Stephanie Olsen Teen Killer Murders Mother

Stephanie Olsen Teen Killer
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Stephanie Olsen was a seventeen year old from Kentucky who along with her boyfriend David Dressman would stab her mother to death. According to court documents Stephanie Olsen and her mother had different opinions regarding David Dressman and when her mother refused to let her teenage daughter move out the teenage couple decided to murder her. The teenage couple who would flee the State a month before the murder made it to Georgia before being picked up and sent back to Kentucky. The two teenagers would enlist yet another teen, Timothy Crabtree, who they promised a portion of the life insurance.

Stephanie Olsen would lure her mother to her bedroom with David following behind. The mother would be stabbed repeatedly leading to her death. Stephanie Olsen and David Dressman would leave the home for the night. The next day Stephanie would go back to the home and call police.

Initially David Dressman and Timothy Crabtree were arrested and charged with the murder. Stephanie Olsen would be arrested ten months later. Timothy Crabtree would plead guilty to conspiracy to commit murder and received six years. David Dressman would receive twenty years for the conspiracy and ten years for burglary. This teen killer received twenty five years in prison.

Stephanie Olsen 2023 Information

Stephanie Olsen 2021 photos
Name:OLSEN, STEPHANIE DENISE 
Active Inmate

Offender Photo(Click image to enlarge)
PID # / DOC #:103234 / 179976
Institution Start Date:7/14/2005
Expected Time To Serve (TTS):12/16/2025
Classification:Medium (Level 3)
Minimum Expiration of Sentence Date (Good Time Release Date): ?12/16/2025
Parole Eligibility Date:9/09/2024
Maximum Expiration of Sentence Date:9/08/2029
Location:KY Corr. Inst. for Women
Age:35
Race:White
Gender:F
Eye Color:Blue
Hair Color:Blond or Strawberry
Height:5′ 01″
Weight:145

Stephanie Olsen Other News

A woman convicted of complicity in the 2002 stabbing death of her mother at their home in The Colony has lost a bid for a reduced sentence.

Stephanie Denise Olsen’s motion to cut five years from her 25-year term was rejected Wednesday by Scott County Circuit Judge Paul Isaacs, court documents show.

Isaacs said Olsen’s motion, filed in October 2014, unsuccessfully argued that her being a minor who was tried as an adult and a lack of physical evidence against her, as well as her actions during her imprisonment since 2005, provided reason to trim her sentence.

Crabtree pleaded guilty to conspiracy and was sentenced to six years.

In her motion for a reduced sentence, Olsen cites “numerous mitigating factors, all of which were introduced at trial.”

One such factor was her being 17 years old at the time of her mother’s murder, that her co-defendants received lesser sentences and that she has overcome addiction issues she had at the time of the crime.

In his response, Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney Keith Eardley says there is no “factual or legal basis” to permit a sentence reduction.

“The positive steps [Olsen] has taken while incarcerated, while commendable, have nothing to do with the fundamental fairness of the trial proceeding and do not constitute a basis for relief,” Eardley wrote in his Aug. 21, 2015, response.

Olsen currently is incarcerated in the Kentucky Correctional Institution for Women at Pewee Valley.

State Corrections Department online records show  her maximum sentence would expire Sept. 8, 2029, while her expected time to serve is until April 24, 2027.

Stephanie Olsen becomes eligible for parole on Sept. 9, 2024.

https://www.news-graphic.com/news/olsen-bid-for-reduced-sentence-denied/article_bf2369d0-e736-11e6-81c6-eb2c48001501.html

Stephanie Olsen More News

After more than eight hours of deliberations lasting into Friday morning, a Scott County jury found Stephanie Olsen guilty of a charge of complicity to murder her mother.

Stephanie Olsen screamed “Oh my God” and started crying after the verdict was read at 12:45 a.m. Her dad and stepmother also cried as they watched bailiffs lead Olson to the Scott County Detention Center.

The penalty phase will begin at 10 a.m. today. The jury could sentence Olson to 20 years to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Prosecutors say Stephanie Olsen conspired with her then-boyfriend, David Dressman, and Timothy Crabtree to kill Diane Snellen for financial gain and due to rifts with her mother over Dressman.

