Austin Myers Teen Killer Sentenced To Death

Austin Myers Teen Killer

Austin Myers was just eighteen years old when he murdered a friend and was sent to Ohio death row. According to court documents Austin Myers believed that there was a ton of the money in the victims home, Justin Back. The original plan was to rob the safe in the home, however that planned quickly changed. The first time at the target home did not go well so Austin Myers and Timothy Mosley left when they realized Justin Back was home. The two then decided to murder Justin and steal the safe. There plan was to make it look like Justin had stolen the safe and left the home.

The next day Austin Myers and Timothy Mosley would return to the Back residence. Justin Back would let the two teenage killers into the home and soon after he would be attacked and stabbed over a hundred times. Austin Myers wanted to shoot the body so after Mosley went out of the home and grabbed a gun. Austin would shoot the body twice before the gun jammed on the third shot, this casing was ejected and would later be found by police. After they hid Justin Back body the two would crack open the safe to find that it contained nothing valuable.

Austin Myers was arrested the next day and attempted to blame the murder on Timothy Mosley who would basically do the same thing. In the end this teen killer would be sentenced to death and remains on Ohio Death Row. Timothy Mosley was sentenced to life in prison

Ohio Death Row Inmate List

Austin Myers 2023 Information

austin myers 2021 photos

Number A710008

DOB 01/04/1995

Gender Male

Race White

Admission Date 10/17/2014

Institution Chillicothe Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

Austin Myers Other News

A former Northmont High School student — one of the youngest on Ohio’s Death Row — is a “big step” closer to being executed in the murder of a childhood friend.

The Ohio Supreme Court, in a decision published Thursday, affirmed the death penalty for Austin Myers, 23, in the death of Justin Back, 18, at Back’s home outside Waynesville in January 2014. Investigators said someone else killed Back but said Myers instigated the crime.

The execution is scheduled for July 20, 2022.

“It’s another step,” Warren County Prosecutor David Fornshell said about the affirmation. “It’s a big step.”

Fornshell was pleased with the 7-0 ruling by the state’s highest court.

“The 7-0 decision is always something you like to see,” said Fornshell, who handled the appeal with Assistant County Prosecutor Kirsten Brandt. “That should give the public some confidence that Mr. Myers received a fair trial and a just punishment.”

Myers, of Clayton, was sentenced to death on Oct. 16, 2014, for Back’s murder during a robbery. Another Clayton man, Timothy Mosley, actually stabbed Back to death. Myers and Mosley both were 19 years old then.

Mosley received a sentence of life without parole.

Austin Myers More News

Convicted killer, Austin Myers, has been denied a death sentence appeal by the U.S. Supreme Court, says Warren County Prosecutor David P. Fornshell.

Myers, along with Timothy Mosely, was convicted of killing Justin Back of Wayne Township in 2014.

Back was stabbed 20 times during a burglary and his body was dumped several counties away.

Myers and Mosely both admitted to creating an elaborate plan to kill Back.

Myers was found guilty on multiple counts including aggravated murder and kidnapping. A jury recommended death for Myers in Oct. 2014.

https://www.fox19.com/2019/01/07/convicted-killer-denied-death-sentence-appeal/

The former Northmont High School student sentenced to the death penalty for crimes involved in the murder of a childhood friend had his motion for reconsideration denied by the Ohio Supreme Court.

Austin Myers, 23, had asked the court to take another look at the case despite a 7-0 ruling on May 17 that affirmed his convictions and the imposition of the death penalty.

Myers was convicted in the death of Justin Back, 18, at Back’s home outside Waynesville in January 2014. Investigators said Timothy Mosley actually stabbed Back to death, but that Myers concocted and instigated the robbery that turned into murder.

The ruling filed Wednesday and signed by Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor read, “It is ordered by the court that the motion for reconsideration in this case is denied.”

Myers is scheduled to be put to death on July 20, 2022. The court previously denied Myers’ attorneys’ attempts to get Myers’ sentenced changed to life in prison without parole — the same sentence Mosley is serving.

Back, 18, was a 2013 Waynesville High School graduate who was going to enter the U.S. Navy in less than two weeks at the time of his death.

After Myers’ original sentencing, Back’s mother, Sandy Cates, said, “It’s bittersweet. It’s justice for Justin, but it’s never going to bring Justin back.”

Testimony showed Myers planned the crime, including acquiring septic chemicals he expected would decompose Back’s body, but that Mosley killed Back during a struggle on the floor of the kitchen after a garrote designed to choke Back to death caught on his chin.

