Maxwell Morton Teen Killer – Shoots Friend Takes A Selfie

maxwell morton teen killer

Maxwell Morton was sixteen years old when he would shoot his friend and then take a selfie. According to court documents Maxwell Morton told police that he asked his friend Ryan Mangan to take a photo of him holding a gun, then the gun accidentally went off striking Ryan. Now instead of calling 911 like a normal person Maxwell Morton would take a selfie with the body and sending it online. This teen killer would be convicted of third degree murder and sentenced to thirty years in prison in Pennsylvania

Maxwell Morton 2023 Information

Parole Number:MZ7444
Age: 21
Date of Birth: 05/21/1998
Race: BLACK
Height: 5′ 05″
Gender: MALE
Citizenship: USA
Complexion: LIGHT
Current Location: PINE GROVE
Permanent Location: PINE GROVE
Committing County: WESTMORELAND

Maxwell Morton Other News

A selfie that shows Maxwell Morton smiling in front of the body of his friend, Ryan Mangan, was released into evidence at the young man’s murder trial Tuesday in Westmoreland County Court.

Morton, 18, of Jeannette, is accused of fatally shooting Mangan, 16, as they played video games on Feb. 4, 2015. The question of whether Morton intended to pull the trigger was addressed in opening statements Tuesday.

District Attorney John Peck argued that the shooting was premeditated. He said Morton’s actions and statements to police afterward proved that, while also showing a lack of remorse.

Defense attorney Pat Thomassey disagreed, saying the shooting was an accident and Mangan was Morton’s friend.

The mother of a boy in Wisconsin reported the selfie after it was sent to her son. That led police to Morton’s house, where he told police a little about what happened and where the gun was.

Morton originally told police that he and Mangan were playing with the weapon, and he wanted to take a picture looking down the barrel and he shot Mangan.

“He had a little smirk on his face and said, ‘I didn’t really care either,’” said Westmoreland County Detective James Williams, who interviewed Morton in the presence of his parents after the search and before Morton was arrested.

The conversation to which Williams testified was not recorded, and according to his police report, Morton originally said the shooting was an accident.

Testimony will continue Wednesday morning before Judge Meagan Bilik-DeFazio.

https://www.wtae.com/article/pennsylvania-attorney-general-says-woman-kept-sister-in-cage-vestaburg-washington-county/30537374

Maxwell Morton More News

An 18-year-old man who shot his 16-year-old friend two years ago while they played video games, then took a selfie of himself next to the victim, was found guilty Thursday of third-degree murder by a Westmoreland County jury.

“It was a difficult case because of what he did afterwards, in terms of the selfie and all of the other stuff,” said Maxwell Morton’s defense attorney, Pat Thomassey. “I give the jury credit. I think they came to a reasonable conclusion based upon all of the evidence they saw.”

Morton, of Jeannette, testified that he and Ryan Mangan had no issues between them, and he was having fun visiting Mangan’s home that day in February 2015.

Morton said the two were pretending to be rappers and imitating what they do in music videos when he saw a lump in a pillowcase, and Mangan pulled out a handgun. Morton testified that Mangan was waving the weapon around and pointed it at him, and Morton then wanted to handle the gun.

Morton told the jury that the clip was out of the firearm, and he didn’t think the weapon was loaded when he pointed it at Mangan and pulled the trigger. The gun fired once, hitting Mangan in the face, but Morton said he did not call 911, nor did he call his parents or ask neighbors for help, because he was afraid to tell anyone what happened.

Morton took a selfie of himself smiling next to Mangan and sent it via Snapchat to a teenager in another state. The teen’s parent reported the photo, and Jeannette police were notified of the shooting. The picture was introduced as evidence in the trial.

Dr. Cyril Wecht, a forensic pathologist, testified that Mangan could have survived the shooting if he had received medical care. Instead, authorities said Morton posed for a selfie with his dying friend and then fled the house without seeking aid.

Morton was returned to the county prison after the verdict to await his sentencing date.

https://www.wtae.com/article/jeannette-shooting-death/8942697

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Maxwell Morton is currently incarcerated at the Pine Grove Facility in Pennsylvania

Maxwell Morton Release Date

Maxwell Morton release date is 2047 however he is eligible for parole in 2032

Maxwell Morton Other News

A Jeannette teen will serve at least 15 years in prison for shooting his best friend in the face, a crime he memorialized by taking a “selfie” with the victim’s body.

