Cory Fenn Found Guilty Of 3 Murders

cory fenn ajax

Cory Fenn has been found guilty of the murders of a mother and her two children. According to court documents Cory Fenn was mad that Krassimira Pejcinovski had broken up with him and Fenn responded violently. Cory Fenn would fatally stab Krassimira Pejcinovski and her 13 year old daughter Venellia before strangling to death her 14 year old son Roy. Cory Fenn tried to blame the triple murder on a five day cocaine binge however the jury was not buying it. Cory Fenn is now due for sentencing where he will face a minimum of twenty five years to life in prison

Cory Fenn More News

 An Ontario man has been found guilty of three counts of second-degree murder in the deaths of a woman and two of her children east of Toronto, with the presiding judge calling the attacks “vicious and brutal.”

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Cory Fenn had pleaded not guilty to three counts of second-degree murder for the deaths of 39-year-old Krassimira Pejcinovski, her 13-year-old daughter, Venellia, and her 14-year-old son, Roy.

Justice Howard Leibowich did not buy Fenn’s argument that he was in a state of psychosis at the time brought on by a five-day cocaine binge.

“Vicious and brutal are some of the descriptors I can use to describe the attacks,” Leibowich told court in his ruling on Thursday.

The prosecution had said Fenn killed all three in a rage on March 14, 2018, in Ajax, Ont., after Krassimira Pejcinovski broke up with him. The mother and her daughter were found stabbed to death, while the boy was strangled.

Fenn argued he did not have the mental ability to commit the crimes, but did not call a defence.

A court-appointed lawyer assisting Fenn said the man killed all three, but argued he did not have the requisite state of mind to commit murder due to his extensive use of cocaine, rendering him in a psychotic state at the time.

Court heard that Fenn and Pejcinovski had an on-again, off-again relationship while Fenn lived in the basement of Pejcinovski’s home.

“Mr. Fenn and Krissy were involved in an unhealthy, toxic relationship,” Liebowich said.

The Crown said Pejcinovski’s oldest daughter, Victoria, who was 16 at the time, had found cocaine on the stove the day before the deaths. She confronted her mother and told her Fenn had to go, she testified. Krassimira Pejcinovski agreed and said she would break up with Fenn.

Pejcinovski spent much of that night in the basement with Fenn, which she often did in the past, court heard, the pair snorting cocaine together.

Her oldest daughter left around 9:30 p.m. to go to her father’s home and told court she became worried when her mother failed to pick her up for a driving lesson the following morning.

When her mother failed to respond to text messages, she called her younger sister, who was in her bedroom with her friend for a sleepover, court heard. Vana, as she was known, left the room to go check on her mom, court heard.

Shortly after that, the Crown said, Fenn attacked the girl, leaving her eyes blackened, stabbed her with a butter knife and stuffed her body under a bed.

The friend who was in the home for the sleepover testified she heard Fenn coming up the stairs, breathing heavily. He asked her where Victoria was, before turning around returning downstairs, leaving her unharmed

Shortly afterward, Krissy Pejcinovski’s boss showed up, worried after her employee had failed to show up to work.

Sherry Robinson testified she noticed blood on Fenn’s arms and foot. She left, drove down the street and called police.

Fenn took off in his car, which he later ditched at a gas station, and went to an ex’s place. Police found him later that day hiding in a shed.

Pejcinovski suffered multiple fractures to her skull and jaw, had 17 fractured ribs and extensive bruising across her face, neck, torso and limbs, court heard. When she kept breathing after an attempted strangulation in the garage, Fenn left to grab a knife and returned.

The judge said he did know the reason of Fenn’s attack on Pejcinovski, but that the motive did not matter.

“Mr. Fenn had the state of mind that when his initial method was not accomplishing his goal, he went to get a knife to finish the job,” the judge said.

The judge found that Fenn had killed Pejcinovski and Roy by 5 a.m.

Fenn said he never would have done it if he wasn’t high on cocaine, court heard.

In closing arguments in late October, Cory Fenn said he was like “the walking dead” at the time of the killings.

“The mental element was not there,” he said. “It’s like the Wizard of Oz going down the path, ‘if I only had a brain’ — I didn’t have one, guys.”

