Chloe Thomas Teen Killer Murders Teenage Girl

Chloe Thomas

Chloe Thomas was sixteen years old when she participated in the murder of a teenage girl. According to court documents Chloe Thomas and Chadd Raymond would lure the young woman to a location where she would be brutally murdered. This teen killer would not be caught until she turned herself in six months after the murder. Chloe Thomas would tell the court that Chadd Raymond would brutally attack the woman than ordered Chloe to finish her off. This teen killer was sentenced to life in prison

Chloe Thomas 2023 Information

Gender: Female

Race: White

Height: 5 ft 5 in

Weight: 150 lbs

Hair Color: Brown

Eye Color: Blue



OK DOC#: 756120

Birth Date: 10/13/1997


Current Facility: MABEL BASSETT CORRECTIONAL CENTER, MCLOU

Reception Date: 1/31/2017

Chloe Thomas Other News

A high-profile murder trial is scheduled to begin in Oklahoma City Monday.

Anne Hill was last seen on April 11, 2014.

The 16-year-old seemingly vanished without a trace. She was never seen or heard from again after leaving a friend’s house.

Days later, her car was found abandoned in an Edmond neighborhood, near 2nd and Coltrane.

Six months after Hill vanished, Chole Thomas, then 17, turned herself into police and confessed to taking part in Hill’s murder.

According to court records, Thomas told police Chadd Raymond, then 16, “attacked Anne and strangled her until she died.”

Court records show Thomas allegedly admitted to helping “Raymond dispose of Anne’s body.”

However, Raymond said he did choke Hill, but it was Thomas who finished choking Hill until she died.

Originally, Raymond was charged with first degree murder but, he later cut a deal with the state and agreed to testify against Thomas.

Raymond told the court the plan was to rob Hill and take her car.

So, he said Thomas text messaged Hill acting like Raymond’s older brother, who Hill had a relationship with.

Hill showed up at the apartment where Thomas and Raymond were.

Hours later, she was dead.

Raymond said he and Thomas took Hill’s body and headed south, eventually dumping it in a field in McClain County.

Raymond testified he covered Hill’s head with a sack, hitting her multiple times with a wrench.

He said Thomas suggested that would keep someone from recognizing Hill.

A year after Hill disappeared, her skull and two dozen bones were found scattered in the field.

As far as a motive, prosecutors said Thomas was jealous of Hill because she too had a relationship with Raymond’s brother.

Raymond is serving 35 years in prison for his involvement in Hill’s murder.

Jury selection in Thomas’ trial is scheduled to begin Monday morning.

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Chloe Thomas Now

Chloe Thomas is currently incarcerated at the Mabel Basset Correctional Center in Oklahoma

Chloe Thomas Release Date

Chloe Thomas is serving life without parole

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chloe thomas 1 1

Chloe Thomas Other News

A verdict reached in the trial of a teenager accused of killing a Peidmont teen.

Chloe Thomas, 19, was found not guilty of first-degree murder, and guilty of second-degree murder Friday evening.

The verdict came as a surprise to the defense who appeared to think she was going to be convicted of first-degree murder for killing Anne Hill in 2014 when Thomas was just 16.

Thomas is one of two teens accused in Anne’s death. Chadd Raymond is the other. Raymond has already accepted a plea deal in the case, and agreed to a 35-year sentence in exchange for his testimony.

Raymond testified both he and Thomas at first wanted to just rob Hill so they could get money to buy drugs. But that robbery went too far and led to them killing her instead.

Throughout the trial Friday, and right down to the verdict Thomas read her Bible, showing no real emotion as her fate was read aloud.

Her lawyer said she’s a changed person and they plan to appeal Friday’s ruling.

“She is a different person that what she was then , she was a very lost soul and in a lot of ways still is, in a lot of ways she is very much still a child even though she is 19,” said Michael Travines, Thomas’ Attorney.

The Hill family did not want to talk, but News 9’s Grant Hermes heard them thanking investigators and prosecutors saying it took a lot of people to get here Friday.

