Joshua Smith was fourteen when he fatally shot his mother in Michigan. According to court documents the teen killer would fatally shoot his mother who was sleeping at the time. The teen killer would be tried as an adult and would plead guilty to the murder and would be sentenced to twenty five to fifty years in prison
Joshua Smith 2023 Information
MDOC Number:853857
SID Number:4396436T
Name:JOSHUA SMITH
Racial Identification:Black
Gender:MaleHair:Black
Eyes:Brown
Height:5′ 7″Weight:200 lbs.
Date of Birth:10/29/1997 (22)
Joshua Smith Other News
The Detroit teen who pleaded guilty to murdering his mother as she slept last February has been sentenced to 25 to 50 years in prison.
Joshua Smith, 14, was tried as an adult in the death of his mother, 36-year-old Tamika Andrea Robinson.
Friday, his grandmother, Annie McKenzie, asked the court for leniency.
“I lost a daughter — now I’m losing a grandson as well,” McKenzie said, through tears. “I would like to ask the court to have mercy on him. He was a good boy, I don’t know what happened that night … That was not the Joshua that I know and love.”
McKenzie said she wants her grandson to know she still loves him, supports him and has forgiven him.
Joshua told police he was tired of being called names. His uncle said Joshua was a good kid who just wanted to hang out and have fun with friends and was tired of helping to care for his mother who was ill.
Chilling testimony filled the courtroom Thursday from the fiancé of a Detroit woman who was allegedly shot and killed by her 14-year-old son.
Tamiko Robinson was killed Feb. 27 in her home on Burns Street. Her son, Joshua Smith, has been charged as an adult with first-degree murder and felony firearm.
Robinson’s fiance, Chika Lewis, said he was sleeping in a back bedroom at about 3 a.m. when he heard several gunshots. He said he saw Smith holding a shotgun and that Robinson was “gasping for breaths.”
He also testified that Smith pointed the gun at him and that he slipped when he stepped back, noticing it was from all the blood on the floor.
Lewis said he grabbed his 5-year-old daughter, broke out a kitchen window and ran for help to a neighbor’s house.
Police say Smith then got into his mother’s car and drove off. He was found a short time later and arrested.
Detroit Detective Johnell White read a statement from Smith in court. In it, Smith said he shot his mother because she called him fat and he wasn’t going to amount to much and “he was tired of it.”
“I shot her (my mother) as she was laying on the couch. She jumped up and said, ‘Ouch, Ouch.’ Then, I shot her again,” said White, quoting Smith.
White also testified that Smith said he didn’t intend to kill his mother and that he didn’t shoot at Lewis because he was holding his 5-year-old sister.
Smith was bound over for trial.
His circuit court arraignment is set for March 15.
He faces life without parole.
Outside court, the teen’s uncle, LeShawn Roberts, said he still considered the teen family.
“I want him to see this, I hope he sees this. I still love you,” he said.
Zion Smith was sixteen years old when he and a friend went on a crime spree in Indiana that would leave one person dead and four others hurt. According to prosecutors Zion Smith, upper left, and eighteen year old Jaquisha Love would go on a crime spree that only lasted a few hours however one person would be murdered and four others would be shot. Zion Smith would be shot in the head and lose his right eye. Both of the teen killers would be found found guilty and sentenced to prison for over a hundred years.
Zion Smith 2023 Information
DOC Number
251083
First Name
ZION
Middle Name
Last Name
SMITH
Suffix
Date of Birth
08/25/1999
Gender
Male
Race
Black
Facility/Location
Pendleton Correctional Facility
Earliest Possible Release Date * *Offenders scheduled for release on a Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday are released on Monday. Offenders scheduled for release on a Thursday, Friday, Saturday or Sunday are released on Thursday. Offenders whose release date falls on a Holiday are released on the first working day prior to the Holiday.
04/19/2125
Jaquisha Love 2023 Information
DOC Number
240905
First Name
JAQUISHA
Middle Name
Last Name
LOVE
Suffix
Date of Birth
05/03/1998
Gender
Female
Race
Black
Facility/Location
Rockville Correctional Facility
Earliest Possible Release Date * *Offenders scheduled for release on a Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday are released on Monday. Offenders scheduled for release on a Thursday, Friday, Saturday or Sunday are released on Thursday. Offenders whose release date falls on a Holiday are released on the first working day prior to the Holiday.
