David Ludwig Teen Killer Murders 2 People

David Ludwig Teen Killer

David Ludwig was eighteen years old when he shot and killed his girlfriends parents. According to court documents David Ludwig was involved in an argument about his relationship with his girlfriends parents when he pulled out a gun and shot and killed the pair. David Ludwig would take off with the fourteen year old girlfriend though they did not make it to far as he crashed the car into a tree. This teen killer would be charged and convicted of kidnapping and double murder and be sentenced to life in prison

David Ludwig 2023 Information

david ludwig

Parole Number:GR6289
Age: 32
Date of Birth: 04/28/1987
Race: WHITE
Height: 6′ 02″
Gender: MALE
Citizenship: USA
Complexion: MEDIUM
Current Location: DALLAS
Permanent Location: DALLAS
Committing County: LANCASTER

David Ludwig Other News

Double murderer David G. Ludwig has been transferred to a state prison in Indiana County to serve part of his life sentence for killing his girlfriend’s parents.

Ludwig, 19, was transferred Aug. 3 to the maximum-security State Correctional Institute at Pine Grove, said Susan Naughton, a spokeswoman for the state Department of Corrections.

The former Lititz resident, who pleaded guilty to killing Michael and Cathryn Borden in their Lititz home in November, began his prison sentence in June at Camp Hill Prison.

“Mr. Ludwig will be assigned a job such as a janitorial or food services worker and take part in daily recreational activities as well as educational opportunities,” Naughton said. “He also will be around young people in the general population and be able to have visitors.”

Shortly after his sentencing, Ludwig was transferred June 20 from Lancaster County Prison to Camp Hill, where he underwent psychiatric, aptitude, substance-abuse and behavioral evaluations.

The state Department of Corrections selected the Indiana prison for Ludwig because of its “Young Adult Offenders Program.”

Designed for inmates ages 15 to 20, the program aims to teach self-responsibility, discipline, respect for others and self-esteem.

Pine Grove, which opened in 2000, houses many of the state’s worst young male criminals in a therapeutic community, according to the Department of Corrections.

Inmates at Pine Grove start each day at 6:10 a.m. A head count is conducted, and at 6:30 a.m. inmates convene for a workout that includes sit-ups, push-ups and running in place.

They return to their cells at 7:15 a.m. and change for breakfast, which starts at 7:30 a.m. Lunch is at 11:30 a.m. and dinner at 4:20 p.m.

The bulk of the day is filled with four hours of educational classes; four hours of job training in culinary arts, business, computer-assisted drafting, installing heating and cooling systems or janitorial maintenance; and four hours of individualized life-management skills.

Inmates also undergo a military-style 90-day leadership development program that promotes honor, discipline, integrity and respect.

The transition from county prison, where Ludwig earned a high school diploma, to a state corrections institution has been hard for the teen, said Merrill M. Spahn, one of Ludwig’s defense attorneys.

“The setting change has been difficult because county prison was smaller, and he had grown used to the environment,” Spahn said.

Ludwig’s parents, Gregory and Jane Ludwig, visited their son in Camp Hill and are planning a trip this week to Pine Grove, which is about 215 miles from their home in Lititz.

“His parents are disappointed because he wasn’t placed at a prison closer to home but feel he is in the best place for him,” Spahn said.

It costs about $120 a day to house an inmate at Pine Grove, which employs about 430 people.

Inmates can make 18 to 42 cents an hour working as carpenters, plumbers, cooks and maintenance workers. Their earnings can be used to purchase clothing, shoes, food and personal items at the prison commissary.

Most of the 250 inmates at Pine Grove stay until age 22 and then are transferred to serve the rest of their terms in adult prisons.

Ludwig pleaded guilty in June to the Nov. 13, 2005, slayings.

Ludwig shot the Bordens inside their home at 15 Royal Drive, Warwick Township, because they objected to his dating their 14-year-old daughter, Kara Beth.

