Sean Lannon Arrested In Connection Of 5 Murders

Sean Lannon

Sean Lannon who was wanted for his alleged involvement in five murders has been arrested in St. Louis Missouri. According to police in Missouri he was arrested without incident. Reports have indicated that Sean Lannon is wanted for questioning for a murder in New Jersey and for four more in New Mexico. The murder victim in New Jersey was described as a long term acquaintance of Lannon. The four murders in New Mexico consisted of Sean Lannon ex wife along with three others. According to officials in New Mexico the bodies of Jennifer Lannon, 39, Matthew Miller, 21, Jesten Mata, 40, and Randal Apostalon, 60 were found in the parking lot at an airport in Albuquerque. Police have said some of the bodies had been dismembered. Sean Lannon was also wanted for forcing his way into a home in New Mexico and attempting to force his way into another. Sean Lannon and his ex wife Jennifer divorced in 2019

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Authorities are asking for the public’s help in locating a suspect in a New Jersey killing who is also a person of interest in a quadruple homicide in New Mexico.

Sean Lannon, 47, of Grants, New Mexico, is considered armed and dangerous and is wanted for questioning in a killing in East Greenwich Township on Monday, the Gloucester County Prosecutor’s Office announced.

Lannon is originally from the East Greenwich area and knew the victim in Monday’s killing, according to prosecutor’s office Chief of Detectives Tom Gilbert. Gilbert described the victim as an adult male, but declined to release additional details Tuesday.

Lannon is described as white, 5 feet 9 inches tall, 140-165 pounds, balding, with blue eyes. He may be driving a blue, 2018 Honda CR-V with New Jersey registration U71JXG.

He was possibly last seen on Monday at around 3 p.m. near the Walter Rand Transportation Center in Camden. The U.S. Marshal’s Service also announced a $5,000.00 reward for information leading to Lannon’s arrest.

Anyone with information about Sean Lannon’s whereabouts is asked to contact prosecutor’s office Sgt. John Petroski at 856-498-6238 or [email protected]. Anonymous tips may be sent to [email protected].

Information about the New Mexico killings was not included in the prosecutor’s announcement, but law enforcement officials there have released some information.

A foul odor led police to four bodies found in a parked vehicle at an airport in Albuquerque, New Mexico, on Friday, according to news reports. Police identified the victims as Jennifer Lannon, 39, Matthew Miller, 21, Jesten Mata, 40, and Randal Apostalon, 60.

In a statement Tuesday, the Albuquerque Police Department confirmed Sean Lannon is “a person of interest” in the Friday slayings.

“APD is currently working with multiple agencies on this investigation. Lannon is also currently wanted out of New Jersey for questioning in another investigation,” the department said.

Three of the victims were reported missing in January from Grants, New Mexico, a small town about 78 miles west of Albuquerque.

Police in Grants said last month that Jennifer Lannon and Mata were wanted for questioning in Miller’s disappearance. On Feb. 26, police said Daniel Lemos, 45, was wanted for questioning in the disappearances of Jennifer Lannon, Miller and Mata.

Lemos was described as armed and dangerous.

https://www.nj.com/gloucester-county/2021/03/armed-dangerous-suspect-sought-in-nj-killing-quadruple-homicide-in-new-mexico-cops-say.html

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A man sought in connection with a homicide in New Jersey and the deaths of his ex-wife and three other people in New Mexico has been apprehended in Missouri, authorities said.

Sean Michael Lannon, 47, of Grants, New Mexico, was arrested Wednesday morning in St. Louis, the Gloucester County Prosecutor’s Office confirmed.

Lannon is the suspect in a Monday killing in East Greenwich Township in South Jersey that claimed the life of a man whose identity has not been released by investigators.

When he was apprehended Wednesday by the U.S. Marshals’ St. Louis Metro Fugitive Task Force, Lannon was driving a blue Honda CR-V reported stolen in connection with the East Greenwich killing, officials said.

