Rebecca Falcon Teen Killer Murders Man During Robbery

Rebecca Falcon

Rebecca Falcon was fifteen years old when she fatally shot a man during a robbery. According to court documents Rebecca Falcon and Cliffton Gilchrist planned to rob the cab driver but in the middle of the robbery they panicked and the driver was shot and killed. According to Gilchrist Rebecca had the gun and shot the driver. Due to her age at the time of the murder this teen killer was sentenced to life in prison and Gilcrest received the same sentence

Rebecca Falcon 2023 Information

Rebecca Falcon
DC Number:Q03851
Name:FALCON, REBECCA L
Race:HISPANIC
Sex:FEMALE
Birth Date:12/24/1981
Initial Receipt Date:05/20/1999
Current Facility:LOWELL C.I.
Current Custody:CLOSE
Current Release Date:SENTENCED TO LIFE

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Hundreds of people serving life in prison for crimes they committed as teenagers could get a chance at a reduced sentence, after a Florida Supreme Court ruling this month.

The court considered the case of Rebecca Falcon, who was convicted in the shooting death of a Panama City Beach cab driver when she was 15.

Rebecca Falcon’s lawyers say she was abused as a child and started hanging out with the wrong crowd as a teenager in Panama City. One day in 1997, they say Falcon’s boyfriend pushed her to go along with his plan to rob a cab driver. A gun went off in the process, killing 25-year old Richard Phillips.

His daughter, Elizabeth Phillips, says her memories of her dad are hazy. But that November’s events have had a clear effect on her. It’s especially tough, she says, on what would be her dad’s birthday.

“I break down. I just want to curl up in a ball and just be left alone for that day,” Phillips said.

Phillips says Falcon, the girl convicted of her father’s murder, has written letters apologizing. But she’s not sure she forgives her. Now, Falcon’s lawyers are preparing for her new sentencing hearing, where a judge will need to take into account factors including her emotional maturity at the time of the crime. Florida’s mandatory life sentences for teens convicted of murder are no longer constitutional. Phillips says she has mixed feelings about the possibility Rebecca Falcon could go free.

“She did take someone’s life away. He didn’t deserve to have his life taken,” she said. “And another half of me says, ‘She’s been in there since she was 15. She deserves a second chance.’”

Lawyers for juveniles convicted of murder and the state are expected to become quite busy. As many as 300 cases like Rebecca’s, some of them several decades old, are eligible for new sentencing.

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The second and final day of a re-sentencing hearing for Rebecca Falcon is now complete.

Falcon was previously found guilty for shooting and killing 25-year-old Richard Phillips in November of 1997.

She, along with co-defendant Cliffton Gilchrist, was sentenced to life in prison without parole.

A 2012 U.S. Supreme Court ruling is giving Falcon a re-sentencing. Gilchrist is not getting the same chance since he was 18 at the time of the murder.

On Tuesday, her lawyers only had one more witness to call to the stand. A former warden and colonel of two facilities Falcon has served time in, Loretta Sink.

Sink shared her interactions with Falcon over the years, starting in the early 2000s.

A stack of certificates of achievements and a GED Falcon had obtained over the years was also submitted into evidence.

Sink says all the programs Falcon completed were voluntary programs inmates have the option to do but must qualify for.

Falcon’s disciplinary report was also discussed. The document outlined every infraction Falcon has had since being in prison in 1999. Sink says all but one of Falcon’s reports took place in the first five years of her incarceration. The last DR ever have been recorded was in 2008.

While it’s never a complete guarantee, Sink says she believes Falcon deserves some kind of chance at a new life and would be the same person she is now if released.

“I really do feel like that she has taken ownership of everything she’s ever done. Regardless of what her long term situation is and that she’s not going to stop being the person she is today. She has come along way,” she said.

Sink was also asked many questions about Falcon’s mental health and counseling she may have received while in prison. Sink says she did not review the medical records before coming in to testify but also wouldn’t have access to some files due to HIPAA laws.

The counsels will now have until May 4 to submit a written final argument to Judge Brantley Clark. Both counsels will have an oral argument day on May 22 and the final sentencing will take place in July.

https://www.mypanhandle.com/news/local-news/resentence-hearing-for-1997-murder-comes-to-an-end/

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Rebecca Falcon is currently incarcerated at the Lowell Correctional Institute

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Anthony Clark Teen Killer Murders 2 During Robbery

Anthony Clark

Anthony Clark was fourteen years old when he shot and killed two people during a robbery. According to court documents Clark arrange a meet with one of the victims in order to rob him. When the victim showed up with another person Anthony would shoot and kill both of them. Due to his age at the time of the double murder once he was convicted of the double murder this teen killer would be sentenced to sixty years in prison for each of the murders

Anthony Clark 2023 Information

Anthony Clark 2021
ID Photo
DC Number:C90133
Name:CLARK, ANTHONY
Race:WHITE
Sex:MALE
Birth Date:08/29/2000
Initial Receipt Date:11/01/2017
Current Facility:MARTIN C.I.
Current Custody:CLOSE
Current Release Date:04/01/2075

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A West Boynton teen who killed two men — shooting them each in the head and then going shopping at malls — was sentenced Friday to 60 years in prison.

