Jared Ohsman a teenager from Minnesota would murder a man during a robbery. According to court documents Jared Ohsman (also spelled Jered Ohsman) and a younger accomplice fired several shots at a man during a robbery causing the man’s death. Jared Ohsman was all set to go to trial when at the last moment the teen killer decided to plead guilty to second degree murder. After the murder Jared Ohsman and his younger accomplice (who has not be named) would carjack yet another victim. Jared Ohsman would be sentenced to twenty two years in prison
A Coon Rapids teen has pleaded guilty to murder charges in a carjacking incident last summer in Minneapolis.
Jered Ohsman, 17, stood in front of a judge in Hennepin County court on Monday and admitted that just before 5 p.m. on June 11 he and another teen set out to rob a man and take his car.
Ohsman was 16. His accomplice was 15. Both boys were armed and fired at Steven Markey. Markey tried to drive away but crashed his car. He died later at the hospital from multiple gunshot wounds.
Prosecutors allege that Ohsman and his accomplice didn’t stop there. According to criminal charges, the two teens continued their crime spree by carjacking another victim downtown and committing another burglary before being arrested after trying to flee police in the stolen car.
Ohsman was certified to stand trial as an adult. Hennepin County Attorney spokesperson Chuck Laszewski said Ohsman’s accomplice is still going through the certification process.
Members of Markey’s family were in court as Ohsman pleaded guilty.
After Ohsman answered questions from attorneys, Judge Kathryn Quaintance asked him directly, “Clearly you knew shooting someone in the chest could or would be fatal?” she asked.
Ohsman replied, “Yes, ma’am.”
Jared Ohsman made a straight plea of guilty to two counts of second-degree murder, opting not to make a deal with the state that could have reduced his sentence.
Laszewski said Jared Ohsman still faces a first-degree robbery charge. He said no decision has been made on whether the office will continue to prosecute Ohsman for that.
Prosecutors say Ohsman faces a maximum penalty of 40 years in prison. His sentencing is set for April 17.
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A 17-year-old boy who pleaded guilty to a deadly shooting in last June was sentenced to nearly 22 years in prison Monday.
Police say Jered Ohsman and another boy shot Steven Markey, 39, on June 11, 2019 while trying to steal his car in northeast Minneapolis.
Ohsman, who was 16 at the time of the murder, was supposed to stand trial as an adult, but he entered a guilty plea in March to second-degree intentional murder. His sentencing was originally scheduled for April 1, but it was postponed to July 6 due to the pandemic. He still faces two aggravated robbery charges.
He apologized to the victim’s family in court Monday.
“There is nothing I can do to take back what I’ve done,” he said. “I would like the court to know that I am sorry for what I’ve done.”
Ohsman’s defense team pinned much of the blame for what happened on a failed child protection system in Hennepin County and asked for a reduced sentence.
The defense explained that their client was clinically diagnosed with Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, and his mother and father’s parental rights were terminated, leaving the young man as a ward of the state without the necessary care, direction or treatment to know right from wrong.
“We have a tremendous and systemic failure. If we want to think of there being a school to prison pipeline in this country, what we have is foster care is a bullet train. They did absolutely nothing,” defense attorney Kathy Cima said.
Prosecutors fought back against the narrative.
“The defendant and his co-respondent planned to rob somebody. They decided when they woke up, they were going to rob somebody. They had a kit that they carried with them, a backpack containing bandanas and firearms,” prosecutor Maximillia Utley said.
Ohsman’s accomplice, who was 15 at the time, is scheduled to appear in court Tuesday to determine if he will be certified as an adult.
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Jared Ohsman is currently incarcerated at the MCF Lino Lakes prison in Minnesota
Jared Ohsman Release Date
Jared Ohsman is eligible for parole in 2033, his maximum date is 2041
Patrick Root was seventeen years old when he shot and killed a man during a drug deal gone bad in Minnesota. According to court documents Patrick Root was mad that the victim instead of giving him drugs gave him a rolled up wad of paper. Patrick Root went to the victims home to demand his money back and when the victim refused he was shot multiple times in the chest causing his death. This teen killer would be sentenced to thirty years in prison
Patrick Root 2023 Information
MNDOC Offender ID:259114
Name:Patrick James Root
Birth Date:07/05/2000
Current Status:Incarcerated as of 04/03/2019. Currently at MCF Stillwater.