01/17/2113
Zion Smith Other News
Two Indianapolis teenagers were convicted Friday in connection with a violent, hours-long crime spree that left one person dead and four others seriously wounded.
Zion Smith, then 16, and Jaquisha Love, then 18, were charged with one count of murder, five counts of attempted murder and one count of robbery after, police say, they terrorized the Near Eastside in the overnight hours between July 18 and 19, 2016.
Police were first called around 12:15 a.m. on July 19 to the 3300 block of Robson Street. There, officers found 18-year-old Dayren Staten shot to death in the driver’s seat of a Kia Rio. Another victim, Valencia Standberry, was found critically wounded in the passenger’s seat
Crime scene investigators found three spent .22-caliber cartridge casings and two spent 9mm cartridge casings at the scene, along with a .40-caliber pistol.
While still on scene, police were approached by a young women who said she had been robbed an hour earlier by a boy she knew as Zion and a woman she knew as Jaquisha Love. She told police that Zion demanded she give him her handgun, and that when she refused he started firing at her. One of the bullets passed through her jacket and shirt, but didn’t strike her.
Three hours later, police were called to the 1400 block of North Wallace Avenue on a report of a person shot. There officers found a man lying in the living room of a home with a gunshot wound to the stomach. He was transported to the hospital in serious condition. Two other gunshot victims were found inside the house and also taken to the hospital
The victims told police they’d received a knock on the door from a young man and woman matching the description of Zion Smith and Jaquisha Love. They said when they opened the door, the young man started shooting.
One of the people inside the house told police he was able to fire back at the shooter with a revolver. He said that when he did he saw the gun fall out of the shooter’s hands.
At that scene, evidence technicians recovered a Smith & Wesson 9mm pistol, a S&W .45-caliber pistol, a S&W .357-caliber revolver and a Mossberg 12-gauge shotgun. The 9mm had been reported stolen two days prior.
Within 45 minutes police received yet another call, this one reporting a person shot in the 4000 block of East 12th Street.
Officers arrived to find a 16-year-old who identified as Zion Curry suffering from an apparent gunshot wound to the eye. The teen was later determined to be Zion Smith. A young woman, Jaquisha Love, was with him at the time.
Based on their investigation and witness testimony, police arrested Smith and Love on preliminary charges of robbery and murder.
Forensic analysis eventually matched Smith’s fingerprints to the door of Staten’s vehicle and to the .45-caliber S&W pistol.
A sentencing hearing for Smith and Love has been set for April 12
Frequently Asked Questions
Zion Smith Now
Zion Smith is currently incarcerated at the Pendleton Correctional Facility
Zion Smith Release Date
Zion Smith must serve over a hundred years before he is eligible for parole
Brenda Spencer was sixteen years old when she shot and killed two people at a school in California. According to court documents she would open fire from her home aiming at young children waiting to get into the school. After all of the shooting was over the Principal and Janitor were dead, eight students and one police officer was injured. Eventually she was talked out of her home. When asked why she would do such a thing Brenda Spencer infamously responded “I don’t like Mondays”. This teen killer would be sentenced to twenty five years to life. Brenda Spencer is still incarcerated in California, forty years following the shooting
Brenda Spencer 2023 Information
Brenda Spencer – Current Facility – California Institute For Women – Parole Eligibility Date – 1993
Brenda Spencer Other News
In a prison two-and-a-half hours from the scene of the UCSB murders sits the killer who started it all, with the first high-profile school shooting more than three decades ago.
“With every school shooting, I feel I’m partially responsible,” Brenda Ann Spencer told the parole board back in 2001. “What if they got the idea from what I did?”
Spencer was 16 on Jan. 29, 1979, when she opened fire with a .22 rifle on Grover Cleveland Elementary School across from her home in San Diego, killing the principal and the custodian while wounding eight youngsters and a police officer.
“I don’t like Mondays,” she famously replied when asked her motive.
Spencer has since said she does not remember making the remark that inspired a song by the Boomtown Rats and became a kind of anthem for many of the school shooters who followed. She has said she also does not recall telling a cop, “It was a lot of fun seeing children shot.”
During a 2009 parole hearing, her most recent, she insisted that she had not intended to shoot anybody.
“So, why did you commit this crime?” the head parole commissioner asked.
“Because I wanted to die,” she said. “I was trying to commit suicide.”
“Why pick the school across the street?” the commissioner asked.
“Because I knew that if I fired on the school the police would show up, and they would shoot me and kill me,” she said. “And every time I had tried suicide in the previous year I had screwed it up.”