Dressman has been charged with murdering Snellen, while Crabtree accepted a prosecution’s deal and entered an Alford plea to a lesser charge of conspiracy. The plea allows Crabtree to recognize the evidence against him without admitting guilt.

Snellen, a 41-year-old Toyota employee, was found nude on the floor of her daughter’s upstairs bedroom with 27 stab wounds to her chest, neck and head on June 6, 2002.

During his closing argument, Commonwealth’s Attorney Gordie Shaw called Snellen’s murder one of the worst he had ever seen, saying her killing was something “personal” and left Snellen with no time to struggle.

“When this happened, it happened fast, it happened hard,” Shaw said, adding that Snellen’s body looked as though she had been hit by a truck.

Shaw said Stephanie Olson wanted her mother dead so she could lead her own life, a life without Snellen’s rules and restrictions.

“She couldn’t wait six months to turn 18, and maybe she wanted the money with no wait,” Shaw said. “I don’t know what goes through the mind of somebody like that.”

Shaw said Snellen was killed sometime after Stephanie Olson got off the phone with her mother at 10:26 p.m. and before Olson and Dressman went to Lexington after midnight. Defense attorney Rodney Barnes challenged the time of death, saying the prosecution had presented “too tight of a time frame” for the murder to have taken place and for evidence to have been destroyed.

In his closing argument, Barnes told jurors that Georgetown police Detective Tom Bell had made “some serious mistakes” in his investigation of Snellen’s murder. Among the errors, Barnes said police did not search the home of Snellen’s boyfriend, Todd Johnson, did not search the field behind Snellen’s house and did not investigate connections with other murders.

Instead, Barnes told jurors police zeroed in on Stephanie Olson and ignored other leads, focusing on his client because she had lied about leaving her friends’ apartment because she bought marijuana and later had sex.

“They made up their mind the day after this murder,” Barnes said.

Shaw denied Barnes’ allegations, mentioning the work Bell had done by contacting other agencies and eliminating other suspects.

“They had some darn good suspects in the first 24 hours, but they didn’t shut down their investigation,” Shaw said of the police. “They kept going.”

Shaw pointed out that when Stephanie Olson was approached by Georgetown Police Sgt. Matt Sly after a failed attempt to go to Florida with Dressman, the teen admitted smoking pot. Olson also told Officer Tom Payne outside of her home that she had gone parking with her boyfriend when he responded to Olson’s 911 call.

“Folks, I’m telling you, their defense was gone with our first two witnesses,” Shaw told jurors.

Barnes also spoke to the lack of physical evidence in the case and questioned the credibility of several of the prosecution’s witnesses, including Crabtree.

Having once been charged with murder, burglary and complicity to murder, Barnes said the prosecution must have “been really hungry” to offer Crabtree a deal where he will serve a maximum of six years in prison.

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Stephanie Olsen Now

Stephanie Olsen is currently incarcerated at the Kentucky Correctional Institute For Women

Stephanie Olsen Release Date

Stephanie Olsen is eligible for parole in 2024 and her max release date is 2029

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Jenna Oakley Teen Killer Murders Stepmother

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Jenna Oakley was fifteen years old when she murdered her stepmother in Kentucky. According to court documents Jenna Oakley and her twenty year old boyfriend Kenneth Nigh would murder the woman before fleeing in her vehicle (no cause of death has been released).

The teen killer and her boyfriend would be arrested in New Mexico a few days later. Kenneth Nigh would hang himself in jail and would later die from his injuries. Jenna Oakley would plead guilty to first degree manslaughter and theft and would be sentenced to fifteen years in prison

Jenna Oakley 2023 Information

jenna oakley 2020 photos
Name:OAKLEY, JENNA 
Active Inmate
Minimum Expiration of Sentence Date (Good Time Release Date): ?5/07/2029
Parole Eligibility Date:2/27/2025
Maximum Expiration of Sentence Date:8/27/2031
Location:KY Corr. Inst. for Women

Jenna Oakley More News

On Sept. 1, 2016, Oakley’s 52-year-old stepmother was found dead in the basement of her home on the edge of Junction City. Authorities launched a nationwide search for Oakley, who did not return to her home the night of the death.

Oakley and Kenneth Nigh, her 20-year-old boyfriend, took Rhonda Oakley’s car and left the state; they were found in New Mexico three days later. Nigh later died in a hospital from self-inflicted injuries.

