Troy Kell Utah Death Row

troy kell

Troy Kell was still a teenager when he committed his first murder however it would be a prison murder that would make him infamous and land him on Utah death row. On this article on My Crime Library we will take a closer look at Troy Kell.

Utah Death Row Inmate List

Troy Kell Nevada Murder

Troy Kell was eighteen years old when he was approached by his friend 15 year old Sandy Shaw to beat up the victim James “Cotton” Kelly aka James Thiede for constantly pressuring her for sex. Troy Kell, Sandy Shaw and William Merritt would kidnap Cotton and drive him out to the desert in 1986 .

Once in the middle of nowhere Troy Kell would shoot Cotton six times in the face. The trio would leave Cotton body and head back to the city. Sandy Shaw and William Merritt in the upcoming days would bring other friends to the murder scene to show off the body. Needless to say police would hear about the murder and the trio would be soon arrested.

It would later be noted that Sandy Shaw never brought people to the murder scene however a friend of hers who she told would. Sandy Shaw would initially be sentenced to life in prison however this would be reduced after the parole board commuted her sentence. Sandy Shaw would spend 21 years in prison.

William Merritt would be convicted at trial and sentenced to eight to twelve years in prison. Merritt would only serve four years however soon after he was released he would be arrested again and sentenced to life in prison.

Troy Kell would be sentenced to life in prison. A number of years after the first murder Troy Kell would be transferred to Utah due to overcrowding.

Troy Kell Prison Murder

Troy Kell was having problems with an inmate named Lonnie Blackmon and according to other prison inmates the two were in constant arguments from their respective cells.

On July 6. 1994 Troy Kell along with another inmate Eric Daniels would be released at the same time as Lonnie Blackmon. Kell and Daniels would attack Blackmon and while Eric held him down Troy would stab the man over sixty five times. The murder would be caught on tape and would be at the center of the documentary Gladiator Days: Anatomy of a Prison Murder

Troy Kell would be sentenced to death and as of 2021 remains on Utah Death Row. Eric Daniels would be sentenced to life in prison.

Troy Kell 2023 Information

troy kell 2021
  • Offender Number: 72819
  • Offender Name: TROY MICHAEL KELL
  • DOB: Thu, 13 Jun 1968
  • Height: 5 Feet 10 Inches
  • Weight: 145
  • Sex: M
  • Location: UTAH STATE PRISON
  • Housing Facility: UINTA
  • Parole Date: N/A
  • Aliases:
    • TROY MICHAEL KELL

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The nation’s top court is considering whether to take up a death penalty case from Utah.

Troy Kell is on death row for the 1994 murder of Lonnie Blackmon inside the Utah State Prison in Gunnison. Kell is accused of stabbing Blackmon numerous times in a racially-motivated murder that was caught on camera. After the slaying, he walked around a cell block with blood on his arms screaming “white power.” Kell’s attorneys argued the killing was self-defense.

The Utah Attorney General’s Office is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to take up Kell’s case, essentially arguing over delays to carry out a death sentence. On Friday, the justices met in conference to determine if they will hear the case.

Earlier this year, the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals dismissed an appeal, saying Troy Kell had not exhausted all his federal and state court processes so they didn’t have jurisdiction to hear it. The court never considered the central issue of the appeal — how long it has taken to exhaust Kell’s death penalty claims.

In its petition to the U.S. Supreme Court, the state said some courts are causing some of the delays and they ought to have the ability to appeal a lower court judge’s determination — which they are unable to do right now.

“The federal district court delayed Mr. Kell’s case unjustifiably,” deputy Utah Solicitor General Andrew Peterson said Friday. “The sovereign state of Utah should be entitled to appeal that decision.

Kell’s lawyers say the Court should not take up the case. In their own filing, they argued that proper procedures are being followed. Those procedures, they said, were set up by the very states complaining about it.

“If the State thinks a claim is truly meritless, it can waive exhaustion and ask the court to grant summary judgment on the merits,” Kell’s lawyer, Dale Baich, wrote. “But the State has not exercised this option and is simply complaining about Rhines, which the district court dutifully followed.”

Death penalty appeals take years to exhaust. Lawmakers in the Utah State Legislature have long complained about delays and have recently pushed legislation to cut down on the appeals process.

