Robbrie Thompson Teen Killer Murders Store Clerk

Robbrie Thompson

Robbrie Thompson was a sixteen year old teen killer from Washington State that would shoot and kill a store clerk during a robbery and would later murder his accomplice. According to court documents Robbrie Thompson would enter the Handy Corner Store where Soon Ja Nam would be shot and killed. However Robbrie Thompson would not stop there as he would also shoot and kill his accomplice Franklin Thuo following the robbery. Robbrie Thompson would be arrested and later convicted of armed robbery and two counts of murder. Robbrie Thompson would be sentenced to forty years in prison.

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431160THOMPSON, ROBBRIE P19Washington Corrections Center

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A teenager convicted of killing the 79-year-old owner of a popular Puyallup corner store during a robbery, then fatally shooting his alleged accomplice on a grassy Commencement Bay beach, faced sentencing Friday in Pierce County Superior Court. Robbrie Thompson, 16 at the time of the armed robbery and 19 now, was sentenced to 40 years in prison, below the standard sentencing range. During the hearing, Judge James Orlando said the sentence was below the standard range to avoid handing a juvenile offender what would essentially be a life sentence. “I believe there are two people inside of Mr. Thompson,” Orlando said in court. “There is one who can pretend the picture of being a concerned young man, somebody who could do well in school, who wants to involve themselves, who wants to apologize, but the bottom line is the only person that Mr. Thompson cares about is Mr. Thompson.”

Defense attorneys had asked that Thompson receive 25 years, the minimum term for aggravated murder committed by people between the ages of 16 and 18. A Pierce County jury in September found Thompson guilty of all eight charges against him. The charges stemmed from the April 27, 2019 armed robbery at the Handy Corner Store where Soon Ja Nam, who owned and operated it with her husband, was killed, and from the death of 16-year-old Franklin Thuo, who allegedly helped rob the store.

Thuo was found dead on the shore of Chinook Marina two days later with a gunshot wound to the back of the head. Prosecutors said Thompson killed Thuo over a fear that he would talk to authorities about Nam’s death. Jurors found Thompson guilty of two counts of first-degree aggravated murder, first-degree murder, first-degree robbery, conspiracy to commit robbery, two counts of second-degree assault and unlawful possession of a firearm. Thompson’s second charge, first-degree murder, was dismissed Friday to prevent the possibility of future double jeopardy, Orlando said. During the hearing, prosecutors presented the facts of the crimes again, noting the steps Thompson took to avoid detection by police. Deputy prosecutor Brian Wasankari said Thompson turned off his phone before going to Puyallup, donned a mask and rubber gloves in Thuo’s Nissan before the robbery and told people close to him not to talk about what happened over text because he knew the messages could find their way to the eyes of law enforcement. “This is someone who planned crimes over the course of days, deliberated about them with a confidant, considered alternate courses of action and chose those that resulted in the deaths of two people, an elderly shopkeeper who posed no physical threat, and a 16-year-old boy who wound up face down on the beach,” Wasankari said in court.

In the defense’s response, attorney Paula Olsen argued that Thompson’s age at the time of the crime, his upbringing which included some abuses by his father and his difficulties with mental health exhibited after the killings were factors that supported a shorter sentence. In Thompson’s address to the court, he apologized to the family’s of the victims, but said that he did not commit the crimes. During his trial in September, Thompson testified that he wasn’t the one who actually shot Nam. In regard to Thuo, he testified that he and others — who he wouldn’t name — brought the teenager to Chinook Marina, and that one of those people actually killed Thuo. Prosecutors pointed to the fact that after the deadly robbery, Thompson talked with a confidant at length, asking her repeatedly whether he should kill Thuo to prevent him from “ratting on him.” Thompson also searched online for “where is the best place to shoot someone” before turning off his cell phone for about 90 minutes, prosecutors said. When Thuo’s body was found, he was missing his white Adidas Yeezy sneakers, which are retailed for $360. During Friday’s hearing, prosecutors played brief videos showing Thompson modeling the same shoes on Snapchat after Thuo was killed.

