Carina Romero Charged In Murder Of Her 11 Year Old Son

Carina Romero

Police in Oklahoma City were in for quite a shock when they encountered Carina Romero who was holding a two year old child and both were covered in blood. Carina Romero allegedly told the officers that someone had killed a child inside of her home and then proceeded to walk away. Carina Romero would lock her door and refuse to answer to the police who would end up blocking off the street when they negotiated with her. When that did not work police would break down the door and inside of the home find the body of an eleven year old boy who had appeared to be stabbed to death. According to her neighbors screams could be heard coming from the home minutes before police arrived and Carina Romero walked outside. Carina Romero was arrested and charged with the murder of the 11 year old boy.

Carina Romero More News

Oklahoma City police say a woman has been arrested in connection to the murder of a child.

Around 4:30 p.m. on Sunday, Oklahoma City police were called to a disturbance in the 800 block of S.E. 50th St.

When officers arrived at the scene, they found 27-year-old Carina Romero in front of the home.

Investigators say she had blood on her and was holding a 2-year-old child. Romero told officers that someone had killed a child inside the home.

At the point, Romero took the 2-year-old into the home, closed the door, and refused to allow officers to come inside the house.

Due to the circumstances, officers forced entry into the home and got the 2-year-old out safely.

Sadly, police found a deceased child in the home

Romero was taken into custody on a complaint of murder of a child.

Officers say the investigation is in its early stages, so they are still trying to determine exactly what led up to the crime.

If you have any information on the case, call the Homicide Tip Line at (405) 297-1200.

https://kfor.com/news/local/police-okc-woman-arrested-for-murder-of-child/

Carina Romero Other News

Police said a boy was stabbed to death in SE OKC on Sunday. Investigators believe a family member may be responsible.

“It’s sad,” said Tyler Risenhoover, a neighbor. “For the last 20 years, the block hasn’t been like this down here, you don’t see much of this.”

Police first got the call around 4:45 Sunday afternoon. Neighbors say they blocked off the street, trying to get someone to come out of one of the homes. One man who lives just across the street says he watched officers bust down the front door to get inside and what they found was the boy.

“It changes everything because it’s kids,” said Risenhoover. “You got to take care of them, and you’re supposed to protect them and lead them the right way and stuff.”

Investigators on scene said they arrested one person who could be related to the victim. Other children were inside the home as well, but fortunately they were not injured.

Police are now trying to piece together what led up to the stabbing. The neighbors I spoke with say they didn’t know the victim or his family, but never suspected anything out of the ordinary.

“Typically, you don’t see a lot of this,” said Risenhoover. “Down here, we don’t really see it so it’s kind of nerve wracking.”

A woman, identified as Carina Romero, is now in the Oklahoma County Jail on a first-degree murder complaint in connection to the stabbing.

She was identified as the person found in the home with the children, and the boy found stabbed to death, when police arrived to the scene.

https://www.news9.com/story/62009c53321dd90729053862/police-say-11yearold-boy-stabbed-to-death-in-se-okc

Christopher Scarver The Man Who Murdered Jeffrey Dahmer

Christopher Scarver

Jeffrey Dahmer is one of the most notorious serial killers in United States history and when he was murdered in prison by Christopher Scarver many believed that prison justice was served. Now the next question became who is Christopher Scarver and why would he murder Jeffrey Dahmer.

According to court documents Jeffrey Dahmer was attacked and beaten to death with a piece of weight lifting equipment by Christopher Scarver on November 28, 1994 and along with the murder of Dahmer he would also beat to death another prisoner named Jesse Anderson who was serving a life sentence for the murder of his wife.

At the time of the murders Christopher Scarver was serving a life sentence for the murder of Steve Lohman which took place in 1990 at the Wisconsin Conservation Corps training program. Apparently Christopher Scarver demanded money and when Steve Lohman gave him $15 dollars Scarver reacted by fatally shooting him in the head.

