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Tag: murder

  • Community Voices: Murder in America and the Need to Disagree Better

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    By Hon. Scott Benson, Detroit City Councilmember

    If the last couple of weeks has taught us anything it’s that we need to learn to disagree better. 

    In the aftermath of the high-profile murder of a notorious MAGA media figure, and with the President of the United States (POTUS) heightening tensions by trying to blame the killing on the “radical left,” Utah Governor Spencer Cox showed bravery and leadership by standing up and saying no to hate. While POTUS’ inflammatory rhetoric is not going to unite a country that is on the edge, Governor Cox is one of the few high-profile Republicans who is actively trying to dial the temperature down.  

    Cox was urging people not to play the blame game, and that the shooter was the only person responsible for this heinous crime. In other words, he was doing what a decent and good leader does at a time like this; dialing the temperature down, while POTUS is doing the exact opposite.  

    Cox was chair of the National Governors Association when he launched an initiative called Disagree Better. Now an independent nonprofit, Disagree Better uses campaigns, partnerships, and real conversations to show what respectful disagreement looks like in action. It offers tools and resources to build meaningful, constructive dialogue. It also has a toolkit so parents can teach their children these important skills. As the organization’s motto says – democracy is disagreement.  And as I like to say, successful democracy is disagreement without violence.  

    Disagree Better urges people to be curious, not caustic. It teaches people to respect the opinion of others, rather than shout them down. Disagreement is not an act of war, but a way to learn. It isn’t necessarily about being nicer to each other, but it is about finding a way to use disagreement to move toward compromise and solutions to the problems we face as a country.  See President Obama and former House Speaker John Boehner. 

    Today, too much of the discourse around politics is toxic. We talk over and yell at each other. We want to “win” every political argument, no matter the cost.  And social media is not helping, as we are forced to sort through disinformation and distortions in search of the truth. Polarization has become a political strategy, deepening with each day that passes while we have political leaders who paint each other as mortal enemies. 

    This past week I heard a lot of pundits and elected officials saying, “this is not what our country is about,” but that showed a great lack of historical understanding and perspective. The Black community is all too familiar with political violence, domestic terrorism and murder. Historically, our community has experienced a disproportionate amount of all three. Political violence and domestic terrorism have been used to deny us our rights, our dreams, and our economic security. From overt acts of terror, like lynchings, to assassinations like those of Martin Luther King and Medgar Evers, the Black community has been the target of deliberate politically motivated violence and murder for generations.  

    What concerns me is that POTUS and his Cabinet members are pushing us further away from the American ideal and now punishing Americans for expressing their views about this murder.  The American ideal encompasses the rights that we as Americans should enjoy and are enumerated in the Declaration of Independence as – “Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness.” The rights that we have fought wars over, and that our government SHOULD protect. The right to free speech, freedom of expression, and peaceful assembly. The right to question our government. The right to hold a viewpoint different from your neighbor. The right to disagree.  

    The notorious media figure’s views were often provocative, laced with rhetoric that was racist, xenophobic, and misogynistic. His often crude and demeaning insults targeted the most vulnerable among us – immigrants, LGBTQ people, and other marginalized communities. He was not the model for learning to disagree better, but he was utilizing his American right to freedom of speech, and no one should be murdered for exercising their American rights. See Maceo Snipes, 1946. 

    To paraphrase FCC Commissioner Anna Gomez, “A single disturbed individual’s inexcusable act of political violence should not justify broader censorship, POTUS’s administration is increasingly using government power to suppress lawful expression.  Giving up the right to speak freely means accepting that those in power, not the people, will define the boundaries of debate in a free society.” 

    Until we learn to disagree better in this country and return to listening to each other, asking questions about how one has arrived at their views, and using disagreement to find solutions, we are only going to remain deeply divided. A majority of the public is clear that they are over the bickering. This is going to take difficult conversations, and we cannot be afraid to have them.   We all need to take the words of Governor Cox to heart and “learn to disagree better.” 

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  • Human remains in Washington state identified as Travis Decker, wanted for killing his daughters

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    Forensic tests confirmed that human remains found on a remote mountain in Washington state this month were those of Travis Decker, a former soldier wanted in the deaths of his three young daughters last spring, officials confirmed Thursday.His remains were discovered on a steep, remote, wooded slope partway up Grindstone Mountain in central Washington, less than a mile from the campsite where the bodies of 9-year-old Paityn Decker, 8-year-old Evelyn Decker, and 5-year-old Olivia Decker were found on June 2, the Chelan County Sheriff’s Office said.Law enforcement teams had been searching more than three months for Decker, 32, before the sheriff’s office announced last week it had located human remains believed to be his. Sheriff Mike Morrison said Thursday that DNA tests on clothing found at the scene, as well as from the remains, matched Decker.The sheriff said investigators wanted to honor the girls’ memory by solving the case, and he apologized to their mother, Whitney Decker, for it taking so long.“I hope you can rest easier at night knowing that Travis is accounted for,” Morrison said.Decker had been with his daughters on a scheduled visit but failed to bring them back to his former wife, who, a year ag,o said that his mental health issues had worsened and that he had become increasingly unstable.He was often living out of his truck, she said in a petition seeking to restrict him from having overnight visits with them.A deputy found Decker’s truck as well as the girls’ bodies three days after Decker failed to return them to their mother’s house. Autopsies found the girls had been suffocated.Decker was an infantryman in the Army from March 2013 to July 2021 and deployed to Afghanistan for four months in 2014. He had training in navigation, survival, and other skills, authorities said, and once spent more than two months living in the backwoods off the grid.More than 100 officials with an array of state and federal agencies searched hundreds of square miles, much of it mountainous and remote, by land, water, and air during the on and off search. The U.S. Marshals Service offered a reward of up to $20,000 for information leading to his capture.At one point early in the search, authorities thought they spotted Decker near a remote alpine lake after receiving a tip from hikers.Officials say the coroner’s office continues to work on determining the cause and time of his death.

    Forensic tests confirmed that human remains found on a remote mountain in Washington state this month were those of Travis Decker, a former soldier wanted in the deaths of his three young daughters last spring, officials confirmed Thursday.