Read more at: https://www.thenewstribune.com/news/local/crime/article257564868.html#storylink=cpy

Robbrie Thompson Now

Robbrie Thompson is currently incarcerated at the Washington Corrections Center

Robbrie Thompson Release Date

Robbrie Thompson is not eligible for release until 2060

Willy Suarez Maceo Alleged Serial Killer Charged With 2 Murders

Willy Suarez Maceo

Willy Suarez Maceo is the latest alleged serial killer from Florida as he has just been charged with two counts of murder. According to police reports Willy Suarez Maceo, who was working as a realtor in Florida, would drive around in his black Dodge Charger and fire a 9mm gun at homeless people sleeping on the street. According to Miami police Willy Suarez Maceo had fired at two homeless people the same night killing one and injuring the second. Bullet casing found at the scenes would match. Willy Suarez Maceo who was initially charged with attempted murder back in December 2021 has now had two counts of murder added to the charges he is facing and police continue to look for more victims.

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The Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office officially charged real estate agent Willy Suarez Maceo with two first-degree murders, one attempted murder and one attempted premeditated murder, labeling him a serial killer.

Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle spoke at a news conference to discuss the case, where numerous surveillance videos were shown.

It is chilling video showing a serial killer in action, according to prosecutors.

“Having an unknown killer striking out at random victims is like no other crime to solve,” Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle said during a press conference announcing charges against 25-year-old Willy Suarez Maceo and showing video of how he was caught.

Suarez Maceo’s online profile showed a smiling, well-dressed professional real-estate agent and records revealed he had no criminal history in Florida.

On Oct. 16, 2021, at 9 p.m. in downtown Miami, a homeless man identified as Manuel Perez was stabbed to death.

Fernandez Rundle described what she said was Suarez Maceo’s first homicide.

“Manuel Perez was homeless and he had been sleeping outside on the sidewalk at the time of the stabbing. Two witnesses heard Mr. Perez yelling, ‘Help, help.’ One witness saw a man making an upward and downward movement as if striking the victim. The man was described as a thin built, Black male, 26 to 27 years of age, short hair, clean-shaven, and wearing a black T-shirt. Surveillance video from a nearby business captured a clear picture of an individual matching that description,” Fernandez Rundle said.

Another surveillance camera from a local business shows the man walking towards the area where the scene of the crime took place. Fernandez Rundle pointed out that there was a very clear picture of the suspect, later identified as Suarez Maceo.

Despite the video, detectives couldn’t identify the man.

“The homicide investigation went cold,” Fernandez Rundle said.

But the suspect struck again. On Dec. 21, 2021, a homeless man was shot and bleeding from the head. He survived. A bullet casing was found and also a set of footprints.

Fernandez Rundle said it was the third incident that broke the case. Two hours later, Jerome Price, who was identified as homeless and sleeping on the ground was shot five times and five 9mm bullet casings were found.

On surveillance video, a black Dodge Charger drove by, and then the video captured flashes from a gun.

“When the police get that video they are then able to catch the last three digits of the (license) tag,” Fernandez Rundle said.

Detectives were able to piece together the full license plate from close circuit television cameras in the area.

“This was a key break to start stripping away at the anonymity of this alleged mystery killer,” Fernandez Rundle said. “That tag number came back to a 2015 black Dodge Charger.” She said a connection with the car was also noted in the unsolved October killing of Manuel Perez. The Charger was also seen circling in the area before Price’s shooting.

The car was registered to Willy Suarez Maceo. Detectives showed up at the real-estate agent’s work where they saw him sitting in the car outside of his place of business. Police stopped him as he exited the vehicle. In the midst of a patdown, a loaded black Glock 19 9 mm handgun was found in the right front waistband of Suarez Maceo’s pants.

The firearm was connected to the spent 9mm casings that were recovered next to Price’s body and another victim, according to Fernandez Rundle.

https://www.local10.com/news/local/2022/02/04/realtor-to-be-charged-with-multiple-murders-in-miami-dade-county/

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James Flint Arrested In Virginia Tech Hookah Lounge Shooting

james flint virginia

James Flint has been arrested in connection to the Virginia Tech hookah lounge shooting that left one person dead. According to police reports James Flint would open fire at the Virginia Tech hookah lounge Melody Hookah Lounge in Blacksburg Virginia that left one person dead and four others injured. James Flint is now facing murder charges in the death of  Isiah O. Robinson, as well as four counts of attempted murder and one count of use of a firearm while committing or attempting to commit murder for the remaining four victims.

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Police in Virginia say the suspect accused of murdering one person and wounding four others in a shooting at a hookah lounge in Blacksburg late Friday night has been arrested.

The suspect, identified as Jamel Flint, 24, of Roanoke, was apprehended Saturday following a manhunt, FOX station WFXR-TV of Roanoke reported. Details about the arrest were not immediately available.

