Aiden Fucci Pleads Guilty To Tristyn Bailey Murder

Tristyn Bailey Aiden Fucci

Aiden Fucci the teen killer from Florida has plead guilty to the murder of thirteen year old Tristyn Bailey. According to court documents Aiden Fucci would stab Tristyn Bailey more than a hundred times before throwing her body into the woods. Aiden Fucci trial was set to start when the teen killer suddenly pleaded guilty. As there was no sentencing guidelines as part of the plea deal Aiden Fucci will be sentenced later this month or early March.

Aiden Fucci More News

Aiden Fucci, the Florida teen who was set to stand trial for the brutal 2021 murder of 13-year-old Tristyn Bailey on Monday, has pleaded guilty to first-degree murder in her fatal stabbing.

Fucci, 16, entered the plea in St. Johns County Courthouse just before jury selection was set to begin, News4Jax, Click Orlando and First Coast News report.

“I just want to apologize to the Bailey family,” Fucci said after changing his plea from not guilty, News4Jax reports.

Fucci faces a sentence of life in prison with a minimum of 40 years.

Fourteen at the time of the murder, Fucci was charged as an adult with first-degree murder in the stabbing of the 13-year-old cheerleader, who was found dead in the woods near her house on Mother’s Day 2021.

Tristyn was found dead on May 9, 2021, after her parents reported her missing.

Tristyn had been stabbed 114 times, with at least 49 stab wounds to her hands, arms, and head that were “defensive in nature,” 7th Judicial Circuit State Attorney R.J. Larizza, told reporters at a press conference at the time.

Fucci was arrested on May 10, 2021, and subsequently made several “admissions” of guilt, according to his arrest report.

Authorities said they found his clothing stained with blood as well as a hunting knife believed to be the murder weapon in a nearby pond.

Days before Tristyn’s killing, Fucci told friends that he planned to kill someone, though he didn’t specify whom, Larizza said.

“He indicated to witnesses that he was going to kill someone by taking them in the woods and stabbing them,” Larizza said.

After his arrest, Fucci posted to social media a selfie of himself in the back of a patrol car referencing Tristyn. In the photo, Fucci is seen giving a peace sign. The photo has the caption: “Hey guys has anybody seen Tristyn lately?”

During a pre-trial conference via video from a room in the Duval County Jail, Fucci was also heard talking about demons, saying, “Please don’t let the demons take my soul. The demons are going to take my soul away.”

Fucci then asked, “What’s going on?” and then says, “Why am I here? I just want to talk to my mom and dad. What’s going? What’s going on?”

Fucci’s mother, Crystal Smith, is charged with tampering with evidence in her son’s murder case, allegedly for washing blood off her son’s jeans.

Attorneys for Fucci and his mother did not immediately return PEOPLE’s requests for comment.

Fucci is scheduled to return to court on Feb. 23 for a hearing to discuss sentencing.

https://people.com/crime/aiden-fucci-pleads-guilty-murder-tristyn-bailey/

Brenda Emile and Eric Miller Costello Murder 3 Year Old

Brenda Emile and Eric Miller Costello

Brenda Emile and Eric Miller Costello are a couple from Utah who would murder their three year old daughter. According to court documents Brenda Emile and Eric Miller Costello would torture and starve to death three year old Angelina Costello. There was video shown in court showing Brenda Emile and Eric Miller Costello taunting the little girl with food as she slowly starved to death. An autopsy would reveal a horrific assortment of injuries both new and old. To avoid the death penalty Brenda Emile and Eric Miller Costello would plead guilty to first-degree felony aggravated murder in order to avoid the death penalty. The pair were each sentenced to life in prison without parole

Brenda Emile and Eric Miller Costello More News

 Saying he “sees the hand of evil” in the torture and starvation murder of 3-year-old Angelina Costello, Judge Michael DiReda on Friday sentenced the toddler’s parents, Miller Eric Costello and Brenda Emile, to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Calling the pair “monsters,” the 2nd District Court judge at times appeared to choke up as he explained his reasoning for imposing the harshest sentence available rather than the other option allowed by state law, 25 years to life in prison.

