Pieper Lewis Teen Killer Murders Alleged Rapist

Pieper Lewis

Pieper Lewis was a fifteen year old teen from Iowa who would fatally stab a man to death who she said repeatedly raped her. According to court documents Pieper Lewis alleged that the victim, 37 year old Zachary Brooks, repeatedly raped her a week before the murder. The teen killer would ultimately stab Zachary Brooks over thirty times causing his death. Pieper Lewis who initially charged with murder would plead guilty to involuntary manslaughter. Pieper Lewis would be sentenced to probation and issued a $150,000 fine

Pieper Lewis More News

A Des Moines teen who pleaded guilty to killing her alleged rapist in June 2020 will be sentenced Wednesday in a Polk County Courtroom.

Pieper Lewis, 17, was charged with killing Zachary Brooks in the early hours of June 1, 2020, when she was 15 years old. Brooks, 37, of Des Moines allegedly raped her multiple times in the weeks before Lewis killed him following another alleged assault, according to court records.

Lewis was charged with first-degree murder after her arrest on June 2, 2020.

She killed Brooks by grabbing a knife from a bedside table and stabbing him 30 times, but wrote in a plea agreement that she did not plan his murder and was overcome with “rage” after Brooks raped her yet again.

She will be sentenced at 9 a.m. Wednesday in a courtroom at the Polk County Criminal Courthouse, 110 6th Ave. 

The Des Moines Register does not typically name victims of sex crimes, but Lewis agreed to have her name used previously in stories about her case.

Lewis, who graduated from high school in July while in juvenile detention, agreed to plead guilty in adult court in June 2021 to involuntary manslaughter and willful injury.  She faces up to 10 years in prison on each charge.

Prosecutors have never disputed claims that Lewis was sexually assaulted or trafficked in court or in court documents. 

Des Moines Police detectives were curious from the beginning about Lewis’ sexual relations with much older men, according to court records. Iowa’s age for sexual consent is 16 years old. Teens ages 14 and 15 can consent with people within 48 months of their age, according to Iowa law. 

Des Moines Police Sgt. Paul Parizek said in November that with extremely violent crimes like Lewis it is common for officers to learn of other crimes. Given Lewis’ age, sex between Brooks and Lewis would be a crime, he said. Human trafficking cases are some of the most complex and lengthy cases the department confronts, Parizek said in November. 

“With all criminal investigations, gathering the evidence necessary to support an accusation and to meet the standard to file criminal charges, can take some time,” Parizek said in November.

Under Iowa law perpetrators of homicides must pay victims’ families $150,000. In a July 20 court filing, Lewis’ attorneys Matthew Sheeley, Paul White and Magdalena Reese asked a Polk County judge to deny Brooks’ estate from the $150,000 because Lewis was an alleged sex trafficking victim. 

“By subjecting the defendant to human trafficking and sexual abuse on June 1, 2020, the decedent was at least 51% at fault for his own damages,” the filing said. “Such an award, as applied to this defendant and to these circumstances, would result in an excessive fine and cruel and unusual punishment.”

https://www.desmoinesregister.com/story/news/crime-and-courts/2022/09/06/des-moines-sex-trafficking-victim-pieper-lewis-sentenced-killing-rapist/10233682002/

Pieper Lewis Other News

A teenage human trafficking victim who was initially charged with first-degree murder after she stabbed her accused rapist to death was sentenced Tuesday in an Iowa court to five years of closely supervised probation and ordered to pay $150,000 restitution to the man’s family.

Pieper Lewis was originally charged with first-degree murder for the stabbing death of Zachary Brooks in 2020. The 17-year-old was charged in the death of 37-year-old Brooks, who she claims raped her multiple times in the weeks before his death. She had faced the possibility of 20 years in prison.

Lewis pleaded last year to involuntary manslaughter and willful injury. Both charges were punishable by up to 10 years in prison.

Polk County District judge David M. Porter on Tuesday deferred those prison sentences, meaning that if Lewis violates any portion of her probation, she could be sent to prison to serve that 20-year term.

As for being required to pay the estate of her rapist, “this court is presented with no other option,” Porter said, noting the restitution is mandatory under Iowa law that has been upheld by the Iowa Supreme Court.

