Michelle Sue Tharp Women On Death Row

Michelle Sue Tharp women on death row

Michelle Sue Tharp is on Pennsylvania Death Row for the murder of her seven year old daughter. According to court documents Michelle Sue Tharp daughter Tausha Lee Lanham who was under twenty pounds when she died in 1998. Michelle Sue Tharp would be convicted and sentenced to death.

Michelle Sue Tharp 2022 Information

michelle sue tharp 2022 photos
NameName Type
MICHELLE S THARPAlso Known As
MICHELLE SUE THARPCommit Name
MICHELLE SUE THARPTrue Name

Parole Number: 983CU
Age: 53
Date of Birth: 01/20/1969
Race/Ethnicity: WHITE
Height: 5′ 02″
Gender: FEMALE
Citizenship: USA
Complexion: LIGHT
Current Location: MUNCY

Permanent Location: MUNCY
Committing County: WASHINGTON

Michelle Sue Tharp More News

From the beginning, Washington County District Attorney John C. Pettit asserted that Michelle Sue Tharp’s starvation murder trial was just as much about her dead daughter as it was about her.

It was Tausha Lee Lanham’s story, he told jurors.

Now, that story has an ending.

Jurors yesterday found Tharp guilty of first-degree murder in the death of the tiny 7-year-old girl, ending a weeklong trial filled with the sordid details of Tausha’s hungry life and the bizarre moments surrounding her premature death.

“God rest her soul. Tausha, we love you,” her father’s sister, Rhonda Lanham, tearfully told reporters outside the Washington County courtroom moments after the verdict. “I just want everybody to know, please, when you go home, hug and love your children. No child deserves to be treated bad.”

The jury of seven men and five women, most of whom have children, delivered their verdict about 3:30 p.m. after deliberating for less than three hours. They also convicted Tharp, 31, of Burgettstown, of endangering the welfare of a child and abuse of a corpse.

On the third and final verdict on the murder charge, Rhonda Lanham punched the air, cried out and doubled over in tears.

Police arrested Tharp on April 19, 1998, a day after she reported Tausha missing from a mall in Steubenville, Ohio.

Investigators quickly learned that Tharp and her live-in boyfriend, Douglas Bittinger Sr., had invented a story that the girl had gotten lost in the mall to hide the fact that they left Tausha’s corpse atop a large bush in the West Virginia woods.

Tharp had found Tausha dead in her bed the previous morning after what Pettit said was a long period in which she had been starved deliberately. Tharp testified that she did not call for help because she was panic-stricken that social workers would take her other children away. Instead, she and Bittinger took Tausha’s body on a long, strange series of errands in his car before leaving the body, wrapped in a sheet and stuffed into garbage bags, in the woods.

Bittinger also faces a homicide charge in the case, but no trial has been scheduled. He testified against Tharp.

Tharp’s attorney, Glenn Alterio, said he was disappointed by the outcome. He is now setting his sights on today’s sentencing, when jurors will choose between the death penalty or a life sentence without parole.

Alterio, who is the county’s public defender, said his client had prepared for a possible guilty verdict and was handling the situation well. Tharp left the courtroom red-eyed and appeared to be on the verge of breaking down as deputies handcuffed her. She wore the same green jacket and skirt she wore during the first day of the trial.

Pettit said the case had been more emotional than most for him, saying that when he thinks of Tausha, he feels guilty after eating.

Using the same sets of facts, the attorneys presented vastly different portraits of Tharp. Was she a conniving, wicked mother who deliberately starved her middle daughter to death? Or was she simply a bad parent who loved her children but was overwhelmed by their health problems and her own dysfunctional relationships?

Jurors ultimately chose to believe the former.

With his client facing the possibility of the death penalty, Alterio reiterated his argument that Tausha’s death from malnutrition occurred because of long-standing health problems — specifically a “failure to thrive” — that prevented her from growing and developing properly.

“She ate. She just didn’t grow,” Alterio said in his his closing.

Tausha was born prematurely and had numerous ailments, including genetic abnormalities and problems with her breathing, blood, glands, nervous system and gastrointestinal tract.

