Carlos Quevedo Teen Killer Murders Clerk During Robbery

Carlos Quevedo

Carlos Quevedo was a seventeen year old from South Dakota who would murder a store clerk during a robbery. According to court documents when Carlos Quevedo entered the store and was caught stealing beer he would attack the clerk and fatally stabbed the employee to death. This teen killer was arrested and convicted of the murder and sentenced to ninety years in prison and must serve forty five years before he is eligible for parole

Carlos Quevedo 2023 Information

carlos quevedo 2021

Age21

Race Native American

Gender Male Hair Color Black Eye Color Brown

Height 5′ 9″ Weight 170 lbs.

Alias(es) helpinfo

Quevedo, Carlos Christopher

DOC Number helpinfo#50169

Current Facility helpinfoSouth Dakota State Penitentiary

Carlos Quevedo More News

A teen who murdered a Rapid City store clerk last year was sentenced Thursday to 90 years in prison at the end of an emotional, daylong hearing.

Carlos Quevedo, 18, showed no noticeable reaction upon hearing his sentence. Quevedo earlier apologized to the victim’s family and told the court he would accept his punishment for repeatedly stabbing 45-year-old Kasie Lord during a beer theft at the Loaf ‘N Jug on Mount Rushmore Road.

Quevedo said he couldn’t remember the attack, having blacked out after ingesting a mixture of vodka, marijuana, cough tablets and soda laced with cough syrup. He was then 17 years old, just finished high school and was planning to join the Air Force.

His crime, second-degree murder, carries a penalty of life in prison without parole, but the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2012 that the penalty can’t be applied to juvenile offenders.

In a hearing that lasted seven hours and involved a dozen witnesses, Pennington County State’s Attorney Mark Vargo argued for a prison term of 100 years; defense attorney Randy Connelly asked for 40 to 45 years.

Judge Heidi Linngren, of the 7th Circuit Court, cited points that both sides made before pronouncing Quevedo’s sentence around 4:45 p.m. Thursday.

Quevedo decided to start stabbing Lord in the back while she was trying to wrench away a case of beer from Cody Grady, Quevedo’s companion at the Loaf ‘N Jug that early morning of Jan. 18, 2017. Grady was sentenced Wednesday to 7-1/2 years for robbery. 

The court heard Lord telling Quevedo, in a 911 call she placed when the robbery started: “He (Grady) got the beer. Stop it.” 

Using expletives, he told Lord to shut up — a phrase the judge said Quevedo heard his dad tell his mom when beating her up. 

When Lord backed out of the store, Quevedo decided to follow her till they both disappeared from the view of security cameras. The video showing the robbery and assault was played in court Thursday, eliciting tears from family members of both Quevedo and Lord. 

Police found her lying in the store parking lot, gasping for air and bleeding out. Her body bore 38 stab wounds, excluding defensive-type injuries in her hands.

From the testimony of Quevedo’s mother, Alisia Quevedo, the public learned for the first time Thursday the dysfunction that characterized his childhood. 

His mom and dad used meth on a weekly basis. His dad was in and out of jail on drug violations. He watched police arrest his parents at home. His dad routinely abused his mom, including holding a gun to her head, and saw her with bruises and broken bones. He had to take care of his three younger siblings. 

“I’m so sorry … realized that I’ve been high his whole life,” Alisia Quevedo said from the stand in a testimony punctuated by sobs. “Now I just think that I’m the most horrible person ever.”

Did Quevedo murder Lord because he was under the influence of alcohol and drugs – including cough medicine known to affect short-term memory and trigger hallucinations? Or, the judge asked, because he has known nothing but violence all his life?

Ultimately, Linngren said, she has to protect the community from the level of violence Quevedo has shown he is capable of: killing an innocent person.

“There is no way to predict his actions,” Linngren said. “I have a responsibility to the public to make sure that does not happen again.”

Quevedo will be eligible to apply for parole at age 62, after serving half of his sentence. This would be 45 years, which Linngren said was equivalent to Lord’s age at her death.

