Tiffany VanAlstyne Teen Killer Murders 5 Year Old Boy

Tiffany VanAlstyne Teen Killer

Tiffany VanAlstyne was nineteen years old when she murdered her five year old cousin. According to court documents Tiffany VanAlstyne would beat than strangle the five year old boy causing his death. Tiffany would hide the child’s body and would tell police that he had been abducted. Eventually police figured it out and the child’s body was found. This teen killer would plead guilty and would be sentenced to eighteen years to life in prison

Tiffany VanAlstyne Other News

An Albany hilltowns woman who fatally injured her 5-year-old cousin and hid him in a snowbank while he was still alive has been sentenced to 18 years to life in prison.

Tiffany VanAlstyne was sentenced Thursday morning in Albany County Court.

The 20-year-old admitted beating and choking Kenneth White while caring for him in December 2014. She pleaded guilty in November to depraved indifference murder of a child.

VanAlstyne initially told authorities White had been kidnapped by masked intruders, who had burst through the door of the family’s trailer at 994 Thacher Park Road in East Berne, prompting issuance of a statewide Amber Alert. She later admitted she covered his body with snow after tossing it into a culvert near their home, then called 911 with the abduction story.

White was found dead later that night.

Tiffany VanAlstyne More News

Tiffany VanAlstyne was a “time bomb waiting to go off” before she choked her 5-year-old cousin Kenneth White and dumped him in the snow, a judge said Thursday in sentencing the 20-year-old Knox woman to 18 years to life in prison for murder.

“It is a tragedy because this never should have happened,” Judge Stephen Herrick told VanAlstyne in Albany County Court as he sentenced the crying Knox woman to 18 years to life in state prison for the murder.

On Dec. 18, 2014, VanAlstyne choked her “little buddy” in their mobile home on Thacher Park Road after she became “a little frustrated” with the kindergartner, she said. Police discovered Kenneth lifeless in a snowbank across the street from the home, but only after VanAlstyne delayed their investigation by concocting a lie that kidnappers abducted the boy.

“There were tell-tale signs that you were at risk. From what I’ve read, this was a time bomb waiting to go off,” the judge told VanAlstyne, 20, noting she had stopped taking medication for her mental illness. “The tell-tale signs were there and not addressed.”

Asked if she wished to speak, VanAlstyne, sobbing, read from a piece of paper: “I want to say that those kids meant the world to me and I loved them very much. I loved Kenneth with all my heart and the girls too. He was my little buddy and will always be in my heart. I’m so, so sorry for what I did … I just wish I could take it back but I can’t.”

VanAlstyne lived with her mother, Brenda VanAlstyne, who had custody of Kenneth and his two sisters, aged 4 and 5. A family friend, Brandon Rios, 18, lived in the trailer as did 10 cats and five dogs. Christine and Jayson White, the estranged parents of Kenneth and his sisters, had lost custody of the children.

On the day of the murder, Tiffany VanAlstyne, her mother, Rios and the three children went to a doctor’s office and Price Chopper to fill a prescription. At 12:45 p.m., they arrived home. Tiffany VanAlstyne and the children went inside. Brenda VanAlstyne and Rios left to drop off gifts at a school. Tiffany VanAlstyne has said she showed Kenneth flash cards to help him with schoolwork but became frustrated when he kept giving wrong answers. She blacked out and awoke with her hands on Kenneth’s neck with the child unresponsive. She locked the girls in a room and took Kenneth outside where she fell twice and the child bumped his head. She walked across the street and threw Kenneth over a guardrail into a drainage ditch, covering him with snow.

On Thursday, the judge told VanAlstyne she “tossed him over the guardrail like a garbage bag.”

The judge noted VanAlstyne heard signs of life from the boy but instead of helping Kenneth made up the story about the kidnapping.

“Perhaps, just perhaps, if you had come to your senses Kenneth might still be alive,” Herrick said.

Outside court, Christine White said Kenneth’s killer was “like a second mom” to him.

“I love my son more than anything in this world but I also love my niece and I know the kind of girl she was,” Christine White said. “People need to realize the kind of girl that (Tiffany) really was with my children — because she was good with them. This is a tragedy and it hurts that nobody understands truly the person she really was.”

