ReportWire

Tag: Lori Vallow

  • Trial to begin this week for Chad Daybell, husband of convicted ‘Doomsday mom’

    Trial to begin this week for Chad Daybell, husband of convicted ‘Doomsday mom’

    BOISE, Idaho — The trial of a man charged with the deaths of his wife and his girlfriend’s two youngest children is set to begin in Idaho this week, serving as a second act in a bizarre case that has drawn worldwide attention and already resulted in a life sentence for the mother of the children.

    The video featured is from a previous report.

    Chad Daybell’s trial is expected to last up to 10 weeks, with jury selection scheduled to get underway in Boise on Monday. The 55-year-old self-published author is charged with three counts of first-degree murder for the deaths of Tammy Daybell, 7-year-old Joshua “JJ” Vallow and JJ’s big sister, Tylee Ryan, who was last seen a few days before her 17th birthday.

    Chad Daybell, the husband of Lori Vallow, recently told ABC News their missing children, Tylee Ryan and JJ Vallow, are safe.

    The younger children’s mother, Lori Vallow Daybell – who married Chad Daybell shortly after the deaths – was found guilty last year and sentenced to life in prison without parole.

    The couple claimed they could tell if people had been possessed by dark spirits that could turn them into “zombies,” former friend Melanie Gibb testified in court. They believed the only way to get rid of a zombie was to destroy the possessed person’s body by killing them.

    The children’s bodies were found buried in Chad Daybell’s eastern Idaho yard in the summer of 2020.

    Chad Daybell also is charged with insurance fraud in connection with Tammy Daybell’s death and two counts of conspiracy to commit first-degree murder and grand theft by deception in the children’s deaths.

    If convicted, he could face the death penalty.

    Daybell has pleaded not guilty. Last week, his attorney John Prior told KIVI-TV in Boise that Daybell is ready to go forward with the case and “wants to tell his story.”

    Two days later, 7th District Judge Steven Boyce issued a gag order barring any of the attorneys or parties in the case from talking about it until after jury selection and opening statements.

    Chad and Lori Daybell originally were scheduled to stand trial together, but in 2022 Prior asked the court to split the cases, saying the co-defendants will have ” mutually antagonistic defenses.” The legal term generally means a jury would have to disbelieve one defendant in order to believe the other.

    RELATED: Lori Vallow trial: Slain kids’ mom used money, power, sex to get what she wanted, prosecutors say

    “Our version of the facts of this case will differ greatly from what Ms. Vallow and her legal counsel are going to be presenting,” Prior told the judge, who later agreed to split the cases.

    The grim case began in the fall of 2019, after extended family members noticed Lori Vallow’s two youngest kids seemingly had disappeared and prodded law enforcement to launch a search. The subsequent months-long investigation spanned several states and took several grim and unexpected turns.

    Lori Vallow and Chad Daybell were having an affair when both of their spouses died unexpectedly, investigators learned. Vallow’s husband was shot to death by her brother in Arizona in July 2019 and the brother told police it was in self-defense.

    Tammy Daybell died in her sleep in November 2019, the untimely death first chalked up to natural causes but later determined to be from asphyxiation, according to an autopsy. Lori Vallow and Chad Daybell married just two weeks after Tammy Daybell died, surprising family members and authorities.

    The couple’s friends later told detectives that the pair also held unusual religious beliefs, including that they had been reincarnated and were tasked with gathering people before a biblical apocalypse.

    Lori Vallow Daybell referred to her two youngest kids as zombies before they vanished in September 2019, one friend would later testify during her trial, Gibb testified.

    Prosecutors say Lori and Chad Daybell espoused those doomsday-focused beliefs to justify the deaths of her kids and his wife, but it was all part of a scheme to eliminate any obstacles to their relationship and to obtain money from survivor benefits and life insurance.

    Copyright © 2024 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

    AP

    Source link

  • Jury selection in Chad Daybell trial starts Monday

    Jury selection in Chad Daybell trial starts Monday

    Zombies, dark spirits and murder are just some of the things people can expect to hear about if they tune into the Chad Daybell trial.

     Chad Daybell is the fifth husband of Lori Vallow Daybell, the woman convicted of murdering and conspiring to kill her two kids and her husband’s late wife. 

    Jury selection for his trial is expected to start on Monday at the Ada County Courthouse in Boise, ID.

    “Lori Vallow and Chad Daybell represent a very fringe part of the LDS faith, and that people who are mainstream Mormons might not even recognize,” Leah Sottile, a freelance journalist, and the author of the book ‘When the Moon Turns to Blood’ said. The book examines the culture of end times paranoia and the deaths surrounding Lori and Chad Daybell. 

    From Arizona to Idaho to Hawaii, and through Netflix documentaries and podcasts, the couple gained widespread attention for their beliefs and the disappearance of Lori’s kids, 7-year-old JJ Vallow and 16-year-old Tylee Ryan. 

    “They take a radical interpretation of LDS scripture, where they believe that they will be the leaders of a group that called the 144,000, that was prophesied in the book of revelation, essentially, god’s chosen people,” Sottile said. 