Myers and Back were friends until eighth grade, when Myers moved to Clayton. Testimony indicated Myers was the one who decided they should target Back’s home, unaware the family safe contained only $70 at the time.

Myers’ attorneys, Timothy McKenna and Roger Kirk, wrote in their motion to reconsider that the state’s highest court’s analysis “was flawed and ignored critical facts” and that Myers’ death penalty sentence “is patently unfair when the actual killer received life without parole.”

McKenna and Kirk didn’t immediately respond to a message seeking comment. Warren County Prosecutor David Fornshell didn’t return a message seeking comment but has said before that he anticipated the defense to appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

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Austin Myers is currently incarcerated at Chillicothe Correctional Institution

Austin Myers Execution

Austin Myers execution has yet to be scheduled

Tyler Miller Teen Killer Stabs Man To Death

tyler miller teen killer

Tyler Miller was sixteen years old when he stabbed a man to death in Ohio. According to court documents Tyler Miller was upset that the victim had shorted him twice when buying marijuana. When the man showed up at Tyler Miller home the teen killer would get into the vehicle and proceed to stab the man multiple times. The man would get out of the vehicle and would collapse and die. Tyler Miller would be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole

Tyler Miller 2023 Information

tyler miller 2022

NumberA776133

DOB06/08/2003

GenderMale

RaceWhite

Admission Date06/05/2020

Institution Mansfield Correctional Institution

StatusINCARCERATED

Indefinite Sentence Min Life Sentence

Indefinite Sentence Max Life Sentence

Expiration of Max Sentence Life Sentence

Tyler Miller More News

A pretrial hearing for a Perrysburg teen accused a stabbing a Toledo man to death was held by phone Monday.

It is possible Tyler Miller, 16, will offer a plea in the Wood County Common Pleas Court of Judge Alan Mayberry on April 23, said Wood County Prosecutor Paul Dobson.

If a plea is made, sentencing will be on June 4, he said.

Miller pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity on Dec. 20, after which the court ordered the teen to be evaluated by the court’s diagnostic and treatment center. That evaluation was submitted at a court hearing on Feb. 21.

Dobson said the evaluation indicated Miller is competent to continue with court proceedings.

“The court still has not ruled on that yet,” he said.

There has not been a second evaluation done, Dobson added.

Although a juvenile, Miller is being charged as an adult with aggravated murder.

Miller allegedly stabbed Amonie Ervin, 19, numerous times in the chest and abdomen inside the victim’s vehicle Nov. 29. The vehicle was located near Miller’s home on Tonbridge Court.

The victim was pronounced dead at the scene after he had exited the vehicle and collapsed on the driveway.

Court records indicate Miller, who had fled the scene, was picked up a short time later. A knife was recovered from his pocket and his clothing had what appeared to be blood on them.

Miller reportedly admitted to stabbing the victim at least five times in the chest and abdomen because he was upset with him because he had shorted him twice with marijuana.

Defense attorney Jeffrey Nunnari is interested in obtaining any other evaluations done by the court diagnostic and treatment center that may have been done in prior situations, Dobson said.

Nunnari has asked for a court order giving him access to those reports, Dobson said.

Miller remains in jail on a $1 million bond with no 10% applicable.

https://www.sent-trib.com/news/prosecutor-perrysburg-teen-accused-of-murder-is-competent-may-take-plea/article_ad296586-7824-11ea-8f83-9ff00ccd4c8b.html

Tyler Miller Other News

A 16-year-old Perrysburg teen was sentenced to life in prison without parole for fatally stabbing a Toledo man in his driveway.

Wood County Common Pleas Judge Alan Mayberry sentenced Tyler Miller on Thursday.

Mayberry didn’t mince words when reviewing Miller’s transgressions, calling him a “cold-blooded, remorseless murderer.”

“I’ve looked and looked for some redeemable quality. I’ve looked and looked for some hint of remorse. I’ve looked and looked for something that would tell me there’s a possibility for rehabilitation. And I’ve not been able to find it,” Mayberry said.

Defense attorney Jeffrey P. Nunnari said an appeal would be made, with new counsel.

At least 15 family members of the victim, Amonie Ervin, who was 19 when Miller killed him on Nov. 29, were in attendance.

Miller’s family also was in attendance but left immediately after the sentencing concluded.