Authorities previously said they believed James Flint fired the shots at downtown Blacksburg’s Melody Hookah Lounge, just a short walk from Virginia Tech’s campus.

Blacksburg police obtained six felony warrants for Flint’s arrest, authorities added in a statement.

James Flint faces charges of first-degree murder in the death of Isiah O. Robinson, 18, who was a student at Patrick Henry High School in Roanoke, as well as four counts of first-degree attempted murder and one count of use of a firearm while committing or attempting to commit murder for the remaining four victims, authorities said.

One of the four wounded victims is a student at Virginia Tech and was recovering, according to Frank Shushok Jr., vice president for student affairs at Virginia Tech.

“We have been in contact with his family, and they report their son is out of surgery, recovering, and seems to be doing well,” Shushok said in a statement, according to Charlottesville’s WVIR-TV. “We continue to respect the privacy of the student, and we are grateful for the outpouring of care and support directed to him.”

Blacksburg police asked that anyone with information about the shooting contact them at 540-443-1400. Anonymous phone calls can be made to the Blacksburg Police Tip Line at 540-961-1819 or by emailing [email protected].

https://www.foxnews.com/us/police-id-suspect-accused-of-hookah-lounge-murder-near-virginia-tech

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A late-night shooting Friday at a hookah lounge near the Virginia Tech campus in Blacksburg leftone person dead and four injured, police said.

About 11:50 p.m., police responded to a report of shots fired at the Melody Hookah Bar in downtown Blacksburg. Police identified the slain man as Isiah O. Robinson, 18, of Roanoke.

They did not release names of the wounded or specify the extent of the injuries.

Local television stations reported that the person killed was a Roanoke high school student, but police and school officials declined to confirm that Saturday afternoon.

On Facebook, Roanoke City Public Schools officials expressed sadness at “the death of a member of our Patrick Henry High School family,” but the statement did not mention the shooting or say how the person who died was connected to the school.

Virginia Tech officials confirmed that a student there was among those injured.

“We have been in contact with his family, and they report their son is out of surgery, recovering, and seems to be doing well,” Frank Shushok Jr., vice president for student affairs, said in a statement Saturday. “We continue to respect the privacy of the student, and we are grateful for the outpouring of care and support directed to him.”

Police said Saturday night that they had obtained warrants charging a man with murder in the death of Robinson. The warrants also charged the suspect with four counts of attempted murder, police said.

The suspect was identified by Blacksburg police as Jamel Flint, 24, of Roanoke.

The town of Blacksburg said in a tweet late Saturday that James Flint had been taken into custody in Roanoke.

Officials did not provide a motive for the shooting.

“This incident continues to be a complex, ongoing case that has shifted to a homicide investigation,” the Blacksburg Police Department said earlier Saturday. “Multiple law enforcement agencies are assisting in the area and following up on leads.”

The campus was placed on lockdown early Saturday, and students were told to “stay inside” and to “secure doors.” The lockdown was rescinded about 3:15 a.m., but students were told to avoid downtown.

“Our condolences go out to the family and friends of the deceased and we extend our support to those who were injured,” Virginia Tech President Tim Sands said in a statement. “Events like this are difficult and unsettling to all of us. Please care for yourself and seek assistance if you need it. … Our community is strong, and our strength is derived from our genuine care and concern for one another.”

The hookah bar, in a statement posted online Saturday, said: “We are deeply hurt and devastated of what happened Friday night, our condolences go to the families and friends of everyone who were affected. Moving forward we will add more precautions and regulations in place.”

In Virginia, individuals have to be at least 21 to smoke hookah.

Ahead of the shooting, on its website, the bar had posted a notice that it would be closed for a private party from 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. but would open to the public again afterward.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2022/02/05/shots-reported-inblacksburg-va/

Justine Johnson Murders Daughter Because SpongeBob Told Her Too

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Justine Johnson is a mother from Michigan who would stab her three year old daughter to death because SpongeBob told her too. According to police reports Justine Johnson was coming off a long heroin withdrawal when she hallucinated that the popular character SpongeBob was telling her to murder her three year old daughter Sutton Mosser or else the character would murder her. So Justine Johnson would stab the three year old girl multiple times causing her death. Justine Johnson would tell investigators she attempting to kill herself but was unable to go through with it. Justine Johnson has been charged with murder and remains in a Michigan county jail

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Days after a 3-year-old girl’s body was found in a trash bag in northern Michigan, the child’s mother told an investigator she had hallucinated SpongeBob on her TV, commanding her to kill her daughter or face death herself.