Earlier this week, notorious killer Ron Lafferty died of natural causes after decades on Utah’s death row awaiting a firing squad execution. In that instance, Peterson said, there were delays in carrying out the sentence.

“Ten years for federal habeas corpus and two years to decide on appeal that he doesn’t have the right to appeal? In our view, it’s too long,” Peterson said of Lafferty’s case.

In Kell’s case, Utah is getting support in its arguments from other states. Indiana, Alabama, Georgia, Idaho, Kansas, Louisiana, Montana, Nebraska, Ohio, South Carolina and South Dakota all filed a “friend of the court” brief arguing that the Supreme Court itself warned this could happen.

“The Court’s prediction that capital petitioners would abuse Rhines stays to delay their executions has proven correct. District courts have delayed numerous executions by issuing stays based on plainly meritless claims,” Indiana Attorney General Curtis Hill wrote.

The U.S. Supreme Court did not announce on Friday if it would hear the case. A decision could be announced next week, or the justices can hold it over for another conference.

https://www.fox13now.com/2019/11/15/u-s-supreme-court-considers-whether-to-take-utah-death-row-case/

Troy Kell More News

The Utah Supreme Court on Monday heard for the third time arguments by attorneys representing death-row inmate Troy Michael Kell, who wants his conviction for fatally stabbing a fellow prisoner at a state prison in 1994 to be overturned.

Megan Blythe Moriarty, a federal public defender representing Kell, said Kell’s prior attorneys failed to investigate 106 claims that Kell identifies as “red flags” in how his case was handled.

Among Kell’s chief concerns is a claim that his attorneys didn’t investigate and present to a jury “mitigating circumstances” that may have swayed jurors to convict Kell to life in prison instead of death for the July 6, 1994 murder of Lonnie Blackmon at the Gunnison prison.

Video footage captured another inmate holding Blackmon, 32, down while a 26-year-old Kell stabbed him 67 times with a shank. Blackmon was serving a sentence for robbery and theft. He had been transferred to Utah’s prison from Arkansas, while Kell had been transferred to Utah from Las Vegas.

Kell, now 42, was convicted in Nevada for the 1986 murder of a Canadian tourist in Las Vegas. He was sentenced to two life sentences. A Sanpete County jury in 1996 convicted Kell of capital murder and sentenced him to die for Blackmon’s murder.

The execution has failed to proceed as the case continues to be held up in appeals.

“This is an ugly case,” Moriarty told the high court. “That is why it required good and thorough [investigation into] post-conviction relief. His counsel didn’t do anything.”

Assistant Utah Attorney General Thomas Brunker disputed Moriarty’s claims, arguing that Kell’s counsel did an in-depth examination of potential post-penalty conviction options. Brunker said “every effort to curb Kell’s violence have been tried and failed” leaving death as the only punishment not tried.

Kell, a white supremacist, yelled “white power” while wiping the blood of Blackmon, an African-American, from his hands as other inmates cheered. Kell stabbed Blackmon nine times in the eyes, a tactic Brunker said was done to ensure the victim experienced the most excruciating pain possible.

Brunker said that evidence in Kell’s case includes testimony from a guard he threatened, saying he had “nothing to lose” by acting out in prison because he was already serving two life sentences in the Nevada case.

If the high court should rule in Kell’s favor, Brunker said, it could open the door for the other eight inmates on Utah’s death row to stall out their cases by filing similar post-conviction relief appeals.

https://archive.sltrib.com/article.php?id=51940093&itype=cmsid

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 Defendant Troy Michael Kell, an inmate at the Central Utah Correctional Facility (CUCF) in Gunnison, Utah, was charged with aggravated murder, a violation of section 76-5-202 of the Utah Code. After being tried in a courtroom located inside the prison facility, he was convicted and sentenced to death.

BACKGROUND

¶ 2 Defendant stabbed fellow inmate Lonnie Blackmon (Blackmon) to death on July 6, 1994.   Prior to the attack, defendant, a white supremacist, had been involved in race-related altercations with several African-American inmates, including Blackmon.