Lannon was also labeled a person of interest after four bodies were found Friday in a vehicle left at an airport parking garage in Albuquerque, New Mexico, which is about 80 miles west of Grants. Three of those victims — Jennifer Lannon, 39, Matthew Miller, 21, and Jesten Mata, 40 — were previously reported missing.

Jennifer and Sean Lannon, who are originally from South Jersey, divorced in 2019, according to New Mexico court records, with a judge ruling in favor of Sean Lannon. The filing sought custody of the couple’s children

Authorities confirmed that the children are safe.

Sean Lannon is from the East Greenwich area, according to investigators. Jennifer Lannon previously lived in Clayton, West Deptford and Blackwood, according to public records searches.

In addition to the homicide case in New Jersey, prosecutors announced Tuesday evening that Lannon was charged with burglary and possession of a weapon after allegedly forcing his way into a home in Monroeville, Elk Township, while armed with a knife on Monday.

Albuquerque police are working with Grants authorities on the investigation of the three missing-person deaths, while Albuquerque detectives are investigating the death of the fourth victim found in the vehicle, 60-year-old Randal Apostalon.

Police in Grants said Jennifer Lannon and Mata had been wanted for questioning in Miller’s disappearance. On Feb. 26, police said Daniel Lemos, 45, was wanted for questioning in the disappearances of Jennifer Lannon, Miller and Mata.

Lemos was described at the time as armed and dangerous.

An aunt of Miller told TV station KOB4 in New Mexico that Lemos and Miller are related and that her nephew was “simply at the wrong place at the wrong time and simply giving somebody a ride.”

Authorities in New Mexico described the investigation as ongoing and have not disclosed how Sean Lannon may be connected to Lemos and how the victims there died.

On Tuesday, Gloucester County authorities announced that Lannon was a suspect in the New Jersey and New Mexico cases and cautioned he was considered armed and dangerous. The U.S. Marshal’s Service announced a $5,000 reward for information leading to his arrest.

Charges against Lannon in the East Greenwich homicide will be filed soon, Acting Gloucester County Prosecutor Christine Hoffman noted in announcing the arrest.

“The rapid and successful apprehension of Lannon is the direct result of excellent collaboration between a wide array of local, county, state and federal partners,” Hoffman said in a statement. “We are particularly grateful to the U.S. Marshal’s New York/New Jersey Regional Fugitive Task Force/Camden Division as well as their parallel jurisdictions between New Jersey and Missouri for deploying their resources to rapidly apprehend Lannon, who was clearly a direct threat to the public.”

https://www.nj.com/gloucester-county/2021/03/sean-michael-lannon-suspect-in-5-killings-captured-by-police-in-missouri.html

Desiree Linares And Alexis Shields Teen Killers

Desiree Linares And Alexis Shields Teen Killers

Desiree Linares and Alexis Shields were both fifteen when they murdered their foster mother. According to court documents Desiree Linares and Alexis Shields would tie up their foster mother and smother her with a pillow. When police arrive they found the two teenage killers gone with the victims wallet, van and laptop were missing. Desiree Linares was found incompetent and unable to stand trial. This teen killer was convicted and sentenced to thirty years in prison however seventeen of it was suspended.

Alexis Shields 2023 Information

alexis shields 2020 photos

Last Name: SHIELDS
First Name: ALEXIS
Middle Name:
NMCD#: 77827
Offender#: 500834
Offender Status: INMATE
Facility/Region:WWCF

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A 17-year-old girl who admitted killing her foster mother in her southern New Mexico home now faces about 10 years in prison.

A judge on Wednesday sentenced Alexis Shields to 30 years in prison but suspended 17 years of the sentence.

According to the Alamogordo Daily News, the remaining 13 years of the sentence will be reduced by the 999 days that Shields has spent in custody since Evelyn Miranda was killed in June 2011.

Shields pleaded guilty in December to first-degree felony murder of Miranda, who was found dead in her San Patricio home.

A co-defendant, who also was 15 when Miranda was killed, awaits trial in the case.

Authorities say the girls stole Miranda’s car, cellphone and computer. They were captured at a friend’s home in Carlsbad.