Costello, 30, and Emile, 28, pleaded guilty last year to first-degree felony aggravated murder, thereby avoiding a potential death sentence. Angelina died on July 6, 2017, after what police and prosecutors said was more than a year of beatings, burns and other abuse while the parents starved the girl, taunting her with food and recording many incidents on their phones.

The parents appeared to react stoically to the sentences. They were seated at opposite ends of a long defense table in an Ogden courtroom after attorneys had warned that there were security concerns. In an outburst during the first day of the sentencing hearing last week, Emile stood and shouted something at Costello.

DiReda began the sentencing Friday by quoting Martin Luther King Jr.: “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.”

The judge said the law requires him to consider “the totality of circumstances” and impose a “proportionate” penalty.

DiReda then quoted from the autopsy report. He said Angelina suffered blunt-force injuries to her head, torso and extremities; significant head and neck injuries; internal bleeding; organ damage; the traumatic chipping of teeth; and deep burns to her chest and abdomen. Cigarette burns “all over her little body” melted the skin, the judge said.

Turning to Emile, the judge said he did not find her to be “credible in any respect.” Raised in a Romani culture “to manipulate and take advantage of people,” Emile “will say and do anything to benefit herself,” he said.

He quoted from Emile’s initial police interview, in which she “acted surprised” that Angelina had died. She was normal, she was healthy, Emile said. “These statements are astonishing, reflective of the dishonesty and lack of accountability,” the judge said.

In Costello’s first police interview, he said he “knew Angelina was going to die,” the judge said. “He knew it was the right thing to do but he didn’t do it,” the judge said Costello told officers.

Angelina was starved over many months, routinely teased and taunted with food, and Costello “used his phone to video this horrific psychological torture,” DiReda said.

Costello minimized his involvement and blamed Emile, “but like Brenda, he is not credible,” the judge said.

Costello underwent intellectual testing and doctors concluded he has a low IQ, but DiReda said he gave little weight to that evidence “when it comes to the crime” because Costello was functional in his life, working and otherwise performing familial and community roles. The judge also said one of the doctors noted that Costello made a “suboptimal effort on cognitive testing.”

DiReda referred to a letter submitted by the adoptive mother of Angelina’s older brother. The boy remains deeply traumatized, she said.

The boy, who was 4 when Angelina died, “was instructed to strike Angelina and was praised for it,” the judge said. “This was uniquely cruel and psychologically devastating to Angelina.”

In his decades in the criminal justice system, DiReda said he “has never seen this level of depravity and evil.” It was the “ultimate betrayal” of a child and the judge said he “sees the hand of evil” in the parents’ actions.

“She just deserved to be held in her parents’ arms, to be loved and protected,” he said. “Instead she was dehumanized and tortured by monsters.”

DiReda said neither defendant “has shown remorse or taken responsibility, and that speaks loudly to me. The people who mourn Angelina the most are a bunch of strangers who only got to know her after she died.”

In hearings last week, the court heard witnesses describe claims that one or both of the parents believed Angelina was “cursed” because she had been born prematurely, and that Emile said while pregnant that she did not want the baby and increased her level of smoking.

https://www.standard.net/police-fire/courts/2023/feb/03/judge-sees-hand-of-evil-in-toddlers-murder-sentences-parents-to-life-without-parole/

Vanroy Smith Charged In Dr Mammone Murder

vanroy smith

Vanroy Smith is a man from California who is charged in the bizarre murder of Dr. Mammone. According to police reports Dr. Mammone was riding his bike when he was struck by a car driven by Vanroy Smith. Vanroy Smith after striking the doctor would get out of his car and stab the doctor repeatedly. Dr. Mammon was rushed to a local hospital, where he worked as an emergency physician, however his injuries were to extreme and would pass away. Now Vanroy Smith has been arrested and charged with with one count of murder and personal use of a deadly weapon

Vanroy Smith More News

The driver accused of hitting an Orange County doctor who was out riding his bike and then repeatedly stabbing him was charged with murder on Friday in a crime that stunned the community and left many unanswered questions.