Ryan Eberline, an investigator with Child Protective Services, testified to this during the Friday, Feb. 4, preliminary examination of Justine M. Johnson held before Iosco County District Judge Christopher P. Martin. Johnson, 22, is charged with felony murder and first-degree child abuse related to the Sept. 16 death of her daughter, Sutton M. Mosser.

Mosser had turned 3 just two days before her death.

Called to testify by Iosco County Prosecutor James A. Bacarella, Eberline said she interviewed Johnson in jail on Oct. 1.

“What did she tell you?” Bacarella asked.

“The conversation was very pieced out,” Eberline said. “We would review things and go back to those things. Overall, the conversation, from what I could conclude, was that near the date of the 16th she had left her mother’s house walking and passed out in the graveyard.”

Johnson then walked to her own apartment, where she attempted to kill herself, Eberline said she told her. Bacarella asked Eberline if Johnson had discussed what happened to her daughter.

“She told me that she didn’t remember the specifics of what happened at the time of what happened to Sutton, that she was experiencing hallucinations due to heroin withdrawal and not sleeping for approximately two weeks,” Eberline said. “She was getting hallucinations from the TV that had instructed her to take her daughter’s life or they would kill her.

“It was SpongeBob who was saying these things on the TV,” Eberline continued. “If she didn’t do what she did to her daughter they would kill her. She said she was afraid for her life and she had lost her mind.”

The hearing began with a sobbing and shackled Johnson being led into the courtroom. Johnson continued to cry intermittently throughout the hearing, frequently dabbing her face with Kleenex.

As the first witness of the day, Bacarella called Johnson’s brother Knesley Johnson Jr. to the stand. Knesley Johnson said that in the fall of 2021, he, his sister, parents, brother, and niece were living at a home in the 5400 block of Cedar Lake Road in Oscoda Township.

About 2:30 p.m. on Sept. 16, Knesley Johnson left for work, having a brief conversation with his sister beforehand. He said there was nothing unusual about her or his niece. When he left, Sutton was in her mother’s care, he said.

Knesley Johnson came home about 3:30 or 4 a.m. on Sept. 17. As he was taking off his shoes to get ready for bed, he asked his younger brother where their sister and Sutton were. The brother went to the back of their house and said he saw a human child’s foot sticking out of a bag, Knesley Johnson testified.

He said he did not know where his sister was at the time.

When Knesley Johnson was finished testifying, he walked by his seated sister on his way out of the courtroom.

“Love you, Knes,” Justine Johnson told him as passed.

“Yep,” he replied.

Justine Johnson’s 17-year-old brother — who is not being named due to his age—then testified he woke up about 6 p.m. on Sept. 16 and went to a bathroom, where he encountered his sister.

“I went into the bathroom and it looked like (Justine Johnson) was doing lines,” he said. “As soon as I went to walk in, she brushed it away. But I’m not sure.”

“Doing lines” refers to snorting drugs in a powdered form. The teen described the substance in question as a scoop of white powder that was on the bathroom’s vanity sink.

The teen said he asked his sister where Sutton was.

“She said, ‘Mind your own [expletive]ing business.’ But that’s like her normal response,” he testified.

The witness said he did not look for Sutton in the house. Shortly thereafter, he said Justine Johnson exited the house to approach a red vehicle that had stopped at a store across the street. She was not there long before returning to the house, he said.

The witness said he took a shower and once he finished, his sister was gone. He left shortly thereafter to go to the beach, returning about 10 p.m., he said.

Bacarella asked if Justine Johnson or Sutton were home when he returned.

“Nobody was home,” the witness said.

When Knesley Johnson arrived home a few hours later, the witness said he went to a back room of their house and found a garbage bag.

“There was like a foot sticking out of the bag,” he said. “I ran up and told Knesley, ‘There’s a foot in a bag.’ He didn’t believe me. He thought I was joking.”

The brothers together looked at the bag, then called an uncle, the 17-year-old testified.

Defense attorney Nathan R. Tyler asked the witness if it was unusual not to see Sutton around the house. The witness replied it was.

Tyler then asked the witness why he hadn’t looked for Sutton.

“I thought (Justine Johnson) knew where she was probably,” the witness replied.

As she did when Knesley Johnson finished testifying, Justine Johnson told her other brother she loved him as he walked by her.

“Uh huh,” her brother replied.

Next witness Oscoda Township Police Officer Gerald Soboleski testified he responded to the Johnson family home in the early hours of Sept. 17.