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One of two teenage girls accused of killing their foster mother in 2011 faces 15 years in prison after pleading guilty to first-degree felony murder.

Alexis Shields, 17, entered her plea Monday in state District Court under an agreement with prosecutors. She is expected to be sentenced next year after a pre-sentencing report is completed.

Shields was 15 when Evelyn Miranda, 53, was found dead at her San Patricio home on June 8, 2011.

The case against the other girl, who also was 15 when Miranda was killed, has been put on hold pending an evaluation of her competency to stand trial, the Alamogordo Daily News reported.

The girls were accused of stealing Miranda’s car, cellphone and computer. They were captured at a friend’s home in Carlsbad.

Deputy District Attorney John P. Suggs said Shields will be sentenced as an adult and could have faced up to 30 years in prison if convicted without a plea agreement. With Shields pleading guilty and taking responsibility, she is now looking at a maximum of 15 years in prison, Suggs said.

The plea agreement included dismissal of other charges, including conspiracy, robbery, kidnapping and tampering with evidence.

Shields will serve her sentence in a state Corrections Department facility, the prosecutor said.

According to 12th Judicial District Court records, Miranda died of asphyxiation.

Miranda took in troubled or challenged teens through Mesilla Valley Hospital’s Treatment Foster Care program.

She was a foster parent for both Linares and Shields in her San Patricio home.

https://www.abqjournal.com/313335/guilty-plea-in-foster-moms-2011-murder.html

Nathaniel Jouett Teen Killer New Mexico Library Shooting

Nathaniel Jouett Teen Killer

Nathaniel Jouett would walk into a library in New Mexico and open fire killing two people and injuring four in August 2017. According to court documents Nathaniel Jouett would steal two guns from his fathers safe and would walk over to the library in Clovis New Mexico. His father realized two guns were missing along with his son called police however Nathaniel Jouett already reached the library and opened fire killing two librarians and injuring four others. According to police Jouett had left a suicide note at home. This teen killer was sentenced to life in prison however due to his age at the time of the Clovis Library shooting he is eligible for a review after so many years

Nathaniel Jouett 2023 Information

Last Name: JOUETT
First Name: NATHANIEL
Middle Name: RAY
NMCD#: 86343
Offender#: 526675
Offender Status: INMATE
Facility/Region:LCCF

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A teenager who opened fire at a rural New Mexico library last year will plead guilty in the August 2017 shooting that killed two librarians and injured four other people, authorities said Tuesday.

Under an agreement signed by Nathaniel Ray Jouett, the Clovis teenager will plead guilty to a total of 30 charges — including two counts of first-degree murder, and multiple counts of child abuse and aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, said District Attorney Andrea Reeb.

A plea hearing has not yet been scheduled.

Jouett, now 17, had been a sophomore at Clovis High School in the New Mexico city of just 39,000 people near Texas border at the time of the shooting. His attorney said the teen agreed to plead guilty to all counts to avoid a lengthy trial that could have further distressed victims.

Authorities had identified more than 100 witnesses to the shooting.

“There’s a reason Nathaniel is doing this and the primary reason is to avoid any more trauma for the victims,” said defense attorney Stephen Taylor. “All he’s seeking is an opportunity for treatment, which he desperately needs.”

The Associated Press generally does not identify juveniles charged with crimes as a matter of policy. It has identified Jouett, however, because of the seriousness of the crime.

Taylor has filed a motion advocating for him to be sentenced as a juvenile, saying he is prepared to present scientific research showing that 16-year-old adolescent brains can limit their perceptions and self-control.

Under New Mexico law, 14-year-olds convicted of first-degree murder are guaranteed a hearing to determine whether they should be sentenced as juveniles or as adults. Juveniles between 15 and 17 are not.

Prosecutors said last year that suicide notes were found at Jouett’s home, and the teen’s pastor also has said he contemplated suicide several months earlier.