Anthony Clark, now 17, pleaded guilty to two counts of second-degree murder in the deaths of two cousins, Ricky Miner, 23, of Boynton Beach, and Andrew Laudano 21, of West Boynton.

Clark was just 14 years old when he shot and killed them during a robbery committed with two accomplices.

“It was so horrific, I can’t even look at the crime-scene photos,” said Mary Lynn Hougen, holding a framed photograph of her son, Miner. “How could anyone do this to two human beings? How does this happen to a mom?”

Circuit Judge Laura Johnson agreed, “It’s senseless.”

Clark stood beside his attorney, Kai Li Aloe Fouts, while pleading guilty and didn’t make any statement in court. Clark must serve at least 25 years of the sentence, Johnson said.

Co-defendant Reed Albertson, 19, also is expected to resolve his charges with a guilty plea on Wednesday. The third assailant has not been arrested yet, prosecutor Andrew Slater told the court.

The victims were both found on April 7, 2015, with bullet wounds to the head in and near a car parked in the Melrose Park neighborhood off Lyons Road, west of Boynton Beach.

Hougen, who has four other children, said she at first wanted to die after the killing of her “kind, funny, charming … precious little boy.”

But she said she managed to go on, and during Friday’s hearing read her son’s Mother’s Day letter to her that he wrote while in the first grade.

Christian Laudano, younger brother of Andrew Laudano, couldn’t hold back his anger when given a chance to address the court.

“He had a kid, bro,” Laudano said. “He had something to live for. When you get out bro, karma is a mother. Just remember that.”

Sarah Bowers, mother of Andrew Laudano’s now 4-year-old son, lamented the absence of the man in her child’s life.

“Our son will never get to spend any more birthdays or holidays with his dad,” she said.

Prosecutor Slater said Clark gave a “full and complete” confession to the killings, as part of a negotiated plea deal with his attorney.

Clark was arrested eight days after the shootings at Palm Beach International Airport, as he tried to board a flight to St. Louis, according to an arrest report.

Deputies said they found witnesses who claimed Clark admitted wanting to rob Laudano. Investigators said they also learned Clark had a laser-equipped gun that he had allegedly stolen in a vehicle burglary, and there was evidence Clark had gone on a shopping spree at malls in Boynton and Wellington on the day of the killings

Clark told a detective he had dropped out of school and didn’t know how he was going to make money, according to the report. Clark also mentioned during the interview how he saw Laudano with a lot of cash and a gun. The prosecutor said Clark bought marijuana from Laudano in the past.

Investigators said Laudano’s Dodge Charger appeared to be rummaged through, and Laudano was missing a Michael Kors rose-gold colored watch and his iPhone 6, according to the report.

Detectives said Clark had the same watch when he was arrested.

Kelly Neal, Miner’s older sister, told the court she wanted Clark to receive a death sentence, which she recognized wasn’t possible under the law because of his age.

“Take no pity on this man,” she said. “He knew what he was doing.”

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Anthony Clark is currently incarcerated at the Martin Correctional Institute

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Anthony Clark is not scheduled for release until 2075

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Legends. That’s how the families of Andrew Laudano and Ricky Miner wanted everyone in a Palm Beach County courtroom Friday to remember them.

In the moments before Circuit Judge Laura Johnson sentenced the men’s 14-year-old killer to 60 years in prison for gunning them down in a 2015 west Boynton robbery, it was important for their families — especially Laudano’s brothers — to show Anthony Clark that not even his bullets could could break the love and admiration they had for the 21 and 23-year-old larger-than-life personalities who considered each other more family than best friends.

“This was their world, you’re just living in it,” Christian Laudano, Laudano’s younger brother, told Clark, now 17.

“Let him know,” said James Bell, another of Laudano’s brothers.

Andrew Laudano with his son, Andrew Laudano, Jr., shortly before his death. (Family photo)

Clark stared ahead expressionless through most of the commentary, even as the brothers’ grief manifested through dark wishes for what will happen to Clark when he gets to prison, or even worse, when he gets out.

It was Laudano’s money, according to Assistant State Attorney Andrew Slater’s in-court narrative of the case to Johnson Friday, that sparked Clark’s plan to rob and kill Laudano two years ago. The plan, which Slater said Clark hatched with an unnamed accomplice who hasn’t been indicted, was to set up Laudano to meet, then rob and kill both him and whoever happened to be with him at the time.

Clark told investigators that he and the unnamed accomplice used to buy marijuana from Laudano and targeted him because he saw he carried large sums of cash. Slater said Clark bought the murder weapon at school days before the killing, and Reed Albertson, who will be sentenced Wednesday, joined the plot days before it ultimately came to fruition on April 7, 2015 in the 900 Block of Talway Circle in the Melrose Place community west of Boynton Beach.