As people began leaving the Pennington County Courthouse before its doors shut at 5 p.m., Alisia Quevedo’s wails and sobs filtered down from the third floor.

https://rapidcityjournal.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/year-old-gets-years-in-convenience-store-clerk-killing/article_a491264e-f2e1-5ac8-8d9c-1239f372aa87.html

Carlos Quevedo Other News

An inmate who committed murder at the age of 17 has been denied a shorter prison sentence.

Carlos Quevedo stabbed a Rapid City convenience store clerk to death during a robbery in January 2017.

He appealed his 90-year sentence to the South Dakota Supreme Court.

In an opinion made public on Thursday, July 23, the high court upheld the sentence that allows Quevedo a chance at parole when he’s 62.

Frequently Asked Questions

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Carlos Quevedo 2021

Carlos Quevedo is currently incarcerated at the South Dakota State Penitentiary

Carlos Quevedo Release Date

Carlos Quevedo is first eligible for parole in 2061

Maricela Diaz Teen Killer Murders Teen In South Dakota

Maricela Diaz Teen Killer

Maricela Diaz was fifteen years old when she helped murder another teenage girl in South Dakota. According to court documents Maricela Diaz and Alexander Salgado would lure the victim to a remote location where the sixteen year old victim was stabbed repeatedly, placed inside of a vehicle and set on fire. Maricela Diaz would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to eighty years in prison. This teen killer has appealed her sentence

Marciela Diaz 2023 Information

Age 28

Race Hispanic or Latino

Gender Female

Hair Color Brown

Eye Color Brown

Height 4′ 11″

Weight 115 lbs.

Location South Dakota Women’s Prison

Maricela Diaz Other News

Maricela Diaz was barely a teenager when she helped murder another teenage girl. Now, that decision could cost her 80 years of her life.

In January, a jury found Maricela Diaz guilty on all charges relating to the 2009 death of a Jasmine Guevara. Friday, a judge sentenced Diaz to 80 years in prison for first degree murder and 50 years for aggravated assault, which will be served concurrently.

The sentencing in Alexandria took most of the day, where prosecutors held up a picture of Guevara, then a picture of her burned body after her death. A short time later, 20-year-year-old Maricela Diaz learned her fate.

“I will be sad for the rest of my life,” said Guevara’s mother Ada Morales.

Nearly five and a half years after the 16-year-old’s death, her mother and sister spoke about the things Jasmine will never experience.

“I wanted her to see the life, the beautiful life that she took away,” said Jasmine’s sister Ada Guevara.

Guevara says no words can describe the hurt, pain and trauma her family has endured. She described her younger sister as the first person to lend a hand, just as she did to Alexander Salgado and Diaz when they first arrived in Mitchell.

Guevara said, “This is it. This was our last chance. This is all we get. I was just trying to express. I had just been trying to express what had been piling up for the last five years.”

On Nov. 10, 2009, Maricela Diaz, who was 15 at the time, and Salgado, lured Jasmine to a remote site near Mitchell. She was stabbed and left for dead in the trunk of a burning car. Before Diaz was sentenced, she told the victim’s family she hopes they will be able to forgive her for her role in Jasmine’s death.

In one of the rare moments that we’ve seen her cry, she said, “I ask you, your honor, please have mercy on me.”

“It’s truly hard to say what Maricela Diaz feels or what she thinks. Only she can say those things,” said Guevara.

While the judge recognized that Maricela Diaz has now been incarcerated for a fourth of her life and has since gotten her GED, the judge said her crime crossed the bounds of all human decency. For that, she will serve at least 40 years behind bars.

Morales said, “I don’t know if any sentence will be enough, but I don’t know about for everybody, but it’s fair enough.”

The defense said Maricela Diaz wanted the chance to raise her young daughter. They asked that she be sentenced to 15 years in prison. The judge says he set the price for taking Jamine’s life very, very high.

