Sarah Johnson Teen Killer Murders Parents

Sarah Johnson Teen Killer

Sarah Johnson was sixteen years old when she was charged with her parents murders. According to court documents Sarah Johnson would fatally shoot her mother who was sleeping in her bed and would then fatally shoot her father who was in a bathroom nearby. At trial prosecutors would point to a wealth of DNA evidence in order to convict her. Sarah Johnson would deny that she had anything to do with her parents murders and continues to fight her conviction. The judge would sentence the teen killer to two life terms and she remains in a Idaho prison

Sarah Johnson 2023 Information

sarah johnson 2020 photos
SARAH MARIE JOHNSON #77613
Mailing Address:POCATELLO WOMAN’S CORRECTIONAL CENTER, UNIT 4
1451 Fore Road Pocatello, Idaho 83205

Sarah Johnson Other News

The Idaho Supreme Court has rejected an appeal from a Blaine County woman who was convicted of killing her parents while still a teen in 2003.

Sarah Marie Johnson was sentenced to life without parole in 2005 for fatally shooting her father, 46-year-old Alan Johnson, and mother, 52-year-old Diane Johnson. At the time, prosecutors said Johnson killed her parents after fighting with them over her relationship with an older man.

In a ruling handed down Friday, the Idaho Supreme Court said Johnson’s two fixed life sentences don’t violate the U.S. Constitution’s Eighth Amendment, which bars cruel and unusual punishment.×

The unanimous court agreed that two recent U.S. Supreme Court rulings forbid mandatory life sentences for juveniles. But they said those rulings didn’t impact Johnson’s case because the sentencing judge considered her age — 16 years old — as a mitigating factor before sentencing her to life in prison.

That’s because the U.S. Supreme Court rulings left it up to states to decide how to enforce the constitutional restrictions on juvenile sentences, essentially requiring that a judge consider the juvenile offender’s youth and attendant characteristics before determining that life without parole is appropriate, the Idaho Supreme Court found.

The trial court in Johnson’s case held a hearing to determine whether the crime was one that “reflected the transient immaturity of youth,” Idaho Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger Burdick wrote in Friday’s ruling. That hearing was the sentencing hearing, Burdick wrote, during which experts testified about the developmental state of an adolescent’s brain, among other things. The trial judge also made specific references to Johnson’s youth during the sentencing, showing that it was weighed against the heinous nature of her crimes, the high court found.

That’s enough to satisfy the requirements of the U.S. Supreme Court rulings, Burdick wrote.

“We recognize the holdings in Miller and Montgomery apply to Idaho, but affirm the district court’s ruling that the substantive requirement in those cases — that the sentencing court holds a hearing that considers the youth of the offender — was met,” Burdick wrote.

The Idaho Supreme Court also found that Johnson isn’t entitled to have new testing run on DNA samples collected after the murders, and that claims that her attorney was ineffective during an earlier post-conviction appeal aren’t a sufficient reason to justify a second post-conviction appeal.

Sarah Johnson Videos

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aBU5lPoPZx8

Sarah Johnson More News

 With the slip of a tongue, a teenage girl admitted to brutally gunning down her parents in their bedroom, according to an inmate who shared a jail cell with her.

Convicted felon Malinda Gonzales told jurors Wednesday that Sarah Johnson talked freely while she awaited trial on charges of first-degree murder for her parents’ deaths.

“I would ask her questions over and over again,” Gonzales said. “One time, she said, ‘When I killed …’.” Then she stopped herself and was like, ‘When the killers …’.”

“What did she say to that?” Blaine County prosecutor Jim Thomas asked.

“She just looked at me, and I was like, ‘Don’t worry, I’m not going to rat on you,'” Gonzales said. “I didn’t think I would.”

More than a year later, the two “bunkies” were reunited in Ada County Courthouse Wednesday, where prosecutors are arguing that Sarah killed her parents, Diane and Alan Johnson, because they disapproved of her Mexican boyfriend.

Johnson faces life in prison if convicted.