Sentence Date:04/03/2019
Anticipated Release Date:12/29/2037
Expiration Date:03/04/2048
Patrick Root Other News
Patrick Root has been sentenced to 367 months in prison for the August 4, 2017 murder of Timothy Hughes.
In February of 2019, Patrick Root pleaded guilty to one count of second-degree intentional murder. His sentence of just over 30 years is the guideline maximum for the charge.
In a statement to WCMP, Pine County Attorney Reese Frederickson said it took a lot of effort to get to Wednesday’s sentencing hearing because Root was 17 at the time of the shooting.
“We had to start in juvenile court, then certify him as an adult, which involved many hearings and expert witnesses. We also had to fight evidentiary and suppression motions, which also involved a lot of litigation,” said Frederickson.
At the sentencing hearing on Wednesday, April 3, multiple family members and supporters of the Hughes made victim impact statements. Root made no statement to the court.
Root will also have to pay $5, 365.33 in restitution for funeral expenses along with the prison time. If he serves two-thirds of his sentence with good behavior, Root could be released early and serve the remaining third while on parole.
Patrick Root has pled guilty to second degree murder for the death of 22-year-old Timothy Hughes in the Pine Terrace Mobile Home Park in Pine City on Aug. 4, 2017.
Root made his plea on Feb. 22 in Pine County Court. Though 17 at the time of the shooting, he was charged as an adult, and has spent the last year and a half in Pine County Jail.
His plea agreement with prosecutors means that Root will spend up to 367 months in prison.
In a transcript of the Feb. 22 hearing Pine County Attorney Reese Frederickson said that his office had reached out to Hughes’ relatives before making the deal.
“We did have a long conversation with the victim’s family about this,” Frederickson said. “In the end, the victim’s family agrees with the terms of the plea agreement.”
Root’s sentence is for 367 months in prison – just over 30 years. If he serves two-thirds of his sentence and his released for good behavior, he could be released to finish the final third of the sentence on parole.
Judge Krista Martin spoke with Root to make sure he was clear about the implications of a guilty plea.
“You do understand that entering this plea today means that you’ll be back for sentencing and at that time you will be sent to prison for a very long time?” Martin asked.
“Yes,” Root responded. He said he understood the charges, the plea, and the fact that making this deal meant he could not appeal later.
“I just want to make sure that you understand what this means in years… at a minimum you’re going to go to prison for about 20 years,” Martin said. “Do you understand that?”
“Yes,” Root said.
Root’s attorney Ryan Pacyga had Root describe the events of Aug. 4. Patrick Root said he gave Hughes money to purchase marijuana from him, but Hughes gave him a bag with shredded paper instead.
Patrick Root said he went to his home with friends and retrieved a Glock pistol, then rode over to the trailer park in the passenger side of the front seat. Root’s friend went in to speak to Hughes, then Hughes came out shouting at Root, who was still sitting in the vehicle’s passenger side.
Root said he was afraid of Hughes, and believed he had a gun. He said he saw Hughes lift his shirt and then pulled out his gun and shot Hughes.
He said Hughes was facing toward him on the first shot, but then Hughes’ body spun around.
“You shot him from behind, is that true?” Pacyga asked.
“Yes,” Root responded.
“And even if your first shot was in self-defense, you agree that by continuing to shoot that it was not reasonable force.”
“Yes,” Patrick Root agreed.
“While you might not have come there with the intent to kill him that day, you agree that you believe that by shooting someone at close range multiple times with that Glock … would have the result of killing him; you understand that?”
“Yes,” Root said.
Frederickson had Root confirm that after he left the scene he wiped the handgun down.
“What was the purpose of wiping it down?” Frederickson asked.
“Just trying to get rid of any evidence,” Root responded. He said he threw the gun and remaining ammo out the window.
Frederickson also pointed out that Root shot Hughes four times.
“At least three of the shots were from the back,” Frederickson said.
“At first it was in self-defense, and then after that I just couldn’t stop,” Root said. “I thought – I knew he had a gun, but I just shot, and I couldn’t stop myself from shooting.”
Root’s sentencing is set for April 3 at 8:30 a.m. at the Pine County Courthouse.