She weighed 2 pounds, 5 ounces at birth, and died nearly eight years later at less than 12 pounds. An autopsy revealed that she had not eaten for days before her death.

Witnesses testified that Tharp starved Tausha, keeping food from her for a day or more at a time. They said she confined her daughter to her room at night to prevent her from searching for any available morsel in the kitchen, where she ate from the garbage can and retrieved scraps from pet bowls. They also said she treated her son and two other daughters better than she did Tausha.

Tharp’s possible motives were never discussed in court, but Pettit said in an interview that Tharp might have been acting out of spite against Tausha’s father or anger that that her child needed extra attention.

Other witnesses told of a mother who cared for all her children, who neither denied Tausha food nor abused her.

Alterio pointed out that Tausha was so sickly that the federal government opted to provide her with monthly welfare checks of $539 for the rest of her life after merely reviewing her medical records.

In a pitch for sympathy, Alterio asked jurors to consider that Tharp endured a difficult childhood and a series of abusive romances. She had no transportation and no telephone and lacked support from the four fathers of her five children. Alterio noted that one of Tharp’s children, Benjamin, was put up for adoption instead of being aborted.

“What does that indicate to you about her feelings toward children?” Alterio asked.

With little help from anyone, Tharp had limited resources with which to care for her daughter. It was no wonder, he told jurors, that she did not show up for all her appointments with various social service agencies.

Nevertheless, Alterio said, she tried. When told in 1998 that she could stay on welfare a little while longer because she was caring for an infant, she chose to receive job training and go to work instead. And no social service agency ever considered Tausha in such a precarious situation that they needed to strip Tharp of her child, Alterio said.

Despite Alterio’s best efforts, the last impression left with the jury was by Pettit, who delivered an impassioned hour-long closing argument using photographs as props.

Pettit told the jurors that Tharp systematically defeated the attempts of agencies, such as Washington County Children and Youth Services, to aid Tausha, thereby engineering a “pattern of deception.” She missed appointments, refused to answer the door when they called and hid Tausha from them, Pettit said.

Tharp defeated even the efforts of doctors to help Tausha because she stopped taking her daughter for check-ups after October 1993, he said.

Pettit referred to damaging testimony from several witnesses, including a high school classmate, who recalled Tharp telling her that Tausha belonged “six foot under in a body bag,” and Tharp’s father’s estranged wife, who testified that Tharp once told her, “I hate [Tausha] so bad that I could just kill her.”

And once again, he outlined the shocking series of events that led Tharp, upon discovering her daughter’s dead body, to put Tausha in a car seat, hop into Bittinger’s car, visit her grandmother’s to call off work and drop off laundry, swing by a nearby lake, and buy garbage bags before leaving the corpse in a remote area.

Standing before the jury, case pictures and his legal pads resting on the wooden rail separating prosecutor and jury, Pettit called Tausha a “fighter” who overcame abuse, neglect and a lack of love.

But, he told the jury, in the end, the plucky little girl could not survive a mother who tried to kill her.

“Tausha was indeed a fighter, and she overcame all of these things. But she could not overcome the act of all food, all nourishment being withheld from her for several days,” Pettit said.

During his last words to the jury, Pettit showed a photograph of the refrigerator in the Tharp home on which hung a saying: “Home is where the heart is.”

“There was no heart in that home when it came to Tausha Lanham,” Pettit said.

http://old.post-gazette.com/regionstate/20001114tausha3.asp

Michelle Sue Tharp Photos

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Michelle Sue Tharp Other News

A woman convicted of fatally starving her child has appealed a Washington County judge’s order that a jury should re-hear the death penalty phase of her case.

Michelle Sue Tharp, who will turn 50 later this month, last had a local address in Burgettstown.

She has been on death row since being convicted in 2000 for the first-degree murder of Tausha Lanham, 7.

In December, Tharp took her criminal case to the state Supreme Court for the second time hoping that a decision by Washington County President Judge Katherine B. Emery can be overturned.

The state Supreme Court in 2014 upheld Tharp’s conviction but decided instead to grant her a new proceeding in which a Washington County jury would decide if her penalty should be life imprisonment or death.