The judge only said the recommended sentence was life, but it’s unclear whether Thomas could receive parole.

https://www.news9.com/story/5e34a873527dcf49dad88590/jury-finds-chloe-thomas-guilty-of-second-degree-murder-in-death-of-anne-hill

Chloe Thomas More News

A woman has learned her sentence after being convicted in the 2014 death of a metro teenager

Chloe Thomas, 19, was sentenced to life in prison with no credit for time served Dec. 22 in Oklahoma County court.

In November, Thomas was convicted of second degree murder in connection to the death of Anne Hill. Hill went missing in April 2014. Court documents show Thomas, then 17, and Chadd Raymond, then 16, were able to get Hill to come over to an Edmond apartment by pretending to be Raymond’s older brother

Once she was there court documents say they began choking Hill. Raymond told investigators after he started to strangle Hill, he got too tired to finish and Thomas took over until she died. The two then put her body in the back of her car and dumped the body. Her remains were later discovered in rural McClain County.

Thomas was initially charged with accessory to murder, but that was later dismissed. Raymond pleaded guilty to first degree murder and accepted a plea deal for his testimony against Thomas.

After a long road, it was a tear-jerking day in the court room as Hill’s mother became emotional, saying she misses her daughter everyday.

In her statement, Hill’s mother said that Thomas should not be allowed back in society. Thomas became emotional herself, saying she’s sorry for the murder.

Darci Parton-Scoon was the Hill family’s private investigator and says today is filled with mixed emotions.

“It’s the end of a journey and a long one and you get to know and love people over that time and it’s both the grief and joy for both of them,” Parton-Scoon said.

Hill was set to graduate from Casady High School this past May and Parton-Scoon told FOX 25 how her family wants her remembered.

“Remember the girl who got a scholarship to Casady and who trained her animals to be emotional therapy dogs and spend time to volunteer and do those things,” Parton-Scoon said.

An attorney for Thomas says they will be filing an appeal within 10 days.

https://okcfox.com/news/local/chloe-thomas-sentenced-to-life-in-prison-for-murder-of-anne-hill

Tyanna Thomas Teen Killer Murders Brother

Tyanna Thomas Teen Killer

Tyanna Thomas was fourteen years old when she fatally shot her brother in Ohio. According to court documents Tyanna Thomas would shoot her fifteen year old brother in the chest with a shotgun after the two were involved in an argument over video games. Initially the judge gave her a break and sentenced her to juvenile detention until she was twenty one years old however her behavior in custody changed that. This teen killer would assault a correctional officer and the judge basically had enough and sentenced the now seventeen year old to life in prison with no chance of parole for fifteen years

Tyanna Thomas 2023 Information

Number W104715

DOB 05/12/2002

Gender Female

Race Black

Admission Date 11/05/2019

Institution Ohio Reformatory for Women

Status INCARCERATED

Tyanna Thomas More News

A teen in juvenile detention for shooting and killing her brother in 2016 could possibly spend the rest of her life in adult prison because of accusations that she assaulted a corrections officer.

Tyanna Thomas, is 17 years old and was 14 at the time of the fatal shooting. She pleaded guilty in 2017 to murder in Lucas County Juvenile Justice Center and was sentenced to juvenile detention until she is 21 with a suspended adult sentence of 15 years to life in prison that could be imposed.

While in juvenile detention, Miss Thomas assaulted a corrections officer and is facing pending prosecution for felony assault on a corrections officer in Montgomery County, where she was being kept in detention, said Lori Olender, deputy chief of the Lucas County prosecutor’s juvenile division.

Based on the new criminal charge and what Ms. Olender described as a pattern of misconduct while in detention, she filed a motion in Lucas County juvenile court to impose the teen’s adult sentence. A hearing is scheduled for Sept. 27 in juvenile court.

The assault occurred in September, 2018, Ms. Olender said. Officials with the Ohio Department of Youth Services contacted prosecutors in Lucas County to inform them of the new criminal charge. Ms. Olender would not give any other details about the assault or about the other misconduct.

The teen has been held in juvenile detention for about two years, and if she were to make it through her juvenile sentence and get released at 21 years old, then the adult sentence could no longer be imposed, Ms. Olender said.