Lewis was 15 when she stabbed Brooks more than 30 times in a Des Moines apartment. Officials have said Lewis was a runaway who was seeking to escape an abusive life with her adopted mother and was sleeping in the hallways of a Des Moines apartment building when a 28-year-old man took her in before forcibly trafficking her to other men for sex.

Lewis said one of those men was Brooks and that he had raped her multiple times in the weeks before his death. She recounted being forced at knifepoint by the 28-year-old man to go with Brooks to his apartment for sex. She told officials that after Brooks had raped her yet again, she grabbed a knife from a bedside table and stabbed Brooks in a fit of rage.

Police and prosecutors have not disputed that Lewis was sexually assaulted and trafficked. But prosecutors have argued that Brooks was asleep at the time he was stabbed and not an immediate danger to Lewis.

Iowa is not among the dozens of states that have a so-called safe harbor law that gives trafficking victims at least some level of criminal immunity.

Lewis, who earned her GED while being held in juvenile detention, acknowledged in a statement prior to her sentencing that she struggled with the structure of her detention, including “why I was treated like fragile glass” or wasn’t allowed to communicate with her friends or family.

“My spirit has been burned, but still glows through the flames,” she read from a statement she had prepared. “Hear me roar, see me glow, and watch me grow.”

“I am a survivor,” she added.

The judge peppered Lewis with repeated requests to explain what poor choices she made that led up to Brooks’ stabbing and expressed concern that she sometimes did not want to follow rules set for her in juvenile lockup.

“The next five years of your life will be full of rules you disagree with, I’m sure of it,” Porter said. He later added, “This is the second chance that you’ve asked for. You don’t get a third.”

Her attorney said after the sentencing that they were extremely happy with the outcome.

“Very pleased at the court decision. Going into this case we assumed the worst she was initially charged with first-degree murder,” said Matt Sheeley.

Lewis’ attorney argued in court that requiring her to pay restitution to the family of the man who raped her was cruel and unusual punishment. Her attorney said that there may be action taken down the line, aimed at the current restitution precedent set at the Iowa Supreme Court. But added that this was a win.

“That is not the most important pressing concern that she has. She wants to move on with her life. She has got her entire life ahead of her. She has all these opportunities ahead of her. So the restitution is not really something she is bothered by at this point,” said Sheeley.

Lewis will be required to undergo mental health and substance abuse evaluation as well as GPS tracking and monitoring. She will not be eligible for early release from probation.

https://ktla.com/news/nexstar-media-wire/iowa-teen-who-killed-rapist-avoids-prison-ordered-to-pay-150000/

1 Dead 2 Injured In Shooting At East High School in Des Moines

East High School in Des Moines

One teenage boy is dead and two teenage girls are critically injured following a school shooting at East High School in Des Moines Iowa. According to reports a number of gunshots were heard outside of the East High School around 2:48 pm local time. Three students were critically injured with a teenage boy later dying at the hospital. Des Moines police say they have several people in custody who are being questioned regarding the East High School shooting however no charges have yet been filed. This story is still breaking.

East High School Shooting More News

Des Moines police said one person has died and two others hospitalized in a shooting outside of East High School on Monday afternoon that injured three people.

Police at the scene said there are “multiple shooting victims outside of the school.”

Three people, who appear to be teens, were hospitalized in critical condition, according to police. Police later said one victim was dead.

The shooting happened outside of the school but on school grounds just before 3 p.m. Police said the gunfire appears to have come from a passing vehicle.

The school was locked down Monday afternoon and residents were asked to stay clear. Streets around the school were shut down as well.

No other injuries have been reported and police said they do not believe there is a continued threat to the public.

Sgt. Paul Parizek said suspects have been detained in the case but no charges have been filed.

“We’ve got some potential suspects detained. That will be a piece that moves through the night that we’re going to have to be working on,” Parizek said. “The kids in that school are our community’s most precious cargo. So, the medics and the firefighters did an outstanding job getting up here. You know, it’s sad. We do train for this. We have to be prepared for it. And this is why.”

East High student Kaylie Shannon told KCCI she was outside of the school when she heard gunfire.

“I was just sitting in my friend’s car and then all of the sudden I heard 11 gunshots and some boys screaming,” Shannon said.

Des Moines police continue to investigate.

