Konrad Schafer was fifteen years old when he murdered two men. According to court documents Konrad Schafer was riding in a car when he pulled out a gun and fatally shot a seventeen year old leaving work. Konrad would then participate in a violent home invasion where the home owner was beaten and then had his throat slit by Schafer. This teen killer would be convicted and sentenced to two life in prison without parole sentences
Konrad Schafer, who at 15 years old shot two people to death as part of a two-week shooting spree that had much of Osceola County on edge during the summer of 2013, pleaded guilty to two counts of first-degree murder Friday at the Osceola County Courthouse.
Schafer, now 18, will be sentenced in those cases on April 15 at 9 a.m. As part of the plea deal, the state will not prosecute the teen on other charges that include armed burglary, shooting a firearm at or within buildings and criminal mischief.
According to State Attorney Jeff Ashton, who is prosecuting the case himself, state guidelines say Schafer could get up to life in prison on each charge, but would serve a minimum of 15 years in the Roopnarine case and 40 years in the Guerrero case.
Police arrested Schafer and three other co-conspirators in July 2013 for the June 25 shooting of 17-year-old David Guerrero along Central Avenue in Kissimmee and the July 3 death of Eric Roopnarine in his Poinciana home. In between those two incidents, several homes across the county were shot at or into. Schafer was linked to those as well when ballistics evidence
provided by the Kissimmee Police Department and Osceola County Sheriff’s Office said the shots came from a .45-caliber Carbine-action rifle Schafer’s father, Lothar, purchased days before the first shooting.
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Konrad is currently incarcerated at the Blackwater Correctional Facility
Quentin Schafer and Carlos Delgado were both fifteen years old when they would murder another teenager. According to court documents the two teen killers planned for a week to kill the sixteen year old. They would pick up the victim from his home and go to a remote location where they would brutally attack the teen, breaking his upper and lower jaw before stabbing him repeatedly. Once the two teen killers were under arrest they would admit to police detectives that they had planned on killing the teen for a week. Both Quentin and Carlos would be convicted and sentenced to forty to seventy years in prison and must serve at least thirty years before they can apply for parole
Quentin Schafer 2023 Information
MDOC Number:111426
SID Number:4994060X
Name:QUENTIN ROYCE SCHAFER
Racial Identification:Hispanic
Gender:Male
Hair:Brown
Eyes:BrownHeight:5′ 9″
Weight:150 lbs.
Date of Birth:11/13/2000
Carlos Delgado 2023 Information
MDOC Number:111398
SID Number:5230746P
Name:CARLOS SANTIAGO DELGADO
Racial Identification:Black
Gender:Male
Hair:Black
Eyes:Brown
Height:5′ 6″Weight:130 lbs.
Date of Birth:11/25/2000
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Michael White’s mother brought an urn of the slain teen’s ashes to court Wednesday, telling his young killers “this is what I’m left with.’’
“I miss him every day,’’ Kelly Ann Hogan told the pair. “Our family will never be the same.’’
Quentin Schafer and Carlos Delgado, both 15, looked down as she spoke. They pleaded guilty last month to first-degree murder for the death of White, a 16-year-old junior at Wyoming Park High School.
His body was found March 19 by a man walking his dog at Lions Park in Wyoming. They were arrested within a few days and on Wednesday were both sentenced to a minimum of 40 years behind bars.
A 2012 ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court affords them a chance of getting out of prison before they’re old men.
Their attorneys asked that Schafer and Delgado serve a minimum of 30 years, saying both are remorseful.
Kent County Assistant Prosecutor Gerard E. Faber objected.
“This was a savage, brutal, premeditated murder and we are asking for the full 40 years,’’ he told the court.
Kent County Circuit Court Judge George S. Buth agreed.
“This is a brutal, senseless murder,’’ the judge said. “I think we all realize that, especially you two defendants. This is a tragedy all the way around, especially for the victim here and his family.’’
Buth sentenced them to between 40 and 75 years in prison. They’ll be in their mid-50s before they can be considered for parole.