Police found 15-year-old Tommie Thomas, at about 8:50 p.m. on Dec. 7, 2016, inside the teens’ residence in the 1000 block of Woodland Avenue with a single gunshot wound to the chest. He was pronounced dead at ProMedica Toledo Hospital.

Investigators believe the teens were arguing just prior to the shooting.

The state at the time argued that Miss Thomas should be tried as an adult in Lucas County Common Pleas Court, but the request was denied and her case proceeded in juvenile court. The state allows children as young as 14 to stand trial as an adult. Miss Thomas was 14 years and six months old when charged.

According to previous court testimony, Miss Thomas was previously arrested in 2015 on a charge of aggravated robbery near the Toledo Lucas County Public Library’s Mott Branch, where she was suspected of carrying a gun. A firearm was not retrieved, and the charge was later reduced to robbery.

Both Miss Thomas and her brother attended Scott High School. According to previous court testimony, she was also disciplined at school more than 30 times through fourth grade and suspended repeatedly later for such incidents as threatening others and pushing a teacher.

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Tyanna Thomas is currently incarcerated at Ohio Reformatory for Women

Tyanna Thomas Release Date

Tyanna Thomas is not eligible for release until 2032

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Tyanna Thomas

Lorraine Thorpe Teen Killer Murders 2 People

Lorraine Thorpe Teen Killer

Lorraine Thorpe was just fifteen years old when she murdered her father and another woman. The would be serial killer was finally arrested and shocked England. According to court documents the deranged couple would then abduct a woman and would torture her for two days before actually killing her. When Lorraine caregiver made a threat that he was going to call the police the pair attacked him beating the man to death.

At first police did not think that Thorpe could be responsible due to the level of violence in the two murders however Lorraine would make a full confession detailing the two barbaric attacks. This teen killer would be sentenced to a minimum of fourteen years in prison meaning she could be released before she turns thirty.

Lorraine Thorpe More News

Britain’s youngest female double killer boasted to the police about her brutal murders and even told officers: ‘You’ll find my footprint on my dad.’

Lorraine Thorpe was 15 when, along with her ‘role model’ Paul Clarke, she tortured and beat Rosalyn Hunt and smothered her father Desmond to death.

Ms Hunt, 41, was beaten to death in Ipswich in 2009 following a row over a dog, with Thorpe responsible for kicking, punching and stamping on her head.

Lorraine Thorpe became Britain’s youngest female double murderer at the age of 15 after the brutal killings of her father Desmond and Rosalyn Hunt

Lorraine Thorpe and Clarke carried out two days of torture on Ms Hunt including grating her face with a cheese grater and rubbing salt in the wounds.

Mr Thorpe, 43, a ‘vulnerable’ alcoholic, was smothered amid fears that he would tell the police about the first murder.

In a new documentary series, it is revealed how Thorpe was initially disregarded by police because of the horrific violence involved in the double murders. 

The teenage killer then started boasting to her friends about how she tortured her victims and told police she had stamped her father’s head so hard it had left a trainer print, saying: ‘You’ll find my footprint on my dad.’

The show Britain’s Deadliest Kids, which airs tomorrow, reveals how Thorpe laughed uncontrollably throughout her trial after the savage killings.

Paul Clarke carried out the brutal killings alongside Lorraine Thorpe in 2009

Speaking in the documentary, DCI Rick Munns, the investigating officer who worked on the case, said of Thorpe during her initial police interview: ‘She didn’t show any particular remorse around the death of Rosie Hunt, and completely denied any involvement in her father’s death.’  

As more evidence came to light, it became apparent that Desmond Thorpe was subjected to a similar level of violence to Rosalyn Hunt.  

Consultant forensic psychologist Dr Keri Nixon said: ‘She laughed about the level of violence they used again Rosalyn Hunt.

‘In my experience, I have never seen this level of violence, these types of injuries, enacted by a 15-year-old girl.

‘Usually, in cases like this, they will partake in some violence. But to be actively involved in such torturous activity, is incredibly rare.’