Monica DeLeon, director for victim and witness services for the prosecutor’s office, read a statement provided by Ervin’s mother, Akisha Gaston.

Gaston wrote about how Ervin was the sixth youngest child out of eight and how his death has impacted the family’s life.

“I am not sure what Amonie did so wrong that he was maliciously done this way. Tyler took something so valuable away from me and my family,” Gaston said. “This is by far the hardest thing I’ve ever had to face or do in my 44 years of living and I wouldn’t wish this on my worst enemy.”

Gaston rocked in the front row while DeLeon read her statement.

“I don’t believe or feel that Tyler should ever experience anything or have a second chance at coming home or being around his family ever again,” she stated.

Miller should get the maximum term of life in prison, Gaston wrote.

“I’m not ready to forgive now … but maybe in the near future with prayers and strength I’ll get through this and maybe give forgiveness one day.”

Before his death, Ervin had planned to head to California to pursue music. He loved animals to the point he took on a friend’s dog.

Ervin’s family met with Wood County Prosecutor Paul Dobson in his office after sentencing. Dobson said Gaston was not up to speaking with the media on the case.

During his 40 minutes in court, Miller spent much of the time leaning back in his chair.

Nunnari said that the law says the sentence in this case must be severe.

“The law also says that the most severe sentence should rarely be imposed upon one who was a juvenile when committing the crime,” he said.

Nunnari said mitigating factors are Miller’s age. He was 16 when he committed the crime.

“Science tells us that his judgment … is impaired by virtue of the development of his brain,” Nunnari said, adding that a brain does not mature until the age of 25.

“He is not operating with a full deck,” Nunnari said.

He had filed a motion to have Miller evaluated for a not guilty by reason of insanity plea, but Miller did not meet the criteria.

Mayberry said he had read letters submitted from agencies where Miller was treated, and the evaluation done to determine whether Miller was insane at the time of the incident.

The court needs to decide if his client is irreparably corrupt. “There is no question that he’s ill.”

Nunnari said the court should not decide whether he is given the chance for parole, but that decision should be left up to the parole board.

Mayberry had the option of a life sentence with a chance of parole at 20 years, 25 years and 30 years.

“It is only an opportunity,” Nunnari said about parole. “People seldom get paroled for this type of offense on the first time up. It’s just a shot, it’s just a chance, and that’s all we’re asking for.”

Dobson agreed age was a mitigating factor — but it is the only mitigating factor in this case.

Miller’s brain was fully developed to “plan to kill another young man, and innocent young man, to develop that plan. He talked about wanting to kill someone and ultimately he decided that that was what he was going to do,” Dobson said.

There was nothing about Ervin that justified making him a target for murder, he said.

“Despite that, Tyler Miller had no intention on that day but to kill Mr. Ervin. He called him in order to kill him, he arranged this deal … in order to kill him, he grabbed a knife from the kitchen in order to kill him, he walked out of his garage door in order to kill him. He got into the car to kill Mr. Ervin and he pulled that knife, without saying anything,” Dobson said.

Dobson said, in details provided by Miller to the probation department, he admitted to no exchange, aggravation or accusations made during the event.

“He is not an insane individual that needs to be out as soon as possible. He was an angry man who wanted to kill somebody, found his target, planned it and executed it,” he said.

Dobson said if the court decided Miller should not be in prison for life without parole, he asked that the sentence would be life with parole after 30 years.

When asked by Mayberry if he wanted to speak, Miller declined, stating “nah, I’m good.”

The court must consider Miller’s age when considering sentencing and the premeditation and actions after the offense, Mayberry said.

“Your mental state and history also creates considerable concern for the court,” he said. “It is obvious that the court does not have a crystal ball to determine whether you are irreparably corrupt.”

Mayberry said he also must consider whether it is likely Miller will commit another offense if released.

“The court would find it’s more likely because you were under release when you committed this offense,” he said.

Juvenile court had charges against Miller that had been continued.

He had been expelled from Perrysburg High School after punching another student.

Mayberry also said recidivism was likely as Miller has failed to demonstrate any genuine remorse.

In reviewing hospital reports, he noted homicidal ideation and Miller’s desire to be a serial killer, and aggressive tendencies would not change with treatment.

Mayberry also said it was noted that Miller had reportedly killed animals and ate their eyes and their hearts.

“This is not somebody demonstrating that they can get past being irreparably corrupt,” he said.

Miller sent messages to friends the day of the stabbing, saying what he planned to do, Mayberry said.