Salgado pleaded guilty to 2nd-degree murder in august of 2010, after accepting a plea deal. He is now serving a life sentence.

Maricela Diaz More News

A 16-year-old girl accused of murdering a fellow 16-year-old Mitchell girl two years ago made her first appearance in adult court Wednesday.

Maricela Diaz, 16, of Fort Wayne, Ind., and Guanajuato, Mexico, appeared in court in Alexandria and was charged with first-degree murder, felony murder by arson, first degree arson, felony murder committed during kidnapping and second-degree aggravated kidnapping

If convicted on the most severe charges, she would face a mandatory sentence of life in prison. According to the South Dakota Attorney General’s Office, states cannot seek the death penalty for an offender who was younger than 18 at the time the crime was committed.

The charges stem from the murder of Jasmine Guevara, 16, of Mitchell, on Nov. 10, 2009. Diaz and Alexander Salgado, 21, were arrested for the murder. Until Wednesday, Diaz’s identity was concealed by authorities because of her juvenile status, and she was known to the public only as “M.D.”

South Dakota law says the courts may use a number of factors to weigh whether a child should be tried in adult court, including the seriousness of an alleged felony offense and whether the alleged felony was committed in an “aggressive, violent, premeditated or willful manner.”

No juvenile prosecuted for a crime may stay within the jurisdiction of the Department of Corrections beyond age 21, according to state law, which may have been a reason for transferring Diaz to adult court.

Court documents state both Diaz and Salgado admitted during police interviews that they killed Guevara. Salgado, who has a child with Diaz, pleaded guilty in 2010 to second-degree murder as part of a plea agreement with the state. He was sentenced to life in prison and is currently serving his sentence at the South Dakota State Penitentiary in Sioux Falls. Diaz is being held in the Minnehaha County juvenile detention center.

Guevara was lured to a rural Hanson County house under false pretenses, stabbed and burned alive in the trunk of her car. Salgado told authorities that Diaz was fueled by jealousy of Guevara.

Court documents state Guevara, Salgado and Diaz attended a party on Nov. 8, 2009. Witnesses at the party said Diaz became jealous because of a suspected relationship between Guevara and Salgado.

“Diaz indicated that she wanted to fight with Jasmine, but no such fight ensued that evening,” according to court documents.

” ‘I’m gonna kill you and I’m gonna kill the girl,’ ” Salgado quoted Diaz as saying.

Diaz and Salgado had been staying with an acquaintance at a residence approximately one block from where Guevara resided, according to court documents. Both residences are near the corner of First and Minnesota in Mitchell.

Court documents state Diaz and Salgado told Guevara to pick them up to attend a cookout.

“When Guevara picked Salgado and Diaz up at their residence, Salgado and Diaz had secured and hidden a knife for each of them,” court documents state.

According to a portion of court records read aloud during Salgado’s sentencing by his attorney, Mike Fink, of Bridgewater, Salgado admitted that he drove with Diaz and Guevara in Guevara’s car to the “Haunt House,” an unoccupied building in rural Hanson County. After leaving the car on Diaz’s instruction, Salgado returned to the sound of screaming and found Diaz repeatedly stabbing Guevara in the legs and stomach with such force that the blade of the knife bent.

Court documents state Salgado returned to the car to find the doors locked. He gained entrance into the vehicle, sat behind Guevara, who was in the driver’s seat, and stabbed Guevara “a number of times.”

“At some point during the attack, Guevara was able to open the driver’s side door in an attempt to escape,” according to court documents. “However, Salgado grabbed Guevara by the hair in order to restrain her and keep her from escaping.”

The knife stayed in Guevara’s neck as the two put her body in the trunk, drove the car into some trees and ignited the car with lighter fluid Guevara had purchased earlier that evening under the belief that it was for a cookout.

The fire was determined to be the cause of Guevara’s death.

Court documents state a search of the residence where Diaz and Salgado were staying revealed clothing soiled with Guevara’s blood. Guevara’s phone was recovered in an area provided by Salgado and Diaz.

