Brycen Caudill Teen Killer Murders Mother

Brycen Caudill

Brycen Caudill was sixteen years old when he would murder his mother in Ohio. According to prosecutors Brycen Caudill would attack his mother before school, beating the woman with a bat and stabbing her several times. The woman was able to get to a neighbors home however she would die from her injuries. Brycen Caudill would flee the scene and would walk for over ten miles before this teen killer would turn himself over to authorities. Brycen Caudill would be sentenced to life in prison however is eligible for parole after fifteen years. He would plead guilty to murder and domestic violence

Brycen Caudill 2023 Information

Brycen Caudill

Number A776132

DOB 01/31/2003

Gender Male

Race White

Admission Date 06/04/2020

Institution Ross Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

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Brycen Caudill, 17, DeGraff, pleaded guilty Monday afternoon to murder before Logan County Common Pleas Court Judge Kevin Braig.

Brycen was arrested Aug. 16 for the murder of his 36-year-old mother Crystal Caudill at their 207 E. Main St., DeGraff, residence.

Law enforcement reports indicate the teen attacked and stabbed his mother multiple times with a wooden baseball bat and knife in her bedroom before school, around 7 a.m.

Crystal Caudill was able to run away to a nearby property, and it was a neighbor that contacted authorities. She was pronounced dead at Mary Rutan Hospital.

Brycen fled the scene, and traveled more than 10 miles on foot to a residence at 10029 Trestle Road, St. Paris, where he eventually turned himself in to authorities. Deputies from the Champaign County Sheriff’s Office received a 911 call, and the teen was taken into custody at that location.

In October, the defendant was charged with murder, felonious assault and domestic violence in Logan County Juvenile Court. His case was later bound over to adult court because of the nature of the charges.

Logan County Prosecutor Eric Stewart said the defendant will only be indicted on the murder charge as the result of a plea agreement.

Brycen, who has been lodged in the Logan County Juvenile Detention Center since his arrest, will be sentenced at 9 a.m. on April 30.

He faces 15 years to life in prison.

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A high school student received a maximum sentence Thursday before Logan County Common Pleas Court Judge Kevin Braig for the August murder of his mother at their DeGraff home.

Brycen Caudill, 16, was sentenced to 15 years to life in prison for one count of murder.

He was ordered to pay restitution and and will have to enroll in Ohio’s violent offender database, which requires him to report his address within 10 days of his release from prison, and every year for a period of 10 years.

Brycen has also been credited with 259 days of jail credit. He pleaded guilty to the charge in March.

Brycen was arrested Aug. 16 for the alleged murder of his 36-year-old mother Crystal Caudill at their home at 207 E. Main St. residence.

Law enforcement reports indicate the teen attacked and stabbed his mother multiple times with a wooden baseball bat and knife in her bedroom before school, around 7 a.m.

Caudill was able to run away to a nearby property, and it was a neighbor that contacted authorities. She was pronounced dead at Mary Rutan Hospital.

Brycen fled the scene, and traveled more than 10 miles on foot to a residence at 10029 Trestle Road, St. Paris, where he eventually turned himself in. Deputies from the Champaign County Sheriff’s Office received a 911 call, and the teen was taken into custody at that location.

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Brycen Caudill is currently incarcerated at the Ross Correctional Institute

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Brycen Caudill is serving a life sentence however is eligible for parole in 2034

Nathaniel Dickson Teen Killer Murders Family

Nathaniel Dickson

Nathaniel Dickson was eighteen years old when he murdered his entire family in South Carolina. According to court documents Nathaniel Dickson was kicked out of his apartment for stealing from his roommate, his girlfriend broke up with him and he failed to qualify for the Marines when he moved back home. Soon tensions in the house increased and on the day of the murders Nathaniel Dickson would shoot and kill his father, stepmother, stepsister and brother.

This teen killer  was soon arrested and would be quickly convicted of four counts of murder and sentenced to life in prison without parole

Nathaniel Dickson 2023 Information

Nathaniel Dickson

Nathaniel Dickson

Number: 00336982

Location: Lee

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Nathan Dickson hung his head, barely looking at Judge Cordell Maddox as he admitted gunning down four members of his family more than a year ago without any real motive.

Nathaniel Dickson pleaded guilty today and was sentenced to life in prison, without the possibility for parole, for the deaths of his father, Andy Dickson; his 14-year-old brother, Taylor; his stepsister, Jiliam Salazar; and his stepmother, Maritza Hurtado Dickson.

“In my nine years, this is the most unexplainable and despicable things I have ever seen in my courtroom,” Maddox said, looking at Nathaniel Dickson. “Your brother and your stepsister ? their unlimited potential is gone and wasted.”