Corey Fenn Now

Corey Fenn is currently awaiting sentencing

Austin Meli Murders 6 Week Old Daughter

Austin Meli

Austin Meli is a POS who was already serving a ten year sentence to abusing his two year old son and has now plead guilty in a New Jersey courtroom to the murder of his six week old son. According to court documents Austin Meli was caught on a hidden recorder admitting to killing his six week old daughter by suffocation because he had lost his temper. Now Austin Meli has to wait for sentencing and can receive a thirty year sentence which is the max for aggravated manslaughter. Like I said Austin Meli is a POS

Austin Meli 2022 Information

Austin S Meli
SBI Number:000398095G
Sentenced as: Meli, Austin S
Race:White
Ethnicity:Unknown
Sex:Male
Hair Color:Brown
Eye Color:Hazel
Height:5’11”
Weight:200 lbs.
Birth Date:August 9, 1996
Admission Date:March 13, 2020
Current Facility:SWSP
Current Max Release Date:September 8, 2027
Current Parole Eligibility Date:September 8, 2027

Austin Meli Other News

A 23-year-old Wall man, already imprisoned for abusing his son, pleaded guilty Thursday to suffocating his six-week-old daughter, announced acting Monmouth County Prosecutor Lori Linskey.

Austin Meli faces 30 years in state prison on the first-degree aggravated manslaughter charge. The sentence is subject to the No Early Release Act, which means that he must serve 85% of the sentence before being eligible for parole.

Meli is already serving a 10-year-sentence in prison for second-degree aggravated assault, two counts of second-degree endangering the welfare of a child and fourth-degree tampering with physical evidence in the abuse of his then-15-month-old son in March 2019, the same month his daughter died. The Prosecutor’s Office has recommended that the sentences run consecutive.

The daughter, identified as G.B. in court documents, died March 9, 2019, after she went  unresponsive while in the care of her father, according to the Prosecutor’s Office.

Meli admitted to the girl’s mother in secretly recorded conversations that he had suffocated the infant until she was dazed, Assistant Prosecutor Ellyn Rajfer said at a hearing in state Superior Court in 2020.

He then gave the girl a bottle and, when she threw up on him, he admitted that he grew angry and suffocated her until she passed out. The girl never woke up.

Wall Township police were called to the home and the baby was rushed to Ocean University Medical Center in Brick, where she was pronounced dead.

Meli was not charged in her death until January 2020, after the girl’s mother turned over the recordings of her conversations with Meli to the police, according to court documents filed in the case.

While police investigated the girl’s death, they uncovered evidence of violent abuse against Meli’s son. Investigators at that time uncovered video from surveillance cameras in the bedroom Meli shared with the mother of his children. The cameras captured a series of violent acts by Meli against his toddler son that occurred in the days before his daughter’s death, authorities said.

The video showed Meli striking his son in the head and knocking him down in his playpen, picking him by the neck and violently shaking him, slamming the child onto a bed and pressing on his neck, and then throwing him back into his playpen, according to an affidavit of probable cause filed by Wall Detective Christopher Lisewski.

Meli was sentenced to 10 years in prison in March 2020 after pleading guilty to the charges of aggravated assault, evidence tampering and endangering the welfare of a child in that case.

The aggravated manslaughter case is assigned to Monmouth County Assistant Prosecutors Rajfer and Margaret Koping. 

Criminal defense attorney Allison Friedman in Freehold represents Meli.

https://www.app.com/story/news/local/courts/2022/02/10/wall-nj-man-pleads-guilty-suffocating-his-infant-daughter/6742024001/

Austin Meli Now

Austin Meli is currently incarcerated at the South Woods State Prison in New Jersey

Radik Tagirov Granny Strangler Serial Killer

Radik Tagirov

Radik Tagirov is an alleged serial killer from Russia who has just been charged with 32 murders. Radik Tagirov who according to police reports is known as the Granny Strangler as he posed as a social worker or maintenance worker to gain entry into elderly women’s homes. As his moniker states Radik Tagirov would then strangle the women. According to police reports Radik Tagirov has confessed to the murders and admitted that he was not sure of the true number of women that he killed during his two year spree. Russia does not have the death penalty so when convicted he will spend the rest of his life in some of the toughest prisons in the world.