¶ 3 On the day before the killing, defendant and two of his accomplices, Eric Daniels (Daniels) and Paul Payne (Payne), submitted medical request forms to visit the prison’s medical facility.   In addition, Daniels forged a medical request form in Blackmon’s name so that Blackmon would be transported to the medical facility at the same time defendant and his accomplices were being transported.

¶ 4 Moments before the attack occurred, defendant and Blackmon were moved from the upper tier of the building at the CUCF where they were housed to the lower tier where they awaited transfer to the prison’s medical facility.   Both defendant and Blackmon were placed in double locked handcuffs fastened to a belt around the waist.   Their feet were not placed in shackles so that they could safely descend the stairs from the top tier of the cell block.   By this time, Daniels had also been moved to the lower tier to go to the medical facility.   Payne’s request to go to the medical facility had been denied because he was in punitive isolation on the top tier of the cell block.   Nevertheless, at his insistence, Payne was permitted to shower on the lower tier of the cell block rather than in the showers located on the second tier of the cell block, where his cell was located.

¶ 5 While descending to the lower tier, defendant removed his handcuffs with a partial handcuff key that had been altered with a homemade handle made from melted plastic utensils.   Defendant also produced a shank.1  Blackmon was standing with his back to defendant talking to other inmates, when defendant began to stab him repeatedly in the neck, eyes, face, back and chest.   Defendant was free to use his unrestrained hands and arms during the attack, but Blackmon could only kick at his attackers to defend himself because he was still in handcuffs that were attached to his waist.   Blackmon’s efforts were futile in any event because Payne choked and punched him and Daniels held onto his legs during the attack.

¶ 6 For over two and a half minutes, defendant slashed Blackmon with his shank, inflicting sixty-seven stab wounds, only two of which were described by the forensic examiner as being capable of inflicting death in the short term.   Despite Blackmon’s pleas to stop, defendant continued the assault and, in fact, after walking away, returned twice to inflict more wounds, until Blackmon lay motionless on the floor of the cell block.   Blackmon bled to death and defendant was charged with aggravated murder.   A more detailed account of the attack can be found in the companion case of State v. Daniels, 2002 UT 2, 40 P.3d 611.

¶ 7 Following two pretrial evidentiary hearings, the trial court determined to hold defendant’s trial in a regular courtroom located inside the CUCF. This decision was based on security risks particular to defendant, including his criminal background, prison disciplinary record, and overall prison history.   In addition, several logistical problems regarding security existed in trying defendant in either of the two courtrooms available outside the prison.   Because most of the numerous witnesses in the case were either prison guards or high security inmates, the security risks and costs associated with transporting all of them to a courtroom located outside of the county would have been extremely high;  thus, the trial court decided to hold the trial in the courtroom located within the confines of the prison.

¶ 8 At trial, defendant testified that he killed Blackmon because Blackmon had overtly threatened him.   According to defendant, Blackmon wanted to make an example of him to the other inmates to demonstrate Blackmon’s power in the prison.   Defendant stated he believed Blackmon was making a threat when he overheard Blackmon say to another inmate on the day of the killing, “Yeah man ․ it’s on.   You know it,” even though Blackmon made no threatening gestures toward defendant.   Defendant claimed that due to conditions in the prison and circumstances surrounding Blackmon’s threats, he was suffering from “extreme emotional disturbance” at the time of the homicide.   One eyewitness testified, however, that during the attack defendant’s demeanor was “very business like, as cold as cold gets.   It was like he was doing a job.”

¶ 9 Based on his testimony, defendant asked the court to instruct the jury on the defense of imperfect self-defense manslaughter, but the court declined his request.   The trial court did, however, instruct the jury on the lesser included offense of murder, as well as aggravated murder.   The jury unanimously found the defendant guilty of aggravated murder and sentenced him to death.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/ut-supreme-court/1321790.html

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Troy Kell 2021

Troy Kell is on death row at Utah State Prison

Troy Kell Release Date

Troy Kell was sentenced to death if that is overturned he will have 2 life sentences without parole to serve

Adrian Navarro-Canales Teen Killer Murders Mom And Brother

adrian Navarro Canales teen killer photos

Adrian Navarro-Canales just turned sixteen years old when he murdered his mother and brother in Nevada. According to court documents Adrian Navarro-Canales was not happy that his family was living in the United States and wanted to return to Mexico. The bodies of his mother and nine year old brother were found stabbed to death in their apartment in Las Vegas. This teen killer would be convicted of both murders and sentenced to 32 to 95 years in prison.