Christine White and the children’s father have admitted to neglect in Albany County Family Court. Family Court Judge Gerard Maney also ruled Brenda VanAlstyne abused and neglected the children. The girls’ great-aunt, Michelle Sweet of Westerlo, asked to be granted “kinship foster care” custody of the girls, now 5 and 6. Such arrangements allow relatives of children to become their foster parents; it contains a more stringent certification process than in typical foster care cases.

Tiffany VanAlstyne, who turns 21 on Saturday, risked 25 years to life in prison if she were convicted at trial. Facing evidence that included her confession on videotape to Chief Deputy Michael Monteleone of the Albany County Sheriff’s Office, she pleaded guilty Nov. 24 in a plea agreement to second-degree depraved indifference murder of a child.

Assistant District Attorney Shannon Sarfoh told the judge Thursday that the crime was “unimaginable and unthinkable.”

VanAlstyne’s lawyer, Albany County Public Defender James Milstein, told the judge VanAlstyne cannot comprehend how she could have committed such a horrific crime.

The judge told VanAlstyne the case was a tragedy from every respect and every perspective, first and foremost because Kenneth White had his life taken from him.

“He’s gone because you violently killed and disposed of his body,” Herrick told the defendant, “and, I have to say, it’s a tragedy because your young life is now realistically gone as you will spend the majority of the rest of your life in state prison. And what comes out of state prison — if you come out of state prison — will be a shell of what you might have been. You have destroyed your future as well as Kenneth’s.”

“Kenneth in his death has received more love and respect than he ever had during his lifetime” due to the outpouring of support the child has received from residents of the Hilltowns, which includes a support group called Kenneth’s Army, several of whose members were in court.

“He will never be forgotten,” the judge said.

https://www.timesunion.com/local/article/Troy-faces-burst-pipe-on-busy-street-6758246.php

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Tiffany VanAlstyne is not eligible for parole until 2034

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Ruthann Veal Teen Killer Murders Elderly Woman

Ruthann Veal Teen Killer

Ruthann Veal was fourteen when she stabbed a woman to death. According to court documents Ruthann Veal had run away from the group home she was in and during an attempted robbery would stab the victim twenty three times causing her death. Initially Ruthann Veal was sentenced to life in prison without parole however it was later reduced to give her a shot at parole. However due to multiple discipline actions behind prison walls this teen killer has yet to be released

Ruthann Veal 2023 Information

NameRuthann Lidvina Veal
Offender Number1060781
SexF
Birth Date07/20/1978
LocationFifth Judicial District
OffenseMURDER 1ST DEGREE
TDD/SDD *LIFE
Commitment Date06/04/2021
Recall Date

Ruthann Veal Other News

The US Supreme Court issued a decision Monday about sentencing handed down to juvenile offenders. It ruled that mandatory life-without-parole sentences are unconstitutional for children 17 and under, because it violates the 8th amendment as “cruel and unusual” punishment.

The decision could impact a couple of major cases, including one tried in Waterloo almost 20 years ago.

Ruthann Veal was convicted of the 1993 murder of Catherine Haynes and sentenced to life-without-parole. While the Supreme Court ruling is no guarantee Veal could be eligible for release, it is possible.

And for those who vividly remember Veal’s brutal crime, it’s a tough thought to bear.

The 100 block of Lovejoy in Waterloo is now your typical quiet neighborhood. But nearly two decades ago, it was the site of a brutal crime.

66-year-old Catherine Haynes was stabbed 23 times in her Lovejoy Street home. Chris Murphy lived across the street from Haynes at the time and vividly recalls the ordeal.

“My husband and I were the last ones to see Catherine alive, except for Veal. It was just so shocking to hear such an innocent lady to be attacked so brutal,” said Murphy.

Just days after the murder, 14-year-old runaway Ruthann Veal was arrested, and then later convicted of killing Haynes. She was sentenced to life-without-parole.

In 2002, KWWL interviewed a then 23-year-old Veal at the Mitchellville Correctional Institute for Women.

“You’ve got to forgive yourself everyday you wake up,” said Veal in 2002.

At the time, Ruthann Veal also said she felt a life-without-parole sentence was too harsh for a teenager. But with the Supreme Court’s ruling Monday, Veal’s continuing legal fight could have new hope for parole release.