Maxwell Morton, who turns 19 this week, told a Westmoreland County judge Monday that he did not want to be remembered as a “savage” and conceded that the Feb. 4, 2015, shooting of 16-year-old Ryan Mangan in the bedroom of his Jeannette home was “messed up.”

“Sometimes sorry isn’t enough for people, but that’s all I have to give,” Morton said.

Common Pleas Court Judge Meagan Bilik-DeFazio sentenced Morton to serve 15 to 30 years in prison. A jury in February found him guilty of third-degree murder.

Prosecutors had charged Maxwell Morton with first-degree homicide, contending he intended to shoot Mangan as the teens fooled around with a 9 mm semiautomatic handgun Mangan kept in his bedroom.

The judge noted Morton’s age and suggested that using his cellphone to take a photograph of himself smiling with Mangan’s body — he was slumped over a chair in the background with a bullet hole under his left eye — rather than call for help substantially altered the case.

“You look like a little boy to me, and now I am faced with sentencing you,” Bilik-DeFazio said. “The reality is this case would be very different but not for that photograph. No one will understand the thought process of taking that photo.”

It was the selfie that police used to link Maxwell Morton to the murder. Police said Morton took the gun and ran from Mangan’s home after the shooting and, later that night, bragged about it to a teen in Wisconsin via a video game system.

As proof of the murder, Maxwell Morton sent the teen the photograph of himself with the body through the social media app Snapchat. The teen preserved the photo and told his mother, who alerted the police.

Assistant District Attorney Tom Grace argued that Morton should receive a maximum sentence of up to 40 years. Grace said Morton has two prior convictions for assault as a juvenile and another violent incident that occurred after he was jailed for Mangan’s shooting.

But Grace said it was the selfie the judge should focus on in determining the sentence.

“When I saw this photograph with the victim lying dead and slumped on a chair and the defendant smiling ear-to-ear, that speaks volumes about his character,” Grace said.

Defense attorney Pat Thomassey argued at trial that the shooting was an accident and that neither teen had malice toward the other. On Monday, Thomassey told the judge that Mangan and his parents were partially at fault for the murder. It was Mangan’s gun — one of several he had possession of — and his parent’s failure to know about the weapons that led to the shooting, Thomassey said.

“There is a lot of blame to go around in this case. I would know if there were guns in my house, and these parents didn’t know,” Thomassey said. “What this is is two kids fooling around with guns. If Maxwell didn’t panic and didn’t do the stupid things he did, called 911, he probably doesn’t even get charged.”

The teens were classmates in the Jeannette school district. At the time of the shooting, they attended Agape, a day treatment center and alternative school for troubled youth.

Mangan’s parents told the judge they were devastated by their son’s death and said they will be unable to forgive Morton for the killing.

“I have no sympathy for the devil that took my son’s life away from me. I hope he … burns in hell for eternity,” said George Mangan, the victim’s father.

Morton’s parents described their son as a young man who has struggled with racism but had dreams to attend college.

“This is just tragic,” said his mother, Honey Morton. “These two lives were just destroyed.”

Sergio Morgan-Wideman Teen Killer Murder Robbery

Sergio Morgan Wideman Teen Killer

Sergio Morgan-Wideman was fifteen years old when he murdered a clerk during a robbery in Florida. According to court documents Sergio Morgan-Wideman and an accomplice walked into the shop where he demanded money from the clerk before fatally shooting him in the head.

Sergio Morgan-Wideman would soon be arrested and the teen killer would be sentenced to life in prison however will be up for review after twenty five years. Sergio Morgan-Wideman accomplice plead guilty to manslaughter and robbery

Sergio Morgan-Wideman 2023 Information

Sergio Morgan Wideman 2020 photos
ID Photo
DC Number:V52234
Name:MORGAN-WIDEMAN, SERGIO D
Race:BLACK
Sex:MALE
Birth Date:06/16/1999
Initial Receipt Date:06/21/2017
Current Facility:CHARLOTTE C.I.
Current Custody:CLOSE
Current Release Date:SENTENCED TO LIFE

Sergio Morgan-Wideman More News

A 17-year-old found guilty in the shooting death of a St. Augustine store clerk during a 2015 robbery was sentenced Monday to two life terms. His getaway driver was sentenced to 22 years for his role in the murder.