    His remains were discovered on a steep, remote, wooded slope partway up Grindstone Mountain in central Washington, less than a mile from the campsite where the bodies of 9-year-old Paityn Decker, 8-year-old Evelyn Decker, and 5-year-old Olivia Decker were found on June 2, the Chelan County Sheriff’s Office said.

    Law enforcement teams had been searching more than three months for Decker, 32, before the sheriff’s office announced last week it had located human remains believed to be his. Sheriff Mike Morrison said Thursday that DNA tests on clothing found at the scene, as well as from the remains, matched Decker.

    The sheriff said investigators wanted to honor the girls’ memory by solving the case, and he apologized to their mother, Whitney Decker, for it taking so long.

    “I hope you can rest easier at night knowing that Travis is accounted for,” Morrison said.

    Decker had been with his daughters on a scheduled visit but failed to bring them back to his former wife, who, a year ag,o said that his mental health issues had worsened and that he had become increasingly unstable.

    He was often living out of his truck, she said in a petition seeking to restrict him from having overnight visits with them.

    A deputy found Decker’s truck as well as the girls’ bodies three days after Decker failed to return them to their mother’s house. Autopsies found the girls had been suffocated.

    Decker was an infantryman in the Army from March 2013 to July 2021 and deployed to Afghanistan for four months in 2014. He had training in navigation, survival, and other skills, authorities said, and once spent more than two months living in the backwoods off the grid.

    More than 100 officials with an array of state and federal agencies searched hundreds of square miles, much of it mountainous and remote, by land, water, and air during the on and off search. The U.S. Marshals Service offered a reward of up to $20,000 for information leading to his capture.

    At one point early in the search, authorities thought they spotted Decker near a remote alpine lake after receiving a tip from hikers.

    Officials say the coroner’s office continues to work on determining the cause and time of his death.

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  • Man Mistakenly Released From Jail Re-Arrested In Florence – KXL

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    FLORENCE, Ore. – A 26-year-old man mistakenly released from the Multnomah County Detention Center earlier this week has been taken back into custody, according to the Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office (MCSO).

    Ty Sage, who was indicted in May on charges of second-degree murder and first-degree robbery, was arrested without incident around 1 p.m. Thursday at a gas station off Highway 101 in Florence. The U.S. Marshals Fugitive Task Force assisted in the arrest.

    Sheriff Nicole Morrisey O’Donnell expressed regret over Sage’s release, which occurred Monday, September 22, after MCSO staff allowed him to post bail despite a court order indicating he should remain in custody.

    “Ty Sage should never have been able to post bail,” said Sheriff Morrisey O’Donnell. “To the family of Lowgunn Ivey, the young man killed, I want to acknowledge the fear and trauma that this mistaken release has caused.”

    Lowgunn Ivey was the victim in the murder case for which Sage had been indicted. His family was informed of the re-arrest Thursday afternoon.

    Sage’s mistaken release appears to stem from a misinterpretation of a court order issued September 17 and filed the following day, the sheriff’s office said. Although MCSO staff sought clarification from the court, Sage was still permitted to post bail and leave custody.

    “Lowgunn’s family deserved better,” Sheriff Morrisey O’Donnell added. “As Multnomah County’s sheriff, I am committed to making sure this does not happen again.”

    MCSO says a full inquiry into the release is ongoing. Sheriff Morrisey O’Donnell has pledged to review and strengthen internal processes to prevent similar mistakes in the future.

    Sage will be booked back into the Multnomah County Detention Center and held without bail.

    Sheriff Morrisey O’Donnell also thanked the U.S. Marshals Service, the Multnomah County Circuit Court, the Multnomah County District Attorney’s Office, the Gresham Police Department, and the MCSO team for their efforts in locating and arresting Sage.

    No further details about the arrest have been released due to the ongoing investigation.

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    Jordan Vawter

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  • Human remains found in Queens park belonged to unknown woman missing arms, legs: NYPD | amNewYork

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    FILE – Medical examiner’s team removing a body in Queens

    Photo by Dean Moses

    Police officials said Thursday that the human remains found by a sanitation crew in Queens earlier this week belonged to an unidentified woman whose extremities had been hacked away.

    Only the victim’s torso was discovered about 100 feet south of the intersection of 149th Avenue and Brookville Boulevard, near Idlewild Park, on Sept. 22. New York City sanitation workers performing a roadside cleanup around 8 a.m. that morning when they noticed a foul smell and made the grisly find.

    “It had several unique and identifiable tattoos which were not visible and not decomposed,” NYPD Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny said of the torso. “The autopsy was done, and the doctor basically tells us, at this point, the torso itself does not have any wounds or injuries that would indicate any cause of death. The forensic anthropologist is still walking through it.”

    Victim’s tattoos may offer clues

    While authorities say they have yet to determine how the woman lost her life, they say the torso had a broken rib that most likely stemmed from the remains being dropped.

    Several tattoos depicted a flower and three names, Chief Kenny said, adding that police are working through missing person reports in an attempt to match up the names.

    “The doctor further states that he believes that straight edge instruments, such as a knife, were used to cut through the soft tissue, and some sort of saw was used to cut through the bone,” Chief Kenny said.

    Police say the victim is believed to be of Guyanese descent, but her age has not yet been established.

    No arrests have been made, and the investigation remains ongoing.

    Anyone with information regarding these remains can call Crime Stoppers at 800-577-TIPS (for Spanish, dial 888-57-PISTA). You can also submit tips online at crimestoppers.nypdonline.org, or on X (formerly Twitter) @NYPDTips. All calls and messages are kept confidential.

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    Dean Moses

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  • Community Voices: Murder in America and the Need to Disagree Better

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    By Hon. Scott Benson, Detroit City Councilmember

    If the last couple of weeks has taught us anything it’s that we need to learn to disagree better. 

    In the aftermath of the high-profile murder of a notorious MAGA media figure, and with the President of the United States (POTUS) heightening tensions by trying to blame the killing on the “radical left,” Utah Governor Spencer Cox showed bravery and leadership by standing up and saying no to hate. While POTUS’ inflammatory rhetoric is not going to unite a country that is on the edge, Governor Cox is one of the few high-profile Republicans who is actively trying to dial the temperature down.  

    Cox was urging people not to play the blame game, and that the shooter was the only person responsible for this heinous crime. In other words, he was doing what a decent and good leader does at a time like this; dialing the temperature down, while POTUS is doing the exact opposite.  