“Why did you have to shoot the people at the school?” the commissioner asked.
“I wasn’t specifically aiming at people,” she said. “I was shooting into the parking lot.”
The commissioner inquired how many rounds she had fired, and she said she did not recall.
“Well, that’s pretty good shooting to hit as many folks as you did if you’re not trying to hit anybody from across the street,” the commissioner noted.
“I don’t remember aiming at anybody,” Spencer insisted.
“Do you remember them taking cover?” the commissioner asked.
“Vaguely,” she said.
The commissioner asked if she remembered the police coming, and she said she did.
“You hit one of those fellows, too,” the commissioner noted.
“Uh-hmm,” Spencer said.
The commissioner reminded her that she had eventually surrendered.
“[You] put your gun down,” the commissioner observed. “You didn’t follow through with your plan.”
“No, I had gotten scared,” she said.
“This gun was a gift?”
“Yes,” she responded.
“From whom?”
“My father.”
The commissioner observed that Spencer had described a dark side to her father, while others described him as a decent man.
“He liked to keep appearances up, that everything was fine in the house,” Spencer now said.
“What about your mother?” the commissioner asked.
“She just wasn’t there,” Spencer said.
“But your father was always there.”
“Yeah.”
“And apparently you two slept in the same bed?”
“Yes.”
She had submitted a written statement in which she alleged that her father had begun fondling her when she was 9 and had sexually assaulted her virtually every night.
The commissioner said they would get back to all that. He returned to the shooting.
“You didn’t go to school that day?” the commissioner asked.
“No, I wasn’t feeling good,” she replied.
She said she had been under the influence of alcohol, pot, and downers.
“They made me numb so I didn’t feel anything,” she said.
She confirmed that she had heard the kids in the school across the street.
“A lot of kids laughing and doing their thing?” the commissioner asked.
“Yes,” she said.
“Did that upset you?”
“No.”
“It didn’t upset you that they seemed to have happier lives?”
“No,” she said. “I was just set on committing suicide.”
“I am sorry you had to go through everything you went through, but what I’m trying to do is find out why you would open fire and kill two people and hurt so many others,” the commissioner said. “You indicate you weren’t really trying to hit anybody—but you did a heck of a job of hitting a lot of people.”
“The only thing I was concentrating on was getting the police there so that they could shoot me,” she said.
“Well, you could have shot out one window of the school and the police would have come.”
“I didn’t think that.”
“You didn’t have any anger at the children?”
“No.”
“You weren’t trying to hit anybody?”
“Not that I remember.”
The commissioner asked if she recalled saying she had fired on the schoolyard because “I don’t like Mondays.”
“I might have said that,” she replied. “It would have been the drugs and the alcohol talking.”
The commissioner quoted the police negotiator’s report, which said she had told him, ”It was fun to watch the children that had red and blue ski jackets on, as they made perfect targets.” The negotiator added that she told him she “liked to watch them squirm around after they had been shot.”
“It’s entirely possible I said that,” Spencer told the parole board.
“Do you have any idea why you’d go out of your way to harm so many innocent people?” the commissioner asked
“I didn’t consider that other people would get hurt,” she said. “I didn’t think it all the way through”
“Several children were injured by gunshot wounds. The principal of the elementary school, Burton Wragg, age 53, had gone to the aid of the students and was subsequently shot himself,” the commissioner said. “Michael Suchar, age 56, school custodian, went to the aid of Mr. Wragg and was also shot.”
“Uh-hmm,” Spencer said.
“You’re shooting people as they come to the aid of others,” he said. “You’re shooting these people as they become targets, and yet you told me that you didn’t intend to hit anyone.”
“No,” she said.
“Are you pretty good with a rifle?” he asked.
“I don’t know,” she said, “I guess.”
She was asked if any adults had seen danger signs before the shooting.
“A month before I was arrested, my [high school] counselor took me to see a psychiatrist,” she reported.
She said the psychiatrist had recommended she be hospitalized as a danger to herself and to others.
“My dad told them that nothing was wrong with me and everything was fine, and leave us alone,” she recalled.
That had been just before Christmas. She had asked her father for a radio.
“I don’t know why he bought me a gun,” she said.
The San Diego District Attorney’s Office sent a representative to the hearing. He informed the board that on the Saturday before the shooting Spencer had told another teen that something big was going to happen on Monday that would be on TV and radio.