Gonzales and several other witnesses who spent time in custody with Sarah testified that she freely volunteered details about her rocky relationship with her parents — particularly her mother — and of her acrimonious relationship with relatives in the wake of the murders.

But for all Sarah’s talk, each witness — except Gonzales — conceded that the defendant never admitted to killing her parents on September 2, 2003.

“She said she’d have knock-down, drag-out fights with her mom because she favored her brother and would give him anything,” Gonzales said.

Members of Sarah’s family in court, including her brother, Matt, winced as the five-time convicted drug trafficker offered her blunt assessments on the witness stand.

“But she loved her dad; she was a daddy’s girl. She said her father had changed the life insurance and she was going to get everything because her brother was not really his kid,” Gonzales said.

Sarah, now 18, has been in custody since October 31, 2003, when she was arrested almost two months after the murders.

One of her former inmates said Sarah claimed her brother Matt refused to post her bond, even though he had the means to do so.

“She pretty much despised him because after the murders, he spent the insurance claims on a [Chevy] Suburban and a house and getting married, while she was in jail,” said Autumn Fisher, who spent 16 days in jail with Sarah.

Novetta Hartmann, who spent 10 days with Sarah, said things were not much better with her aunts and uncles.

“She talked about how her family had kind of dismissed her and when she was living [with them], they tapped her phone and conned her into going to the burial so they could arrest her,” Hartmann told jurors.

“She talked a lot about the insurance money and about taking her guardian, Pat, on a cruise to Mexico or something,” she said.

The guardian, Pat Alder, blew Sarah a kiss from the witness stand Wednesday, and was dismissed quickly when she refused to answer prosecutors’ questions.

Hartmann testified that her parents seemed to be the least of Sarah’s concerns when she was in prison.

“She was upset a couple times because she went to court and it wasn’t on TV. She would say, ‘It should be on TV,'” Hartmann said. “When the case was going, she was upset she couldn’t wear regular clothes, had to wear her oranges.”

Each day before court, when Sarah Johnson arrives to the Ada County Courthouse from the county jail, a member of the defense team provides her with business-casual attire, jewelry and make-up. Her hair is always neatly coiffed.

Prosecutors are expected to rest their case this week. The trial is being aired live on Court TV.

http://www.cnn.com/2005/LAW/02/24/johnson/

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Sarah Johnson is currently incarcerated at the POCATELLO WOMAN’S CORRECTIONAL CENTER

Sarah Johnson Release Date

Sara Johnson is serving life without parole

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Crystal Brooke Howell Teen Killer Murders Father

Crystal Brooke Howell Teen Killer

Crystal Brooke Howell was seventeen years old when she murdered her father in North Carolina. According to court documents Crystal Howell would fatally shoot her father who was sleeping on the couch. The teen killer would then conceal his body and threw parties in the home until his body would be discovered. Crystal Brooke Howell was sentenced to life in prison

Crystal Brooke Howell 2023 Information

Crystal Brooke Howell 2020
Offender Number:1521235                                          
Inmate Status:ACTIVE
Gender:FEMALE
Race:WHITE
Ethnic Group:EUROPEAN/N.AM./AUSTR
Birth Date:08/24/1996
Age:23
Current Location:ANSON CI

Crystal Brooke Howell Other News

 A Maggie Valley woman charged with killing her father in 2014 pleaded guilty Monday in Haywood County Superior Court.

Crystal Brooke Howell, 20, appeared in court, where she was convicted of first-degree murder and concealment of death and failure to report a death not from natural causes, according to the District Attorney’s Office.

She received 60 to 84 months in prison for the second charge, followed by a minimum of 25 additional years for the murder charge before she can apply for a
parole hearing.

Howell shot her father, Michael Joseph Howell, 50, in the head with a shotgun while he was napping on Feb. 24, 2014. Michael Howell’s body was found by house guests about a month later on the family’s property in the Sheepback Mountain community near Maggie Valley.

His body had been placed inside a plastic container in the family’s storage shed.