But Black Hawk County Attorney Tom Ferguson, who prosecuted the Vcase, says the high court’s ruling doesn’t guarantee anything. It only says states can’t mandate life-without-parole sentences for juveniles.

“It’s going to be some time before we sort this all out. It’s going to be sorted out through the courts. And, ultimately, I think will be sorted out somewhat through the legislature when we get some guidance from the courts on this decision’s impact on juveniles as well as our own Supreme Court’s decision on the impact of life without parole on juveniles,” Ferguson said.

For Chris Murphy, it’s unfathomable that Veal could ever be released after what happened on her old street all those years ago.

“I think she’ll kill again. So I would hope if she does come up for parole, she would not get it. But every time she’s eligible, we’d just be holding our breaths, ‘Is she going to get it? Is someone going to give it to her?’ Oh my gosh,” Murphy said.

Attorneys with the Equal Justice Initiative representing Ruth Ann Veal did not return our call.

Veal has a status hearing on her case on July 19th. County Attorney Tom Ferguson expects many of the issues brought forward with the Supreme Court’s ruling will take center stage at that hearing.

In addition to the Veal case, the Supreme Court’s ruling could also impact another Iowa teen convicted of murder.

Edgar Concepcion, Jr. was handed two life-sentences in the 2009 death of his three-year-old cousin. He was 14 when he killed the girl. In multiple appeals, his attorney’s argued that life without parole for a juvenile was “cruel and unusual” punishment.

Ruthann Veal More News

A three-member panel of the Iowa Board of Parole on Wednesday again denied parole to Ruthann Veal, who in 1993 was convicted of first-degree murder as a teenager.

The Iowa Department of Corrections had recommended that she not be released. Warden Sheryl Dahm of the Iowa Correctional Institution for Women in Mitchellville said Veal’s skills and behavior haven’t prepared her for life outside prison. 

“We have to see something in her where she’s not trying to navigate people, including staff, to help her get out of here,” said Dahm, who outlined a plan including changing Veal’s counselor and living arrangement, which she said would help better acclimate Veal to social and societal norms.

Veal, 40, was 14 when she stabbed to death and robbed Catherine Haynes of Waterloo, a 66-year-old retired University of Northern Iowa librarian. Veal was found guilty and sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole, becoming Iowa’s youngest female convict serving an adult sentence.

But in 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court barred automatic life sentences without parole for juvenile murderers. The Iowa Supreme Court later called the sentences cruel and unusual punishment.

The decision to deny Veal parole came with a condition that if the Department of Corrections changes its recommendation to support parole for Veal within the next year, the board would agree to hold another hearing.

Jeff Wright, chair of the parole board, warned Veal that she must fully convince the department that she’s ready to be paroled before such a hearing could happen.

https://www.desmoinesregister.com/story/news/2019/02/06/convicted-1993-killing-iowa-woman-sentenced-teen-denied-parole-ruthann-veal/2787542002/

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Ruthann was released on parole in 2021

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Rachel Wade Teen Killer Murders Love Rival

Rachel Wade Teen Killer

Rachel Wade was a teenager in Florida who was involved in a love triangle that ended in murder. According to court documents Rachel Wade and Sarah Ludemann were both involved with the same man Joshua Camacho. What started as nasty phone calls and texts quickly turned violent when Wade would fatally stab Ludemann. This teen killer was quickly arrested and this teen killer would be convicted at trial and sentenced to spend 27 years in prison.

Rachel Wade 2023 Information

rachael wade 2021 photos
DC Number:R67662
Name:WADE, RACHAEL
Race:WHITE
Sex:FEMALE
Birth Date:02/27/1990
Initial Receipt Date:09/08/2010
Current Facility:FL.WOMENS RECPN.CTR
Current Custody:MEDIUM
Current Release Date:01/27/2033

Rachel Wade Other News

A Florida judge sentenced Rachel Wade, the 20-year-old woman convicted of second-degree murder for fatally stabbing her romantic rival in a fight last year, to 27 years in prison Friday.

While acknowledging mitigating factors — primarily Wade’s youth and lack of a criminal past — the judge said her actions were not “unaggravating.”

“The murder was no accident,” Judge Joseph Bulone said.