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Patrick Root is currently incarcerated at Stillwater Prison in Minnesota
Jquan McInnis was seventeen years old when he opened fire on a vehicle killing a man and a infant. According to court documents Jquan McInnis believed that the victim had stolen something from him so he would run up to the vehicle and fire five times striking and killing the man inside. This teen killer would then fire into the back seat killing a seven month old infant. At court Jquan McInnis would be sentenced to two life sentences and must serve thirty years on each count meaning he must serve sixty years before he will be eligible for parole.
Jquan McInnis 2023 Information
MNDOC Offender ID:235357
Name:Jquan Leearthur Mcinnis
Birth Date:03/17/1999
Current Status:Incarcerated as of 02/21/2019.
Currently at MCF Oak Park Heights.
Sentence Date:02/19/2019
Anticipated Release Date:Life –
Jquan McInnis Other News
A then-teenage gunman will be an old man when, or if, he is ever released from prison after receiving a 60-year sentence in the deaths of a man and an infant.
Jquan McInnis, now 20, was sentenced Thursday in Hennepin County District Court for the fatal 2016 murders of Gustav Christianson II and 7-month-old Jayden Redden. Judge Jeannice Reding called McInnis’ actions on that day “brazen and heartless.” She sentenced McInnis to life in prison with the possibility of parole after 30 years on each first degree murder count and ordered them served consecutively, meaning the convicted gunman will be 78 years old before he can be considered for release.
McInnis was given credit for three years he’s served in jail since the shootings took place.
During the trial prosecutors alleged that the shootings were carried out because McInnis believed Christianson had stolen from him. Investigators say the teen obtained a gun and when he passed a car parked near 26th Street East and 11th Avenue South with Christianson inside, McIniss told his companion to drive and park a block away. Prosecutors say McInnis then put his hood up to hide his identity, ran through several yards and fired five times, killing Christianson. As he was leaving, McInnis fired one more shot through the car’s back window, striking the infant in his car seat, although missing the baby’s father, the driver of the car.
During a presentence hearing evidence was presented that McInnis was likely exposed to drugs and alcohol in the womb, which is detrimental to development of the fetus. He was taken from his mother as an infant and placed with her mother and her husband where he suffered “chronic maltreatment,” including a failure of the grandparents to follow up on school and mental health resources that could have helped McInnis.
Instead, he spent a lot of his time on the street, unsupervised, and “spent time with mostly older gang members and learned how to survive on the streets, including using violence as a way of conflict resolution,” Judge Reding said. In deciding not to sentence him to life in prison without parole, the judge noted that both experts who examined McInnis said he is capable of being rehabilitated in prison.
KARE 11 reported that just months before the fatal shootings McInnis had been charged in the armed robbery and assault of a woman, but as a juvenile was given no prison time and released on three years probation.
A man who was 17 years old when he was charged in the shooting deaths of a man and a baby in Minneapolis in 2016 has been sentenced to two consecutive life sentences in prison.
Jquan McInnis had been found guilty of two counts of first-degree murder in 2018, for a crime that happened in October 2016. He was indicted by a grand jury.
The victims were 20-year-old Gustav Christianson II and seven-month old Jayden Redden. Minneapolis Police said that McInnis was riding in a car with then 25-year-old Rashad Austin two years ago when McInnis saw Christianson in a car nearby. He then got out of the car and went up to the other vehicle, firing shots into it before running away.
Redden’s father was also in the vehicle, and ran with the baby toward Children’s Hospital before being met by paramedics, who treated Redden in an ambulance before transporting him to the hospital. He died a short time thereafter.
The two life sentences carry the possibility of parole after 30 years. However, as it was ruled they were to be served consecutively, the earliest McInnis will be eligible for parole will be after he serves a minimum 60 years in prison, when he is about 80 years old.
He has been given credit for the more than three years he has already served.
Jquan McInnis Gets 2 Life Sentences In 2016 Shooting Deaths Of Man, Baby
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Jquan McInnis is currently incarcerated at MCF Oak Park Heights
John McLaughlin was responsible for the ROCORI High School shooting in Minnesota. According to court documents John McLaughlin walked into ROCORI High School looking for a particular student who he said was bullying him over his acne. McLaughlin would find the student exiting a locker room and proceeded to shoot him in the chest, the teen killer would fire a second shot hitting another student which would cause his death.