Ludwig and Kara Beth fled together after the shootings and eluded authorities for about 28 hours before being arrested in Indiana. Kara Beth was not charged with any crime.

Judge David Ashworth sentenced Ludwig to serve two consecutive life terms plus 9½ to 19 years in state prison and ordered him to pay $125,000 in restitution.

No appeals are planned, Spahn said.

David Ludwig More News

A state appellate court denied David G. Ludwig’s latest request for relief, according to the Lancaster County district attorney’s office.

The convicted killer of a Warwick Township couple filed too late, authorities said.

David Ludwig, now 29, is serving two consecutive life terms for fatally shooting Michael and Cathryn Borden in their home in November 2005 after they told him he could no longer see their 14-year-old daughter, Kara Borden.

David Ludwig, 18 at the time, drew a pistol and shot both parents in the head as he was being shown to the door to leave

He fled with the daughter, and the couple was found a day later in Indiana.

In Ludwig’s most recent filing, he argued alleged issues including a request that he be treated as a juvenile killer serving life. He pointed to a 2012 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that deemed life sentences for juvenile defendants “unconstitutional.”

He also pointed to “ineffective assistance” of his previous lawyer.

The Pennsylvania Superior Court recently denied the request, concurring with Lancaster County Judge David Ashworth who previously found the challenge to be untimely and without merit, according to the district attorney’s office.

Ashworth said Ludwig was not due the same consideration as juveniles because he was 18½ at the time of the murders.

In June 2006 David Ludwig pleaded guilty to two counts of first-degree murder, statutory sexual assault and related charges in exchange for a sentence of two consecutive life terms and a consecutive term of 9½ to 19 years in prison.

David Ludwig is currently incarcerated in Luzerene County.

https://lancasteronline.com/news/local/man-who-killed-warwick-township-couple-fled-with-14-year-old-daughter-denied-relief-in/article_e66a6cd8-dd8a-11e6-a8ab-4bdd87e77f31.html

Alec Kreider Teen Killer Murders 3 People

Alec Kreider Teen Killer

Alec Kreider was sixteen years old when he murdered three people. According to court documents this teen killer would go into the home of a classmate where he would fatally stab the father and stabbed the mother. Kreider would go to the room of his classmate where a brief fight took place before he would stab the teenager to death. Alec would go back to the parents room where he would finish off the mother.

The teenage daughter would wake the next day and would run to a neighbours home for help. Alec Kreider would not be arrested for a month when Alec would tell his father what he had done and his father called police. Alec Kreider would be convicted on all three murders and sentenced to three life sentences with no parole. Alec Kreider would come up for a retrial following the sentencing reform but would take his own life before that could take place.

Alec Kreider Other News

The entries in Alec Kreider’s old journal painted a picture of a teenager on the brink of killing himself, a 16-year-old who deeply loathed rules, restrictions and the people who imposed them.

“Ever since I was young I was defiant of rules and their consequences, which of course laid the foundation for my current anger, depression and violent nature,” he wrote.

His words were a glimpse into a disturbed mind that meandered into suicidal and murderous thoughts.

“Never did I believe killing a man is wrong. No, no killing out of cold blood is wrong. But that is all. I often wondered … if I set out to destroy the world, if God would stop me,” he wrote in another entry.

He’d been increasingly wanting and needing to kill, he wrote on June 6, 2007 — nearly a month after he murdered his best friend and the boy’s parents.

The bloody massacres of a Thomas Haines, his wife Lisa, and their son, Kevin, rattled the quiet, upper middle-class suburb of Lancaster, Pa.

Kreider — a high school student who, though somewhat of a loner, had friends and good grades — suddenly became the callous murderer who will be the subject of a crime book and a documentary years later.

People could only speculate about why he killed a family who welcomed him into their home for years. Although he pleaded guilty to murder charges, he never explained why he stabbed his best friend and his friend’s parents to death that early morning of May 12, 2007.

That reason will never be known.

On Friday, about two weeks before he would’ve turned 26, Kreider hanged himself in his cell at a state correctional facility in Camp Hill, Pa.