Now back to the Jeffrey Dahmer and Jesse Anderson murders. According to Christopher Scarver Jeffrey Dahmer was despised by the other inmates and not just for the cannibalistic murders that he committed while he was out in the free world but his behavior when the serial killer was finally locked up. Jeffrey Dahmer liked to pour ketchup on food that he shaped to look like limbs from a body which he would then hide so other inmates and staff could find them. Jeffrey had to be escorted around the prison by staff as he had made a large number of enemies. The day that he was murdered Jeffrey Dahmer did not have a guard escort when he, Jesse Anderson and Christopher Scarver were tasked by staff to clean a washroom. Scarver would take his opportunity and murder Jeffrey Dahmer and soon after murder Jesse Anderson who was apparently friendly with Dahmer.

Christopher Scarver believes that staff at the prison set up the scene in hopes that Scarver would react however that is just speculation. What we do know is that Scarver received two more life sentences for the murders of Jeffrey Dahmer and Jesse Anderson.

Christopher Scarver 2022 Information

Christopher Scarver is not in the Wisconsin Department Of Corrections

Christopher Scarver More News

Serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer was done in by his uncontrollable lust for human flesh, the man who whacked him in prison 20 years ago told The Post, revealing for the first time why the cannibal had to die.

Christopher Scarver — who fatally beat the serial killer and another inmate in 1994 — said he grew to despise Dahmer because he would fashion severed limbs out of prison food to taunt the other inmates.

He’d drizzle on packets of ketchup as blood.

It was very unnerving.

“He would put them in places where people would be,” Scarver, 45, recalled in a low, gravelly voice.

“He crossed the line with some people — prisoners, prison staff. Some people who are in prison are repentant — but he was not one of them.”

Scarver, who arrived at Wisconsin’s Columbia Correctional Institution around the same time as Dahmer in 1992, knew right away to keep a safe distance from the serial killer.

Scarver said the madman had a personal escort of at least one guard at all times when he was out of his cell because of his friction with other inmates.

“I saw heated interactions between [Dahmer] and other prisoners from time to time,” Scarver said, adding that he didn’t think much of Dahmer.

“There was no impression,” he said.

Like a lone wolf, Scarver watched Dahmer from afar on the prison yard, but never approached him, because he did not want to become a target of his sickening humor.

“I never interacted with him,” he said.

But that all changed on the morning of Nov. 28, 1994, when Scarver doled out his vigilante justice in a gymnasium of the Portage, Wis., prison.

Dahmer, 34, Scarver and a third inmate, Jesse Anderson, were led unshackled to clean the bathrooms by correction officers, who left them unattended.

Scarver, who was repulsed by the youth-molesting cannibal’s lust for flesh, kept in his pocket a newspaper article detailing how Dahmer killed, dismembered — and in some cases ate — 17 men and boys from 1978 to 1991.

Scarver, then a 25-year-old convicted murderer, had just retrieved his mop and was filling a bucket with water when someone poked him in the back.

“I turned around, and [Dahmer] and Jesse were kind of laughing under their breath,” Scarver recounted. “I looked right into their eyes, and I couldn’t tell which had done it.”

The three men then split up, and Scarver followed Dahmer toward a staff locker room.

Scarver grabbed a metal bar from the weight room and confronted Dahmer with the news story he had been carrying in his pocket.

I asked him if he did those things ’cause I was fiercely disgusted. He was shocked. Yes, he was,” Scarver said.

“He started looking for the door pretty quick. I blocked him,” Scarver said.

With two swings of the bar, Scarver crushed Dahmer’s skull.

“He ended up dead. I put his head down,” he said.

He then casually crossed the gym and entered a locker room where Anderson, 37, was working.

“He stopped for a second and looked around. He was looking to see if any officials were there. There were none. Pretty much the same thing [happened] — got his head put out,” Scarver said of Anderson, who was serving a life term for killing his wife in 1992.

Scarver believes it was no accident that he ended up alone with Dahmer — since prison officials knew he hated the madman and they wanted him dead.

“They had something to do with what took place. Yes,” said Scarver, noting that the guards disappeared just before he clobbered Dahmer with the 20-inch, 5-pound metal bar.

But Scarver refused to elaborate out of fear for his own safety.