DMPS officers no longer in schools:

KCCI has been covering concerns over violence in Des Moines schools for much of this school year. This is the first school year since 1999 that the district has been without Des Moines police officers in schools.

Last year, the school board voted to end the school resource officer program. Members said the program disproportionately affected students of color.

Des Moines police said school resource officers are intended to build positive relationships with students.

https://www.kcci.com/article/shooting-reported-outside-des-moines-iowa-school/39359495#

East High School Shooting Other News

Six teenagers have been arrested on murder charges stemming from a drive-by shooting Monday outside a Des Moines, Iowa, high school that left a 15-year-old boy dead and critically injured two female students, police said on Tuesday.

The teenager who was fatally shot is believed to have been the intended target, the Des Moines Police Department said in a statement Tuesday.

Most of the suspects were arrested within an hour of the shooting and all were in custody in several hours, police said.

“While this incident occurred outside of a school, it could have occurred in any one of our neighborhoods. The school is where the suspects found their target,” police said in the statement.

The two wounded teenage girls remained in a hospital Tuesday with life-threatening injuries, police said.

The names of the suspects and the victims were not released.

In addition to first-degree murder, the suspects were charged with two counts each of attempted murder, authorities said.

Overnight, homicide detectives executed multiple residential and vehicle search warrants, and recovered multiple firearms, police said.

The shooting unfolded Monday afternoon outside East High School. The two injured girls were both students at the school, while the slain boy was not, police said.

The motive for the shooting remains under investigation.

“Unfortunately, what happened here … is just another pointless tragedy in our community, people using firearms to settle their differences,” Des Moines Police Chief Dana Wingert said Monday.

The high school was immediately on lockdown Monday afternoon, but Des Moines Public School District tweeted students were being dismissed on time after police and the school district gave an all-clear.

https://abc7news.com/6-teens-charged-with-murder-in-drive-by-shooting-outside-iowa-high-/11629856/

Ethan Orton Charged With Murdering Parents

ethan orton 2022

Seventeen year old Ethan Orton has been charged with two counts of murder for stabbing his parents to death. According to sources this alleged teen killer would stab to death his parents at their Cedar Rapids Iowa home. Casey Arthur Orton, 42, and Misty Scott-Slade, 41, were found deceased in their home back in October 14 2021. Ethan Orton lawyers may be planning an insantity defense which will be difficult after the seventeen year old was found competent to stand trial. If convicted on the murder charges Ethan Orton may spend the rest of his life in prison.

Ethan Orton More News

A Cedar Rapids teen charged with fatally stabbing his parents in October may claim insanity and diminished responsibility at his murder trial set for next month.

Ethan Alexander Orton, 17, charged as an adult with two counts of first-degree murder, was found competent to stand trial last week by a judge following a psychiatric evaluation.

He is accused of fatally stabbing his parents, Casey Arthur Orton, 42, and Misty Scott-Slade, 41, on Oct. 14 at their home in northeast Cedar Rapids.

Orton’s lawyers filed a notice of defense Tuesday, stating he “may rely on the defenses of insanity and diminished responsibility” at his Feb. 8 trial.

A competency evaluation helps a judge determine if a defendant understands the charges against him and if he is able to assist his lawyers with his defense at trial.

An insanity defense is a tougher threshold to meet because a jury must decide if a defendant will be held criminally responsible for his actions.

Guy Cook, a Des Moines lawyer, said the insanity defense under Iowa Law is tough to prove and rarely successful.

The prosecution must first prove the defendant committed the crime and then the burden shifts to the defense to prove the individual was legally insane when he or she committed the crime, he said.

“Simply put, the defendant must prove at the time he committed the crime he did not know right from wrong,” Cook told The Gazette on Wednesday.

According to Iowa code, insanity doesn’t have to exist for any specific length of time before or after a crime. The defendant must prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that insanity is more likely true. This is a lesser burden to prove than beyond a reasonable doubt.

Cook said if a jury finds a defendant not guilty by reason of insanity, the judge commits the person to a state mental institution — the Iowa Medical and Classification Center in Coralville. The commitment continues as long as the person remains a danger to himself or others.

Closely related to the insanity defense is the defense of diminished responsibility, which also is difficult to prove, Cook said. The defense has to prove a defendant was unable to form the specific criminal intent to commit the crime.