She said Lorraine Thorpe didn’t passively watch her father die but rather ‘actively engaged in the violence’ towards him.

Thorpe, who was diagnosed with ADHD, showed no remorse during her trial, and even giggled throughout the court proceedings. 

Rosalyn Hunt was tortured over days by the pair with psychologists saying they had never seen such a level of violence from a young girl

‘No one stopped her. I felt disgusted, I felt like I wanted to jump over and just rip her head off.’

Both Lorraine Thorpe and Paul Clarke were found guilty of murder, making Thorpe Britain’s youngest female double murderer.

Clarke was sentenced to 27 years but was found dead in his cell four years later. 

She was sentenced to a minimum term of 14 years in prison, making her eligible for release by the time she turns 29. 

The judge ruled she had been brought up ‘with no real understanding of what is right and what is wrong’.

Mr Justice Saunders said she could be ‘manipulative’ and was not acting entirely under Clarke’s control, adding: ‘She found violence funny and entertaining.’

The judge said Clarke, also an alcoholic, was the ‘instigator’ in the murder of Ms Hunt, although Thorpe ‘played a full part’.

‘Far from being sorry, Lorraine Thorpe appears to have gloried in it, describing to her friends at one stage how she stamped on Rosalyn’s head,’ he said.

Dr Keri Nixon, a consultant forensic psychologist, said Thorpe’s crimes could have been avoided if she had never met Clarke.

She said: ‘I start to feel complete empathy for the girl that was let down by society and professionals. No girl should be living with her alcoholic father at the age of 12.

‘She was lost. She went from her mother to foster care, and then she ran away to be with her father and eventually social services lost her and she was living on the streets drinking with alcoholic men. That shouldn’t happen in our society.

‘I believe she was groomed by Paul Clarke and living a life that no teenager should be living.

‘But then we look at the level of violence she enacted on Rosalyn Hunt. It was so extreme, so vicious, and that’s where it’s difficult to look at the vulnerable girl.

‘Would those murders have taken place if she wasn’t part of that drinking community, and if she hadn’t met Paul Clark? No, I don’t believe they would have done.’

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Lorraine Thorpe More News

A girl thought to be Britain’s youngest female double murderer has been jailed for life.

Lorraine Thorpe, now 16, of Clapgate Lane in Ipswich, was found guilty in August of murdering her father Desmond Thorpe and a woman called Rosalyn Hunt.

Thorpe, 15 when the murders took place in 2009, was told at the Old Bailey she would serve at least 14 years.

Paul Clarke, 41, also convicted of two murders at Ipswich Crown Court, was sentenced at an earlier hearing.

Clarke, of Mountbatten Court, was also jailed for life and told he must serve a minimum of 27 years.

Mr Justice Saunders said Thorpe could be “manipulative” and was not acting entirely under Clarke’s control, adding: “She found violence funny and entertaining.”

The bodies of Ms Hunt and Mr Thorpe were found at separate addresses in Ipswich in August 2009.

Both Clarke and Thorpe had denied the charges and gave no evidence during their trial.

They had repeatedly beaten and tortured Ms Hunt and then smothered Mr Thorpe to death.

The judge said: “Far from being sorry, Lorraine appears to have gloried in it, describing to her friends at one stage how she stamped on Rosalyn’s head.”

He said the only “possible explanation” for her father’s murder was “the fear that he would go and tell the police what happened to Rosalyn Hunt”.

Mr Justice Saunders described the case as “exceptional” and the story of Thorpe “appalling”.

The court heard Thorpe and her father lived in “squalid” flats and sometimes even in tents.

“She was spending all her time with middle-aged alcoholics to whom violence had become normal,” the judge said.

“It had become part of their way of life. The alcoholics fought with each other.

“They stole in order to get the drink they craved.”

Social services could not keep track of her and when she was placed in a school she went back to her father, the judge told the court.

Through drinking the Thorpes met Clarke and lived at his flat for a time.

“She has been left with no real understanding of what is right and what is wrong,” Mr Justice Saunders said.