Crystal Howell fled the state after she hid her father’s body and was found in Richmond County, Georgia. She was in possession of her father’s Land Rover and a U-Haul trailer full of items.

Crystal Brooke Howell More News

A young woman was sentenced to 30 years in prison after admitting she fatally shot her dad in their North Carolina home and hid his body in a shed for a month, during which time she drove his car and spent his money.

Crystal Brooke Howell, 20, pleaded guilty in Haywood County Court on Monday to concealing a death/failing to report a death not from natural causes and first-degree murder in the February 2014 killing of her father, sports editor Michael Howell, 50.

After shooting her dad in the head with a shotgun as he napped, the then-17-year-old girl hid his body inside a plastic container in the family’s storage shed on their Maggie Valley property and sold the shotgun used in the murder, officials said.

The teen then told friends her father had committed suicide and invited them to live in his home while she drove around in his car and burned through his cash, authorities said.

“She had her friends move in, had a drug-fueled party, and even had a stripper pole installed in the kitchen,” Haywood County Assistant District Attorney Jeff Jones said in a press release obtained by The Huffington Post.

Her friends discovered her father’s body on March 22, 2014 when they were moving a pinball machine into the shed, according to reports.

That same day, Howell showed up at the home of her mother, Kristina Rester, in Augusta, Georgia, with her father’s car and a U-Haul trailer filled with her belongings. She had asked Rester three days earlier if she could move back in with her, saying her father had released her from his custody, authorities said.

She was arrested the next day in Augusta at a Motel 6.

Prosecutors said Howell had thought about killing her father before pulling the trigger.

“The evidence in this case is that Miss Howell, who had just been caught shoplifting at Ingles by her father that day, came home and thought about killing her dad while she showered,” Jones said, according to WYFF. “Afterwards, she executed him while he slept on the couch.”

Howell’s attorney said her client had a history of mental health issues.

“I can tell you there is a lot more wrong with Crystal than has come out,” Howell’s aunt, Brenda Ellis, told the Columbia County News-Times, where Michael Howell served as a sports editor.

“There have been so many issues but they have compounded by all that she has been through over the years. She’s not a heinous monster. It is a heartbreaking tragedy, that’s all I know.”

But District Attorney Ashley Welch pointed to Howell’s actions as the real indicator of her motive.

“It’s shocking that a young woman kills her father,” Welch said, WYFF reported. “But the fact that Howell then began to spend her father’s money, use his house and drive his car – all after hiding his body and the evidence of her crime – that’s the motive. She wanted to live on her terms at the expense of Michael Howell’s life. It’s very sad.”

Howell will serve her sentence at the North Carolina Department of Adult Corrections.

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Crystal Brooke Howell is currently incarcerated at Anson Correctional Institute

Crystal Brooke Howell Release Date

Crystal Brooke Howell is serving a life sentence

Holly Harvey and Sandra Ketchum Teen Killers

Holly Harvey and Sandra Ketchum

Holly Harvey and Sandra Ketchum were young lesbian lovers and when Holly Grandparents tried to end their relationship the two teenage girls decided to murder them.

According to court documents Holly and Sandra would stab the elderly couple several times each causing their death. The teen killers would take off in the couple’s vehicle and would be picked up by police a short time later. Both of the girls were sentenced to multiple life terms however each was eligible for parole. As of this writing in 2021 both are still in prison

Holly Harvey 2023 Information

holly harvey 2022

MAJOR OFFENSE: MURDER
MOST RECENT INSTITUTION: ARRENDALE STATE PRISON
MAX POSSIBLE RELEASE DATE: LIFE

Sandra Ketchum 2023 Information

sandra ketchum 2021 photos

MAJOR OFFENSE: MURDER
MOST RECENT INSTITUTION: PULASKI STATE PRISON
MAX POSSIBLE RELEASE DATE: LIFE

Holly Harvey and Sandra Ketchum Other News

Two teenage girls accused of stabbing one of the girls’ grandparents to death pleaded guilty Thursday to murder during a court hearing, ending a case that garnered national headlines. Holly Harvey, 15, was sentenced to two life sentences in prison after pleading guilty to two counts of malice murder. Because of her age, she was not eligible for the death penalty. She will not be eligible for parole until after she serves 20 years in prison.