Kreider’s death marks the end of a tragedy that ruined two families — his and that of the young woman who lost her father, mother and brother all in one day.

Lancaster County District Attorney Craig Stedman, who prosecuted the case a decade ago, can think of only one reason Kreider chose the Haines home.

“It was an easy target,” he said.

It was close to where Kreider lived. Having been to their home many times, he knew that the Haineses, like others in that quiet neighborhood, didn’t lock their doors.

Armed with knives, he walked in shortly after 2 a.m. He stabbed Thomas and Lisa Haines first while they were sleeping in their bedroom, Stedman said. Thomas Haines died immediately, while his wife lived a few more minutes.

Then Kreider walked down the hall to his best friend’s room.

Maggie Haines, the couple’s daughter, narrowly escaped. Court records say she heard someone screaming for help and ran out of her bedroom — while Kreider was killing her brother next door.

She went to her parents’ room and found her bloodied mother still alive. Lisa Haines told her daughter to get help. After Maggie Haines ran out to a neighbor’s house, Kreider went back to her parents’ room and slit her mother’s throat, Stedman said.

Police arrived at about 2:30 a.m. By that time, Kreider had escaped, leaving bloody shoe marks inside the house, court records say.

The slayings went unsolved for weeks. People who didn’t use to lock their homes lived in fear, Stedman said. Because there were no signs of a break-in, nothing had been stolen, and the Haineses did not have enemies, investigators believed a serial killer was on the loose.

At school, Kreider gained sympathy from classmates who knew he was close to Kevin Haines, Stedman said. He even went to the funeral.

By June, Kreider had been placed on suicide watch at a hospital outside Lancaster. He hated being watched, he wrote in his journal.

“The foolish administrators and doctors of this institution are idiotic enough to ignore the statements, concerns and warnings in relation to my need to be alone and free,” he wrote June 6, 2007. “It has been a horribly long day that is only becoming worse and worse.”

On June 12, 2007, for reasons that weren’t entirely clear, Kreider told his father that he had killed his friend and his parents.

The next day, he pondered about his uncertain future — and entertained the idea of not having one. He also wrote about a girl who didn’t reciprocate his love.

His father went to police June 14, 2007. Kreider was arrested and charged with burglary and three counts of criminal homicide two days later.

Investigators found the knives, Kreider’s shoes that matched the bloody foot prints in the Haines home, and his journal. In one of the pages was a one-line entry that authorities believe Kreider wrote about an hour after the murders: “Alexander was born on May 12th at 3:30 2007”

Stedman believes Kreider was referring to himself — that he was reborn as Alexander after he killed.

Killing, Stedman said, “energized” him.

“He was the true pathological killer,” he said. “He definitely was one of the most frightening and evil people that I’ve prosecuted.”

But Robert Beyer, a defense attorney hired by the Kreider family, emphasized that Kreider was “just a boy,” and that he was vilified after he was turned over to police.

“When he was actually charged, people really came down on him,” Beyer said. “He’s a 16-year-old boy with problems.”

During Kreider’s sentencing hearing in 2008, prosecutors played a video of Maggie Haines as she talked about her life after the deaths of her loved ones — the recurring nightmares, the long periods of crying, the painful thought of not having a father to one day walk her down the aisle, the waves of panic caused by the slightest sound of the wind.

“My biggest concern should’ve been what grades I was getting on my college finals, not what caskets to bury my parents in,” said Haines, who was 20 when her family was killed.

Kreider was sentenced to three consecutive life terms.

Kreider’s father, Timothy Kreider, would later write, “Refuse to Drown: A Father’s Unthinkable Choice,” a book about the painful decision of turning his teenager over to police, and the years of tormenting himself over his son’s crimes.

“I got caught on the downward spiral of blame and insecurity wondering what I could have done to keep Alec from doing what he did. There was a constant voice in my head asking me, ‘Where did I fail?’ ” he wrote, according to LancasterOnline.