“It bothers me that you can’t even tell me why.”

Dickson, who is 20, remained silent as his uncle and another stepsister stood in court, tears in their eyes. He did not move, holding his hands in front of him, as his mother, Patricia Dickson, sobbed in the courtroom.

“Thank you for accepting my plea, and I apologize to the families,” Dickson said.

Tenth Circuit Solicitor Chrissy Adams said the Dickson and Hurtado families both argued against pushing for the death penalty in the case. She said the families thought a lifelong jail sentence would be more of a punishment to Dixon than even a death sentence.

“I want him to remember his little brother, his father ? I want him to remember,” said Nadine Salazar, as she stared at her stepbrother.

The hearing was the end to a case that began April 26, 2008, and according to prosecutors, defense attorneys and investigators was unusual because of Dickson’s apparent lack of motive.

Adams said there were some incidents in the weeks before the slayings that hinted at trouble.

Dickson had been kicked out of an apartment in Anderson for stealing a roommate’s credit card. His girlfriend had broken up with him. When he tried to enlist in the U.S. Marine Corps, he scored too low on the entrance exam to get in ? something he later lied about to friends. He stole about $600 in change from his father.

And there was tension in his parents’ home when he moved back in and wasn’t working.

“Nothing really rises to the level of explaining why this happened that day,” Adams said. “This was a family that loved each other.”

Even in his confession to police in the hours after the slayings, Dickson did not explain why he shot his family.

“I don’t know why I killed my family today,” Dickson said in the statement. “Once I loaded that shotgun and shot Maritza, I could not stop and I did not stop until I shot them all. It hurts inside and I really can’t believe it’s real. I am concerned how all of this may affect my enlistment in the Marine Corps. I am sorry for all the trouble I have caused. It just hurts inside.”

In the statement, which the solicitor read at the hearing, Dickson said he and his father had a disagreement around 2 a.m. that Saturday, because he had come in too late. After a “fitful” night of sleep, Dickson woke, went to his brother’s closet for some clothes and found a 12-gauge shotgun his brother used to hunt squirrels.

Dickson picked up the gun, loaded it and found his stepmother and fired one round, killing her. As his stepsister ran to the kitchen, he followed her and shot her in the laundry room.

Then he found Taylor, yelling at him to stop. Dickson described knocking his brother out, only to come back later and shoot him in the head as Taylor cried for help.

In all, he reloaded the shotgun five times.

Dickson stalked his father, shooting him several times. He struck his final blow as his father called 911 for help. In his statement, Dickson said his father “rolled over and told me ?I love you’ before I took my last shot at him.”

Dickson then left the house and drove to Belton where he spent the day riding four-wheelers with a friend, never mentioning what had happened in his home just hours before. Officers later tested Dickson and he was given a mental evaluation.

What authorities ? including Dickson’s attorneys, Kurt Tavernier and Andy Potter ? found was that Dickson was not drunk nor was he under the influence of any drug when he shot his family. A Greenville psychiatrist, Robert Richards, testified for the defense. He said he could not find evidence of a mental illness that would give attorneys grounds for an insanity defense.

“This kicks at your gut because this was a good family,” Tavernier said. “Nathan was a good kid and we don’t know what made him snap.”

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Nathaniel Dickson was going through a rough patch in his life. The teen and his live-in girlfriend had broken up and he was dealing with tension from moving back in with his parents a year after graduating high school and going out on his own.

Still, the 18-year-old politely answered questions on a visit to a friend a week ago, according to the friend’s mother. Nathan Dickson text messaged the same teen Friday, saying he was going to ride four-wheelers with friends.
Less than 12 hours later, authorities say Nathan Dickson gunned down his father, stepmother, 19-year-old stepsister and 14-year-old brother at their home Saturday morning in this suburban South Carolina community. He has been charged with four counts of murder, leaving friends and neighbors trying to grapple with how the quiet teen who loved video games and sports and always called women “ma’am” could be capable of the largest killing spree officials in this county of 180,000 can recall in at least 50 years.


“I can’t put my finger on what happened,” said Melissa Funk, whose 16-year-old son, Robbie, was good friends with both the suspect and youngest victim. “It’s not what I’ve known him to be.“
Dickson’s mother, Patricia Dickson, screamed and cried as he appeared before a county magistrate on a closed-circuit television for a brief hearing Sunday night, the Anderson Independent-Mail reported.
The teen remained motionless as the judge read him his rights and said a higher court judge would have to hear any request for bail.
Magistrate James Cox told the newspaper Dickson has confessed. “But he can’t say why he did it,” the judge said.
Anderson County Sheriff David Crenshaw refused to release any additional details of the shooting Sunday.
“I’m going to have this case tried in the courtroom, not out on the streets,” Crenshaw said.