Sergio Morgan-Wideman was convicted of one count of first-degree murder, one count of armed robbery and two counts of aggravated assault with a firearm in the fatal shooting of Malav Desai, 28.

Andre Robinson, 18, pleaded guilty in May to manslaughter with a firearm and armed robbery in the clerk’s murder.

Morgan-Wideman, who was 15 when he shot Desai, was sentenced to life with parole on the murder and armed robbery charges and five years in prison for each of the aggravated assault charges. His sentences will run concurrently. He is eligible for a sentence review after 20 years on the armed robbery charge and after 25 years on the murder charge.

Prosecutors said Morgan-Wideman was the leader who made the decision to kill Desai, who was shot once in the forehead and died at the Tobacco and Beverage Express. Court documents say Morgan-Wideman got away with $600 before he and Robinson led police on a multi-county high-speed chase.

Morgan-Wideman’s sentencing hearing became emotional as his mother described a troubled young man who had been using marijuana since age 11, when he lost his grandmother to cancer. She said he was not in his right mind when he robbed the store and that he had been negatively influenced by drug dealers, who got him hooked on molly.

“There are no words to explain the hurt and pain I feel in the depths of my soul for my son and Mrs. Desai,” Morgan-Wideman’s mother, Maria Hardy, said. “No one wins here today. My son is not a monster. I truly feel if it had not been for this drug, we would all not be sitting here today.”

The defense argued that at age 15, Morgan-Wideman’s brain lacked the ability to make mature decisions and understand the consequences of his actions.

But the judge said Desai was executed and that Morgan-Wideman would pay for that decision with his freedom.

A victim’s advocate read a statement from Desai’s widow, Aakankssa Desai, as she faced Morgan-Wideman in court. In the statement, she said that Desai was her world and that he was also a son, a brother and an uncle, with a loving family in India who were all left to mourn his death. 

She said she still has nightmares about the murder and that she wanted Morgan-Wideman and his co-defendant to both get life in prison.

“It has been two years, but it still feels like yesterday. I have nightmares about this day, and I wake up in the middle of the night looking for my husband in the bed next to me, unwilling to except the reality,” her statement said. “I can see where leniency would back him only because of their age, but it does not change the fact that they took a life. My husband’s life. If they were mature enough to get their hands on a gun, steal a vehicle, plan an entire robbery and shoot an innocent person in the head, they are not kids.”

Robinson’s sentence will run concurrently to whatever sentence he is given on outstanding charges of fleeing police in Putnam and Clay counties. He will be given credit for 616 days of time served. Morgan-Wideman has 30 days to appeal his sentence.

https://www.news4jax.com/news/2017/06/05/teen-sentenced-to-2-life-terms-in-2015-murder-of-store-clerk/

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Sergio Morgan-Wideman is currently incarcerated at the Charlotte Correctional Institution

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Joshua Mooney Teen Killer Murders Woman During Robbery

Joshua Mooney Teen Killer

Joshua Mooney was fourteen years old when he broke into a home and when he was surprised by the homeowner he would shoot and kill the forty seven year old woman. Once arrested Mooney would brag to other inmates about the killing. This teen killer would be sentenced to life in prison without parole

Joshua Mooney 2023 Information

joshua mooney now 2019 photos

Gender: Male

Race: White

Height: 5 ft 8 in

Weight: 134 lbs

Hair Color: Brown

Eye Color: Green



OK DOC#: 695292

Birth Date: 4/4/1998


Current Facility: DAVIS CORRECTIONAL FACILITY-HOLDENVILLE,

Reception Date: 4/29/2014

Oklahoma Department Of Corrections

Joshua Mooney Other News

A Jenks teenager who is serving a life prison term for murder is seeking court relief based on a contention that he was “misled” by his attorney when he entered his guilty plea.

