Richard Kinder Teen Killer Kidnapping Murder

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Richard Kinder was seventeen years old when he and David Duren would kidnap and murder a teen girl in 1983. According to court documents Richard Kinder and David Duren, 21, would kidnap sixteen year old  Kathleen Bedsole, and her date, Charles Leonard. The pair would be driven to a remote location where they would be bound and shot. Kathleen Bedsole would die from her injuries. David Duren would be sentenced to death and executed in 2000. Richard Kinder due to his age was sentenced to life without parole and this teen killer remains behind bars.

Richard Kinder 2023 Information

richard kinder 2021 photos
Race:W
Sex:M
Hair Color:BLOND / STRAWBERRY
Eye Color:BLUE
Height:5′ 11″
Weight:181
Birth Year:1965
CustodyMEDIUM

Inmate: KINDER, RICHARD DAVID

AIS: 00139063  

Institution: ST.CLAIR CORRECTIONAL FAC.

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On the night of Oct. 20, 1983, Kathy Bedsole had a date with her boyfriend, Chuck Leonard. It was nearly Halloween, and the pair, both 16, were planning to go to a haunted house in Trussville, a town northeast of their homes in Birmingham, Alabama. Leonard picked up Bedsole at 9 p.m. Before she left, her father, Anthony Bedsole, gave her $40. She was going to a football game with friends the next day, and he wanted to make sure she had cash to pay for her ticket and food. 

On the east side of Birmingham, David Duren and Richard Kinder had devised a plan for the night: They were going to rob something or someone. In need of cash to buy marijuana, Duren, who was four years older than 17-year-old Kinder, suggested that they rob a Mrs. Winner’s fast food restaurant. Kinder was in.

Duren had a different idea, though, as they came upon an Oldsmobile sitting on the side of the road. Duren told Kinder that they would steal the car and any occupants would go into the trunk. Duren, who was armed with a gun, and Kinder, who was holding a knife, approached the window of the car; Leonard and Bedsole were inside. Unable to find the haunted house, and with Bedsole’s 11 p.m. curfew approaching, the couple had turned back for Birmingham. 

Duren ordered them to get into the trunk. He and Kinder then drove the Oldsmobile to the Mrs. Winner’s drive-through. When the cashier saw Duren flash his gun at the window, she screamed that the restaurant was being robbed. Spooked, Duren and Kinder sped away. “We had to get rid of them because they seen us and identified us,” Kinder later recalled of Duren’s next words to him, referring to Bedsole and Leonard. Kinder protested; the pair wouldn’t be able to identify them, he said, and he and Duren should just leave them in the trunk. Kinder later recalled that Duren told him he wouldn’t shoot Bedsole because she hadn’t seen him. Following Duren’s instructions, Kinder then proceeded to tie the pair up with a rope and remove the $40 from Bedsole’s purse. He got back into the car and started the ignition. Five shots rang out. “You didn’t shoot them, did you?” Kinder remembered asking.

Kinder and Duren were arrested that night and charged with capital murder. Bedsole had died, while Leonard survived and made his way to a nearby porch. A woman, seeing Leonard, alerted police. 

Jefferson County Juvenile Court Judge Sandra Storm transferred Kinder to adult criminal court, where then-Jefferson County District Attorney John DeCarlo sought the death penalty for both men. He was running for election at the time of the 1984 trial, on a tough-on-crime platform. At the end of an emotional trial, the jury recommended that Kinder be sentenced to die. 

Alabama law at that time allowed a judge to overrule the jury’s recommendation, a practice abolished in 2017. Many judges used that authority to overrule life sentences and send people to death row. But Judge James Hard, citing testimony from Leonard, Duren, and Kinder, determined that Kinder had played a minor role in the killing. Lead investigator Detective Eddie White was of the same opinion; he testified that Kinder was telling the truth about his role in the crime. Hard overruled the jury’s recommendation, and sentenced him to life without the possibility of parole—the only alternative punishment available under state law. 

Duren, on the other hand, received the death penalty and was executed in 2000. In an affidavit, Duren’s attorney said that for years after the crime, until his death, Duren maintained that none of the plans for that night were made by Kinder. He said he never told Kinder he was going to shoot Bedsole and Leonard.

