Jenna Oakley Teen Killer Murders Stepmother

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Jenna Oakley was fifteen years old when she murdered her stepmother in Kentucky. According to court documents Jenna Oakley and her twenty year old boyfriend Kenneth Nigh would murder the woman before fleeing in her vehicle (no cause of death has been released).

The teen killer and her boyfriend would be arrested in New Mexico a few days later. Kenneth Nigh would hang himself in jail and would later die from his injuries. Jenna Oakley would plead guilty to first degree manslaughter and theft and would be sentenced to fifteen years in prison

Jenna Oakley 2023 Information

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Name:OAKLEY, JENNA 
Active Inmate
Minimum Expiration of Sentence Date (Good Time Release Date): ?5/07/2029
Parole Eligibility Date:2/27/2025
Maximum Expiration of Sentence Date:8/27/2031
Location:KY Corr. Inst. for Women

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On Sept. 1, 2016, Oakley’s 52-year-old stepmother was found dead in the basement of her home on the edge of Junction City. Authorities launched a nationwide search for Oakley, who did not return to her home the night of the death.

Oakley and Kenneth Nigh, her 20-year-old boyfriend, took Rhonda Oakley’s car and left the state; they were found in New Mexico three days later. Nigh later died in a hospital from self-inflicted injuries.

In the first public glimpse of Oakley’s background leading up to the day Rhonda Oakley was killed, Hooper told the court she found two things unique about Oakley’s case.

“One is that there is zero criminal history. Her teachers loved her. There were never any infractions in school,” Hooper said. “So even being involved in the system is an utter anomaly.”

Hooper said the second unusual aspect of Oakley’s situation was the lack of her family’s involvement.

“I’ve worked on cases where there are grown men who are accused of some pretty gruesome crimes, yet their mothers are always calling me, or texting me, trying to reach me to see how the client is doing or how the case is going,” she said. “But never once have I had an inquiry from Jenna’s mother or her father. It’s just really astonishing.”

Hooper said she thinks Oakley was “thrown away repeatedly by her parents,” based on interviews she conducted and based on records. “The interviews I’ve done over the past two years — it appears that Jenna was just thrown back and forth between one parent and the other, when things got difficult or there was … abuse in the home.”

Over the course of the past two years, Hooper said she talked with Oakley for about 200 hours, face-to-face and via phone. She also researched Oakley’s early life by going over her education and medical records, as well as documents from child protective services involving Oakley in Indiana and Kentucky. Hooper said she interviewed Oakley’s friends, parents of friends, former neighbors, a former landlord/babysitter, former pastors, teachers, therapists, school counselors a step-sister and a half-sister, making her qualified to speak about Oakley’s upbringing, she testified.

When asked about Oakley’s early life with her mother, Christy Wood Poe, in Indiana, Hooper said, “It wasn’t a safe home.”

She said after Oakley’s parents separated, her mom worked at the local jail, formed a romantic relationship with an inmate, bonded him out “and brought him home to live with the children.”

“It was incredibly unsafe,” Hooper said. “He ended up stealing from them and he brought women into the home that the children saw.”

Hooper said child protective services was called a couple of times when Oakley was about 3 years old, when a neighbor saw rats around the home and was concerned that the children were being left alone for long periods of time.

In the social worker’s records and notes from one of the visits, she wrote that Oakley’s mother was hostile toward her and at first wouldn’t allow the social worker into the home.

“When she finally did get in, she said in her notes there was garbage scattered everywhere around the house,” Hooper said. “There was vomit. There were feces and urine, human and animal, throughout the house.”

The records noted that roaches were under the stove; dirty, moldy dishes were piled in the sink; and medicines were within the children’s reach, Hooper said.

The landlord was also Oakley’s babysitter, Hooper said. “She spent a great deal of time with Jenna as a child and she said Jenna was constantly covered in flea bites,” and her constant scratching caused them to bleed.

When the family moved out of the house, the landlord said she saw the same filth that the social worker had reported, Hooper said.