Sandy Ketchum, 16, who has been described as Holly’s lover, was sentenced to serve three life sentences to be served consecutively. At the end of her hearing, which lasted less than 10 minutes, Fayette County Superior Court Judge Johnnie Caldwell sentenced her to three life sentences for murder and armed robbery, to be served concurrently — meaning she could be eligible for parole in 10 years.

During the court proceeding, the girls spoke about the stabbings, and the blood, which Harvey said felt like a bucket of hot water. Carl Collier, 74, and his wife, Sarah, 73, were each stabbed multiple times Aug. 2 inside the couple’s house in north Fayette County.

The girls then allegedly fled in the Colliers’ truck and were arrested the next day in Tybee Island. As part of her plea, Harvey detailed how she killed the couple. For half an hour, she choked back sobs and spoke softly as she recounted the killings to Fayette County Superior Court Judge Pascal English. Harvey and her friend had stayed out all night and spent the morning of the killings listening to music in the basement bedroom of her grandparents’ north Fayette home.

That was when Ketchum suggested stealing the grandparent’s truck “to get something to calm us down,” Harvey said. “‘We’ll have to kill them to do that,”‘ Harvey said she responded. “But I didn’t mean nothing by that,” she told Judge Pascal English. Ketchum suggested hitting them in the head with a lamp, and then suggested getting a knife, Harvey said. “I got the biggest knife I could find out of the kitchen,” she said, adding that they practiced stabbing a mattress to see if the knife was sharp enough. When the grandparents came downstairs to get a suitcase, Harvey said she stabbed her grandmother. “My eyes were closed the whole time,” she said.

Her grandfather then pinned her down and Harvey said she stabbed him in the chest. She pursued him as he ran upstairs and tried to call for help, pulling the phone out of the wall, Harvey said. “He grabbed the knife and I thought he was going to stab me,” Harvey said, adding she took the knife from him and started attacking him. When the judge asked Holly Harvey why she did it, the teen said, “For Sandy,” and added, “So that we could be together.”

Judge English asked Holly Harvey after sentencing her if 20 years in prison “was a good deal” for killing her grandparents. She answered no. When he asked what she thought should happen to her, Harvey replied, “I think I should be dead.” The judge muttered, “We both agree on that.” Ketchum’s hearing was much shorter. She was not forced to detail the crime because she was immediately cooperative with authorities, showed remorse and was prepared to testify against Holly Harvey at trial — factors which justified a lighter sentence, Prosecutor Scott Ballard said during her hearing.

Outside the courthouse, Tim Ketchum, her father, said she did the right thing. “I can’t explain it. I’m not that type of person,” he said. “I didn’t raise her to be that type of person. I want to say to the community I’m very sorry this happened.” The teens had faced two counts of felony murder, two counts of malice murder and one count of armed robbery. The maximum sentence the girls could have received was life in prison without parole. The girls were to be tried as adults in the killings.

Holly Harvey had been living with her grandparents while her mother served a prison term. Police said the girls were lesbian lovers and killed the Colliers because they disapproved of the relationship and refused to let the girls go to the beach together. The girls were arrested 17 hours after the slayings at a beach house on Tybee Island, about four hours away. Police say they found a sort of to-do list scrawled in ink on Harvey’s arm: “kill, keys, money, jewelry.”

Holly Harvey And Sandra Ketchum Videos

Holly Harvey And Sandra Ketchum Photos

Holly Harvey and Sandra Ketchum
Holly Harvey and Sandra Ketchum
sandra ketchum
holly harvey

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Holly Harvey Now

Holly Harvey is currently incarcerated at Arrendale Prison in Georgia

Holly Harvey Release Date

Holly Harvey is sentenced to life in prison however she is eligible for parole in 2024

Sandra Ketchum Now

Sandra Ketchum is currently incarcerated at Pulaski Prison in Georgia

Sandra Ketchum Release Date

Sandra Ketchum is serving a life sentence however she is currently eligible for parole

Holly Harvey And Sandra Ketchum More News

The two teenage girls arrested on Tybee Island for the murder of an elderly couple appeared in court yesterday. Sixteen-year-old Sandy Ketchum and 15-year-old Holly Harvey were led into a Fayette County courtroom wearing shackles and bulletproof vests.

