Tess Damm Teen Killer Murders Mother

tess damm

Tess Damm was sixteen years old when she murdered her mother. According to court documents Tess Damm and her boyfriend Bryan Grove planned the murder of the victim. Bryan Grove would fatally stab multiple times in her neck causing her death. This teen killer would ultimately plead guilty to second degree murder and sentenced to twenty three years in prison. Tess Damm was granted parole in 2018

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Tess Damm is up for parole for the first time since she was incarcerated as a 16-year-old for her role in the murder of her mother in Lafayette in 2007.

Tess Damm, now 26, has applied for discretionary parole after serving nearly 10 years of her 23-year prison sentence for directing her then-boyfriend to stab Linda Damm to death at the family’s home.

On Wednesday, Tess Damm will be interviewed by one member of Colorado’s parole board, and that member then will recommend either deferring Damm’s application for a specified time or releasing her to discretionary — as opposed to mandatory — parole.

“The person I am now at the age of 25 is drastically different,” Damm wrote to the parole board last April. “The past 10 years, thanks to the various treatment opportunities I was afforded, have opened my eyes to the person I used to be. I am able to see my thought process that led to my crime and I know that I will never find myself back at that place.”

Boulder County District Attorney Stan Garnett, who became chief prosecutor two years after the murder, said his office has not taken a position supporting or opposing Damm’s release.

“Prosecutors are not notified by the Department of Corrections when a defendant has an upcoming parole hearing, and the Tess Damm case is no different,” Garnett said Monday. “The DA’s office typically only considers writing a letter objecting to the possible parole of a defendant if requested by a victim or victim’s family, and we have not been asked to do so in this case.”

In her letter to the parole board, Tess Damm said that her first goals in community placement would be to find a job, manage her finances and get involved with a church.

“It is difficult to articulate the extent of my remorse for the choices I made that cost my mother her life, but the continual contact I have with my aunt, my mother’s sister, has above all taught me the beauty and healing that comes with forgiveness,” Tess Damm wrote. “I cannot go back and undo what was done, but I can have a successful life from here and bring honor to my mother through the choices and decisions I make every day for the rest of my life.”

According to an acceptance letter from Reintegration Ministries, a residential program in Denver formerly known as Inside/Out, Tess Damm would be responsible for monthly rent, participation in group and individual sessions, and weekly classes based on the Bible.

Because she was a teenager at the time of incarceration, Tess Damm would have access to help with basic life skills “that not every client requires” and assistance from one-on-one life coaching, mentorship and group counseling, according to the letter.

In February 2007, Bryan Grove stabbed Linda Damm 18 times in the neck at her Lafayette home. Grove, who was 17 at the time, was Tess Damm’s boyfriend. Police said Tess Damm plotted to kill her mother because of abuse and neglect.

The couple’s friends Jared Smith, then 16, and Jared Guy, then 18, accepted plea deals for their roles in covering up the homicide after it took place.

A year after the killing, Tess Damm pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and was sentenced to 23 years in prison, with the first five years to be served at a juvenile facility.

She is currently housed at the Denver Women’s Correctional Facility.

Grove was charged with first-degree murder in the killing. He also pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in 2008 and was sentenced to 40 years in prison.

He is currently at the Arkansas Valley Correctional Facility, and will become eligible for parole in 2033, when he will be 44.

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Tess Damm Release

Tess Damm was released on parole after serving more than a decade in prison for directing her then-boyfriend to murder her mother in Lafayette in 2007.

Damm, 28, first applied for parole in 2018 after serving nearly 10 years of her 23-year prison sentence.

Colorado Department of Corrections spokeswoman Annie Skinner said Damm was released on parole in April 2019.

In a letter to the parole board in 2018, Damm noted she was only a teen at the time of the murder.

“The person I am now at the age of 25 is drastically different,” Damm wrote to the parole board in 2018. “The past 10 years, thanks to the various treatment opportunities I was afforded, have opened my eyes to the person I used to be. I am able to see my thought process that led to my crime and I know that I will never find myself back at that place.”

In February 2007, Bryan Grove stabbed Linda Damm 18 times in the neck at her Lafayette home. Grove, who was 17 at the time, was Tess Damm’s boyfriend. Police said Tess Damm plotted to kill her mother because of abuse and neglect.