Adrian Navarro-Canales 2023 Information

adrian Navarro Canales 2020 photos
NameOffender IDEthnicAgeInstitutionCustody Level
ADRIAN NAVARRO-CANALES1156619HISPANIC22LOVELOCK CORRECTIONAL CENTERMEDIUM

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The Henderson teenager who was convicted of killing his mother and younger brother more than two years ago has been sentenced.

Adrian Navarro-Canales was sentenced to 32.5 to 95 years in prison for the two murders. Navarro-Canales pled guilty to one count of first degree murder and one count of second degree murder in December 2015.

Navarro-Canales stabbed to death  his 40-year-old mother Elvira Canales-Gomez and 9-year-old brother Cesar Navarro in September 2013. Theie bodies were found on Sept. 20.

Initially, police believed that the teenager was missing and possibly in danger. However, they later identified him as a person of interest for the double slaying, and then located him at a food court on the Las Vegas Strip. He was arrested on Sept. 25, 2013.

Navarro-Canales was charged as an adult, but was not eligible for the death penalty because he was 16 at the time of the murders.

https://www.ktnv.com/news/henderson-teen-sentenced-for-killing-mother-brother

Adrian Navarro-Canales Other News

Shackled and wearing a blue prison uniform, a Las Vegas-area teenager Monday made a brief initial court appearance on charges that he killed his mother and younger brother a day after celebrating his 16th birthday.

Adrian Navarro-Canales nodded to say he understood the charges and said little else during the hearing before Henderson Justice of the Peace David Gibson Sr. The judge set a preliminary hearing for Oct. 30.

Navarro-Canales is being prosecuted as an adult in the case. He wasn’t asked to enter a plea.

He faces two murder charges that could carry the possibility of life in prison if he is convicted. He cannot face the death penalty due to his age.

Henderson police found the bodies of Elvira Canales-Gomez and 9-year-old Cesar Navarro Sept. 20 in the bathroom of their Henderson apartment.

The mom had multiple stab wounds and a butcher knife in her chest, police said. The boy was stabbed once in the chest.

Police haven’t released a possible motive for the slayings.

A cousin, Ana Martinez, 23, told police that she didn’t think Navarro-Canales had any friends in the Las Vegas area, didn’t like living in the United States and wanted to go back to Mexico. She said he spent most of his time in the apartment playing video games.

Neither the prosecutor, Robert Daskas, nor the teen’s appointed public defender, Joseph Abood, commented outside court.

Navarro-Canales was sought for several days in the U.S. and along the Mexican border before he was found last Wednesday sitting alone at a food court on the Las Vegas Strip. The spot is about 9 miles from the suburban apartment where he lived with his mother and brother.

Police think the killings occurred Sept. 17, sometime after the mom picked up Cesar from school.

Navarro-Canales was initially named as a possible victim, not a suspect, and his father, Adrian Navarro Soto-Mayor, flew from San Jose, Calif., to plead for him to contact family members.

The Associated Press typically doesn’t identify minors accused of crimes but is naming Navarro-Canales because of the seriousness of the case.

Officers went to the apartment once Sept. 18 and twice Sept. 19 at the request of Martinez and Canales-Gomez’s boyfriend before entering and finding the bodies during a fourth visit.

School officials said Navarro-Canales was enrolled as a junior at Coronado High 

https://www.foxnews.com/world/nevada-teen-accused-of-killing-mother-and-brother-appears-in-court

Adrian Navarro-Canales Videos

Adrian Navarro-Canales FAQ

Adrian Navarro-Canales 2021

Adrian Navarro-Canales is currently incarcerated at the Lovelock Correctional Facility

Adrian Navarro-Canales Release Date

Adrian Navarro-Canales earliest opportunity for release is 2042 his maximum release date is 2104

Monique Maestas Teen Killer Murders 3 Year Old Girl

Monique Maestas Teen Killer

Monique Maestas was sixteen years old when she and her brother Beau murdered a three year old girl and paralyzed her ten year old sister. According to court documents Monique Maestas and her brother were upset that the dope they bought from the murdered girls mother was fake. They went looking for the drug dealer but found her children instead. This teen killer was sentenced to forty seven years to life while her brother Beau Maestas was given a death sentence

Monique Maestas 2023 Information

No longer in Nevada prison system. States out of state confinement. Looks like she is in the Connecticut Department Of Corrections

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A 20-year-old Utah woman was sentenced Thursday to 47 years to life in prison in a brutal knife attack that killed one little girl and left another paralyzed outside a Nevada casino in 2003.

