Unit 1012 Cover Photo

Unit 1012 Cover Photo

Saturday, July 13, 2013

BRING BACK THE DEATH PENALTY TO IOWA (IN LOVING MEMORY OF ELIZABETH COLLINS, WENT MISSING ON JULY 13, 2012)



            On this date, July 13, 2012, two girls, Elizabeth Collins and her cousin, Lyric Cook went missing on July 13, 2012 in Iowa. Their bodies were found in early December 2012.

Sadly, there is no death penalty in Iowa. Killers chose that state to commit murder as they know they will never face a death sentence. We, the VFFDP, understand that the parents are Christians and not revengeful or hateful people, they forgave the killers but want to see justice served. 

Let us hear the quotes from those victims’ families in Iowa:

QUOTE 1: Friday December 14, 2012 - Hundreds turned out last night for a celebration of life event to honor an eight-year-old northeast Iowa girl who went missing last summer. Elizabeth Collins and her cousin were last seen riding their bikes in Evansdale. Their bodies were found last week and Elizabeth’s mother told the crowd gathered in a Cedar Falls church that the family had been planning a celebration when her daughter came home — and now she is home with God.

“We’re celebrating her life and we’re celebrating that she is not in pain anymore and she is with who better else than our Father in Heaven,” she said.

Heather Collins thanked her family, friends and the community for their support over the past five months. She and her husband spoke with reporters after the service.

“The service was absolutely amazing,” she said. “Seeing all the people that were there — it was overwhelming.”

A slide show of photos was projected on the big screen at the front of the church and Elizabeth’s parents arranged for her favorite songs to be sung.

“I know she was there the whole entire time and I just got this, like, warm feeling over me through the whole entire service and she was just there,” Collins said. “She still is here.”

Before the service, Drew Collins told reporters he wants to see the person responsible for his daughter’s death receive the death penalty.

“We don’t want this person to be able to hurt anybody else because whoever it is is sick and we’ll feel a lot better once that person’s is in custody,” Drew Collins said. “But I don’t think there ever can be closure in something like this. We’ll have to live with it the rest of our lives.”

QUOTE 2: Collins said he has always believed in the death penalty.

“I can forgive someone and Heather can forgive someone, but they still have to meet justice, punished for what they’ve done. It’s just not fair that they can take a life and that they can sit in prison and they can live the rest of their lives out and their family gets to go see them…but we don’t get to visit our daughter,” Collins said. “She’s gone.”

The couple will meet with Governor Branstad on Monday to talk about the death penalty issue. Branstad supports a limited form of capital punishment that would apply in a case like this, but this past Monday Branstad said it was unlikely the Democratic leader in the Iowa Senate will bring a death penalty bill up for a vote. Collins vows to be a vocal advocate for the death penalty.



QUOTE 3: “A lot of the people that are against the death penalty believe in abortion and that makes absolutely no sense to me,” Collins said. “…A lot of those people will probably fight us along this road that we’ve got to go, but we’re going to fight them.”

The father of a teenager who was kidnapped and murdered in Waterloo six years ago will accompany Drew and Heather Collins to Monday’s meeting with Branstad. A Des Moines woman whose son has been missing since 1982 and Republican Senator Kent Sorenson of Milo will be there, too. Sorenson plans to sponsor a bill that would restore capital punishment in Iowa.

QUOTE 4: "You get life in prison if you kidnap someone and you get life in prison if you murder someone in Iowa," Drew said. For the killer, "there was no reason to let (Elizabeth and Lyric) live."

QUOTE 5: Her husband, Drew Collins, said, "To me, it is criminal that we don't protect our children. If we don't protect our children, what are we as a society?"



QUOTE 6: Friday January 25, 2013 - However, Sen. Robert Hogg, D-Cedar Rapids, chairman of the Iowa Senate Judiciary Committee, has said the death penalty debate has already been settled in Iowa and he won’t allow the bill to be considered.

Drew Collins said it isn’t fair for Hogg to hold the death penalty bill hostage.

“If his child was missing, I don’t think he would feel the same way. This is not how this country is set up. As the parent of a murdered child, it just makes me sick that this is not even open for debate,” he said.

QUOTE 7: Noreen Gosch said she respects the opinions of legislators such as Senate Majority Leader Michael Gronstal, D-Council Bluffs, who say they oppose the death penalty on moral grounds.

“But this isn’t about him. It is about little kids,” Gosch said. “What if somebody took your child and savagely murdered them, and then, God willing, they were caught and then all they got was some time in jail?”

Capital punishment won’t stop child abductions, but it may prevent someone from killing a child, Gosch added. “The criminals know we don’t have it, and it can be a deterrent,” she contended.

AUTHOR: Drew and Heather Collins whose daughter, Elizabeth was murdered in Iowa. She and her cousin went missing on July 13, 2012 and their bodies were found in early December 2012.

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