In the first public glimpse of Oakley’s background leading up to the day Rhonda Oakley was killed, Hooper told the court she found two things unique about Oakley’s case.

“One is that there is zero criminal history. Her teachers loved her. There were never any infractions in school,” Hooper said. “So even being involved in the system is an utter anomaly.”

Hooper said the second unusual aspect of Oakley’s situation was the lack of her family’s involvement.

“I’ve worked on cases where there are grown men who are accused of some pretty gruesome crimes, yet their mothers are always calling me, or texting me, trying to reach me to see how the client is doing or how the case is going,” she said. “But never once have I had an inquiry from Jenna’s mother or her father. It’s just really astonishing.”

Hooper said she thinks Oakley was “thrown away repeatedly by her parents,” based on interviews she conducted and based on records. “The interviews I’ve done over the past two years — it appears that Jenna was just thrown back and forth between one parent and the other, when things got difficult or there was … abuse in the home.”

Over the course of the past two years, Hooper said she talked with Oakley for about 200 hours, face-to-face and via phone. She also researched Oakley’s early life by going over her education and medical records, as well as documents from child protective services involving Oakley in Indiana and Kentucky. Hooper said she interviewed Oakley’s friends, parents of friends, former neighbors, a former landlord/babysitter, former pastors, teachers, therapists, school counselors a step-sister and a half-sister, making her qualified to speak about Oakley’s upbringing, she testified.

When asked about Oakley’s early life with her mother, Christy Wood Poe, in Indiana, Hooper said, “It wasn’t a safe home.”

She said after Oakley’s parents separated, her mom worked at the local jail, formed a romantic relationship with an inmate, bonded him out “and brought him home to live with the children.”

“It was incredibly unsafe,” Hooper said. “He ended up stealing from them and he brought women into the home that the children saw.”

Hooper said child protective services was called a couple of times when Oakley was about 3 years old, when a neighbor saw rats around the home and was concerned that the children were being left alone for long periods of time.

In the social worker’s records and notes from one of the visits, she wrote that Oakley’s mother was hostile toward her and at first wouldn’t allow the social worker into the home.

“When she finally did get in, she said in her notes there was garbage scattered everywhere around the house,” Hooper said. “There was vomit. There were feces and urine, human and animal, throughout the house.”

The records noted that roaches were under the stove; dirty, moldy dishes were piled in the sink; and medicines were within the children’s reach, Hooper said.

The landlord was also Oakley’s babysitter, Hooper said. “She spent a great deal of time with Jenna as a child and she said Jenna was constantly covered in flea bites,” and her constant scratching caused them to bleed.

When the family moved out of the house, the landlord said she saw the same filth that the social worker had reported, Hooper said.

Hooper said she spent three days in Arlington, Indiana, and saw the house where Oakley had most recently been living with her mother. “It was sort of ramshackle and very run down. Broken windows and things like that,” Hooper said.

“Inside the home … what the records indicated — it was terrifying. It was chaotic and it was unpredictable.”

Hooper told the court that Oakley’s mother wouldn’t speak to her, but her older half-sister said the abuse was “terrible;” she left when Oakley was in middle school.

“She’s been estranged from Christy ever since. It’s been difficult for Jenna because this older half-sister was really her protector. It got really bad after she left.”

Hooper said in Phillip Oakley’s house, “It appears there was a lot of emotional neglect. Jenna was in an unfinished basement, by herself. It was moldy and she was often sick because of it.” There were also no pictures of Oakley inside the house, Hooper added.

Commonwealth’s Attorney Richie Bottoms pointed out that Hooper had never actually been inside Phillip Oakley’s house and had based her opinion only on crime scene photos and what his daughter had told her.

“That is correct,” Hooper said.

Bottoms said that in Hooper’s earlier testimony, she stated Oakley was doing well in the Boyle County school system while living with her father and step-mother. And she didn’t have behavior or dependance issues, to which Hooper agreed.

Bottoms asked Hooper if she “was aware that (Phillip Oakley) was trying to block her pursuit of any relationship with Kenneth Nigh. He did not approve of the relationship.” Hooper said she did know that.

Hooper told Bottoms she did not find any records where family services had been called to “Mr. Oakley’s home, as far as it relates to living conditions of the home.”