A woman who answered the phone listed under Timothy Kreider’s name said he has no comment.

In the book, he revealed that his son expected to be protected even after what he had done, according to LancasterOnline.

He wrote that even before his son confessed, the thought of him being the killer had entered his mind.

In 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court found that mandatory life imprisonment without parole for juveniles was unconstitutional. Four years later, the high court’s justices decided that the ruling should be retroactive, meaning it would apply to those who were sentenced before 2012.

That opened the door for Kreider to one day be released from prison — a possibility that brought a sense of betrayal to the victims’ families, Stedman said.

“The agonizing part of this is that the family was told at the time of the plea that he’s done. He can never get out,” he said.

Kreider killed himself while his case was being reevaluated.

“The reality is this is a tragic ending to a horrible drama,” Beyer said. “He was a boy. He’s still a boy and he’s dead. That’s not good for anybody.”

Beyer said the anger from the people in the small Pennsylvania community was driven by the fact that they never got an explanation from Kreider about why he did what he did.

“If he wanted the public to know,” Beyer said, “the public would’ve known.”

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Alec Kreider committed suicide in 2017

Stanley Kralik Teen Killer Murders Man

Stanley Kralik Teen Killer

Stanley Kralik was seventeen when he beat a man to death. According to court documents Stanley Kralik thought that one of his friends was sexually assaulted by an ex Marine. Stanley Kralik and Oliver Trizarri lured the victim to the woods, choked and beat him to death with a shovel. This teen killer was convicted of third degree murder and sentenced to forty years in prison

Stanley Kralik 2023 Information

Parole Number:MQ9470
Age: 22
Date of Birth: 09/12/1997
Race: WHITE
Height: 5′ 09″
Gender: MALE
Citizenship: USA
Complexion: MEDIUM
Current Location: PINE GROVE
Permanent Location: PINE GROVE
Committing County: SCHUYLKILL
Last Updated Time: 12/17/2019 4:00:16 AM

Stanley Kralik Other News

Jurors have convicted a Schuylkill County man of third-degree murder in the death of an ex-Marine who authorities say was killed in revenge for an alleged sexual assault.

The Schuylkill County panel deliberated for less than two hours Wednesday before convicting 18-year-old Stanley Kralik of Coaldale of the charge along with conspiracy, aggravated assault, robbery and theft.

Authorities alleged that he and 23-year-old Oliver Trizarri of Reading lured 24-year-old Corey Samuels into the woods in January 2014 and beat him with a shovel and choked him because they believed he had sexually assaulted a friend of Kralik.

Trizarri pleaded guilty in February to third-degree murder and testified for the prosecution. Kralik testified Tuesday that he merely witnessed Trizarri commit the murder.

Kralik is scheduled for sentencing Aug. 16.

https://www.mcall.com/news/breaking/mc-pa-pottsville-marine-beaten-conviction-20160622-story.html

Stanley Kralik More News

The trial of a Schuylkill County man accused of killing a Marine more than two years ago has come to an end. Stanley Kralik has been found guilty on charges of third degree murder, conspiracy, aggravated assault as well as robbery and theft.

A sentencing date is scheduled for August 16.

Closing arguments were heard Wednesday in the case against Stanley Kralik.

The verdict came 24 hours after he took the stand, hoping to convince a jury of his innocence in the 2014 murder of Schuylkill County Marine Cory Samuels.

He testified he merely witnessed the killing, but had nothing to do with it.

https://www.wfmz.com/news/kralik-found-guilty-of-murder/article_264eede0-9bde-5ac0-84b8-08e374584016.html

Stanley Kralik Other News

A judge in Schuylkill County found there’s enough evidence to send a homicide case to trial.

Oliver Trizarri and Stanley Kralik are accused of killing a man in Coaldale more than a year ago because they thought the victim attacked a woman.

On the way into their preliminary hearing, Trizarri told Newswatch 16 that he did it.

“It wasn’t the thing I was supposed to do,” said Trizarri.