Jouett told investigators he had been thinking “bad things” for some time and initially planned to target his school because he was angry, court documents said. The teen said he didn’t know why he went to the library and that he didn’t know the victims.

Jouett’s father called Clovis police when he discovered two handguns missing and reported his son missing, but the shooting had already happened.

Asked by investigators what Nathaniel Jouett was thinking during the shooting, he said, “I was mad.”

The teen also said during the interview that no one liked him and he had thought he would kill himself or “kill a bunch of people,” the court records said.

Police said Jouett did not resist officers after they arrived at the library.

The two workers killed were circulation assistant Wanda Walters, 61, and youth services librarian Kristina Carter, 48.

Wounded were circulation assistant Jessica Thron, 30, and patrons Noah Molina, 10, his sister Alexis Molina, 21, and Howard Jones, 53.

https://ca.news.yahoo.com/prosecutor-teen-suspect-library-shooting-plead-guilty-215408659.html

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Nehemiah Griego Teen Killer Murders Family

Nehemiah Griego

Nehemiah Griego was fifteen years old when he murdered his entire family. According to court documents Nehemiah would shoot his mother first and when his brother became upset Nehemiah would shoot him as well. Nehemiah Griego would murder his two other siblings as well then waited for his father to come home and would shoot and kill him as well. This teen killer was initially charged as a juvenile however over the years the State has been fighting this. In 2019 Nehemiah Grieg was sentenced to life in prison

Nehemiah Griego 2023 Information

Last Name: GRIEGO
First Name: NEHEMIAH
Middle Name: NEFRATLIE
NMCD#: 87474
Offender#: 531136
Offender Status: INMATE
Facility/Region:LCCF

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After a lengthy court battle and numerous twists and turns, a judge determined on Friday that Nehemiah Griego, who killed his parents and three younger siblings in 2013, will be sentenced as an adult.

On Friday, Judge Alisa Hart filed a 75-page order in 2nd Judicial District Court stating she reviewed transcripts, recordings and exhibits from a December amenability hearing and considered relevant case law and arguments from the attorneys, and found the now 22-year-old is not amenable to treatment or rehabilitation in available facilities and, therefore, should not be sentenced as a child.

The determination reverses a 2016 ruling by Children’s Court Judge John Romero who found prosecutors hadn’t proved Nehemiah Griego wasn’t amenable to treatment. Griego had pleaded guilty to two counts of second-degree murder and three counts of intentional child abuse resulting in death.

At that time, Romero sentenced Griego to the custody of New Mexico Children, Youth and Families Department until his 21st birthday. However, the state Attorney General’s Office appealed the sentence and 11 days before he was supposed to be released the Court of Appeals ruled the case should be sent back to a judge for another amenability hearing.

Romero recused himself half-way through that second amenability hearing and the case was transferred to Hart’s courtroom.

Nehemiah’s sentencing date hasn’t been scheduled, but he now faces up to 120 years in prison.

However he could also receive far less prison time and receive probation and treatment instead, according to Stephen Taylor, his public defender. Taylor said he visited his client in the Metropolitan Detention Center Friday afternoon and is looking forward to the sentencing hearing.

“We are hopeful that the court would still be looking at allowing him to continue his treatment and not send him to prison which would interfere and maybe even truncate the treatment that he has received over the last six years,” Taylor told the Journal.

In January 2013, Nehemiah Griego – then 15 – shot and killed his mother and three younger siblings, ages 9, 5 and 2, in the family’s South Valley home. Then, he armed himself with an AR-15 and waited for his father to return home from his shift at a rescue mission. He shot his father four or five times, killing him.

These chilling details factored into Hart’s determination about Nehemiah Griego’s amenability to treatment as a child.

“When asked why he killed his family, child stated that he ‘can’t answer why,’ ” she wrote. “The killings of child’s family members were not committed in self-defense or defense of another. The killings of child’s family members were calculated and willful.”

The other factors Hart considered include: The seriousness of the offense; whether a firearm was used to commit the offense; whether the offense was against people; the maturity of the child; the record and previous history of the child; and the prospects for adequate protection of the public and the likelihood of reasonable rehabilitation.