“So he was doing the things, at least appropriate along those lines, by making sure she was in school and doing what she was supposed to be doing,” Bottoms said.

Hooper said her opinion as to why Oakley was susceptible to being in a relationship with an older man: “I think that a little girl who was deprived of so much love and care … she’s starving for it. … It’s like air. She needs it like air to breathe. She needs love and air to breathe. So when somebody comes along like that, it’s a knight in shining armor. It’s everything. Somebody loves her for once. It’s all she’s ever wanted.”

Hooper said the first thing Oakley told her when they met was, “’All I ever wanted was a family.”

Hooper said she believed Oakley “revered” Nigh. “He was giving her everything she ever wanted. … She just looked up to him for everything. … The worst thing that could have happened was to lose that love.”

Anthony Lee Tanner, another mitigation specialist for the defense, provided the court with a thick stack of papers explaining the scientific aspects of brain maturation and adolescence. It also contained several articles about how adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), abuse and violence can affect the brain.

According to Tanner, “ACEs are stressful or traumatic events, including abuse and neglect, household dysfunction and traumas.”

During an interview, Tanner asked Oakley two-part questions she answered: 

• Did a parent or other aduilt in the household often: swear at you, insult you, put you down, or humiliate you? “Yes.” Act in a way that made you afraid that you might be physically hurt? “Yes.”

• Did a parent or other adult in the household often: push, grab, slap or throw something at you? “Yes.” Ever hit you so hard that you had marks or were injured? “Yes.”

• Did an adult or person at least 5 years older than you ever: touch or fondle you or have you touch their body in a sexual way? “Yes.” Try to or actually have oral, anal, or vaginal sex with you? “Yes.”

• Did you often feel that: no one in your family loved you or thought you were important or special? “Yes.” Your family didn’t look out for one another, feel close or support each other? “Yes.”

• Were your parents separated or divorced? “Yes.”

• Was your mother or stepmother: often pushed, grabbed, slapped or had something thrown at her? “No.” Sometimes/ often kicked, bitten, hit with fist or hit with something hard? “No.” Ever repeatedly hit over at least a few minutes or threatened with a gun or knife? “No.”

• Did you live with anyone who was a problem drinker or alcoholic or who used drugs? “Yes.”

• Was a household member depressed or mentally ill or did a household member attempt suicide? “Yes.”

• Did a household member go to prison? “No.”

Tanner testified that Oakley had the mental faculties of someone younger than 15 when the manslaughter occurred.

He also noted that Jenna Oakley lived in an abusive home environment and her mother encouraged the inappropriate relationship with Nigh.

In conclusion, Tanner wrote that there was an overall lack of family love, nurturing and understanding in Oakley’s life.

During his victim impact statement, Phillip Oakley said he considered Nigh a sexual predator of his daughter. When he found out they were still together, even though Oakley was now living with him and his wife Rhonda in Kentucky, Phillip Oakley said he called the police.

He also spoke with Nigh on the phone.

“And you told him to stay away or there’d be consequences?” Bottoms asked Phillip Oakley. “He knew if he came to your house and he was caught there, he would go to prison or you would do everything you could to make sure he’d go to prison?”

“Yes,” Phillip Oakley answered.

“I want to know why you did what you did,” Phillip Oakley asked his daughter in court. “Because myself or Rhonda never abused you.”

“When Jenna came to live with myself and Rhonda, it was to give her a better life,” he said.

Bottoms asked him, “On the day that you got the call that Christy (his ex-wife) and Jenna had had a bigger issue and that Jenna needed to leave, how did Rhonda feel?”

“She’s my daughter,” Phillip Oakley answered. “I was going to do whatever I needed to do to protect her.” He said Rhonda Oakley encouraged him to take his daughter in.

“She loved Jenna. She did everything in her power to care for Jenna. She provided for Jenna,” he said.

“When we found out about Kenny (Nigh), we tried to do everything in our power to keep you away from him,” Phillip Oakley told his daughter. “We did everything in our power to keep you from communicating. We took your cell phone. We took your computers. You had no access, but somehow you continued to have communications.

“There was no better person on the face of this earth than Rhonda. You didn’t have a right to do what you did.”