Monique Maestas read a letter of apology for “lives lost and changed” by the stabbings that killed 3-year-old Kristyanna Cowan and severed the spine of Cowan’s 10-year-old sister, Brittney Bergeron.

Maestas’ brother, Beau Maestas, 23, said nothing before Clark County District Judge Donald Mosley scheduled him to die by lethal injection and tacked on a sentence of up to 75 years in prison.

“This case has to be one of the most horrendous I have ever been involved with,” Mosley said. “It is a tragedy all the way around … brought on by this scourge in our community, narcotics.”

A jury decided in August for the death penalty for Beau Maestas, who previously pleaded guilty to first-degree murder. Thursday’s additional sentences were for his guilty pleas to attempted murder with a weapon, burglary with a weapon and conspiracy.

The judge scheduled Beau Maestas to die the week of Dec. 11-17, but that date will be pushed back years while the death sentence is automatically appealed.

Monique Maestas, who pleaded guilty to the same charges, was not eligible for the death penalty because she was 16 at the time of the attack. Her brother was 19.

Mosley noted that Monique Maestas could apply for parole when she is 63.

Monique Maestas avoided trial by pleading guilty the same day the jury returned the death penalty verdict against her brother. Her plea spared Brittney Bergeron from having to testify about the bloody January 2003 attack, which happened in a trailer parked outside a casino in Mesquite.

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A jury decided Tuesday that a 22-year-old Utah man should die by lethal injection for brutally stabbing two little girls left alone in a trailer outside a Mesquite casino in 2003.

Beau Santino Maestas sat silently, blinked twice and kept his eyes downcast as the verdict was read. Maestas, who only recently apologized for the knife attack, had said the stabbings were revenge for a drug rip-off. He pleaded guilty in May 2005 to murder and attempted murder.

“This is a tragic case, for those poor girls and for Beau,” defense lawyer Thomas Ericsson said after Maestas was led away in shackles. Ericsson had tried to convince the jury of seven women and five men that Maestas had such a horrific childhood that he should be spared the death penalty.

He will become the 82nd person on Nevada’s death row when he is formally sentenced Aug. 30 by Clark County District Judge Donald Mosley.

Maestas admitted killing 3-year-old Kristyanna Cowan and stabbing Cowan’s half-sister, 10-year-old Brittney Bergeron. Brittney was left paralyzed from the waist down in the Jan. 22, 2003, attack.

A trauma surgeon said Brittney had been stabbed 20 times, including wounds that severed her spine. Kristyanna died of multiple stab wounds to the head, throat and back.

Maestas, who was 19 at the time of the killing, and his 16-year-old sister, Monique Maestas, were accused of forcing their way into the trailer and attacking the girls after the girls’ mother, Tamara Bergeron, and her then-boyfriend, Robert Schmidt, sold the Maestas pair salt in place of methamphetamine.

Brittney’s pluck and persistence as she teetered near death, then slowly recovered, riveted a region mortified by the bloody attack and appalled by allegations that the girls had been left alone while their drug-addicted mother and her boyfriend gambled at the casino

https://www.deseret.com/2006/8/23/19970034/utahn-to-die-for-stabbing-2-nevada-girls

Frequently Asked Questions

Monique Maestas Now

Due to her charges Monique Maestas is housed out of Nevada

Monique Maestas Release Date

Monique Maestas current release date is 2050

Toni Fratto Teen Killer Murders Love Rival

Toni Fratto

Toni Fratto was seventeen when she helped murder a romantic rival. According to court documents Toni Fratto was dating Kody Patten and was jealous of the relationship he had with the victim Micaela Costanzo and demanded her boyfriend help get rid of the sixteen year old. Micaela Costanza was brought to a remote location where she was hit over the head, straddled by Fratto while Kody Patten slit her throat. The sixteen year old was buried in a shallow grave. This teen killer would end up pleading guilty to her role in the murder and was sentenced to life in prison with parole eligibility after eighteen years. Kody Patten was sentenced to life without parole

Toni Fratto 2023 Information

Toni Fratto

FLORENCE MCCLURE WOMENS CORRECTIONAL Center

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Toni Fratto was sentenced to spend life in prison plus an additional 20 years for her involvement in the murder of West Wendover teen Micaela Costanzo.