A year after the killing, Tess Damm pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and was sentenced to 23 years in prison, with the first five years served at a juvenile facility.

Grove was charged with first-degree murder in the killing. He also pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in 2008 and was sentenced to 40 years in prison.

He is currently at the Arkansas Valley Correctional Facility in Ordway, and will become eligible for parole in 2033, when he will be 44.

The couple’s friends Jared Smith, then 16, and Jared Guy, then 18, accepted plea deals for their roles in covering up the homicide after it took place

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Tess Damm Release

Tess Damm was released in 2018

Keaira Brown Teen Killer Murders Teenager

Keaira Brown

Keaira Brown was just thirteen years old when she murdered a teenager during a carjacking. According to court documents Keaira attempted to steal a vehicle at gunpoint and when the young driver did not respond fast enough he was shot and killed. Due to her young age at the time of the murder there was much debate whether or not Keaira should be tried as an adult. However due to the brutal nature of the crime it was ultimately decided to charge the thirteen year old as an adult. This teen killer would be sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for twenty years

Keaira Brown 2023 Information

Keaira Brown

Current Facility – Topeka Correctional Facility 

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Keaira Brown was only 13 years old when she killed Scott Sappington Jr. in an attempted carjacking. She’s now 16 and going to prison for life without the possibility of parole for 20 years.

The Kansas City Star reported that Brown told the judge at her sentencing on Thursday: “I’m a kid, too.”

She added: “Now I feel like the state is taking (my life), and nobody cares but my family.”

Yep, pretty much. I certainly don’t care about you being locked up for life after you fired a bullet into Sappington’s head at close range, killing him.

https://www.cjonline.com/article/20110120/NEWS/301209749

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Keaira Brown is currently incarcerated at the Topeka Correctional Facility

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Keaira Brown is serving a life sentence however is eligible for parole in

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A girl who shot a teen to death at age 13 — the youngest killer to be prosecuted as an adult in Kansas — will be among the youngest inmates serving life.A Wyandotte County judge on Thursday sentenced Keaira Brown, also known as Keaire Brown, now 16, to life with no parole possible for 20 years.

Defense lawyers said they will appeal and raise the issue of whether Kansas law allowing adult prosecution and life sentences for children that young is unconstitutional.

Prosecutors and the family of the victim, 16-year-old victim Scott Sappington Jr., say Brown committed a heinous crime and deserves the time.

A jury convicted her last year of shooting Sappington in the head in Kansas City, Kan., on July 23, 2008, during a botched carjacking. Besides felony first-degree murder, they also convicted her of attempted aggravated robbery.

Judge Ernest Johnson imposed a 32-month sentence for the robbery charge but made it concurrent to the life sentence.

Sappington, an athlete who worked two jobs, had just dropped off his younger siblings with his grandmother when he was shot at close range.

At the hearing Thursday, an aunt read the judge a statement from Felicia Johnson, Scott’s mother.

Many lives changed for the worse when Scott died days before he turned 17, his mother wrote.

“Scott was known for keeping his classmates, family and friends laughing when they were down,” she wrote. “Scott was such a joy.”

His father, Scott Sappington Sr., told Brown in court: “You chose this path of destruction. You took a great man from us.”

They asked for the maximum sentence.

Cheryl Turner, Brown’s mother, said the justice system has shown blind hostility and revenge toward her daughter.

The girl who loved animals, roller skating and movies is now locked up with hard women who talk about drugs and tell grim war stories, her mother said.

Brown told the judge, “I’m a kid, too,” and noted that a Wyandotte County judge in 2009 chose not to prosecute another 13-year-old for murder as an adult.

“Now I feel like the state is taking (my life) and nobody cares but my family,” she said.

Vernon Lewis, her defense lawyer, argued for mercy.

“We can never stop trying to nurture and raise our young,” he said. Society won’t let children do many things because they are too immature, he said, yet in Kansas children as young as 10 can be prosecuted as adults.

Sheryl Lidtke, assistant prosecutor, noted that the judge had to impose the life sentence under the law and she asked that the other sentence be concurrent.

“Let’s not forget our victim was also a teenager with no criminal record,” she said. “He was dropping off his siblings and going to work and did nothing more that try to protect his car.”

Johnson told lawyers it would be up to an appeals court to assess the ruling of another judge that Brown be prosecuted as an adult.