“In other words, at the time of the crime, the defendant was unable to form the premeditated, deliberate, specific intent to kill,” Cook said. “Diminished responsibility, even if proven, however, does not entirely relieve the defendant of responsibility for his actions. It only prevents a conviction on first degree murder.”

A jury could find this defendant guilty on a lesser included charge, such as second-degree murder or manslaughter.

“Only a tiny fraction of defendants succeed with such a defense,” Cook pointed out. “Indeed in Iowa, over the years only a scattering of defendants have been successful with these defenses.”

Local prosecutors said they couldn’t recall any recent not-guilty verdicts because of insanity.

Among those who tried were Alexander Kozak, who claimed diminshed capacity, was convicted in Johnson County for killing a woman at the Coralville Mall in 2016 and Nicholas Luerkens, convicted in Linn County for fatally stabbing his ex-girlfriend in a Marion grocery store parking lot in 2015.

On appeal, Luerkens was granted a new trial because the court found the trial judge should have allowed the jury to consider his insanity defense. The trial judge ruled the defense hadn’t submitted sufficient evidence to present the insanity claim to the jury. In 2018, Luerkens pleaded guilty to first-degree murder and is serving a life sentence without parole.

Another defendant who claimed insanity, Greg Davis, was convicted in 2018 of killing his ex-girlfriend and concealing her body in a roll of carpet, but the verdict was overturned on appeal.

The court found the trial judge didn’t give an instruction to the jury regarding Davis’ insanity defense on the first-degree murder charge but did provide the instruction for lesser charges the jurors could consider.

The error allowed the jury to wrongly conclude the insanity defense didn’t apply to the first-degree murder charge, according to the court ruling.

Davis has a new trial set for Aug. 13.

Orton’s trial remains set for Feb. 8, but 6th Judicial District Judge Ian Thornhill said last week he would understand if more time is needed.

Ethan Orton would have to waive his right to trial within 90 days before the trial is rescheduled.

The court proceedings against Orton were temporarily suspended until the competency evaluation was completed.

Cedar Rapids police received a 911 call about 2:10 a.m. Oct. 14 regarding suspicious noises coming from the Orton house at 361 Carnaby Dr. NE, according to a criminal complaint.

Officers said they found the teen soaked in blood outside the home and that Ethan Orton admitted to killing his parents, who were found inside the home. He stabbed both parents with a knife and used an ax to finish killing his mother, he told investigators.

Ethan Orton said he killed them “to take charge of his life,” according to the complaint.

The teen remains in jail under a $2 million cash-only bail. First-degree murder is a life sentence without parole, but because he is a juvenile, he would have the opportunity for parole if convicted.

Jay Neubaum Teen Killer And Sexual Predator

Jay Neubaum

Jay Neubaum was a seventeen year old from Iowa who would fatally shoot another teenager. According to court documents Jay Neubaum and the victim plus two others were working on a car in a garage when an argument broke out. Jay Neubaum would fatally shoot the victim in the head with a shotgun causing his death. This teen killer would ultimately be arrested, convicted and sentenced to fifty years in prison however Jay Neubaum is now going on trial for ten counts of sexual abuse that resulted from the sexual assault of six girls.

Jay Neubaum 2023 Information

NameJay Lee Lane Neubaum
Offender Number6790088
SexM
Birth Date12/21/2002
LocationAnamosa State Penitentiary
OffenseMURDER – 2ND DEGREE, 85%
TDD/SDD *01/25/2044
Commitment Date08/25/2021
Recall Date08/25/2022
Mandatory Minimum (if applicable)

Jay Neubaum More News

An Onawa teen was sentenced Thursday to 50 years in prison for the shooting death of another teen in a Mapleton, Iowa, garage.

District Judge Duane Hoffmeyer waived any mandatory minimum sentence that Jay Lee Neubaum must serve before he’s eligible for parole, according to court documents. 

Neubaum must also pay $150,000 to the estate of Joseph Hopkins. 

A Monona County District Court jury in May found Neubaum, 18, guilty of second-degree murder for the Jan. 31, 2020, shooting death of 16-year-old Hopkins.