The initial victim would try to run from the scene however he would be chased down and shot in the head. John McLaughlin would empty his gun and turn himself over to a teacher. McLaughlin would be convicted of the two murders and sentenced to two consecutive life sentences.
John McLaughlin 2023 Information
MNDOC Offender ID:218041
Name:John Jason Mclaughlin
Birth Date:07/19/1988
Current Status:Incarcerated as of 08/30/2005.
Currently at MCF Stillwater.
Sentence Date:08/30/2005
Anticipated Release Date: Life
John McLaughlin Other News
On September 24, 2003, John McLaughlin loaded his father’s semiautomatic .22 caliber pistol, put it in a gym bag, and brought it to school with the intention to “shoot some people.” Specifically, McLaughlin intended to “hurt” fellow ninth-grader Bartell, who, according to McLaughlin, was one of the students who teased him “all the time.” Bartell and McLaughlin were in the same physical education class. Shortly before that class was to start, McLaughlin brought the gun to the boys’ locker room and cocked it in the bathroom so no one would see it. He then hid the gun in his gym bag, sat on a bench, and waited for Bartell. Other students were getting ready for class in the locker room at this time. John McLaughlinasked one of these students, R.S., where C.E., another student in the physical education class, was. R.S. responded that C.E. was gone that day.[1]
Shortly thereafter, R.S. left the locker room with Bartell, who had changed clothes in an area of the locker room that John McLaughlin could not see. McLaughlin followed R.S. and Bartell out of the locker room and into a hallway, where he fired the gun at and hit Bartell. Bartell grabbed his left side as he and R.S. continued down the hallway toward a staircase leading to a gymnasium. Meanwhile, McLaughlin cleared a jam in the gun and reloaded it. Before Bartell and R.S. reached the stairs, McLaughlin fired a second shot in Bartell’s direction; this shot missed Bartell, but hit fellow student Aaron Rollins, who was walking toward McLaughlin. Rollins raised his hands toward the wound in his neck and as he started falling, said, “[h]elp me, I’m hurt. Help me, I’ve been shot.”
As R.S. and Bartell climbed the stairs, Bartell lifted his shirt and said to R.S., “Look, I’m shot.” R.S. and Bartell continued up the stairs and into the gym, looking for their physical education teacher. Shortly thereafter, McLaughlin entered the gym and approached Bartell. When McLaughlin was approximately two feet from Bartell, who had turned to face him, McLaughlin shot Bartell a second time, this time hitting him in the forehead. Student witnesses estimated that the gun was anywhere from one to eight inches from Bartell’s head when McLaughlin pulled the trigger, but a forensic expert determined that the distance was approximately 18 inches to three feet. Bartell collapsed instantly, and McLaughlin started to walk away.
Physical education teacher Mark Johnson was completing some paperwork in the gym when McLaughlin shot Bartell the second time. As McLaughlin walked away from Bartell, Johnson stood up from his seat in the bleachers and first began to walk toward Bartell, and then toward McLaughlin. After Johnson took two or three steps toward McLaughlin, McLaughlin raised the gun and pointed it at Johnson. Johnson stopped immediately, raised his hand, and said “no” in a loud voice. McLaughlin then lowered the gun, ejected the remaining shells onto the floor, and dropped the gun. Johnson picked up the gun, grabbed McLaughlin by the wrist, and took him to the school office. Shortly thereafter, law enforcement officers arrived and transported McLaughlin to the police station.
While the officers dealt with McLaughlin, emergency response personnel attended to Bartell and Rollins. Attempts to revive Rollins through CPR were unsuccessful, and he was declared dead upon arrival at a St. Cloud hospital. Bartell underwent surgery soon after he arrived at the same hospital, but remained unconscious until his death 16 days later.
In an interview with Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) Agent Ken McDonald immediately after the shooting, McLaughlin initially admitted shooting Bartell in the basement, but moments later, he said that he thought his first shot missed Bartell. McLaughlin told McDonald that once he reached the gym, he “shot [Bartell] again” from a distance of five to six feet. When asked where he shot Bartell, McLaughlin responded, “I don’t know, I think right here,” and pointed toward his shoulder. McLaughlin told McDonald that he did not think he shot anyone other than Bartell, but he acknowledged that he might have, “if [he] missed, maybe.” Midway through the interview, McDonald learned that one of the victims had died. When he relayed this information to McLaughlin, McLaughlin started to cry.