Signing his own application for post-conviction relief, 16-year-old Joshua Mooney asserts in a court document filed this week that his public defenders did not advise him of his right to appeal a court order denying him consideration as a youthful offender.

In the filing, Joshua Mooney says he is applying to have counsel appointed to represent him and that “I believe I am entitled to relief.’’ He indicates that he wants court-appointed counsel to assist with his application for an appeal of the youthful offender ruling.

First Assistant District Attorney Doug Drummond said Mooney is entitled to this appeal and that applications for post-conviction relief are not unusual.

Joshua Mooney was 14 when he fatally shot Mary Brice Escue, 47, of Reno, Nevada, at her parents’ home in Jenks on Dec. 17, 2012. He told authorities that he had broken into the house to steal money and then held Escue at gunpoint before killing her.

Last October, Tulsa County Special Judge Cliff Smith denied Mooney’s request to be treated as a youthful offender, and the state Court of Criminal Appeals upheld that ruling in January.

Mooney pleaded guilty April 4 and was convicted as an adult. He is in Department of Corrections custody at the Joseph Harp Correctional Center in Lexington.

A plea agreement stipulated that Joshua Mooney, in pleading guilty, got life sentences with the possibility of parole on murder and robbery counts. He got a seven-year term for burglary, with all sentences running concurrently and equivalent for prison purposes to one life term.

Accepting the plea deal meant Joshua Mooney avoided the possibility of a no-parole life prison sentence or consecutive sentences.

His life sentence requires that he serve at least 38 years and three months before becoming eligible for parole.

If he had been categorized as a youthful offender, his sentence would have been much lighter.

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Joshua Mooney is currently incarcerated at the Davis Correctional Center

Joshua Mooney Release Date

Joshua Mooney is serving a life sentence however he is eligible for parole in 2052

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He gunned a woman down in cold blood when just 14 years old, and on his 16th birthday, Joshua Scott Mooney accepted a plea deal that will send him to prison for life.

Mooney agreed to plead guilty Friday to first degree murder, robbery with a firearm, and second degree burglary.

He broke into a home belonging to the parents of Mary Escue, 47, of Reno Nevada in December of 2012.

When she came home and discovered him inside, he held her at gunpoint with a rifle found inside the house, then shot and killed her.

First Asst. D.A. Doug Drummond tells KRMG the plea deal includes life sentences for the murder and robbery charges, and 7 years for the burglary charge, all sentences to be served concurrently.

In Oklahoma, a life sentence is considered to be 45 years; murder and robbery with a firearm convictions require the prisoner to serve 85 percent of the sentence before parole can be considered.

That means Mooney will have to serve just over 38 years before he’s eligible for parole.

Drummond says he’s happy with the outcome of the case.

“If we don’t have to go to trial, and we can get a sentence we believe is justice, we do that,” he told KRMG. “That’s better for the family. They don’t have to sit through the emotion of the trial.”

Mooney will not receive any credit for time served; he’s been in jail since his arrest in December, 2012.

Lukas Mironovas Teen Killer Murders Mother

Lukas Mironovas Teen Killer

Lukas Mironovas was fifteen when he killed his mother over stolen marijuana in Maine. According to court documents Lukas Mironovas, fifteen year old William Smith and a unnamed thirteen year old would strangle and stab the victim in the neck. Apparently an argument broke out between Lukas Mironovas and his mother over missing marijuana and her refusal to drive him and his friends back to Massachusetts. This teen killer was sentenced to thirty three years in prison, William Smith was sentenced to twenty eight years and the unnamed juvenile will remain in custody until he turns twenty one.

Lukas Mironovas Other News

A Maine teenager who killed his mother after she confronted him and his two friends about stealing her marijuana was sentenced to 33 years in prison Thursday.

In November, Lukas Mironovas, 16, pleaded guilty to murder and conspiracy to commit murder in the April 21, 2018, death of his 47-year-old mother Kimberly Mironovas.

Prosecutors alleged Lukas, then 15, and his two friends William Smith, then 15, and Thomas Severance, then 13, concocted a scheme to kill his mother after she came home from beauty school and accused them of stealing some of her marijuana and then refused to give Smith and Severance a ride back to Massachusetts, where they lived.