Wade went to trial in July, accused of second-degree murder in the stabbing death of 18-year-old Sarah Ludemann. The two women, only teenagers at the time, had fought for months via voicemails, text messages and MySpace postings over their relationship with the same man, Joshua Camacho.

The feud culminated in a fatal confrontation in the early morning hours of April 15, 2009.

After a three-day trial and only two and a half hours of deliberation, a jury of five men and one woman convicted Wade of second-degree murder. Wade had claimed self-defense and hoped for an acquittal or no more than a manslaughter conviction.

A life sentence was recommended by Florida prosecutors. The defense had recommended 15 years, followed by 15 years of probation.

TruTV’s “In Session” correspondent Beth Karas spoke to Wade days before her sentencing.

“I think about it every day, regardless if they give me five years or 20 years more than they could give me,” Wade said. “I never meant to do it, and I’m still gonna have to live with it, no matter if I’m home or if I’m in prison.”

Wade’s lawyer told HLN Friday that the sentence was “very fair.”

“I just don’t think this was a case that called for life,” said Jay Hebert.

Hebert said the case is a cautionary tale about the potentially deadly mix of young people and modern communications technology.

“When you start looking at the tragic nature of this, the social networking, the instant messaging, the ability of people to hide behind the screen and make statements and create situations — it just festered until it bubbled up and exploded into a situation… until two good girls, their worlds collided,” he said.

Hebert said Wade has resolved to teach young people about the dangers associated with social networking.

“I don’t think we can appreciate how young people talk,” he said. “And that’s the lesson for parents. Pay close attention to your children. Watch how they talk and who they talk to. Watch their social networking outlets.”

“Because it’s an explosive situation when when you don’t have to be accountable, when you can break up with somebody or ask somebody to prom via text,” he said. “There’s no face-to-face interaction.”

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Rachel Wade is currently incarcerated at the Florida Women’s Reception Center

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Rachel Wade is scheduled for release in 2033

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Rachel Wade, the teenage girl who murdered her romantic rival, Sarah Ludemann, was sentenced Friday in a Florida courtroom to 27 years in prison.

According to the St. Petersburg Times,  Pinellas-Pasco Circuit Judge Joseph A. Bulone said that Wade had “caused a lot of pain” before handing down the sentence.

Wade, now 20, was found guilty of second-degree murder on July 23. The jury deliberated for less than three hours, before siding with prosecutors, who argued that Wade had murdered the 18-year-old Ludemann in April 2009 because the two were involved with same young man, Joshua Camacho.

The state maintained that Wade murdered her nemesis, then sat back as Ludemann was dying and asked Pinellas Park police officers for a cigarette.

Prosecutor Wesley Dicus described the stabbing as so violent that the knife blade was bent.

Wade’s attorney, Jay Hebert, maintained that his client acted in self defense,  saying that on the night of the murder, Ludemann and her friends were on their way to “jump” Wade. Months and months of vicious taunts and bickering came to a head, he explained, and it was Ludemann, not Wade, who started the fatal fight.

During his closing argument, Hebert told the jury, “Sarah was the aggressor. They couldn’t stop her. She went looking for Rachel that night.”

Wade and Ludemann were both dating the same young man in a twisted and drama-filled love triangle that lasted for months.

There had been numerous confrontations between the girls

The most damning evidence from the trial was a collection of threatening voice mail messages from Rachel to Sarah.

Rachel Wade is heard saying, “Please tell me Sarah why you would be a dumb-a** c**t and put a brand new picture of you and Josh at the beach on your MySpace. Seriously, I told you to watch your f***ing back and not to f***ing chill with him. I’m guaranteeing you that I’m going to f***ing murder you, I’m letting you know that now.”

The jury fell silent after the messages were played in court, and Rachel began crying

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/rachel-wade-sentenced-teenage-love-triangle-murderer-gets-27-years-for-death-of-sarah-ludemann/

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Eliza Wasni Teen Killer Murders Uber Driver

Eliza Wasni Teen Killer

Eliza Wasni was a sixteen year old girl from Illinois who decided she wanted to kill someone. The teen killer would steal a knife and a machete from a store before using her phone to call for an Uber. Once the driver arrived the young woman would get into the car and within minutes would proceed to attack the driver stabbing him multiple times. The driver was able to get out of the car and get to a condo building where someone would call for an ambulance. The man would later die in hospital.