Like 2,800 other people in the United States, sentenced as children to life without parole, Kinder was facing death in prison. Then, in a series of landmark decisions, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that children must be sentenced differently. 

In its 2012 decision in Miller v. Alabama, the court held that juvenile life without parole sentences were unconstitutional, except for rare circumstances. To support her opinion, Justice Elena Kagan cited Graham v. Florida—another juvenile life without parole case—writing that each state “must provide ‘some meaningful opportunity to obtain release based on demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation.’” Four years later, the court ruled in Montgomery v. Louisiana that its decision in Miller applied retroactively, to cases before 2012. Kinder would have a chance at freedom. 

At a July 2017 resentencing hearing—33 years since Kinder’s sentencing—Jefferson County Circuit Court Judge Teresa Pulliam heard from Kinder and other witnesses. He had gotten clean, they said, earned his college degree, and moved into the prison’s faith-based honors dorm. He had married a volunteer he met at the Jefferson County Jail while he awaited trial. In his years at St. Clair Correctional Facility, he had one minor disciplinary infraction. “I hope the victims of my crime will find it in their hearts to forgive me,” he said, reading a letter he had written. “I know that must be a very difficult thing to do.” 

Bedsole’s father Anthony and her sister, Susan Harris, testified that they wanted Kinder to stay in prison for the rest of his life. In an interview with The Appeal, Anthony said the investigating officers told him shortly after the crime occurred that Kinder had pushed Duren into shooting his daughter and Leonard, a narrative later refuted in court testimony and affidavits. “Deep down I thought that was wrong that the Supreme Court said to retry him,” he said of Kinder’s resentencing. “We thought it was over and we were trying to live our lives.”

But Pulliam determined that there was “uncontradicted evidence” that Kinder had worked to better himself, even while believing that he would spend the rest of his life at St. Clair. “A ‘potential for rehabilitation’ has been clearly proven here,” she wrote in her July 2017 order. 

Now eligible for parole, Kinder, then 52, appeared before the board a year later. Board members heard the story of Kinder’s transformation, as Pulliam had. If he were granted release, Kinder planned to go live with his wife in her home outside Huntsville. He hoped to get a job with a moving company. 

Once again, Anthony Bedsole said he wanted Richard Kinder to stay in prison. So did Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall. In a letter to the board, Marshall wrote, “An early release would defeat the retribution purposes of the State’s penal system and would undermine the overall goal of incarceration.” 

The parole board denied Kinder’s application on the spot. Alabama does not require the board to issue a written decision explaining itself. Kinder’s attorney, Richard Jaffe, who also represented him at his capital murder trial in 1984, was distraught. “If there’s anyone that deserves parole, it’s this kid,” he told The Appeal. “It’s an unbelievable story of redemption

https://theappeal.org/alabama-life-without-parole-denied-freedom-supreme-court/

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Richard Kinder is currently incarcerated at the St. Clair Correctional Facility

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Richard Kinder is serving a life without parole sentence

David Duren Execution

David Duren was executed in 2000

Malcolm Thrower Teen Killer Stabs Woman To Death

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Malcolm Thrower was seventeen years old from Jacksonville Florida when he stabbed a woman to death. According to court documents Malcolm Thrower would admit to attempting to rob and kidnap the victim, 58 year old Marilyn Jean Russell before stabbing the woman to death. Marilyn Russell who was attempting to help Malcolm Thrower get a job would tell rescue personnel who stabbed her before passing away. This teen killer would receive life in prison without parole and if he was just a few months older would have received the death penalty.

Malcolm Thrower 2023 Information

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DC Number:J43176
Name:THROWER, MALCOLM J
Race:BLACK
Sex:MALE
Birth Date:11/30/1992
Initial Receipt Date:03/22/2011
Current Facility:DESOTO ANNEX
Current Custody:CLOSE
Current Release Date:SENTENCED TO LIFE

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An 18-year-old Jacksonville man said drugs were partly to blame when he brutally stabbed a 58-year-old woman to death in her Baldwin home a year ago.

Malcolm Thrower, who was 17 at the time of the murder, was sentenced to life Thursday by Circuit Judge Jeff Morrow.