Ervin was stabbed 20-25 times as he sat in his car, unable to defend himself and still in his seatbelt, “all because he shorted you on some drug transactions,” Mayberry said.

The coroner’s office ruled he died at the scene from the stab wounds.

After the stabbing, Miller went back into his house, got his cigarettes and left. He was found several hours later by police at the home of a friend, several blocks away.

He was taken into custody and a knife with blood on it was found in his pocket.

After being Mirandized, Miller confessed to the crime and said he had taken a knife from his kitchen when he went to meet Ervin. He planned to stab him in the vehicle, flee in it and dump the body elsewhere.

Tyler turns 17 on Monday.

Dobson said the death penalty could not be considered because of Miller’s age.

Miller, who entered the courtroom in an orange jumpsuit with handcuffs and leg shackles, will likely be taken to Ohio Department Rehabilitation and Correction in Orient.

Miller was originally charged as a juvenile. His case was bound over as an adult and a grand jury indicted him in December for the aggravated murder charge.

https://www.sent-trib.com/news/perrysburg-teen-sentenced-to-life-without-parole-for-murder/article_13efef6a-a688-11ea-af71-176cad9def1b.html

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Tyler Miller is currently incarcerated at the Mansfield Correctional Institution

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Tyler Miller is serving life without parole

Dustin Lynch Teen Killer Murders Teen Girl

dustin lynch teen killer photos

Dustin Lynch was fifteen years old when he murdered a teenage girl. According to court documents Dustin Lynch would beat the victim with a bedpost before fatally stabbing her to death. Dustin Lynch would be sentenced to life in prison without parole. While in prison this teen killer would murder his cellmate

Dustin Lynch 2023 Information

dustin lynch 2020 photos

Number A460592

DOB 12/03/1986

Gender Male

Race White

Admission Date 12/23/2003

Institution Ohio State Penitentiary

Status INCARCERATED

Dustin Lynch Other News

Telling the judge “do what you have to do,” a former inmate at Toledo Correctional Institution stood passively as he was sentenced Wednesday to life in prison without the possibility of parole for killing his cellmate.

Dustin Lynch, 26, refused to give Lucas County Common Pleas Judge Gary Cook any reason to sentence him to less than the maximum sentence for aggravated murder and would not allow his attorney to offer any mitigating factors.

“I feel like whatever sentence you give me, whether it’s 20-to-life, 25-to-life, 30-to-life, it amounts to life without parole because I’m already doing a 20-to-life sentence. So, do what you have to do,” Lynch said.

Lynch, who was in prison for killing a Medina County girl in 2002, pleaded no contest and was found guilty Oct. 2 of aggravated murder in the March 17 strangulation of Arturo Lopez, 43, formerly of Port Clinton. Lynch also carved the word “CHOMO” — a reference to child molester — into Lopez’s back.

The homicide was the second this year at the Toledo prison, which has since experienced two additional slayings of inmates.

Jennifer Donovan, an assistant Lucas County prosecutor, asked the court to impose life without parole because of the violent way in which Lynch killed his first victim — a 17-year-old girl in her family’s home where he had been welcomed — and his second victim in prison — with a rope he had directed Lopez to make.

“This takes time. It takes effort. It takes anger,” she said, adding that Lynch made statements after the 2002 murder that he would kill again. “This is an individual who should not be back on the streets.”

Defense attorney Jeff Simpson asked for a sentence that would give Lynch the opportunity for parole.

“Dustin is a young man, a lot of life ahead of him,” Mr. Simpson said. A sentence with parole eligibility “would give Dustin something to work towards.”

Judge Cook rejected that, citing Lynch’s violent history, his diagnosis of antisocial personality disorder, and his behavior record in prison.

In addition to the maximum prison sentence, Judge Cook also ordered Lynch to pay the maximum fine of $25,000 — something he said Lynch may one day be able to do if he finds a way to profit from the story of his crimes as he once said he would do.

“This is not a free license for you to go back to the prison system and act with total disregard for any of your cellmates, because if that’s the case you’ll be brought back to another court and sentenced again, and eventually you’ll just run out of opportunities to have any interaction with anybody else in any community,” Judge Cook said.

Dustin Lynch More News

A convicted killer serving 20 years to life has been handed a life sentence for killing an inmate at Toledo Correctional Center.

A judge sentenced 26-year-old Dustin Lynch on Tuesday to life without parole.

