Ashley Hollingsworth Attempts To Murder Newborn

Ashley Hollingsworth

Ashley Hollingsworth is a woman from Las Vegas Nevada who attempted to murder her newborn with a blanket. According to police reports Ashley Hollingsworth would give birth at a relative home in a bathroom and when she was being brought to the hospital she would attempt to smother the newborn with a blanket. According to investigators she attempted to kill the newborn because she believed the newborn was evil and smelled off. As for the double black eyes in Ashley Hollingsworth mugshot photo well according to police that was self inflicted. Ashley Hollingsworth has been charged with attempted murder and child abuse.

Ashley Hollingsworth More News

A Primm woman was arrested Wednesday after authorities accused her of trying to suffocate her newborn.

Ashley Hollingsworth, 23, was booked on one count of child abuse and one count of attempted murder, according to jail records.

Las Vegas police initially were called Sunday morning to MountainView Hospital after Hollingsworth dropped the baby off and ran away, according to an arrest report released Thursday.

The child’s father told police that she had the baby at a Las Vegas home Saturday night, but her family took her to the hospital because of the baby’s condition.

“It was later learned that Ashley had attempted to kill the baby by smothering her with a blanket while enroute to the hospital,” police wrote

Hollingsworth’s aunt and uncle told police that the woman gave birth quietly in the guest bathroom and that they found the baby girl in the toilet.

The family headed to MountainView Hospital, but the uncle told police that on the way, he heard the baby stop crying and found Hollingsworth squishing a blanket over the girl’s face. He said Hollingsworth did this at least twice before he took the child away

Hollingsworth was found near the hospital two hours later with a large wound on her head and bloody pants. She told police that she was “beat up by a rock.”

The woman was taken to University Medical Center and interviewed again on Tuesday. She told police that she had two other children, born in 2018 and 2020, who lived with their father in California.

Hollingsworth had been diagnosed with a medical condition four years ago that was redacted in the arrest report. She told police that she was not taking her medication while she was pregnant.

According to the report, she “continuously talked about prophecies and other religious ideations” and said she believed the baby was evil.

She is being held without bail and is scheduled to appear in court again Monday.

Ashley Hollingsowrth Arrested

Michael Mosley Guilty Of Clayton Beathard Murder

michael mosley

Michael Mosley has been found guilty of the murder of Clayton Beathard. According to court documents Michael Mosley would approach a woman who was with the victims and was told repeatedly to go away. This brought out a situation that would turn violent outside of the Nashville bar when Michael Mosley would stab three people killing Clayton Beathard and Paul Trapeni III and injuring the third man. Clayton Beathard is the brother of former NFL quarterback C.J. Beathard and grandson of Hall of Fame General Manager Bobby Beathard. Michael Mosley would be found guilty of the two murders and of the attempted murder. At sentencing later this year Michael Mosley would not be eligible for parole for 100 years.

Michael Mosley More News

Michael Mosley was convicted Thursday of first-degree murder in the 2019 stabbing deaths of two men outside a Midtown bar.

Michael Mosley was also convicted of attempted first-degree murder after the stabbing left another man blind in one eye and assault against another. 

Michael Mosley was named the suspect in the fight and stabbing that killed two Williamson County college students, Clayton Beathard and Paul Trapeni III, on Dec. 21, 2019, at The Dogwood, a bar on Division Street.

Beathard was stabbed in the chest, hitting his heart. Trapeni, too, was stabbed in the heart, and also in the back.

Another man, A.J. Bethurum, then a 21-year-old University of Tennessee student from Franklin, survived the stabbing with injuries to his eye and arm.

He has since fully lost vision in his left eye, he testified Thursday after the knife went up and under the organ and nearly pierced his brain.

All three victims were old friends and had attended Battle Ground Academy in Franklin together.

Deputy District Attorney Amy Hunter and Assistant District Attorney Jan Norman say Mosley escalated a comment from one of the trio’s friends to a fistfight and then he alone pulled a knife

In statements after the verdict was read Friday afternoon, prosecutors said the case was about the choices Michael Mosley made that took a violent turn. 