Vanroy Smith, 39, of Long Beach, was charged with one count of murder and personal use of a deadly weapon, which could enhance his sentencing, according to Orange County Superior Court records. Smith, who pleaded not guilty, is being held on $1-million bail.

If convicted on all charges, Vanroy Smith faces a maximum sentence of 25 years to life. Smith, who is listed as unemployed in jail records, is scheduled to appear in court on Feb. 16 for a pretrial hearing.

Dr. Michael John Mammone, 58, was riding his bike near the intersection of Pacific Coast Highway and Crown Valley Parkway in Dana Point at about 3 p.m. Wednesday when he was struck from behind by the driver of a white Lexus, Orange County sheriff’s officials said.

The driver of the vehicle, later identified by authorities as Vanroy Smith, got out of the car and stabbed Mammone several times with a knife, sheriff’s officials said

First responders arrived to find Mammone suffering from severe injuries, authorities said. He was taken to Providence Mission Hospital in Mission Viejo, where he died. Mammone sometimes worked at the hospital.

Bystanders who rushed to help Mammone managed to pin Vanroy Smith to the ground, according to deputies. Vanroy Smith was taken into custody and a knife was recovered at the scene.

There is no known connection between the two men, officials said, and investigators are still trying to determine what prompted the assault.

“An innocent man is dead because he took a bike ride to enjoy a beautiful California day along the beach and he was hit with a car and stabbed to death by someone he apparently never met,” Orange County Dist. Atty. Todd Spitzer said in a news release. “The murder of a complete stranger in broad daylight for what appears to be absolutely no reason is the stuff of nightmares.”

Mammone worked as an emergency physician for Providence Mission Hospital, said Erin Prunell, a spokeswoman for the healthcare group.

He practiced mostly out of the hospital’s Laguna Beach facility and occasionally worked at the Mission Viejo location where he died, and at Children’s Health of Orange County Health Center in Mission Viejo.

“The entire Mission Hospital family is grieving over the loss of an incredible physician and friend,” representatives for the hospital wrote in a statement. “We will honor Dr. Mammone’s dedication to our community and passion for medicine.”

Friends and family in Laguna Beach were devastated by his death, a spokesperson for the Providence Mission Hospital said Thursday. Friends said Mammone had a warm personality and “was the kind of person you wanted to be your doctor.”

Mammone had been affiliated with Providence since November 2011 and was among the numerous medical professionals who toiled heroically during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the spokesperson.

Mammone’s family declined to comment.

Yvette Cook posted on social media that she had the “privilege of working in the medical field with Dr. Mammone” while they were at San Antonio Regional Hospital in Upland.

Cook wrote that Mammone was a “caring” and “excellent physician.”

“He even helped one of my family members in an emergency situation,” she added. “May he [rest in peace] and my deepest condolences to Dr. Michael Mammone’s family.”

Mammone received his medical degree from USC’s Keck School of Medicine in 1993, according to state records.

In the Arch Beach Heights neighborhood of Laguna Beach, where Mammone lived with his family before moving roughly a year ago, his former neighbors said they were devastated to hear the news of his death.

Mammone was always present at neighborhood block parties and often invited neighbors over for dinner. They described him as a “friendly and mellow” individual who was always quick with a smile and greeting.

Mammone, who has two sons, also loved mountain biking, they said.

“He was a great guy,” said one neighbor who declined to provide her name to The Times. “We’re just crushed.”

Roger Borelli, who lives two doors down from Mammone’s South Laguna home, was trying — and failing — to reason out what could have prompted someone to attack the doctor.

“It’s just so sad that this happened,” he said. “I have no idea what the motive could have been.”

Borelli said Mammone and his wife would often take walks together around the neighborhood. But most of his interactions with Mammone centered on the doctor’s dog, Harry.

On several occasions over the few years Mammone and his family lived in the neighborhood, his small dog would escape from his home and run into Borelli’s house.

“I think we were just the first open door Harry saw. [Mammone would] come over here and take him home,” he said. “He was a nice guy.”