There, Slater said Clark told him, Albertson and the unnamed accomplice acted as lookouts while Clark shot both Laudano and Minor in the head as they sat in a Dodge Charger, then fired another bullet in Laudano’s head at the encouragement of the unnamed accomplice.

Investigators at the time of Clark’s arrest said the robbery got him $5,000, which they spent partially on a video game system and expensive sneakers he bought on a shopping spree at a mall with friends after he bragged about the killing.

As part of the 60-year plea deal, Clark will serve a mandatory minimum of 25 years in prison, but will be eligible for release after a review of his case then based on new state laws regarding sentencing for juvenile offenders.

Friday’s sentencing brought tears from the mother of Laudano’s 4-year-old son, who remembered the young father teaching his son how to walk only to have his life taken before he could be there for much more.

Ricky Minor with his girlfriend shortly before his death. (Family photo)

For Minor’s mother, Mary Lynn Rogan, the memories were of her son’s loving, protective nature. She told Johnson about how she’d gotten a call from her son’s middle school principal shortly after the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. A group of bullies had beaten up three Pakistani girls in a school bathroom, and when Minor found out, his mother said the principal explained, he responded by personally walking each of the girls to their classes from that day on so that no one would hurt them.

In elementary school, he made a card out of construction paper as a school project for Mother’s Day and explained that he loved his mother because she treated him nice, was always there for him and always fed him — in that order.

“Is your mom special as mine?” Minor wrote in the short essay that Logan read aloud Friday, later adding: “Whenever I get hurt she always makes it better. She always keeps me safe. Don’t you wish you had a mom like mine?”

For Minor’s niece, Lexi “Lexx” Neal, every day brings with it memories of the love and life advice her uncle gave her. Chief among his pearls of wisdom: Keep going.

“He would always say that,” she said. “No matter what happens, whatever you go through, keep going.”

The words have been hard for her to remember at times, and she told Johnson in court Friday that her uncle’s death launched her into a deep depression that separated her from her family and friends, led her to stop wanting to go to school and inflicted emotional pain she still suffers from today.

There was no one in the courtroom for Clark, except for his defense attorney, Kai Li Fouts, who from the start of the case had tried her best to remind everyone both in and out of court that her client, after all, was and is a child.

Minor’s older sister, Kelly Neal, urged Johnson to “take no pity on this man.” And even after Laudano’s brothers’ words led deputies to ask them to leave the courtroom, they stood outside waiting for the sentencing hearing to end and said they weren’t sorry for anything they said.

Their sympathy, they said, had been lost at the sight of the pair of tears Clark had tattooed under his eye after the killings, a symbol made popular in prison culture to signify the number of people a gang member or prisoner has killed.

Christian Laudano said he believed that Clark killed his brother and Minor while playing the role of “gangster.” But the younger brother said he had personally watched Clark’s confession video and said he was “crying like a girl” and also had violated the so-called gangster code to which he ascribed by “snitching” to police about the plot in order to broker the deal.

“My brother, I couldn’t even give you words that could tell you how big a person he was,” Christian Laudano said. “He lived more life in 23 years than most people live in a whole lifetime

https://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/crime–law/double-murder-brings-year-sentence-for-teen-killer/JOwM8TJRHzFUNpIVm7vf0H/

Timothy Chavers Teen Killer Murders Teenager

Timothy Chavers

Timothy Chavers was seventeen years old when he took part in a murder of another teenager. According to court document Timothy and two others lured the victim to a remote location under the pretense of buying drugs. The initial plan was to just to rob the youth however it quickly turned into a fatal shooting. This teen killer would be sentenced to life in prison without parole

Timothy Chavers 2023 Information

timothy chavers 2021 photos
ID Photo
DC Number:P46305
Name:CHAVERS, TIMOTHY P
Race:WHITE
Sex:MALE
Birth Date:01/22/1993
Initial Receipt Date:10/25/2011
Current Facility:WAKULLA C.I.
Current Custody:CLOSE
Current Release Date:SENTENCED TO LIFE

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Timothy Chavers, the man twice convicted of murdering a Fort Walton Beach teenager during a 2010 drug robbery, was re-sentenced Monday afternoon to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Chavers, now 25 years old, is one of six people in Okaloosa County who were sentenced to life in prison as juveniles, and who were granted hearings to re-examine their sentences thanks to a 2014 ruling that said it wasn’t mandatory to sentence juveniles to life if they were convicted of first degree murder.

Chavers’ defense attorney, Todd Early, argued before Okaloosa County Circuit Judge William Stone that there were several mitigating factors that warranted a reduced sentence for Chavers. The minimum sentence Chavers could have received was 40 years in prison.

Instead, Stone re-sentenced him to life, possibly setting a precedent for the four remaining cases to be heard in the coming months.