    Cox was chair of the National Governors Association when he launched an initiative called Disagree Better. Now an independent nonprofit, Disagree Better uses campaigns, partnerships, and real conversations to show what respectful disagreement looks like in action. It offers tools and resources to build meaningful, constructive dialogue. It also has a toolkit so parents can teach their children these important skills. As the organization’s motto says – democracy is disagreement.  And as I like to say, successful democracy is disagreement without violence.  

    Disagree Better urges people to be curious, not caustic. It teaches people to respect the opinion of others, rather than shout them down. Disagreement is not an act of war, but a way to learn. It isn’t necessarily about being nicer to each other, but it is about finding a way to use disagreement to move toward compromise and solutions to the problems we face as a country.  See President Obama and former House Speaker John Boehner. 

    Today, too much of the discourse around politics is toxic. We talk over and yell at each other. We want to “win” every political argument, no matter the cost.  And social media is not helping, as we are forced to sort through disinformation and distortions in search of the truth. Polarization has become a political strategy, deepening with each day that passes while we have political leaders who paint each other as mortal enemies. 

    This past week I heard a lot of pundits and elected officials saying, “this is not what our country is about,” but that showed a great lack of historical understanding and perspective. The Black community is all too familiar with political violence, domestic terrorism and murder. Historically, our community has experienced a disproportionate amount of all three. Political violence and domestic terrorism have been used to deny us our rights, our dreams, and our economic security. From overt acts of terror, like lynchings, to assassinations like those of Martin Luther King and Medgar Evers, the Black community has been the target of deliberate politically motivated violence and murder for generations.  

    What concerns me is that POTUS and his Cabinet members are pushing us further away from the American ideal and now punishing Americans for expressing their views about this murder.  The American ideal encompasses the rights that we as Americans should enjoy and are enumerated in the Declaration of Independence as – “Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness.” The rights that we have fought wars over, and that our government SHOULD protect. The right to free speech, freedom of expression, and peaceful assembly. The right to question our government. The right to hold a viewpoint different from your neighbor. The right to disagree.  

    The notorious media figure’s views were often provocative, laced with rhetoric that was racist, xenophobic, and misogynistic. His often crude and demeaning insults targeted the most vulnerable among us – immigrants, LGBTQ people, and other marginalized communities. He was not the model for learning to disagree better, but he was utilizing his American right to freedom of speech, and no one should be murdered for exercising their American rights. See Maceo Snipes, 1946. 

    To paraphrase FCC Commissioner Anna Gomez, “A single disturbed individual’s inexcusable act of political violence should not justify broader censorship, POTUS’s administration is increasingly using government power to suppress lawful expression.  Giving up the right to speak freely means accepting that those in power, not the people, will define the boundaries of debate in a free society.” 

    Until we learn to disagree better in this country and return to listening to each other, asking questions about how one has arrived at their views, and using disagreement to find solutions, we are only going to remain deeply divided. A majority of the public is clear that they are over the bickering. This is going to take difficult conversations, and we cannot be afraid to have them.   We all need to take the words of Governor Cox to heart and “learn to disagree better.” 

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    Jeremy Allen, Executive Editor

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  • After deinstitutionalization, America’s mental health system struggles to protect the public

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    One of the charming, if bizarre, discoveries I made living in New England was its constellation of splendid, thoroughly abandoned mental institutions. They occupied commanding heights in bucolic rural backwaters—fine Victorian masterpieces of red brick and turreted cupolas. The one near Danvers, Massachusetts, was perhaps the most impressive—the sheer scale and strange, unsettling quiet of it all inspired curiosity. The awe these deserted institutions inspired has never left me.

    I thought of the place recently in light of the awful murder of Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska by Decarlos Brown on a subway car in Charlotte, North Carolina. The assassination shortly afterward of Charlie Kirk eclipsed the headlines, but each case has a great deal to say about our national schizophrenia over mental illness. 

    While Kirk’s murderer was clearly unstable, he showed no actionable warning signs of the violence he was about to commit. Zarutska’s murderer, on the other hand, was a known quantity—a time bomb whose repeated encounters with the law painted a trajectory that could predictably end only in disaster. Brown was trapped in the liminal space between mainline criminal incarceration (where he spent time) and the psychiatric wards of yesteryear, which no longer exist. The societal question over individual liberty and social safety, however, remains.

    The State Lunatic Hospital at Danvers fairly exemplifies the structural elements at play. Since the 1960s and the era of “deinstitutionalization,” the United States has substantially eliminated treatment space dedicated to the care and incarceration of the mentally ill, with an estimated 64 percent decrease since 1970. Some of this decline was a rational response to advances in antipsychotic medications and moves toward “community-based” care, but much of it was about funding and politics.

    The politics, in their turn, were shaped by the growing disaffection with the model of treatment these facilities could offer. Centralized psychiatric care at places like Danvers had become grossly overcrowded, and disturbing methods of treatment made everyone uneasy. Eunice Kennedy Shriver, sister of President John F. Kennedy, said of her sister Rosemary after a botched lobotomy, “Her mental capacity diminished to that of a two-year-old child, she was left incontinent and unable to speak intelligibly.” Stories like these shifted public opinion. By 1963, the Community Mental Health Act devolved mental care toward local communities, and the closing of large state institutions began. By 1981, under President Ronald Reagan’s Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act, the process was effectively complete: The era of the “psychiatric facility” was over. Danvers closed for good in 1992 and was largely demolished in 2007.

    These shifts had major implications—many of them good. They helped protect patients from abusive treatments and from the Dickensian nightmare that many asylums had become. But they obviously didn’t end mental illness. In effect, they merely pushed the problem to less visible peripheries and increasingly depended on the criminal incarceration system to pull up the slack for those unable or unwilling to seek professional treatment. Prisons became, in effect, the nation’s new asylums—only without the mandate, expertise, or resources to treat the underlying pathology.

    The results are visible in tragedies like Zarutska’s. Those who ride subways, walk city streets, or simply send their kids to public schools know from experience that they harbor a certain population of untreated, unstable individuals. Some are harmless eccentrics. Some are self-medicating strugglers. Still others are genuinely dangerous, propelled by paranoia or psychosis toward catastrophic acts.