Nathaniel Dickson is the only suspect in the case and more charges could be filed against him, the sheriff said.
He did not have an attorney at Sunday’s hearing.
The sheriff said he can’t remember ever dealing with the teen before Saturday’s quadruple homicide.
The killings unfolded in a one-story house with tan siding and bright blue shutters in a wooded neighborhood about five miles from Easley. A plastic tricycle and basketball goal were overturned in the yard Sunday. An orange notice stuck to the front door warned of biohazard material inside and recommended calling someone to clean up before entering.


Just to the left of the front door was a window for the laundry room where authorities say one victim was found behind a clothes dryer. The blinds were up and the inside pane of glass had a fist-sized hole in it. The outside pane was not damaged.


Samuel Andrew Dickson Jr., 46, died as paramedics arrived after someone called 911 Saturday morning to report a man injured in the yard of the home. Officers then went inside and found the bodies of his wife, 46-year-old Martiza Hurtado Dickson; his 19-year-old stepdaughter, Melissa Giliam Salazar; and his 14-year-old brother Taylor. All were shot to death. Authorities refuse to say how many times they were shot, where they were found in the home or release other details.


Neighbors said the family was quiet and kept to themselves. Joyce Allen’s husband worked with Samuel Dickson, who went by the nickname “Andy.” The elder Dickson was an electrician with Vulcan Materials, a company that provides crushed stone, sand and gravel for construction.
Dickson didn’t say much at work, keeping to himself. Most of Allen’s memories are of him with his sons.


“He was crazy, crazy, crazy about those kids,” Allen said. “I’d see him running up and down the road, taking them to ball games.“
Taylor Dickson had just made one of the junior varsity baseball teams at Wren High School a year after failing to make the cut. His father, who had coached his youth teams, was so proud he bought him several Wren High school shirts and caps, said Melissa Funk, whose son was friends with the Dickson boys.


Funk said she thought the two brothers seemed close, so when word came four people were dead inside the home, Funk said she figured the fourth victim might be the stepsister’s boyfriend, and Nathaniel Dickson and his brother escaped with their lives.
“I figured we’d find him safe with Taylor, or that it had to be something else,” Funk said.


Neighbors said they didn’t see Martiza Dickson much. She was a native of Colombia and worked as a translator. Melissa Salazar graduated high school last year and was going to technical college, Funk said.
Funk said her 16-year-old son is taking what happened hard. He had been hanging around with Dickson since the two families moved in the neighborhood about five years ago. Dickson’s younger brother would tag along too.
“He’s heartbroken,” Funk’s husband, Robert, said. “Those were his only friends in the neighborhood.“


Nathaniel Dickson graduated from high school last year and moved in with his girlfriend, working a series of fast-food and restaurant jobs. The two broke up and Dickson moved back in with his parents about two weeks ago, said Funk, who wasn’t sure if he had found another job before the killings.
The last time the son saw Dickson was Friday evening in the driveway. Funk said her son told her that Dickson’s eyes were bloodshot and he looked like he needed to sleep. Dickson later sent a text message to him saying he was out with friends, Melissa Funk said.


Sitting on her couch the day after the killings, Funk recalled with tears in her eyes the only time she remembered Dickson getting in trouble. She was coming to pick up her son at the high school and the teen was sitting outside the principal’s office.
“I said, ‘Nathan, what are you doing here?’ And he said, ‘Mrs. Funk, I have holes in my blue jeans.’ 

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Nathaniel Dickson is currently incarcerated at the Lee Facility

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Nathaniel Dickson is serving life without parole

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A US man has confessed to stalking and methodically murdering four family members in their home, reloading his shotgun five times before firing the final shot into his father as the man said: “I love you.”

Nathan Dickson, 20, pleaded guilty to four counts of murder as part of a deal that will allow him to avoid the death penalty. He was sentenced to life in prison without parole.

Dickson did not say why he killed his father, stepmother, stepsister and younger brother at their home in Easley, South Carolina, in April last year and prosecutor Chrissy Adams said the motive might never be known.

Defence lawyer Kurt Tavernier said not being able to work out why he killed his family gnawed at Dickson every day

Adams read Dickson’s confession in court. He had been arrested hours after the killings – spending the time before police found him riding four-wheelers with a friend.

Dickson said he woke up that Saturday morning and saw a shotgun while looking for some of his clothes in his 14-year-old brother’s closet. The killing began when he shot his stepmother, Maritza Dickson, 41, while she was in bed talking to her daughter.

Dickson’s stepsister, Jiliam Salazar, 19, was killed after running into the kitchen screaming.

He punched his brother, Taylor, in the head when he yelled at Dickson to stop, and shot him.