“First, they were going to steal the car and drive themselves to Massachusetts,” Lukas Mironovas’ defense attorney Pamela Ames tells PEOPLE. “But they discarded that because she would be able to find her car and they would get caught.”

The teens then planned to drug her wine with prescription pills and slit her wrists to make it look like a suicide but decided against that plan because they didn’t think the pills would sufficiently dissolve.

“Then they come up with the plan” says Ames. “They will strangle and stab her and stage it to look like a suicide or a home invasion, and she got killed in that.”

Ames says at one point Lukas allegedly considered not going through with the killing when his mother told them she indeed would drive the two teens back to Massachusetts.

Severance, she says, backed out of the plan.

“It was Mr. Smith who was the ringleader,” says Ames. “He was the one who wanted to go through with it, no matter what.”

Prosecutors said fifteen minutes after Kimberly went to bed, Smith and Lukas snuck up to her bedroom.

Both boys choked her and Lukas stabbed her in the throat repeatedly.

“Lukas stabbed his mother repeatedly in the neck with a knife he had brought from downstairs,” said Assistant Attorney General Meg Elam, at an earlier plea hearing. “According to medical examiner Kristin Sweeney, the cause of Kimberly Mironovas’ death was the concurrent cause of strangulation and multiple knife wounds to her neck.”

Smith’s attorney, Walter McKee, says it was Lukas who was the instigator, not his client.

“He was the one who took a knife and stabbed her in the neck, not William,” McKee tells PEOPLE. “What was clear but for Lukas fixated on it it never would have happened.”

Smith, he says, feels “tremendous remorse” over the slaying.

According to prosecutors, after the murder the teens told police that an intruder killed Kimberly but later admitted to the crime.

Ames says Lukas was kicked out of “every school system” in Massachusetts before they moved to Maine.

In the days leading up to the murder, Ames says Lukas, who had also been kicked out of school in Maine, wanted to visit his two friends in Massachusetts but instead Kimberly decided to bring them to Maine.

“Kimberly did everything she could do,” she says. “If she hadn’t gone down to get Smith and Severance I don’t think this would have ever happened.  You can’t blame her she was trying to do something. Lukas was isolated. He had nothing going on in his life.”

Severance, 14,  pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit murder in the homicide and is incarcerated at the Longcreek Youth Development Center until the age 21.

Smith, 17, pleaded guilty to murder and conspiracy to commit murder and was sentenced to 28 years in prison. He is serving his time at Long Creek until he turns 18 and then will be housed in Maine State Prison.

https://people.com/crime/maine-teenager-murdered-teen-son-friend-argument-marijuana/

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Lukas Mironovas 2023 Information

Lukas Mironovas 2022
Status:Incarcerated
MDOC Number:160978
Last Name, First Name, Middle Initial:Mironovas, Lukas Alexander
Alias or Aliases:
Location(s) and location phone number(s):Facility – Maine Correctional Center
Earliest Custody Release Date:11/29/2046
Date of Birth:3/25/2003
Age (Years):18
Weight (Pounds):240
Height:6 Feet 2 Inches

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Lukas Mironovas is currently incarcerated at the Maine Correctional Center

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Lukas Mironovas earliest release date is 2046

Tyler Miller Teen Killer Stabs Man To Death

tyler miller teen killer

Tyler Miller was sixteen years old when he stabbed a man to death in Ohio. According to court documents Tyler Miller was upset that the victim had shorted him twice when buying marijuana. When the man showed up at Tyler Miller home the teen killer would get into the vehicle and proceed to stab the man multiple times. The man would get out of the vehicle and would collapse and die. Tyler Miller would be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole

Tyler Miller 2023 Information

tyler miller 2022

NumberA776133

DOB06/08/2003

GenderMale

RaceWhite

Admission Date06/05/2020

Institution Mansfield Correctional Institution

StatusINCARCERATED

Indefinite Sentence Min Life Sentence

Indefinite Sentence Max Life Sentence

Expiration of Max Sentence Life Sentence

Tyler Miller More News

A pretrial hearing for a Perrysburg teen accused a stabbing a Toledo man to death was held by phone Monday.