He said Jenna Oakley was defiant and wasn’t following their rules at home, so he and Rhonda talked about sending her to Charter Ridge or some type of reform school — “something just to get her on track.”

But Rhonda Oakley wanted to continue trying to help her step-daughter at home.

“You didn’t have the right to do what you did,” Phillip Oakley said. “You agreed to a 10-year sentence for taking her life and five years for stealing her car. Myself, your brother, Rhonda’s children, Rhonda’s friends … we got a life sentence.”

“You took a life, and so yes, I’m angry because you destroyed so many people’s lives,” Phillip Oakley said. “Jenna, you wrote in a journal that you were going to do that. Kenny didn’t know our address — so you had to tell him. You had to let him in the house.

“You’re saying you wish you could have stopped it? Jenna, you’re not a victim. You’re a victimizer.”

Testimony at Jenna Oakley’s manslaughter sentencing reveals sad backstory of troubled teen

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Jenna Oakley is currently incarcerated at the Kentucky Correctional Institute for Women

Jenna Oakley Release Date

Jenna Oakley is eligible for parole in 2025 and her maximum release date is 2031

Jenna Oakley More News

Jenna Oakley, the Boyle County teen convicted in the death of her stepmother will spend 15 years in prison for the crime.

Jenna was 15 years old when police say she killed her stepmother, Rhonda Oakley, at her Junction City home in September of 2016.

Earlier this year, Jenna pleaded guilty to manslaughter and car theft.

Lawyers for Oakley spent much of Wednesday’s sentence hearing trying to convince the judge to allow her to serve time in residential treatment.

More than a half dozen witnesses testified, most of whom worked with Jenna Oakley at the Adair County juvenile holding facility. They spoke largely about her exemplary behavior while there.

Another woman, described as a mitigation specialist, talked about how Jenna had a difficult home life, both while living with her mother in Indiana, and with her father in Kentucky. Upon meeting Jenna, the woman testified that Jenna told her, “All I ever wanted was a family.”

Most of the youth workers in Adair County say they never had any issues with Jenna Oakley.

“Nothing but positive,” says Heather Sinclair, with the Adair County Juvenile Detention Center. “Never had any issues with her. Very respectful. Very well mannered.”

After considering the arguments for an hour, however, the judge decided Jenna needed incarceration and not treatment and sentenced her to 15 years.

“I would note that this was particularly cruel,” said Judge Darren Peckler, adding, “It was senseless, it was even callous, in that regard.”

Jenna Oakley will receive credit for time already served, and must serve 85 percent of her sentence before she is eligible for parole

https://www.wkyt.com/content/news/Boyle-Co-teen-convicted-in-stepmothers-death-sentenced-to-15-years-507734611.html

Christopher Endicott Teen Killer Murders Guardians

Christopher Endicott

Christopher Endicott was fifteen years old when he murdered his guardians in Kentucky. According to court documents the couple were granted guardianship of Christopher Endicott just a few months before the brutal double murder. The teen killer would fatally shoot the couple as they laid in bed before taking off with his girlfriend. Police would send off an Amber Alert and soon Christopher Endicott and his twelve year old girlfriend were found. Christopher Endicott would ultimately be sentenced to twenty years in prison

Christopher Endicott 2023 Information

Christopher Endicott
Name:ENDICOTT, CHRISTOPHER LEE 
Active Inmate
Parole Eligibility Date:3/05/2028
Maximum Expiration of Sentence Date:3/04/2031
Location:Green River Corr. Complex

Christopher Endicott More News

A 15-year-old boy accused of killing a Metcalfe County couple who had taken him in had disagreed with the victims about his relationship with a 12-year-old girl, family members said.

State police charged Christopher Endicott, 15, on Wednesday with murder in the deaths of Gary Holloway, 50, and Barbara Holloway, 51.

The Holloways were granted custody of Christopher in January, said state police Detective B.J. Burton, the lead investigator.

Burton said there was no allegation of abuse or an argument that might have sparked the violence

There is no indication of a possible motive other than that Christopher wanted to run away with his girlfriend, Burton said.

Family members of the victims said that Christopher had been getting in trouble at school for behavior such as talking back to teachers and that the Holloways didn’t want him seeing the girl.

Chesaney Dile, the girlfriend of Jason Smith, a relative of the Holloways, said the couple had taken away Christopher’s cell phone at night.