Chavers, was 17 on March 4, 2010, when he and three other teens lured 17-year-old Christopher Pitcock to the corner of Oakland Circle and Lula Belle Lane in Fort Walton Beach under the pretense of buying marijuana from him. They actually planned to steal Pitcock’s marijuana, according to prosecutors.

During the meeting, Timothy fatally shot Pitcock in the side with a .357 Magnum as Pitcock sat in his Chevrolet Blazer.

Chavers and 16-year-olds Tyree Rashand Washington, Kyle Markeith Walling and Jonathan Lee Louviere were arrested in a matter of days. They were all charged with first degree murder.

Washington and Walling were convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to life in prison without parole. Louviere pleaded no contest to second degree murder as an accomplice and was sentenced to 15 years.

Walling had a hearing in November 2017, but his new sentence has not yet been determined. Washington’s hearing will be held in October.

Chavers was convicted of first degree murder and attempted robbery at his 2011 trial and was also given life in prison without parole. His conviction was overturned in 2013 when an appeals court found that his Miranda Rights were violated during his arrest and jury instructions given at his trial were inadequate.

Timothy Chavers was convicted again in 2014, but wasn’t given a new sentence pending his hearing after the 2014 juvenile sentencing ruling.

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Timothy Chavers is currently incarcerated at the Wakulla Correctional Institute

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Timothy Chavers is serving life without parole

Nathaniel Brazill Teen Killer Murders Teacher

Nathaniel Brazill

Nathaniel Brazill was just thirteen years old when he fatally shot his teacher. According to court documents Nathaniel would return to his Florida school after being sent home early for throwing a water balloon at a teacher. Brazill would walk up to the teacher and open fire killing the school teacher. At court this teen killer would be found guilty and would be sentenced to twenty eight years in prison. Nathaniel is scheduled to be released from prison in 2028

Nathaniel Brazill 2023 Information

Nathaniel Brazill 2021 photos
ID Photo
DC Number:W16443
Name:BRAZILL, NATHANIEL R
Race:BLACK
Sex:MALE
Birth Date:09/22/1986
Initial Receipt Date:08/02/2001
Current Facility:Wakulla Annex
Current Custody:MINIMUM
Current Release Date:05/18/2028

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Nathaniel Brazill’s mother didn’t know whether to cry or smile the moment her teenage son became a convicted murderer but dodged a mandatory life sentence.

Polly Powell said she went numb when the jury’s verdict was read last week as she sat among friends and family in a Palm Beach County courtroom.

“My heart just got still,” she said late Wednesday afternoon, speaking publicly for the first time since the verdict of second-degree murder.

With the trial over, Powell says that she now prays that Palm Beach County Circuit Judge Richard Wennet will be lenient in sentencing him and that one day Lake Worth Middle School teacher Barry Grunow’s family can forgive her 14-year-old son.

“Unless [the Grunows] are forgiving in their hearts, it’s going to be hard to get over this hump in their lives,” she said in a half-hour interview with WPTV-Ch. 5 reporter Cynthia Demos.

Brazill shot Grunow last May 26 — the final day of school — when he took a stolen .25-caliber semiautomatic handgun to campus after being suspended earlier in the day for throwing water balloons.

Prosecutors argued that the teen intentionally shot Grunow, 35, and deserved to be convicted of first-degree murder, which carries a mandatory life sentence. Brazill’s attorneys pushed for a manslaughter conviction, arguing that the then-13-year-old accidentally fired the gun while he was trying to scare Grunow into letting him talk to two girls inside the teacher’s classroom.

The May 16 verdict fell in the middle. Prosecutors say Brazill now faces between 25 years and life in prison under the state’s 10-20-Life law dealing with crimes involving guns, but the teen’s attorneys will argue that the statute doesn’t apply in the teen’s case. If the defense attorneys are successful, Wennet could sentence the teen to less than the 22-year minimum recommended by state sentencing guidelines.

Time and time again during Wednesday’s interview at her home, Powell came back to a single point — her son is a child who did something wrong but deserves a chance at having a life.

She said that when she visited her son a few days after the verdict, he was all right, but they avoided talking about the decision. She said that this Friday, though, she will have “a one-on-one, hard talk about what’s next.”

Powell said jail has been a tough experience for her son — something she blames for his lack of emotion when he testified during his trial. When he first got there, a group of inmates gave him a hard time, and he’s been doing his best to survive ever since, she said.

“When you’re in a lion cage, you have to be a lion,” she said.

Powell said she can’t put her finger on what went wrong — what prompted her son to steal the gun from the family friend’s dresser. She said she has never talked to her son about shooting his teacher.

Powell said that she used to search her son’s room but hadn’t in the months leading up to the shooting because she was struggling with breast cancer.

“I did random searches because I know there are drugs in the area,” she said. “Nowadays any mother would be crazy not to [do searches].”

Two of Grunow’s older brothers have said they would like Brazill to receive a life sentence, saying the teen clearly meant to kill their brother when he cocked the loaded gun and pointed it at the teacher’s head.