Much of the specifics throughout the order are redacted, however the only factor that was weighted favorably toward Nehemiah Griego’s rehabilitation was his record and history since he “had little opportunity to interact with anyone outside of his family’s home and church.”

Hart determined the other six factors showed he is not amenable to treatment and rehabilitation as a child.

She also stated that she could not be satisfied that his release to an “unlocked treatment setting” would adequately protect the public.

“A locked treatment facility that offers services such as those offered by (redacted) may be the most beneficial option for both child and the public at this stage of child’s rehabilitation,” Hart wrote.

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John Hovey Teen Killer Murders Parents

John Hovey Teen Killer

John Hovey was sixteen when he murdered his parents. According to court documents John Hovey would sneak into his parents bedroom and would open fire killing his parents. This teen killer would be sentenced to life in prison however he was not done killing yet. This teen killer thought a paraplegic inmate was telling on him so he stabbed the inmate over two hundred times and would receive yet another life sentence.

John Hovey 2023 Information

john hovey 2021 photos

Last Name: HOVEY
First Name: JOHN
Middle Name: RAYMOND
NMCD#: 34833
Offender#: 10056
Offender Status: INMATE
Facility/Region:NMCD CUSTODY

MURDER 1ST DEGREE (D-202-CR-38516)GUILTY PLEA
CON MURDER 1ST DEGREE (D-1314-CR-98-00179)GUILTY-JURY
MURDER 1ST DEGREE (D-1314-CR-98-00179)GUILTY-JURY
TAMPERING W/EVIDENCE (D-1314-CR-98-00179)GUILTY-JURY

MURDER, FIRST DEGREE (CR 38516) Release Date: 99999999

John Hovey More News

As troubled kids go, Johnny Hovey was one of the worst.

So troubled that his mother confided in friends and relatives and a probation officer that she wondered whether he was possessed by the devil, that she thought his hobby of making lifelike corpses and other gruesome props was disturbing, that she feared one day he would kill her.

That last concern proved prophetic.

Before dawn on June 19, 1984, at the family home on Valley Park SW, the 16-year-old Hovey crept into his parents’ bedroom clad only in underwear and his thick, oversized glasses and opened fire.

His father, Raymond Hovey, 36, was shot twice. It took five shots and several hours to kill his mother.

“My son, John Hovey, shot us,” Nancy Hovey, 37, told the first Albuquerque police officer to arrive. “Get him before I die.”

The case of Johnny Hovey was extensively covered by the local news media, the photo of the skinny kid with bushy hair and big glasses a near-constant presence on the front pages for months.

Hovey, as the testimony goes, had a knack for making grotesque mannequins and bloody props, including a decomposing, bloody-eyed corpse he named Susan and rolled about the house in his grandmother’s wheelchair.

His mother had gotten rid of the props. That, one relative testified, was something Johnny Hovey could not forgive.

He was convicted of two counts of first-degree murder in June 1986. A month later, he was sentenced to two consecutive life terms.

Court records show that Hovey was initially transferred to an Oregon prison, then returned. He had also been transferred and returned more than once to a Florida prison (a location he fought hard to be removed from, according to court documents) and one in Washington.

In 1997, an escape plan he is accused of masterminding while incarcerated in New Mexico was thwarted. In 1998, he was accused of stabbing a paraplegic inmate 230 times in New Mexico, and in 2000 he was given an additional life sentence plus 16 years.

That’s the last the public heard about Hovey.

Earlier this month, Roman Garcia of Omnibus Investigations of Santa Fe contacted me about the Hovey case. He had been the initial defense investigator for Hovey, he said, and while cleaning out files, he had come across a document he thought Hovey might want. He didn’t specify what the document was.

He tried to locate Hovey on the state Department of Corrections website but found nothing. A Department of Corrections employee he spoke with told him she could find no record of Hovey’s ever having been in the New Mexico prison system.