Dickson then went to father’s bedroom to get more ammunition and shot his brother again.

The second shot went into Taylor’s head as he was sprawled across a chair crying for help, according to the confession.

Dickson’s father was out of the house when the killings began. Dickson said he shot him first in their back yard, then, after going to the bedroom to get another shell, shot him again at the edge of the front yard.

After firing the last shot at his brother and getting one final shell, Dickson said he went to the front yard and confronted his father, who had called police.

I don’t know why I killed all my family today. Once I loaded that shotgun and shot Maritza I couldn’t stop and I did not stop until I had shot them all

“He rolled over and told me, ‘I love you’ right before I took my last shot at him,” Dickson wrote in his confession, adding he then slammed the stock of the shotgun into his father’s head like a club because he was still breathing.

Adams said she decided not to pursue the death penalty because the victims’ relatives were strongly opposed to it, and because Dickson had no criminal record and was 18 at the time of the murders.

While Dickson vividly recounted the killings for nearly two weeks afterwards, he cannot remember them now, his lawyers said.

But Adams said the confession matched physical evidence, right down to how many times the victims were shot.

Dickson had several problems just before the killings. The Marines rejected him, but he told people he had already served in the military. Money went missing from his house and he had just broken up with his girlfriend, Adams said.

But Dickson called his father his hero on his MySpace page and friends told investigators he appeared to get along well with his stepmother and stepsister. He was a decent student in high school and well-liked by teachers and friends. There were no drugs or alcohol in his system, Adams said.

The confession gives no clues.

“I don’t know why I killed all my family today. Once I loaded that shotgun and shot Maritza I couldn’t stop and I did not stop until I had shot them all,” Dickson wrote, adding he was concerned it would affect his chances of enlisting in the Marines.

The confession also includes what Dickson did after the killings. He threw the gun into the woods, put on sandals and drove to a nearby convenience store for water and smokeless tobacco. He then bought a chicken biscuit with his stepsister’s debit card, but was so sick he ate only two bites. Then he rode four-wheelers with a friend.

Nathaniel Dickson apologised after pleading guilty.

“The question that will go unanswered – what was it that caused him to snap?” Tavernier said. “We’ll probably never know.”

https://www.smh.com.au/world/i-love-you-fathers-last-words-before-son-shot-him-dead-20090922-fz6t.html

Raul Castro Teen Killer Murders 4 Year Old Boy

Raul Castro Teen Killer

Raul Castro was fourteen years old when he murdered a four year old boy. According to court documents Raul Castro would lure a four year old boy into his home and would sexually assault him. When the boy started to cry Raul would put the child into a bathtub where he would drown the child. Castro would put the body of the child into the dryer where he would be discovered. This teen killer would be convicted and sentenced to life in prison with a chance of parole after thirty three years

Raul Castro 2023 Information

CDCR NumberAH0674
Age24
Admission Date10/05/2011
Current LocationSierra Conservation Center
Location LinkDirections
Parole Eligible Date (Month/Year)08/2030

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A Mendota teenager was sentenced Friday morning for the murder of his four-year-old neighbor.

15-year-old Raul Castro will spend 33 years in the Department of Corrections before he is eligible for parole.

Castro must also register as a sex offender for life.

In April, a Fresno County judge found him guilty of sexually assaulting and killing Alex Mercado in October 2009.

Alex’s body was found stuffed in a clothes dryer in Castro’s home.

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A state appeals court has reduced the prison sentence of a Central California teenager convicted of molesting and drowning his 4-year-old neighbor and then hiding the boy’s body in a clothes dryer.

The 5th District Court of Appeal ruled that the trial judge erred in adding eight years to Raul Castro’s sentence for his sex-crime convictions. The Mendota teen was convicted of forcible sodomy on a child and a forcible lewd act on a child in addition to first-degree murder in the 2009 slaying of Alex Mercado.

Authorities say Castro, then 14, drowned the preschooler in a bathtub after Mercado said he would tell his mother about the sexual assault.

The Fresno Bee reports that the appeals court reduced Castro’s sentence last week from 33 years- to-life to 25 years-to-life in prison

https://bakersfieldnow.com/news/local/central-valley-teens-sentence-reduced-in-dryer-killing

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Raul Castro is currently incarcerated at the Sierra Conservation Center

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Raul Castro is serving a life sentence however is eligible for parole in 2030

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f you’d asked the families of Alex Mercado and Raul Castro two years ago, where they thought they’d be today, they’d probably never say in the Fresno County Courthouse at their sons’ murder trial.

“It’s had, but I’m trying not to cry, just try to hang in there the best that I can,” Elsa Castro, Raul Castro’s mom, said.

Elsa is still in shock.