“On Monday morning, January 29th, she asked her father if she could stay home from school because she didn’t feel well,” the deputy district attorney reported. “Her father left home for work around 7 o’clock in the morning. Then the inmate proceeded to commit one of the most notorious crimes in the history of this nation.”
He went on: “At 8:30 a.m., the children were lining up to enter Cleveland Elementary School… She picked up her .22 caliber, semiautomatic scoped rifle and began shooting children. Principal Burton Wragg heard the shooting and ran out to get the children out of harm’s way, and the inmate shot him in the chest and killed him. The head custodian, Michael Suchar, known as ‘Mr. Mike’ to the children, ran to Mr. Wragg’s aid, and the inmate shot him in the chest and killed him. She shot eight children, and she shot a responding police officer, Robert Robb, in the neck. But for the heroic efforts of a police officer who risked his life to drive a trash truck in front of her residence to block her field of fire, no doubt further children would have been shot.”
The D.A. representative added that Spencer had complained to the police negotiator that the custodian had tried to get everybody off the school grounds.
“She shot him because, by her own words, he was making it more difficult for her to shoot the kids,” the representative said. “The number of shots fired and the number of vital hits speaks of incredibly accurate, directed shooting, and these were moving targets.”
The representative further reported that blood and urine samples taken after Spencer’s arrest tested clean. He concluded that no drugs or alcohol had been talking when she said she just didn’t like Mondays.
“Basically, what she’s telling this board are a series of untruths,” the representative concluded.
A lawyer representing Spencer spoke next. He suggested that the testing of the time may have simply failed to detect the intoxicants. He allowed that Spencer’s father had never “owned up” to sexually abusing her. But the lawyer also noted that while visiting Spencer at a juvenile-detention facility after her arrest, the father had met a girl who resembled his daughter, but was younger.
“[The father] then went on and had a sexual relationship with her and married her,” the lawyer alleged.
The commissioner read into the record several victim-impact statements. One was from Wilfred Suchar, son of the murdered custodian, Michael Suchar. He said his wife had heard on the radio of a shooting at the school and called him at work. He had gone to his parent’s home to tell his mother, Valentina.
“We found her singing as she gardened in the backyard,” the son recalled. “We were all very upset and shocked on the way to the hospital, because no one would tell us Michael’s condition. When we arrived, we found him not in the hospital room, but down in the basement, dead. He had died trying to help the children and Principal Wragg, killed by Ms. Spencer trying to liven up her Monday.”
He said that his mother never recovered.
“She was lonely and scared, and became more and more depressed,” he said. “There didn’t seem much I or the rest of the family could do to help her.”
He went on to say that his father “had gotten out alive from some rough times in the Pacific during World War II. He was then a part of the Allied occupying forces in northern Germany. Here he met his wife-to-be, Valentina. She, because of the language and cultural differences in the United States, always counted on him to manage their affairs. Suddenly, he was gone. I think her premature death in 1991 was at least partly the result of this traumatic experience.”
He ended by saying on behalf of his deceased parents and the surviving members of the family that they opposed parole for Spencer.
“My question is, will there be another boring Monday for her?” he asked.
The custodian’s brother, Andrew Suchar also submitted a statement, noting that Michael had survived two ship sinkings during the war only to be killed by a 16-year-old in a schoolyard. The brother said that although his widowed sister-in-law lived until 1991, “her life actually ended in January 1979. The victims are not only those killed, but the survivors who live the tragedy for the rest of their lives.”
And then there was a statement by Steve Wragg, son of Principal Burton Wragg.
“My dad and Mike were the only two to die that day,” he said, “The kids that they were trying to save all lived. Some of them were seriously injured, but all survived. I hope that somehow my dad and Mike know this.”
There was also a statement from the principal’s daughter.
“People have told me that I look like him, act like him, that my kids are the spitting image of him,” she said. “When the kids hear this, they can’t possibly relate to such statements, because they have never met their grandfather, and they know they never will, because I’ve told them over and over again that he is dead, that he was murdered by Brenda Spencer.”
The daughter spoke of scattering her father’s ashes in the desert.
“The place he loved the most. The small ceremony solidified my understanding of love and eternity, and of our ties to one another as human beings. Yet, while it was all happening, so beautiful, so serene, I couldn’t get over the perverse violence associated with my dad’s passing. I still can’t.”