Typically, a defendant found guilty of second-degree murder would face a mandatory minimum of 35 years in prison on the 50-year sentence. But Neubaum was 17 at the time of the shooting, and Iowa law says that if a person was under age 18 at the time an offense, other than a Class A felony, was committed, a judge may suspend all or part of the prison sentence, including any mandatory minimum sentence

Neubaum had been charged with first-degree murder, which is a Class A felony, but the jury found him guilty of the lesser charge.

Hopkins, of Mapleton, was shot once in the forehead with a 12-gauge shotgun while he, Neubaum and two other teenage boys were working on a demolition derby car in a garage at the home of Neubaum’s grandmother, with whom he was living at the time.

Prosecutors said Neubaum shot Hopkins after becoming angry with him because he would not stop playing with an unloaded 20-gauge shotgun. The defense said the shooting was an accident.

Neubaum still faces prosecution in Monona County for 10 counts of third-degree sexual abuse for the alleged rape of six teenage girls and forced sexual contact with a seventh in 2019 and 2020. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges and is scheduled to stand trial in December.

https://siouxcityjournal.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/onawa-teen-sentenced-to-prison-for-shooting-death/article_83578948-f65a-5f0b-954a-c026a227d409.html

Frequently Asked Questions

Jay Neubaum Now

Jay Neubaum is currently incarcerated at the Anamosa State Penitentiary

Jay Neubaum Release Date

Jay Neubaum is not eligible for parole until 2042

Jay Neubaum Sexual Assault Trial

Jay Lee Neubaum’s trial wrapped up Thursday without his defense attorney calling any witnesses, as a judge will now decide whether the Mapleton teen is guilty of sexually abusing seven teenage girls. 

During the three-day trial, each of the girls, who ranged in age from 13 to 16,  described how Neubaum forced himself on them at various locations in Mapleton, pop. 1,165, between August 2019 and March 2020.

Neubaum, 18, has denied the allegations. 

In her closing arguments, defense attorney Theresa Rachel contended prosecutors had failed to prove their case. She pointed to what she described as conflicting or inconsistent testimony from the girls and other witnesses.

“The evidence that was presented either shows consent or that it didn’t even rise to the level of a sex act,” Rachel told the court.

Rachel also focused on one of the girls, a then-15-year-old who testified Neubaum sexually abused her in the bedroom of his home in March 2020, ejaculating on her underwear and jeans. A state criminalist testified Thursday that seminal fluid found on the crotch of her jeans matched Neubaum’s DNA.

The defense attorney suggested the girl may have persuaded the other six girls to concoct stories of their own. 

“There is also a lot of evidence that shows that there might have been some collusion between these girls of how to say this and what to say to law enforcement,” Rachel told the court.

n his rebuttal, Monona County Attorney Ian A. McConaughey said the girl would have had to have been an “amazing, amazing manipulator” to fabricate a false claim of sexual abuse not only for herself, but also six other girls, for over 1 1/2 years, and then testify, under oath, and “make that false claim of sexual abuse all over again.”

“But that’s not what the evidence has shown — that (the girl) is some sort of grand master behind this,” McConaughey told the court.

In their testimony, the girls told consistent stories, McConaughey said in his closing arguments. In each instance, Neubaum got the victims alone, started kissing them against their will, pushed them down, forcibly removed their pants and underwear, and sexually assaulted them, the prosecutor said. 

“This defendant used the same playbook over and over because he knew that’s what worked,” he said.

Neubaum forced himself on the girls, despite their repeated pleas asking him to stop, he said.

“He simply would not accept no for an answer,” McConaughey said. 

Responding to the defense bringing up the extended period between when the cases allegedly occurred and when the victims came forward to authorities,  McConaughey said many of the victims were long fearful of saying anything

“A lot of the victims worried what other people would think of them,” he said. “They were worried nobody would believe them.”

Neubaum “made these girls feel it was not safe to tell and that worked for a long time,” he said.

Some victims were in denial, a state of shock or ashamed of what happened, said the prosecutor, who mentioned one of the girls twice tried unsuccessfully to kill herself.

Before the prosecution rested its case Thursday, Maple Valley-Anthon Oto High School Principal Dan Dougherty testified that Neubaum attended special units addressing sexual consent as an MVAO student in 2018 and 2019.