“My son is a really good person. He’s never been into trouble. I’m going through a lot, but I’m here, hanging in there,” she said.

But on a taped interview with investigators, Castro revealed the horrific details of exactly what happened October 30th, 2009.

{}”Did you have an urge to kill him? Or did you have an urge to do something sexual, or both?” An investigator asked. “The urge was just to kill.” Raul said.

Castro told detectives, he’d been having “urges” to kill for a couple of years.

And on that day in October, he saw an opportunity when Alex Mercado was playing outside.

That’s when he lured him into his house, then into the bathroom, where he sexually assaulted the four-year-old boy.

He told detectives he’d panicked when Alex started crying.

So he laid on top of him in the bathtub to drown him.

“Do you feel sorry for what you did?” The investigator asked on the tape. “I do feel sorry for what I’ve done. I should’ve taken his place instead of him dying.” Castro responded.

Raul told police he stuffed Alex’s body in the clothes-dryer, and then went to bed, hoping it would all go away.

The next day, police found him during a search of the neighborhood.

“I walked into the kitchen, I opened up the pantry, Elsa knelt down and opened the dryer,” Deputy Matt Hamilton, Fresno County Sheriff’s Office, said. “She started screaming uncontrollably.”

Castro is facing charges of first-degree murder, molestation and kidnapping.

He is being charged as an adult.

And if convicted, faces life in prison with the possibility of parole after 47 years.

Raul Castro waived his right to a jury trial earlier this month.

So the case is being heard by Fresno County Superior Court judge Jonathan Conklin.

The trial is expected to take three to five days.

https://kmph.com/archive/mendota-teen-says-he-had-urges-to-kill-before-4-year-olds-murder

Regina and Margaret DeFrancisco Teen Killers

Regina and Margaret DeFrancisco

Regina and Margaret DeFrancisco are two teens from Illinois who were charged in the murder of Regina boyfriend Oscar Velazquez. According to court documents Regina and Margaret DeFrancisco lured the victim to their home and then shot the man before wrapping up his body and setting him on fire. The two teen girls would be initially questioned by the police but before they could be arrested they would flee the area and be on the run for the next two years. Margaret DeFrancisco would be arrested in March 2002 and Margaret DeFrancisco was arrested in October 2002.

The two teen killers would be convicted and Regina DeFrancisco was sentenced to 35 years in prison and Margaret DeFrancisco was sentenced to 46 years in prison.

Margaret DeFrancisco 2023 Information

R77247 – DEFRANCISCO, MARGARET
Parent Institution:LOGAN CORRECTIONAL CENTER
Offender Status:IN CUSTODY
Location:LOGAN

Regina DeFrancisco 2023 Information

R76804 – DEFRANCISCO, REGINA
Parent Institution:LOGAN CORRECTIONAL CENTER
Offender Status:IN CUSTODY
Location:LOGAN

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A childhood friend took the stand Tuesday in the murder trial of Margaret DeFrancisco, the 20-year-old Chicago woman on trial for the slaying of her sister’s boyfriend.

Veronica Garcia testified DeFrancisco asked her for the gun that killed Oscar Velazquez four years ago.

“I said probably, and she said, ‘Come to my house,’” Garcia said.

Garcia, who was charged with helping to cover up the slaying, also said killing Velazquez was never part of the plan that DeFrancisco and her sister, Regina, devised. According to Garcia, the two sisters just wanted “to scare Oscar for his money.”

The DeFrancisco sisters were charged with first-degree murder and armed robbery. Regina, 21, was found guilty by a jury in July and sentenced to 35 years in prison. Margaret’s trial ended with a hung jury. Her new trial began Monday.

Garcia, a key witness in Margaret DeFrancisco’s earlier trial, offered similar testimony Tuesday.

Prosecutors allege the DeFrancisco sisters lured Velazquez to their Pilsen neighborhood home on the afternoon of June 6, 2000, with the intention of robbing him of his money and car.

On Tuesday, the new jury listened to more than two hours of testimony from Garcia, who struck a deal with prosecutors to testify against her childhood friend in exchange for a five-year prison sentence.

Garcia then detailed the events of June 6 for jurors. She said she and her boyfriend delivered the gun to Margaret DeFrancisco’s house, and she stayed there.

“(The sisters) were talking to each other about where they were going to rob him,” Garcia told the jury.

When Velazquez arrived, Garcia said, Regina DeFrancisco called him to the basement. She said Margaret DeFrancisco followed him, closely holding the gun behind her back.

“Maybe 20 to 30 seconds (later), I heard a gunshot,” Garcia said. “I got up and ran downstairs.”

She said she saw Velazquez lying face down on the floor with blood coming out of his ear, and his right hand was shaking. Garcia said she also saw the two sisters going through his pockets, and they found a gun in Velazquez’s waistband.