Washington County President Judge Katherine B. Emery heard testimony and argument on Tharp’s behalf, but was not swayed by her attorneys’ arguments that the passage of time and deaths or unavailability of witnesses made it impossible to present an adequate case.

The judge said prior testimony or depositions could be read into the record for the new jury to consider.

Lacking from the trial in 2000 before then-judge Paul Pozonsky was testimony on Tharp’s mental state that might have resulted in a punishment other than the death penalty, her attorneys contended.

In Pennsylvania, only a jury, not a judge acting alone, can impose a death sentence.

The information about Tharp’s latest appeal came to light Friday in a teleconference convened before Judge John DiSalle while Emery is on medical leave.

DiSalle noted Tharp’s filing with the state Supreme Court does not stop the case from proceeding on the county level.

However, attorneys James McHugh and Elizabeth Hadayia won’t be representing Tharp if her case eventually goes before a jury.

‘”I think we need to get Ms. Tharp counsel,” McHugh said via speakerphone. “We’re not going to go forward with the matter.”

McHugh recommended that a Philadelphia lawyer who is qualified to try a death penalty case be appointed by the court.

DiSalle said another telephone conference, not yet scheduled, would include the attorney that McHugh mentioned.

Assistant District Attorney John Friedmann said his office is answering Tharp’s petition filed with the Supreme Court, but when the Supreme Court might decide Tharp’s latest appeal is unknown.

“Trial counsel needs to be appointed,” Friedmann said. “I don’t think we can ever be too early on that.”

In ordering the new penalty phase in 2014, Justice Max Baer called the evidence of Tharp’s guilt “overwhelming,” writing she not only denied Tausha meals but physically restrained the child so she could not feed herself and asked others to perpetuate the same abuse.

Emery noted in her six-page opinion that Tausha, who weighed only 11.77 pounds at age 7, lacked fat in parts of the body where it normally accumulates, and had extreme wear on her teeth from grinding.

Tausha was falsely reported to have been abducted from a mall in Steubenville, Ohio, on April 18, 1998, when she actually died in bed at home.

According to trial testimony, Tharp feared Washington County Children and Youth Services would take away her other children, so the death was concealed.

Tausha’s body, in trash bags, was found dumped along a road in Follansbee, W.Va.

Tharp is serving her sentence in the State Correctional Institution at Muncy in central Pennsylvania

https://observer-reporter.com/news/localnews/michelle-tharp-appeals-judges-decision-in-child-starvation-death/article_a62f8462-1052-11e9-823d-cf367c96aacd.html

Michelle Sue Tharp FAQ

Michelle Sue Tharp 2021

Michelle Sue Tharp is currently incarcerated at the Muncy facility the home of Pennsylvania Death Row for Women

Why Is Michelle Sue Tharp On Death Row

Michelle Sue Tharp was convicted of the starving death of her seven year old daughter

Claire Miller Charged With Sisters Murder

claire miller

Claire Miller a fourteen year old TicToker has been charged with the murder of her older sister who was confined to a wheelchair. According to police reports Claire Miller would stab her sister multiple times before calling 911 to report what she had done. According to police Claire Miller parents were sleeping when the murder occurred

The popular TicToker who had millions of views under the name ‘spiritsandsuchconsulting’ account when through the roof when news was released regarding the murder.

The alleged teen killer is being held in an adult prison without bond

UPDATE – Claire Miller Pleads Guilty To Sisters Murder

Claire Miller More News

A 14-year-old girl accused of stabbing her older disabled sister to death in the middle of the night was on the phone with someone who told police Claire Miller was having “suicidal and homicidal thoughts.”

The new detail was included in court records filed to support a search warrant of the Manheim Township home where Claire lived with her sister, Helen, and their parents, in the 1500 block of Clayton Road.

The records didn’t explain whether the witness talked to Claire Miller before, during or after the stabbing of Helen Miller, who had cerebral palsy and used a wheelchair.