Hooper said she spent three days in Arlington, Indiana, and saw the house where Oakley had most recently been living with her mother. “It was sort of ramshackle and very run down. Broken windows and things like that,” Hooper said.

“Inside the home … what the records indicated — it was terrifying. It was chaotic and it was unpredictable.”

Hooper told the court that Oakley’s mother wouldn’t speak to her, but her older half-sister said the abuse was “terrible;” she left when Oakley was in middle school.

“She’s been estranged from Christy ever since. It’s been difficult for Jenna because this older half-sister was really her protector. It got really bad after she left.”

Hooper said in Phillip Oakley’s house, “It appears there was a lot of emotional neglect. Jenna was in an unfinished basement, by herself. It was moldy and she was often sick because of it.” There were also no pictures of Oakley inside the house, Hooper added.

Commonwealth’s Attorney Richie Bottoms pointed out that Hooper had never actually been inside Phillip Oakley’s house and had based her opinion only on crime scene photos and what his daughter had told her.

“That is correct,” Hooper said.

Bottoms said that in Hooper’s earlier testimony, she stated Oakley was doing well in the Boyle County school system while living with her father and step-mother. And she didn’t have behavior or dependance issues, to which Hooper agreed.

Bottoms asked Hooper if she “was aware that (Phillip Oakley) was trying to block her pursuit of any relationship with Kenneth Nigh. He did not approve of the relationship.” Hooper said she did know that.

Hooper told Bottoms she did not find any records where family services had been called to “Mr. Oakley’s home, as far as it relates to living conditions of the home.”

“So he was doing the things, at least appropriate along those lines, by making sure she was in school and doing what she was supposed to be doing,” Bottoms said.

Hooper said her opinion as to why Oakley was susceptible to being in a relationship with an older man: “I think that a little girl who was deprived of so much love and care … she’s starving for it. … It’s like air. She needs it like air to breathe. She needs love and air to breathe. So when somebody comes along like that, it’s a knight in shining armor. It’s everything. Somebody loves her for once. It’s all she’s ever wanted.”

Hooper said the first thing Oakley told her when they met was, “’All I ever wanted was a family.”

Hooper said she believed Oakley “revered” Nigh. “He was giving her everything she ever wanted. … She just looked up to him for everything. … The worst thing that could have happened was to lose that love.”

Anthony Lee Tanner, another mitigation specialist for the defense, provided the court with a thick stack of papers explaining the scientific aspects of brain maturation and adolescence. It also contained several articles about how adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), abuse and violence can affect the brain.

According to Tanner, “ACEs are stressful or traumatic events, including abuse and neglect, household dysfunction and traumas.”

During an interview, Tanner asked Oakley two-part questions she answered: 

• Did a parent or other aduilt in the household often: swear at you, insult you, put you down, or humiliate you? “Yes.” Act in a way that made you afraid that you might be physically hurt? “Yes.”

• Did a parent or other adult in the household often: push, grab, slap or throw something at you? “Yes.” Ever hit you so hard that you had marks or were injured? “Yes.”

• Did an adult or person at least 5 years older than you ever: touch or fondle you or have you touch their body in a sexual way? “Yes.” Try to or actually have oral, anal, or vaginal sex with you? “Yes.”

• Did you often feel that: no one in your family loved you or thought you were important or special? “Yes.” Your family didn’t look out for one another, feel close or support each other? “Yes.”

• Were your parents separated or divorced? “Yes.”

• Was your mother or stepmother: often pushed, grabbed, slapped or had something thrown at her? “No.” Sometimes/ often kicked, bitten, hit with fist or hit with something hard? “No.” Ever repeatedly hit over at least a few minutes or threatened with a gun or knife? “No.”

• Did you live with anyone who was a problem drinker or alcoholic or who used drugs? “Yes.”

• Was a household member depressed or mentally ill or did a household member attempt suicide? “Yes.”

• Did a household member go to prison? “No.”

Tanner testified that Oakley had the mental faculties of someone younger than 15 when the manslaughter occurred.

He also noted that Jenna Oakley lived in an abusive home environment and her mother encouraged the inappropriate relationship with Nigh.