    This is the point where a free society faces its most uncomfortable question: How do we balance liberty with involuntary commitment? America’s default in recent decades has rightly been to err on the side of liberty, a choice with noble roots but sometimes tragic consequences. We recoil from the notion of allowing the state to lock up citizens without trial. We recall the abuses of “insanity defenses” and the ease with which Soviet authorities diagnosed dissidents with schizophrenia. Our suspicion of state power is vital. But in our zeal to prevent abuse, we have stripped away tools that might, in fact, protect both the vulnerable and the innocent.

    This very debate was featured in the pages of Reason, and it’s evident that the “lock ’em up” or “let ’em be” camps can both find ample supporting evidence for their positions. Mike Riggs, a contributing editor at Reason, takes the firmer individualist position, writing that, “mentally ill people can be deprived of their liberty only as a form of punishment and only if they victimize someone; they cannot be deprived of their liberty to merely deliver them from temptation or risk.” Libertarians, as a rule, would be inclined to agree—accepting the risk of isolated violence over systemic “preventive” incarceration. Riggs is supported by psychiatrist Thomas Szasz, who wrote in 2016 that “the overwhelming majority of mentally ill people can live okay lives outside of any institution, hopefully receiving community care if they want it. If they commit crimes they will go to prison just like anyone else.” 

    The murder by Brown confronts us with the frightening failure of this system. Lawmakers in North Carolina have introduced “Iryna’s Law” to try to fill the void caused by a justice system that has “lost institutional control” over its community. Balancing liberty and security in this situation will not be an easy task, especially amidst the heightened emotions over a heart-wrenching murder. 

    Other societies have attempted to strike their own balance. The Netherlands, for example, has developed a model that attempts to thread this needle more carefully. Dutch law allows for terbeschikkingstelling (TBS), a system in which courts can impose psychiatric treatment in secure facilities for offenders deemed dangerous due to mental illness. The regime is subject to judicial review and proportionality standards, but it acknowledges a simple truth we Americans seem to resist: Some people are both ill and dangerous, and society must manage that reality rather than wish it away. The Dutch experience suggests that it is possible to protect public safety without abandoning civil liberty altogether—but it is hardly perfect. My wife’s good friend, a psychologist at one of these secure facilities, witnessed the horrific murder of a care provider by a psychopathic inmate. Yet the very fact that this tragedy occurred within walls designed to shield the innocent from this psychosis directly highlights the awful tragedy of the American system, which allowed Brown to prowl the North Carolina subways. 

    There are glimmers of reform. Some states have experimented with “assisted outpatient treatment” laws, which compel treatment without requiring long-term confinement. Others have piloted crisis-intervention teams that divert offenders toward psychiatric care rather than jail. These are steps in the right direction, but they remain piecemeal and controversial, constrained by our deep-seated suspicion of institutionalization.

    Perhaps that suspicion is justified. No one, after all, wants to resurrect the abuses of the asylum era. Yet it is worth remembering that we once accepted the need for institutional care as a matter of course, and that our rejection of it was as much about cost and scandal as it was about basic principle. The empty hulks at Danvers and elsewhere stand as monuments to that choice—monuments we dare not celebrate, but whose consequences we live with every day.

    The derelict asylum on the New England hillside and the violent crime on the Charlotte subway are connected. Both reflect our collective discomfort with the messy problem of mental illness in a free society. We can choose essential liberty, or we can choose safety, but giving up the former for temporary stints of the latter has, as the famous Benjamin Franklin quote goes, permanent consequences that condemn us to neither.

    Unsatisfying as it feels in the heat of the moment, our challenge is to find a middle ground—an institutional arrangement that recognizes both the dignity of the mentally ill and the legitimate right of the public to be safe from clear and present harms. Other societies have shown this is possible. Ours, so far, has chosen paralysis. Until we grapple with the hard question of what we owe to the dangerously unstable, we will continue to live with headlines like Zarutska’s, and with the haunted ruins of Danvers as mute testimony to our unfinished business.

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    Paul Schwennesen

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  • Arrest made in 2010 triple-shooting in Castroville that killed 18-year-old

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    CBS News Live



    CBS News Bay Area

    Live

    More than 15 years after a triple-shooting in Monterey County left a man dead, authorities have announced an arrest in the case.

    On the morning of Aug. 15, 2010, deputies were called to the 11000 block of Jackson Street in the community of Castroville following reports of a juvenile male possibly suffering a heart attack. When deputies arrived, they found three victims with gunshot wounds.

    Deputies administered first aid, while firefighters and paramedics responded. Two victims were taken to local hospitals. A third victim, 18-year-old Salvatore Dentice, was pronounced deceased at the scene.

    In an update Wednesday, deputies said there were able to identify 41-year-old Stephen Vasquez as a suspect in the shooting and arrest him in connection with the case. Additional details about his arrest were not immediately available.

    stephen-vasquez-cold-case-arrest-092525.jpg

    Stephen Vasquez, who is accused in a triple shooting in Castroville on Aug. 15, 2010 that left an 18-year-old man dead.

    Monterey County Sheriff’s Office


    “Today’s arrest is a testament to collaboration, persistence of our detectives, and the unwavering commitment of this office to pursue justice – no matter how much time has passed,” Sheriff Tina Nieto said. “Cold cases leave lasting impacts on families and our community, and while nothing can erase the pain of loss, we hope this step provides a measure of healing.”

    Jail records show Vasquez being held at the Monterey County Jail on suspicion of homicide and two counts of attempted homicide.

    Anyone with additional information is asked to contact Detective Richard Geng of the sheriff’s office at 831-253-6029 or Sgt. James Day at 831-597-0065. Tips can also be sent anonymously on the sheriff’s office website.

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    Tim Fang

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  • Adam Fravel, convicted killer of Madeline Kingsbury, requests new trial

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    Adam Fravel, Madeline Kingsbury’s convicted killer, requests new trial



    Adam Fravel, Madeline Kingsbury’s convicted killer, requests new trial

    00:30

    Adam Fravel, the 31-year-old Winona, Minnesota, man convicted of killing Madeline Kingsbury, the mother of his children, is requesting a new trial. 