“To describe her upbringing as not being a proper upbringing would be an understatement but it has left her as a violent young woman and a highly manipulative young woman as well.”

Graham Parkins QC, defending, said: “It was highly inappropriate for this young girl to be playing a role of carer to her drunken and indeed very frail father.

“She never really had much of a chance in life.”

Britain’s youngest female killer, Mary Bell, was held at the age of 11 in 1968 for the manslaughter of two boys aged three and four.

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-suffolk-11218238

Melissa Todorovic Teen Killer Murders Love Rival

Melissa Todorovic Teen Killer

Melissa Todorovic was fifteen years old when she manipulated her boyfriend to murder a perceived romantic rival. According to court documents Melissa Todorovic would withhold sex from her boyfriend until he murdered his ex girlfriend Stefanie Rengal. The boyfriend, David Bragshaw would wait for Rengal to leave her home then fatally stabbed the teenager to death.

This teen killer would receive a youth life sentence meaning she would serve no more than seven years.

Melissa Todorovic Other News

The puppet master has finally met her match.

And so killer Melissa Todorovic has had her day parole revoked and she’ll remain behind bars for orchestrating the senseless murder of 14-year-old Stefanie Rengel.

Melissa Todorovic, 27, had tried to convince the Parole Board of Canada that she had learned her lesson, that she now realizes she should have abided by her day parole conditions and disclosed that she was in the midst of an “unhealthy” love triangle with two ex-cons.

You think?

But Melissa Todorovic kept it a secret, starting a dalliance with a high-risk offender named “Kirk” who she’d met at a group for reintegrating former inmates, signing herself out of her Brampton halfway house and lying about where she was going.

And then, unsatisfied with the sexual prowess of her first paramour, she set her sights on his best friend “Dennis” and started an affair with him, as well.

All the while, playing them against each other as only a cunning puppet master can do.

We’ve all heard this story before, of course. The jealous Melissa Todorovic was 15 when she blackmailed her boyfriend David Bagshaw into killing Rengel — whose parents were both Toronto cops at the time but her mom is now a grief counsellor.

Melissa Todorovic became strangely obsessed with Rengel, who had briefly — and platonically — dated Bagshaw, two years before. After her unrelenting eight-month campaign of phone calls, 50,000 MSN messages and thousands of texts rife with sexual blackmail — “Ur getting blocked until u kill her” — her lovesick boyfriend finally agreed to carry out the plan.

On New Year’s Day, 2008, just days shy of his 18th birthday, Bagshaw lured Stefanie from her East York home and stabbed her six times in the abdomen, ripping through the black sweater her mother had given her for Christmas just days earlier.

He then left her to bleed to death in a snowbank.

All this time later, released after serving only about 11 years of her life sentence for first degree murder, Melissa Todorovic is falling back into her old pattern: Playing with people’s lives.

Parole board hearing officer Shannon Stewart wasn’t falling for any of it: not her mea culpa or Melissa Todorovic’s insistence that she should be given another chance, this time at a halfway house in Kingston.

“It’s calculated deception,” Stewart told her, in revoking her day parole. “Within two months, you’re back to your offence cycle (of manipulating men). It’s very, very, very concerning.”

Rengel’s mother, Patricia Hung, said she was relieved by the revocation of Melissa Todorovic’s day parole.

“Getting the news that Melissa Todorovic reoffended badly enough to be taken into custody was shocking,” she said in her victim impact statement. “The fact that Melissa, in just a few short months, was unable to abide by her very limited conditions, raises red flags that are, frankly, terrifying.”

Melissa Todorovic was awarded day parole last November under pretty lenient conditions: All she had to do was continue counselling and report any relationships to her parole officer.

Yet almost immediately, she was secretly looking for love in all the wrong places. “I knew it was wrong,” Melissa Todorovic admitted. “I didn’t have people to talk to. I liked people complimenting me and giving me attention and didn’t want that to end.”

She even tried to deflect the blame. “Nobody asked me if I was in a relationship,” she said.

That didn’t fly with the hearing officer, who accused her of downplaying her web of lies to everyone from her family to her team of support workers.