“I think he done it just for the simple fact he couldn’t get his way,” Dile said.

Still, Christopher had not displayed any violence toward the couple, and the killings came as a shock, said Elizabeth Osborn, who lives with the victims’ son, Stephen Holloway, in Metcalfe County.

“It breaks my heart ’cause none of us seen it coming,” Osborn, 28, said Wednesday, wiping her eyes.

The Holloways lived in a mobile home north of Edmonton with Christopher.

The boy’s father is in prison on theft and other charges, and his mother has been unreliable, Osborn and others said.

Gary Holloway had worked for many years at a dairy farm but was disabled because of emphysema. His wife cared for him.

The Holloways have taken in family members before to help them, and they did the same for Christopher, Osborn said.

Christopher, an eighth-grader, was Barbara Holloway’s second cousin.

Family members said the killings were thought to have happened about 3 a.m. Tuesday.

Family members said Gary Holloway had a 30-30 rifle that he had used to hunt deer. He kept the gun and shells in separate spots, they said.

Christopher found the shells, loaded the rifle and shot the Holloways in their bed as they slept, Osborn said.

Police said the rifle was empty when they found it, she said.

“He just unloaded on them,” she said.

The family had been putting coins and small bills in a water jug at the Holloways’ house to save for a camping trip.

Christopher took the jug and also took some money that Barbara Holloway kept under her pillow, Osborn said.

The couple was known for taking in animals no one else wanted, and had a black pug-chihuahua mix named Lola who slept with them.

Christopher either took the dog, or it jumped in the car with him when he left the Holloways’ mobile home in their 1997 Chevrolet Lumina after the shootings. He dropped off the dog at the adult day-care center in Edmonton where Barbara Holloway’s parents go, knowing someone would find it, Osborn said.

About 5 a.m., a girl that Christopher had been seeing, 12-year-old Kyra Shockley, was reported missing to police in Edmonton.

Family members of the Holloways said the girl lived near the center where Christopher dropped off the dog.

State police were later asked to join the search for Kyra.

Because police had information that Kyra might be with Christopher, police went to talk to the Holloways but got no answer.

Finally, Osborn said, she and Stephen Holloway went into his parents’ house between 3 and 3:30 p.m. Tuesday because they hadn’t been able to reach them by telephone. They found the couple dead in their bedroom.

Gary Holloway was lying beside the bed, and his wife was in bed.

Stephen Holloway first thought they might be sleeping, but his father’s arm was cold when he touched it, Osborn said.

The two ran outside and called 911.

“It’s unexplainable,” Osborn said of what she felt.

Preliminary autopsy reports show Gary Holloway died from several gunshot wounds, while Barbara Holloway was shot once in the head, state police said Wednesday.

Police issued an Amber Alert for Christopher and Kyra at 6:58 p.m. Tuesday because the two were missing and “possibly involved in a double homicide.” The Herald-Leader normally does not identify juveniles, but in this case both names were widely circulated as part of the alert.

A firefighter called state police about 10:40 p.m. Tuesday and said he was following the Holloways’ missing car.

When state police caught up with the vehicle, in Barren County, there was a short chase. The vehicle, which Christopher was driving, went off the road and through a fence.

Police caught Christopher and the girl after a short foot chase.

Burton said it wasn’t clear where the two juveniles were headed.

“They planned it,” Burton said of taking off, “but they hadn’t planned it that far.”

Police charged Christopher after interviewing him. Kyra was released to a parent.

In addition to murder, Christopher is charged with first-degree fleeing and evading police, first-degree wanton endangerment, reckless driving, driving without a license and third-degree criminal mischief.

He was being held in the Adair County Youth Development Center.

Police said the investigation is continuing, and more charges might be filed pending a grand jury hearing.

On Wednesday, family members gathered to clean up the couple’s home, burning their bed.

Gary Holloway liked to hunt and fish, and he and his wife were animal lovers and good people who were always willing to help others, family members said.

Their family was struggling to come to terms with the reality that the teen the Holloways took in is accused of killing them.

“I guess the first people to show him love, he didn’t know how to take it,” Osborn said.

https://www.kentucky.com/news/local/crime/article44085774.html

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A judge has sentenced a 16-year-old boy who pleaded guilty to killing his guardians to 20 years in prison.