Lidtke said the appeal ruling could clarify issues of Kansas law related to the prosecution of young criminals.

Kassi Brandeberry Teen Killer Sets Fatal Fire

Kassi Brandeberry

Kassi Brandeberry was seventeen years old when she set a house on fire in Ohio killing a fourteen year old teenager and severely injuring another teen, a firefighter was also injured fighting the deadly fire. According to this teen killer lawyers she did not realize that anyone was home when she set the fatal fire however this teen arsonist would be convicted of murder and attempted murder along with a host of other charges. Kassi Brandeberry must serve at least fifteen years in prison before she is eligible for parole.

Kassi Brandeberry 2023 Information

Kassi Brandeberry 2022

Number W095577

DOB 12/11/1997

Gender Female

Race White

Admission Date 06/09/2016

Institution Dayton Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

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The Toledo teen who admitted to starting a fire that killed a 14-year-old and injured another teen could spend the rest of her life in prison.

Kassi Brandeberry, was sentenced to 21-years to life in prison on Tuesday in Lucas County Common Pleas Court. She pleaded guilty in April to one count of murder and two counts of aggravated arson for the May 2, 2015 fire that killed Joseph Fazenbaker and seriously injured Michael Rheinbolt.

Fazenbaker, 14, was killed in the fire at 235 Willard in Toledo.

Kassi Brandeberry, who was a 17-year-old at the time of the fire, was sentenced on one count of murder, two counts of aggravated arson, and one count of burglary. Her sentences total 21 years to life in prison. Judge Duhart told the court that the sentences will be served consecutively out of a necessity to protect the public from the danger posed by Brandeberry.

Rheinbolt was severely injured in the fire, causing him to undergo weeks of treatment for kidney failure and other injuries. A Toledo fireman was also injured as a result of the intentionally-set fire. “I want to acknowledge the harm you’ve caused to the fireman that was involved in this act,” Judge Myron Duhart said at Tuesday’s sentencing. “Part of his job is to fight fires and protect the community. (He) didn’t deserve that either. You’ve put just so many people in harms way.”

The teen’s defense attorney addressed the court prior to sentencing, saying Kassi Brandeberry’s rough troubled youth contributed to her poor judgement on the night of the fire. “You could probably teach a PhD course in psychology based on her first 17 years of life,” Brandeberry’s attorney said of her childhood. “She didn’t realize, when she decided to set fire to the house, that there were people inside the house. Her intention was not to take someone’s life.”

“I understand that you have gone through and did go through some dysfunction in your life, but who hasn’t,” Judge Duhart said. “That does not justify those type of actions, Ms. Brandeberry. Where do you get that from?”

“I don’t know,” Kassi Brandeberry replied, through tears.

“Well, you need to know. You need to think about it,” said Judge Duhart. “Everyday that you spend in prison, you need to think about that.”

Judge Duhart also ordered Brandeberry to register as an arson offender upon her release from prison. She must also pay more than $13,000 in restitution to the family’s of her victims, and including $1,089 to the Toledo Fire and Rescue Department for costs of their investigation into the fatal fire.

Rheinbolt said outside the courtroom that he believes the sentence handed down was fair, but did not feel that Brandeberry’s comments in court were genuine. “I feel like, even after Kindergarten, somebody knows the difference between right and wrong.”

Kassi Brandeberry Other News

A Toledo teen has been sentenced for the murder of 14-year-old Joseph Fazenbaker.Kassi Brandeberry was sentenced to 21 years to life Tuesday.

Last month, Brandeberry admitted to setting the fire that killed Joseph and severely burned his step-brother, 13-year-old Michael Rheinbolt. Investigators say she was trying to get back at her boyfriend

“She doesn’t deserve a second chance, Joseph doesn’t get a second chance,” said Agnes Avalos, a family member of the victim.

Family members were allowed to address the teen while in court Tuesday.

“You cannot begin to understand yet at your level of maturity the amount of harm that you have caused,” said Judge Myron Duhart.

Kassi did acknowledge her mistake and apologized to the victim’s families.

“I’m not proud of it, I am ashamed. There is no excuses for this behavior,” said Brandeberry.

Despite her tearful apology, the Honorable Myron Duhart handed her a strict sentence.

“As to count two, you will serve 15 years to life,” said Duhart.

It’s a punishment that will not bring back Joseph, but can help make a family whole again.