Even after Salgado confessed to Guevara’s murder, he still referred to Diaz as “sweetie” and “my love,” according to court documents.

“I love you a lot,” Salgado told Maricela Diaz in Spanish after his first police interview. “Everything I did was for love.”

Until Wednesday, the status of the girl known as “M.D.” was secret. The South Dakota Attorney General’s Office remained quiet on any details surrounding Diaz, citing a policy that prohibits the office from commenting on juvenile matters.

Court documents state a motion to transfer Maricela Diaz to adult court was heard between Jan. 31 and Feb. 4. She was officially transferred to adult court Wednesday by Judge Sean O’Brien.

A representative from Hanson County State’s Attorney Jim Davies’ office said Davies is not taking any questions on the case. Sara Rabern, spokeswoman for the South Dakota Attorney General’s Office, said Doug Dailey and Chris Nipe, both of Mitchell, have been appointed to represent Diaz.

First-degree murder, felony murder by arson and felony murder committed during kidnapping are all Class A felonies punishable by a mandatory sentence of life in prison.

Second-degree aggravated kidnapping is a Class 1 felony punishable by a maximum of 50 years in prison. Firstdegree arson is a Class 2 felony with a maximum penalty of 25 years in prison.

https://www.mitchellrepublic.com/news/1536706-second-guevara-murder-suspect-maricela-diaz-moved-adult-court

Maricela Diaz Photos

Maricela Diaz
Maricela Diaz 1

Maricela Davis FAQ

Maricela Davis Now

Maricela Davis is currently incarcerated at the South Dakota Women’s Prison

Michael Campbell Teen Killer Murders Online Girlfriend

Michael Campbell
Michael Gavin Campbell

Michael Campbell was seventeen years old when he murdered a sixteen year old girl he had met for the first time. According to court documents Michael Campbell and Shayna Ritthaler met on an online dating website and soon after started to date online. The two made plans for Shayna Ritthaler to run away and live with him.

Finally the two met and Michael Campbell would pick her up and a short time later Shayna Ritthaler was dead shot in the head. No one is quite sure why the murder happened. Michael Campbell hid the body but he would be soon arrested. The teen killer would plead guilty to first degree manslaughter and is expected to receive a fifty five year sentence later this year.

Michael Campbell News

A South Dakota teen has admitted to killing a 16-year-old girl who ran away from home to be with him after they met online.

On Thursday, Michael Campbell, 17, pleaded guilty to first-degree manslaughter in the killing of 16-year-old Shayna Ritthaler, according to the Argus Leader, KNBN and KOTA.

Ritthaler was reported missing from a Moorcroft, Wyoming, coffee shop last October.

Weeks earlier, she had met Michael Campbell on the dating website Badoo. The pair eventually planned for Campbell to drive to Wyoming to pick Ritthaler up so she could “run away and live with him in his house,” prosecutors said in court on Thursday, the Leader reports.

On Oct. 3, Michael Campbell picked Ritthaler up from Wyoming in his Jeep and drove her back to his Sturgis, South Dakota, home. During their time together, an argument ensued that ended when Campbell shot Ritthaler once in the head.

Through their investigation, police located Campbell’s Jeep and made contact with the teen on Oct. 6.

The following day, investigators found Ritthaler’s body in Campbell’s basement.

Shortly after his arrest, a judge sealed court documents detailing the crime citing the case’s “sensitive nature.”

Campbell was initially charged with second-degree murder, which was dismissed as part of the plea that recommends 55 years in prison. He is scheduled to be sentenced in July.

Michael Campbell Other News

A 17-year-old has entered pleas of not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity in the death of 16-year-old Shayna Ritthaler.

Michael Gavin Campbell was in court Thursday for his arraignment hearing. Campbell has been indicted on alternate charges of first-degree and second-degree murder in the death of Ritthaler.