On Friday, several bouquets of flowers hung from a light pole on Pacific Coast Highway near the intersection where the incident occurred.

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2023-02-04/driver-charged-with-murder-hit-stabbed-doctor-riding-bike

Levi Norwood Gets Life For Double Murder

Levi Norwood

Levi Norwood was seventeen years old when he would murder his mother and his little brother in Virginia. Now the teen killer will spend the rest of his life in prison however due to laws in Virginia he will be eligible for parole after 20 years due to his age when the double murder was committed.

According to court documents Levi Norwood would fatally shoot his mother Jennifer Norwood and his six year old brother Wyatt Norwood. Levi Norwood would attempt to murder his father.

Levi Norwood would be arrested and charged with the double murder and would ultimately plead guilty

Levi Norwood More News

Nearly three years after he murdered his mother and 6-year-old brother, a judge sentenced Levi Norwood to life in prison plus 40 years for the Feb. 14, 2020, double homicide in Midland. He will be eligible for parole in 20 years because he was a juvenile at the time of the offense; he is now 20 years old.

Norwood, a 17-year-old Liberty High School student at the time of the murders, pleaded guilty in August to murdering his mother, Jennifer Norwood, 34, and brother, Wyatt Norwood. He also admitted to trying to kill his father, Joshua Norwood, 37, but the shots intended for his father missed. Levi Norwood stole a car at a nearby house and fled to North Carolina, where he was found and taken into custody. Joshua Norwood killed himself two months later.

Circuit Judge James Fisher announced the sentence at the conclusion of a 1 ½ hour hearing Tuesday morning. It was the first time prosecutors played for the court a video recorded in a Durham, North Carolina interrogation room after Levi Norwood was arrested. The video was referenced in written narrative filed with the plea agreement, but only small excerpts from Norwood’s statements had previously been made public.

Norwood did not take the stand Tuesday and has never testified in open court since his arrest.

In the video from the North Carolina interrogation room, Norwood is alone in the small room, handcuffed and sitting in a chair. After about 20 minutes of silence, he sees the security camera and begins to mumble to himself, eventually raising his voice to an audible level to recount the murders in excruciating detail over an hour of rambling, sometimes unintelligible monologue.

Norwood says in the video that he killed his parents because they would not let him be romantically involved with a girl whom they felt was worsening his mental state. Because his parents were “taking his life away” by refusing to let him be with the girl, he said, killing them “is self defense,” he says. “I did it all just so I would see [the girl],” he says at another point, explaining that he planned to run away with her after murdering his family.

The only regret he expresses is his failure to kill his father, whom Levi Norwood shot at and missed before fleeing the scene. “All they had to do was just emancipate me,” he says at another point. “This would have never happened to them.”

Why he killed his 6-year-old brother is less clear. Norwood said at one point it was to save him from “rape and abuse in an orphanage.” But while he admits that it was “kind of sad” to kill his brother, he at other points appeared to relish the act. Wyatt “will never get to enjoy his Valentine’s Day or birthday or any of the other things in life, because I killed him.” (According to prosecutors, Norwood told a psychiatrist during a later evaluation that he killed Wyatt to “punish” his parents.)

Throughout the monologue, Norwood jokes and chuckles about the more gruesome details of the murders.

He muses at various times about what version of “insane” he might be diagnosed with, whether he will be sent to a juvenile or adult prison and what last meal he should choose if he is sentenced to death. At other times, he appears to address imaginary friends with names like “Smiley,” “Viper” and “Zero.” Looking around the room, he says, “I like this. It’s fun. It’s fitting for me.” He says that the murders “actually helped” his anxiety.

“Why is it so enjoyable killing people?” he muses. “It just feels right.”

He often repeats his frustration about his own mental state. “I wish I could feel f—— emotion,” Norwood says at one point. “I want to be normal.” But like in many parts of the monologue, he quickly changes the subject. “At least I don’t have to worry about my math grade anymore.”

Norwood’s attorney, public defender Ryan Ruzic, did not dispute any of the facts surrounding the murders themselves. But Ruzic pointed out that Norwood alleged to a doctor after the murders that his father had physically and mentally abused him from a young age, asking the judge to consider those allegations when imposing a sentence.