“As far as I’m concerned, a life sentence is getting off easy,” said Kurt Grunow, one of Barry Grunow’s brothers, before the verdict. “His mom can go visit him and talk to him in jail. We can’t go visit Barry. We can’t go see Barry.”

But Powell said she knows in her heart that her son told the truth when he testified the shooting was an accident.

And she said she looks forward to the day when she will be reunited with her son. She admits that as positive as she tries to be, she often cries herself to sleep.

“And then in the morning, it’s another day,” she said.

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What was I thinking? What was I thinking?”

Nathaniel Brazill, then 13, sobbed those words to detectives on the afternoon of Friday, May 26, 2000.

The former honor student, now 33, has been in Florida’s prison system for about two-thirds of his life.

In two years, he’ll be the age Barry Grunow was when Brazill shot him in the face in the doorway of his Lake Worth Middle School classroom near the end of the last day of school.

“We all miss him,” Grunow’s brother Kurt said May 5. “A lot. To this day.”

Palm Beach County hasn’t forgotten Barry Grunow in the 20 years since his death. The gymnasium at Lake Worth Middle has been named for Grunow, a onetime basketball standout. A scholarship fund has distributed a total of nearly $250,000 to hundreds of students in his name.

His son and daughter, now adults, grew up in the area without him. His widow, known for being private, took time over the years to lecture students as a “safe school ambassador.”

“The loved ones we grieve for are still around,” Pam Grunow said at the 2001 dedication of a butterfly garden at Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton, Barry’s alma mater. He loved butterflies.

“We can make good out of bad,” she said, “if we want to.”

Brazill, one of the youngest people charged with murder in Palm Beach County, is set to get out of state prison in eight years, when he’s 41.

He agreed to a Palm Beach Post interview this month but, because of the coronavirus lockdown, was able only to answer questions by email.

“Twenty years ago, I was a 13-year-old kid recognized by law as being too immature and too irresponsible to drive a car, get married, join the military, sign a contract, see a rated ‘R’ movie, or vote,” Brazill wrote from prison. “Today, I am a 33-year-old man, a positive influence among my peers, and a leader within the prison community.”

Pam Grunow, who still lives in Palm Beach County, declined an interview and asked for privacy for her and children, Sam and Lee-Anne, now in their 20s.

She did say in an email about the Barry Grunow Scholarship, “We are happy knowing that so many young people are benefiting,” adding, “this allows Barry’s goals and values to continue through others.”

Barry Grunow was a Detroit-area native whose father died when he was young. He grew up in the working-class Cabana Colony neighborhood near Palm Beach Gardens. At 6-foot-3, with a decent jump shot, he’d earned all-conference basketball honors at Jupiter High.

While he was a freshman at Florida Atlantic University, The Post interviewed him for a 1986 Labor Day weekend story about people’s worst jobs. He’d spent two weeks over the summer as a convenience-store clerk before he’d quit.

“You’re there for eight hours,” he said, “and any minute a killer could come in and gun me between the eyes.”

He finished at FAU In 1987 and was hired to teach English at Loggers’ Run Middle School west of Boca Raton. He already had been dating Pamela Hlawka, a former special-education teacher, for two years, and the two married in 1991. They would have two children and live in a home on North O Street in Lake Worth. It had a basketball net.

In 1995, Barry transferred from the highly rated Loggers’ Run to the struggling Lake Worth Middle. It was more challenging, but he was up to it. And it was just 3 miles from the Grunow home.

One of the kids in his Language Arts class was Nate Brazill.

Grunow had encouraged Brazill when others mocked his zeal for study, which earned him A’s and B’s. He dreamed of becoming a U.S. Secret Service agent.

Brazill lived a little closer to the school than Grunow, about 2½ miles, in an apartment with his mother, Polly Ann Powell, a 2-year-old sister and Powell’s husband. Powell was an assistant food service director at a retirement home. Nathaniel’s father lived in Daytona Beach and sent the family $50 a week.

On the morning of May 26, Polly already was at work when Nathaniel got to the bus stop at 8:30 a.m. He clutched a small bouquet of orange and white blossoms, with a silver balloon, which he would give to a girl he liked just before classes started at 9:15 a.m. Hidden in his backpack: water balloons. It was, after all, the last day of school.

After attending Grunow’s class and having lunch, Brazill went to band, where he played tuba. After class, he slipped into a restroom and filled water balloons. About a dozen students then sparked a fight. They scattered when a counselor ran up. All, that is, but a 13-year-old girl and Nate Brazill.

Busted, they were sent home.

The girl later would say that at the school gate, Brazill told her he planned to come back and shoot the counselor, saying, “Just watch. I’ll be all over the news.”

The previous weekend, he’d visited the Boynton Beach home of a man he considered an unofficial grandfather. The man kept a .25-caliber Raven semiautomatic handgun in a tin box in a drawer, and loose bullets in a separate drawer. Nate had pilfered both.

At his apartment, Brazill retrieved his bicycle, put the gun in his pocket and headed back to school. A campus police officer saw him racing down a fire lane but couldn’t catch up.