“You chose to deceive,” Stewart said.

It was only by happenstance that her clandestine hook-ups were uncovered. Her community parole officer Angela Law told the hearing she was informed by Kirk’s probation officer, who had recognized Melissa Todorovic from past media coverage of the gruesome killing.

A search of her room found a Valentine’s Day card from Kirk in which he apologized for not satisfying her and for not treating her well.

Melissa Todorovic’s bail was suspended in March and she was returned to the Grand Valley Institution for Women for violating her conditions. Friday’s hearing was to determine whether her day parole should be permanently revoked — she can reapply in a year — or reinstated under new conditions.

Her parole officer recommended she remain in prison because her failure to disclose that she was involved in not one, but two, relationships and her “manipulating them against one another” show she still presents an undue risk to the public.

The hearing officer agreed — and so in prison she’ll remain.

Melissa Todorovic who has gained weight and cut her hair since her 2009 trial, wiped away tears throughout the hearing but simply stared coldly at Stewart when told she’d be losing her freedom.

Somebody had finally cut her strings.

Melissa Todorovic Videos

Melissa Todorovic More News

A woman who pressured her boyfriend into murdering his teenage ex more than a decade ago has lost her bid to overt urn the revocation of her parole.

In a decision released Friday, the appeal division of the Parole Board of Canada rejected Melissa Todorovic‘s argument that the board was unreasonable and overly strict in cancelling her day parole last year.

The parole board moved to send Todorovic back to prison after finding she had become entangled in a secret love triangle, contravening a condition of her release that required she disclose any new relationships.

READ MORE: Woman convicted in Stefanie Rengel’s murder has day parole revoked

The one-person panel found at the time that Todorovic’s “purposeful and calculated” deception meant she posed an undue risk to the public.

She had been granted six months of day parole in a halfway house in late 2018, after the board found she had improved in understanding what led her to orchestrate the 2008 killing of 14-year-old Stefanie Rengel.

But the board required that she report any new romantic or platonic relationships because of the role unhealthy romance played in her crime.

The love triangle was discovered in March of last year, causing the board to suspend Todorovic’s parole, and a hearing was held in August to decide whether to uphold the suspension.

READ MORE: Melissa Todorovic, mastermind behind killing of Stefanie Rengel, granted day parole

At that hearing, Todorovic’s parole officer said the woman had become romantically involved with two men on probation who were friends, and appeared to be turning them against each other.

Todorovic, meanwhile, said she knew it was wrong to hide the relationships, but insisted there was no manipulation.

In challenging the revocation, Todorovic argued the board should have been more lenient in assessing whether she posed a risk to the community, given she has spent the last 12 years in prison without the opportunity to understand how to function in the community.

The appeal division rejected that argument, saying Todorovic had participated in numerous programs and been granted temporary absences and work releases to prepare her to reintegrate into society.

The reality is that you have been given every opportunity to improve your understanding of your risk and needs, to develop effective and meaningful strategies to recognize and manage your risks, and to prepare yourself for a graduated return to society,” the decision read.

“Your own choices resulted in your suspension of day parole; your own decisions to be evasive and manipulative precipitated the revocation of your parole,” it said.

READ MORE: Ontario woman convicted in Stefanie Rengel murder not committed to rehabilitation: parole board

“The board was not unreasonable in determining that, by engaging in romantic relationship with two friends, by psychologically manipulating one against the other, and by consciously choosing to not report these relationships to your (parole officer), you had become re-engaged in your offence cycle.”

The appeal ruling also dismissed her arguments that a victim impact statement read at the hearing went beyond what is permitted, and that there was a reasonable apprehension of bias because the panel member who heard her case had previously interacted with her in a professional capacity.

“The board member conducted a thorough hearing, was respectful and collegial with you and did not act in a manner that would suggest bias; nor did the decision appear to suggest that the board member relied upon her past knowledge of you to influence the decision,” the document said.

Todorovic was convicted of first-degree murder in 2009 for ordering her then-boyfriend, David Bagshaw, to kill Rengel. Both were sentenced to life in prison, with Todorovic eligible for parole after seven years.