Prosecutor Rich Mantei said he would have sought the death penalty in the grisly case, but Thrower’s age prevented that. Thrower pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in the January 2010 death of Marilyn Jean Russell.

During a plea hearing in November, he’d also admitted to trying to rob and kidnap her. Mantei said Russell met Thrower at a grocery store and was trying to help him find a job.

Malcolm Thrower said he had been smoking marijuana laced with PCP and had hazy recollections of what happened. He initially told police that someone who looked just like him must have been the culprit.

Mantei said Malcolm Thrower was tied to the crime because of physical evidence and because Russell made a dying declaration to a family member about what happened to her.

Russell was stabbed multiple times. At one point, Thrower had to get a new knife when he broke the blade of another. One of the blows broke one of Russell’s ribs, Mantei said.

https://www.jacksonville.com/article/20110127/NEWS/801258437

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Malcolm Thrower is currently incarcerated at the Desoto Annex in Florida

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Malcolm Thrower is serving life without parole

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 The Wednesday stabbing death of Marilyn Jean Russell has shaken this little town west of Jacksonville.

It’s one of those places where neighbors know and look out for each other – and where violent crime, especially murder, is rare, some residents and family members said on Saturday.

“I’ve been here 27 years and you could probably count on one hand the number of people that have been killed here,” said Elmer Still, a friend of Russell’s and owner of an auto repair shop near the intersection of U.S. 301 and U.S. 90.

Plus, everyone in town knew and liked Russell, said Doris “Shorty” Capps, who served as a fellow police dispatcher with Russell in 1996.

“There’s nothing that she wouldn’t do for you,” Capps said.

Russell, 58, died after being stabbed by an assailant in her home around 11:15 a.m. Wednesday.

Police have charged Malcolm J. Thrower, 17, in the stabbing. The teen’s arrest docket said Russell screamed for help from her front door after being stabbed repeatedly, and that she gave officers the name of her attacker before she died.

Russell’s family called reporters to a relative’s home in Baldwin on Saturday to share their memories of their loved one. They refused to discuss or answer any questions about the investigation or about Thrower.

“Family is what she treasured most,” son Paul Russell of Jacksonville said as he pointed to 12 family members standing behind him in the driveway.

Paul Russell described his mother as strong and generous. “She would never turn down a person in need.”

And her death has been “a real struggle” for the family, he said.

Russell’s sister Tammy Russell said she flew down from Michigan after learning of the crime. She held a large, framed photograph of her sister during the news conference.

Paul Russell said it’s been difficult to accept that his mother is gone.

“Through the past couple of days I could hear her voice,” he said.

https://www.jacksonville.com/article/20100124/NEWS/801258541

Justin Long Teen Killer Murders Father

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Justin Long was fifteen years old when he stabbed his adoptive father to death. According to court documents Justin Long who had been taken in by the Long family two years before the murder would stab to death 42 year old Hoyt Long. Justin Long who was taken into Oklahoma protective services at an early age due to physical and sexual abuse would be sentenced to life in prison without parole. This teen killer is due for resentencing in the upcoming year

Justin Long 2023 Information

justin long photos 2021

Gender: Male

Race: White

Height: 6 ft 1 in

Weight: 167 lbs

Hair Color: Brown

Eye Color: Blue



OK DOC#: 411389

Birth Date: 3/27/1985


Current Facility: NORTH FORK CORRECTIONAL CENTER, SAYRE

Reception Date: 12/14/2001

Justin Long More News

A 15-year-old Duncan boy is facing a murder complaint for allegedly stabbing his adoptive father to death Monday night, police said.

Justin Long is accused of killing Hoyt Long, 42, who was found dead in his living room of multiple stab wounds with a large knife in his lap, said Duncan police.

Department Investigator George Williams said the boy’s mother called police after she reported hearing strange noises coming from
the home’s living room.

Police said she found her husband sitting on the living room sofa, making gasping noises.

She said the boy was sitting nearby and ran from the house when she called 911, Williams said.

An officer used a dog to track Justin Long down.

