Everett Miller was sentenced to death by the State of Florida for the murders of two Florida police officers. According to court documents Everett Miller would shoot and kill Kissimmee police officers Matthew Baxter and Sergeant Sam Howard while they attempted to investigate a drug crime. After Evertt Miller shot and killed Matthew Baxter and Sergeant Sam Howard he would pose the two officers before fleeing the crime scene. Evertt Miller, who is a former Marine, was arrested soon after and would later be convicted of the double murder and sentenced to death
A judge sentenced Everett Miller, the man convicted of murdering Kissimmee police officers Matthew Baxter and Sergeant Sam Howard nearly five years ago, to death Friday afternoon.
The jury had previously recommended the death penalty, but the defense had argued that Miller, a former Marine, deserved life in prison
On August 17, 2017, Officer Baxter approached some men known for drug activity. Sgt. Howard was there as backup.
Police said Miller shot the two officers in the back of their heads, then flipped them over and posed them before shooting them in their faces.
In 2019, after hearing from the medical examiner and emotional testimony from the responding officers who tried to save Baxter and Howard’s lives, it took jurors less than two hours of deliberations to find Miller guilty of first-degree murder.
Miller, who was also found guilty of carrying a concealed firearm in an establishment licensed to dispense alcohol, was sentenced to 60 days in the Osceola County Jail with credit for 60 days time served. He was also sentenced to 365 days in the Osceola County Jail for resisting an officer without violence, with credit for time served.
All sentences will be served consecutive to one another, the judge said
“My girls still don’t have their daddy,” she said.
“We forgive Everett Miller. Although what he did was not right, we forgive him. These girls deserve to live a happy life with no hate. Hate is what got us here,” she said.
Baxter’s sister, Mia, said: “Justice has been served. It’s been a very long process. Our family has endured so much.”
Sadia also spoke on behalf of Sam Howard’s family and said her family miss his smile the most.
William Hester is a seventeen year old from South Carolina who has just been charged with the murder of his four year old stepsister. According to police reports William Hester allegedly suffocated four year old Joanna Lockaby and put her little body in a storage container behind the family residence. When police were called due to a missing child report they would find the child who was pronounced dead at the scene. This alleged teen killer would be arrested and remains in custody.
William Hester More News
The 17-year-old half brother of a child found dead Tuesday behind a Greenville County home has been charged with murder in her death, according to Lt. Ryan Flood with the Greenville County Sheriff’s Office.
Jeffery Haynie was sixteen years old from Grantsville Utah when he murdered four family members and attempted to murder a fifth. According to court documents Jeffery Haynie would wait for each family member to come home before shooting and killing them over a five hour period. Killed in the massacre were Consuelo Alejandra Haynie, 52; Alexis Haynie, 15; Matthew Haynie, 14; and Milan Haynie, 12 and the attempted murder of his father Colin Haynie. During the attempted murder of his father Jeffery Haynie would confess to him that he had murdered his mother and three younger siblings. This teen killer would be arrested and in July 2022 would plead guilty to four counts of murder and one count of attempted murder. Jeffery Haynie will be sentenced later this year where he faces life in prison
A Tooele County teen charged with fatally shooting four of his family members when he was a juvenile pleaded guilty on Tuesday.
19-year-old Colin Jeffery Haynie, who goes by Jeffery, entered guilty pleas to four counts of aggravated murder for the deaths of his mother and three younger siblings. He also entered a guilty plea for the attempted aggravated murder of his father.
Jeffery Haynie was 16 at the time of the murders.
Tooele County Attorney Scott Broadhead said Jeffery Haynie methodically shot his five family members as they each arrived home over a period of five hours on Jan. 17, 2020.
“This young man killed his mother, his three siblings, he tried to kill his father. These were brutal crimes …. neighbors and friends were shocked. It’s just been tough emotionally for many people,” Broadhead told KUTV.
His father, Colin Haynie, was the last family member to arrive home. Jeffery Haynie reportedly shot and injured his father, and a struggle ensued. Colin Haynie was eventually able to get the gun away from his son.
He was formally charged Jan. 22, 2020, for the deaths of Consuelo Alejandra Haynie, 52; Alexis Haynie, 15; Matthew Haynie, 14; and Milan Haynie, 12; as well as the attempted aggravated murder of Colin Haynie.
Jeffery Haynie has an adult brother, who was at college at the time of the shooting.
The teen suspect initially refused to cooperate with investigators. While he told police he intended to kill everyone in the house except for himself, he has still not disclosed a motive.
Broadhead said the case was delayed extensively due to the COVID-19 pandemic and negotiations between attorneys.
“Especially in a case like this, it’s really hard to have a lot of hearing, especially substantive hearings, with somebody of that age and not being able to talk to somebody in person,” Broadhead said.
A sentencing hearing has been set for Dec. 7 of this year. Haynie faces 25-years-to-life in prison for each of the five counts against him.
It will be determined at sentencing whether those sentences will run consecutively or concurrently.
I have run My Crime Library since its inception back in 2018/2019 and to date there is over 2500 posts and it has been visited by a few million people. Lately I have not been posting as much as I do work full time as a truck driver so I spend sixty hours a week behind the wheel. Needless to say my weekends are mostly sleeping and getting things in order for the next week of driving. Right now I am debating what to do with this website
Option One – Sell My Crime Library
I have received offers over the years to buy My Crime Library however due to the amount of time I have spent building this site, the revenue it does bring in and the value of the site I have turned down all offers. Now I am more likely to sell My Crime Library however I am not going to let it go for a low price
Option 2 – Hang On To My Crime Library
Like i mentioned in option 1 My Crime Library continues to bring in revenue each month and though it is lower than in years past, due to the lack of effort I have been putting in, it still covers all costs associated with this site in a couple of days and the rest is pure profit.