The plot was fuelled by Todorovic’s jealous obsession with Rengel, a girl she had never met but who Bagshaw had briefly dated years earlier. Todorovic, who was 15 at the time, continuously threatened to break up with Bagshaw or withhold sex unless he killed Rengel.

He eventually lured Rengel out of her family’s Toronto home and stabbed her to death on New Year’s Day 2008.

Ashley Toye Teen Killer Cash Feenz Murders

Ashley Toye Teen Killer

Ashley Toye was sixteen years old when she took part in a double murder in Florida. According to court documents Ashley Toye was dating an older man named Kemar Johnston who was part of a gang known as the Cash Feenz who would kidnap two teenagers. The two teenagers would be tortured for quite sometime before they were murdered. Ashley Toye would say that her boyfriend forced her to stab the two victims and she did so for she feared for her life.

This teen killer would be sentenced to life without parole. Ashley Toye had her sentence thrown out in 2019 and is currently awaiting a new sentence in 2020

Ashley Toye 2023 Information

ashley toye
ID Photo

DC Number:Y33438

Name:TOYE, ASHLEY M

Race:WHITE

Sex:FEMALE

Birth Date:10/31/1988

Initial Receipt Date:04/12/2007

Current Facility:LOWELL ANNEX

Current Custody:CLOSE

Current Release Date:SENTENCED TO LIFE

Ashley Toye Other News

Cape Coral woman who was convicted for her part in the brutal murders of two cape coral teenagers more than a decade ago could be out of prison within the next 10 years. We’ve been following this case since the beginning, and we looked at what led to this point and what could be ahead for a convicted killer.

Ashley Toye was 17 years old when 18-year-old Jeffrey Sosa and 14-year old Alex Sosa were murdered in Cape Coral in 2006. Toye was sentenced to life in prison without parole after she was found guilty of her involvement in their deaths.

However, Toye’s life sentence has been overturned for a second time and she could walk free in the future.

For years, Toye has claimed she was coerced into her participation in the crimes.

In 2009, she told WINK News Anchor Lois Thome her abusive ex-boyfriend, alleged ringleader Kemar Johnston, forced her to take part in the murders of Jeffrey and Alex.

But a U.S Supreme Court ruling in 2012 bans mandatory life sentences for juveniles without a secondary hearing, giving Toye a chance for freedom.

In 2014, the appeals court overturned her life sentence, and Toye took the stand to convince Judge Bruce Kyle to reduce her punishment.

“The knife was handed to me,” Toye said in court back in 2014. “I didn’t know what to do at the time. There was guns in my face. I was wanting to save face, I guess you could say, and I felt like, ‘I’m going to do this too to be cool, to fit in.”

But Kyle wasn’t buying it. He, once again, sentenced Toye to life in prison.

Then, this past December, the Florida district court of appeals overturned Toye’s life sentence again and removed Kyle from the case.

Attorney Stu Pepper handled Toye’s first appeal and still keeps in touch with her. A Christmas card she sent him this year shows Toye, now 31 years old, with her child, a son she’s never really known because she went to jail when she was pregnant.

It’s up to the state attorney’s office to propose a new sentence and set a date, but the office has not commented. Meanwhile, Pepper believes that could happen in the next six months.

If everything goes in Toye’s favor, she could be out of prison within the next decade.

Ashley Toye More News

Two convicted killers will go back to serving life in prison, after a fight to get a lesser sentence.

Ashley Toye and Roderick Washington, members of the Cashe Feenz gang, were re-sentenced to life this morning for their roles in the violent torture, and murders, of two Cape Coral teens.

The two had a chance to have their previous life sentences overturned, because a 2012 United States Supreme Court ruling decided juveniles can’t be given life sentences without parole.

The two were only 17 when they were originally put away, for their part in the murders of Jeffrey and Alexis Sosa.

Two weeks ago, Toye’s attorney, argued that his client did not shoot the teens and should not be behind bars forever.

The state agreed.

“I thought that was good enough for me, I thought it was good enough for the judge. Instead he went his own way,” said Toye’s attorney, Stuart Pepper.