Justin Long is in the Stephens County Jail. District Attorney Gene Christian said he will be charged with first-degree murder in district court.

https://www.newson6.com/story/5e3685982f69d76f6209b0a4/duncan-boy-facing-murder-complaint-for-allegedly-killing-father

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Justin Long is currently incarcerated at the North Folk Correctional Center

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Justin Long is serving life without parole

Deon Haynes Teen Killer Murders Christy Davis

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Deon Haynes was a sixteen year old from Michigan who participated in a robbery that would claim the life of another teenager. According to court documents Deon Haynes and two others would enter a home in search of $400, before the robbery was over the teen killer would fatally shoot seventeen year old Christy Davis. Deon Haynes was tried four times for the murder and in the end would be convicted and sentenced to life in prison without parole. However he was later resentenced to life with the chance of parole and would be released from prison

Deon Haynes 2023 Information

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MDOC Number:233439

SID Number:1714924P

Name:DEON LATROY HAYNES

Racial Identification:Black

Gender:Male

Hair:BlackEyes:Brown

Height:6′ 2″Weight:235 lbs.

Date of Birth:08/01/1975  (46)

Current Status:Parolee

Supervision Begin Date:01/21/2021

Assigned Location: Genesee/Flint/Parole/REP

Supervision Discharge Date:01/21/2023

Security Level:

Date Paroled:01/21/2021

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Sentenced to life without parole for his part in the robbery-turned-murder of a teenage girl when he was 16, a now 45-year-old prisoner from Saginaw County has the chance to be released one day.

The victim’s mother says she can forgive the man but not forget what he did.

On Thursday, Oct. 15, convicted murderer Deon Haynes appeared for resentencing before Saginaw County Circuit Judge Andre R. Borrello via Zoom from the Lakeland Correctional Facility in Coldwater.

A Saginaw County jury in 1993 found Haynes guilty of first-degree murder stemming from the July 28, 1992, killing of 17-year-old Christy L. Davis. Haynes was 16 at the time of the killing.

The resentencing results from the U.S. Supreme Court in 2012 ruling that mandatory life sentences for those 17 and younger is a form of cruel and unusual punishment.

Borrello on Thursday said Haynes’ sentencing range was from 25 to 40 years on the minimum to 60 years on the maximum. When the hearing concluded, the judge sentenced Haynes to 30 to 60 years, with credit for 10,181 days, or almost 28 years, already served.

That means Haynes could have a chance at freedom in just two years.

On Thursday, Haynes sat at a desk as he read from a statement he’d written, directed mainly to Davis’ mother, Donna Riley, who also attended the hearing via Zoom.

“Miss Riley, I cannot even pretend to imagine the emotional pain, sorrow, grief, anguish and suffering you have endured over the years as a result of the loss of your daughter’s life,” Haynes said. “I have wanted to tell you for quite some time how very sorry I am for my participation in a robbery that led to the murder of your daughter. I have hesitated until now because I didn’t know if you would be receptive to my (indistinguishable) inaccurate and probably meaningless apology. However, I offer this apology to you now. My apology also extends to other members in your family and to your daughter’s friends as well.”

Haynes went on to say that when the crime occurred, he was an “immature, irresponsible, foolish and self-centered teenager” who “didn’t care who I hurt to get what I wanted.”

Over the past 28 years, Haynes has matured and come to recognize the severity of his criminal past, he said.

“In short, I am no longer the same 16-year-old youngster that was involved in the murder of your daughter,” he said. “I now wish to express to you my sincere regret for my poor decision and action that led to your daughter’s murder.”

Haynes went on to say he yielded to his friends’ peer pressure to participate in the fateful robbery.

“I offer no justification for my actions; there is none,” he said. “A young woman lost her life. The murder of Christy Davis is something that will haunt me for the rest of my life. I only wish I could somehow make amends for my ruthless actions.”

Haynes told Riley he hopes she can somehow forgive him. He said that in honor of Davis’ life, he has tried rehabilitating himself and become a better person behind bars.

“I have learned to value and respect human life,” he said. “My promise to you and this court, for whatever it’s worth, is that I will never again harm another human being. Instead, once I am eventually released from prison, I will live an honest, law-abiding, and productive lifestyle.”

Attorney Ray Richards said he has noticed a change in Haynes in the years he’s known him. In late 2017, Richards visited Haynes at a prison in the Upper Peninsula.

“He was relieved because he had come to grips with what he had done,” Richards said. “That’s the first time in my years of practice that I’ve had someone who I could tell was beating himself up for what happened.”