    In the 48-page document filed this week in Winona County, Fravel lays out a number of complaints about how his trial was handled. He claims there was not enough evidence to convict him of premeditated or intentional murder.   

    At Fravel’s sentencing hearing, Winona County Attorney Karin Sonneman asked the judge to adhere to guidelines mandating life in prison for first-degree premeditated murder, the most serious of the four counts on which Fravel was convicted.

    Maddi Kingsbury

    Madeline Kingsbury

    Kingsbury Family


    Fravel was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole in December. In March, he filed an appeal with the Minnesota Supreme Court.

    Kingsbury, 26, went missing in March 2023 after dropping off the children she shared with Fravel at a Winona daycare. Her body was discovered three months later near Fravel’s family property.

    During Fravel’s sentencing, Kingsbury’s family made emotional victim impact statements. Fravel has maintained he is innocent.

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    Chloe Rosen

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  • The Missing Runaway, the Viral Singer, and the Tesla Trunk in the D4vd Saga

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    About 75 miles from Hollywood, an animated high school science teacher held his phone screen up to his students. He had taught Celeste Rivas Hernandez years ago, he told the class, displaying a photo of himself alongside her. Rivas Hernandez, a 15-year-old girl who was found dead this month in the trunk of an impounded Tesla, had, he added, “been missing since I taught her.”

    The remarks, as displayed in footage obtained by TMZ, were among the latest installments in the trail of breadcrumbs left behind about Rivas Hernandez and D4vd, the 20-year-old Los Angeles singer to whom the Tesla is registered, and a testament to the morbid interest that has accompanied it. After receiving a report of a rotting odor coming from a car in an impound lot near the Hollywood Hills home where D4vd had been staying, authorities identified Rivas Hernandez’s dismembered corpse. On Monday, days after police raided the property, the homeowner told the Daily Mail that D4vd’s manager broke his $20,000-per-month lease.

    A suspect has not been named in the investigation into Rivas Hernandez’s death, and D4vd has not been accused of any wrongdoing. The intrigue surrounding the case has largely centered on the correspondences between Rivas Hernandez and D4vd’s lives. An unreleased Dv4d track appeared online that included lyrics describing how the scent of a girl named Celeste, “with my name tattooed on her chest,” was sticking to the singer’s clothes. The teen had a tattoo reading “Shhh…” on her right index finger, TMZ reported, and D4vd has one in the same location. Footage surfaced of the two of them livestreaming together in the months before she went missing in 2024. (A spokesperson for D4vd said in a statement to NBC News that the singer “has been informed about what’s happened,” and “is fully cooperating with the authorities.”)

    The singer’s blunt self-presentation and motifs, now often taken literally, have stoked public interest in the case. D4vd has brought a casket on stage at performances, made a music video in which one blood-soaked version of his body carries another into a trunk, and, among his many macabre lyrics delivered in a flat affect, sang in his 2022 breakout single “Romantic Homicide,” “I killed you and I didn’t even regret it.”

    D4vd began making music in Houston as a homeschooled teenager. From the start, his output was tied to the social media waters in which he was swimming: He has said he grew up listening only to gospel, and that his mother suggested songwriting as an alternative when YouTube started cracking down on his montages of copyrighted video games. Landing on a wobbly mixture of bedroom pop, indie rock, and R&B, he made his debut on the Billboard Hot 100 after snippets of “Romantic Homicide” found traction on TikTok and soon signed to Interscope Records. By 2025, he was opening for SZA and sharing the front row at an Amiri runway show in Paris with J Balvin and Lucky Blue Smith.

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    Dan Adler

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  • Brother charged with strangling, killing 8 month-old sister in Leesburg; ICE detainer filed – WTOP News

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    An 8-month-old girl died Tuesday after she was strangled in Leesburg and the man charged in her death faces an immigration detainer and additional charges, including murder, police said.

    An 8-month-old girl died Tuesday after she was strangled last week in Leesburg, Virginia, and the man charged in her death faces an immigration detainer and additional charges, including murder, according to police.

    Alvaro Mejia Ayala, now 22, was arrested and charged with strangulation Sept. 17, the day he’s accused of choking his baby sister, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

    Leesburg police are not releasing the child’s identity at the request of the family.

    Officers responded to Hancock Place NE in Leesburg around 10 a.m. on Sept. 17 for a call involving an infant in medical distress. Despite extensive efforts from first responders and medical professionals to save her life, the child died just after midnight on Tuesday.

    Ayala left the scene before officers arrived, according to Leesburg Police Chief Thea Pirnat, but was found several hours later and will face additional charges, including murder. He is currently being held at the county’s detention center.

    “The entire process may take several months and this is considered a very active investigation,” Pirnat said during a news conference Tuesday. “Let me be clear, this was not an accident. A child was murdered in a deliberate act. The Leesburg Police Department and our criminal justice partners are fully committed to ensuring that the person responsible is held accountable to the fullest extent of the law.”

    Police did not release additional details about the circumstances of the child’s death.

    “We will continue to provide information when it is legally and ethically appropriate to do so, but we will not be prematurely releasing details that could compromise the integrity of this investigation or derail the pursuit of justice,” Pirnat said.

    U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has also issued an immigration detainer for Ayala, according to Pirnat, which requests the jail to hold him for 48 hours longer than the time he’d be released so ICE can take him into federal custody.

    In a news release, the Department of Homeland Security said Ayala entered the U.S. with his family in 2016 from El Salvador and that his immigration case was dismissed in October 2024.

    “The death of a child is an unbearable loss, and this one has deeply affected the involved family, our community and every first responder that was called to help,” Pirnat said.

    Ayala is expected in court in November.

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Thomas Robertson

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  • Iowa woman found guilty of killing ex-partner in Minneapolis

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    Minnesota breaks with federal guidance on COVID vaccines, and more headlines



    Minnesota breaks with federal guidance on COVID vaccines, and more headlines

    06:02

    An Iowa woman has been convicted of murder for killing her ex-partner in Minneapolis last year.

    A jury found Margot Lewis, 33, guilty of two counts of second-degree murder on Monday, according to court records. 

    The victim, 35-year-old Liara Tsai, was found dead in the backseat of Lewis’ car after a crash on Interstate 90, just southeast of Rochester, Minnesota, on June 22, 2024. A criminal complaint said Tsai was “wrapped in bedding, a mattress, and covered with a tarp.”