This teen killer attempted to drive away in the car but would get stuck and attempt to flee the scene. Before the driver died from multiple stab wounds he would tell the police what the teenager passenger looked like and soon after Eliza Wasni was apprehended still covered with blood spatter and the Uber app on the phone directly tying her to the murder. Eliza Wani would spend three years in custody before pleading guilty to the murder and was sentenced to twenty seven years in prison, to be honest she deserved life.

Eliza Wasni 2023 Information

eliza wasni 2022
Date of Birth:12/17/2000
Weight:282 lbs.
Hair:Blonde or Strawberry
Sex:Female
Height:5 ft. 03 in.
Race:White
Eyes:Blue

Admission Date:
09/04/2020
Projected Parole Date:
05/12/2044
Last Paroled Date:

Projected Discharge Date:
05/12/2047

Parent Institution:LOGAN CORRECTIONAL CENTER
Offender Status:IN CUSTODY
Location:LOGAN

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A young woman who pleaded guilty to stabbing an Uber driver to death in a Chicago suburb has been sentenced to 27 years in prison, authorities said Tuesday.

Eliza Wasni, 19, pleaded guilty to first-degree murder and was sentenced Monday by Cook County Judge Timothy Chambers, according to the state’s attorney’s office.

Grant Nelson, 34, picked up the then-16-year-old Wasni a few blocks from a Walmart in the Chicago suburb of Skokie. She attacked Nelson, of Wilmette, without provocation using a knife and a machete that she had just stolen from the store, prosecutors said.

After the attack, Nelson was able to flee his vehicle and sought help at a nearby condominium building.

Police followed a trail of blood and found him on the grass on the side of the building. Nelson described his attacker before he died at a hospital.

Prosecutors said Wasni fled in Nelson’s car after the attack, struck a median and took off on foot. When police caught up with her, her clothes were spattered with blood. Investigators used the Uber app on Nelson’s phone to identify his most recent customer as “Eliza,” prosecutors said.

Eliza Wasni Gets 27 Years In Prison For 2017 Murder Of Uber Driver Grant Nelson

Eliza Wasni More News

A 19-year-old Chicago woman was sentenced to 27 years in prison this week for hacking an Uber driver to death with a stolen knife and machete in an unprovoked attack in north suburban Lincolnwood.

Eliza Wasni, who was 16 when she killed Grant Nelson, pleaded guilty to murder on Monday and was sentenced by Cook County Judge Timothy Chambers at the Skokie Courthouse, court records show.

Wasni, a former Taft High School student, had been charged as an adult for the 2017 crime.

When she first appeared in court following her arrest three years ago, Judge Michael J. Hood called Wasni’s actions a “random act of violence

Before dawn on May 30, 2017, Wasni walked out of a 24-hour Walmart in Skokie with the weapons she shoplifted, called an Uber and was picked up by 34-year-old Nelson in his Hyundai Sonata, prosecutors said.

Within two minutes, the teen began attacking Nelson as the car approached the intersection of Touhy and Lincoln avenues, stabbing him repeatedly on the side of his arm, torso, head and chest, prosecutors said.

Nelson, of Wilmette, pulled up to a condo building in the 7200 block of Touhy Avenue, ran to the lobby and slammed on the door screaming for help. Responding officers followed a trail of blood and found him on the grass on the side of the building.

Wasni took Nelson’s car and drove it back toward Lincoln and Touhy avenues before she hit a median and fled the vehicle. Officers found Nelson’s phone in the car’s front seat and saw that Wasni was listed as his Uber passenger, prosecutors said.

Officers later spotted Wasni hiding behind a nearby office building in a blood-spattered Cubs shirt holding the bloody knife and machete.

Nelson, who a friend described as “the type to give you the shirt off his back,” was able to tell police his passenger had stabbed him before he died later that morning at St. Francis Hospital in Evanston

https://chicago.suntimes.com/crime/2020/8/25/21401569/eliza-wasni-grant-nelson-sentence-machette-attack-lincolnwood

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Eliza Wasni is currently incarcerated at the Logan Correctional Center

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Jasmiyah and Tasmiyah Whitehead Teen Killer

Jasmiyah and Tasmiyah Whitehead Teen Killer

Jasmiyah and Tasmiyah Whitehead would murder their mother when they were sixteen years old. According to court documents Jasmiyah and Tasmiyah Whitehead would flag down a police car and say that their mother had been stabbed. Initially the two girls were not suspects but over time their story began to crumble. Eventually two young teen killers would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to thirty years in prison for their mother’s murder.