It is possible Tyler Miller, 16, will offer a plea in the Wood County Common Pleas Court of Judge Alan Mayberry on April 23, said Wood County Prosecutor Paul Dobson.

If a plea is made, sentencing will be on June 4, he said.

Miller pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity on Dec. 20, after which the court ordered the teen to be evaluated by the court’s diagnostic and treatment center. That evaluation was submitted at a court hearing on Feb. 21.

Dobson said the evaluation indicated Miller is competent to continue with court proceedings.

“The court still has not ruled on that yet,” he said.

There has not been a second evaluation done, Dobson added.

Although a juvenile, Miller is being charged as an adult with aggravated murder.

Miller allegedly stabbed Amonie Ervin, 19, numerous times in the chest and abdomen inside the victim’s vehicle Nov. 29. The vehicle was located near Miller’s home on Tonbridge Court.

The victim was pronounced dead at the scene after he had exited the vehicle and collapsed on the driveway.

Court records indicate Miller, who had fled the scene, was picked up a short time later. A knife was recovered from his pocket and his clothing had what appeared to be blood on them.

Miller reportedly admitted to stabbing the victim at least five times in the chest and abdomen because he was upset with him because he had shorted him twice with marijuana.

Defense attorney Jeffrey Nunnari is interested in obtaining any other evaluations done by the court diagnostic and treatment center that may have been done in prior situations, Dobson said.

Nunnari has asked for a court order giving him access to those reports, Dobson said.

Miller remains in jail on a $1 million bond with no 10% applicable.

https://www.sent-trib.com/news/prosecutor-perrysburg-teen-accused-of-murder-is-competent-may-take-plea/article_ad296586-7824-11ea-8f83-9ff00ccd4c8b.html

Tyler Miller Other News

A 16-year-old Perrysburg teen was sentenced to life in prison without parole for fatally stabbing a Toledo man in his driveway.

Wood County Common Pleas Judge Alan Mayberry sentenced Tyler Miller on Thursday.

Mayberry didn’t mince words when reviewing Miller’s transgressions, calling him a “cold-blooded, remorseless murderer.”

“I’ve looked and looked for some redeemable quality. I’ve looked and looked for some hint of remorse. I’ve looked and looked for something that would tell me there’s a possibility for rehabilitation. And I’ve not been able to find it,” Mayberry said.

Defense attorney Jeffrey P. Nunnari said an appeal would be made, with new counsel.

At least 15 family members of the victim, Amonie Ervin, who was 19 when Miller killed him on Nov. 29, were in attendance.

Miller’s family also was in attendance but left immediately after the sentencing concluded.

Monica DeLeon, director for victim and witness services for the prosecutor’s office, read a statement provided by Ervin’s mother, Akisha Gaston.

Gaston wrote about how Ervin was the sixth youngest child out of eight and how his death has impacted the family’s life.

“I am not sure what Amonie did so wrong that he was maliciously done this way. Tyler took something so valuable away from me and my family,” Gaston said. “This is by far the hardest thing I’ve ever had to face or do in my 44 years of living and I wouldn’t wish this on my worst enemy.”

Gaston rocked in the front row while DeLeon read her statement.

“I don’t believe or feel that Tyler should ever experience anything or have a second chance at coming home or being around his family ever again,” she stated.

Miller should get the maximum term of life in prison, Gaston wrote.

“I’m not ready to forgive now … but maybe in the near future with prayers and strength I’ll get through this and maybe give forgiveness one day.”

Before his death, Ervin had planned to head to California to pursue music. He loved animals to the point he took on a friend’s dog.

Ervin’s family met with Wood County Prosecutor Paul Dobson in his office after sentencing. Dobson said Gaston was not up to speaking with the media on the case.

During his 40 minutes in court, Miller spent much of the time leaning back in his chair.

Nunnari said that the law says the sentence in this case must be severe.

“The law also says that the most severe sentence should rarely be imposed upon one who was a juvenile when committing the crime,” he said.

Nunnari said mitigating factors are Miller’s age. He was 16 when he committed the crime.

“Science tells us that his judgment … is impaired by virtue of the development of his brain,” Nunnari said, adding that a brain does not mature until the age of 25.