Police were called to the family’s ranch home at 1:08 a.m. Monday, and they arrived five minutes later. They were greeted outside by Claire Miller, wearing bloody pants and with blood on her hands, repeatedly saying “I stabbed my sister,” according to court records.

Officers went inside and found Helen Miller, 19, on her back in a bedroom with a bloody pillow over her face. When an officer removed the pillow, a large knife was sticking out of her neck and blood was pooled on her chest and bed. She died from multiple stab wounds, the coroner said.

Police said they heard from a witness at 1:42 a.m. that the witness previously had been communicating with Claire Miller on the phone and that the teen was having “suicidal and homicidal thoughts.”

No further details on the witness’ identity or conversation with Claire Miller were included in the court documents. The documents outlined what items police collected from the crime scene, including the clothes Claire Miller was wearing at the time of the killing: A blue t- shirt with a white cat face on it and black, white and gray checkered pajama pants.

Police also collected bloody sheets, blankets and a comforter from Helen’s front bedroom, and a stuffed rabbit toy that was on a blanket.

Officers took swabs for DNA testing from the front door inside doorknob, the closet door in Helen’s room, Helen’s box springs, her carpet, an alarm keypad and a spot of suspected blood on the floor in front of an elevator. The ranch home has a finished basement.

Police also collected several sharp objects from the home to see if any were used in the stabbing in addition to the knife left in Helen’s neck. They took nine kitchen knives found in drawers or the dishwasher and they found these items in a rear bedroom: an Exacto knife in a desk; a dart board on the desk, and a paper towel with suspected blood on the floor.

Police also took a white board with chores for Claire located in the dining room. Officers said in their application for a search warrant that they would be looking for Claire’s cell phone, which could assist the investigation potentially establishing a motive and the events that occurred before, during and after the crime, but no phone was listed as among the items seized by police.

Claire Miller, who was charged with criminal homicide, is being held without bail in the Lancaster County Prison as she awaits court proceedings. She had a preliminary hearing set for Friday but it was continued. She is being held in prison in a cell by herself in the female unit of the facility under constant observation, officials sad.

https://www.pennlive.com/news/2021/02/teen-had-suicidal-and-homicidal-thoughts-the-night-her-older-sister-was-stabbed-to-death-records.html

Claire Miller Videos

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Shortly after police say Claire Miller stabbed her sister to death early Monday morning, a person told police the 14-year-old girl had been having suicidal and homicidal thoughts, according to a search warrant application.

The person is identified only as witness one in the warrant. The person told police at 1:42 a.m. that they had been talking with Miller by phone. The warrant does not say when they had been talking.

Miller called police shortly after 1 a.m. Monday and told them, hysterically, that she had killed her sister, according to Manheim Township police. When officers arrived to the Clayton Avenue home, they found Helen Miller, 19, in a bedroom with a pillow over her face and a knife sticking out of her neck. Helen Miller, who had cerebral palsy, had been stabbed repeatedly, an autopsy found.

Claire Miller’s attorney, Robert Beyer, who has previously declined comment, could not immediately be reached Thursday.

The search warrant lists items police wanted to take as evidence, including DNA samples, sheets, clothing, knives and a whiteboard listing Claire Miller’s chores. The application also said police wanted Claire Miller’s phone, but a phone was not listed on the inventory of items seized.

Claire Miller is being held in Lancaster County Prison without bail.

https://lancasteronline.com/news/local/manheim-twp-teen-charged-with-killing-sister-told-witness-she-was-homicidal-suicidal-police/article_0ceb31c0-779d-11eb-ac13-fb3432481061.html

Claire Miller More News

A 14-year-old girl in Manheim Township has been charged in the killing of her older sister, according to the Lancaster County District Attorney’s Office.

Claire Miller was arraigned Monday on a homicide charge and is being held without bail at Lancaster County Prison. She is charged as an adult in the killing of her sister, Helen Miller, 19.

Authorities said police responded shortly after 1 a.m. Monday to the family home in the 1500 block of Clayton Road.

According to court documents, Miller was outside the home when officers arrived and repeatedly said, “I stabbed my sister.”

