Victim
Inmate Name: Bruce Lower
Inmate Number: A203800
Victim: Laura Skinner
Offense: Involuntary Manslaughter
Min/Max Sentence: 10 years / 25 Years
Status: Deceased - Date of Death March 19, 2015

Case Summary

On January 15, 1987 Bruce Lower was babysitting three-year-old Laura Skinner. Lower was dating and living with Laura’s mother. That evening Lower called Laura’s mother and told her Laura needed to go to the hospital. When Laura arrived at the hospital and doctors found her covered with over 80 bruises of various ages. She had also been sexually assaulted. Lower was arrested for killing and sexually assaulting Laura. Rather than go to trial he was allowed to plead guilty to involuntary manslaughter and received a sentence of 10-25 years in prison. He was paroled multiple times and served only 16 years before his final release in September 2003. Lower died on March 19, 2015.

Laura Skinner's Story

UPDATE: Child killer/ sexual predator Bruce Lower died on March 19, 2015. Justice has been served.

________________________________________________

Knowing Girl’s Killer Is Free Pushes Activist To Fight Harder

Published: Monday, October 4, 2004, By Barbara Carmen, The Columbus Dispatch


Down a twisted rope of a road — past shacks, trailers and tasseled cornfields — lies Laura.

The epitaph on her tombstone reads, “Suffer little children.”

She did.

Laura died one month after her third birthday. Testimony, autopsy and police reports say the child was raped, sodomized and battered in January 1987.

Laura Skinner
Laura Skinner

Laura weighed 36 pounds; stood 41 inches tall; and had blue eyes, brown hair and more than 80 bruises.

Her mom, Celia Skinner, worked a temp job during the day. She also had a night gig dancing in a bar while Bruce Lower, her unemployed boyfriend, baby-sat.

The day before Laura was fatally injured, a neighbor said, Lower had answered his apartment door wearing only a white bathrobe. Laura stood behind him, in a bedroom doorway, naked and crying.

Two months before, Laura’s collarbone had been broken. Relatives were relieved when Franklin County Children Services found no abuse and left her in the home.

Suffer little children.

Even after the child’s death, the system failed to protect her.

Prosecutors settled for a plea bargain. Lower drew 10 to 25 years in prison for involuntary manslaughter. The rape evidence was never prosecuted. And Lower maintained he was innocent.

In court testimony, he said:

That Laura bumped her head while eating oatmeal. That he was scared to summon medical help because of the earlier Children Services investigation. That he’d carried Laura, unconscious, around all day.

He shopped for furniture. And he took a walk in a park, where he said he fell down an embankment, explaining her bruises.

As for the bite mark on her thigh, he said he was trying to awaken her.

Common Pleas Judge Daniel T. Hogan concluded, at a hearing to rule Lower a sexual predator, that Laura had been tortured. Hogan said what anyone who reads her case thinks: He hoped she was unconscious during her ordeal.

Lower served only 16 years of his sentence. At the predator hearing, the assistant prosecutor admitted he conducted an “ineffective prosecution.” He said he should have called a witness who told police that Lower had confessed horrible details one long night at the jail.

Lower, the witness reported, said he was tanked up on pornography and liquor and killed Laura when she resisted being raped again.

Suffer little children.

Now get this. Lower was released from prison in September 2003. But twice since then he has been before the parole board, accused of violating his parole. And twice he has been let go.

The injustice against Laura might have gone unnoticed if not for one man, Bret Vinocur. I met the marketing executive two years ago when he set up a Web site, www.findmissingkids.com, after a spate of child kidnappings.

Vinocur spends nights tracking sexual predators to warn the 17,000 people who have logged on to his site.

“When I stumbled on Lower’s name,” Vinocur said, “I thought it was a mistake. Involuntary manslaughter? So I called the sheriff’s office. I was told it was no mistake.”

Laura's bench
A bench was placed at Antrim park in Spring 2005 to ensure Laura is never forgotten.

The more Vinocur learned of Laura’s case, the less sleep he got.

“I don’t know if you can become a victim by association, but I am. I can’t get this little girl’s story out of my head,” he said.

He doesn’t blame Lower for being free. He blames the system for setting Lower free.

Suffer little children.

Last month, when Lower was picked up for the second time and accused of parole violations — possessing liquor and pornography — Vinocur saw history repeating itself.

Todd Marti took Vinocur’s phone call at the Ohio attorney general’s office.

“This case was kind of shocking, to be honest,” said Marti, an assistant attorney general. “I knew (Lower) was not a guy you want on the streets.”

Marti, the father of a daughter about Laura’s age, worked the weekend to draft an appeal to the parole board to send Lower back to prison.

But the board already had ruled. And it wouldn’t reconsider.

So Vinocur works to remember Laura. At her grave — the tiniest plot in the cemetery near Bremen in Fairfield County — he has placed a pot of red begonias.

“What kind of injustice is it if her killer walks free and she’s in the back of a cemetery?” Vinocur asks. “I’m hoping we can use her life to make sure this never happens again.”

Vinocur told Laura’s story to friends who offered to help. In the spring, an $800 bench — paid for by those friends — will arrive at Antrim Park in Worthington, where Vinocur goes to find peace, to remember Laura. The bench will bear her name. But we must tell her story.

Suffer little children.

Contact Us

Looking to add a name to our list, or provide additional information on one of our cases? Please contact us at Block Parole now!

Request Assistance