The girls are facing murder charges for the stabbing death of Harvey’s grandparents, Carl and Sara Collier. Investigators say the Colliers disapproved of the girls’ romantic relationship, and they also say Harvey manipulated Ketchum to get her to help.

“I found a poem written, I don’t remember the date, the poem talked about Holly’s depression and the fact she cried herself to sleep at night,” said Lt. Bruce Jordan of the Fayette County Sheriff’s Office. “And she wished for everyone to suffer the way she suffered, and all she wanted to do was kill.”

Investigators released photos of the girls’ arrests and say the teens had a bag with them containing bloody clothing and the knives believed to be used in the killings. The teens are being held in separate detention centers under suicide watch.

Both girls will be tried as adults.

https://www.wtoc.com/story/2141400/investigators-release-photos-in-teen-double-murder-case/

Montoya Harris Teen Killer Murders Classmate

Montoya Harris

Montoya Harris was fourteen years old when she stabbed a thirteen year old girl to death. According to court documents Montoya Harris confronted the victim about stealing her boyfriend and soon after a fight broke out where the victim was stabbed ten times dying from her injuries. This teen killer would plead no contest to murder and was initially sentenced to the juvenile program however her behavior would see her sent to the adult system where she would be sentenced to life in prison.

Montoya Harris 2023 Information

Montoya Harris 2022

Gender: Female

Race: Black

Height: 5 ft 4 in

Weight: 112 lbs

Hair Color: Brown

Eye Color: Brown


Alias: Toya Harris


OK DOC#: 652168

Birth Date: 4/12/1993


Current Facility: MABEL BASSETT CORRECTIONAL CENTER, MCLOU

Reception Date: 2/1/2012

Montoya Harris Other News

Tulsa County teenage killer Montoya Harris will stay in the adult prison system, the state Court of Criminal Appeals ruled Thursday.

The state’s high court for criminal matters denied a request to let Harris return to the juvenile system to complete a treatment program.

Harris pleaded no contest in February 2009 to the first-degree murder of Sydney Dailey, 13, whom she stabbed 10 times on March 15, 2008. Harris was 14 and pregnant at the time of the killing.

Both girls attended Madison Middle School in Tulsa.

Harris said she stabbed Sydney with a knife after they talked about Sydney’s “allegedly stealing” Harris’ boyfriend, a police officer said.

Tulsa County District Judge William Kellough found Harris guilty in 2009 and imposed a life term for murder, with the understanding that as a youthful offender she would not serve anywhere near that amount of time if she complied with a treatment plan.

As a youthful offender, she could not have been kept in Office of Juvenile Affairs custody beyond her 20th birthday, which is April 12, 2013.

Kellough denied one request to bridge Harris into the adult system after multiple reports of misconduct while in OJA custody, but the judge granted a later request.

Harris entered Department of Corrections custody Feb. 1. She is housed at the Mabel Bassett Correctional Center in McLoud.

Her attorney, Robert Jackson, asked the appeals court during oral arguments Thursday to find that the district judge abused his discretion in sending Harris to the adult system.

He said she still has a year to complete the program as a juvenile.

But Harris “doesn’t seem to get it,” Court of Criminal Appeals Judge Gary Lumpkin said.

Jackson disagreed, saying, “She’s made progress.”

Tulsa County Assistant District Attorney Julie Doss said Harris was given “chance after chance” in the juvenile system before she was ordered to serve a life sentence as an adult.

Doss said Harris threatened another female inmate the same way she threatened Sydney and chalked up numerous rule violations.

Doss said that even if Harris were returned to the juvenile system, it wouldn’t make a difference because she does not have the capacity for empathy for her victim.