“I would need a good attorney to ensure there would not be any retaliation by Wisconsin officials or to get me out of any type of retaliatory position they would put me in,” Scarver said.

Wisconsin Correction Department spokeswoman Joy Staab did not return calls for comment about those claims — but an investigation following the killings determined he acted alone.

Scarver initially pleaded insanity to the murders but later changed it to “no contest” in exchange for a transfer to a federal penitentiary.

He was sentenced to two life terms on top of the life sentence he was already serving.

Scarver was locked up for killing his former boss during a robbery in 1990.

After getting fired from a job-training program at the Wisconsin Conservation Corps, Scarver started drinking heavily and said he heard voices that called him “the chosen one.”

He returned to his former workplace with a .25-caliber semiautomatic pistol and demanded cash from site manager John Feyen. When he gave only $15, Scarver put a bullet in the head of a
worker, Steven Lohman.

He shot Lohman two more times before Feyen knocked the gun out of his hands and ran off.

Hours later, cops arrested Scarver sitting on the stoop of his girlfriend’s apartment building.

After the killings, Scarver bounced from prison to prison until he landed at his current home: Centennial Correctional Facility in Canon City, Colo.

Christopher Scarver says he has been evaluated by 10 to 20 prison doctors but still doesn’t understand his mental issues.

He partly blames prison food for his insanity.

“I found out in my own research what the problem is: Certain foods I eat cause me to have a psychotic break — bread, refined sugar,” he said. “Those are the main culprits.”

He now spends his days writing poems for his site. He also has self-published poetry books for sale on Amazon.

Christopher Scarver Photos

christopher scarver

Craig Bjork The Serial Killer You Have Never Heard Of

craig bjork craig jackson

Craig Bjork is a serial killer that most people have never heard of unless they are from Minnesota and have a long memory and the name Craig Jackson rings a bell. Craig Bjork started his criminal ways back in Minnesota when he would murder four people including two of his toddlers.

This mass murder crime is one of the worst in the history of Minnesota. See on that day back in 1982 would murder his girlfriend Ramona Yurkew, another woman, Gwendolyn Johnson, and his two sons Joseph and Jason, ages 3 and 1. Minneapolis Police would enter the home to conduct a wellness check and would find all four victims dead, each had been strangled and stuffed other beds. For that crime Craig Bjork would receive multiple life sentences however he was not done with his murderous ways

Craig Bjork would be sent to a maximum security prison in Minnesota called Stillwater where a few years later would beat to death a fellow prisoner and would receive yet another life sentence. Now the Minnesota Department Of Corrections did not want to deal with Craig Bjork any longer so they had him transferred to the Oregon Department of Corrections.

Craig Bjork would keep his head down for a number of years until 2013 when he would strangle to death his cellmate at the Oregon State Penitentiary. Now Oregon does have the death penalty however a Judge ordered the Minnesota Department Of Corrections to get Craig Bjork out of his State which changed the charges against him and a long story short made him ineligible for the death penalty. Craig Bjork would plead no contest to his sixth murder and would receive yet another life sentence

Craig Bjork 2022 Information

MNDOC Offender ID: 123611

Name: Craig Dennis Bjork

Birth Date: 09/14/1959

Current Status:Incarcerated as of 11/05/1982. Currently at a non-DOC facility.

Sentence Date:11/04/1982

Anticipated Release Date: Life without Parole

Expiration Date: Life

Craig Bjork More News

After his latest murder conviction, this time for strangling his cellmate in Oregon, a Minneapolis man who in the 1980s said God and the devil beckoned him to kill two women and his children could be coming home.

In handing down Craig Bjork’s fifth life sentence, for committing his sixth murder, a judge has asked the Minnesota Department of Corrections to move the 60-year-old prisoner out of Oregon, where Bjork is serving time through an interstate compact that allows correctional systems to trade problem inmates

That means Bjork has escaped Oregon’s death penalty, the sentence prosecutors there sought for him.