“We were thrilled to get that verdict especially for these families who have been so wonderful and they’ve been through so much,” Hunter said. “It was also really great to get that verdict for all of the friends who came and testified, who showed such a level of composure…We were glad that they got justice that they deserved

The defense, led by Nashville attorney Ken Quillen, argued Mosley was acting in self-defense from the tall, athletic former football players in the trio’s friends group. 

The victims had gathered that evening with a handful of other classmates and friends from Franklin or who attended BGA with them. 

Quillen’s closing arguments were stilted and short. 

“I would suggest that when a man angrily walks toward you and points at you, that is a threat,” he said.

Quillen played a video using audio from several initial interviews with witnesses to the fight that were discussed extensively in cross-examination as being out of context. 

He thanked the jury for being “attentive” in a statement that lasted less than 10 minutes. 

Emily Sanders, who said she is Mosley’s best friend, told The Tennessean after the verdict she still believes in her friend. 

“Michael’s a good person,” she said. “He was just in the wrong place at the wrong time.”

Sanders comforted Mosley’s sobbing sister as the pair walked out of the courtroom together. 

What took a brawl to a fatal stabbing in the street? 

“It seemed to me every time I separated a situation, another escalated,” Jaycie Harper, a friend of the defendant, said on the stand this week. She was subpoenaed by prosecutors and made clear she was unhappy about testifying against Mosley. 

Questioning took an unexpected turn on the first day of the trial. 

Quillen seemed to thread a narrative that a young woman’s flirting on the night of the stabbing may have kicked off the argument that turned into a brawl. 

On the stand Tuesday morning, she denied it. 

Prosecutors’ first witness was Emma Yoder, a friend of the three victims and fellow BGA alum, who had been out with them in a large group that night. 

She said that a stranger, later identified as Mosley, approached her at least three times at the Dogwood that night, offering to buy her a drink or ask her to dance. She declined multiple times, she said. 

t was on the third time that her old friend Sam Folks put an arm around her and told Mosley she had a boyfriend and to leave her alone. Yoder and Folks were not actually in a romantic relationship, she said. 

Everyone had been drinking that night, and by nearly 3 a.m. were being ushered out of the bar. The BGA group had called rideshares, she said. 

What happened next to escalate Folks’ comment to a fight remains unclear. 

Harper testified she heard someone, possibly Mosley or another companion of theirs, say “we’re going to fight them,” about the high school friends. 

That man, identified as Sergio Alvarado, was supposed to testify in the case this week. But although he was present Monday, he did not return to court the following day. 

Judge Angelita Blackshear Dalton issued a bench warrant to find him. 

As of Thursday, there were still ongoing efforts to locate him.

Alvarado has been linked to MS-13 gang activity in a federal investigation after a Nashville nightclub shooting in October 2020. Court documents include the allegation he was violating terms of federal parole by being with Michael Mosley at the Dogwood in 2019. 

Prosecutors this week allege Alvarado was selling drugs that evening, with Mosley’s help. Mosley is not facing drug charges in the case. 

“Only one person knew that people were going to die that night of Dec. 21. Only one person knew Michael Mosley had a knife,” Norman said in the state’s closing arguments. 

Jurors were released to eat lunch and began deliberating around 1 p.m. Thursday. 

The courtroom was packed each day with friends and family of the victims who have previously declined to comment on the case. Extra chairs were brought in to seat more family members in the gallery.

Mosley’s supporters were more sparse, but family members sat in the courtroom on the day of the verdict together. 

As Hunter laid out the state’s rebuttal closing, many of them hung their heads. Their sniffles could be heard across the courtroom. 

“Michael Mosley robbed Paul Trapeni and Clay Beathard’s friends and family of these young men, but he robbed all of us. Those men were going places. Those men were going to be incredible,” she said. “He must be held accountable.”

Hunter fired back at Quillen’s framing around Yoder, calling it, “offensive, ridiculous and unconscionable.”

“Saying this had anything to do with…Emma Yoder is just flat out wrong and cruel to do to these people,” she said. “The defense would have you believe that the defendant was being ganged up on by a group of super-tall athletes.”