In conclusion, Tanner wrote that there was an overall lack of family love, nurturing and understanding in Oakley’s life.

During his victim impact statement, Phillip Oakley said he considered Nigh a sexual predator of his daughter. When he found out they were still together, even though Oakley was now living with him and his wife Rhonda in Kentucky, Phillip Oakley said he called the police.

He also spoke with Nigh on the phone.

“And you told him to stay away or there’d be consequences?” Bottoms asked Phillip Oakley. “He knew if he came to your house and he was caught there, he would go to prison or you would do everything you could to make sure he’d go to prison?”

“Yes,” Phillip Oakley answered.

“I want to know why you did what you did,” Phillip Oakley asked his daughter in court. “Because myself or Rhonda never abused you.”

“When Jenna came to live with myself and Rhonda, it was to give her a better life,” he said.

Bottoms asked him, “On the day that you got the call that Christy (his ex-wife) and Jenna had had a bigger issue and that Jenna needed to leave, how did Rhonda feel?”

“She’s my daughter,” Phillip Oakley answered. “I was going to do whatever I needed to do to protect her.” He said Rhonda Oakley encouraged him to take his daughter in.

“She loved Jenna. She did everything in her power to care for Jenna. She provided for Jenna,” he said.

“When we found out about Kenny (Nigh), we tried to do everything in our power to keep you away from him,” Phillip Oakley told his daughter. “We did everything in our power to keep you from communicating. We took your cell phone. We took your computers. You had no access, but somehow you continued to have communications.

“There was no better person on the face of this earth than Rhonda. You didn’t have a right to do what you did.”

He said Jenna Oakley was defiant and wasn’t following their rules at home, so he and Rhonda talked about sending her to Charter Ridge or some type of reform school — “something just to get her on track.”

But Rhonda Oakley wanted to continue trying to help her step-daughter at home.

“You didn’t have the right to do what you did,” Phillip Oakley said. “You agreed to a 10-year sentence for taking her life and five years for stealing her car. Myself, your brother, Rhonda’s children, Rhonda’s friends … we got a life sentence.”

“You took a life, and so yes, I’m angry because you destroyed so many people’s lives,” Phillip Oakley said. “Jenna, you wrote in a journal that you were going to do that. Kenny didn’t know our address — so you had to tell him. You had to let him in the house.

“You’re saying you wish you could have stopped it? Jenna, you’re not a victim. You’re a victimizer.”

Testimony at Jenna Oakley’s manslaughter sentencing reveals sad backstory of troubled teen

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Jenna Oakley is currently incarcerated at the Kentucky Correctional Institute for Women

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Jenna Oakley is eligible for parole in 2025 and her maximum release date is 2031

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Jenna Oakley, the Boyle County teen convicted in the death of her stepmother will spend 15 years in prison for the crime.

Jenna was 15 years old when police say she killed her stepmother, Rhonda Oakley, at her Junction City home in September of 2016.

Earlier this year, Jenna pleaded guilty to manslaughter and car theft.

Lawyers for Oakley spent much of Wednesday’s sentence hearing trying to convince the judge to allow her to serve time in residential treatment.

More than a half dozen witnesses testified, most of whom worked with Jenna Oakley at the Adair County juvenile holding facility. They spoke largely about her exemplary behavior while there.

Another woman, described as a mitigation specialist, talked about how Jenna had a difficult home life, both while living with her mother in Indiana, and with her father in Kentucky. Upon meeting Jenna, the woman testified that Jenna told her, “All I ever wanted was a family.”

Most of the youth workers in Adair County say they never had any issues with Jenna Oakley.

“Nothing but positive,” says Heather Sinclair, with the Adair County Juvenile Detention Center. “Never had any issues with her. Very respectful. Very well mannered.”

After considering the arguments for an hour, however, the judge decided Jenna needed incarceration and not treatment and sentenced her to 15 years.

“I would note that this was particularly cruel,” said Judge Darren Peckler, adding, “It was senseless, it was even callous, in that regard.”