    Tsai’s dog was also found at the scene, and the animal’s microchip led authorities to her Minneapolis residence. Police “encountered a bloody scene” there, according to the complaint.

    The medical examiner’s office later determined Tsai’s cause of death was from a “gaping puncture wound” to her neck, and not from the crash.  

    mpls-dj-killed-pic-photos-duxter-schwab-00-00-2404-1.jpg

    Liara Tsai

    Olivia Anderson


    Tsai’s friends told WCCO she had just moved to Minneapolis from Iowa.  

    “She was so connected with her humanity, and her divinity, and her love,” said friend Levi Lake. “I really grieve that she won’t be here to experience that.”  

    Lewis is also charged in Olmsted County with interference with a dead body or scene of death. She is scheduled to be sentenced on the murder convictions on Nov. 28.


    Domestic Violence Resources: For anonymous, confidential help, people can call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233 or 1-800-787-3224.

    ,

    and

    contributed to this report.

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  • Man charged in New Hampshire country club shooting makes first court appearance

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    NASHUA, N.H. — A man charged in a fatal shooting at a New Hampshire country club where authorities say restaurant patrons acted quickly to stop the gunman made a brief initial court appearance Monday and was ordered to return in early October.

    One person was killed and two others were wounded by gunfire Saturday at Sky Meadow Country Club in Nashua.


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    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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    By PATRICK WHITTLE and HOLLY RAMER – Associated Press

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  • Man charged with murder in killing of teen TikTok star in Pakistan

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    A Pakistani court charged a man on Saturday with murder for shooting a teenage social media influencer outside her home earlier this year after refusing his offer of friendship.

    Judge Mohammad Afzal Majoka in the capital, Islamabad, indicted Umar Hayat for killing 17-year-old Sana Yousuf. Hayat pleaded not guilty.

    Hayat, a 22-year-old TikTok content creator, was arrested in June in the eastern city of Faisalabad. Yousuf’s death drew widespread condemnation.

    Judge Majoka asked Hayat if he had killed Yousuf. Hayat replied that he had not. He also rejected the allegation that he had stolen her mobile phone, a court official told The Associated Press. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media.

    Footage on Pakistan’s private Samaa TV channel showed police leading a handcuffed Hayat to the court.

    Women activists holding posters and photographs of TikTok influencer Sana Yousaf, who was murdered, take part in a demonstration condemning violence against women, in Islamabad on June 5, 2025.

    FAROOQ NAEEM/AFP via Getty Images


    Yousuf, originally from the scenic northern region of Chitral, was known for promoting traditional Chitrali music and dress through her TikTok channel. She also advocated for girls’ education. Hours before her murder, she had posted a birthday celebration photo with friends.

    Police described the killing as a “gruesome and cold-blooded murder,” alleging Hayat killed Yousuf after she repeatedly rejected his proposals.

    Some comments in social media posts sharing the news of Yousuf’s murder suggested it was justified in a society where honour codes dictate how women should behave.

    “You reap what you sow,” said one comment.

    TikTok enjoys immense popularity in Pakistan due to its easy-to-use and visually-led format, with tens of millions of users.  Women have found both audience and income on the app, which is rare in a country where fewer than a quarter of the women participate in the formal economy.

    But it has also faced temporary bans. The government has suspended the platform several times, citing concerns that the app promotes immoral or unlawful content.

    In July, police in Pakistan said a father shot and killed his daughter after she refused to delete her TikTok account.

    Violence against women is pervasive in Pakistan according to the country’s Human Rights Commission, and cases of women being attacked after rejecting marriage proposals are not uncommon.

    In 2021, 27-year-old Noor Mukadam was beheaded by her Pakistani-American boyfriend, Zahir Jaffer, after she rejected his marriage proposal in a case that sparked widespread anger. Jaffer was sentenced to death.

    Agence France-Presse contributed to this report.  

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  • Eviction Over Unpaid Rent Leads To Horrific Discovery Of Four Dead Babies Stashed In Closet & Attic – Perez Hilton

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    [Warning: Potentially Triggering Content]

    A woman in rural Pennsylvania was evicted from her rental home, and when the landlord went inside to clean up, what he found was absolutely horrifying.

    According to multiple local media reports in western Pennsylvania, landlord Brent Flanigan evicted a 39-year-old woman named Jessica Mauthe (pictured above in her mugshot) from her rental home in the tiny town of Cadogan Township, Pennsylvania which is northeast of Pittsburgh. Then, when Flanigan went inside the home to clean it up, he smelled a strong odor coming from a trash bag that was stashed in a closet.

    He went in the closet to investigate, and what he came upon was absolutely horrific: the bag contained a dead baby. Shocked to his core, Flanigan called the cops. They showed up, and things only got worse from there.

    Related: Taylor Swift Terrified Of Very Real ‘Threats’ After Charlie Kirk Murder!

    Cops searched the entire house up and down, and they discovered two more bags in the attic — each of which contained another dead infant, per WTAE News and the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

    Mauthe was tracked down and charged with criminal homicide and abuse of a corpse for the discoveries of three dead babies.

    But then, days later, officials with the Pennsylvania State Police announced one more horrific discovery: a fourth set of infant remains had been found inside the house. That’s right. Mauthe’s former residence was hosting the decaying remains of four deceased children.

    What. The. F**k.

    Per the Post-Gazette, Mauthe allegedly admitted to investigators that she hid the bodies of three of the infants each shortly after giving birth to them in her home.

    In one of the incidents, she gave birth to a baby in the bathroom about six years ago, and then passed out after hearing the baby “whimpering,” per the police report. When she regained consciousness, she claimed the baby was dead, and so she hid its body.

    She reportedly told cops she also gave birth to the two other children in similar circumstances, and put their remains in garbage bags and then tote bags which she placed around the home. Per the Post-Gazette, the police report stated:

    “She could hear the child making several noises. Mauthe removed the child from the toilet, wrapped a towel around the infant’s entire body, where it remained until it stopped making noises.”

    OMG…

    The circumstances surrounding the fourth set of remains that police later uncovered in the home are not yet clear. However, cops say Mauthe never sought medical attention for any of the infants, nor did she notify anybody about their deaths.