Jasmiyah Whitehead 2023 Information

jasmiyah whitehead

YOB: 1993
RACE: BLACK
GENDER: FEMALE
HEIGHT: 5’00”
WEIGHT: 116
EYE COLOR: BROWN
HAIR COLOR: BROWN

MAJOR OFFENSE: VOLUNTARY MANSLAUGHTER
MOST RECENT INSTITUTION: ARRENDALE STATE PRISON
MAX POSSIBLE RELEASE DATE: 05/19/2040

Tasmiyah Whitehead 2023 Information

tasmiyah whitehead

YOB: 1993
RACE: BLACK
GENDER: FEMALE
HEIGHT: 5’03”
WEIGHT: 130
EYE COLOR: BROWN
HAIR COLOR: BROWN

Jasmiyah and Tasmiyah Whitehead Other News

A brutal kitchen brawl between a Conyers mother and her teenage twin daughters ended with the mother’s death, prosecutors said.

Nearly four years after Jarmecca “Nikki” Whitehead’s spinal cord was fatally severed at the climax of the fight, one of her twins has admitted her part in the killing.

Tasmiyah Whitehead, 20, pleaded guilty Thursday to voluntary manslaughter, falsification in government matters and possession of a knife during the commission of a crime in the death of her mother.

She was sentenced to 30 years in prison.

Her identical twin sister, Jasmiyah Whitehead, goes to trial in March in connection with the killing and could face life in prison.

“I have read about … tragedies of epic proportion,” Rockdale County Superior Court Judge David Irwin said Thursday at Tasmiyah Whitehead’s plea hearing. “I had no idea what that was until today.”

Tasmiyah Whitehead and Jasmiyah Whitehead were 16 when they were arrested and charged with malice murder, felony murder and aggravated assault in connection with their mother’s death.

An apparent history of violent family turmoil had been brewing over some years and exploded on the morning of Jan. 13, 2010, prosecutors said.

The twins had been living with their great-grandmother Della Frazier and had been moved back to Conyers with Jarmecca Whitehead just a week earlier.

Rockdale District Attorney Richard R. Read said on Thursday that Tasmiyah recently told prosecutors she and her sister awoke that day late for school and encountered their mother in the kitchen.

“(Nikki) hit Jas with a pot,” Read said. “Tas took the pot from their mother and Nikki grabbed a steak knife.”

“There was name-calling and cursing and gouging and scratching and everybody was mad,” Read said. “During the fight, her mom was cut and stabbed.”

Tasmiyah Whitehead looked on stoically in handcuffs, leg irons and an orange Rockdale County Jail jumpsuit as Read described her accounts of the fight that led to her mother’s death.

At some point that January morning, the melee halted, and Jarmecca Whitehead left the house seeking help from a next-door neighbor, according to prosecutors

When no one immediately answered the door, she returned home, Read said.

“Tas said Nikki came and sat down in the kitchen … she was tired,” Read said. “Tas said Nikki lunged at the knife. Eventually the blows necessary to bring about the death of Nikki Whitehead were given.”

Among her injuries, Jarmecca Whitehead suffered significant stab wounds to her lungs, jugular and the back of her neck, where her spinal cord was severed, prosecutors said

Jasmiyah and Tasmiyah Whitehead went to school and flagged down a Rockdale County sheriff’s deputy driving by their home later that day, telling the deputy they found their mother dead, prosecutors said.

Conyers police investigating the death followed evidence, including cuts and bite marks on the twins after the fight, to implicate them in the death, authorities said.

They were arrested and charged after four months of police investigation, and both pleaded not guilty.

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Jasmiyah Whitehead is currently incarcerated at the Arrendale State Prison

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Tasmiyah Whitehead is currently incarcerated at the Arrendale State Prison

Jasmiyah Whitehead Release Date

Jasmiyah Whitehead current release date is 2040

Tasmiyah Whitehead Release Date

Tasmiyah Whitehead current release date is 2040