Ethan Orton Gets Life In Parents Murders

ethan orton

Ethan Orton who plead guilty to the murders of his parents just found out he is going to spend a very long time behind bars

According to court documents Ethan Orton would murder his parents Misty Scott-Slade and Casey Orton in order to take charge of his life. The two victims would be stabbed repeatedly and his mother was also hit with an ax

Ethan Orton would plead guilty to two counts of first degree murder and now he was sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for fifty years

Ethan Orton Case

The Cedar Rapids teen who admitted to killing his parents in 2021 will stay in prison at least until he’s in his sixties.

Ethan Orton was sentenced to life in prison Monday afternoon. He is eligible for parole after 50 years.

Orton pleaded guilty in March to stabbing his parents, Misty Scott-Slade and Casey Orton, to death in their home.

Under Iowa law, first-degree murder means life in prison without the possibility for parole. The exception is for juvenile defendants. Orton was five months away from being 18 at the time of his crime. How long until he would be eligible for parole was the question at the center of Monday’s sentencing.

Both the defense and prosecution called an expert witness to testify to the impact of Orton’s history and his mental capacity at the time of the killings.

Dr. Tracy Thomas, a forensic psychologist, helped the defense paint a picture of Orton as a vulnerable person in an emotionally abusive home. Dr. Thomas detailed what she called a suicide attempt when Orton was 10 or 11 in which he drank bleach. She also outlined what she thought was the impetus for the “breakdown” that led to Orton killing his parents.

“His mother had sent an email while he was at school, and the email essentially said ‘When you turn 18, you’re out of the house. We’re done with you. Plan on being gone,” said Thomas. She went on to say Orton wasn’t able to “rationalize” th e email.

“This offense was the result of, essentially, a complete breakdown,” said Thomas.

However, prosecutors pointed out Orton has not been diagnosed with any major mental illness. They presented a story in which, rather than a breakdown, there was a plan.

“The first conclusion and the entire conclusion was that he was normal,” said Dr. Daniel Tranel, witness for the prosecution. He added Orton “did not meet the criteria for diminished responsibility.”

About Orton’s home life, the state’s witness said it wasn’t “optimal” but added there are those who have it worse.

“I did not see anything profoundly abnormal or severely wrong with his developmental environment,” said Tranel.

Assistant Linn County Attorney Michael Harris added, “He reports that he was not treated well by his parents, but I would ask the court, what teenager truly thinks that they are?”

The defense asked for life with the possibility for parole after ten years, but the judge believed Orton’s age, maturity, and home life weren’t strong mitigating factors.

Both sides’ expert witnesses agreed Ethan Orton is a good candidate for rehabilitation and treatment while in prison.

https://www.kcrg.com/2023/06/06/cedar-rapids-teen-who-murdered-parents-sentenced-life-eligible-parole-after-50-years/

Ethan Orton Teen Killer Murders Parents

Ethan Orton

Ethan Orton was a seventeen year old teen killer from Cedar Rapids Iowa who would murder his parents. According to court documents Ethan Orton thought the best way to be able to take charge of his life was to murder his parents so he would stab Misty Scott-Slade and Casey Orton . When he though his mother was still alive he would take an axe and finish the job.

Ethan Orton would call 911 and told the operator what he had done and officers would soon arrive on the scene. Ethan Orton would be arrested and eventually plead guilty to two counts of first degree murder. Ethan Orton will be sentenced later this month

Ethan Orton More News

A Cedar Rapids teenager accused of stabbing his parents at their home in October 2021 has pled guilty to two counts of first-degree murder.

Court documents say Ethan Alexander Orton killed Misty Scott-Slade and Casey Orton at their home in the 300 block of Carnaby Drive NE. When police arrived at the home, they say they found Orton sitting outside the home covered in blood.

Police say Orton admitted to stabbing and killing them in order to “take charge of his life.” They also say he used an axe to kill his mother when she appeared to have survived the initial stabbing.

Orton was charged with two counts of first-degree murder. His defense initially filed a Motion for Competency Evaluation citing that Orton was suffering from a mental disorder that prevented him from appreciating the charge. After a medical evaluation found Orton competent to stand trial, Orton and his defense team submitted a ‘Notice of Defense of Insanity/Diminish Responsibility to the court in January 2022. The trial was then delayed in February 2022

On Monday, officials announced that Orton had pled guilty to both first-degree murder charges.

There is no sentencing date set at this time.

Ethan Orton pleads guilty to killing parents (kcrg.com)

Ethan Orton Other News

An Iowa teenager pleaded guilty Monday to murder in the deaths of his parents in 2021, using a knife and ax to kill them in an effort to “take charge of his life.”

Ethan Alexander Orton pleaded guilty to first-degree murder in the deaths of his parents Casey Arthur Orton, 42, and Misty Scott-Slade, 41, of Cedar Rapids.

Cedar Rapids police were called about 2 a.m. on Oct. 14, 2021, to check out suspicious noises coming from a home and found the then-17-year-old Orton covered in blood. He told police he used a knife to stab his parents and then used an ax on his mother when she appeared to be alive, according to a criminal complaint.

The case was delayed as defense lawyers argued Orton suffered from a mental disorder and wasn’t competent to stand trial. A judge ultimately ruled he was competent.