“I would just add that it’s a tragedy for you two and your friends and family,’’ the judge said.
White was found beaten and stabbed at Lions Park on Dunbar Avenue SW. He left home 11 p.m. the night before and never came back.
After planning to kill White for about a week, his teen assailants used a knife, brass knuckles and White’s own skateboard to attack him before changing out of their bloody clothes and calling it a night.
Those chilling details emerged during a May preliminary hearing.
“Just stop, just leave me, just leave me here to die,’’ a mortally wounded White told his younger assailants, a detective testified at the earlier hearing in Wyoming District Court.
Wyoming detective D.J. Verhage said Delgado admitted to the slaying after being grilled about blood-soaked jeans found in his room.
Detectives tracked down Delgado after cell phone data indicated he’d been in contact with White the night White died.
Schafer was also identified as a suspect based partly on Facebook posts, according to earlier testimony.
DNA from Delgado’s jeans, Schafer’s black T-shirt and brass knuckles recovered at Lions Park tied the teens to the murder. The assailants fled with a designer belt taken from White’s waist, police said.
An autopsy revealed a puncture to White’s right lung, which alone could have been fatal. He also had a punctured kidney, fractures to his upper and lower jaw and a fractured skull.
Detectives found a broken knife, brass knuckles and White’s blood-covered skateboard near his body.
Schafer and Delgado were prosecuted under Michigan’s automatic waiver law, which allows prosecutors to charge 15 and 16-year-olds as adults for serious crimes, such as murder.
Mandatory life sentences are no longer a foregone conclusion for teens convicted of first-degree murder. The U.S. Supreme Court in 2012 struck down automatic life terms with no chance of parole for teenage killers.
Michigan law was updated in 2014, allowing judges to consider a term of between 25 and 60 years for young people convicted of first-degree murder. Judges still have the option to sentence teens to mandatory life without parole.
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Courtney Schulhoff was fifteen years old when she started dating an older man who was a convicted felon and needless to say her father was not happy. Courtney fearing that her father would make her end the relationship with Michael Morin decided to kill him. On the night of the murder Schulhoff would fatally beat her father with a baseball bat. At trial this teen killer initially said that her boyfriend was responsible but after she was convicted she told the judge that she alone committed the brutal murder. Schulhoff was initially sentenced to life in prison but later it was changed to forty years
An Altamonte Springs woman who was initially sentenced to life in prison for helping murder her father with a baseball bat in February 2004, was given a reduced sentence Thursday: 40 years.
Courtney Schulhoff was 16 when she told her boyfriend she wanted her father dead; then, while her father was asleep, placed a baseball bat outside his bedroom door.
Minutes later, the boyfriend, Michael Lawrence Morin Jr., picked up the bat, went inside and used it to beat Steven Schulhoff, 48, to death in his bed.
Morin, now 33, and Schulhoff were convicted at separate trials in Sanford and each was sentenced to life in prison.
Morin was 20 at the time.
Schulhoff was prosecuted as an adult and was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
The U.S. Supreme Court has since ruled that sending underage offenders to prison for life with no prospect for release amounts to cruel and unusual punishment and, therefore, is unconstitutional.
That was the reason for Thursday’s resentencing.
According to evidence at Schulhoff’s trial, her father didn’t want her dating Morin, a homeless, out-of-work car thief.
That didn’t keep them apart, though. Morin would slip into the Schulhoffs’ apartment through her bedroom window at night.
Courtney , now 29, also was angry that her father had cut off her access to credit cards.
Morin told police that he grabbed the aluminum bat and stepped into Steven Schulhoff’s bedroom but blacked out after that. The next thing he remembered, he told them, was standing there with the victim’s blood on his clothing.
Schulhoff was convicted first; when Morin went on trial, prosecutors were seeking the death penalty. She took the witness stand and claimed that she, alone, killed her father.
Jurors did not believe her.
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Courtney Schulhoff is scheduled for release in 2039
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A 16-year-old girl and her 20-year-old boyfriend face first-degree murder charges after allegedly fatally beating the girl’s father with a baseball bat, police said.