Jenna Oakley will receive credit for time already served, and must serve 85 percent of her sentence before she is eligible for parole

https://www.wkyt.com/content/news/Boyle-Co-teen-convicted-in-stepmothers-death-sentenced-to-15-years-507734611.html

Jocelyn Norton Teen Killer Murders Father

Jocelyn Norton teen killer photos

Jocelyn Norton was fifteen years old when she convinced her older boyfriend Daniel Stroh to murder her father. According to court documents Jocelyn Norton told her boyfriend that either he killed her father or she would kill herself. Daniel Stroh would fatally shoot her father and the intial plan was to kill her mother as well but that plan changed after the murder of her father.

This teen killer would tell police that her ex boyfriend broke into their home and fatally shot her father but soon her story would fall apart. Jocelyn Norton was sentenced to twelve years in prison after pleading guilty to second degree murder.

Jocelyn Norton 2023 Information

Jocelyn Norton 2020 photos
Last Name First Name Middle Initial NORTON JOCELYN N
Gender Height (inches) Weight Hair Color FEMALE 57 107 BROWN
Eye Color Ethnic Origin Custody Class Admission HAZEL CAUCASIAN Medium/Moderate 09/05/2019
Projected Eligible Release Date Prison Release Date Release Type 10/20/2029 SENTENCE EXPIRATION

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Judge Pamela Gates sentenced Tonopah teen Jocelyn Norton to 12 years in prison Thursday after pleading guilty to helping her boyfriend kill her father, according to Bryan Bouchard, a Superior Court of Arizona spokesman.

Norton, 17, pleaded guilty to second-degree murder, attempted child abuse and tampering with evidence, according to court records. 

In 2017, Norton and her boyfriend Daniel Stroh planned to kill Norton’s parents John Norton Sr. and Theresa Norton, according to court records. Jocelyn Norton hid her father’s gun so she could give it to her boyfriend. 

After shooting John Norton, who was holding Jocelyn Norton’s baby and had her 13-year-old sister next to him, Jocelyn Norton and Stroh fled the scene, planning to go to Theresa Norton’s work to kill her. The two left the baby and the sister in the car. 

Court records show that Jocelyn Norton and Stroh changed their plans and left the gun in the desert. 

A day after the shooting, Jocelyn Norton called 911 and gave them a different story than what happened. She claimed that her ex-boyfriend killed her father after forcing his way into the home, according to court records. 

Stroh told detectives Jocelyn Norton gave him an ultimatum: She would shoot herself if he didn’t shoot her father, according to court records. 

Stroh, 23, was found guilty of second-degree murder and tampering with physical evidence in July. He is set to have a Rule 11 Hearing on Oct. 1, according to court records. Under Rule 11, a defendant has a right to a full mental examination and hearing if needed, according to Maricopa County Attorney’s Office.

https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/southwest-valley/2019/08/29/jocelyn-norton-sentenced-prison-after-helping-boyfriend-kill-her-father/2153483001/

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A Tonopah teenager who pleaded guilty to helping her boyfriend kill her father in 2017 has been sentenced to 12 years in prison.

Jocelyn Norton was sentenced Thursday after entering a plea agreement in the case earlier this month and pleading guilty to second-degree murder.

The 17-year-old Jocelyn Norton was charged as an adult in the case.

Her co-defendant — 23-year-old Daniel Stroh — is facing charges of first-degree premeditated murder and tampering with evidence.

Prosecutors say the then 15-year-old Jocelyn Norton hid her father’s gun so she could give it to Stroh.

They say Stroh hid in the Norton home near 373rd Ave. and Buckeye Rd. as Jocelyn Norton waited outside

Stroh is accused of fatally shooting John Norton Sr. in the home’s kitchen in October 2017 before he and his girlfriend fled the scene.

https://www.fox10phoenix.com/news/arizona-teen-gets-12-year-prison-term-in-dads-2017-murder1

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An Arizona teenager accused of conspiring with her adult boyfriend to kill her adoptive father two years ago was sentenced to more than 10 years in prison Thursday, authorities said.