“I think it’s disgusting,” said Matt Kemmy, deputy district attorney in Marion County, Ore. “The death penalty is supposed to be for the worst of the worst, and Craig Bjork is absolutely that. This is a man who has been convicted of killing men, women and children — plural of each. Frankly, he should be the poster child for why we have the death penalty.”

Thirty-eight years ago, Bjork, then known as Craig Jackson, committed a spree of four murders that Minneapolis police called the city’s worst of the 20th century. He achieved new notoriety years later as a problem inmate when he beat a man to death in Stillwater prison. In 2013, after Minnesota sent him to Oregon State Penitentiary, Bjork killed his cellmate, a convicted murderer named Joe Atkins.

After Bjork’s conviction for the latter killing, Judge Tracy Prall and Oregon corrections officials agreed that Bjork would stay in Oregon through April, while Minnesota finds new housing for him, according to court documents. Prison administrators here have not yet decided whether to place Bjork in Minnesota or send him to another state, said Department of Corrections spokesman Nicholas Kimball.

Bjork ranks among a tier of violent inmates who pose a dilemma for prisons. He is serving, at minimum, a 170-year prison sentence. With two more murder convictions under his belt, his outlook has hardly changed from when a Hennepin County judge first sentenced him to “never be permitted to walk the streets of any community for the remainder of his life.”

Brad Colbert, who runs a legal assistance clinic for prisoners at Mitchell-Hamline law school, said inmates like Bjork are “why supermax prisons were built,” referring to the long-term, high-security facilities with segregated cells.

“Bjork is really the .001 percent of the .001 percent of people who are incarcerated,” he said. “I think you put him in a place where he can’t hurt anyone else. But you don’t forget that he is not like the other people who are incarcerated.”

In 2017, after a Star Tribune report on Bjork facing the death penalty, he called from solitary confinement in Oregon and spoke at length about his life and murders. Bjork claimed that killing Atkins was an act of self-defense.

“It’s an old penitentiary at the end of the tier,” Bjork said. “It’s dark. We’re alone. Two convicted murderers in the cell in the middle of the night. There is no help, you know?”

Bjork doesn’t deny the six killings of which he’s been convicted over the years. He is adamant, however, that those acts do not alone define him — that he feels deep remorse and wants to be viewed with more nuance than simply a “monster.”

“I actually am a human being,” he said. “I actually have a conscience.”

Bjork grew up in Des Moines with an abusive father who ranted about his hatred for women and blacks, and taught his son to tell time by beating him when he got it wrong.

He lived mostly with his mother, a cocktail waitress named Shirley Fees, in small apartments crowded by cousins and grandparents.

As a kid, Bjork angrily stamped out all the flowers in his yard. Once he tied two cats together by the tails and watched them tear each other apart, a psychiatrist later testified at Bjork’s trial.

When he was 18, Bjork got his underage girlfriend, Terry, pregnant, and they moved to Minneapolis. Bjork proudly showed off his first son, Joey. “I ought to charge you a dollar to see this baby of mine,” he told people.

But trouble always followed him. Drugs were anesthesia to make it through the day. He carried a gun and ransacked one of his mom’s friend’s mobile homes. A month after Joey’s birth, he spent two weeks in jail. After their second son, Jason, was born, Bjork and Terry broke up. Bjork started dating a waitress at Dulono’s pizzeria, Ramona Yurkew. It was a brutal relationship and Yurkew left several times when she got sick of the beatings.

One day, in February 1982, Bjork decided to will his soul to the devil in exchange for “money, good physique, women, a good family,” according to the psychiatrist’s testimony.

A couple weeks later, Bjork dropped off his sons with a babysitter and spent the day popping speed, drinking whiskey and beer, smoking marijuana, then snorting PCP and amphetamines, according to testimony. He went downtown Minneapolis and drank on Hennepin Avenue, where he met Gwendolyn Johnson, a 20-year-old woman with a history of prostitution arrests. He brought her back to the house and strangled her during sex, then hid her body under the bed.

The babysitter dropped off Jason and Joey, ages 1 and 3, and Bjork choked them to death, too. Then he waited for Yurkew to come home from her shift, and strangled her.