“We just want to put this behind us and move on, just put it behind us and go. It’s been so, so painful. So, I hope everyone can pick up and move on from here,” said Ruth Reinbolt, Michael’s mother.

Back in June of 2015, it was decided that Brandeberry would be tried as an adult. She faced life without parole, but took a plea deal in April.

Before Tuesday’s sentencing, both Rheinbolt and Brandeberry spoke. Rheinbolt talked about all he’s lost, including his step-brother. Brandeberry gave her apologies to the family.

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A 17-year-old girl has been indicted as an adult on an aggravated murder charge in a Toledo house fire that killed a 14-year-old boy and seriously injured his 13-year-old stepbrother.

Kassi Brandeberry was indicted on eight counts Tuesday. The most serious charge against her carries a maximum penalty of life in prison without parole.

Prosecutors say there is DNA evidence and surveillance footage linking her to the fire in early May.

A police department spokesman has said that investigators believe the girl had a personal problem with one of the victim’s family members.

Court documents do not list an attorney for Brandeberry. Her defense attorney in juvenile court where she originally appeared denied the charges against her.

https://www.beaconjournal.com/article/20150701/NEWS/307019066

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Kassi Brandeberry is currently incarcerated at the Ohio Reformatory For Women

Kassi Brandeberry Release Date

Kassi Brandeberry is serving a life sentence however is eligible for parole in 2038

Hayley Bowden Teen Killer Murders Elderly Woman

Hayley Bowden

Hayley Bowden was sixteen when she murdered an elderly woman. According to court documents Hayley and her boyfriend were staying in a home without permission, when the victim found them instead of leaving the couple would stab the man repeatedly causing his death and attempted to burn the house down. Hayley and her boyfriend would steal his truck which was recovered in a pond. The two would eventually be arrested and found guilty on the robbery and murder charges. Due to her age the teen killer was sentenced to forty years in prison

Hayley Bowden 2023 Information

hayley bowden 2021 photos
ID Photo
DC Number:P57250
Name:BOWDEN, HAYLEY N
Race:WHITE
Sex:FEMALE
Birth Date:04/24/1996
Initial Receipt Date:11/02/2016
Current Facility:LOWELL ANNEX
Current Custody:CLOSE
Current Release Date:06/28/2051

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A teenager who stabbed an elderly man in Walton County a couple of years ago finally plead before the court Tuesday.

According to State Attorney Bill Eddins, Hayley accepted an open plea for First Degree Premeditated Murder and/or Felony Murder along with other charges on October 6th in lieu of taking her case to trial.

She could face life in prison when sentenced on January 19, 2016.

Bowden stabbed 77-year-old Arthur Anderson after he discovered that she and her boyfriend Crispin Ramirez were living in a DeFuniak Springs home for which he was the caretaker.

According to the state attorney’s office, Bowden then collected several items from the residence and loaded them into one of Anderson’s vehicles while Ramirez set fire to the house and his other automobiles.

Officials say the two were later apprehended by the Walton County Sheriff’s Office but not before Ramirez threatened deputies and exploded homemade fire bombs to resist arrest. We are told Bowden fled into the woods.

The state attorney’s office says Bowden confessed to all the crimes she was charged with after being arrested.

Ramirez made a deal with the state back in September 2014, to avoid the death penalty. He plead guilty to First Degree Murder and will spend the rest of his life behind bars.

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Hayley Bowden, who at the age of 16 participated in the 2013 killing of elderly Mossy Head resident Arthur Anderson, was sentenced Tuesday to 40 years in prison.

Circuit Court Judge Kelvin Wells ordered Bowden to serve 40 years on one count of felony murder, 40 years on a count of burglary with assault and five years for grand theft.

The sentences will be served concurrently, however, and Bowden, by virtue of her age, will be eligible in 25 years for a review of her sentence, said Assistant State Attorney Josh Mitchell, who represented the state at Tuesday’s sentencing hearing.

Bowden’s boyfriend at the time of the crime, then 22-year-old Crispin Ramirez, was sentenced to life in prison in September of 2014 for his role in the Anderson killing.

“The citizens of Walton County are going to be safer for the next 40 years,” Mitchell said after Tuesday’s hearing. “I think Mr. Ramirez and Ms. Bowden posed a great risk to the citizens of Walton County, as evidenced by the crime spree they went on in 2013.”