Police said they went inside the home and found 19-year-old Helen Miller, who is wheelchair-bound, in a bedroom with a large knife in her neck. Life-saving measures were attempted but were unsuccessful, police said.

Investigators want to know what led up to the stabbing.

“Looking for evidence and trying to come up with a timetable and whatever they can find to help them understand what might have happened,” Manheim Township police chief Tom Rudzinski said.

Police believe the girls’ parents were home but asleep when the stabbing occurred.

“My heart goes out to them, and I can’t even begin to understand or imagine the pain that they feel at this point,” Rudzinski said.

The Lancaster County coroner on Wednesday released the autopsy results for Helen Miller.

The coroner said she died of multiple stab wounds.

Her death has been ruled a homicide.

“A Manheim Township teenager is charged with killing her older sister in her family home in the early morning hours on February 22, 2021.

“Officers with the Manheim Township Police Department were dispatched shortly after 1:00 am Monday, February 22, 2021, to the 1500 Block of Clayton Road, Manheim Township, after a female called 911 and reported that she had killed her sister. Arriving officers were met by Claire E. Miller F/14 who directed them to a bedroom where they found Helen M. Miller F/19 with a stab wound in her neck. Officers and EMS personnel attempted lifesaving measures, but they were unsuccessful. Information obtained so far determined that the incident happened during the overnight hours when the girls’ parents were asleep.

“Claire Miller was taken into custody at the scene. The Lancaster County District Attorney’s Office is assisting with the investigation and approved charging Claire Miller with Criminal Homicide. Miller will be arraigned by Magisterial District Judge David Miller. It is expected that Miller will be transported to Lancaster County Prison after arraignment on the charge of Homicide. Anyone charged with homicide in Pennsylvania is not eligible for bail. Claire Miller is being charged as an adult because homicide is not considered a delinquent act in Pennsylvania.

“Police indicate there is no threat to public safety. Manheim Township Police are fully committed to this investigation. Investigators and members of the Lancaster County Major Crimes Unit are still at the residence collecting evidence and working to determine the circumstances that led to Helen Miller’s death.

“Detective Steve Newman of the Manheim Township Police Department filed the charges which were approved by Assistant District Attorney Christine Wilson.

Miller is presumed innocent.”

https://www.wgal.com/article/pennsylvania-manheim-township-girl-accused-of-killing-older-sister/35627317#

Claire Miller Photos

claire miller 2021
claire miller 2021 photos

Harvey Robinson Teen Killer To Serial Killer

harvey robinson

Harvey Robinson is a serial killer who was still in his teens when he was arrested for multiple murders. The teen killer who is from Pennsylvania was just seventeen years old when he killed his first victim. Harvey Robinson would spend eight months in jail following the first murder however once he was released would murder two more women. Initially Harvey Robinson received a death sentence for each victim however when it was declared unconstitutional to execute juveniles he would receive a life sentence for the first murder but was still sentenced to death for the other two. Harvey Robinson is currently on death row in Pennsylvania

Harvey Robinson 2023 Information

harvey robinson 2021

Parole Number: 303DL
Age: 46
Date of Birth: 12/06/1974
Race/Ethnicity: WHITE
Height: 5′ 08″
Gender: MALE
Citizenship: USA
Complexion: LIGHT
Current Location: PHOENIX

Permanent Location: PHOENIX
Committing County: LEHIGH

Harvey Robinson More News

The Lehigh Valley’s only serial killer will have a chance at parole for one of his murders, although it’s unlikely he’ll ever be released from prison.

Harvey Miguel Robinson was re-sentenced on Tuesday to 35 years to life for the murder of Joan Burghardt, a 29-year-old nurse’s aide. He was convicted in 1994 of killing Burghardt; Charlotte Schmoyer, a 15-year-old newspaper carrier; and Jessica Jean Fortney, a 47-year-old grandmother.

Robinson is 44 but was a teenager at the time of the three murders.

He successfully appealed his life sentence in the Burghardt case on the basis that he was a juvenile and that the penalty was too harsh for a young person.