“The caller stated they had found a foot on their porch,” Soboleski said. Upon arrival, he parked at the end of the residence’s driveway, where he was greeted by Johnson’s brothers and an uncle.

“Knesley started telling me about how he came home from work on this day and looked throughout the house for his sister and niece and was unable to locate them,” the officer testified. “At that point, he said, ‘And then we found this,’ referring to what we later found was the human foot.”

Soboleski went to a back room of the house, where he found a circular blue tote with two garbage bags stocked on top. Protruding from one of the bags was a small child’s foot, Soboleski said.

“I felt the bottom of the child’s foot. It was cold to the touch, and EMS was called to the scene,” he said. Soboleski secured the scene and called a detective sergeant. A medical examiner also responded to scene, he said.

Shane Hill, a forensic scientist with the Michigan State Police Crime Lab in Bridgeport, said he and three fellow team members went to the crime scene on Sept. 17 to process it for evidence and take photographs. The investigators found several bloodstains on a hallway closet door, on living room couches, and on items in a bedroom.

They also confiscated three knives found in a bedroom, Hill said.

Inside the black trash bag within the blue tote, Sutton’s body was wrapped in a comforter. A pair of jeans were also in the bag, while a black sweatshirt was under the bag at the bottom of the tote, Hill said.

The jeans tested positive for blood, Hill said. Investigators were also alerted to a potential secondary site within an apartment complex, where numerous other items were seized that bore apparent blood stains, Hill said.

Bacarella asked Hill if he formed a conclusion as to where the killing occurred based on the blood evidence. Hill replied Sutton was more than likely killed inside the Johnson family home.

Sgt. Kenneth Binder, a latent print technician with the Michigan State Police Crime Lab, testified there were 13 finger- and palmprints recovered from the bag Sutton’s body was found in. All 13 prints were Justine Johnson’s, Binder said.

No other identifiable prints were recovered from the bag, Binder said. A bloody palmprint recovered from a wall in the house came from Sutton, Binder added.

Questioned by Tyler, Binder could not say how long Justine Johnson’s prints had been on the trash bag. There did not appear to be blood associated with any of Justine Johnson’s prints, Binder said.

Pathologist Dr. Jaya L. Sankaran, the Iosco County medical examiner, testified she went to the Cedar Lake Road scene and assisted in removing Sutton’s body from the bag and tote. She gave the body a preliminary examination and noted stab wounds to Sutton’s neck, chest, and abdomen, with a gaping wound exposing a portion of the small intestine, Sankaran said.

Oscoda Township Police Officer Danny Gallahar testified he had compiled a timeline of the comings-and-goings at the Johnson house on Sept. 16 based on nearby businesses’ surveillance camera footage.

At 3:23 p.m., Justine Johnson exited the Cedar Lake Road home, crossed the street to a former cleaning business, sat down and put her head in her hands, Gallahar said. Johnson was wearing a black sweatshirt and blue jeans as she paced around outside. Judging by the design on it, it appeared the sweatshirt was the same one later found in the blue tote with Sutton’s body, Gallahar said.

Justine Johnson returned to the home at 3:46 p.m., Gallahar said. At 3:55 p.m., she again exited the house and began walking southbound along the shoulder of Cedar Lake Road.

A vehicle appeared to drop off Justine Johnson at her home at 6:06 p.m., Gallahar said. Police later identified the driver of this vehicle, who said he had picked Johnson up in town. The driver later described Johnson’s demeanor as being in a confused and possibly drug-addled state, Gallahar said.

About an hour later, Justine Johnson again left the house, wearing different clothing than she had on before. At 7:24 p.m., she walked across the street and approached a maroon SUV, though she did not make contact with any occupants, the officer said.

Bacarella asked Gallaher if any of the video footage showed Sutton with her mother.

“At no time do you see Sutton in any video,” Gallaher replied.

Justine Johnson left the home again at 7:37 p.m. The video footage did not show anyone else entering or exiting the house until Johnson’s younger brother left to go to the beach.

When testimony concluded, Bacarella asked Judge Martin to bind Johnson’s case over to Circuit Court for trial. Martin granted the request and scheduled a pre-trial hearing for 9:30 a.m. on Feb. 28. In the meantime, Johnson is to remain jailed without bond.