Before being sentenced, Fratto, 19, of West Wendover turned to the mother and family of the victim and offered an apology in Elko District Court Monday morning.

“I would like to apologize to Micaela’s family and friends and those that loved her dearly,” Fratto said while she made sobbing sounds but shed no tears. “I’m sorry for what I did to Micaela, and I’m sorry for what I did not do, and that was protect her. I know saying I’m sorry does not do justice and it does not change what has happened. But I truly am sorry.”

Fratto and co-defendant Kody Patten, 19, of West Wendover were charged with Costanzo’s murder, which occurred March 3, 2011. District Attorney Mark Torvinen sought the death penalty for both defendants after they pleaded not guilty to the charges.

On Jan. 26, Fratto changed her plea. In exchange for a guilty plea to second-degree murder, Fratto agreed to testify as a state witness, if called, during Patten’s trial, which is scheduled July 31 in Elko District Court.  

Before Senior Judge Dan Papez sentenced Fratto, Torvinen called to the stand family members of the victim who testified to the impact the murder had on their lives, and gave Papez a recommendation for sentencing.

Micaela’s mom, Celia Costanzo; father, Theodore Costanzo; and sister, Kristina Lininger, each asked Papez to consider giving Fratto the maximum sentence allowed.

Celia Costanzo exemplified her daughter’s innocence in court by describing the type of person Micaela was in high school and around the house.

Micaela was involved with many extracurricular school activities including playing basketball, running track, participating in a People to People leadership program, and editing the school newspaper. Micaela wanted to be an author, her mother said. She was an avid writer of short stories and poetry.

In the home, Micaela was close with her five siblings and had a nurturing relationship with her nieces and nephews.

After the murder, the Costanzo family became inward, and struggled to cope with basic functions of life, Celia Costanzo said. One daughter dropped out of college.  

A grieving Celia Costanzo spoke with difficulty, nearly hyperventilating between words.

“It basically destroyed me. I don’t sleep. I have nightmares,” Celia Costanzo said. “I haven’t been able to go to work and work a full shift.”

Celia Costanzo said she has had difficulty when her grandchildren asked her to read books to them that Micaela used to read.

“My kids were everything. I lived to try to give them the best that I could,” Celia Costanzo said. “We were very, very close. All of us did everything together. With Micaela being gone, there’s a part of me that has been ripped away.”

“And not a day, a moment, a second (goes by) that I don’t think about her and what we would be doing.”

Micaela’s father, Theodore Costanzo, testified to the confusion and pain he has suffered.

“I don’t know where to start,” he said on the stand. “I still think that I’m dreaming. I think this can’t be happening here. Everyday.”

Lininger said the murder has made her fearful for herself and her children and stepchildren.

“It’s had a tremendous impact … I’ve always been a protective parent — now I’m overly protective,” Lininger said. She said she constantly worries even when her children are with friends, and she feels scared in West Wendover where before she didn’t.

“I beg that you give (Fratto) the same thing that she gave my sister. Show her (no mercy). She doesn’t deserve a chance,” Lininger said to Papez. “I hope you give her the maximum that you possibly can. That’s what she took away from all of us. I never get the chance to tell my sister that I love her or give her a hug. (Fratto) gets to call her parents whenever she wants.”

Defense attorney John Springgate called Fratto’s mother, Cassie Fratto, to testify on behalf of her daughter before sentencing.

Cassie Fratto testified to Toni Fratto’s character, particularly before she became romantically involved with Patten.

“Toni is very courageous, kind, compassionate, (and) very respectful. She would be your best friend. She would do anything for you. She loves life,” Cassie Fratto said tearfully.