Jocelyn Norton was 15 when she was arrested following the Oct. 23, 2017, fatal shooting of 59-year-old John Norton Sr. in Tonopah, about 50 miles west of downtown Phoenix.

She was initially charged as an adult with first-degree murder. Last month, she pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and two lesser charges

On Thursday, Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Pamela Gates sentenced Norton, now 17, to 12 years in prison

Daniel Robert Stroh, who authorities believe pulled the trigger, faces a first-degree murder charge. Stroh, 23, currently is being evaluated for mental competency.

According to a Phoenix New Times report on court proceedings last year, Norton’s attorney said Stroh fathered the teen’s baby.

Investigators said Jocelyn Norton gave Stroh, who was 21 at the time, a gun and told him to shoot her father, who did not approve of their relationship

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Jocelyn Norton is currently incarcerated at the ASPC Perryville, Lumley Unit

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Jocelyn Norton current release date is 2029

Donovan Nicholas Teen Killer Murders Woman

Donovan Nicholas Teen Killer

Donovan Nicholas was fourteen years old when he fatally shot his father’s girlfriend. According to court documents Donovan waited for the victim to head up the stairs to answer a phone call when he grabbed his fathers gun and shot her twice from behind. Nicholas who was quickly arrested attempted to tell police that the murder was committed by his alter ego however they did not believe him nor did the jury at trial.

This teen killer was sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for twenty seven years.

Donovan Nicholas 2023 Information

donovan nicholas 2022

Number A746131

DOB 07/09/2002

Gender Male

Race White

Admission Date 07/25/2018

Institution Ross Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

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No one disputes how Heidi Taylor died — after more than five dozen stab wounds and with a final, fatal shot to the head — but more than a year later, the teenage boy convicted of murdering her in their home maintains he is not to blame.

“I am so scared. I didn’t want to kill her,” Donovan Nicholas, then 14, told an emergency dispatcher in a shaky voice last April from his kitchen in Urbana, Ohio. There he lay bleeding from an inadvertent leg wound sustained while he was stabbing the 40-year-old Taylor with a kitchen knife, over and over.

Voice stuttering, Donovan Nicholas explained to 911 that someone he called Jeff, modeled after the fictional horror character “Jeff the Killer,” lived “inside” him. It was Jeff, he said, who was in control while killing Taylor, the longtime girlfriend of Donovan’s father and the woman who raised him.

Later investigators would learn that Donovan had dressed like Jeff during the murder, even slashing his mouth with a small blade in an impression of Jeff’s rictus. (“Jeff the Killer,” an Internet-born horror character, traces back to around 2008 and is usually depicted as white-skinned homicidal maniac without eyelids or a nose.)

In black pants and a black shirt, according to prosecutors, Donovan hid near the front staircase of his home on the afternoon of April 6, 2017, and then called Taylor down to die. A chaotic and bloody scramble ensued as Taylor pleaded for Donovan to stop attacking her, to call 911.

At one point he got a drink of water and, when Taylor headed for her bedroom upstairs to get her phone, he raced ahead of her, at last retrieving his father’s 9-mm handgun from the nightstand.

Twice he had to load it, but he only had to shoot her once.

“I hate Jeff so much. … He couldn’t have taken somebody else, no,” Donovan Nicholas told 911 after Taylor was dead. “He took me to be his person.”

“I don’t want to die in prison,” Donovan said. “I swear it wasn’t my fault.”

Jurors disagreed: In June, days after his 16th birthday, he was convicted as an adult of aggravated murder and sentenced to life in prison. He will be eligible for parole after 28 years.

Champaign County Prosecutor Kevin Talebi says that Donovan, grown resentful and sunk deep into homicidal fantasy, was pushed over the edge after Taylor decided to take his phone away when she discovered he was sexting with an out-of-state girlfriend.

Talebi vigorously disputes Donovan’s claims of an alternate personality, dismissing it as the excuse of a vicious mind. He notes the psychologists who examined Donovan found him to be legally sane and did not agree that he had dissociative identity disorder as Donovan’s attorney, Darrell Heckman, believes.