Radik Tagirov More News

Russian investigators claim to have caught the man responsible for more than 25 murders attributed to a perpetrator known for years only as the “Volga maniac”.

Russia’s Investigative Committee said that the suspect, a 38-year-old man named Radik Tagirov, confessed to a string of 26 murders of elderly women that had terrorised central Russia between 2011 and 2012. He had been identified using DNA evidence, shoe prints, and other evidence from crime scenes, investigators said.

Tagirov had conned his way into the apartments of elderly women living alone by impersonating an electrician, plumber, or utilities worker.Advertisement

Once inside, he would overpower the women and strangle his victims using either his hands or nearby objects, including an apron and a clothesline. The vast majority of his victims were older than 70.

He often robbed his victims but in some cases left valuables untouched. He wore gloves and had sterilised crime scenes before leaving to thwart investigators.

The murders, most of which took place between 2011 and 2012, were recorded in a number of Russian cities including Kazan, Samara, Tolyatti, Izhevsk, Ufa and others. Other killings were suspected to have taken place in the Urals, although the exact number of his victims has never been established.

The serial killer appeared to have gone quiet after 2013, but a killing spree in the region in 2017 renewed fears among the public.

Police in 2019 offered a £30,000 reward for information leading to his arrest.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/dec/01/radik-tagirov-suspected-of-killing-25-women-caught-russian-volga-maniac

Radik Tagirov Now

Radik Tagirov is currently awaiting trial for 32 murders

Karla Jackelin Morales Wanted For Murder

Karla Jackelin Morales texas

Karla Jackelin Morales is a woman from Texas who is on the run as she disappeared just days before her trial was to begin. According to police reports Karla Jackelin Morales would lure a man, Jose Villanueva, to the grassy area of a school where he was ambushed by MS-13 gang members. Apparently Jose Villanueva had insulted the gang during one of his raps. Karla Jackelin Morales has been charged with murder. Somehow Karla Jackelin Morales bond was lowered to $60,000 and she was able to get out of jail and placed on an ankle bracelet. However just days before her trial was to begin Morales would cut off the bracelet and go on the run. The odd part is that Karla Jackelin Morales disappeared back in October 2021 so its a bit odd that this story is now coming to light. Anyway if you know where she is call Crimestoppers and buy that big screen TV with the proceeds

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A woman is on the run after being charged with murder for luring a man to his ambush death at the hands of machete-wielding MS-13 gang members.

Authorities are now asking for the public’s help in finding Karla Jackelin Morales. Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg announced on Wednesday that a reward is being offered for information that leads to her capture.

“She helped plan and plot this vicious execution, and somebody out there knows where she is hiding,” Ogg said. “You can do the right thing by helping deliver justice for Jose’s family, and you can collect a reward for your efforts.”

Five MS-13 gang members, who hacked 24-year-old Villanueva with a machete and shot him to death, have already been convicted and sentenced to prison. Morales is the last to face trial.

She was set for trial on Oct. 25 and was free on a $60,000 bond.

Just five days before trial, Morales cut off her GPS ankle monitor and absconded. She has since been charged with bond jumping.

Ogg said that authorities will not ask the immigration status of potential tipsters, and they can remain anonymous, even when they get paid.

According to authorities, Morales lured Villanueva on July 29, 2018 to a grassy field near a Spring elementary school to smoke marijuana as a belated birthday gift.

Once he got there, several MS-13 members hacked him with machetes, and then, as he tried to crawl away, shot him repeatedly with a handgun.

Villanueva’s mutilated and decomposing remains were found days later.

Investigators say the victim had been hiding from the gang members, who were searching for him for allegedly disparaging MS-13 in a rap-music battle.

Morales and the gang planned the scheme to lure Villanueva into the ambush for weeks before the murder.

Morales, 20, goes by the nicknames “Cherry,” “Karlita,” “Missy,” and “Foxy.”

She is 5 feet tall with a heavy build. She has black hair and brown eyes, as well as tattoos, including a large one on her upper left chest that reads “Alicia.”

Authorities believe Morales, who was born in California and has family in Honduras and El Salvador, may still be in the Houston area.