“He wasn’t being ganged up on by anybody. He started a fight.”

Mosley faces two life sentences on the first-degree murder convictions. Dalton will be guided by statute to determine whether they should run concurrently or consecutively. 

If consecutive, Mosley would not be eligible for parole for more than 100 years under Tennessee law. 

https://www.tennessean.com/story/news/crime/2022/03/31/michael-mosley-guilty-of-first-degree-murder-in-2019-stabbing-outside-midtown-nashville-bar/7171451001/

Keegan Harroz Facing Death In Triple Murder

keegan harroz

Keegan Harroz is a defense attorney in Oklahoma who is now facing the death penalty for a triple murder. According to police reports Keegan Harroz was involved in a relationship with a former client, Barry Titus, that ended with the murders of Titus former girlfriend and her parents. Two masked suspects would go to the home of Tiffany Eichor, and her parents, Jack and Evelynn Chandler where the electricity was cut before the two masked suspects entered the home. Allegedly Barry Titus and Keegan Harroz would kick down the door and would fatally shoot Tiffany Eichor, and her parents, Jack and Evelynn Chandler. Now Keegan Harroz and her boyfriend Barry Titus are facing three counts of murder and if convicted and could face the death penalty.

Keegan Harroz More News

Oklahoma is now seeking the death penalty against a criminal defense attorney who fell in love with her client. It’s a tangled tale of a love-triangle turned deadly that KFOR has been covering for years.

New Okmulgee County documents show state prosecutors believe Barry Titus and his Oklahoma City attorney-turned-lover, Keegan Harroz, “should be punished by Death (sic)” for the murder of Titus’s ex-girlfriend, Tiffany Eichor, and her parents, Jack and Evelynn Chandler.

Before the volatile love triangle was ever formed, Eichor accused 40-year-old Titus of threatening her family. She also had a pending domestic abuse case against him. Represententing Titus was 38-year-old attorney Harroz.

Early on a September morning in 2019, investigators said two masked suspects were seen on security cameras outside the rural home in Beggs. Minutes later, the electricity was cut. Reports say while the family was fast asleep, Titus and Harroz kicked in the door and shot them to death one by one.

The new documents said Evelynn Chandler, Eichor’s 69-year-old mother, “suffered mental anguish” before she was shot to death, as the suspects “began firing gunshots striking and killing her husband, Jack Randall Chandler, as she attempted to hide from the intruders, seeking refuge in her closet.”

As for Eichor, the state said the 43-year-old “suffered serious physical abuse, torture and pain prior to and during the course of her death” because she “heard intruders enter the home she shared with her parents and began firing gunshots striking and killing her parents, Jack Randall Chandler and Evelynn Kaye Chandler.”

The state alleged Eichor was killed so Titus could “avoid prosecution” for the domestic assault case. The documents add Titus and Harroz killed the Chandlers so they could get away with killing their daughter.

News 4 reached out to the 24th District Attorney’s Office for comment, but we did not hear back.

We also reached out to Harroz’s and Tittus’s attorneys. One of Harroz’s attorneys said they did not want to comment. We did not hear back from the others.

https://kfor.com/news/local/death-penalty-sought-in-triple-murder-case-against-former-oklahoma-city-attorney-boyfriend-2/

Keegan Harroz Other News

Oklahoma attorney Keegan Harroz pleaded guilty Tuesday morning to a federal weapons violation count.

Harroz was accused of prohibited person in possession of ammunition and selling or otherwise disposing of a firearm to a prohibited person.

Investigators said she provided her boyfriend Barry Titus with a weapon, knowing he was not allowed to have a gun because of his criminal history.

The federal court accepted the plea deal and a sentencing hearing is yet to be set.

Harroz, who cried throughout the entire hearing, will remain in the custody of the U.S. Marshals.

In Harroz’s plea agreement, she asked for a 24 to 30 month sentence and for the government to cease an investigation into her owning/giving away a firearm.

https://www.news9.com/story/5f73581e9fff330b8accd075/oklahoma-attorney-pleads-guilty-to-federal-weapons-violation