She described going to the school to collect her father’s personal effects
“The blood hadn’t been scrubbed from where he had fallen on the concrete. I walked around this place, not stepping on the splotches and the puddles, and didn’t want to be hugged by anyone. Nothing can console me ever.”
She then spoke words that have gained ever more truth after ever more mass shootings.
“A person can be attending school and be gunned down.”
She added, “It happened here first.”
Other statements came from children now grown.
“My name is Crystal Hardy,” one began. “I was 10 years old when I was shot by Brenda Spencer.”
She described arriving at school and hearing shots and seeing the principal and the custodian lying dead. A teacher had called for her to duck.
“But I wasn’t able to run from the bullet Brenda had for me,” Hardy said.
She recalled lying in the nurse’s office, bleeding as bullets crashed through the window.
“I was greatly comforted when the policemen arrived to carry me away. I can still remember the pool of blood on the nurse’s bed, and the terror didn’t end there. Later, of course, I had nightmares, and to this day I fear that someone is pointing a gun at me when I’m walking in open places.”
“And recently, my boyfriend wanted me to go to a shooting range with him because it’s a sport he enjoys, and although I was hesitant, I thought, ‘Well, it’s been a long time, I’ll probably be OK.’ And I sat there as he shot the silhouette, but he had to stop because I started frantically crying. It was completely uncontrollable.”
There was also a statement by a parent, Francis Stile, whose two daughters attended the school. He recalled “the phone call from the neighbor who said there had been a shooting at Cleveland, the frustration of not being able to get near the school because the incident was still going on, the terror in my wife’s eyes, her screams of anguish at not knowing whether our girls were involved, the phone call from the hospital telling us that one of them had been wounded, looking at the bullet hole in her right elbow and the bullet burns on the inside if each thigh where a bullet had passed between her legs.”
The other daughter had been saved from harm when a notebook with a pouch of pens stopped a bullet. Both girls had witnessed the death of the principal and the custodian.
“They still speak of hearing the gurgle in Mr. Wragg as he lay there dying… If such evil can occur in such a benign and tranquil setting, then it can happen anywhere and probably will.”
A former student named Cam Miller attended the hearing in person and offered the last statement.
“I was 9 years old when I was shot,” he began.
He recalled that his mother had just dropped him at school directly opposite Spencer’s home and he had been starting up the sidewalk when he saw the bodies of the principal and the custodian. He had then blacked out as a bullet passed within an inch of his heart, exiting his chest. He survived but remained terrorized.
“I would have to call to my mother two or three times each night to walk me around the inside of my house, just so I knew that Brenda Spencer was not inside my house,” he recalled.
He had been called to testify against her.
“I walked into court and saw this monster glaring at me,” he remembered. “The look at Brenda Foster gave me was enough to scare any young child to death.”
Thirty years later, Miller beheld her in another proceeding and asked the board not to parole her. The board denied her and she will not be eligible for another hearing until 2019.
In the meantime, she will sit as inmate W14944 in the California Women’s Institution, seeming to see no irony in having used heated metal to brand the words “Courage” and “Pride” across her chest. She is now 51 and will no doubt hear of more school shootings and ask herself if they got the idea from what she did on that long ago Monday.
Brenda Spencer Videos
Frequently Asked Questions
Brenda Spencer Now
Brenda Spencer is currently incarcerated at the California Institute For Women
Brenda Spencer Release Date
Brenda Spencer has been eligible for parole since 1993 however has been denied repeatedly. Her max sentence is life
Corey Spencer was fifteen when he took part in a murder. According to court documents Corey Spencer, Johnny Phifer and Dustin Bernard would shoot a young woman in the course of a robbery. The pregnant woman would die from her injuries. Corey Spencer and Johnny Phifer were both fifteen years old when the murder took place. Dustin Bernard would be sentenced to fifty years in prison. This teen killer received a life sentence with no parole for thirty years. Johnny Phifer case is still in front of the courts.
Corey Spencer 2023 Information
SID Number: 50560149
TDCJ Number: 02301868
Name: SPENCER,COREY JAMAHL JR
Race: B
Gender: M
Age: 18
Maximum Sentence Date: LIFE SENTENCE
Current Facility: TELFORD
Projected Release Date: LIFE SENTENCE
Parole Eligibility Date: 2047-12-10
Corey Spencer Other News
A teenage boy has been sentenced to life in prison for fatally shooting a 19-year-old pregnant woman in 2017.