The Glasgow Daily Times reports that Christopher Endicott received the sentence during a hearing Tuesday in Metcalfe County.

He pleaded guilty in October in the 2011 slayings of his legal guardians, Gary and Barbara Holloway. The couple was found fatally shot in their Edmonton home. He also entered guilty pleas to robbery, tampering with evidence and fleeing from police.

Under the plea deal, a 20-year sentence was recommended. However, at the court hearing, prosecutors asked for life without parole and Endicott’s attorneys cited their client’s age in asking for probation.

The judge was not swayed, but he will re-evaluate the sentence when the boy reaches the age of 18.

https://www.wlky.com/article/teen-sentenced-to-20-years-in-double-slaying/3778007

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Christopher Endicott is currently incarcerated at the Green River Correctional Facility

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Christopher Endicott current release date is 2031

Michael Carneal Teen Killer School Shooter

Michael Carneal

Michael Carneal was fourteen years old when he murdered three fellow students. According to court documents Michael Carneal brought a shotgun and a rifle wrapped in a blanket to Heath High School in Kentucky. Michael Carneal would open fire on a group of praying students killing three and injuring five. This teen killer was quickly arrested and sentenced to multiple life sentences however he is eligible for parole after twenty five years

Michael Carneal 2023 Information

Michael Carneal 2022
Name:CARNEAL, MICHAEL ADAM 
Active Inmate

Offender Photo(Click image to enlarge)
PID # / DOC #:246005 / 151127
Institution Start Date:6/01/2001
Expected Time To Serve (TTS):LIFE WITH PAROLE AFTER 25 YEARS
Classification:Medium (Level 3)
Minimum Expiration of Sentence Date (Good Time Release Date): ?LIFE WITH PAROLE AFTER 25 YEARS
Parole Eligibility Date:11/16/2022
Maximum Expiration of Sentence Date:LIFE WITH PAROLE AFTER 25 YEARS
Location:Kentucky State Reformatory
Age:36
Race:White
Gender:M
Eye Color:Blue
Hair Color:Brown
Height:5′ 11″
Weight:150

Michael Carneal Other News

On the morning of Dec. 1, 1997, then 14-year-old Michael Carneal arrived at Heath High School. While many thought it would be normal day, Carneal entered the school carrying a pistol, loaded clips, shot gun shells, and hundreds of .22 rounds, along with two shotguns and two rifles wrapped in a blanket. He told his sister the blanket was holding a school project.

He then approached and opened fire on a group of students praying. He killed three teenage girls and hurt five other classmates. Carneal then dropped the pistol and surrendered to the school’s principal.

He pleaded guilty a year later, and was sentenced to life in prison. He was also required to receive mental health care while in prison.

Investigators say Carneal had been bullied, and suffered from paranoia. After the shooting, he was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia, and had to be hospitalized several times due to psychosis.

In 2012, Carneal attempted to withdraw his plea, saying he was mentally ill at the time he made it. A month later, the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals denied his request, stating he could have acted sooner.

He is up for parole in 2023.

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Michael Carneal is currently incarcerated at the Kentucky State Reformatory

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Michael Carneal was sentenced to life in prison, he is eligible for parole in 2023

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In 1997 Michael Carneal walked into Heath High School in Paducah and opened fire on his classmates, killing three students and injuring five others. For the last five years we’ve been left to wonder why. He recently sat down with our Carrie Harned for his first ever television interview since the attack.

Michael Carneal seems to clearly remember the day of the shootings. “I remember pulling out the gun and holding it in front of me,” Carneal recalls. “I really wasn’t focused on the people I was focused on my hands.”

On that fateful day in Paducah, Michael Carneal sealed the fate of three teenage girls in a matter of seconds. But he says the events that led up to the shootings were years in the making. “There was a pecking order and I was probably towards the bottom of it.”

Carneal did, however, point to one event in particular that he identified as the starting point of all the trouble. “There was an incident in middle school that they put in the school newspaper that I was gay,” he said, “and ever since that, that label stuck with me. Everybody, if they wanted to get to me, they would put ‘faggot’ or ‘queer’ on the end.”

Despite the constant teasing, Carneal says he was desperate to make friends.