Lynch had pleaded no contest in the strangling of Arturo Lopez last March at the north Toledo prison. According to online records for Lopez, the 43-year-old was behind bars on a rape conviction from 2005 and was scheduled for within a year of his murder.The Blade reports that the 26-year-old Lynch already was serving a sentence for killing a 17-year-old girl in Medina County in 2002.

The most recent inmate-on-inmate murder was the jailâ??s fourth in the past 13-months, in addition to an inmate suicide. Prior to the recent string of violence, the last inmate murder at TOCI occurred in 2000. A recent report from the Correctional Institution Inspection Committee suggests the increase in violence is the result of changes enacted by Governor John Kasich in 2011.

Records show violence at the prison rose after the state started doubling up inmates in the same cell to deal with overcrowding. ecords show violence at the prison rose after the state started doubling up inmates in the same cell to deal with overcrowding.

Dustin Lynch Other News

A 17-year-old changed his plea to guilty in the beating death of a teenage girl despite the advice of his attorney.

Dustin Lynch offered no explanation for why he punched, stabbed and beat JoLynn Mishne (pictured, right) to death in her Montville Township home in November 2002.

When asked by Judge Christopher Collier on Monday whether he had anything to say before his sentencing, he whispered, “Nope.”

Lynch’s attorney, V. Lee Winchell said he was opposed to Lynch’s plea. He said Lynch insisted that he wanted to plead guilty to a single count of aggravated murder, which carries life in prison with no chance of parole for 20 years, in exchange for other charges being dropped.

Lynch, who was 15 at the time of the murder, could not have faced the death penalty.

An hour before the abrupt change of plea, Winchell, was prepared to ask to be removed from the case because of Lynch’s erratic behavior, which included mailing bloodstained, taunting confession letters from jail to the victim’s family and prosecutors.

Mishne’s mother, Lori, sat hunched over in the courtroom and sobbed loudly as her statement had to be read by someone else.

“I feel not one shred of compassion,” she said. “I want (Lynch) to suffer.”

She said it was the compassion that she taught her daughter that led to her death.

Lynch had been a guest at the Mishne home after JoLynn, 17, said the wayward teen had no other place to stay.

A week into his stay, JoLynn’s father, Merle “Mickey” Mishne, found his daughter’s body in the home.

Merle Mishne directed his anger at the court system and the prosecutor’s office, which he called a joke.

Mishne complained that, because of Prosecutor Dean Holman’s eagerness to cut a deal and avoid a trial, he will never know what motivated Lynch to kill his daughter.

Holman said the Mishnes agreed to the plea agreement.

https://www.cleveland19.com/story/1305439/teen-pleads-guilty-in-girls-beating-death/

Jacob LaRosa Teen Killer Murders Elderly Woman

Jacob LaRosa Teen Killer

Jacob LaRosa was fifteen years old when he murdered an elderly woman. According to court documents Jacob LaRosa broke into the home of the ninety three year old woman and would end up fatally beating her to death with a flashlight.

This teen killer would be charged with burglary, attempted rape, murder and aggravated robbery. Jacob LaRosa would be convicted and sentenced to life in prison without parole

Jacob LaRosa 2023 Information

Number A753938

DOB 07/27/1999

Gender Male

Race White

Admission Date 10/19/2018

Status INCARCERATED

Institution Marion Correctional Institution

Jacob LaRosa Other News

Jacob LaRosa, 20, who was sent to adult prison a year ago for killing his elderly Niles neighbor in 2015, is asking the 11th District Court of Appeals to reverse his conviction and sentencing.

Oral arguments were given Tuesday in the 11th District Court of Appeals the case. LaRosa of Niles was 15 when he killed Marie Belcastro, 94, in her Cherry Street home.

The appeal seeks to reverse his life-without-parole sentence from Trumbull County Common Pleas Court and the decision of a Trumbull County Juvenile Court judge to transfer his case from juvenile to adult court.

Attorney Lynn Maro argued Tuesday and in her filings that Juvenile Court Judge Sandra Stabile Harwood transferred the case to adult court despite evidence that LaRosa was amenable to treatment.

“Multiple doctors provided testimony that there were treatment options and rehabilitation options available that had not been tried with Jacob,” Maro said. “Testimony and evidence confirmed improvement and behavior and maturity in the three years Jacob was incarcerated while awaiting trial. Yet, the trial court’s sentence foreclosed the possibility of change and rehabilitation.”