I get offers five days per week for guest posts however I have always turned them down for they have nothing to do with crime and just companies trying to improve their own websites by buying links. The last thing I want to do is bug my readers with posts that are in my opinion garbage.
My Crime Library Future
Anyway I just wanted to let you know what is going on. I am actually on vacation for the next week as the auto plants are doing their annual switch over to get ready for new models. So chances are you are going to see more posts this week and as for the future of My Crime Library I guess we will just wait and see.
Scott Kologi was sixteen years old when the teen killer from New Jersey when he shot and killer four members of his family on New Years Eve in 2017. According to court documents Scott Kologi would use a a semi-automatic rifle to shoot and kill 18-year-old Brittany Kologi, his mother, 44-year-old Linda Kologi, his father, 42-year-old Steven Kologi, all of Long Branch, and also killed his grandfather’s companion, 70-year-old Mary Schulz, of Ocean Township. Scott Kologi lawyers attempted to blame the massacre on his mental health problems however a jury was not going for it and found him guilty of the four murders. At his sentencing the judge wanted to make sure that Scott Kologi never set foot outside of prison again sentenced him to 150 years.
A 20-year-old New Jersey man who brutally massacred four members of his own family with a high-powered assault rifle on New Year’s Eve appears poised to spend the rest of his life behind bars. Monmouth County Superior Court Criminal Division Presiding Judge Marc C. Lemieux on Thursday sentenced Scott Kologi to 150 years in state prison for killing his mother, father, older sister, and surrogate grandmother on the final day of 2017, prosecutors announced.
A jury in February took less than five hours to convict Kologi four counts of first-degree murder and a second-degree weapons charge in the deaths of Linda Kologi, 44; Steven Kologi Sr., 42; Mary Schulz, 70; and Brittany Kologi, 18.
Judge Lemieux on Thursday also denied a series of motions from Kologi’s defense team seeking a new trial and verdict reversal, saying the evidence against Kologi was “overwhelming” and his crime resulted in “immeasurable harm.
Prosecutors agreed and sought “a sentence matching the severity of the crime,” according to a press release from the prosecutor’s office.
“These were acts of evil, carried out by someone who knew exactly what he was doing,” Monmouth County Assistant Prosecutor Sean Brennan said during the proceeding. “He killed them because he could. He killed them because he wanted to.”
Officers with the Long Branch Police Department and deputies with Monmouth County Sheriff’s Office, at approximately 11:43 p.m. on Dec. 31, 2017, responded to a 911 call reporting shots fired at 635 Wall Street. Upon arriving at the scene, first responders discovered all four victims at different locations within the residence, with each appearing to have sustained multiple gunshot wounds. All four were pronounced dead on the scene.
A then-16-year-old Scott Kologi was arrested at the house and the firearm used in the killings, a C39v2 semi-automatic rifle, was recovered.
As previously reported by Law&Crime, authorities said Kologi confessed to the murders during that initial meeting with detectives from the Long Branch Police Department. Video of the interrogation shows Kologi calmly explaining how he killed each of the four family members while his brother struggles to maintain his composure
“When everything was happening, I felt like I was watching it like I was further back in my mind,” he said. “I just kept firing until they, like, stopped moving.”
Scott Kologi told detectives that he went upstairs and put on a leather jacket, sunglasses and earplugs just before his killing spree. He then loaded a rifle belonging to his biological brother and stood in his room with all of the lights turned off, noting that he knew his mother would come looking for him and he didn’t want her to see him with the weapon.
Assistant Prosecutor Brennan described the shooting during Thursday’s proceeding to illustrate the premeditated nature of the crime. Per Brennan, Kologi lured his mother upstairs, shooting her in the head four times “under the cover of darkness.” He then shot his father in the back and torso as he rushed upstairs to see what was going on. Kologi then made his way downstairs and “casually” murdered his surrogate grandmother with several shots to the torso. He then shot his sister, who was home from school on winter break, in the head three times while she sat at the kitchen table.
Kologi told detectives that he planned to shoot more people until he saw his grandfather—who, along with Kologi’s brother, was home during the attack—fall to his knees and break down in tears after he shot Schulz made him “confused.” The grandfather and brother were unharmed.
“Even though they physically survived,” Brennan said, “they will still have to deal with the mental scars of what they saw.”
In all, Kologi fired 14 shots, with 12 of those shots hitting his victims.
Kologi pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity. His attorneys, Richard Lomurro and Emeka Nkwuo, argued that their client had untreated schizophrenia and hallucinations and experienced a psychotic break the day of the murders. Kologi also suffered from severe developmental disabilities.
As previously reported by Law&Crime, Kologi’s defense attorneys called one of his surviving brothers, Jonathan Ruiz, to the stand to support its claims during the second week of the three-week trial. Ruiz testified that at the time of the shootings his brother still believed in Santa Claus, slept in his parents’ bed, and could not get dressed by himself.
A prosecution expert countered that Kologi was “autistic, not schizophrenic, and knew what he was doing when he killed his family members,” according to the Asbury Park Press.
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