Anderson was a caretaker for a home on West Juniper Avenue in Mossy Head on Jan. 24, 2013, when he confronted Bowden and Ramirez and was stabbed to death, according to news reports.

Bowden had run away from home and she and Ramirez had taken up residence in the home Anderson was looking after.

Both Bowden and Ramirez “participated and contributed to the death of Mr. Anderson” by repeatedly stabbing him, Mitchell told the court last year when Bowden agreed to plead guilty.

Walton County deputies were unaware Bowden and Ramirez had killed Anderson when they originally encountered the two Jan. 24. They were looking for a runaway, but arrested the pair when Ramirez threatened officers with a knife, reports said.

Suspicions rose when Anderson’s truck was found in a pond near where the stabbing took place.

Bowden and Ramirez had stolen Anderson’s vehicle and also attempted to burn down the home where they’d left his body.

One reason for the delays in sentencing Bowden was that her attorneys had filed motions calling the defendant’s competency into question.

Judge Wells ultimately ruled Bowden competent to stand trial, according to State Attorney Bill Eddins.

“We’ve been back and forth over the last year trying to get this resolved,” Mitchell said

https://www.nwfdailynews.com/news/20160927/teen-killer-sentenced-to-40-years-in-prison

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teenage runaway and her boyfriend are accused of murdering a 77-year-old Walton County man Thursday night.

The suspects and the victim are all from Walton County’s Mossy Head community.

Walton County Sheriff Michael Adkinson announced the charges early Friday afternoon, saying that the two had already been tracked down by the time the murder came to light. After 16-year-old Haley Nicole Bowden had been reported as a runaway, a tip led deputies and tracking dogs to a home in the Mossy Head Community. They found her there with 22-year-old Chrispen Ramirez on Thursday at a dwelling on Eagles Way. When officers approached, Bowden and Ramirez ran away, officials said. K-9 units were put on their trail and tracked the two down.

Ramirez was armed with knives at the scene and threatened the lives of deputies, authorities reported in a press release about the chain of events leading to the arrests of Bowden and Ramirez and the charges against them. Deputies were able to subdue Ramirez and took him to jail, along with Bowden, on various charges related to that encounter. At that point, Ramirez was charged with interference with child custody and assault on a law enforcement officer. Bowden was charged at that point with resisting an officer without violence.

But officials would soon level more serious charges against them.

Around the same time they were being processed into the jail, other events were unfolding elsewhere. Deputies had been sent to Beaver Dam Road to investigate a trespass complaint. The caller told authorities that someone had come onto private property and abandoned a vehicle there.

The car was found partially submerged in water, with the tag missing.

Officers identified the owner of the vehicle as 77-year-old Arthur Gerald Anderson and went looking for him.

During the course of their search, his family members told investigators that they hadn’t seen him in a few days. Deputies found Anderson’s body a short time later at a location not far from where the vehicle had been found.

“Further investigation revealed Bowden and Rameriz murdered Anderson after he confronted them for entering a residence on West Juniper Avenue he was a caretaker of,” the press release stated. “The couple then attempted to burn the residence, stole Anderson’s vehicle, and dumped it later.”

In connection to the Anderson death, Ramirez and Bowden have each been charged with arson and an open count of murder.

The investigation is ongoing.

https://dothaneagle.com/jcfloridan/news/crime_courts/murder-in-walton-county-teen-runaway-boyfriend-accused/article_ae866fb6-cfc7-527d-b1bb-01d6032d782f.html

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Hayley Bowden is currently incarcerated at the Lowell Annex in Florida

Hayley Bowden Release Date

Hayley Bowden is not eligible for release until 2051

Amy Lee Black Teen Killer Murders Man During Robbery

Amy Lee Black Teen Killer

Amy Lee Black was just sixteen when she and her boyfriend robbed and murdered a man in Michigan.  According to court documents Amy Lee Black and her boyfriend Jeff Abrahamson were drinking with the victim at their apartment when an argument broke out. Amy Lee Black would strike the victim over the head with a whiskey bottle. The teen killers would lead the victim out of their home and into a vehicle. They brought the victim to a secluded area where Jeff then stabbed the man to death.