Robinson was initially sentenced to death for all three cases. He agreed to a life sentence for the Schmoyer case and is appealing his death sentence in the Fortney case, according to defense attorney Gavin Holihan and Lehigh County Assistant District Attorney Jeff Burd.

Burd considered arguing for a life sentence in the Burghardt case but decided to make the 35-to-life offer given the uphill battle prosecutors have had in other cases overturning appeals for juveniles previously sentenced to life.

“It puts this case to rest, finally,” Burd said Tuesday. In exchange for the sentence, Robinson waives his right to further appeals in the case.

Even if all three murder convictions were somehow overthrown, Robinson could remain in prison for more than 100 years for additional convictions, including the rapes of his victims.

Robinson said he’ll consider a request from Lehigh County Judge Edward Reibman to donate his brain to science.

Robinson’s alleged brain damage has been an appeal issue for decades. The judge told Robinson donating his brain to science is one way for some small good to come from his horrific crimes. The judge noted the study of sports-related concussions and the study of the brain itself has come a long way since Robinson’s convictions.

Asked whether Robinson thinks about the harm he inflicted on the community, Robinson had no comment for the judge.

Asked whether he would consider donated his brain to science, Robinson mumbled a response. Holihan later said Robinson “will investigate whether that’s something his religion will permit.” Robinson is a devout Muslim, Holihan said.

Holihan said he’s not sure whether dissecting Robinson’s brain decades after he committed his crimes will yield much understanding of how serial killers’ brains are wired, but he said it wouldn’t hurt to try.

“I can understand the request,” Holihan said

Robinson appeared in court in a wheelchair. He was wearing glasses and had his hair tied up in a ponytail on the crown of his head. He smiled at a front row of court supporters as he was wheeled away. He will return to the State Correctional Institution at Phoenix in Montgomery County

https://www.lehighvalleylive.com/news/2019/10/allentown-serial-killer-agrees-to-35-to-life-sentence-for-one-of-his-murders.html

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There will be no getting off death row for serial killer Harvey Robinson.

A Lehigh County judge has denied Robinson’s appeal to toss out the death sentence he was handed for the murder of Jessica Fortney in 1993.

Robinson argued his lawyers shortchanged him by not disclosing his brain damage during the trial.

Robinson was also sentenced to die for two other murders in Allentown in the 1990s. Those sentences were overturned, but one of them could be reinstated down the road.

Harvey Robinson Photos

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Harvey Robinson More News

An Allentown woman who survived being attacked by serial killer Harvey Robinson has died.

Denise Cali passed away last week at age 65.

Her obituary says the Dieruff High School and Muhleberg College graduate died suddenly at her home, but doesn’t mention a cause. Cali was co-owner of J &J Luxury Transportation in Allentown and two other businesses.

In 1993 she was brutally raped and left for dead by Robinson. Robinson returned to her Allentown home seven times before he was caught. The attack happened in a time period when Robinson murdered three other women.

https://www.wfmz.com/news/area/lehighvalley/allentown-woman-who-survived-attack-by-serial-killer-dies/article_9590cc26-5b53-11eb-bedd-5b3fda74a449.html

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Harvey Robinson is on death row in Pennsylvania

Harvey Robinson Release Death

Harvey Robinson is facing a death sentence and multiple life sentences

Jason Sweeney Murder

jason sweeney murder

Jason Sweeney was a sixteen year old from Fishtown, Pennsylvania who would be brutally murdered by the girl he was dating, a friend since childhood and two brothers. Jason Sweeney had recently started dating Justina Morley a troubled fifteen year old girl. Jason who had been working construction was excited for the date he had that night with Justina Morley.

Justina Morley would invite him to meet her at a wooded area so the two of them could have sex. What Jason Sweeney did not know was that his friend Edward Batzig Jr and two brothers, Nicholas and Domenic Coia were lying in wait so they could rob him of his paycheck

Edward Batzig Jr would strike Jason Sweeney first which was quickly followed by Nicholas and Domenic Coia who would also attack. Jason Sweeney reportedly begged Edward Batzig Jr to stop however his so called friend would hit him repeatedly with an axe. The three teen killers would finish by smashing Jason Sweeney skull in with a large rock.