Harris showed a chronic pattern of defying authority while in the juvenile system, Doss said, creating disruptions that interfered with others’ ability to have their treatment programs work for them.

“The only way to treat her now is to bridge her and keep her away from others,” she said.

Harris filed a lawsuit in November in federal court in Oklahoma City against the Central Oklahoma Juvenile Detention Center, employee Kizell Brown and the state Office of Juvenile Affairs, alleging that Brown had raped her while he was employed at the Tecumseh facility as a youth guidance specialist.

Brown has been charged with two counts of second-degree rape in Pottawatomie County in connection with assaults that are alleged to have taken place in May 2010, court records indicate.

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Montoya Harris is currently incarcerated at he Mabel Bassett Correctional Center

Montoya Harris Release Date

Montoya Harris is serving a life sentence

Meagan Grunwald Teen Killer Murders Police Officer

Meagan Grunwald

Meagan Grunwald was seventeen years old when she took part in a crime spree that would leave one police officer dead and another injured. According to court documents Meagan Grunwald was driving a car with her boyfriend Angel Garcia-Juaregui. Her boyfriend would start shooting at a police car who was trying to pull them over. One of the police officers would be struck in the head and the other officer was fatally injured. Angel Garcia-Juaregui would later die in a shootout with police.

This teen killer tried to say she did not realize that the officers were shot however this was proven to be false in court. Meagan Grunwald would be sentenced to thirty years to life in prison

Meagan Grunwald 2023 Information

Meagan Grunwald
  • Offender Number: 223233
  • Offender Name: MEAGAN DAKOTA GRUNWALD
  • DOB: Mon, 5 Aug 1996
  • Height: 5 Feet 6 Inches
  • Weight: 160
  • Sex: F
  • Location: UTAH STATE PRISON
  • Housing Facility: TIMPANOGOS
  • Parole Date: N/A
  • Aliases:
    • MEAGAN DAKOTA GRUNWALD

Meagan Grunwald Other News

A young woman convicted in a 50-mile crime spree that left one Utah sheriff’s deputy dead and another wounded was sentenced Wednesday to 30 years to life in prison with the possibility of parole.

State Judge Darold McDade handed down 18-year-old Meagan Grunwald’s term following emotional testimony about the January 2014 chase from the injured lawman.

Utah County Sheriff’s Deputy Greg Sherwood told the judge that after he was shot in the head and fighting for his life in his police cruiser, Grunwald drove past him without stopping to help.

“She could have ran towards me, and I would have protected her with all my energy,” he said. “Instead, she made the choice to run.”

Grunwald cried during the hearing as she read quickly from a brief written statement.

“It’s hard for me to ask for forgiveness when I have a hard time forgiving myself,” she said.

Meagan Grunwald will get credit for the year and half she already has served behind bars in jail. At the earliest, she could be released in 2044, when she’s 47 years old.

Prosecutors said Meagan Grunwald was a willing accomplice ready to do anything to stay with her 27-year-old boyfriend, including driving a speeding getaway car in the three-county chase.

During her trial, the teenager tearfully told a jury she was afraid to stop driving when the man she loved turned the gun on her and threatened to kill her family.

The boyfriend, Jose Angel Garcia-Jauregui, was killed in a shootout with police.

Meagan Grunwald was convicted in May of 11 counts, including aggravated murder, attempted murder, aggravated robbery and use of a controlled substance. She was found not guilty on one count of attempted aggravated murder.

The maximum penalty Meagan Grunwald could have faced was life in prison without parole. She was ineligible for the death penalty because she was 17 when it happened.

She was charged and convicted under Utah laws that allow an accomplice to be considered equally responsible for a crime.

Utah County Sheriff’s Sgt. Cory Wride, 44, was killed during the crime spree.

Wride’s widow, Nannette, said his family wanted Grunwald to have a chance at parole because she’s young and might make something of herself.

“I’m going to be rooting for her to be someone better,” Nannette Wride told reporters.