    Related: Bryan Kohberger’s Shirtless Selfies After Idaho Murders Clearly Show Hand Wound!

    The woman has two sons, ages 6 and 8, who she shares with her husband — a man who is currently incarcerated. Media reports say the rental home in which the remains were discovered was the childhood home where Mauthe grew up; she took over the lease a few years back after her father died.

    Now, the accused woman faces one count of criminal homicide, one count of involuntary manslaughter, four counts of concealing the death of a child and four counts of abuse of a corpse, according to to state police officials. She’s being held in the Armstrong County Jail while awaiting her next court appearance.

    Here is more on this truly awful story (below):

    Wow. We don’t even know what to say. So, so sad.

    If you have sincere cause to suspect child abuse, call the Childhelp National Child Abuse Hotline at 1-800-4-A-Child or 1-800-422-4453, or go to www.childhelp.org.

    [Image via Armstrong County Jail]

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    Perez Hilton

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  • No ‘loose ends’: San Jose triple homicide stemmed from domestic violence, authorities say

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    SAN JOSE — A man jailed and charged with fatally shooting a woman he was dating, along with her roommate and another man, in a violent episode at a South San Jose apartment, was under police scrutiny after the woman accused him of assaulting her over two days prior to the killings, authorities have revealed in new court filings.

    Joseph Vicencio, 27, of San Jose, was arrested in connection with a shooting that killed three people at an apartment on Chynoweth Avenue on Sept. 16, 2025. His criminal past includes being arrested and accused of opening fire at the San Jose State University library in Sept. 2019. (San Jose Police Dept.) 

    The shooting suspect, 27-year-old Joseph Vicencio, reportedly told an acquaintance that he “couldn’t have any ‘loose ends’ and people talking about him” shortly before he went over to the woman’s apartment early Tuesday and unleashed a torrent of gunfire that ended three lives.

    According to a criminal complaint filed Friday by the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office, Vicencio was charged with three counts of murder in the deaths of Tarrah Lynn Taylor, 27; Jeannessa Caillean Lurie, 24; and Max Chavez Ryan, 27.

    A probable cause affidavit written by San Jose police detectives stated that Taylor was in a romantic relationship with Vicencio, and that Lurie was her roommate. Ryan’s connection to the group was not detailed in the court document.

    The three murder counts each carry maximum sentences of life in prison without the possibility of parole, and are accompanied by nine charging enhancements for allegations including using a gun, dissuading a witness and having prior convictions. Vicencio was also charged with being a felon in possession of a firearm, and for two separate domestic violence assaults alleged to have occurred on Sept. 14 and 15, preceding the Sept. 16 shootings.

    Police investigate a triple homicide in San Jose, Calif., on Tuesday, Sept. 16, 2025. (Shae Hammond/Bay Area News Group)
    Police investigate a triple homicide in San Jose, Calif., on Tuesday, Sept. 16, 2025. (Shae Hammond/Bay Area News Group) 

    Vicencio is being held without bail in the Santa Clara County Main Jail, and was scheduled for arraignment Friday afternoon. He was arrested early Wednesday based on video surveillance images and two witnesses who claimed to know Vicencio and recounted their interactions with him before and after the shootings, the detectives wrote.

    One of the witnesses told police that Vicencio was anxious about being in trouble with the law after he allegedly punched Taylor in the torso on Sept. 15, and the subsequent police response found bruising on her neck indicating that Vicencio choked her the day before. The two reported assaults account for misdemeanor and felony assault charges filed against Vicencio.

    During one conversation with the witness, Vicencio implied that he was going to silence Taylor and Lurie, and after the shootings, Vicencio reportedly used the witness’s computer to “search for information about San Jose murders.”

    A second witness, as described by the detectives, reported getting a call from Vicencio about seven hours after the shootings in which he said “he was in trouble with police and had issues with where he lived and needed help.” The witness claimed to have confronted Vicencio about the killings, prompting Vicencio to reportedly tell the witness “there was an issue with a male at the apartment but he handled it.”

    Gunfire and the sound of a woman screaming prompted a 911 call at 12:26 a.m. Tuesday from the 200 block of Chynoweth Avenue. The police affidavit stated that responding officers went to an apartment building and found Taylor outside “bleeding profusely from multiple gunshots.”

    Officers went inside and found two more victims, Lurie and Ryan. Lurie was pronounced dead at the scene; Taylor and Ryan died later that morning after being taken to a hospital. Police recovered multiple .40 caliber bullet casings from the crime scene.

    The affidavit states that surveillance video from the area recorded someone later identified as Vicencio entering the apartment and fleeing immediately after the gunfire. Vicencio was seen with a distinct satchel that one of the witnesses said concealed a firearm that he carried, and that witness reported that Vicencio was not carrying the satchel after the shootings.

    Ryan worked for the city’s housing department as a member of the Homelessness Response Outreach Team, and was “a valued member of our work family,” according to a Facebook post from the department.

    “His commitment to the people of San Jose, and in particular the most vulnerable among us, exemplified the thoughtful, caring human he was,” the post read. “He will be remembered not only for his professional contributions, but also for his kindness, compassion, and spirit.”

    Lurie graduated from California State University, Monterey Bay in 2024 with degrees in humanities and communications, and she worked as a dog trainer at Bite Club K9 in Monterey, according to her Facebook and LinkedIn pages. She attended Mid-Peninsula High School in Menlo Park, graduating in 2019, according to her LinkedIn page.

    “We love you and the sunshine that surrounded you, and now lights the heavens,” one commenter wrote on her Facebook page Wednesday.

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    Robert Salonga, Caelyn Pender

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  • Man accused of murder after 2 women found dead in Walnut Creek home

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    Walnut Creek police launch homicide investigation after 2 women found dead in home



    Walnut Creek police launch homicide investigation after 2 women found dead in home

    00:53

    Police in Walnut Creek have arrested a man on suspicion of homicide after two women were found dead in a home late Thursday night.

    Around 11:45 p.m., officers were called to a home on Kelobra Court, near Ygnacio Valley Road, on reports of a disturbance with possible gunfire. When police arrived, they found the women deceased inside the home.