Inside, Brazill went looking for the girl to whom he’d given the flowers, as well as her friend. At this time of day, 3:25 p.m., they’d be in Room 301, Barry Grunow’s class.

Security cameras — no audio — capture Grunow meeting Brazill at the door and stepping out into the hallway. Grunow likely did not know he’d been sent home for the day and the rest of the school year.

He likely had asked Brazill for a hall pass. Then he told Brazill he couldn’t see the girls.

An hour later, Brazill would tell investigators that Grunow “was laughing. And that made me mad.”

Brazill pulled out the gun.

“I was like shaking a lot,” he’d say later. “I didn’t know what was going to happen if I would have dropped it. And so it just all went from there.”

Students inside heard Grunow say, “Stop pointing that gun at me, Nate.”

Marc Ariot, a 14-year-old who was in the hall, would say later, “I heard a big pop.”

Grunow dropped in front of a row of lockers. All Brazill could do was curse.

Everybody came running out of class. They were shouting, ‘He shot Mr. Grunow,’ ” Ariot would say. “I saw him laying there in a pool of blood. . . . I knew there was nothing I could do for him.”

John James, a math teacher who’d taught Brazill earlier in the year, stepped out into the hallway. Brazill waved the gun. He said, “Don’t bother me, Mr. James!”

James threw up his palms and backed into his classroom.

Outside, Brazill found his bike gone. He raced across campus, jumped a fence and was running down the street when a police car pulled up. He stopped and walked over. He told the officer, “I shot somebody.”

Polly Ann Powell got home at 3:30 and was surprised to find her son not there. One-half hour later, her sister called. Nathaniel had been arrested.

Twenty minutes later, students at Lake Worth Middle were sent home. Barry Grunow already was dead.

Inside his now-empty classroom, notebooks, purses, and homework had been left behind as frantic students had fled. On Grunow’s desk were a paperweight, a half-finished bag of jelly beans and a worn brown briefcase. On the wall, a sign said, “Welcome to Mr. Grunow’s Class.”

Ben Marlin, then the Palm Beach County schools superintendent, drove to the Grunow home. He said later that Pam kept asking “Why? Why?”

In police video from hours after the shooting, Nathaniel Brazill asked detectives how Grunow was doing. They told him his teacher had died. Brazill broke down and sobbed.

Later, Polly Powell came into the interrogation room and Brazill began to weep and shake. His mother wiped the tears from her boy’s face.

“If I taught you anything,” she said, “didn’t I teach you to think first?”

Barry Grunow’s memorial service would draw about 1,600 people to Good Shepherd United Methodist Church on Military Trail near West Palm Beach.

Many of them were seventh-graders, still at an age where they shouldn’t be expected to tackle a subject as profound as violent death, especially one at their school. But it had been just a year since the mass shooting at Colorado’s Columbine High.

“There’s just been too many of these,” Bob Chase, the president of the National Education Association, told Grunow’s mourners.

Six days after the shooting, a sobbing Polly Powell met with reporters at the Palm Beach County Public Defender’s Office. She said, “I just ask myself, ‘Is it something that I missed?’ ”

How does a 13-year-old do such a thing?

“Because he was 13. That’s what nobody seems to accept,” Robert Udell, who defended Brazill in court, recalled April 28 from Jensen Beach in Martin County.

He called Brazill “one of the finest young men I ever met in 30 years of practice.” But, he said, his client “did a very stupid thing.”

Udell sticks to the argument that Brazill brought the gun to school just to intimidate people, and killed Grunow by accident.

Then-Palm Beach County State Attorney Barry Krischer had opted to charge the 13-year-old as an adult.

In the year before he went to trial, Nathaniel Brazill had grown 4 inches and bulked up, morphing from a baby-faced kid to a young man. At trial, prosecutors said he showed little remorse. They said he had admitted pulling back the slide on the gun, which they argued made this no accident.

A conviction of first-degree, premeditated murder meant a life sentence. Manslaughter, the accidental result of recklessly pointing a gun, had a maximum of 15 years. The jury convicted Brazill of second-degree murder. He was sentenced to 28 years.

Pam Grunow sued the pawn shop that sold the pistol, as well as Brazill’s “grandfather” and the Palm Beach County School Board. Cases were settled out of court for more than $1 million.

She also sued the Broward County company that made the gun and won a $1.2 million judgment. An appeals court threw it out, saying the gun was anything but defective

The same year Polly Powell’s son killed his teacher, she learned she had breast cancer. In 2003, she would go, with other parents of children who’d committed murder, to the Vatican to try to change U.S. attitudes about prosecuting teenagers as adults.

Cancer took her life in 2008. She was 43.

“It compounded my pain,” Brazill said this month in an email to The Post, “that I was not permitted to bury her which was my duty as her only son and eldest child.

In prison, Brazill has earned his GED and law-clerk and paralegal certifications. He hopes to earn a law degree. He’s filed seven lawsuits and 500 administrative complaints against the prison system. One, filed in July 2011 alleging he was punished for retaliation, was settled.