“The whole time I was asking them, screaming at them, ‘Why did you do it?’” Garcia said.

She said the sisters wrapped Velazquez’s body in flowery sheets, and she helped them drag it outside into the trunk of Velazquez’s car. Prosecutors say the DeFrancisco sisters set the body on fire using nail polish remover.

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Regina Defrancisco is currently incarcerated at the Logan Correctional Center

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Margaret DeFrancisco is currently incarcerated at the Logan Correctional Center

Regina DeFrancisco Release Date

Regina DeFrancisco current release date is 2038

Margaret DeFrancisco Release Date

Margaret DeFrancisco current release date is 2048

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In April 2000, Oscar Velazquez, a 22-year-old hard-working Chicago truck driver gave 17-year-old Regina DeFrancisco a ride home. 

Two months later, she and her sister repaid that favor by shooting him in the back of the head and burning his remains before evading police capture for two years.

On June 6, 2000, the incinerated body of an unidentified Hispanic male was found on the south side of Chicago. Detectives had scant evidence to go on, according to “Killer Siblings,” airing Saturdays at 6/5c on Oxygen.

The victim had been wrapped in a bed sheet with blood on it. Nail polish remover, a possible accelerant, was found nearby.

As authorities sought to identify the victim, they looked for a motive. Gang violence? Robbery? A jealous lover? As they worked their way from ground zero, they confirmed that the cause of death was a bullet to the back of the head

On June 8, about 36 hours after the discovery of the crime, the victim was identified by his mother as Oscar Velazquez. He’d never been arrested and had no gang affiliations. He was a “good, clean-cut kid,” investigators told “Killer Siblings.” 

As detectives dug into the case, their focus turned to Velazquez’s car, a white Camaro, which had gone missing. Witnesses told investigators that the vehicle was seen being driven by two girls. 

When the car was eventually recovered, it was gutted and torched “beyond evidentiary value.” There were no telltale fingerprints or evidence to help further detectives’ work in the murder case.

“Whoever did the homicide was trying to cover their tracks … by burning the body and then the car,” Steven Konow, a detective with the Chicago Police Department, told “Killer Siblings.” 

However, Velazquez’s phone records provided detectives an invaluable clue, as they looked into conversations he had in the hours preceding his murder.

The logs turned up the name of Regina DeFrancisco, a 17-year-old who lived with her 16-year-old sister, Margaret, and single mother, Nora, in the Lower West Side community of Pilsen, the Chicago Tribune reported in 2004. 

Regina had a reputation for being magnetic and charming, according to “Killer Siblings.” Her little sister looked up to her and emulated her. So when Regina started to dabble in questionable behavior, including hanging out with gang member Johnny Rivera, Margaret followed her lead. The girls began to go off the rails. 

Caught by narcotics officers in Rivera’s apartment where there was two kilos of cocaine, Regina had been hit with a drug arrest. After a court appearance linked to the bust, she was outside court room and by chance, Velazquez drove past at that time. She asked him for a ride home, and he obliged, according to “Killer Siblings.” The two began dating.

Authorities made a beeline to speak with Regina and Margaret about the Velazquez homicide, Konow told producers, and they found the girls at home.

There, the sisters corroborated each other’s accounts, which were intended to clear the girls from suspicion. 

During her interview Regina emphasized her innocence and told investigators that they ought to be looking at Rivera. 

But detectives questioned why Regina was pointing the finger at someone else. Rivera was eventually cleared of suspicion, and the 17-year-old girl’s strategy, meant to deflect blame from her, backfired and intensified it. 

Investigators focused on Regina and considered the likelihood of Margaret’s involvement.

A week after the slaying, Frank Main, a journalist with the Chicago Sun-Times, told producers that officials had enough evidence to get a warrant to search the DeFrancisco home. 

As authorities combed through the residence, various red flags emerged. Sheets in the house matched the pattern of the one in which Velazquez’s body had been wrapped. In the basement, Luminol revealed significant traces of blood that had been cleaned up, Al Graf, detective with the Chicago Police Department, told producers. A bullet casing, a match to the same kind of pistol cartridge used to kill Velazquez, was also found.

But a witness had previously came forward and reported seeing three people loading a heavy object into Velazquez’s trunk. This was the missing piece that remained: Who was the third party spotted on the night of the murder near Velazquez’s car?

The answer soon emerged: the sisters’ friend, Veronica Garcia, 15. On June 22, she was brought in for questioning When asked about events on the night of the homicide, she clammed up and turned evasive.

Authorities told her that she could be charged with murder, and Garcia then detailed what had happened before the murder and during it.