Three days later the teenage couple would be arrested while they slept. Both Amy Lee Black and Jeff Abrahamson would be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Amy Lee Black 2023 Information

Amy Lee Black – Current Facility – Women’s Huron Valley Correctional Facility (WHV)

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Barb VanBogelen was thrilled to hear of Tuesday’s Michigan Supreme Court decision keeping in prison inmates serving no-parole life sentences in connection with murders committed at 17 and younger. Nearly 25 years ago, one of those inmates – Amy Lee Black, then 16 – participated in the robbery and murder of VanBogelen’s husband, 34-year-old David John VanBogelen. “I’m so excited,” Barb VanBogelen said late Tuesday afternoon, July 8, shortly after the high-court decision was announced. “This is what we wanted all along.” In a 4-3 decision, the high court ruled that juveniles sentenced before June 2012 to life without parole for murder won’t get new hearings that could have led some to their release.

One of those affected is Black, now a 40-year-old inmate at Huron Valley Complex Women’s Correctional Facility in Ypsilanti. She’s serving a sentence of life without chance of parole for first-degree premeditated murder. A jury convicted Black of first-degree murder as an aider and abettor in the Dec. 7, 1990, stabbing death of David VanBogelen of Sullivan Township, whom she and her boyfriend had met in a restaurant and decided to rob. She was sentenced in 1991 to life in prison without chance of parole, as Michigan law required. That made her Muskegon County’s only female “juvie lifer” and one of only 10 in Michigan. In addition to aiding 19-year-old Jeff Abrahamson, the confessed stabber, Black confessed to personally bashing VanBogelen in the head repeatedly with a square-sided whiskey bottle earlier in the evening, inflicting wounds a medical examiner said could also have proven fatal.

When he died, VanBogelen left his wife, their 7-year-old daughter, Amanda, and 12-year-old son, David. The U.S. Supreme Court in June 2012 ruled that laws, like Michigan’s, that mandated life-without-parole sentences for juvenile defendants are unconstitutional, although such sentences can still be imposed as long as judges are allowed to decide the issue. But the nation’s high court didn’t state whether the decision was retroactive to convicts who had already been sentenced under such laws. Black filed a motion for relief from her no-parole sentence based on the U.S. Supreme Court ruling. Muskegon County 14th Circuit Judge Timothy G. Hicks in March 2013 declined to rule on her motion until the Michigan high court decided the issue of retroactivity. On Tuesday, the court did so, declaring the ruling was not retroactive.

That appears to end Black’s hopes of being resentenced. That’s fine with Barb VanBogelen. “Just because you’re 16 doesn’t give you the right to commit a murder and then say, ‘Whoops, I’m too young,’” she said. “Juveniles need to realize if you’re going to do a crime, you need to pay the time. “She (Black) was not mentally incompetent. Nobody forced her, and to cry afterward – tough luck. We’ve cried many, many, many a tear over all this,” VanBogelen said. She believes the state supreme court made the right decision. “I’m glad they realized that you can’t go backwards,” she said. “You can make a law that goes forward, but you can’t go back and change the law backwards to accommodate a few people.

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amy lee black
amy lee black

Amy Lee Black More News

In the wee hours of Dec. 7, 1990, teenagers Amy Lee Black and Jeff Abrahamson met a visibly drunk, cash-flashing stranger in a Muskegon Heights restaurant.

It was a fateful meeting for all three.

By dawn of that Pearl Harbor Day, 34-year-old Dave VanBogelen, of Sullivan Township, lay dead on a remote rural two-track — his head bludgeoned, his body pierced by multiple stab wounds.

By the next Fourth of July, both teens had been sentenced to prison until the day they die.

Black was 16 years and six months old at the time of the crime, a relative newcomer to Muskegon after leaving her mother’s Kalamazoo home.

Today she’s 37, an unhappy resident of the Women’s Huron Valley Correctional Facility near Ypsilanti.

She is one of only 10 female “juvenile lifers” in Michigan.

Black was not the one who stabbed VanBogelen to death. Her 19-year-old boyfriend confessed to that. But she did play a role in the events of that night.

Amy Lee Black has given two conflicting accounts of how deep that role was, starting with a detailed early confession that she recanted in testimony at her May 1991 trial. The jurors and sentencing judge believed her confession, not her second version, which she maintains to this day.