Justina Morley, Edward Batzig Jr, Nicholas and Domenic Coia would steal the money out of Jason’s pocket and reportedly the four shared a group hug

The four would spend the money on jewelry and drugs. It would not take long for police to figure out who was responsible for the murder of Jason Sweeney

Justina Morley lawyers would attempt to keep her case in juvenile court as they brought up her struggles with mental health and drug addiction however the prosecutors just pointed at the severity of the crimes that she was charged with. Justina Morley would be tried as an adult and would agree to testify against the three others in exchange for a reduced sentence.

Edward Batzig Jr, Nicholas Coia and Domenic Coia would all be found guilty and sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Many believed that Justina Morley was the ringleader and that prosecutors did not need her testimony in order to convict the other three and she deserved a life sentence for her actions.

Justina Morley would be released from prison in 2020.

Jason Sweeney Killers Update

dominic coia 2021
Domenic Coia

Parole Number: GE5575
Age: 35
Date of Birth: 06/13/1985
Race/Ethnicity: WHITE
Height: 5′ 10″
Gender: MALE
Citizenship: USA
Complexion: LIGHT
Current Location: GREENE

nicholas coia 2021
Nicholas Coia

Parole Number: GE6387
Age: 34
Date of Birth: 08/30/1986
Race/Ethnicity: WHITE
Height: 5′ 06″
Gender: MALE
Citizenship: USA
Complexion: LIGHT
Current Location: SOMERSET

edward batzig
Edward Batzig Jr

Parole Number: GE6503
Age: 34
Date of Birth: 10/05/1986
Race/Ethnicity: WHITE
Height: 6′ 00″
Gender: MALE
Citizenship: USA
Complexion: LIGHT
Current Location: CHESTER

justina morley 2021
Justina Morley

Inmate Number: OJ6487
Age: 33
Date of Birth: 03/07/1988
Race/Ethnicity: White
Height: 5′ 04″
Weight (lbs): 142
Gender: Female
Complexion: FAIR
District Office: Allentown DO
County of Residence: BUCKS
State: PENNSYLVANIA
Release Date: 12/10/2020

Justina Morley Teen Killer Jason Sweeney Murder

Justina Morley teen killer

Justina Morley was fifteen years old when she took part in the brutal murder of an another teenager. According to court documents Justina Morley lured the victim Jason Sweeney to a remote location with the promise of sex where he would be fatally attacked by Edward Batzig, Domenic and Nicholas Cola. According to police the reason that Jason Sweeney was attacked is that the group knew he had just been paid. This teen killer Morley would be sentenced to 17 and a half to 35 years in prison, as of this writing she is still incarcerated. Edward Batzig, Domenic and Nicholas Cola all received life sentences.

Justina Morley 2021 Information

justina morley now

Justina Morley has been released from prison

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Nicholas Coia wore a blue prison uniform, handcuffs and a blank expression yesterday as he was led into court for a resentencing hearing in the brutal 2003 murder of 16-year-old Jason Sweeney.

Coia, 28, sat next to his lawyer, his back to the victim’s parents Dawn and Paul Sweeney and his sister Melissa Vereb, who were among the witnesses called to testify at the hearing to determine whether Coia’s life sentence should stand.

“My precious baby boy had been beaten to death so brutally that I had to identify him by a fresh scar on his hand,” Dawn Sweeney testified, tears streaming down her face. “I sat in the court room listening to testimony that a couple of weeks prior to Jason’s murder, the four of them originally wanted to murder me and my whole family while we slept.”

She asked that Coia’s life sentence be upheld.

Coia, 16 at the time of the killing, was convicted of first-degree murder in March 2005, along with his brother Domenic Coia and their friend Edward Batzig, for the brutal slaying of Sweeney in Fishtown. A fourth teen, Justina Morley, then 15, pleaded guilty in the slaying and was sentenced to 17 1/2 to 35 years in prison.

The three boys, all under 18 at the time of the murder, were sentenced to life in prison without parole. However, in 2012 the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that life sentences given to juveniles were a violation of the 8th amendment, which prohibits cruel and unusual punishment, and required that juveniles sentenced to life be resentenced.