The DeFrancisco sisters had duped Velazquez into believing Regina needed $1,000 for bail money. He gave it to her, and when he asked to get his money back they lured him to their house with the promise of repayment. 

The sisters had gotten their hands on a gun with Garcia’s help, and Margaret shot Velazquez as he descended the stairs to the basement, where they’d spread plastic to help hide the crime. 

The trio wrapped his body up in sheets, dumped him into the trunk of his Camaro, and drove him to a vacant lot, where they set him ablaze after dousing his body with nail polish remover. 

By the time investigators had confirmed that the blood in the DeFrancisco basement belonged to Velazquez, the sisters had fled. In July 2000, U.S. Marshals joined the hunt for the suspect sisters. After months passed, authorities enlisted the help of “America’s Most Wanted” to spread the word about the fugitive family members. 

The airing yielded no successful leads, and the case went cold. In March 2002, though, the episode re-aired and officials got a break. Margaret was found in Roscoe, Illinois, and brought back to Chicago to face formal charges.

Seven months later, Regina was finally tracked down in Dallas, after an incident involving a stolen car. 

Both sisters were charged with premeditated murder. In July 2004, they were tried together before two separate juries. Regina DeFrancisco’s verdict came back first. She was found guilty of murder in the first degree and sentenced to 35 years in prison.

A day later, a jury was unable to reach a verdict in the case of Margaret DeFrancisco. She “walked out of a Cook County courtroom free on bail,” reported the Chicago Tribune at the time.

She was retried and convicted in December 2004 and sentenced to 46 years in the Illinois Department of Corrections.

For her role in concealing the crime, Garcia was sentenced to 5 years in prison.

The DeFrancisco siblings have each filed unsuccessful appeals.

Michael Carneal Teen Killer School Shooter

Michael Carneal

Michael Carneal was fourteen years old when he murdered three fellow students. According to court documents Michael Carneal brought a shotgun and a rifle wrapped in a blanket to Heath High School in Kentucky. Michael Carneal would open fire on a group of praying students killing three and injuring five. This teen killer was quickly arrested and sentenced to multiple life sentences however he is eligible for parole after twenty five years

Michael Carneal 2023 Information

Michael Carneal 2022
Name:CARNEAL, MICHAEL ADAM 
Active Inmate

Offender Photo(Click image to enlarge)
PID # / DOC #:246005 / 151127
Institution Start Date:6/01/2001
Expected Time To Serve (TTS):LIFE WITH PAROLE AFTER 25 YEARS
Classification:Medium (Level 3)
Minimum Expiration of Sentence Date (Good Time Release Date): ?LIFE WITH PAROLE AFTER 25 YEARS
Parole Eligibility Date:11/16/2022
Maximum Expiration of Sentence Date:LIFE WITH PAROLE AFTER 25 YEARS
Location:Kentucky State Reformatory
Age:36
Race:White
Gender:M
Eye Color:Blue
Hair Color:Brown
Height:5′ 11″
Weight:150

Michael Carneal Other News

On the morning of Dec. 1, 1997, then 14-year-old Michael Carneal arrived at Heath High School. While many thought it would be normal day, Carneal entered the school carrying a pistol, loaded clips, shot gun shells, and hundreds of .22 rounds, along with two shotguns and two rifles wrapped in a blanket. He told his sister the blanket was holding a school project.

He then approached and opened fire on a group of students praying. He killed three teenage girls and hurt five other classmates. Carneal then dropped the pistol and surrendered to the school’s principal.

He pleaded guilty a year later, and was sentenced to life in prison. He was also required to receive mental health care while in prison.

Investigators say Carneal had been bullied, and suffered from paranoia. After the shooting, he was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia, and had to be hospitalized several times due to psychosis.

In 2012, Carneal attempted to withdraw his plea, saying he was mentally ill at the time he made it. A month later, the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals denied his request, stating he could have acted sooner.

He is up for parole in 2023.

Michael Carneal FAQ

Michael Carneal Now

Michael Carneal is currently incarcerated at the Kentucky State Reformatory

Michael Carneal Release Date

Michael Carneal was sentenced to life in prison, he is eligible for parole in 2023

Michael Carneal More News

In 1997 Michael Carneal walked into Heath High School in Paducah and opened fire on his classmates, killing three students and injuring five others. For the last five years we’ve been left to wonder why. He recently sat down with our Carrie Harned for his first ever television interview since the attack.

Michael Carneal seems to clearly remember the day of the shootings. “I remember pulling out the gun and holding it in front of me,” Carneal recalls. “I really wasn’t focused on the people I was focused on my hands.”

On that fateful day in Paducah, Michael Carneal sealed the fate of three teenage girls in a matter of seconds. But he says the events that led up to the shootings were years in the making. “There was a pecking order and I was probably towards the bottom of it.”