The 21-year-old is accused of killing Corey Samuels in January of 2014.

Stanley Kralik, 17, is charged with the same crime.

When asked if he did it, Kralik said, “I didn’t do anything.”

Police said the two men beat and strangled Samuels to death on January 20 in 2014 in Schuylkill county.

Samuels’ body was discovered months later, on September 6 of last year.

The remains were found in a wooded area in Coaldale

State police said his body parts were scattered throughout 100 feet.

During the preliminary hearing, a state trooper testified that the men originally told police the group was having a boys night in the woods. They got into a fight and then Samuels ran off. But Trizarri later admitted that the two beat the 24 year old and then shoveled snow over his body and blood.

The men told police they did it because Samuels assaulted their friend first, but charges were never filed.

“I don’t know how they could do it. It was a stupid reason,” said Tara Kurtz, Samuel’s girlfriend at the time of the crime.

She said the two suspects lied to her and even helped her look for Samuels days after he went missing.

Kurtz said Trizarri and Kralik are liars.

“Corey was a good guy, funny. He never would have hurt anybody.”

Kurtz said the worst part is that Samuels thought the two suspects were his friends.

On the way out of the hearing, Trizarri says the whole thing is messed up.

“It’s an emotional thing.”

“Why is it emotional?”

“Because it’s wrong.”

Both men are charged with criminal homicide.

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Stanley Kralik is currently incarcerated at the Pine Grove Facility

Stanley Kralik Release Date

Stanley Kralik current release date is 2056

Bryan and David Freeman Teen Killers

Bryan and David Freeman

Bryan and David Freeman would murder their entire family while they were still teenagers. According to court documents Bryan and David Freeman were self proclaimed neo Nazi’s and decided their parents Jehovah Witness beliefs were not to their liking. With their cousin Nelson Birdwell would murder their parents and their younger brother. The teen killers were convicted of double murder, they were not charged with the murder of their younger brother, and were sentenced to life in prison without parole.

Bryan and David Freeman 2023 Information

Bryan Freeman

Parole Number:CX3426
Age: 41
Date of Birth: 01/07/1978
Race: WHITE
Height: 6′ 00″
Gender: MALE
Citizenship: USA
Complexion: LIGHT
Current Location: COAL TOWNSHIP
Permanent Location: COAL TOWNSHIP
Committing County: LEHIGH

David Freeman

Parole Number:594HX
Age: 40
Date of Birth: 02/09/1979
Race: WHITE
Height: 6′ 03″
Gender: MALE
Citizenship: USA
Complexion: LIGHT
Current Location: MAHANOY
Permanent Location: MAHANOY
Committing County: LEHIGH

Bryan And David Freeman Other News

Twenty years after stabbing and bludgeoning to death their mother, father and younger brother in one of the Lehigh Valley’s most shocking crimes, former neo-Nazi skinhead brothers Bryan and David Freeman tell an aunt they wish they could change the past.

The brothers, who along with their cousin Nelson “Ben” Birdwell III will spend the rest of their lives in prison for the slayings, were troubled teenagers who found an outlet for their rebellion in the white supremacist skinhead movement.

Their rejection of their parents’ authority came to a horrific climax Feb. 26, 1995, as Bryan Freeman, then 17, grabbed his mother, Brenda, as she came down the stairs of the family’s Salisbury Township home, stuffed a pair of shorts in her mouth and stabbed her repeatedly.

David Freeman, then 16, and Birdwell, who was 18, went upstairs, where they beat Dennis Freeman with an aluminum baseball bat and metal exercise bar as he lay asleep in bed.

Prosecutors said Birdwell also attacked 11-year-old Erik Freeman, who was also asleep, hitting him repeatedly with a 3-foot pick ax handle.

Armed with a shotgun, the three fled in Brenda Freeman’s convertible to Michigan, where they were arrested three days later.