Joshua Norwood allegedly forced a “very young” Levi to kill small animals, insulting him when he was reluctant to participate. Joshua Norwood allegedly threatened to kill his son if he ever dated a Black girl — or was gay — sometimes pointing a gun at his son to make the point. The father allegedly beat Levi in a hardware store with a crowbar in a fit of rage. Joshua Norwood allegedly “actively resisted” attempts by other family members to get Levi mental health treatment.

Ruzic said that Joshua Norwood’s alleged treatment of his son made it “almost inescapable” that, especially with severe mental health issues left untreated, Levi would engage eventually in some kind of violence. “This is not a crime that came out of nowhere,” Ruzic argued, adding that Levi grew up in an “extremely racist … abusive and demeaning” home environment because of his father.

“Society, had we known what was happening, maybe could have stopped it,” Ruzic said. “In many ways, [Levi] is indeed a victim.”

The prosecutor, Fauquier County Commonwealth’s Attorney Scott Hook, successfully rebutted Ruzic’s arguments for leniency, however. Even if his “dad was the worst person, Levi has taken his place,” Hook argued. “I would argue that Levi is worse than any way they portray his father.”

And, Hook said, Norwood only alleged the years of parental abuse after he was arrested. The murders were not about any alleged abuse, Hook said, pointing out that the monologue from the North Carolina interrogation room made no mention of any alleged abuse. Instead, Hook argued, “This is about a girl.”

Norwood’s family was “just a normal family with their flaws,” Hook argued, “but Levi is a dangerous person.”

In an especially poignant moment, Hook read a note Joshua Norwood wrote in Levi’s birthday card a month before the murders. “I love you buddy,” the card read, “and I’m proud to call you my son.”

https://www.fauquier.com/news/public_safety/levi-norwood-sentenced-to-life-in-prison-for-murdering-mother-and-brother/article_1c55f362-a198-11ed-a56d-4fae91dd2304.html

John Musbach Attempted To Hire Hit Man To Kill 14 Year Old

John Musbach

John Musbach is a man from New Jersey who attempted to purchase the services of a hit man to murder a 14 year old. According to police reports John Musbach went wandering on the dark web where he came in contact with an alleged hit man. John Musbach would offer $20,000 in bitcoin in order for the hit man to murder a fourteen year old who was going to testify against him in a child pornography case. Well the hit man turned out to be an undercover officer. John Musbach would be arrested and ultimately plead guilty, Musbach now faces ten years in prison.

John Musbach More News

A New Jersey man faces up to 10 years behind bars after he hired a hitman and paid $20,000 in Bitcoin to kill a 14-year-old, prosecutors said. 

John Michael Musbach, 31, of Haddonfield, pleaded guilty in Camden federal court Thursday to an indictment charging him with one count of knowingly and intentionally using and causing another to use a facility of interstate and foreign commerce, the internet, with the intent that a murder be committed, a news release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of New Jersey said. 

Musbach is accused of exchanging sexually explicit photographs and videos with the then-13-year-old victim living in New York in the summer of 2015, prosecutors said. 

The victim’s parents found out about the inappropriate exchange and contacted police. 

Musbach was identified in the case and in March 2016 was arrested on child pornography charges and a search warrant of his residence, then in Galloway, New Jersey, was conducted. 

Prosecutors said that Musbach had decided to have the victim killed so the minor could not testify against him in the pending criminal case. 

From May 7 to May 20, 2016, he “repeatedly communicated with the administrator of a murder-for-hire website” on the dark web, which offered contract killings in return for cryptocurrency payment. 

Using that website, Musbach arranged for a murder-for-hire. 

“Musbach asked if a 14-year-old was too young to target, and upon hearing that the age was not a problem, paid approximately 40 bitcoin (approximately $20,000 at the time) for the hit,” the release said. 

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/new-jersey-man-hired-hitman-paid-20k-bitcoin-kill-14-year-old-prosecut-rcna68971