McLaughlin denied wanting to kill or “seriously hurt” anybody and told McDonald that he “was just trying to hurt [Bartell] like he hurt me.” He said that he did not think a .22 gun would do “very much” harm.[2] McLaughlin also told McDonald that he started thinking about bringing a gun to school approximately one week earlier. He also said that two days before the shootings he checked the school for metal detectors and security cameras. Toward the end of the interview, McDonald asked McLaughlin, “Do you think you did something wrong today?” McLaughlin replied, “[y]eah.”
John McLaughlin told McDonald that his trouble with Bartell began in sixth grade, and that he was teased “basically about [his] zits and stuff.” Of the 12 students who testified at McLaughlin’s trial, including several of McLaughlin’s friends, only two told the district court that they had ever observed any conflict between Bartell and McLaughlin. The conflicts these witnesses described involved pushing, yelling, and “talking,” but not Bartell calling McLaughlin names or teasing him about his acne or anything else. Two students testified that C.E. called McLaughlin names such as “fag” and “asshole.” But these witnesses qualified their testimony by stating that C.E. teased “everybody else” in the same manner, that C.E. was “just a kidding type of guy,” and that the conflict between C.E. and McLaughlin was “nothing major.” A third witness remembered one instance in which C.E. pushed McLaughlin out of the way by McLaughlin’s locker, and McLaughlin responded by acting as if it did not happen.
The student who said he only saw Bartell and John McLaughlin “talking” apparently testified to the grand jury that McLaughlin “was teased almost every day or every other day” and that “[Bartell] and his friends would go up to [McLaughlin] and they would just push him around.” On cross-examination, this student agreed with defense counsel’s statement that “[your grand jury testimony] was based mainly on rumors that you had heard.” Another witness admitted on cross-examination that she had heard stories from other students about McLaughlin being teased, even though she never saw it happen. Defense counsel read from a statement this same witness gave to BCA agents on the day of the shooting, in which she said that McLaughlin “was a pretty good person and he got teased for a lot of things, for just a lot of things.”
B.K., who knew John McLaughlin since elementary school and developed a friendship with him in middle school, told the court that she exchanged e-mail messages with McLaughlin during the summer before ninth grade and after the school year started. During this time, John McLaughlin told B.K. that he had a girlfriend named Suki Renoko, and he asked B.K. if she would exchange e-mail messages with Renoko. B.K. began to correspond with Renoko, but she soon became suspicious that there was no such person and that Renoko was actually McLaughlin. She testified that the messages contained overly personal questions that typical 14-year-olds would not ask and had the same spelling errors as McLaughlin’s messages. In one message from “Renoko,” McLaughlin characterized himself as a “sniper.” In another, he described an incident in which he cut the face of someone who stabbed his sister. Before classes began on the day of the shooting, John McLaughlin e-mailed B.K. under his own name and wrote, “befor[e] [I] go to[o] far [I] have to ask you not to tell any one about this not the news cops or parents ok * * * so [I] guess this is goodbye my love.” B.K. did not receive this message until after the shootings when she returned home from school.
Approximately six months after the shootings, the Stearns County Juvenile Court certified McLaughlin to stand trial as an adult. John McLaughlin appealed the certification to the Minnesota Court of Appeals, which affirmed the certification order. The parties then agreed to a bifurcated bench trial in which McLaughlin would stipulate to guilt in the second-degree murder of Rollins during the trial’s first phase and would attempt to prove a mental illness defense during the second phase. There was no stipulation as to Bartell. At the close of the first phase, the district court found John McLaughlin guilty of first-degree murder in Bartell’s death, second-degree murder in Rollins’ death, and possession of a dangerous weapon on school property. In the second phase, the court heard testimony from six mental health experts—three retained by McLaughlin, one by the state, and two by the court.
Students and staff at ROCORI High School are marking the 10th anniversary of a fatal school shooting in a low-key manner at the request of families involved.
Teens and educators paused for a moment of silence Tuesday to remember the Sept. 24, 2003, high school shooting that killed two students — 14-year-old Seth Bartell and 17-year-old Aaron Rollins. Ninth-grader John McLaughlin was convicted in the shooting and sentenced to life in prison.
