![]() ![]() In one of the letters, she told Bowers she was glad that Jenkins wasn't alive to see what Bowers had done. "It just makes it all that much more unbelievable that his mind was that broken that he was thinking what he thought with where he came from," Fine said.įine has written nearly 100 letters to Bowers in prison and visited him a handful of times, she said. ![]() That's part of what made Bowers' actions so inconceivable, Fine testified. It was the proudest achievement of his life. Jenkins served in the military in World War II and, in particular, helped find Holocaust survivors after the war, Fine said. While they were cleaning up Jenkins' house, Rob found evidence of Jenkins working at Dachau concentration camp after World War II. He helped Bowers get a job as a delivery truck driver at a bakery that he had for 14 years in his 20s and 30s, which represented the longest period of employment in Bowers’ life. Jenkins was one of the only people Bowers had a close relationship with, according to Fine. A couple of times Jenkins set rags on the stove on fire when he would accidentally forget that he'd turned his tea kettle on, and Fine said Bowers would have to come put the fire out when the smoke alarm went off because Jenkins wouldn't hear. Jenkins would fall out of his bed at night and need to be helped back up. His trial began on May 30 and Fine was the last witness to testify in the final portion of the trial about whether Bowers deserves the death penalty or life in prison.īowers had been living with and taking care of his grandfather, Lloyd Jenkins, for a number of years before he died. Last month Bowers was convicted of killing 11 Jewish worshipers at the Tree of Life synagogue in 2018. Back in 2014, Patricia Fine and her nephew, Robert Bowers, spent a couple of weeks together cleaning up her father's house after he passed away. ![]()
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