By the time police found the bodies three days later, Bjork was gone. Detectives didn’t know whether he was hiding or dead.

Police tried to find Terry for questioning. She was missing, too.

In April, Bjork turned himself in to the brother of a Minneapolis homicide detective in a pancake house in Kansas. A month later, a father and son foraging for mushrooms in rural Iowa found Terry’s remains.

Bjork was charged with her murder but it never went to trial. He maintains he did not kill Terry.

Looking back on his first murders, Craig Bjork said he was locked into a drug-induced psychosis, disconnected from reality. “I believe that with every fiber of my being.”

He said he’s been sober now for 20 years and feels remorse deeper than he can express. “I literally totally destroyed myself,” he said. “Who could ever punish me more than my own mind would punish me for what I’d done? The law couldn’t come close to what I did to myself mentally.”

When he first entered prison, Craig Bjork fought other inmates. Prison staff caught him in several escape plots, and transferred him back and forth from different prisons to foil his plans. Bjork boasted that he was untouchable. He was already serving three life sentences, and Minnesota didn’t have the death penalty. One staffer recorded Bjork saying he had “nothing to lose by killing any inmate.”

One summer day in 1996, Craig Bjork wrote an internal communiqué to then-Stillwater prison Warden David Crist demanding he be moved back to Oak Park Heights prison. If Crist didn’t comply, Bjork threatened to kill again. “I’m very homicidal,” he wrote. “Trust me if I made a move I’d complete it. I’m very close to committing mass murder in Stillwater. Trust me minimum of 3 bodies, I’d go for 10 and come real close.”

On Thanksgiving Day 1997, a corrections officer found Bjork in the prison kitchen mopping up a dark red liquid. The officer followed drag marks to a garbage cart, where he found the body of inmate Edwin Curry.

Asked about this killing, Craig Bjork said the prison was playing a “punk game” with him, “and I gave them a body.”

“This is what prison is. This isn’t 3M and this isn’t the neighborhood and this isn’t Powderhorn Park,” he said in an interview. “It probably wasn’t the best choice, but it was the choice I made.”

In 2013, Craig Bjork was transferred to the Oregon prison. He killed Joe Atkins on Aug. 16, 2013. Two years later, a grand jury indicted him for the murders of Atkins, Curry, Johnson, Yurkew and his two children — each one enough to carry the death penalty.

As he prepared for the trial, Bjork told the Star Tribune that Atkins tried to kill him in his sleep because Bjork had confronted Atkins for hiding a knife and razor blades in their cell, and that he strangled him in self-defense.

Craig Bjork said he never intends to kill another person; he said he could be released from prison today and never harm another soul. But if faced with the same threat in prison, he said, he wouldn’t hesitate to act.

“If some dude up in here threatens my life next week and I think he’s serious, I’m going to do whatever I need to do to take care of myself and defend myself,” said Bjork. “That’s how it is.”

Facing death, Craig Bjork said he wanted a botched execution that sent flames shooting from his body. “We can all go to hell together,” he said. “I mean, you want to kill me? Then botch the execution, screw it up, I want it to be horrific.”

The opportunity for such a spectacle would never come. Last year, as Bjork awaited trial, Oregon’s governor signed a new death penalty law making Bjork ineligible for the punishment.

Asked what he thinks should be done with him, Bjork struggled to arrive at an answer.

“What’s fair? I don’t know,” he said. “It’s a difficult question. It’s almost like asking someone what’s the meaning of life.”

https://www.startribune.com/what-to-do-with-a-murderer-who-keeps-killing-in-prison/568439942/?refresh=true

Ryan Geraghty Arrested In Elizabeth Lyn Vargas Standoff

Ryan Geraghty

Ryan Geraghty has been arrested following a standoff at his ex girlfriends Elizabeth Lyn Vargas home. Elizabeth Lyn Vargas is best known for being part of the series Real Housewives Of Orange County. According to police reports Ryan Geraghty would break into the home of Elizabeth Lyn Vargas home and would threaten the reality tv star. Elizabeth Lyn Vargas would call 911 and Ryan Geraghty can be heard in the background threatening to murder officers and Vargas. Eventually an armed SWAT team would take Ryan Geraghty into custody and he has been charged with assault with a deadly weapon, burglary, felon in possession of a firearm and extortion. The extortion charge came after his arrest as it was revealed Ryan Geraghty had been extorting Elizabeth Lyn Vargas for sometime