At a minimum: She does admit striking the victim’s head with a heavy whiskey bottle in the couple’s Muskegon Heights apartment, blows that the Muskegon County medical examiner testified could also have led to his death. She accompanied Abrahamson as he helped the disoriented, bleeding victim down stairs and into VanBogelen’s pickup truck. She rode along as Abrahamson drove to the secluded spot near Brooks and Ellis roads, where he repeatedly stabbed VanBogelen

Afterward, Black helped clean up the couple’s blood-spattered apartment. After discarding a gory sofa and other items, the two fled in the victim’s truck to her uncle’s home in Barry County, where police caught up to them three days later while they slept.

Amy Lee Black has always said she didn’t expect Abrahamson to kill VanBogelen.

Today, as in her trial, she blames the events of the night on Abrahamson and says she went along because she was afraid of him. She describes herself as a passive, unwilling participant, her chief fault being a failure to break away and let someone know what was happening. She attributes that to her youth, her dependence on her boyfriend and her failure to understand that she had “options.”

My role basically was that, as Jeff’s girlfriend, I was there with him,” she said in an Oct. 4 interview in Huron Valley’s visiting room. “And the crimes that he committed, I should have told somebody.”

That account contradicts the half-hour taped statement she gave police at her own request shortly after the two were arrested and brought to Muskegon. A transcript is in her court file.

In it, although she said Abrahamson surprised her by ultimately stabbing the victim — she supposedly thought they were just going to drop him off and steal his truck — she said that she plotted with her boyfriend in the restaurant to lure the drunken stranger to their nearby apartment to rob him; repeatedly bashed VanBogelen’s head with a square-bottomed bottle when he wouldn’t pass out from drinking; took cash from his jacket pocket; and “held his head down” in the truck as they drove into the country.

They got about $1,500 cash from VanBogelen, some of which she spent on new clothes, she told police.

In the confession, she attributed her actions to “money,” adding, “I always wanted to know if you could just kill somebody and, and, and the cops not know that it was you. I did. I always wondered that. I never, never thought I’d do it — do nothing like that, though. And, especially, I didn’t kill him, but I helped out my fair share.”

Testifying at her trial, though, she blamed Abrahamson for everything. She admitted hitting the victim with a bottle but said her boyfriend made her do it, after he first broke a bottle over VanBogelen’s head.

Jurors, after hearing both versions, took less than two hours to find her guilty of premeditated murder and armed robbery, as an aider and abettor.

Amy Lee Black maintains she falsely confessed because Abrahamson had repeatedly urged her to do so in the event that they were caught. His idea, she says, was to exaggerate her role and minimize his because she was a juvenile.

“He had explained to me that, because I was young, I wouldn’t (be charged as an adult), and they couldn’t hold me responsible,” she said in the Chronicle interview.

“When you’re young you believe things, stars and stripes and balloons and birds and puppy dogs. Now I think I can’t believe I was that stupid to believe those things.

Under Michigan law as it stood at the time, Amy Lee Black was tried as an adult, but it was then up to the trial judge to decide whether to sentence her as an adult or juvenile.

If the decision was adult, the sentence had to be life without chance of parole; if juvenile, she’d have to be freed when she turned 21 — less than four years after her July 3, 1991, sentencing. The judge had no middle course.

Muskegon County 14th Circuit Judge Ronald H. Pannucci made his decision after an hours-long sentence hearing. He heard testimony from psychologists, probation officers who had conducted a pre-sentence investigation, social-service workers and others.

A Spring Lake psychologist who tested, interviewed and evaluated Black testified that he believed her to have a manipulative, “sociopathic personality,” without empathy for others, and “the mental maturity of an adult.” He said Amy Lee Black had a poor prognosis for rehabilitation and needed decades in a highly structured environment.

State probation agents and Department of Social Service workers also recommended an adult sentence.

On the other side, two Community Mental Health therapists who had repeatedly counseled Amy Lee Black in jail called her a troubled teen who was remorseful and capable of reform, criticizing the “sociopath” label as inappropriate for one so young. The Muskegon County Jail chaplain also said Black was remorseful. All advocated a juvenile sentence.

At the end of the hearing Pannucci made his decision, based on testimony at the trial and the sentence hearing: an adult sentence was required.

And that meant life without parole.

https://www.mlive.com/news/muskegon/2011/11/amy_lee_black_troubled_teen_gi.html

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Amy Lee Black is currently incarcerated at the Women’s Huron Valley Correctional Facility (WHV)

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Amy Lee Black is serving life without parole