My heart goes out to the family who’s here,” the judge said at the hearing’s end. “Good luck to you, Justine, as your case proceeds.”

https://www.mlive.com/news/saginaw-bay-city/2022/02/michigan-mom-charged-with-murder-told-investigator-she-hallucinated-spongebob-telling-her-to-kill-3-year-old-daughter.html

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Bronwyn Meeks Pleads Guilty In Bizarre Murder

Bronwyn Meeks 2022 photos

Bronwyn Meeks is a 22 year old woman from Virginia who just plead host to a series of charges including murder. According to court documents Bronwyn Meeks, Dominic Samuels and Brennan Thomas would kidnap the victim Dylan D. Whetzel who was oddly brought to McDonald;s for what Bronwyn dubbed his last meal. Dylan was then brought to a remote area in Virginia where he was shot multiple times in the head. The trio would then use an ax to chop up the victims body before being placed in trash bags and scattered around the area. Apparently the reason behind the murders is that the victim had approached Bronwyn Meeks about selling drugs to a friend who had recently overdosed. Also at hand was that Bronwyn Meeks was worried about going back to jail for a dirty urine screen (drug test) and told a friend if she was going back to jail it might as well be for something big. Brownyn Meeks has yet to be sentenced and Dominic Samuels and Brennan Thomas are yet to go on trial.

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A young Spotsylvania County woman pleaded guilty to more than 30 charges Friday for her role in the slaying and dismemberment of a 20-year-old Stafford County man last year.

Bronwyn C. Meeks, 22, was convicted of offenses that include first-degree murder, murder by mob, abduction, concealing and defiling a dead body and multiple counts of conspiracy and firearms-related offenses.

The charges stem from the slaying of Dylan D. Whetzel of Stafford, who was shot at least five times on Jan. 31, 2021. His remains were chopped up and discarded in rural Spotsylvania in four large trash bags.

Special prosecutor David Sands gave a lengthy recitation of the evidence Friday in Spotsylvania Circuit Court, but it remains unclear why Whetzel was targeted.

A sentencing date for Meeks will be set at a later date. Her plea agreement calls for her to receive an active sentence of between 16 and 54 years in prison.

Bronwyn Meeks had been scheduled for an arraignment Friday, but instead decided to take the plea agreement.

Her codefendants, Dominic Samuels, 19, and Brennan Thomas, also 19, had their trial dates set Friday. Samuels is scheduled for a five-day jury trial that would start on Aug. 15, while a multi-day trial for Thomas is set to begin Nov. 29.

Thomas’ attorney, Jim Ilijevich, tried Friday to get Thomas released on bond. Judge Ricardo Rigual soundly rejected that request.

According to Sands, Meeks and Samuels were drug dealers who were romantically involved. Thomas was a friend of Samuels and attended the same high school.

Sands referred to what sounded like a relatively minor conflict between Meeks and Whetzel in which Whetzel told her to stop selling drugs to one of his friends. That friend had overdosed on drugs he obtained from Meeks, but survived, the prosecutor said.

Sands, who meticulously went through a series of cellphone trackings, text messages and pictures that he said connected the group to the crimes, said Meeks was also upset about a pending drug test that she expected to fail. In one text, she told someone that if she was going back to jail, she was going to “make it worth my while.”

The prosecutor said that Bronwyn Meeks made arrangements to pick up Whetzel in North Stafford under the guise of going to a party. She and her codefendants drove Whetzel to a McDonald’s for what Meeks described in a text as his “last meal,” Sands said.

The group ended up in the area of Pamunkey and Finney roads in western Spotsylvania, where Sands said Whetzel was pulled out of the vehicle and shot repeatedly. Authorities allege that Samuels and Thomas later purchased a Cobalt ax that was used to dismember the body.

Police were alerted to the crime by Thomas’ grandfather, who called 911 after seeing the red Mustang Thomas was driving in the area and his grandson coming out of the woods. The grandfather said Thomas told him that someone had been shot.

The older man was clearly distraught during the 911 call, at one point saying, “Oh, my God! What the [expletive] did he do?”

Sands also read text messages attributed to Samuels and Meeks following the slaying. One text from Samuels read, “I’m a [expletive] up psychopath and you just saw it first hand.”

Bronwyn Meeks in one text expressed displeasure with how the slaying was carried out, writing, “We’re [expletive] because everything was done so [expletive] wrong.”

All three suspects have been in custody for the past year.

https://fredericksburg.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/spotsy-woman-pleads-guilty-to-killing-dismembering-stafford-man/article_1c5b3967-6f8a-5424-b890-5c598940f788.html

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Domonic M. Samuels Brennan E. Thomas and Bronwyn C. Meeks Spotsylvania murder of Dylan Whetzel