Before Grunwald was sentenced, Wride addressed the crying teenager in court.

“You are forgiven, and I hope, sweet girl, that one day you can forgive yourself,” Wride said as Meagan Grunwald put her head down and sobbed.

The shootout and chase came after Cory Wride happened upon the couple’s pickup on the side of a road. Garcia-Jauregui had a warrant out for his arrest and gave the deputy a fake name. When Wride grew suspicious, Garcia-Jauregui stuck a gun out the truck’s rear window and shot the deputy as he sat in his police cruiser.

Grunwald’s lawyer said she was a scared girl who trusted an older, manipulative man. Attorney Dean Zabriskie said as the couple fled from police through three central Utah counties, Grunwald was driving with a gun to her head.

Zabriskie said Wednesday that Meagan Grunwald survived her time in the truck because Wride stopped to help her, and she considers him her savior.

“Now she wishes she would have done something,” he said. “She wishes she would have done something, even at the risk of her life.”

Zabriskie said Grunwald plans to appeal her conviction.

Meagan Grunwald Videos

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Meagan Grunwald Now

Meagan Grunwald is currently incarcerated at the Utah State Prison

Meagan Grunwald Release Date

Meagan Grunwald is currently going through a resentencing process in which she must serve 30 years before she is eligible for release which would be 2044.

Meagan Grunwald Appeal

The Utah Supreme Court has overturned the murder conviction of Meagan Grunwald.

Grunwald was the getaway driver for her boyfriend, who shot and killed Utah County Sheriff Sgt. Cory Wride in 2014. Grunwald was originally found equally liable for Wride’s death.

Utah’s High Court ruled that there was a reasonable probability a jury would not have convicted the now 23-year-old if it weren’t for errors in jury instructions during her trial.

Wride’s widow, Nannette Wride, was extremely emotional when she heard the news of the reversal on Friday.

“I stand in utter shock and numbness, because I don’t understand,” she said.  “I am ashamed of the state we live in. Cory pulled up behind someone with their hazards on that snowy day. He was there to help them, and he was shot to death. To have the conviction overturned is like losing six years of healing. It’s incredibly painful.”

Meagan Grunwald remained in prison, where she has been since July 2015, on a remaining conviction of aggravated robbery tied to the car chase, which also wounded Utah County Sheriff’s deputy Greg Sherwood.

The first-degree felony charge carries a sentence of at least five years and up to life.

Brent Jex, president of the Utah Fraternal Order of Police, spoke for the nearly 4,000 members of the police union, advocating for a retrial and final justice for Sgt. Wride.

“The facts are there. The elements are there. The need for justice is there,” Jex said. “The decision to retry could be made today, even within the hour by Utah County Attorney David Leavitt.”

Members of the order were waiting to see what action the Utah County prosecutor will take, if any.

“This affects our community, the ways we function, and the safety we feel here,” said Shante Johnson, communications director for the Utah Fraternal Order of Police. “Meagan Grunwald 100% was not a victim. She participated wholly in what happened that tragic day.”

Grunwald’s attorneys took the argument to the Utah Court of Appeals in 2018, where they failed to overturn the conviction. However, the Utah Supreme Court ruled in favor of the faulty jury instruction, reversing the capital murder conviction.

“For that technicality to be a single word is rare,” Jex said. “Whether the law enforcement community can feel confidence that the Utah County prosecutor will do the right thing… we are about to find out, and the effect will be significant.”

The Utah Fraternal Order of Police released a statement on the overturned conviction on Friday:

“Our hearts are heavy with the news that the Wride family, their friends, the community, and every man and woman serving in law enforcement will be forced to re-live the trauma that Meagan Grunwald inflicted upon them with her callous and murderous actions.

“Today, the Utah Supreme Court ordered a retrial based on technicality – that the original judge issued slightly faulty instructions to the jury. We are all called upon to make difficult judgements, and will not turn our anger upon the justices. However, let there be no doubt – on that day, Ms. Grunwald actively participated in the murder of Sergeant Cory Wride, and she should pay for her actions by spending the rest of her life in prison.