The Beaumont Enterprise reports 17-year-old Corey Spencer admitted for the first time during Wednesday’s sentencing that he shot Kera Teel during the attempted car robbery two years ago.
Spencer has been in and out of juvenile detention for burglaries he’s been involved in since he was 10 years old.
The teen has no chance of parole for 30 years and will be moved to a facility for youthful offenders.
Corey Spencer More News
Corey Spencer was sentenced to life in prison for the murder of 19-year-old Kera Teel and her unborn child in 2017.
Spencer pleaded guilty to first-degree murder and aggravated robbery in connection with Teel’s death.
The shooting happened in June 2017 at the Sienna Trails Apartments in Beaumont.
Teel says he was breaking into cars at the apartment complex trying to get money to fix his mother’s car. He says he shot Teel because he was scared.
“You took my best friend, my life,” Teel’s mother said during sentencing on Wednesday.
There were two other people involved in the robbery and shooting, but investigators said Spencer admitted to being the one who pulled the trigger. He told the court he originally lied about being the gunman because his cousin “told him not to say anything.”
Spencer was only 14-years-old on the day Teel was shot. He is now 17 years old.
Spencer’s criminal history dates back years before the tragic murder. Court records show he was linked to burglaries when he was just 10 and 11 years old.
Spencer’s mother was escorted out of the courtroom by police following the sentencing. She was screaming to her son, “We’re going to fight this,” as she was removed.
Rachel Keller, who was in the courtroom at the time of the sentencing, says she continued to scream outside of the courtroom and was being subdued by police.
Joseph Spencer was sixteen years old when he murdered his mother, father and nine year old sister in West Virginia. According to prosecutors the teen killer would shoot and kill his mother outside of the home, before going back inside to murder his father and nine year old sister. Joseph Spencer would then call 911 and told authorities what he had done. Joseph Spencer would plead guilty to three counts of murder and would be sentenced to two life sentences to be served concurrently and another life sentence to be served consecutively. Joseph Spencer is eligible for parole in 2027
Joseph Spencer 2023 Information
Offender ID (OID) Number: 3540583
Name: Spencer, Joseph Burton
Sex: Male
Birth Date: 12/31/1995
Height: 5′ 6″Weight: 127 lbs.
Race: White
Location: Mount Olive Correctional Center
Intake Date: 7/30/2014 10:00:00 AM
Next Parole Hearing: 9/3/2027
Maximum Parole Discharge Date: Not Available
Projected Release Date: Not Available
Joseph Spencer More News
Life with mercy.
That’s the sentence for a Doddridge county teenager guilty of killing three members of his family.
Joseph Spencer got that sentence Monday for the deaths nearly 18 months ago of his father, mother and younger sister.
Spencer, who is now 18, will serve his sentence in the West Virginia Penitentiary.
But his attorney is concerned he won’t get the psychiatric help he needs.
“Did I think those needs would be met within the West Virginia penal system? Unfortunately, I do not think they will,” says Spencer’s attorney, Rodney Windom. “Our mental health care in the penitentiary system is lacking, and that is a disservice to the inmates and to the state of West Virginia and the public.”
The deaths happened on Labor Day, 2012.
Spencer shot his father and then his mother to death before killing his sister.
He pleaded guilty last month to three first-degree murder charges.
Joseph Spencer Other News
Doddridge County officials have released court documents that say 16-year-old Joseph Spencer called 911 and advised them he had just shot his family on Sept. 3 .
Dead was Spencer’s parents and young sister of West Union.
Part of the case file was made public after Circuit Court Judge Tim Sweeney granted a motion by the state to try Spencer as an adult.
The report says Doddridge County sheriff’s deputy C.W. Modesitt answered the call to the residence, and when he arrived he apprehended Spencer and placed him in his cruiser.
“Upon clearing all structures on scene, I observed a female lying outside at the foot of the porch steps, dead from apparent gunshots. Through the front downstairs door.”
“I observed a female approximately 9 years old lying dead from apparent gunshot wounds. Up the stairs to the residence, and in a back bedroom, I observed a third body. The third body was a male adult,” says the report.
The victims were identified as Fred and Dixie Spencer and their young daughter Patience “PJ” Spencer.
Spencer told the officer he loaded a 9mm handgun belonging to his father and shot all three family members before calling 911.
The youth has been charged with three counts of first degree murder.
Joseph Spencer is currently incarcerated at the Mount Olive Correctional Center
Joseph Spencer Release Date
Joseph Spencer is not eligible for parole until 2027
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