Ryan Geraghty More News

The ex-boyfriend of former “Real Housewives of Orange County” cast member Elizabeth Lyn Vargas was charged Thursday with multiple felonies for allegedly extorting her and holding her at gunpoint during a standoff at her Newport Beach home.

Ryan Matthew Geraghty, 33, was charged with single counts each of extortion, assault with a firearm, criminal threats, corporal injury on a spouse or cohabitant, possession of a firearm by a felon and grossly negligent discharge of a firearm, all felonies, as well as two misdemeanor counts of possession of cocaine and a Xanax bar. He also faces sentencing enhancements for the personal use of a firearm.

According to the criminal complaint, Geraghty has two prior convictions for burglary in Los Angeles in June of 2008 and November of 2016. The two prior strikes mean he faces about 75 years to life in prison if convicted.

Geraghty allegedly extorted Vargas for what was reportedly tens of thousands of dollars, threatening to release nude photos of Vargas if she did pay him. This came before he held her at gunpoint during a roughly two-hour standoff with Newport Beach police inside Vargas’ home Tuesday night before he was arrested.

The standoff began at about 5:45 p.m. when police conducted a welfare check at the home located on the Balboa Peninsula in the 100 block of East Oceanfront, near East Balboa Boulevard and Medina Way, according to Newport Beach police.

After two hours, officers entered the home and found Geraghty “actively threatening the life of the victim.”

“She was being held captive for a number of hours and is extremely thankful to the Newport Beach Police Department, who was able to rescue her and get her out of harm’s way,” Weintraub said in a statement. “She spent the entire night with the Newport Beach Police Department going over what exactly happened and she is just glad to be safely out of the situation.”

Prosecutors say Geraghty began blackmailing Vargas on Christmas Eve, forcing her to pay tens of thousands of dollars to prevent him from releasing nude photos of her. According to the prosecutors, he also allegedly forced her to buy him a BMW.

On Tuesday, he allegedly called Vargas and accused her of stealing his car, because she stopped payments on the BMW, prosecutors said.

The day prior, Geraghty supposedly fired a gun of in Vargas’ home, where the bullet hit the ceiling.

Orange County Defense Attorney Todd Spitzer issued a statement on Geraghty’s violent criminal past that began well before his time with Vargas. “There are some members of our society who are so violent that they cannot live amongst the rest of us,” he said in a portion of his statement. “(We) will do everything (we) can to prevent this violent criminal from being able to harm anyone else,” the statement continued.

The judge made sure to make it clear to Ryan Geraghty that there was a “no contact protective order” placed against him by Vargas.

Following the standoff, Weintraub issued a statement saying, “Elizabeth is doing great now,” and added, “She wants to thank the Newport Beach Police Department and SWAT teams for saving her from harm’s way. This was a traumatic experience for her and she feels blessed that she survived.”

She was reunited with her husky at a safe location shortly after authorities were able to extract both from the home on Tuesday.

https://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2022/02/03/ryan-geraghty-charged-extortion-rhoc-elizabeth-vargas/

Ryan Geraghty Videos

Frank Deleon Charged In Murder Of Girlfriend

Frank Deleon

Frank Deleon a seventeen year old alleged teen killer from Texas has been charged in the murder of his girlfriend. According to police reports Frank Deleon believed that his girlfriend Diamond Alvarez was cheating on him. Frank Deleon would ambush the young woman and would shoot her twenty two times as she was walking her dog and would die from her injuries. Frank Deleon would be arrested and is currently sitting in a Texas county jail as he has been charged with murder.

Frank Deleon More News

A 17-year-old boy was arrested Monday and charged with murder for allegedly shooting his ex-girlfriend 22 times as she walked her dog in a Houston park last week, authorities said.