I would buy something and tell people I stole it because I thought that’s what they liked,” Carneal said, “that they wanted to be friends with a delinquent type person.”

After the shootings, Carneal avoided a trial by pleading guilty but mentally ill. Currently, he’s housed in the Kentucky State Reformatory’s psychiatric unit, where he takes medication for depression.

Carneal says he has been dealing with feelings of extreme sadness since kindergarten. “I was angry, I was lonely, I was afraid. I was just full of emotions and I didn’t know how to control them.”

So what he did was plan. At first, his ideas seemed strangely innocent. “If everybody left the school, then I could get on the intercom and talk.”

But then his thoughts grew more sinister. “Before the shootings, I would think about certain people who I would have liked to shot or hit or done something to.”

On December 1st, 1997, Michael Carneal stopped thinking and started taking action. He came to school that day armed with five guns and 1,000 rounds of ammo.

“The first place that I came upon was the lobby where everybody was just standing around,” he recalls. “And for some reason, I just decided I was going to do it there.”

He doesn’t remember much about the shooting itself except its aftermath. “I just remember stopping shooting and seeing a bunch of people on the ground screaming and crying.”

Now, facing the possibility of spending the rest of his life behind bars, Carneal is now aware of the destruction he caused — with plenty of time to think through his deadly plan in ways his 14-year-old mind could not.

“For some reason, I thought that if I did that, I thought that all my problems would just go away,” Carneal said. “But I never really thought about what would happen to the people.”

And looking back now, Carneal says he truly believes one thing could have stopped him. “If somebody would have just pulled me to the side and talked to me about what was going on, I probably — things would have been a lot different. It was in my mind so much it just became like I needed to bring it into action for some reason.”

Michael Carneal pleaded guilty but mentally in October 1998 to the attempted murder of the wounded and the murder of Kayce Steger, Nicole Hadley and Jessica James.

He was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for 25 years, so he won’t be eligible for release until 2022.

Carneal was ineligible for the death penalty because of his age at the time of the crime.

https://www.wave3.com/story/932794/carneal-recalls-1997-high-school-shooting-rampage/?clienttype=printable

Michael Carneal Parole Denied 2022

The Kentucky Parole Board on Monday ordered the man who, at age 14, opened fire on classmates in a 1997 school shooting to spend the rest of his life in prison, denying his request for parole 25 years later. 

Michael Carneal, now 39, told parole board members last week that he would live with his parents and continue his mental health treatment if they agreed to release him. 

He admitted that he still hears voices like the ones that told him to steal a neighbor’s pistol and fire it into a prayer circle in the crowded lobby of Heath High School, located in West Paducah, in December 1997. However, Carneal said that with therapy and medication, he has learned to control his behavior.

Those killed were 14-year-old Nicole Hadley, 17-year-old Jessica James, and 15-year-old Kayce Steger. Five more were injured, including Missy Jenkins Smith, who was paralyzed and uses a wheelchair.

Those killed were 14-year-old Nicole Hadley, 17-year-old Jessica James, and 15-year-old Kayce Steger. Five more were injured, including Missy Jenkins Smith, who was paralyzed and uses a wheelchair.

The Courier Journal reported that the mass school shooting was one of the first in modern U.S. history. The Heath High School bloodshed came just 17 months before Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold killed 12 students and one teacher and injured 21 more at Columbine High School in Colorado.

Jenkins Smith, who had considered Carneal a friend before she was paralyzed by one of his bullets, said she couldn’t sleep Sunday night because she was so anxious about the decision. She said she was in shock after hearing it. “It’s so hard to believe I don’t have to worry about it again,” she told the Associated Press.  “I guess I’ll realize it later. It will sink in.”

Jenkins Smith watched the hearing from her home in Kirksey with another victim, Kelly Hard Alsip, and their families. Her oldest son, who is 15, had been worried that if Carneal were released, he would come to their house, she said.

Jenkins Smith, Alsip, others who were wounded in the shooting, and relatives of those who were killed spoke to the parole board panel last week. Most expressed a wish for Carneal to spend the rest of his life in prison. Carneal told the panel there are days that he believes he deserves to die for what he did, but on other days he thinks he could still do some good in the world.

https://www.foxnews.com/us/kentucky-school-shooter-denied-parole-25-years-later-spend-rest-life-prison