But, with Donovan Nicholas appealing, the case is likely to carry into next year. Heckman argues he is severely mentally ill and in critical need of treatment in the juvenile system, where he should have remained.

“There is an important societal issue as to what age do we give up on children for their rehabilitation prospects and what age do we not?” Heckman tells PEOPLE.

As Talebi does, Heckman also cites the evaluations done of Donovan, but for the opposite reason: Two of the psychologists found that Donovan Nicholas, who previously struggled with depression and self-harm, had notable mental health issues even if the exact diagnosis was less clear.

“It’s got feathers, it flies. You don’t really have to identify the bird to know that it’s a bird,” Heckman says.

Taylor’s children, who were raised in a blended family with Donovan and his father, Shane Nicholas (who declined to speak with PEOPLE), aren’t sure what to believe.

In the aftermath of the murder, stunned and mourning, they have gathered around Taylor’s memory, which they don’t want lost amid the case’s grim details.

Daughter Alyssa Nicholas described Taylor as her “best friend” and a doting grandmother to her young girls — “the type of grandma who kept cookie dough in the freezer so that she had cookies on demand,” she recalled in court.

“For my sanity, I would like to think there is something truly wrong [with Donovan] for him to do something so horrific,” Alyssa, 23, tells PEOPLE.

Taylor’s son, 21-year-old Todd Taylor, is more skeptical about what is going on inside Donovan’s head, but still he wrestles with the savage reality of what Donovan Nicholas did last year.

At his sentencing in July, Donovan Nicholas offered his regret and said he would like to receive treatment. In conversations with his family from behind bars, Donovan sounded much the same.

Todd recalls one meeting where he apologized, over and over.

“How do you know it’s sincere though?” Todd wonders. “Anybody can say sorry.”

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Donovan Nicholas is currently incarcerated at the Ross Correctional Institution

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Donovan Nicholas current release date is 2045

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Donovan Nicholas is currently incarcerated at the Ross Correctional Institution

Donovan Nicholas Release Date

Donovan Nicholas current release date is 2045

Alan Nickerson Teen Killer Murders Police Officer

Alan Nickerson Teen Killer

Alan Nickerson was seventeen when he fatally shot a police officer. According to court documents Alan Nickerson and three other teens decided to rob two men, not knowing one was an off duty police officer, when the victim tried to run away this teen killer would open fire, striking and killing the victim. Alan Nickerson was initially convicted of capital murder and sentenced to life without parole however that would later be reduced to life in prison with a chance of parole after forty years.

Alan Nickerson 2023 Information

SID Number:    07720958

TDCJ Number:    01540517

Name:    NICKERSON,ALAN MICHAL

Race:    B

Gender:    M

DOB:    1990-02-09

Maximum Sentence Date:    LIFE SENTENCE       

Current Facility:    MCCONNELL

Projected Release Date:    LIFE SENTENCE

Parole Eligibility Date:    2047-11-30

Offender Visitation Eligible:    YES

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Alan Nickerson was still in high school when he and a group of friends shot to death an off-duty deputy constable during a botched robbery.

It was a capital crime but, at 17, Alan Nickerson wasn’t eligible for the death penalty. Instead, he was automatically given a sentence of life without the possibility of parole for the murder of Carltrell Odom.

That was in 2008. In the intervening years, public opinion has shifted and the laws have changed. Life without parole is no longer a legal sentence for minors in Texas.

When a U.S. Supreme Court decision sparked a review of cases like Nickerson’s, Harris County prosecutors again decided to ask for a sentence of life without parole, a move that surprised Nickerson’s attorneys and set off months of legal back-and-forth.

But on Monday, following a meeting with the victim’s family, a strongly worded letter from a coalition of criminal justice advocates and questions from the Houston Chronicle, prosecutors switched course and offered a plea to life with the possibility of parole after 40 years.

“We’re grateful that the district attorney’s office has come to this conclusion,” said Mandy Miller, the defense attorney representing Nickerson. “I hope that this now means that they’re taking a stance that they won’t be seeking life without parole on any of these cases when they come back for resentencing.”