After the case was transferred to adult court, Common Pleas Judge W. Wyatt McKay decided LaRosa’s sentence after LaRosa pleaded no contest to aggravated murder, aggravated burglary, aggravated robbery and attempted rape.

Maro gave a history of LaRosa’s developmental difficulties as a boy, saying he had an “extremely low” IQ of 64 at age 8 and had started receiving counseling. He was diagnosed with attention deficit disorder, oppositional-defiant disorder and other disorders by age 9.

An older sister also was in counseling by age 14 and “explained how dysfunctional and abusive the family truly was,” Maro’s filing says.

She quoted from the testimony of Dr. Thomas Gazley, who concluded during testimony that LaRosa “was not emotionally, physically or psychologically mature enough for transfer to adult court.”

Ashleigh Musick, Trumbull County assistant prosecutor, spoke at the hearing, saying testimony in juvenile court indicated that LaRosa was “offered almost every possible opportunity for rehabilitation and failed each and every step of the way.”

Two of three expert witnesses testified that LaRosa “failed to respond to multiple interventions.”

One of the three appeals judges, Mary Jane Trapp, asked Musick about information that LaRosa’s parents had not taken him to some of the treatment programs. Musick replied that this might account for “part of why he did not attend,” but, “He had gotten kicked out of several of the (treatment) programs, despite numerous efforts.”

Musick added, “His mother also had brought him to juvenile court, asking, begging for help.”

A ruling in the case will come later.

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Jacob LaRosa Other News

A Niles man who was just 15 years old when he killed his 94-year-old neighbor will remain in prison after an appeals court ruled Tuesday to uphold his conviction. 

Attorneys for Jacob Larosa, who is now 20, had been asking that his conviction for murdering Marie Belcastro be overturned on the grounds that a juvenile court should have heard his case. 

On Tuesday, the 11th District Court of Appeals ruled against Larosa’s motion to have his conviction overturned. 

Larosa pleaded no contest and was found guilty of aggravated murder, attempted rape, and theft for breaking into Belcastro’s home, attempting to rape her and beating her to death with a flashlight. 

Larosa was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole

https://www.wfmj.com/story/41592078/appeals-court-upholds-conviction-for-jacob-larosa

TJ Lane Teen Killer School Shooter

TJ Lane Teen Killer

TJ Lane is a school shooter from Ohio who at seventeen years old would bring a gun to school and shoot dead three fellow students. According to court documents TJ Lane, also known as Thomas M Lane III, would bring a .22 calibre gun to school where he would open fire striking and killing three students.

At trial TJ Lane showed no remorse and on the day he was to be sentenced would somehow get hold of a black marker and write the word Killer on his t-shirt. Along with insulting the victim’s families TJ Lane basically made sure that he would receive the maximum sentence which would be life in prison with no chance at parole.

This teen killer would make the news a couple of years later by briefly escaping from prison

TJ Lane 2023 Information

Number A640654

DOB 09/19/1994

Gender Male

Race White

Admission Date 03/20/2013

Institution Warren Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

TJ Lane Other News

A convicted high school shooter in Ohio built a 13-foot ladder out of old cabinets to escape from a prison along with two other inmates, a jailbreak that put the community where Thomas “T.J.” Lane carried out his killing spree on edge, the state department of corrections said in a report Friday.

Lane, 20, broke out of Allen Correctional Institution in Lima, Ohio, on Sept. 9, and remained on the loose until he was captured six hours later. Lane is serving three life sentences for killing three students in a hail of gunfire at Chardon High School in 2012. Prison officials personally met with the victims’ families to explain how Lane was able to escape, NBC station WKYC reported.

The report from the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction said Lane and the other two inmates, Lindsey Bruce and Clifford Opperud, fashioned their ladder over several months from materials inside a crawlspace located adjacent to the recreation yard. The door was padlocked, but the inmates were able to break in anyway, the report said. On Sept. 9 they used the ladder to get on top of a building near the prison entrance at around 7:40 p.m. and jump 15 feet down to the ground and escape through a soybean field, the report said.

Bruce was arrested almost immediately, but Lane was on the run for almost six hours, until he was arrested at 1:20 a.m. in a wooded area near the prison. Opperud, a convicted robber and burglar, was arrested at 4:22 a.m. by officers who tracked him with a police dog. The prison will be upgrading padlocks with more secure locks, razor wire was added on top of the building the inmates used to escape, and the area where the prisoners built their ladder was closed. The report found the inmates had “unimpeded” access to the maintenance area on their way to and from the recreation yard.

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