Carneal did, however, point to one event in particular that he identified as the starting point of all the trouble. “There was an incident in middle school that they put in the school newspaper that I was gay,” he said, “and ever since that, that label stuck with me. Everybody, if they wanted to get to me, they would put ‘faggot’ or ‘queer’ on the end.”

Despite the constant teasing, Carneal says he was desperate to make friends.

I would buy something and tell people I stole it because I thought that’s what they liked,” Carneal said, “that they wanted to be friends with a delinquent type person.”

After the shootings, Carneal avoided a trial by pleading guilty but mentally ill. Currently, he’s housed in the Kentucky State Reformatory’s psychiatric unit, where he takes medication for depression.

Carneal says he has been dealing with feelings of extreme sadness since kindergarten. “I was angry, I was lonely, I was afraid. I was just full of emotions and I didn’t know how to control them.”

So what he did was plan. At first, his ideas seemed strangely innocent. “If everybody left the school, then I could get on the intercom and talk.”

But then his thoughts grew more sinister. “Before the shootings, I would think about certain people who I would have liked to shot or hit or done something to.”

On December 1st, 1997, Michael Carneal stopped thinking and started taking action. He came to school that day armed with five guns and 1,000 rounds of ammo.

“The first place that I came upon was the lobby where everybody was just standing around,” he recalls. “And for some reason, I just decided I was going to do it there.”

He doesn’t remember much about the shooting itself except its aftermath. “I just remember stopping shooting and seeing a bunch of people on the ground screaming and crying.”

Now, facing the possibility of spending the rest of his life behind bars, Carneal is now aware of the destruction he caused — with plenty of time to think through his deadly plan in ways his 14-year-old mind could not.

“For some reason, I thought that if I did that, I thought that all my problems would just go away,” Carneal said. “But I never really thought about what would happen to the people.”

And looking back now, Carneal says he truly believes one thing could have stopped him. “If somebody would have just pulled me to the side and talked to me about what was going on, I probably — things would have been a lot different. It was in my mind so much it just became like I needed to bring it into action for some reason.”

Michael Carneal pleaded guilty but mentally in October 1998 to the attempted murder of the wounded and the murder of Kayce Steger, Nicole Hadley and Jessica James.

He was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for 25 years, so he won’t be eligible for release until 2022.

Carneal was ineligible for the death penalty because of his age at the time of the crime.

https://www.wave3.com/story/932794/carneal-recalls-1997-high-school-shooting-rampage/?clienttype=printable

Michael Carneal Parole Denied 2022

The Kentucky Parole Board on Monday ordered the man who, at age 14, opened fire on classmates in a 1997 school shooting to spend the rest of his life in prison, denying his request for parole 25 years later. 

Michael Carneal, now 39, told parole board members last week that he would live with his parents and continue his mental health treatment if they agreed to release him. 

He admitted that he still hears voices like the ones that told him to steal a neighbor’s pistol and fire it into a prayer circle in the crowded lobby of Heath High School, located in West Paducah, in December 1997. However, Carneal said that with therapy and medication, he has learned to control his behavior.

Those killed were 14-year-old Nicole Hadley, 17-year-old Jessica James, and 15-year-old Kayce Steger. Five more were injured, including Missy Jenkins Smith, who was paralyzed and uses a wheelchair.

Those killed were 14-year-old Nicole Hadley, 17-year-old Jessica James, and 15-year-old Kayce Steger. Five more were injured, including Missy Jenkins Smith, who was paralyzed and uses a wheelchair.

The Courier Journal reported that the mass school shooting was one of the first in modern U.S. history. The Heath High School bloodshed came just 17 months before Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold killed 12 students and one teacher and injured 21 more at Columbine High School in Colorado.

Jenkins Smith, who had considered Carneal a friend before she was paralyzed by one of his bullets, said she couldn’t sleep Sunday night because she was so anxious about the decision. She said she was in shock after hearing it. “It’s so hard to believe I don’t have to worry about it again,” she told the Associated Press.  “I guess I’ll realize it later. It will sink in.”

Jenkins Smith watched the hearing from her home in Kirksey with another victim, Kelly Hard Alsip, and their families. Her oldest son, who is 15, had been worried that if Carneal were released, he would come to their house, she said.

Jenkins Smith, Alsip, others who were wounded in the shooting, and relatives of those who were killed spoke to the parole board panel last week. Most expressed a wish for Carneal to spend the rest of his life in prison. Carneal told the panel there are days that he believes he deserves to die for what he did, but on other days he thinks he could still do some good in the world.

https://www.foxnews.com/us/kentucky-school-shooter-denied-parole-25-years-later-spend-rest-life-prison