He went on to say that Haynes earned his general equivalency diploma in 2002 and is continuing to take classes to better himself. He also has had no serious tickets or citations for misconduct while incarcerated, Richards said.

Before the judge handed down his new sentence, he allowed some of Davis’ surviving loved ones to speak. First among them was Chrystal Grunwell, self-described as Davis’ best friend.

“She was such a beautiful young lady with a heart of pure gold,” Grunwell said. “She had a kind word to say about everyone. There wasn’t anybody she didn’t like. She truly was what most people would call a gentle soul. Together, we planned out every part of our lives, right down to the very last detail.

“What we didn’t plan on,” she continued, “was for you to murder her and take all of those dreams away.”

Haynes sat stoically as Grunwell spoke.

She said she and Davis had planned on completing college and remaining friends throughout their lives.

“Those hopes and dreams we talked about every single day were not meant to be, because of you. Why did you do it? Why? Christy did nothing to harm you.”

Grunwell called Haynes a “cold-blooded murder, a life-taker, and a dream-killer,” saying she has tried to forgive him but cannot.

“I can’t seem to find any absolution for the person that killed my best friend,” she said. “This week we should be celebrating her 46th birthday. Instead, we’re here in this courtroom fighting for justice for the life that you took.”

She asked Borrello to keep Haynes incarcerated

Donna Riley, Davis’ mother, then delivered an emotional statement, pausing at times to compose herself through her tears.

“Deon and others gathered at a house across the street from his and together they planned, they set in motion, to come to my home to rob me,” she said. “They set evil in motion with that planning. They came to ambush us without cause. No one took his hand and put a gun in his hand. No one helped him squeeze that trigger; he did it all on his own.”

Riley then addressed Haynes directly.

“I want to tell you, Deon, I don’t hate you,” she said. “I have never hated you. I am a believer in God and forgiveness. I forgive you for what you did. I forgive you as a human being, but I can’t forget. I’m not allowed to forget.”

She said that for the past 28 years, she has continually fought to keep Haynes locked up.

“My grief has driven me throughout the years. I’ve not had peace. I heard Deon say that he’s sorry but I want to know what it is that he’s sorry for. I need to hear you say, ‘I am sorry that I took that gun and killed your daughter.’ Then I might think that you are rehabilitated.”

She described her daughter as “a kind, caring, loving person that should still be here.”

“When I say this has ruined our lives, it really has,” she continued. “I’m afraid of what the future holds knowing that Deon may be free someday soon.”

She went on to say she doesn’t want Haynes to spend the rest of life in prison.

“But I am asking for you to spend a while longer,” she said. “I don’t think you’re ready to come out.”

Saginaw County Assistant Prosecutor Melissa J. Hoover said she has handled 11 resentencings for juvenile lifers, all of whom took responsibility for their crimes. Haynes, though, has not followed suit, standing by his story that he did not kill Davis, alarming Hoover about his potential release.

“He has had a very long time to think about this and to get right with himself and I am very concerned, in terms of rehabilitation, for a person who cannot fully take responsibility for their role in a murder,” Hoover said.

Davis was shot in the head at her mother’s house at 6191 Hess in Buena Vista Township. Her brother saw Haynes standing over her with a gun, according to trial testimony.

A teenage girl spending the night at the home identified Haynes by his voice, while another witness said he heard Haynes say he was looking for $400 at the house, according to previous reporting by The Saginaw News. Two juries deadlocked on a verdict before a third convicted Haynes.

A codefendant was convicted of assault with intent to commit armed robbery, while a juvenile who was 14 at the time of the crime was tried and acquitted in juvenile court. The teen later testified for the defense in Davis’ trials.

Hoover took issue with Richards’ claim that Haynes was peer pressured into the crime, saying he acted more as a leader.

Davis’ last words were identifying Haynes as present at the scene, Hoover said. Two other witnesses both identified Haynes “as the person who had a gun in his hand that night, who put that gun to Christy’s head and who pulled that trigger,” she continued.

“I think that Mr. Haynes is on his way to being rehabilitated, but I don’t believe he is there yet, your Honor,” Hoover said.

Borrello commended Haynes for bettering himself in prison when he believed he would never get out.