There are only about two dozen cases like Nickerson’s statewide, and District Attorney Kim Ogg didn’t immediately address how she plans to handle those out of Harris County. But she framed the change of heart as a relief to the victim’s family.

“Although Carltrell’s senseless murder is forever a daily presence in their lives, Carltrell’s family wants the legal wrangling and appeals to end,” Ogg said Monday. “The certainty that Nickerson must serve at least 40 years before being considered for parole, while it restores nothing to them, gives a measure of peace.”

For decades, Texas killers convicted of capital murder had two sentences available to them under law: life with parole or the death penalty. But in 2005, the state Legislature replaced life with parole with a harsher alternative: life without the possibility of parole.

It was a change that death penalty supporters had long resisted, fearing it would make juries less apt to agree to death if they knew that a life sentence truly meant a killer would never be able to get out of prison.

But convicted capital murderers under 18 weren’t eligible for death — thanks to an earlier Supreme Court decision — so instead they got mandatory life without parole.

Then in 2012, a groundbreaking Supreme Court case out of Alabama banned mandatory life without parole for minors. Instead, the high court said sentencing for young offenders should be considered on a case-by-case basis, weighing factors such as culpability and the possibility of rehabilitation.

“The U.S. Supreme Court was clear that the sentence should only be for the rare juvenile that represents permanent incorrigibility and the inability to be rehabilitated,” said Marsha Levick, chief legal officer at Juvenile Law Center in Pennsylvania.

Teens sentenced in the six years between the creation of life without parole and the Supreme Court’s 2012 decision were in a sort of legal limbo, sentenced under a statute deemed no longer constitutional.

In 2013, the Texas Legislature passed a law banning life without parole as a sentence for killers under 18. That law wasn’t retroactive, so it didn’t affect cases like Nickerson’s.

But three years later, another Supreme Court case made the 2012 ruling retroactive, and Nickerson’s case ended up back in the legal system.

The 2007 slaying that started it all was over money for a pair of sneakers. Nickerson and three other teens approached the off-duty constable and another man outside the Concord Apartments, demanding their valuables.

Odom, who was off duty and not in uniform, ran away across the parking lot, but Nickerson followed him and opened fire, killing the 20-year-old six months before he was scheduled to graduate from college.

Afterward, Miller said, Nickerson showed remorse and helped police catch his co-conspirators.

But still, according to First Assistant District Attorney Tom Berg, it was the “heinousness” of the crime that prompted prosecutors to consider life without parole as the sentence a second time around.

In July, the case went before the district attorney’s capital review committee, which evaluates every capital murder case and votes on an appropriate sentence. Prosecutors wouldn’t say how each member voted, but collectively they decided to move ahead in pursuing life without parole.

To Miller, it was an unexpected move, especially from a district attorney who campaigned as a reform candidate.

“Going forward with life without parole is clearly against the legislative intent,” she said, pointing to the 2013 law.

“This is not the worst of the worst,” she said. “This is a robbery gone wrong.”

The case was headed for a jury trial, though prosecutors had filed a motion asking for the judge to handle sentencing instead.

Miller, meanwhile, filed a motion asking the court to apply the 2013 law retroactively, thus banning life without parole for her client.

And last week the Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association and a coalition of advocacy groups sent Ogg’s office a letter asking them to reconsider, and to think about whether life without parole is “ever an appropriate sentence for a juvenile since the Texas Legislature has found it is not.”

Prosecutors met Monday morning with the family, Berg said. When the Chronicle called for comment just before noon, officials said they were still pursuing life without parole.

Then, early Monday afternoon, prosecutors emailed the defense attorney with the offer of a lesser sentence, life with the possibility of parole after 40 years — in 2047.

“What we’re really talking about here is the chance at mercy,” said defense attorney Patrick McCann, who also handled the case. “That’s all we’re talking about — the chance.”