Back when Morales was charged with murder, prosecutors asked a magistrate judge to set her bond at $250,000. The judge instead set it at $100,000.

A district court judge later lowered the bond to $60,000 and waived the defendant’s fees for an ankle monitor.

She failed to show up for a hearing days before her trial was to begin and hasn’t been seen since.

Crime Stoppers of Houston is offering a reward of $5,000 for information leading to her capture. Anyone with information on her whereabouts is asked to contact Crime Stoppers at 713-222-TIPS.

https://www.fox26houston.com/news/wanted-woman-charged-for-luring-man-to-ms-13-ambush-where-he-was-hacked-by-machete-and-shot-to-death

Karla Jackelin Morales Now

Karla Jackelin Morales current where about are unknown

Peter Chadwick Pleads Guilty To Murder

Peter Chadwick mugshot

Peter Chadwick has plead guilty to the murder of his wife Quee Choo “Q.C.” Chadwick who was murdered back in 2012. According to court documents Peter Chadwick would murder Quee Choo “Q.C.” Chadwick inside of their Newport Beach home and would wrap up the woman in a blanket and dump it into a dumpster in San Diego County. So why does it take nine years to find someone guilty of murder? Well Peter Chadwick decided his chances of getting a not guilty verdict was not so good so the multimillionaire fled the Country. After spending four years on the run and even finding himself on the US Marshall’s Top 15 Most Wanted List Peter Chadwick was finally found in Mexico and extradited back to California to stand trial for the murder of Quee Choo “Q.C.” Chadwick. Now Peter Chadwick will spend the next fifteen years to life in a California prison dreaming of Mexico’s beaches.

Peter Chadwick 2022 Information

Peter Chadwick More News

A California man who led police on a years-long manhunt and landed on the U.S. Marshals’ 15 Most Wanted fugitive list admitted Wednesday to strangling and drowning his wife.

Peter Chadwick, 57, pleaded guilty to the 2012 second-degree murder of his wife Quee Choo “Q.C.” Chadwick, who was found wrapped in a blanket and discarded in a dumpster in San Diego County after he killed her in their Newport Beach home, according to the Orange County District Attorney’s Office.

As part of the plea deal, Chadwick was sentenced to 15 years to life and waived the right to credit for time served.

On Oct. 10, 2012, Chadwick murdered Q.C. during a fight about a possible divorce and financial issues, according to prosecutors. A neighbor reported Q.C. missing that afternoon when two of their sons were never picked up from school.

Investigators found spots of blood and signs of a struggle at the couple’s house.

Chadwick was arrested the next morning, Oct. 11, in San Diego near the U.S.-Mexico border and led police to his wife’s body.

The multimillionaire was released on a $1 million bail shortly after his arrest, surrendered his British and American passports and moved in with his father in Santa Barbara.

For two years, Chadwick showed up to his hearings, until January 2015 when he missed a pre-trial hearing.

Officials spent more than four years searching for Chadwick across the United States, Canada and Mexico, tracking “strategically placed indicators” like receipts from the Seattle area and literature about living in Canada he left in his father’s Santa Barbara home, according to prosecutors.

In 2018, the U.S. Marshals put Chadwick on their 15 Most Wanted fugitive list.

Eventually, Mexican immigration authorities captured him near Puebla on Aug. 4, 2019.

“Three young boys lost their entire reality the day their mother was murdered by their father,” Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer said in a statement Wednesday.

“It took years of painstaking police work to track down this defendant in order to hold him accountable for the murder of his wife and the mother of his three sons. In making the decision to accept a guilty plea, we carefully considered the wishes of Q.C.’s family, especially her sons who have already suffered the loss not only of their mother but also of their father at such a young age.”

https://www.nydailynews.com/news/crime/ny-chadwick-millionaire-fugitive-wife-murder-20220210-4u37tfl5f5bc7bipd3zd5vsqqq-story.html

Peter Chadwick Other News

A multimillionaire who jumped bail while awaiting trial for killing his wife in their beach community a decade ago has pleaded guilty to second-degree murder.

A judge immediately sentenced Peter Chadwick, 57, to 15 years to life in prison. San Diego police originally arrested him, but he jumped bail and was sought for years.