David and Bryan Freeman pleaded guilty to murdering their parents. And although a jury acquitted Birdwell of Erik Freeman’s murder, he was convicted for his role in killing Dennis Freeman, whose blood had spattered Birdwell’s T-shirt.

“The boys are not what they were back then,” said Sandy Lettich, who is Brenda Freeman’s sister. “They both regret what they did and wish they had never done it.”

Bryan Freeman, who is serving his sentence at the state prison in Coal Township, Northumberland County, has embraced his parents’ religion, becoming baptized as a Jehovah’s Witness, Lettich said.

David Freeman, who is at Mahanoy State Prison near Frackville, has softened from the cold-eyed and mean young man he had become in the months before the killings, she said.

“If you bring up what happened, they cry,” said Lettich, who visits the brothers frequently.

The Freeman murders came during one of the bloodiest years in Lehigh Valley history, with 14 homicides in the first five months.

A day after the Freeman brothers were captured, 17-year-old Jeffrey Howorth used his father’s hunting rifle to gun down his parents, George and Susan Howorth, ambushing them as they returned separately to the family’s Lower Macungie Township home.

“Those kids in Salisbury, they were cool. They killed their parents,” Howorth wrote in an apparent reference to Bryan and David Freeman that investigators found in his bedroom desk.

“I would be rough [cool] if I did that,” the note continued.

Howorth was arrested March 4, two days after the shootings, when the car he was driving ran out of gas in Missouri. In his trial, experts theorized that Howorth drew inspiration from the Freeman killings. He was acquitted of the murders later that year by a jury that found him not guilty by reason of insanity. He was involuntarily committed and remains under state supervision at Wernersville State Hospital in Berks County.

Howorth’s brother, Stephen Howorth, declined to be interviewed, saying in an email that his parents’ murders continue to cause his family pain.

Memories of the murders have faded in the Freemans’ old neighborhood, said 20-year-old Jacob Ross, who has lived most of his life in the Freeman family’s former home in the 1600 block of Ehrets Lane.

Ross said neighbors used to talk about the killings often, but that changed as time wore on and many longtime residents moved away.

“The neighborhood somehow moved past it, and it was always a wonderful place to live,” he said.

In 1995, the Freeman and Howorth killings came as a one-two punch that rattled parents and educators and exposed the harsh reality that Lehigh Valley youth were not immune to indoctrination by hate groups.

The Freeman brothers and their cousin had reportedly attended gatherings at the Longswamp Township home of Mark Thomas, a proponent of white supremacist ideology who later went to federal prison for his role in a nationwide bank robbery ring run by the Aryan Republican Army.

Although they were not known to be part of an organized skinhead group, Bryan and David Freeman looked the part. In the months before the murders, they began sporting shaved heads and military surplus clothes.

Then the Freeman boys turned up at school with neo-Nazi tattoos on their bare foreheads. David’s read “Sieg Heil,” a Nazi salute, while Bryan’s read “Berserker,” to match one on Birdwell’s forehead.

The neo-Nazi affiliations brought an especially sinister element to the murders.

“We got a number of phone calls from the schools, asking what’s going on,” said Robert Werts, then commander of Pennsylvania State Police Troop M in Bethlehem, which investigated the killings.

Barry Morrison, who retired in 2013 as regional director of the Anti-Defamation League in Philadelphia, said he was besieged with calls from reporters asking how to predict and prevent such crimes.

In response, Morrison organized a conference for educators and professionals from other backgrounds to discuss strategies for preventing youth hate crimes. Local police and anti-gang organizations also held workshops on dealing with hate groups.

What made the Freeman killings especially tragic, Morrison said, was that Brenda Freeman had tried to get help for her husband and herself in managing their sons.

Bryan Freeman had been hospitalized twice for mental illness and his brother David was treated for substance abuse and had been held in several juvenile facilities, according to published reports.

As the boys bridled against authority, leveled death threats against their parents and sank deeper into neo-Nazi beliefs, Brenda Freeman called the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission for help. They referred her to Morrison, who said in an interview last week that at first he saw a conversation with Brenda Freeman as an opportunity to gather up-to-date intelligence on white supremacist activities in the area.