At that re-sentencing hearing, Toye took the stand telling the judge she had been in an abusive relationship with Kemar Johnston, the ringleader of the Cash Feenz, and could not stop the murders from happening.

“Dead words. judge did not pick that up. I think his mind was made up beforehand. That’s my opinion,” said Pepper.

Roderick Washington’s lawyer also argued that although his client had a gun pointed on the victims at the time, he never actually hurt them.

The judge said he found it hard to believe these two didn’t know what was happening.

“I don’t understand how you could watch those boys be tortured, put into the trunk of a car to go to a second location, and not know that death was intended,” said Judge Bruce Kyle.

Once they have served 25 years, their sentence is eligible for a review. The time they have already served will count toward that.

Ashley Toye’s attorney says he plans to appeal.

Convicted Cash Feenz killers get re-sentenced to life in prison

https://www.winknews.com/2015/06/22/convicted-cash-feenz-killers-get-re-sentenced-to-life-in-prison/embed/#?secret=EOBRcSPTrj

Ashley Toye Videos

Frequently Asked Questions

Ashley Toye Now

Ashley Toye is currently incarcerated at the Lowell Annex in Florida

Ashley Toye Release Date

Ashley Toye is currently serving a life without parole sentence however she is up for resentencing

Ashley Toye Appeal

The life sentence of Ashley Toye has been reversed and a new sentence will be determined for the Cash Feenz member convicted of murder.

The reversal doesn’t mean Toye, 31, will be retried, only that a new sentence will be imposed. She will remain in prison while that is decided.

Toye was convicted in the murders of 14-year-old Jeffrey Sosa, 14, and his 18-year-old uncle, Alexis Sosa that took place at a Cape Coral home in October 2006.

According to police reports, the Cash Feenz, the name a group of teen rappers gave themselves, tortured the Sosas for hours on end by binding them, beating them, carving the initials of the rap group — “CF” — into their backs, pouring bleach into the fresh wounds, dragging them outside into the trunk of a car, where they were shot. The car was then set ablaze.

All but two of the 10 Cash Feenz members convicted remain in prison. Cody Roux, 32, was released in 2018, and Michael Balint, 32, was freed in December.

Serving life sentences are Roderick Washington, 30, and Kemar Johnston, 33. Others serving various non-life sentences include Melissa Rivera, 33, Paul Nunes, 31, Kenneth Lopez, 31, Alexis Fernandez, 31, and Iriana Santos, 29.

Toye was sentenced to life in 2007 and also given two 25-year sentences for kidnapping that are not affected by the reversal.

But a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in 2012 declared that the Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution prohibited a mandatory life sentence without the possibility of parole for defendants under 18. Toye was 17 at the time of the crimes.

Her appeal was denied and she was sentenced to life again in 2015.

The denial to her appeal was reversed in December. The reversal was officially filed Jan. 23 and entitles her to a special hearing to determine the new length of her sentence.   

That hearing could come as early as Feb. 17.

The state attorney’s office confirmed the reversal but declined to comment, citing the active case status.

In court documents on the reversal, the state’s recommendation was to give Toye something less than a life sentence.

According to the filing: “The state explained that while Toye was ‘an active participant,’ her culpability was different from her three co-defendants in her case who got the longest sentences … . Finally, the state pointed to Toye’s immaturity at the time of the offense and the fact that she had ‘actively sought to rehabilitate herself while she has been incarcerated.'”

The court’s decision also took into account what it and the state, agreed to, that there was no “clear jury finding” that Toye intended to kill the Sosas, a fact the court said made the verdict a violation of legality.

Toye will be represented by attorneys Mariko Outman and Chris Altenbernd, of Tampa. Fort Myers attorney Stuart Pepper has withdrawn from the case.

Toye would have been eligible for a sentence review in 25 years, at age 51.

https://www.news-press.com/story/news/crime/2020/01/31/ashley-toyes-life-sentence-cape-coral-murders-reversed-cash-feenz-defendant-face-new-sentencing/4618513002/

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