In the negotiated plea deal with Orange County prosecutors, Chadwick, 57, waived his custody credit and will have to serve at least 85% of his sentence before being eligible for parole.

Chadwick choked up in court Wednesday and cried as he admitted killing his wife, Quee Choo Lim Chadwick, 46, known as Q.C., on the morning of Oct. 10, 2012, in their Newport Beach home.

They had fought over a possible divorce and related financial issues.

“I just want to express that I am truly sorry,” Chadwick said, while calling his late wife a “wonderful person.” He added that he irreparably harmed his family.

“I destroyed everything,” he said. “So I deserve whatever the court decides.”

Chadwick said he hoped his sons and his wife’s family can “somehow carry on remembering what kind of a person she was. Such a great person, so loving and she cared for everyone. I am sorry for what happened.”

The victim’s brother said in a statement read aloud in court by Senior Deputy District Attorney Jennifer Walker that when his sister immigrated to the U.S. for college in the late 1980s she lived with him at the time.

“When I moved to Southern California in 1998, she followed me to move too. Since 2001, we have had family vacations every year. We regularly got together since we were the only two immediate family members living in the U.S.”

He said he felt “guilty” because he gave his “blessing to marry Peter when she asked me for the opinion.”

He also described the hardships of gaining guardianship of Hardwick’s sons, who remained in Newport Beach schools when their father was arrested. The boys lived with their uncle and aunt in Pasadena and had to commute to Orange County for classes.

The victim’s sister said in a statement also read aloud in court by Walker that she continues to struggle with her sibling’s death.

“QC was chatty, inquisitive and compassionate and we would speak on the phone almost every day,” she said. “Family was the most important thing to her. She would go to extraordinary lengths to do anything to help us. She looked after my family as I would hers. It was her who would initiate and spend countless hours planning our annual family reunions. We still feel her loss every year at these events, an emptiness that cannot be filled.”

She said she would “never understand how after hurting her, Peter was so barbarically able to dump her body as if she was a worthless piece of trash.”

Peter Chadwick was captured in August 2019 in a residential duplex in a community of American expatriates near Pueblo, Mexico, after seven years on the run.

Newport Beach police and U.S. Marshals Service officials said Chadwick was nabbed thanks to one of thousands of tips generated by a $100,000 reward and a podcast about the case.

Though the case began in Orange County, it led to San Diego County, where police arrested Chadwick and authorities located his wife’s body.

Neither Peter Chadwick nor his wife arrived to pick up their sons, then 8, 10 and 14 years old, from school the fall afternoon in 2012 when she was killed.

Another student’s parent drove the children home and requested that Newport Beach police conduct a welfare check when the Chadwicks could not be found. A subsequent search of the home revealed blood and signs of a struggle inside, according to police.

Sometime between the morning of the murder and the following morning, Peter Chadwick drove to San Diego and called police, telling them that a handyman killed his wife and then kidnapped him and forced him to drive to Mexico to dump her body, according to authorities.

San Diego police, who arrested Chadwick four miles north of the border that day, noticed he had scratches on his neck and dried blood on his hands, according to the U.S. Marshals Service.

Peter Chadwick admitted to investigators that he made up the story about the handyman.

After questioning him, detectives found the victim’s body in a gas station trash bin in Lakeside. She had been strangled.

When he was released on Dec. 21, 2012, after posting $1 million bail, he surrendered his British and American passports and agreed to live with his father in Santa Barbara, according to a federal arrest warrant.

When Peter Chadwick skipped a January 2015 court date, Newport Beach detectives went to his father’s home and were told the defendant was not living there and no one knew where he was, according to the Marshals Service.

Chadwick’s family later told investigators that Chadwick told them he was going to Seattle and left in a taxi. Authorities said Chadwick called a cab at 11 a.m. on Jan. 9, 2015, and was taken to the Santa Barbara airport, where video footage showed him leaving the airport in a different cab six hours later wearing different clothing, according to the Marshals Service. His cell phone was turned off the same day and was later found in a trash dump.

Bank records showed he withdrew $600,000 from an account that same month, according to the Marshals Service.

Peter Chadwick Now

Peter Chadwick is incarcerated within the California Department Of Corrections

Peter Chadwick Release Date

Peter Chadwick is not eligible for parole until 2034