“It was mandatory for all of our students to watch a video, listening to a speaker, as well as take part in a discussion with school mentors, related to the rules of sexual consent,” Dougherty said. 

Neubaum is charged with 10 counts of third-degree sexual abuse for the alleged assault of six girls, and forced sexual contact with a seventh. Each sex abuse count carries a 10-year prison sentence.

Because Neubaum waived his right to a jury trial, District Judge Zachary Hindman will decide the case in a written ruling. Hindman said he intends to reach a decision as soon as possible. Once that happens, he will schedule a hearing to announce the verdict.

In May, a Monona County jury found Jay Neubaum guilty of second-degree murder in the Jan. 31, 2020, shooting death of 16-year-old Joseph Hopkins in Mapleton. Neubaum is currently serving a 50-year prison term on that offense. 

Hindman on Thursday granted Neubaum’s request not to return to Monona County for the verdict in the sex abuse trial. Court officials will make arrangements for him to watch the proceedings through a Zoom call. 

https://siouxcityjournal.com/judge-will-now-decide-whether-mapleton-teen-is-guilty-of-sexually-abusing-seven-teenage-girls/article_c52e0853-02ed-5721-a344-3a3f1032995a.html

Jayden Straight Teen Killer Murders 8 Month Old Child

Jayden Straight Teen Killer

Jayden Straight was seventeen years old when he murdered his eight month old child. According to court documents Jayden violently shook the small infant to such a degree her skull was fractured causing her death. This teen killer was charged and convicted of second degree murder and willful injury to a child and was sentenced to a total of one hundred years in prison making him eligible for release in 2119

Jayden Straight 2023 Information

NameJayden Sidney Straight
Offender Number6901549
SexM
Birth Date08/31/2000
LocationAnamosa State Penitentiary
OffenseMURDER – 2ND DEGREE, 85%
TDD/SDD *01/15/2064
Commitment Date11/18/2019
Recall Date11/30/2021
Mandatory Minimum (if applicable)

Jayden Straight More News

A Des Moines man who was 17 years old when he violently shook and killed his baby will likely spend the rest of his life behind bars.

Jayden Straight was sentenced to a total of 100 years in prison on Friday after pleading guilty to second-degree murder, willful injury and child endangerment.

His daughter, 8-month-old Raija Straight, died in the hospital last July. Police said she had multiple skull fractures, broken ribs and internal injuries when her father brought her in.  Raija’s mother says her daughter was not only shaken but hit multiple times by Jayden Straight as well.

Jayden Straight turned 18 years old a few weeks after Raija’s death and was originally charged with first-degree murder.

Jayden Straight Other News

An 18 year-old killer was jailed for 100 years after battering his eight month-old baby daughter so badly her skull was totally shattered. Jayden Straight was handed the century-long sentence Friday after admitting the July 2018 murder of baby Raija Straight in Des Moines, Iowa. The killer, who was 17 at the time of the murder, left his baby suffering serious internal injuries, including multiple skull fractures, broken ribs, a ruptured spleen and massive retinal hemorrhaging. Straight’s partner Ri Bambino left him in the care of their tiny daughter on the afternoon she was fatally injured to go and run errands.

After handing himself in the next day, he was unable to provide any explanation for the wounds inflicted on Raija, and has since failed to provide any motive for his daughter’s death. A doctor who treated the baby in hospital before she died said the injuries were ‘from a deliberate assault and could not be explained as unintentional or accidental.’

The Des Moines Register reported that Straight was jailed for 50 years for second-degree murder. He was handed a further five decade-long sentences for three counts of willful injury and two counts of child endangerment resulting in serious injury. All six sentences will run consecutively, meaning Straight will not be released from jail before 2119. Paying tribute to Raija, the infant’s great-grandma Robin Head said: ‘When I saw this child’s face and what she has brought to me for the last eight months of her life. ‘I can’t never explain that feeling of holding her, laughing with her, touching her, walking with her, crawling with her.’
https://metro.co.uk/2019/11/11/killer-18-jailed-100-years-shattering-baby-daughters-skull-11078888/

Frequently Asked Questions

Jayden Straight Now

Jayden Straight is currently incarcerated at Anamosa State Penitentiary

Jayden Straight Release Date

Jayden Straight must serve 100 years before he is eligible for parole