Cold Spring Mayor Doug Schmitz told the St. Cloud Times there’s a frustration among residents of the small community that it’s known only for the school shooting and the fatal shooting of police officer Tom Decker last November.
Schmitz said the community is moving forward, but will never forget
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John McLaughlin is currently incarcerated at the Stillwater prison
Brok Junkermeier and two other teens including the victims grandson planned and ambushed the seventy nine year old woman during a robbery. According to court documents Brok Junkermeier would ambush the victim. cutting her hands and forcing her to write a check before brutally stabbing her to death. Brok Junkermeier and the victims grandson expected to find a ton of money in the safe she kept in her home however the only thing inside were documents. Brok Junkermeier would go to trial for the murder of the elderly woman however would this teen killer later plead guilty and the teen killer would be sentence to life in prison without parole
Brok Junkermeier 2023 Information
MNDOC Offender ID:243651
Name:Brok Nathaniel Junkermeier
Birth Date:06/13/1994
Current Status:Incarcerated as of 04/09/2014.
Currently at MCF Stillwater.
Sentence Date:04/09/2014
Anticipated Release Date:
Life without Parole
Expiration Date:Life
Highest Ranked Offense:HomicideAid/Abet
Brok Junkermeier Other News
Two high school friends of Brok Junkermeier testified Monday that he had talked about killing Lila Warwick in the past and that shortly after her death was discovered, he told them details of how he killed the 79-year-old grandmother.
Morgan Hoffer, 20, of Willmar, secretly recorded the conversation on his cell phone.
Jurors at the Kandiyohi County Courthouse in Willmar listened to the muffled recording as the murder trial began its second week.
Junkermeier, 19, of Willmar, faces one count of first-degree premeditated murder and one count of first-degree murder with intent while committing a felony.
Earlier in the day Monday, photos and a video led jurors through Lila Warwick’s home on the east edge of Willmar, where she was found dead on July 29, 2013.
In a hushed courtroom, Mark Patterson, who is a forensic scientist with the state Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, narrated the video that showed a trail of blood through the home, garage and basement.
It also showed the body of Warwick lying on her back on the basement floor.
Barefoot and wearing black clothing, Warwick had blood and abrasions on her chin and a pool of blood by her left hand.
A lightweight handcuff that Patterson described as a “novelty” or “toy” handcuff was around her left wrist.
The tour through the home also included shots of Warwick’s office nook where the computer screen was open to a bank website that showed her bank balance that day of a little more than $1,500.
There was blood on a blank check that was lying on the floor next to the computer desk, and blood on the computer equipment and chair.
Junkermeier is accused of cutting Warwick’s hand with a knife during the early morning surprise attack and then forcing her to write him a $1,500 check.
After blood got on the first check, Junkermeier allegedly bandaged her hand so that she could write him a clean check.
A series of Kandiyohi County Sheriff’s deputies and detectives testified Monday about what they saw at the house and how evidence was methodically collected and processed.
Much of the afternoon was spent hearing the testimony of Junkermeier’s two friends, Hoffer and Tyler Stegeman.
They both said Junkermeier had talked many times about killing Warwick. And they both said they had not taken such talk seriously.
Stegeman, an 18-year-old senior at Willmar High School, testified that four days before the killing, he and Junkermeier were playing basketball when Junkermeier said he was going to kill Warwick.
The motive was money.
Stegeman said he did not consider it a real threat.
“I honestly didn’t think he was going to do it,” said Stegeman, responding to the attorney’s question about why he did not notify authorities. “Who’s going to kill an old lady?” said Stegeman.
Hoffer said he had heard “bits and pieces” about the murder plans for nine months but thought it was “just talk” and was “something so stupid” he did not take it seriously until he heard that Warwick had been found dead.
Hoffer told the court he called Junkermeier the day after the murder to “say farewell” because he had “put it together” that Junkermeier was involved.
Figuring that Junkermeier would be quickly caught, Hoffer said he called Junkermeier to say goodbye.
The two talked in person for nearly three hours while Hoffer was at work, with Junkermeier providing details of each step of the killing.
During that conversation, Hoffer recorded three short segments on his phone that was hidden from Junkermeier’s view.
Hoffer testified that Junkermeier said he had tried to strangle Warwick and when that failed, he attempted to break her neck and then stomped on her throat and finally stabbed her before throwing her body in the basement.