“Needless to say … 28 years is a significant amount of time in one’s life to be incarcerated, to have the loss of freedom,” Borrello said.

The judge also said Deon Haynes has not had citations for violent misconduct while in prison since his first few years

“There is a great deal of evidence to suggest the defendant is not a threat to the protection of society,” Borrello said. “I know that’s very difficult considering the circumstances of which he was convicted. The crime that he committed was a violent, heinous act.”

After Borrello imposed the new sentence, he offered a word of encouragement to Haynes.

“In final word to Mr. Haynes, I do wish you a prosperous future,” he said. “Please take advantage of the opportunity that will be given to you at some point in the future.”

https://www.mlive.com/news/saginaw-bay-city/2020/10/sentenced-to-life-without-parole-as-a-teen-saginaw-county-man-has-chance-at-release-2-years-from-now.html

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Deon Haynes was paroled from prison in 2021

Talen Barton Teen Killer Murders 2

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Talen Barton was a 17 year old from California who would stab to death a friend and a friends father. According to court documents Talen Barton would stab to death Teo Palmieri, 17, and his father Coleman Palmieri, 52. Talen Barton would also stab two girls who lived in the house. Talen who was taken in by the family two years before the double murder would smile in court after the judge sentenced the teen killer to 71 years in prison

Talen Barton 2023 Information

Inmate NameBARTON, TALEN CLARK
CDCR NumberAX9898
Age25
Admission Date10/08/2015
Current LocationValley State Prison
Location LinkDirections
Parole Eligible Date (Month/Year)07/2039

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Talen Barton made what should be his last appearance Tuesday in Mendocino County Superior Court for the brutal murders of a Laytonville family.

Details into his state-of-mind before-and-after the killings have been released as part of the Probation Department’s report and final sentencing recommendations that paint a picture of the hatred he had for two of the victims, and the troubled life Barton lived since childhood.

Mendocino County Sheriff’s Office lead detective Clint Wyant stated in his report to the Probation Department that his investigation and interviews with Barton led him to believe the teen was “pure evil,” and said it was the most brutal thing he had ever seen in his 17-year career in law enforcement.

“This murder was very calculated, and I hope to never see him out of prison,” Wyant was quoted as saying in the probation report. “He is an absolute monster.”

Prior to sentencing, the Probation Department is tasked with compiling a report of recommendations to the judge outlining the crime, providing interviews and investigation details.

Talen Barton, 19, pleaded guilty last month to two counts of murder, two counts of attempted murder and two counts of false imprisonment while using a knife in the commission of all the crimes.

He agreed to a minimum 71-year mandatory sentence that includes $10,000 in restitution for the surviving victims. He was officially sentenced Tuesday by Superior Court Judge Ann Moorman.

Following the murders on July 19, Talen Barton was interviewed the next day by Dr. Donald Apostle of Santa Rosa at the Mendocino County Jail for a psychiatric evaluation that revealed he had only planned to kill Teo and Coleman Palmieri and then commit suicide.

Dr. Cindy Norvell, wife of Coleman Palmieri and mother to Teo Palmieri, was injured in the stabbings, but Barton said he didn’t intend to kill her and described her as a “saint,” saying she interrupted him during the crimes which derailed his planned suicide

Cindy Norvell’s brother Theodore Norvell was visiting from Canada, he was also nearly killed during the attacks. Two teenage girls of the family were uninjured as Barton said he “killed everyone he wanted to kill.”

Talen Barton was taken in by the Norvell-Palmieri family at age 17 after being arrested in January 2013 for threatening his previous foster mother, Denise Shields. As a juvenile, Barton served 5 months of formal probation for misdemeanor vandalism. The incident was the only crime on record Barton had committed prior to the murders.

Talen Barton also described his anger at Shields to investigators, “I would have killed her if she had been there (at the Palmieri house). If anyone deserved it she did. She also knew I had anger issues.”

Barton’s juvenile probation officer at that time noted concerns about “Talen’s emotional balance and his risk of becoming a danger to others.” She warned the Norvell-Palmieri family that it wasn’t a good idea to take Barton in.

Cindy Norvell told detectives Barton told them at the time, “You guys are really gonna regret ever bringing me into your home.”