    The kids vanished in September of 2019. Lori Vallow Daybell never reported them missing. The couple then got married in Hawaii, just two weeks after Daybell’s first wife, Tammy died in October of 2019. Then in June of 2020, investigators found the remains of JJ and Tylee buried in Chad Daybell’s backyard in eastern Idaho. 

    Last year, a jury convicted Lori Vallow Daybell of murder and conspiracy to commit murder in the deaths of JJ, Tylee and Tammy Daybell. 

    While Chad Daybell’s trial is scheduled to start Monday, former Idaho attorney general and current criminal defense attorney Dave Leroy told FOX 13, there are some key differences between Lori’s trial and what people can expect during Chad’s. 

    “Number one, we know about the evidence or a great body of it already, and so the defense will be more prepared,” Leroy said. “Secondly, there are different charges here, Mr. Daybell is charged with first-degree murder of his wife that has never been tried before, and third, this is a death penalty case.” 

    Since the death penalty is on the table and this trial comes just one year after Lori’s, Administrative District Judge Steve Hippler said the Ada County Courthouse has processed 2,500 jurors. That’s the most he’s seen in his tenure. 

    “The pretrial publicity creates the potential for more people having been exposed to that, which creates additional problems in terms of finding unbiased jurors,” Hippler said. 

    Part of the fascination in this case stems from the extreme religious beliefs the couple shared, which will likely be on display during the trial. 

    “Chad, and Lori would take LDS scripture and then just sort of add on these almost like fantastical sci-fi elements,” Sottile said. “So, talking about zombies being the arbiters of a dark and light scale system where they could say someone had been infiltrated by a dark spirit, and that they, you know, could go light again, but in this case, all of the people who were killed, went dark, so that has nothing to do with the LDS faith.” 

    The trial will be live streamed. It’s expected to last eight-to-10 weeks. As for Lori Vallow Daybell, while she has been sentenced to life in prison, she is currently in an Arizona jail where she faces conspiracy to commit charges in the death of her fourth husband Charles Vallow and her former nephew Brandon Boudreaux. 

    MORE FOX 13 SEATTLE NEWS

    Woman dies after Lynnwood hit-and-run, family searching for driver responsible

    Tacoma woman arrested, accused of attacking man with ax, stabbing Uber driver

    California man sentenced to 5 years for organized retail theft in WA, 22 other states

    Driver who caused head-on crash was ‘too high to evaluate,’ deputies say

    To get the best local news, weather and sports in Seattle for free, sign up for the daily FOX 13 Seattle newsletter.

    Source link

  • Idaho Jury Convicts Lori Vallow Daybell Of Murdering 2 Children, Romantic Rival

    Idaho Jury Convicts Lori Vallow Daybell Of Murdering 2 Children, Romantic Rival

    BOISE, Idaho (AP) — An Idaho jury on Friday convicted Lori Vallow Daybell of murder in the deaths of her two youngest children and a romantic rival, a verdict that marks the end of a three-year investigation that included bizarre claims of zombie children, apocalyptic prophesies and illicit affairs.

    Vallow Daybell, who wore a simple black dress, showed no expression as the verdict was read. Some in the courtroom gallery wiped tears from their eyes.

    Prosecutors in the case described Vallow Daybell as a power-hungry manipulator who would kill her two youngest children for money, while the defense team said she was normally protective mother who fell under the romantic sway of a wannabe cult leader.

    Jurors heard both stories Thursday during final arguments in the seven-week long trial, and deliberated for about four hours before breaking for the evening. They resumed deliberations Friday morning and reached a verdict, which was announced shortly after noon.

    Vallow Daybell and her fifth husband Chad Daybell were both charged with murder, conspiracy and grand theft in the deaths of 7-year-old Joshua “JJ” Vallow, 16-year-old Tylee Ryan, and Daybell’s previous wife Tammy Daybell. Prosecutors say the two worked with Vallow Daybell’s brother, Alex Cox, to carry out the crimes. Cox died in December 2019 and was never charged.

    Vallow Daybell faces up to life in prison when she is sentenced in at least three months. Chad Daybell’s trial is still months away.

    Vallow Daybell wanted the victims’ money, so she used sex and power to manipulate her brother and her lover into carrying out the crimes, Madison County Prosecutor Rob Wood told jurors during closing arguments.

    “Money, power and sex,” Wood said, reprising the arguments his team made at the start of the trial. He claimed Vallow Daybell considered the three victims nothing more than obstacles to her goals.

    “What does justice for these victims require? It requires a conviction on each and every count,” Wood said.

    Defense attorney Jim Archibald countered that there was no evidence tying his client to the killings but plenty showing she was a loving, protective mother whose life took a sharp turn when she met her fifth husband, Chad Daybell, and fell for the “weird” apocalyptic religious claims of a cult leader. He suggested that Daybell and Cox were the ones responsible for the deaths, and that Vallow Daybell’s only crime was lying to police about where her children were.

    This courtroom sketch, from left, depicts Madison County prosecutor Rob Wood, Lori Vallow Daybell and defense attorney Jim Archibald during opening statements of Vallow Daybell’s murder trial in Boise, Idaho, Monday, April 10, 2023.