Junkermeier allegedly told the same story to Stegeman, who testified that he talked to Junkermeier on the phone the day of the killing.
Junkermeier said he had “killed her, strangled her, stomped on her, stabbed her,” said Stegeman, recalling his conversation with Junkermeier.
Hoffer contacted police two days after the death was discovered and informed them that Junkermeier and Warwick’s grandson, Robert Warwick, 18, were involved.
Hoffer said Robert Warwick’s name had always been included when Junkermeier had talked about killing Lila Warwick.
Paul Follmann, a detective with the Kandiyohi County Sheriff’s Office, testified that he met on July 31 with a nervous Hoffer. Based on information from Hoffer, Follmann said the murder investigation focused on Junkermeier and Robert Warwick.
Robert Warwick, of Willmar, has been indicted on the same set of first-degree murder charges. He is alleged to have planned the killing. No trial date has been set for him.
Devon Jenkins, 16, of Willmar, has already been sentenced as a juvenile for aiding and abetting second-degree murder. He was in the car when Junkermeier was inside Lila Warwick’s house.
In an Aug. 8 statement to police, Stegeman said Junkermeier had not previously talked about killing Warwick. Then in a September interview with the Attorney General’s office, Stegeman changed his story and said Brok Junkermeier had talked about killing Warwick days before she was killed.
When asked Monday why he did not give accurate information to police in August, Stegeman said he was scared.
“I don’t want to sit here in front of him and do this,” said Stegeman, glancing at Junkermeier.
Stegeman and Hoffer had similar answers when asked about Junkermeier’s demeanor when he told them he had killed Warwick.
“He seemed happy,” said Stegeman.
“Excited, I guess,” said Hoffer of Junkermeier. “Proud almost.”
Before recessing for the day, Judge Donald Spilseth reminded the jury they were not to talk to anyone about the case or read or listen to any news coverage.
Brok Junkermeier, the 19-year-old who in the midst of his trial last week surprised even his attorney by pleading guilty to killing his friend’s grandmother, Lila Warwick, was sentenced to life in prison without parole Wednesday morning.
As members of two families — Warwick’s and his own — quietly cried, Brok Junkermeier apologized in Kandiyohi County District Court on Wednesday for the July ambush robbery and attack on Warwick.
“I am so sorry,” he said, after taking off his glasses to wipe away tears. “If I could trade my life for hers, I would.
“I pray for their forgiveness,” he added, referring to the families. “I’m learning to accept my punishment.”
Last week, Brok Junkermeier abruptly changed his plea, admitting on the stand to killing Warwick and saying that he planned the crime with Warwick’s grandson, Robert Inocencio Warwick, 18, whose trial has not yet been set.
Two of Lila Warwick’s granddaughters made statements at Wednesday’s sentencing. Katie Ekbom, 22, said that at first, she was furious about the way her grandmother had died.
“But then it hit me,” she said. “Is this how my grandma would want me to live?”
Their mother, Cheri Ekbom, also spoke, occasionally looking at Junkermeier. She said, in part:
The battle of hatred versus mercy is one that has played out often in my mind the last ten days. Hatred and revenge come easily, and I tell myself I am justified in doing so. Since my mom’s death eight months ago, I have had a compass to guide me. Quite simply, it’s been a compass to honor her. Despite every graphic and appalling word I’ve heard and witnessed, I do not hate. Returning hatred for hatred and evil for evil: She would not, nor will I. In this, I will honor her.
One morning in late July,Brok Junkermeier sneaked into Lila Warwick’s garage with a long dagger, cutting her hands before forcing her to write him a check for $1,500. He detailed how he stabbed and strangled her in an interview with investigators two days after her body was found on the basement floor.
Brok Junkermeier and “Robbie” Warwick had expected to find tens of thousands of dollars in the safe they picked up on a trip back to her home a few hours after her slaying.
But when the pair pried open that safe, “there was just, like, documents,” Brok Junkermeier said in the videotaped interview, including a high school diploma, passport and baptism certificate. They also took $30,000 in savings bonds in the name of Lila Warwick, which deputies later spotted on Junkermeier’s bedside table.
Brok Junkermeier is currently incarcerated at MCF Stillwater
Brok Junkermeier Release Date
Brok Junkermeier is serving a life without parole sentence
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