“We are confident that the horror of that day will once again be taken up by the brave, extraordinarily dedicated prosecutors of the Utah County Attorney’s Office under the leadership of Utah County Attorney David Leavitt. On behalf of our nearly 4,000 members, we stand by to support those efforts and see final justice for Sergeant Wride – with the life imprisonment of his murderer. Let the people of Utah County be called once again to hear the horrific details of Ms. Grunwald’s actions, and let them once again order her removed from society for the rest of her days. There are no jury instructions that will save her.

“We leave you with Ms. Grunwald’s words to officers at the end of the chase she led them on that day, which included shooting a second officer in the face. As she discovered her lover laying in the road, she did not ask police for help, nor was she distressed that officers had been shot and killed. Instead, she saved her concern for her boyfriend: ‘You f—— a——-, you didn’t have to shoot him. You f—— shot him. Oh my god, you f—— shot him.’”

Meagan Grunwald Photos

Meagan Grunwald
Meagan Grunwald 1

Meaghan Grunwald Other News

After more than 11 hours of deliberation, the jury found Meagan Grunwald guilty of 11 of the 12 charges against her, including aggravated murder.

As the jurors sat to listen to the clerk read the verdicts, many looked noticeably upset, not just fatigued.

Grunwald, 18, was convicted of being an accomplice to murder in the shooting death of Sgt. Cory Wride of the Utah County Sheriff’s Office. Jose Angel Garcia-Juaregui, her ex-boyfriend, was shot and killed Jan. 30, 2014 in Juab County after an hours-long crime spree that left Wride dead, Deputy Greg Sherwood seriously injured and countless others traumatized.

“No one wins in these kinds of situations,” said Blake Wride, father of Cory Wride. “Do we feel happy? No. Did it bring Cory back? No. But like I said earlier today, when people make choices, there’s consequences.”

Sherwood was in court every day of the trial, and after hearing the verdict, he said, “It shows that if you make bad choices and you hang out with the wrong people, there are going to be consequences for it.

“It’s a sad situation, it’s not the great end for anybody, but my family and I and the Wrides are grateful to have this in the past and move on.”

After the verdict was read, Grunwald’s family broke down into hysterics and tears. Her mother shouted, “I love you, baby” as the teen was led out of the courtroom. As the verdict was read on her dozen charges, she cursed the judge, jury and even the Wride family, and her family had to help her out of the courtroom.

Beyond the charge of aggravated murder for the death of Wride, Grunwald was found guilty of aggravated attempted murder and the discharge of a firearm in the shooting of Sherwood.

She was found not guilty of attempted aggravated murder of trooper Jeff Blankenagel.

She also was found guilty on two charges of discharging a firearm, two charges of criminal mischief, a charge of accident involving property damage, failure to stop, aggravated robbery and a charge of possession of methamphetamine.

Deliberations began Friday afternoon after prosecutors said Meagan Grunwald’s tearful testimony — that her boyfriend pointed a gun at her and threatened her family, forcing her to drive the car during the fatal crime spree — rang hollow.

The jury returned a verdict at about 12:30 a.m. Saturday. An appeal of the verdict is likely, according to Grunwald’s attorney, Dean Zabriskie.

“We’re very, very disappointed and of course, she’s devastated,” he said. Grunwald tried to maintain composure as the guilty verdicts were read, but by the time Judge Darold McDade was discussing a sentencing date with her attorneys, she was in tears. 

“Do we agree with it? Of course not.” Zabriskie said. “Do we accept it? Yes, we do.”

Nanette Wride, Cory Wride’s widow, was not in the courtroom to hear the verdict. She is in Washington D.C. already for a special ceremony in which her late husband’s name will be added to the Fallen Officers Memorial.

Sentencing will be on July 8. Grunwald faces a life prison term.

https://www.heraldextra.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/meagan-grunwald-found-guilty-of-aggravated-murder-10-other-charges/article_5d268d97-0f2f-517f-ba91-61b888d20b2a.html