Although that was the case, Talen Barton told Apostle during his psychological assessment that he loved the Norvell-Palmieri family, and that it was the closest thing he ever had to a family. Barton said he couldn’t feel the family’s unconditional love, and that his life had been meaningless since the age of 8. He reported being suicidal since around the age of 14.

Talen Barton said he intended to kill Teo Palmieri, 17, because Teo was never happy and Teo and his father, Coleman Palmieri, would be better off with reincarnation, which Barton believed in despite being Agnostic, and that one would have a chance at reimproving themselves after death. He described Coleman Palmieri, 52, as just a “useless electrician.”

Barton told investigators that he was angry with Teo, characterizing the victim as someone who “had an uncontrollable temper, and wasn’t going anywhere.”

Teo Palmieri was murdered first, in his bedroom just after midnight on July 19, which law enforcement characterized as a violent struggle as Barton put his hand over the 17-year-old’s mouth and attempted to slit his throat before he woke up.

The county’s forensic pathologist determined Teo Palmieri died from having his throat slit along with five stab wounds to his neck and body. Coleman Palmieri was stabbed nine times by Barton with injuries to his neck and body that included being stabbed through the heart.

Talen Barton also told Apostle that he had not intended to stab Cindy Norvell, but did so after she ran into Teo Palmieri’s room in response to his screams. Barton left her and stabbed Coleman Palmieri to death then spotted Theodore Norvell and stabbed him.

He cut the telephone lines and spoke with the girls, at one point offering them cookies.

Apostle told investigators Barton asked Cindy Norvell how it felt to die, as they waited for police to arrive.

Talen Barton told Apostle he had intended to kill himself but felt it wasn’t right to do so after he stabbed Cindy Norvell.

Apostle reaffirmed Barton as a heavy drug user, and at the time of his interview with Barton, said Barton was clinically depressed but that he believed him to not be psychotic at the time of the murders.

Apostle also said Barton was aware of the nature of the crimes and that he knew it was wrong to commit them. Barton denied taking any medication leading up to the crimes, and stated he had never been diagnosed with any mental illness.

Barton indicated he started smoking marijuana at age 13, at least once a week for recreational purposes. By age 15, he stated, he smoked 5 to 10 grams of marijuana every day, and by 18, estimated he was smoking one-quarter ounce per day.

Barton said he no longer got high after smoking marijuana, but enjoyed the taste of it. Additionally, Barton relayed he liked to smoke hash, honey oil and “kief,” or what he described as crystals from the leaf of a marijuana plant, or pure THC.

Barton said he didn’t grow the marijuana himself, but got it from others. He also stated he had used LSD 10 times in the past, and psychedelic mushrooms approximately 15 times in the past.

Apostle’s report stated Barton frequently burned himself on the forearm with the “marijuana cigarettes,” and had been into fantasy card playing, including “Dungeons and Dragons,” and identified with the character “Ger,” who is an assassin who kills and rapes with a sword.

Apostle offered a diagnosis of posttraumatic stress disorder to investigators, saying Barton self- medicated with marijuana, despite never being able to solve his problems or longing.

Barton had lived in Mendocino County for five years prior to the murders, and was a 2014 graduate of Laytonville High School. He apparently lived in Eureka briefly between 2014 and 2015 and worked at Ramone’s Bakery and Cafe.

He stated he had lived in California for 10 years, and had also lived in Nevada, Alaska and Washington. He was born in Phoenix, to a woman who allegedly had a history of methamphetamine, cocaine and heroin abuse, even when pregnant.

Barton told investigators his parents were never married, and he was raised by his mother and stepfather until he was 8 years old, at which time he went into foster care as a result of his mother and stepfather’s drug abuse.

He said he was beaten by his stepfather, who would threaten him and his older brother with weapons while under the influence of methamphetamine. Barton also stated he was sexually abused once by a friend of his stepfather.

Talen Barton described his mother to investigators as someone who was chronically depressed, especially when on drugs. He said that he had been in contact with his birth mother on Facebook and said they were friends, despite not having seen her for six years. Barton said he hadn’t talked to his father since he was 15, and had a younger stepbrother and older brother

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Talen Barton is currently incarcerated at the Valley State Prison in California

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Talen Barton is serving a life without parole sentence

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