    In an update Friday morning, police said a suspect was arrested following the initial investigation. The suspect, identified as 43-year-old Howard Wang of Walnut Creek, was booked into the Martinez Detention Facility on two counts of murder.

    walnut-creek-double-homicide-091925.jpg

    Walnut Creek police on the scene investigating a double homicde at a home on Kelobra Court on Sep. 18, 2025.

    CBS


    According to officers, Wang was known to both women. He is being held without bail.

    Investigators said they do not believe there are any outstanding suspects in the case and that there is no indication of an ongoing threat to public safety.

    Anyone with information is asked to contact the Walnut Creek Police Department at 925-943-5844 or through the department’s anonymous tip line at 925-943-5865.

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    Tim Fang

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  • The Puzzling Death of Susann Sills

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    The Puzzling Death of Susann Sills – CBS News










































    Watch CBS News



    The wife of a fertility doctor is found dead at the bottom of a staircase. Did her dogs play a role in her death or was the scene staged to cover a murder? “48 Hours” correspondent Tracy Smith reports.

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  • Authorities find remains they think are fugitive Travis Decker, accused of killing his 3 daughters in Washington state, officials say

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    Authorities in Washington state have found remains they believe are those of Travis Decker, the fugitive father accused of killing his three young daughters earlier this year before disappearing into the wilderness. 

    The Chelan County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement Thursday night that, “While positive identification has not yet been confirmed, preliminary findings suggest the remains belong to Travis Decker.”

    The 32-year-old Decker, a former Army soldier with extensive survival skills, was accused in May of killing his three daughters, 9-year-old Paityn Decker, 8-year-old Evelyn Decker and 5-year-old Olivia Decker. 

    A search for Decker began on May 30 after the girls’ mother reported that Decker had not returned them on time to her home in Wenatchee, about 100 miles east of Seattle, following a planned visit. 

    Three days later, their bodies were found down an embankment at a campsite in the Cascade Mountains. Their wrists were bound with zip ties, and an autopsy determined the girls’ cause of death was suffocation, authorities said. 

    A search for Decker has been ongoing since then. DNA testing confirmed Decker was the sole suspect in their murders. 

    Photos showing how he may have changed his appearance were released in June, and a reward of up to $20,000 was being offered for information leading to his arrest. 

    Earlier this month, the FBI said it had found bones that might have be Decker but then determined the bones weren’t from a human.

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  • Charlie Kirk shooting suspect charged with murder as prosecutors announce they will seek death penalty

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    (CNN) — PROVO, UTAH — Tyler Robinson, the suspect in the killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, appeared virtually for his first court hearing since he was formally charged with aggravated murder on September 16.

    Judge Tony F. Graf said Tuesday that Tyler Robinson, the suspect in the killing of Charlie Kirk, will remain in custody, without bail.

    “Mr. Robinson at this time, you will remain in custody, without bail,” Graf said.

    Graf said he reviewed Robinson’s financial situation and found that he is “indigent,” meaning he cannot afford legal fees.

    Graf said he was “provisionally” appointing an attorney for Robinson, and that person need to file paperwork about their qualifications to the court before the next hearing.

    Robinson faces seven criminal counts, including aggravated murder.

    The next hearing date for the suspected shooter is set for September 29, 10 a.m. local time (noon ET).

    Earlier Tuesday, Robinson was formally charged with aggravated murder, two counts of obstruction of justice and felony discharge of a firearm causing serious bodily injury, two counts of witness tampering, and commission of a violent offense in the presence of a child. Utah County Attorney Jeff Gray announced the charges at a press conference Tuesday.

    Utah County Attorney General Jeff Gray speaks at a press conference regarding Tyler Robinson, the suspect in the fatal shooting of Charlie Kirk on September 16, 2025 at the Utah County Health & Justice Building in Provo, Utah. Credit: Chet Strange / Getty Images via CNN Newsource

    Gray said he intends to seek the death penalty.

    Gray noted it was the mother of the suspected shooter who identified her son through photos released by authorities.

    Court documents allege that Robinson’s mother, “explained that over the last year or so, Robinson had become more political and had started to lean more to the left – becoming more pro-gay and trans-rights oriented.”

    “She stated that Robinson began to date his roommate, a biological male who was transitioning genders,” court documents filed Tuesday say.

    “This resulted in several discussions with family members, but especially between Robinson and his father, who have very different political views.”

    After Tyler Robinson’s parents became concerned that surveillance images of a suspect that authorities released looked like their son, and that a rifle that police believed was used in Charlie Kirk’s killing “matched a rifle that was given to his son as a gift,” his father called him, Utah County Attorney Jeff Gray said.

    The father contacted his son and asked him to send a picture of the rifle, but Robinson didn’t respond, Gray said. The father subsequently spoke on the phone with his son, who “implied that he planned to take his own life,” Gray said.

    Robinson’s parents were then “able to convince him to meet at their home,” Gray said.

    While talking to his parents at their home, Robinson implied that he shot Kirk, “and stated that he couldn’t go to jail, and just wanted to end it,” Gray said. When Robinson was then asked why he did it, “Robinson explained there is too much evil, and the guy (referring to Charlie Kirk) spreads too much hate,” Gray said, reading from a probable cause statement filed in court.

    Booking photo of Kirk shooting suspect, Tyler Robinson has been released by the Utah Governor’s office. Credit: Utah Governor’s Office via CNN Newsource

    The day of the shooting, Robinson texted his roommate to locate a note he had left which said he had the “opportunity to take out Charlie Kirk,” Gray said.

    “On September 10, 2025, the roommate received a text message from Robinson, which said, ‘Drop what you’re doing, look under my keyboard.’ The roommate looked under the key board and found a note that stated, ‘I had the opportunity to take out Charlie Kirk and I’m going to take it.’ Police found a photograph of this note,” Gray said.

    According to Gray, after reading the text from Robinson, the roommate had responded, “What? You’re joking, right?”

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    Chris Boyette, Michelle Watson and CNN

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  • Suspect in Charlie Kirk killing makes first court appearance

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    Suspect in Charlie Kirk killing makes first court appearance – CBS News










































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    The suspect in Charlie Kirk’s assassination appeared virtually for his first court appearance in Utah on Tuesday. CBS News justice correspondent Scott MacFarlane and former federal prosecutor Scott Fredericksen join with analysis.

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