Prison records show 15 disciplinary actions, most for minor offenses such as lying or disrespect, or violations of telephone or mail privileges, although he was cited for fighting in 2001, for having a weapon in 2005 and for assault in 2015. He admits only to the fighting charge and says the others were fabricated.

Over the years, Brazill has sought clemency and early release without success.

In 2010, on the 10th anniversary of Barry Grunow’s death, he sat down with a Post reporter at a state prison in Okeechobee County.

“That wasn’t clear thinking. I personally don’t know what to call it. Stupidity,” he said. “I had no intent to harm Mr. Grunow.”.

He said he was not the person he had been that day. He said, “I am a good person and I will do good.”

Brazill now is at a minimum-security work camp about 60 miles northwest of Tallahassee.

“I refuse to allow what I did, what I didn’t do, or what I should have did, affect what I’m about to do,” he said in mid-May. “I can’t focus on future years if I’m stuck on past years.”

He said he already has petitioned State Sen. Bobby Powell, D-Riviera Beach, to let him attend the funeral of his now 94-year-old maternal grandmother when she dies.

“I have told her,” Brazill said of his grandmother, “that she has to live to be 115 so that she can see me become the first lawyer in our family.”

Powell said May 18 he’s been “amazed” by Brazill’s attitude, and while he acknowledged the tragedy of Grunow’s death, he said, “No one is the worst thing that they have ever done.”

Soon after the shooting, the Barry Grunow Memorial Scholarship was created, seeded by leftover campaign money from then-School Board member Jody Gleason and County Commissioner Warren Newell.

For five years, it drew support from a 3-on-3 basketball tournament at Grunow’s Jupiter High, run by his lifelong friend Garth Rosenkrance and others.

“We just thought it would be a great way to honor him,” he said.

In 2011, MaryAnne Hedrick, who taught physical education at Lake Worth Middle, started a memorial golf tournament. It averaged $15,000 a year. Hedrick, paralyzed in a 1997 car crash, also became an advocate for accessibility. She died last year at just 62, leaving the golf event without an organizer.

“We know that she’s not replaceable,” financial adviser Michael Woods, who helps run the scholarship fund, said April 29. “But we’d like to see somebody come in and continue the legacy.”

In two decades, the fund has distributed $233,250 to 143 public, private and home-schooled students.

Lorraine C. Przybylski of Santaluces High was a first-year recipient. She has taught now for 15 years and is at Rolling Green Elementary in Boynton Beach.

“I’m thankful every day that this is what we do,” Lorraine — now Lorraine Sotelo — said May 5. ’Even though his life ended, he passed on this beautiful thing that continues to give back.”

One day in April of this year, Garth Rosenkrance’s mother texted him a photo she had found in an old album. She was on the sidelines of a flag football game.

Beside her: a young Barry Grunow.

https://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/20200521/teen-teacher-gun-2000-school-shooting-staggered-palm-beach-county

Nathaniel Brazill FAQ

Nathaniel Brazill Now

Nathaniel Brazill is currently incarcerated at the Jackson Correctional Institute

Nathaniel Brazill Release Date

Nathaniel Brazill current release date is in 2028

Hayley Bowden Teen Killer Murders Elderly Woman

Hayley Bowden

Hayley Bowden was sixteen when she murdered an elderly woman. According to court documents Hayley and her boyfriend were staying in a home without permission, when the victim found them instead of leaving the couple would stab the man repeatedly causing his death and attempted to burn the house down. Hayley and her boyfriend would steal his truck which was recovered in a pond. The two would eventually be arrested and found guilty on the robbery and murder charges. Due to her age the teen killer was sentenced to forty years in prison

Hayley Bowden 2023 Information

hayley bowden 2021 photos
ID Photo
DC Number:P57250
Name:BOWDEN, HAYLEY N
Race:WHITE
Sex:FEMALE
Birth Date:04/24/1996
Initial Receipt Date:11/02/2016
Current Facility:LOWELL ANNEX
Current Custody:CLOSE
Current Release Date:06/28/2051

Hayley Bowden Other News

A teenager who stabbed an elderly man in Walton County a couple of years ago finally plead before the court Tuesday.

According to State Attorney Bill Eddins, Hayley accepted an open plea for First Degree Premeditated Murder and/or Felony Murder along with other charges on October 6th in lieu of taking her case to trial.

She could face life in prison when sentenced on January 19, 2016.

Bowden stabbed 77-year-old Arthur Anderson after he discovered that she and her boyfriend Crispin Ramirez were living in a DeFuniak Springs home for which he was the caretaker.

According to the state attorney’s office, Bowden then collected several items from the residence and loaded them into one of Anderson’s vehicles while Ramirez set fire to the house and his other automobiles.

Officials say the two were later apprehended by the Walton County Sheriff’s Office but not before Ramirez threatened deputies and exploded homemade fire bombs to resist arrest. We are told Bowden fled into the woods.