The body of Steven Schulhoff was found at his condominium Tuesday. Schulhoff’s daughter, Courtney Schulhoff, and boyfriend Michael Morin of Orlando remained in custody Wednesday.
The girl was in the custody of juvenile authorities, and Morin was in the Seminole County jail without bail.
Courtney Schulhoff told investigators that her father beat her Sunday, which prompted her and Morin to come up with a plan to kill him.
Courtney Schulhoff said she left to walk her father’s dog Tuesday and returned about 20 minutes later to find Morin with blood on his clothes and face, and a baseball bat on the ground near the front door. She said Morin told her he had “taken care of the problem.” She said Morin told her he had killed her father and he would kill her, too, if she told anyone. While Courtney Schulhoff pinned the blame on her boyfriend,oOfficials said Morin told them he “blacked out” after grabbing the bat. He said he tried to talk her out of killing her father. He said she placed the bat outside her father’s bedroom door.
“He said . he went inside and grabbed the bat and blacked out,” investigators wrote. “He said that the next thing he knew, he was covered in blood and that he was washing himself off in the bathroom.”
Morin planned to drive the body to Brevard County and dump it off a bridge, but those plans were interrupted when Steven Schulhoff’s girlfriend came to the condo to check on him shortly before 3 p.m. Tuesday. The woman dialed 911 when she saw Courtney Schulhoff and Morin run from the condo complex
Dylan Schumaker is probably best known for crying in the courtroom that ended up on YouTube but the reason he was in that courtroom should be the focus. Dylan Schumaker was left to babysit his girlfriends young child and by the end of the night the child was dead. According to court documents Schumaker would fatally beat the child when he would not stop crying.
Dylan Schumaker would be arrested and convicted of the murder along with child abuse charges. When he was to be sentenced he allegedly told the guards that they should watch the performance he was going to put on in the courtroom. The rest of course is history on YouTube. This teen killer was sentenced to twenty five years to life in prison for the murder
Dylan Schumaker 2023 Information
DIN (Department Identification Number)
14B0189
Inmate Name
SCHUMAKER, DYLAN
Sex
MALE
Date of Birth
01/09/1997
Race / Ethnicity
WHITE
Custody Status
IN CUSTODY
Housing / Releasing Facility
CLINTON
Date Received (Original)
01/23/2014
Date Received (Current)
01/23/2014
Admission Type
NEW COMMITMENT
County of Commitment
ERIE
Aggregate Minimum Sentence
0018 Years, 00 Months, 00 Days
Aggregate Maximum Sentence
LIFE Years, 99 Months, 99 Days
Earliest Release Date
03/12/2031
Earliest Release Type
PAROLE ELIGIBILITY DATE
Parole Hearing Date
11/2030
Parole Hearing Type
INITIAL RELEASE APPEARANCE
Parole Eligibility Date
03/12/2031
Conditional Release Date
NONE
Maximum Expiration Date
LIFE
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A Springville teenager who fatally beat his girlfriend’s 23-month-old son told a judge Friday that he did not intend to kill the toddler.
“I never wanted to hurt Austin. I never wanted Austin to die,” Dylan Schumaker, 17, said in a tearful apology to his 19-year-old girlfriend in a Buffalo courtroom.
Jurors who convicted Dylan Schumaker of second-degree murder last month didn’t buy it.
Neither did State Supreme Court Justice M. William Boller. He sentenced Dylan Schumaker to 25 years to life in prison, the maximum punishment.
“At 16 you knew right from wrong,” Boller told Schumaker, who turned 17 this week. “You knew it was wrong to keep punching his head.”
Dylan Schumaker previously testified he put a pillow on the back of Austin’s head and punched it to stop him from crying and waking his baby brother.
The March 19 attack occurred while he was baby-sitting Austin and Austin’s 3-month-old brother.
Dylan Schumaker lived with his mother, along with Ashlee Smith and her two sons, in his mother’s home on Cochran Avenue. He was 16 at the time of the attack. Neither of the children was his.