Diamond Alvarez, 16, was lured to the park last Tuesday after she received a text message from the suspect, Frank Deleon Jr., asking that she meet him there, the victim’s mother Anna Machado said.

Soon after, Alvarez’s family heard the gunfire from their house and rushed to the nearby green space when their dog, Peanut, returned home alone, relatives said.

The family found Alvarez’s body and the mother tried to revive her daughter by performing CPR, but it was too late.

Police said the teen couple’s relationship ended after Alvarez learned Deleon was cheating on her.

Machado said her daughter and her alleged killer dated “on and off” for about a year.

“My daughter was always crying about him,” the mother said.

Machado said she visited a makeshift memorial honoring her daughter after learning of the arrest in the case.

“I went up over there again, crying and said: ’Baby you have justice. It’s not done yet. It’s not over yet. But at least we know a name,’” she said.

Deleon was being held in Harris County Jail and prosecutors are seeking a $250,000 bond.

But Machado wants the suspect held without bond.

“He doesn’t even deserve a high bond. He executed my daughter,” the mother said.

https://nypost.com/2022/01/18/teen-charged-with-murder-of-ex-girlfriend-who-was-shot-22-times/

Frank Deleon Posts Bond

The 17-year-old boyfriend of a teen girl who was shot and killed in southwest Houston has been released from jail after he was arrested for her murder.

Frank Deleon Jr., 17, posted his $250,000 bond Wednesday morning, according to court records. He’s charged with the murder of 15-year-old Diamond Alvarez.

Family members heard gunshots on Jan. 11 around 9:30 p.m. and grew worried because they knew Alvarez was outside, walking her dog named “Peanut.”

The video above is from a previous report.

Her mother went outside and found her daughter shot 22 times in the 15400 block of Park Manor near Markwood Lane in an open greenspace, just a couple blocks from their home.

Police said Alvarez’s gunshot wounds were consistent with her laying on her back on the ground at the time of her murder. Numerous shell casings were found around her body.

According to Houston police, Deleon was simultaneously in a romantic relationship with Alvarez and another girl.

When Alvarez learned about the other relationship, she went to meet Deleon in the neighborhood. That’s when he shot her multiple times, police said.

Deleon was arrested Monday night after detectives worked with the community to track down witnesses and leads, HPD said.

In court, prosecutors said that when officers arrested Deleon, a suitcase was found in his room, packed with enough belongings for more than an overnight trip.

When prosecutors requested his $250,000 bond, they said there were concerns that Deleon would be violent against Alvarez’s family and retaliate.

According to family members, Deleon was violent against Alvarez in the past, including punching her in the face and pointing a gun at her.

The couple was together for six or seven months, and the relationship had recently ended, the prosecutor said in court.

Prosecutors said that recently, Alvarez saw Deleon with another girl at a quinceañera, and that made her mad.

Investigators said Deleon had been involved with the other girl for a couple years, and begged Alvarez not to tell anyone he and Alvarez had been seeing each other, sparking an argument.

That’s when he reportedly asked Alvarez to meet him in the neighborhood to talk.

When he was arrested, prosecutors said Deleon told police that Alvarez was stalking his new girlfriend, which caused her to break up with him. His new girlfriend reportedly told Deleon to leave her alone on the night of the murder and blocked his calls.

Police said Deleon lied to them when he was arrested and said he didn’t meet up with Alvarez and hadn’t seen her, despite surveillance video and screenshots with evidence of the encounter.

Under his bond conditions, Deleon cannot have contact with anyone involved with the case, including the other alleged girlfriend, any witnesses or their family members. He was granted house arrest with a GPS monitor.

Deleon’s parents appeared with him in court Wednesday, where the judge reiterated that if it is discovered he is not living at their home, his bond will be revoked.

Deleon is scheduled to appear in court again on March 9.

Alvarez’s family set up a GoFundMe page to help with funeral expenses.

https://abc13.com/diamond-alvarez-shot-and-killed-frank-deleon-out-of-jail-posts-bond-250k/11487492/