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Alan Nickerson is currently incarcerated at the McConnell Facility in Texas

Alan Nickerson Release Date

Alan Nickerson is serving a life sentence and eligible for parole in 2047

Adrian Navarro-Canales Teen Killer Murders Mom And Brother

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Adrian Navarro-Canales just turned sixteen years old when he murdered his mother and brother in Nevada. According to court documents Adrian Navarro-Canales was not happy that his family was living in the United States and wanted to return to Mexico. The bodies of his mother and nine year old brother were found stabbed to death in their apartment in Las Vegas. This teen killer would be convicted of both murders and sentenced to 32 to 95 years in prison.

Adrian Navarro-Canales 2023 Information

adrian Navarro Canales 2020 photos
NameOffender IDEthnicAgeInstitutionCustody Level
ADRIAN NAVARRO-CANALES1156619HISPANIC22LOVELOCK CORRECTIONAL CENTERMEDIUM

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The Henderson teenager who was convicted of killing his mother and younger brother more than two years ago has been sentenced.

Adrian Navarro-Canales was sentenced to 32.5 to 95 years in prison for the two murders. Navarro-Canales pled guilty to one count of first degree murder and one count of second degree murder in December 2015.

Navarro-Canales stabbed to death  his 40-year-old mother Elvira Canales-Gomez and 9-year-old brother Cesar Navarro in September 2013. Theie bodies were found on Sept. 20.

Initially, police believed that the teenager was missing and possibly in danger. However, they later identified him as a person of interest for the double slaying, and then located him at a food court on the Las Vegas Strip. He was arrested on Sept. 25, 2013.

Navarro-Canales was charged as an adult, but was not eligible for the death penalty because he was 16 at the time of the murders.

https://www.ktnv.com/news/henderson-teen-sentenced-for-killing-mother-brother

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Shackled and wearing a blue prison uniform, a Las Vegas-area teenager Monday made a brief initial court appearance on charges that he killed his mother and younger brother a day after celebrating his 16th birthday.

Adrian Navarro-Canales nodded to say he understood the charges and said little else during the hearing before Henderson Justice of the Peace David Gibson Sr. The judge set a preliminary hearing for Oct. 30.

Navarro-Canales is being prosecuted as an adult in the case. He wasn’t asked to enter a plea.

He faces two murder charges that could carry the possibility of life in prison if he is convicted. He cannot face the death penalty due to his age.

Henderson police found the bodies of Elvira Canales-Gomez and 9-year-old Cesar Navarro Sept. 20 in the bathroom of their Henderson apartment.

The mom had multiple stab wounds and a butcher knife in her chest, police said. The boy was stabbed once in the chest.

Police haven’t released a possible motive for the slayings.

A cousin, Ana Martinez, 23, told police that she didn’t think Navarro-Canales had any friends in the Las Vegas area, didn’t like living in the United States and wanted to go back to Mexico. She said he spent most of his time in the apartment playing video games.

Neither the prosecutor, Robert Daskas, nor the teen’s appointed public defender, Joseph Abood, commented outside court.

Navarro-Canales was sought for several days in the U.S. and along the Mexican border before he was found last Wednesday sitting alone at a food court on the Las Vegas Strip. The spot is about 9 miles from the suburban apartment where he lived with his mother and brother.

Police think the killings occurred Sept. 17, sometime after the mom picked up Cesar from school.

Navarro-Canales was initially named as a possible victim, not a suspect, and his father, Adrian Navarro Soto-Mayor, flew from San Jose, Calif., to plead for him to contact family members.

The Associated Press typically doesn’t identify minors accused of crimes but is naming Navarro-Canales because of the seriousness of the case.

Officers went to the apartment once Sept. 18 and twice Sept. 19 at the request of Martinez and Canales-Gomez’s boyfriend before entering and finding the bodies during a fourth visit.

School officials said Navarro-Canales was enrolled as a junior at Coronado High 

https://www.foxnews.com/world/nevada-teen-accused-of-killing-mother-and-brother-appears-in-court

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Adrian Navarro-Canales is currently incarcerated at the Lovelock Correctional Facility

Adrian Navarro-Canales Release Date

Adrian Navarro-Canales earliest opportunity for release is 2042 his maximum release date is 2104