Police say Orton admitted to killing his parents as part of a desire to “”take charge of his life,” according to the complaint.

The judge will set a sentencing date for Orton later

Iowa teen pleads guilty to murder in death of his parents (siouxcityjournal.com)

Ethan Orton Charged With Murdering Parents

ethan orton 2022

Seventeen year old Ethan Orton has been charged with two counts of murder for stabbing his parents to death. According to sources this alleged teen killer would stab to death his parents at their Cedar Rapids Iowa home. Casey Arthur Orton, 42, and Misty Scott-Slade, 41, were found deceased in their home back in October 14 2021. Ethan Orton lawyers may be planning an insantity defense which will be difficult after the seventeen year old was found competent to stand trial. If convicted on the murder charges Ethan Orton may spend the rest of his life in prison.

Ethan Orton More News

A Cedar Rapids teen charged with fatally stabbing his parents in October may claim insanity and diminished responsibility at his murder trial set for next month.

Ethan Alexander Orton, 17, charged as an adult with two counts of first-degree murder, was found competent to stand trial last week by a judge following a psychiatric evaluation.

He is accused of fatally stabbing his parents, Casey Arthur Orton, 42, and Misty Scott-Slade, 41, on Oct. 14 at their home in northeast Cedar Rapids.

Orton’s lawyers filed a notice of defense Tuesday, stating he “may rely on the defenses of insanity and diminished responsibility” at his Feb. 8 trial.

A competency evaluation helps a judge determine if a defendant understands the charges against him and if he is able to assist his lawyers with his defense at trial.

An insanity defense is a tougher threshold to meet because a jury must decide if a defendant will be held criminally responsible for his actions.

Guy Cook, a Des Moines lawyer, said the insanity defense under Iowa Law is tough to prove and rarely successful.

The prosecution must first prove the defendant committed the crime and then the burden shifts to the defense to prove the individual was legally insane when he or she committed the crime, he said.

“Simply put, the defendant must prove at the time he committed the crime he did not know right from wrong,” Cook told The Gazette on Wednesday.

According to Iowa code, insanity doesn’t have to exist for any specific length of time before or after a crime. The defendant must prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that insanity is more likely true. This is a lesser burden to prove than beyond a reasonable doubt.

Cook said if a jury finds a defendant not guilty by reason of insanity, the judge commits the person to a state mental institution — the Iowa Medical and Classification Center in Coralville. The commitment continues as long as the person remains a danger to himself or others.

Closely related to the insanity defense is the defense of diminished responsibility, which also is difficult to prove, Cook said. The defense has to prove a defendant was unable to form the specific criminal intent to commit the crime.

“In other words, at the time of the crime, the defendant was unable to form the premeditated, deliberate, specific intent to kill,” Cook said. “Diminished responsibility, even if proven, however, does not entirely relieve the defendant of responsibility for his actions. It only prevents a conviction on first degree murder.”

A jury could find this defendant guilty on a lesser included charge, such as second-degree murder or manslaughter.

“Only a tiny fraction of defendants succeed with such a defense,” Cook pointed out. “Indeed in Iowa, over the years only a scattering of defendants have been successful with these defenses.”

Local prosecutors said they couldn’t recall any recent not-guilty verdicts because of insanity.

Among those who tried were Alexander Kozak, who claimed diminshed capacity, was convicted in Johnson County for killing a woman at the Coralville Mall in 2016 and Nicholas Luerkens, convicted in Linn County for fatally stabbing his ex-girlfriend in a Marion grocery store parking lot in 2015.

On appeal, Luerkens was granted a new trial because the court found the trial judge should have allowed the jury to consider his insanity defense. The trial judge ruled the defense hadn’t submitted sufficient evidence to present the insanity claim to the jury. In 2018, Luerkens pleaded guilty to first-degree murder and is serving a life sentence without parole.

Another defendant who claimed insanity, Greg Davis, was convicted in 2018 of killing his ex-girlfriend and concealing her body in a roll of carpet, but the verdict was overturned on appeal.

The court found the trial judge didn’t give an instruction to the jury regarding Davis’ insanity defense on the first-degree murder charge but did provide the instruction for lesser charges the jurors could consider.

The error allowed the jury to wrongly conclude the insanity defense didn’t apply to the first-degree murder charge, according to the court ruling.

Davis has a new trial set for Aug. 13.

Orton’s trial remains set for Feb. 8, but 6th Judicial District Judge Ian Thornhill said last week he would understand if more time is needed.

Ethan Orton would have to waive his right to trial within 90 days before the trial is rescheduled.

The court proceedings against Orton were temporarily suspended until the competency evaluation was completed.

Cedar Rapids police received a 911 call about 2:10 a.m. Oct. 14 regarding suspicious noises coming from the Orton house at 361 Carnaby Dr. NE, according to a criminal complaint.

Officers said they found the teen soaked in blood outside the home and that Ethan Orton admitted to killing his parents, who were found inside the home. He stabbed both parents with a knife and used an ax to finish killing his mother, he told investigators.

Ethan Orton said he killed them “to take charge of his life,” according to the complaint.

The teen remains in jail under a $2 million cash-only bail. First-degree murder is a life sentence without parole, but because he is a juvenile, he would have the opportunity for parole if convicted.