But upon speaking with her, he sensed she needed help that he wasn’t equipped to provide and put her in touch with the Allentown Police Department’s community relations officer.

Morrison said he later tried to call Brenda Freeman to follow up, but the phone rang unanswered. Morrison learned of the murders a short time later, he said.

“It was clear to me that just by coincidence she had been killed shortly before I tried to reach her,” Morrison said. “This was a very sobering experience for me. It left me feeling very unsettled.”

Morrison said he has used aspects of the Freeman case in his work educating others about hate groups. He said he still wonders whether the killings could have been stopped if a teacher had recognized a clear red flag from one of the brothers.

Instead of answering the questions on a test in school, one of the brothers scrawled racist and anti-Semitic epithets, an account of attacking his father and a screed describing his support for the neo-Nazi cause. The teacher returned the paper with a note saying he should rethink his ideas.

Today, in the wake of numerous school shooting tragedies, such writings would set off alarms, Morrison said.

“I doubt that a student would submit this kind of garbage … without serious action being taken by the school,” he said.

Werts, who is now director of the Northeast Pennsylvania Counter Terrorism Task Force in Stroudsburg, said that even two decades later, the Freeman case illustrates the importance of parents being involved in their children’s lives, which by many accounts, the Freemans were.

Dennis and Brenda Freeman were described at the time of the killings as decent, normal people who were troubled by the change in their sons but didn’t know where to turn for help. As Jehovah’s Witnesses, they had high expectations of their children, said Lettich, who was close to her sister and spent a lot of time in her home. The boys, however, were difficult to discipline, she said.

“They just didn’t want to have rules. They just wanted to do whatever they wanted to do,” Lettich said. “When you have 16-year-olds who look like men and have the strength of men, it’s kind of hard to control them.”

Werts said there’s little law enforcement can do to intervene in a situation like the one Brenda and Dennis Freeman faced because no laws had been broken. But, he added, there are social service organizations that can help.

The Freeman brothers and their cousin had reportedly attended gatherings at the Longswamp Township home of Mark Thomas, a proponent of white supremacist ideology who later went to federal prison for his role in a nationwide bank robbery ring run by the Aryan Republican Army.

Although they were not known to be part of an organized skinhead group, Bryan and David Freeman looked the part. In the months before the murders, they began sporting shaved heads and military surplus clothes.

Then the Freeman boys turned up at school with neo-Nazi tattoos on their bare foreheads. David’s read “Sieg Heil,” a Nazi salute, while Bryan’s read “Berserker,” to match one on Birdwell’s forehead.

The neo-Nazi affiliations brought an especially sinister element to the murders.

“We got a number of phone calls from the schools, asking what’s going on,” said Robert Werts, then commander of Pennsylvania State Police Troop M in Bethlehem, which investigated the killings.

Barry Morrison, who retired in 2013 as regional director of the Anti-Defamation League in Philadelphia, said he was besieged with calls from reporters asking how to predict and prevent such crimes.

In response, Morrison organized a conference for educators and professionals from other backgrounds to discuss strategies for preventing youth hate crimes. Local police and anti-gang organizations also held workshops on dealing with hate groups.

What made the Freeman killings especially tragic, Morrison said, was that Brenda Freeman had tried to get help for her husband and herself in managing their sons.

Bryan Freeman had been hospitalized twice for mental illness and his brother David was treated for substance abuse and had been held in several juvenile facilities, according to published reports.

As the boys bridled against authority, leveled death threats against their parents and sank deeper into neo-Nazi beliefs, Brenda Freeman called the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission for help. They referred her to Morrison, who said in an interview last week that at first he saw a conversation with Brenda Freeman as an opportunity to gather up-to-date intelligence on white supremacist activities in the area.

But upon speaking with her, he sensed she needed help that he wasn’t equipped to provide and put her in touch with the Allentown Police Department’s community relations officer.