Fratto and Patten began dating during their sophomore year of high school. Sometime during the relationship, Patten got kicked out of his  house and the Frattos allowed him to move into their home.

Cassie Fratto testified to seeing a school surveillance tape of Patten being physically abusive to Fratto by pushing her against a wall and choking her.

“Knowing what you know about that attack on her, why would you open your home to that person?” Springgate asked.

“Toni was very much in love with Kody,” Cassie Fratto said. “We were afraid that if we did not (open our home) that he would take Toni away from us and our family.”

According to Cassie Fratto, since Toni Fratto’s incarceration and separation from Patten, she has noticed a change in her daughter’s demeanor. She also said she hoped time served would help her daughter rehabilitate.

“She was losing herself … What I see now is, we have our Toni back. She’s come to the realization of the abuse that she was put through by being in a relationship with (Patten),” Cassie Fratto said.

“She is realizing the importance of being new and true to yourself. She wants to help others that suffered through abuse, through the pain and anguish of someone taking your life away from you,” Cassie Fratto said.

In his closing argument, Torvinen asked Papez to consider the brutality of the murder when making his sentence.

“It’s as horrific a murder as I suspect you will ever see. That word is inadequate to describe the circumstances of this event. Moreover, it’s as innocent a victim as anyone might envision,” Torvinen said.

“Ms. Fratto participated in a sequence of events which has inflicted an agony on Micaela’s family and friends which probably surpasses understanding,” said Torvinen. “They will suffer, as you’ve seen here, each and every day of their lives. The state has asked that you impose the maximum sentence available to you under the law.”

“I would submit that the question here is: Is she a sheep or is she a wolf?” said Springgate. “She is in fact a documented victim of both physical and emotional abuse.”

Springgate argued Fratto was emotionally and cognitively immature, that she is of low-average intelligence, and that her personality is one susceptible to peer pressure.

Papez addressed the brutality of the case mixed with the confusion of an unanswered question: Why did Fratto help murder Costanzo? Which neither Springgate could answer after the sentencing nor Torvinen inside the courtroom.  

“Why such a senseless murder of a precious life?” he asked.

“It is even more puzzling when I look at your record,” Papez said. Letters Papez received from Fratto’s friends and family described her as kind, responsible and supportive.

“The attack was brutal, it was vicious, it was violent. All shockingly so,” he said.

Papez gave Fratto the maximum sentence of life and a consecutive sentence of 20 years, and a restitution fine of $3,909. She will be parole eligible after 18 years in prison.

https://elkodaily.com/news/local/teen-killer-eligible-for-parole-after-years-in-prison/article_b9fe8eee-88a4-11e1-a2c9-0019bb2963f4.html

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Toni Fratto Parole Denied 2021

 A Nevada woman convicted of second-degree murder in the death of a West Wendover teenager a decade ago has lost her first bid for parole.

Toni Fratto, 28, has been imprisoned since 2012 for her role in the killing of 16-year-old Micaela Constanzo, whose body was found in a shallow grave about 5 miles (8 kilometers) from the Utah line.

Elko District Attorney Tyler Ingram told the Elko Daily Free Press on Monday that Fratto’s parole was denied. She had appeared before the Nevada Board of Parole Commissioners via a video conference in February.

Kody Cree Patten, 28, was convicted of first-degree murder in Constanzo’s death in 2011 and sentenced to life without the possibility of parole.

Fratto was sentenced to a minimum of 10 years for second-degree murder, but both she and Patten received an additional 8-10 years for the use of a deadly weapon in the commission of the crime.

Prosecutors say the two were involved in a relationship at the time of the killing.

Ingram said if Fratto had been granted parole on the murder charge, she would not have been released from prison, rather she would have started serving the second sentence.

Her next parole hearing is scheduled May 2024.

https://mynews4.com/news/local/parole-denied-in-2011-murder-of-west-wendover-teenager

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Toni Fratto Now

Toni Fratto is currently incarcerated at the Florence McClure Correctional Facility

Toni Fratto Release Date

Toni Fratto is serving a life sentence however is eligible for parole as of 2021.

Toni Fratto Parole

Toni Fratto was denied parole in 2021