“He is not operating with a full deck,” Nunnari said.

He had filed a motion to have Miller evaluated for a not guilty by reason of insanity plea, but Miller did not meet the criteria.

Mayberry said he had read letters submitted from agencies where Miller was treated, and the evaluation done to determine whether Miller was insane at the time of the incident.

The court needs to decide if his client is irreparably corrupt. “There is no question that he’s ill.”

Nunnari said the court should not decide whether he is given the chance for parole, but that decision should be left up to the parole board.

Mayberry had the option of a life sentence with a chance of parole at 20 years, 25 years and 30 years.

“It is only an opportunity,” Nunnari said about parole. “People seldom get paroled for this type of offense on the first time up. It’s just a shot, it’s just a chance, and that’s all we’re asking for.”

Dobson agreed age was a mitigating factor — but it is the only mitigating factor in this case.

Miller’s brain was fully developed to “plan to kill another young man, and innocent young man, to develop that plan. He talked about wanting to kill someone and ultimately he decided that that was what he was going to do,” Dobson said.

There was nothing about Ervin that justified making him a target for murder, he said.

“Despite that, Tyler Miller had no intention on that day but to kill Mr. Ervin. He called him in order to kill him, he arranged this deal … in order to kill him, he grabbed a knife from the kitchen in order to kill him, he walked out of his garage door in order to kill him. He got into the car to kill Mr. Ervin and he pulled that knife, without saying anything,” Dobson said.

Dobson said, in details provided by Miller to the probation department, he admitted to no exchange, aggravation or accusations made during the event.

“He is not an insane individual that needs to be out as soon as possible. He was an angry man who wanted to kill somebody, found his target, planned it and executed it,” he said.

Dobson said if the court decided Miller should not be in prison for life without parole, he asked that the sentence would be life with parole after 30 years.

When asked by Mayberry if he wanted to speak, Miller declined, stating “nah, I’m good.”

The court must consider Miller’s age when considering sentencing and the premeditation and actions after the offense, Mayberry said.

“Your mental state and history also creates considerable concern for the court,” he said. “It is obvious that the court does not have a crystal ball to determine whether you are irreparably corrupt.”

Mayberry said he also must consider whether it is likely Miller will commit another offense if released.

“The court would find it’s more likely because you were under release when you committed this offense,” he said.

Juvenile court had charges against Miller that had been continued.

He had been expelled from Perrysburg High School after punching another student.

Mayberry also said recidivism was likely as Miller has failed to demonstrate any genuine remorse.

In reviewing hospital reports, he noted homicidal ideation and Miller’s desire to be a serial killer, and aggressive tendencies would not change with treatment.

Mayberry also said it was noted that Miller had reportedly killed animals and ate their eyes and their hearts.

“This is not somebody demonstrating that they can get past being irreparably corrupt,” he said.

Miller sent messages to friends the day of the stabbing, saying what he planned to do, Mayberry said.

Ervin was stabbed 20-25 times as he sat in his car, unable to defend himself and still in his seatbelt, “all because he shorted you on some drug transactions,” Mayberry said.

The coroner’s office ruled he died at the scene from the stab wounds.

After the stabbing, Miller went back into his house, got his cigarettes and left. He was found several hours later by police at the home of a friend, several blocks away.

He was taken into custody and a knife with blood on it was found in his pocket.

After being Mirandized, Miller confessed to the crime and said he had taken a knife from his kitchen when he went to meet Ervin. He planned to stab him in the vehicle, flee in it and dump the body elsewhere.

Tyler turns 17 on Monday.

Dobson said the death penalty could not be considered because of Miller’s age.

Miller, who entered the courtroom in an orange jumpsuit with handcuffs and leg shackles, will likely be taken to Ohio Department Rehabilitation and Correction in Orient.

Miller was originally charged as a juvenile. His case was bound over as an adult and a grand jury indicted him in December for the aggravated murder charge.

https://www.sent-trib.com/news/perrysburg-teen-sentenced-to-life-without-parole-for-murder/article_13efef6a-a688-11ea-af71-176cad9def1b.html

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Tyler Miller is currently incarcerated at the Mansfield Correctional Institution

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Tyler Miller is serving life without parole