    Daybell told her they had been married in several previous lives and she was a “sexual goddess” who was supposed to help him save the world by gathering 144,000 followers so Jesus could return, Archibald said.

    “Why can’t people escape religious cult figures, why can’t they break out, why can’t they break away from that mind control?” Archibald said. “Promises are marvelous to some people even if they sound like stupid gibberish to the rest of us.”

    At times, the testimony in the case has been heartbreaking — such as when Vallow Daybell’s only surviving child, Colby Ryan, accused her of murdering his siblings in a recorded jailhouse phone call.

    Other testimony has been strange, such as when Vallow Daybell’s former friend Melanie Gibb testified that Vallow Daybell believed people in her life had been taken over by evil spirits and turned into “zombies” — including JJ and Tylee. Four of the people the defendant described as “zombies” were later killed or shot at, according to the testimony.

    It has also been gruesome, such as when law enforcement officers testified about finding JJ and Tylee’s remains buried in Chad Daybell’s yard.

    Tylee had her whole life ahead of her, Wood told the jury, when she was killed in September 2019.

    FILE - Lori Vallow Daybell sits in a police car after a hearing at the Fremont County Courthouse in St. Anthony, Idaho, on Aug. 16, 2022.
    FILE – Lori Vallow Daybell sits in a police car after a hearing at the Fremont County Courthouse in St. Anthony, Idaho, on Aug. 16, 2022.

    “Tylee’s body was burned beyond recognition. Her body was dismembered in such a grotesque and extreme manner,” that the medical examiner couldn’t determine the cause of death, Wood said. Marks on her pelvis showed she was stabbed, he said.

    “JJ Vallow’s voice was silenced forever by a strip of duct tape over his mouth,” just two weeks later, Wood said. “A white plastic bag was placed over his head, and secured with duct tape around and around from his forehead to his chin.”

    Evidence shows JJ struggled, Wood said, and at one point the boy’s arms and legs were bound with duct tape.

    “He stopped breathing, his heart stopped beating and he died. It was a brutal, horrific murder of a 7-year-old boy with special needs,” he said.

    Vallow Daybell never reported the kids missing but continued to collect the survivor benefit checks each child was receiving because of the earlier deaths of their fathers, Wood said.

    Wood said Tammy Daybell was slain between Oct. 18 and Oct. 20, 2019.

    The defense attorney countered that Vallow Daybell wasn’t even in the state when Tammy Daybell was killed. She was in Hawaii, visiting with friends, he said.

    Archibald did not call any witnesses during the trial, and Vallow Daybell declined to testify. Instead, Archibald asserted that prosecutors had not proven their case, suggesting that there was not enough evidence to find beyond a reasonable doubt that she committed a crime.

    “Of the 15,000 texts you have in evidence, show me one where Lori is part of that conspiracy,” Archibald said in closing arguments.

    Under Idaho law, conspiring to commit a murder carries the same penalty as carrying out a murder. Wood reminded jurors of that law, noting that aiding and abetting a crime is akin to committing it.

    The case began in July 2019, when Vallow Daybell’s then-husband, Charles Vallow, was shot and killed by her brother, Alex Cox, at his home in a Phoenix suburb. The husband and wife were estranged, and he had filed divorce documents claiming that she believed she was a goddess sent to usher in the Biblical apocalypse.

    FILE - Lori Vallow Daybell glances at the camera during her hearing in Rexburg, Idaho., on March 6, 2020. A mother charged with murder in the deaths of her two children is set to stand trial in Idaho. The proceedings against Lori Vallow Daybell beginning Monday, April 3, 2023, could reveal new details in the strange, doomsday-focused case. (John Roark/The Idaho Post-Register via AP, Pool, File)
    FILE – Lori Vallow Daybell glances at the camera during her hearing in Rexburg, Idaho., on March 6, 2020. A mother charged with murder in the deaths of her two children is set to stand trial in Idaho. The proceedings against Lori Vallow Daybell beginning Monday, April 3, 2023, could reveal new details in the strange, doomsday-focused case. (John Roark/The Idaho Post-Register via AP, Pool, File)

    At the time, Cox told police he acted in self-defense, and he was never charged in connection with the death. Cox died later that year of what authorities determined were natural causes. Vallow Daybell was later charged in Arizona in connection with Charles Vallow’s death; she has not yet had the opportunity to enter a plea in that case.

    According to prosecutors, Vallow Daybell was already in a relationship with Chad Daybell, who was still married to his wife, Tammy Daybell, at the time. She moved to eastern Idaho with her brother and kids to be closer to Chad Daybell.

    The children were last seen alive in September of 2019. Police discovered they were missing a month later after an extended family member became worried. Their bodies were found the following summer.

    The case has garnered widespread interest not just in Idaho but around the world, and the judge banned cameras from the courtroom in an effort to limit pretrial publicity. The trial was also moved to the capital city of Boise, where 1,800 potential jurors were called and winnowed to a panel of 18 people.

    This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

    Source link