The judge called the trial testimony gut-wrenching. Witnesses described the attack and Austin’s extensive head injuries that led to brain bleeding and the toddler’s death.
The judge said the last minutes of Austin’s life must have been terrifying. “He loved you, he trusted you, and you betrayed him,” Boller said.
The judge questioned Dylan Schumaker’s testimony at trial that he did not intend to kill Austin or realize his actions could kill the toddler.
Boller called Dylan Schumaker “a manipulator and deceiver.”
The judge said he took note of a comment Schumaker made in a phone conversation with his mother last July while in the Erie County Holding Center awaiting trial.
“I’m a 16-year-old blond. Probably all I have to do is cry, and they’re going to feel sorry for me,” Dylan Schumaker told her, referring to the jury.
The judge also cited the 200 texts Schumaker sent as he baby-sat the two children while his girlfriend worked her night job at a Springville restaurant.
In those texts, the judge noted, Dylan Schumaker tried to set up a sexual tryst with a girl and sell drugs to his friends.
“But when the texting stopped, the beating started,” Boller said.
For a 17-year-old, Dylan Schumaker has caused so much pain and grief for so many people, the judge said. He said he received letters from 13 people describing how Schumaker’s crime impacted them.
“The night of March 19, my family’s life was decimated because this didn’t have to happen,” Michael Smith, Austin’s grandfather, told the judge in court, his voice breaking.
“He had numerous opportunities to get out” of the house and seek help, Smith said. “But he didn’t.”
Smith asked the judge to consider the family’s feelings in sentencing Dylan Schumaker.
“We’ll never get Austin back,” he said, crying. “A piece of our heart will always be missing.”
Joseph Terranova, Schumaker’s attorney, agreed with Smith.
“This didn’t have to happen,” Terranova told the judge. “If the Smith family hadn’t thrown Ashlee and her children out” of the house, “they wouldn’t have ended up at Dylan’s home,” with the children being baby-sat by a teenager who was unable to control his anger and ill-equipped to take care of them.
Doctors prescribed medicine for Dylan Schumaker to treat his anger and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, but he chose not to take it, Schumaker said during the trial.
Terranova said the minimum sentence of 15 years to life would be a more reasonable punishment, given his client’s tough childhood, his remorse over Austin’s death and his inability to take care of children.
“What about the protection of the community?” the judge asked Terranova. “If he is released in 15 years, who’s to say it won’t happen again?”
The defense attorney said no one can predict what will happen, but he assured the judge that his client “is not a serial killer who will get out and want to kill another kid.”
“To blame anyone other than Dylan for what happened flies in the face of reality,” said homicide prosecutor Colleen Curtin Gable.
Although Dylan Schumaker was inexperienced as a baby sitter, what he did to Austin is not what a normal 16-year-old would have done, she said.
By taking in Ashlee Smith and her children into his mother’s home, “I was trying to do what my father didn’t do – be there,” Schumaker told the judge.
Dylan Schumaker then turned to Ashlee Smith. “Ashlee, I’m sorry,” he said, crying as she and others started crying. “I never wanted to hurt Austin. I never wanted Austin to die. I don’t know why I didn’t go for help.”
He told the judge he did not have a good family life growing up, but he thanked his family members for attending the sentencing.
As he was brought into court for sentencing, Dylan Schumaker cried out, “I didn’t mean to hurt him. You know I loved Austin.”
During his trial, Dylan Schumaker told the jury that he slapped Austin’s face and spanked him when he spit out his food and used an obscenity. He also admitted he slammed the boy’s head on the floor while changing his diaper as the child tried to get up and that he later put a pillow over the back of his head and punched it three times because he was afraid that the boy would wake up his baby brother.
He said it was only the second time he had taken care of both the boys.
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A Springville teenager convicted of second-degree murder in the death of his girlfriend’s toddler son last year was given the maximum penalty at his sentencing Friday morning.