The state attorney’s office says Bowden confessed to all the crimes she was charged with after being arrested.

Ramirez made a deal with the state back in September 2014, to avoid the death penalty. He plead guilty to First Degree Murder and will spend the rest of his life behind bars.

Hayley Bowden More News

Hayley Bowden, who at the age of 16 participated in the 2013 killing of elderly Mossy Head resident Arthur Anderson, was sentenced Tuesday to 40 years in prison.

Circuit Court Judge Kelvin Wells ordered Bowden to serve 40 years on one count of felony murder, 40 years on a count of burglary with assault and five years for grand theft.

The sentences will be served concurrently, however, and Bowden, by virtue of her age, will be eligible in 25 years for a review of her sentence, said Assistant State Attorney Josh Mitchell, who represented the state at Tuesday’s sentencing hearing.

Bowden’s boyfriend at the time of the crime, then 22-year-old Crispin Ramirez, was sentenced to life in prison in September of 2014 for his role in the Anderson killing.

“The citizens of Walton County are going to be safer for the next 40 years,” Mitchell said after Tuesday’s hearing. “I think Mr. Ramirez and Ms. Bowden posed a great risk to the citizens of Walton County, as evidenced by the crime spree they went on in 2013.”

Anderson was a caretaker for a home on West Juniper Avenue in Mossy Head on Jan. 24, 2013, when he confronted Bowden and Ramirez and was stabbed to death, according to news reports.

Bowden had run away from home and she and Ramirez had taken up residence in the home Anderson was looking after.

Both Bowden and Ramirez “participated and contributed to the death of Mr. Anderson” by repeatedly stabbing him, Mitchell told the court last year when Bowden agreed to plead guilty.

Walton County deputies were unaware Bowden and Ramirez had killed Anderson when they originally encountered the two Jan. 24. They were looking for a runaway, but arrested the pair when Ramirez threatened officers with a knife, reports said.

Suspicions rose when Anderson’s truck was found in a pond near where the stabbing took place.

Bowden and Ramirez had stolen Anderson’s vehicle and also attempted to burn down the home where they’d left his body.

One reason for the delays in sentencing Bowden was that her attorneys had filed motions calling the defendant’s competency into question.

Judge Wells ultimately ruled Bowden competent to stand trial, according to State Attorney Bill Eddins.

“We’ve been back and forth over the last year trying to get this resolved,” Mitchell said

https://www.nwfdailynews.com/news/20160927/teen-killer-sentenced-to-40-years-in-prison

Hayley Bowden Other News

teenage runaway and her boyfriend are accused of murdering a 77-year-old Walton County man Thursday night.

The suspects and the victim are all from Walton County’s Mossy Head community.

Walton County Sheriff Michael Adkinson announced the charges early Friday afternoon, saying that the two had already been tracked down by the time the murder came to light. After 16-year-old Haley Nicole Bowden had been reported as a runaway, a tip led deputies and tracking dogs to a home in the Mossy Head Community. They found her there with 22-year-old Chrispen Ramirez on Thursday at a dwelling on Eagles Way. When officers approached, Bowden and Ramirez ran away, officials said. K-9 units were put on their trail and tracked the two down.

Ramirez was armed with knives at the scene and threatened the lives of deputies, authorities reported in a press release about the chain of events leading to the arrests of Bowden and Ramirez and the charges against them. Deputies were able to subdue Ramirez and took him to jail, along with Bowden, on various charges related to that encounter. At that point, Ramirez was charged with interference with child custody and assault on a law enforcement officer. Bowden was charged at that point with resisting an officer without violence.

But officials would soon level more serious charges against them.

Around the same time they were being processed into the jail, other events were unfolding elsewhere. Deputies had been sent to Beaver Dam Road to investigate a trespass complaint. The caller told authorities that someone had come onto private property and abandoned a vehicle there.

The car was found partially submerged in water, with the tag missing.

Officers identified the owner of the vehicle as 77-year-old Arthur Gerald Anderson and went looking for him.

During the course of their search, his family members told investigators that they hadn’t seen him in a few days. Deputies found Anderson’s body a short time later at a location not far from where the vehicle had been found.

“Further investigation revealed Bowden and Rameriz murdered Anderson after he confronted them for entering a residence on West Juniper Avenue he was a caretaker of,” the press release stated. “The couple then attempted to burn the residence, stole Anderson’s vehicle, and dumped it later.”

In connection to the Anderson death, Ramirez and Bowden have each been charged with arson and an open count of murder.

The investigation is ongoing.

https://dothaneagle.com/jcfloridan/news/crime_courts/murder-in-walton-county-teen-runaway-boyfriend-accused/article_ae866fb6-cfc7-527d-b1bb-01d6032d782f.html

Hayley Bowden FAQ

Hayley Bowden Now

Hayley Bowden is currently incarcerated at the Lowell Annex in Florida

Hayley Bowden Release Date

Hayley Bowden is not eligible for release until 2051