“I reminded her the he got escape charges, filed a tort claim against (the prison warden), had habeas actions and even killed another prisoner while incarcerated,” Garcia said in an email. “Her refrain: ‘Oh, really? He was never here.’ ”

It’s as if Hovey had never existed.

It may seem that way to the public when an inmate is transferred out of or into New Mexico to serve out a prison sentence through an interstate compact.

“It can be difficult for not only the survivor but the family of the inmate in that often they are not sure when or where an inmate might be taken out of state,” said Joan Shirley, victim advocate for the Resource Center for Victims of Violent Death.

Currently, 76 inmates convicted in New Mexico are incarcerated out of state, while 83 inmates from out of state are serving their time in New Mexico facilities, said Alex Tomlin, public affairs director for the Department of Corrections.

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A man serving three consecutive life sentences for murder asked a judge Monday to bring him back to New Mexico from a Florida prison where he says he’s been treated inhumanely.

John Hovey, 34, was sentenced to life in prison by a Valencia County jury in July, 2000, for killing a fellow inmate, Tim Lucero, at the Central New Mexico Correctional Facility in Los Lunas. Testimony at Hovey’s trial revealed Hovey and another inmate stabbed Lucero over 230 times while Lucero was sitting in his wheelchair in his prison cell.

Hovey, who, at the time of Lucero’s murder, was serving two life sentences for killing his parents in Albuquerque almost 20 years ago,, testified Monday he was not receiving proper psychological treatment in the Florida prison system.

District Court Judge John Pope didn’t make a decision Monday as to whether he’ll bring Hovey back to New Mexico. After hearing Hovey testify about Florida’s alleged prison conditions, Pope said he would take the matter under advisement for 10 days.

“Mr. Hovey isn’t my concern,” Pope said. “I have no sympathy for him. He does not have a right to say where he’s going, but I do want to make sure he’s not subjected to cruel and unusual punishment. I don’t want an inmate or guard killed because he (Hovey) gets depressed.”

Hovey, who didn’t testify at his own trial, took the stand and described the lack of medical and psychological treatment he’s received after his 2000 conviction. He testified he has been transported 11 different times to several New Mexico prisons as well as several prisons in Texas and Arizona and three prisons in Florida.

Hovey said he’s being housed in “close management” (solitary confinement) and only gets to see a doctor once a month for two or three minutes at a time. He said he isn’t offered psychological treatment in the Florida prison because he’s from New Mexico.

“All the time I was there, I was only treated twice,” Hovey said. He also testified that, because he is in “close management,” he’s not allowed his eye glasses, letters, books or attorney/client interaction and is kept in an unventilated cell without air conditioning. He also testified he’s not allowed an am/fm radio or television set and is only allowed one hour of recreation per week.

“I was never given a reason why I was sent to Florida,” Hovey said. “They (corrections officials) told me different lies. They first said New Mexico sent me to Florida for my own protection, and then they said I was a threat to New Mexico.

“This has messed me up quite a bit,” Hovey said. “I’m worse than I was before.”

Under cross examination, Hovey told Deputy District Attorney Ron Lopez that he was wrongfully convicted of killing his parents in 1984. He told Lopez he didn’t remember killing Lucero but said, after his trial in 2000, “I have no doubt I was involved.”

“I don’t agree I’m still a high security risk,” Hovey said. “I feel I’m more of a threat to myself.”

Lopez believes that the only reason Hovey wants to return to New Mexico is that if he kills again in Florida, he would be more likely to be sentenced to death.

“He shouldn’t be allowed to dictate to the state of Florida how he should be treated,” Lopez said. “He’s just not happy about being in Florida.”

Hovey’s attorney, Kari Converse, told Pope that her client’s constitutional rights are being violated in the Florida prison system. She said her client is being subjected to cruel and unusual punishment.

Lopez told Pope that, if he allows Hovey to come back to New Mexico because he doesn’t like how he’s being treated, the court will be inundated with requests from everyone in prison who wants to come back to New Mexico.

https://news-bulletin.com/hovey-wants-to-return-to-nm-prison/

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