Dylan Schumaker, 17, was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison for the death of 23-month-old Austin Smith while babysitting the boy and his infant brother last March 19 while their mother, his girlfriend, was at work. Schumaker was convicted in a jury trial last month.
Smith was beaten on the head several times by Schumaker, according to prosecutors. They say he muffled the boy’s face with a pillow before striking him three times, trying to get him to stop crying.
According to a Buffalo News report, State Supreme Court Justice M. William Boller cited 13 letters from witnesses and family members and called Dylan Schumaker “a manipulator and deceiver” before giving him the maximum sentence
Dylan Schumaker appeals from a judgment convicting him upon a jury verdict of murder in the second degree (Penal Law § 125.25[1] ), arising from the death of his girlfriend’s 23–month–old son. Defendant contends, inter alia, that the evidence is not legally sufficient to support the conviction and that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence. Although he concedes that his actions caused the victim’s death, defendant challenges the sufficiency and weight of the evidence with respect to whether he intentionally caused the victim’s death. We reject those challenges.
It is well settled that “[t]he standard for reviewing the legal sufficiency of evidence in a criminal case is whether ‘after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt’ “ (People v. Contes, 60 N.Y.2d 620, 621, quoting Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319, reh denied 444 U.S. 890). Consequently, we must “determine whether there is any valid line of reasoning and permissible inferences which could lead a rational person to the conclusion reached by the jury on the basis of the evidence at trial” (People v. Bleakley, 69 N.Y.2d 490, 495).
Here, the testimony of the Medical Examiner established that the victim sustained ruptured blood vessels in his left ear and near his right eye, hemorrhages in his retina and perioptic nerve, and subdural and subarachnoid hemorrhaging. The Medical Examiner testified that the victim also had numerous contusions and abrasions on multiple areas of his torso, buttocks, scalp, face and neck. The Medical Examiner opined that the cause of the victim’s death was “diffuse axonal injury,” which resulted from shearing forces within the child’s brain caused by his head whipping violently back and forth, and that such a result is consistent with the blows that defendant admitted inflicting upon the child.
The Medical Examiner testified that the child’s injuries were not consistent with a slip and fall as defendant testified occurred, but instead were the result of “multiple impacts.” Other evidence, including text messages that Dylan Schumaker sent and his trial testimony, established that the child was initially injured before 5:00 p.m., and that defendant inflicted further injuries upon him over a period of several hours during the evening. Dylan Schumaker admitted hitting the victim several times, including backhanded smacks to his face, and slamming his head on the ground while changing a diaper, all of which culminated in defendant placing the victim on a bed with a pillow over him and repeatedly punching him in the head. The Medical Examiner testified that the “diffuse axonal injury” caused the victim’s death, and that the victim had “no prolonged survival [after he sustained that injury, but rather he] died soon thereafter, shortly thereafter.”
The evidence also established that Dylan Schumaker frequently stopped attacking the victim while he sent an ongoing series of text messages. At approximately 5:00 p.m., he told the victim’s mother that the victim had fallen, but for the next several hours he texted with her on that and other topics, flirted with a different young woman, and attempted to sell synthetic marihuana to a third person. Thus, the evidence is sufficient to establish that defendant spent the evening intermittently attacking the 23–month–old child while engaging in commercial and social activities, and then placed the victim on a bed and punched him repeatedly in the head through a pillow. “A jury is entitled to infer that a defendant intended the natural and probable consequences of his acts” (People v. Bueno, 18 NY3d 160, 169; see People v. Hayes, 163 A.D.2d 165, 166, affd 78 N.Y.2d 876; People v. Watson, 269 A.D.2d 755, 756, lv denied 95 N.Y.2d 806). We conclude that the evidence is legally sufficient to establish that Dylan Schumaker intended to cause the death of the victim (see generally Bleakley, 69 N.Y.2d at 495).
CLAIM: American teenager who killed a Muslim refugee for raping his sister sentenced to prison
AP’S ASSESSMENT: False. A viral video portraying a teenager sentenced to prison for killing a Muslim refugee is actually using footage from Dylan Schumaker’s trial, a teenager found guilty of murdering his girlfriend’s son in 2013.