The resentencings must take into consideration the juvenile’s age at the time of the murder as well as other factors.

During yesterday’s hearing, Special Agent Richard Reinhold, who investigated the murder in 2003, described the vicious wounds found on Sweeney’s face and testified that Coia spent weeks plotting to kill Sweeney with the intent to steal his money.

Assistant District Attorney Jude Conroy, asked Reinhold to explain how Coia enlisted the help of Morley to lure Sweeney to the location where Coia, his brother and Batzig hacked and clubbed him to death with multiple weapons including a rock and a hatchet.

Vereb, the victim’s sister, asked that Coia’s sentence stand, saying he was incapable of change.

“Forgiving them means that it hurts less today than it did 12 years ago,” she testified. “I only ask that you find it in your judgment to understand that while some people are capable of becoming better than their past, that Coia is not. This was a well thought out murder. One where he had plenty of time to stop it from happening.”

The hearing before Common Pleas Judge Sandy L.V. Byrd continues today.

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Justina Morley was released from prison in 2020

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Jason Sweeney, 16, was a brown-haired, easygoing teenager who loved working beside his father on construction jobs. His best friend was Eddie Batzig, a bespectacled 16-year-old. The girl he wanted to bring home to meet his mother was pale, slender Justina Morley, 15.

On the evening of May 30, Justina allegedly lured Jason to the Trails, a wooded area of the working-class Fishtown section of Philadelphia along the Delaware River. She promised him sex.

The two were undressing when Eddie allegedly appeared with a hatchet. With him were two other teenage boys Jason knew. One was armed with a hammer.

According to the confession of Dominic Coia, who appeared in court recently, Jason was beaten savagely and fatally. The three young men are charged as adults with murder along with Morley, who police say was part of the plot.

As Jason lay dying, Coia told police, “We took Sweeney’s wallet out and split up the money, and we partied beyond redemption.” But first, he said, the teens shared “a group hug–it was like we were all happy with what we did.”

Like any big city, Philadelphia is accustomed to almost daily murders, some of them brutal, some committed by teenagers. But this one was different, and the accused teens’ apparent callousness and utter lack of remorse have shocked the city.

The accused killers were not high on drugs. The killing was not random. It was not a crime of passion or self-defense or a drug deal gone bad.

A police detective testified that he asked Coia, 18, whether he was high on drugs during the murder. “No, I was as sober as I am now,” he replied. “It is sick, isn’t it?”

The killers planned the crime several days in advance, according to police. They sent Morley as “the bait,” Coia told police. As Sweeney lay unconscious after the first blows, they smashed his face at least a dozen times. They left with Sweeney’s $500 weekly salary, which they spent on heroin, marijuana and the depressant Xanax.

To prepare for the killing that day, Coia told police, “we must have listened to `Helter Skelter’ about 42 times.” Mass murderer Charles Manson said the Beatles song inspired him and his followers during their 1969 killing spree in Los Angeles.

Batzig, who had been Sweeney’s best friend since 4th grade, told a detective that he hit his friend’s face four or five times with a hatchet, according to court testimony.

“Jason started begging for his life, but we just kept hitting him,” Batzig told police.

At a preliminary hearing June 17, no explanation was offered for why the killers did not simply rob Jason. Jason’s father, Paul Sweeney, thinks he knows why.

“Jealousy,” he said last week in the kitchen of his Fishtown row house. “They were jealous that Jason was moving past them, growing beyond them as a good person. He wasn’t hooked on drugs like the rest of them, and they wanted vengeance.”

Coia abused heroin, marijuana and alcohol, according to his lawyer, Lee Mandell. Morley, Batzig and Coia’s brother, Nicholas, 16, abused heroin, marijuana and prescription drugs, according to court testimony.

On the day of the killing, Dominic Coia told police that the killers left the house to hide in the woods as Morley lured Jason to the site. They put on latex gloves, Coia said.

They counted down “three, two, one,” Coia said, and then they attacked.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-2003-06-29-0306290275-story.html

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Jason Sweeney Photos

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