Ritthaler, from Upton, Wyo., was the subject of a missing person’s case. Her body was found Oct. 7 in Campbell’s home near Sturgis after deputies and agents from the South Dakota Division of Criminal Investigation searched the house at the request of the Lawrence County Sheriff’s Office, who was working with authorities in Wyoming.

Campbell, if convicted, can face prison time, but cannot be sentenced to life in prison because he is juvenile. Campbell’s attorney said he plans to file a motion to have the case moved to juvenile court.

Prosecutors allege Campbell shot and killed Ritthaler in his home earlier this month after an alleged argument between the two.

A judge set December 20 for Campbell’s status hearing and set that date as the deadline to turn in any documents related to the case.

Campbell is being held on a $1 million bond.

https://www.dakotanewsnow.com/content/news/Sturgis-teen-enters-insanity-plea-in-Wyoming-girls-death-563307701.html

Michael Campbell More News

An argument between Michael G. Campbell and Shayna Ritthaler,

a Wyoming 16-year-old who went missing Oct. 3, led to him allegedly shooting her, prosecutors said in court Wednesday.

Dressed in a green prison uniform and bound in shackles, Campbell made his

initial court appearance before Fourth Circuit Judge Kevin Krull Wednesday morning. The state is charging Campbell with murder in the second degree. Campbell, who is 17 years old, is being charged as an adult and not a juvenile in this case, so the proceedings remain open.

If convicted, he could face life in prison.

Acting Meade County State’s Attorney Michele Bordewyk asked that Campbell be held with no bond because the nature of the allegations against Campbell show he is a danger to the community.

“The defendant was with the victim. There was an argument. It got violent which led to him shooting her,” Bordewyk said.

Krull granted a motion by Bordewyk to seal the probable cause affidavit in the case. That means details of how the two knew each other and what happened leading up to the crime will not be known for now.

Bordewyk said following the hearing that the main reasons she asked for sealing the affidavit were because of the age of the victim and the abundant media coverage of Ritthaler’s disappearance before she was

found.

The body of a young female was discovered in a basement bedroom of a home in the Blucksberg Estates subdivision south of Sturgis near Interstate 90 Monday night.

The body is believed to be that of Ritthaler, Sgt. Caleb Deyo of the Meade County Sheriff’s Office said Tuesday. An autopsy was set for Thursday morning.

Bordewyk said they believe the shooting happened at the home where Campbell lives with his parents.

“I feel like we will know a lot more after the autopsy is done,” she said.

Although the defense asked that bail be set at $250,000, Krull set bail at $1 million. Conditions of bail also included that Campbell wear an electronic monitoring device and not travel outside the Fourth District Court jurisdiction.

Campbell’s attorney, Steven Titus, argued that his client had no criminal history, was working on getting his GED and was employed full-time at a hotel in Deadwood.

Campbell, who has shoulder-length sandy hair and a stocky build, spoke only when questioned by Krull answering “Yes, your honor, or No, your honor.”

Shayna Ritthaler was a student at Moorcroft High School. Counselors were on hand Monday when students were notified of her death.

There were eight family members of Ritthaler on hand at the hearing

Wednesday and five of Campbell’s family members.

Campbell will be arraigned on charges Oct. 17. He remains in custody at the Western South Dakota Juvenile Services Center in Rapid City.

https://www.bhpioneer.com/local_news/details-emerge-in-death-of-wyoming-teen/article_d292750a-eb85-11e9-8acf-23bd4205b01a.html

Michael Campbell 2023

Age 22

Race White

Gender Male

Hair Color Blonde

Eye Color Green

Heigh t5′ 10 “Weight 180 lbs.

Alias(es) helpinfoCampbell, Michael Gavin

DOC Number helpinfo#59050

Correctional Status helpinfoActive Inmate

Michael Campbell FAQ

Michael Campbell Now

Michael Campbell is currently incarcerated at the South Dakota State Penitentiary

Michael Campbell Release Date

Michael Campbell is eligible for release in 2047 and his max date is 2074