THE FACTS: A video posted on Facebook by the Sarah Huckabee Sanders Fans Page does not show a teenager being sentenced to prison for killing a Muslim refugee.
The image shown in the video originates from the sentencing of Dylan Schumaker, a teenager who was found guilty of murdering his girlfriend’s 23-month-old son in 2013. Schumaker was given a life sentence for the murder in 2014.
Sean Sellers was sixteen years old when he would murder his parents and in a separate crime murder a clerk at a convenience store. This teen killer would be convicted on all three murders and sentenced to death and would be executed a number of years later and before the United States stopped executing teens who committed their crimes under the age of eighteen.
Sean Sellers is the only person to be executed for crimes committed under the age of seventeen since the reestablishment of the death penalty in 1977
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On Sept. 8, 1985, Sean Sellers was 16 when he shot and killed Robert Bower, a convenience store clerk in Oklahoma City. According to the testimony of Sellers’ best friend, Richard Howard, who was with him at the time of the murder, Sellers said that he killed Robert Bower because he “wanted to see what it feels like to kill somebody.”
On March 5, 1986, Sean Sellers shot and killed his mother, Vonda Bellofatto, and stepfather, Lee Bellofatto, while they slept in their Oklahoma City home. Howard testified that just after the murders, Sellers had come to his house and told him that he had killed his parents. Howard was also initially charged with first degree murder, but the state dismissed the charge and recommended that he be given a five-year suspended sentence in exchange for testimony against his friend. By his own admission, Sellers committed the murders as a practicing satanist.
Sean Sellers was the 13th execution of murderers who were under 18 years old at the time of the murder, and the first in 40 years for one who murdered at the age of 16. At the time of his trial, his defense argued Sean Sellers was addicted to the game “Dungeons and Dragons” and had no control over his actions. At the time of his execution, Sellers contended he was the victim of a multiple personality disorder.
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Former Satan worshipper Sean Sellers was executed early today with Jesus on his lips.
Sellers, 29, died at 12:17 a.m. after being injected in both arms with poisons designed to put him to sleep, stop his breathing, then stop his heart.
Sellers sang and spoke to his witnesses before falling unconscious.
“Here I come, Father,” Sellers said loudly. “I’m coming home.” He then turned to Warden Gary Gibson and said, “Let’s do it, Gary. Let’s get it on.”
Sellers then began singing, “Set my spirit free that I might praise Thee. Set my spirit free that I might worship Thee.” Those were his last words.
Earlier, Sellers began his final statement by addressing relatives of his stepfather. He said: “All the people that are hating me right now and are here waiting to see me die, when you wake up in the morning, you’re not going to feel any different. You’re going to hate me just as much tomorrow as tonight.
“When you wake up and nothing has changed inside, reach out to God and He will be there for you. Reach out to God and He will heal you. Let Him touch your hearts. Don’t hate all your lives.”
He then told his seven witnesses, “I love you all.”
Sellers’ crimes were committed in two transactions. His first victim was Robert Bower, a convenience store clerk, who died because Sellers told a friend he “want[ed] to see what it feels like to kill somebody.” Escaping detection for the first murder, six months later, Sellers killed his mother and stepfather, each with a single shot to the back of the head, making it appear the couple had been attacked by an intruder in the middle of the night.
Afterward, Sellers told a friend he thought he had done a good job feigning his innocent discovery of the bodies and described how he stood in his undershorts while firing the two shots so no blood would spatter and be discovered on his clothing.
At his state trial on three counts of first degree murder, defense counsel portrayed Sellers as the victim of Satanism and occult worship. He further argued Sellers’ addiction to the game, Dungeons and Dragons, dictated his actions and disconnected him from any consciousness of wrongdoing or responsibility. A psychiatric expert testified Sean was “legally unconscious” at the time of all three killings and therefore incapable of forming the intent required of first degree murder.
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Sean Sellers was executed February 4, 1999
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