Morrison said he later tried to call Brenda Freeman to follow up, but the phone rang unanswered. Morrison learned of the murders a short time later, he said.

“It was clear to me that just by coincidence she had been killed shortly before I tried to reach her,” Morrison said. “This was a very sobering experience for me. It left me feeling very unsettled.”

Morrison said he has used aspects of the Freeman case in his work educating others about hate groups. He said he still wonders whether the killings could have been stopped if a teacher had recognized a clear red flag from one of the brothers.

Instead of answering the questions on a test in school, one of the brothers scrawled racist and anti-Semitic epithets, an account of attacking his father and a screed describing his support for the neo-Nazi cause. The teacher returned the paper with a note saying he should rethink his ideas.

Today, in the wake of numerous school shooting tragedies, such writings would set off alarms, Morrison said.

“I doubt that a student would submit this kind of garbage … without serious action being taken by the school,” he said.

Werts, who is now director of the Northeast Pennsylvania Counter Terrorism Task Force in Stroudsburg, said that even two decades later, the Freeman case illustrates the importance of parents being involved in their children’s lives, which by many accounts, the Freemans were.

Dennis and Brenda Freeman were described at the time of the killings as decent, normal people who were troubled by the change in their sons but didn’t know where to turn for help. As Jehovah’s Witnesses, they had high expectations of their children, said Lettich, who was close to her sister and spent a lot of time in her home. The boys, however, were difficult to discipline, she said.

“They just didn’t want to have rules. They just wanted to do whatever they wanted to do,” Lettich said. “When you have 16-year-olds who look like men and have the strength of men, it’s kind of hard to control them.”

Werts said there’s little law enforcement can do to intervene in a situation like the one Brenda and Dennis Freeman faced because no laws had been broken. But, he added, there are social service organizations that can help.

“Any parent who has a child who has a swastika tattooed on his neck and ‘Sieg Heil’ on his forehead, you’d best be looking for help at that point. And in the Freemans’ case, they did.” Werts said. “It just didn’t work.”

“Any parent who has a child who has a swastika tattooed on his neck and ‘Sieg Heil’ on his forehead, you’d best be looking for help at that point. And in the Freemans’ case, they did.” Werts said. “It just didn’t work.”

Bryan And David Freeman FAQ

Bryan Freeman Now

Bryan Freeman is currently incarcerated at the Coal Township Facility

David Freeman Now

David Freeman is currently incarcerated at the Mahandy Facility

Bryan Freeman Release Date

Bryan Freeman is serving life without parole

David Freeman Release Date

David Freeman is serving life without parole


Michael Bourgeois Teen Killer Murders Parents

Michael Bourgeois

Michael Bourgeois was sentenced to life in prison without the parole for the murders of his adoptive parents in 2001.  According to documents Michael Bourgeois along with Landon May, Steven Estes and Drenea Rodriguez conspired to kill the couple.  Landon May and Michael Bourgeois went to the home and tied the couple up then proceeded to torture them for house. 

The female victim was shot, stabbed, had a television set dropped on her head and was finally suffocated.  The male victim was shot, stabbed and strangled to death.  The group was soon arrested and Landon May was sentenced to death.  Steven Estes was sentenced to 17 to 35 years in prison, Drenea Rodriguez was sentenced to life and Michael Bourgeois who was seventeen years old was sentenced to life in prison.  Due to changes in juvenile sentencing laws the teen killer was resentenced to eighty years in prison and will be eligible for parole when he reaches ninety seven years old

Michael Bourgeois 2023 Information

Michael Bourgeois 2022

Parole Number:FG4843
Age: 36
Date of Birth: 04/14/1984
Race: ASIAN
Height: 5′ 04″
Gender: MALE
Citizenship: USA
Complexion: LIGHT
Current Location: MAHANOY

Permanent Location: MAHANOY
Committing County: LANCASTER

Michael Bourgeois Other News

A prison inmate who was 17 years old when he tortured and killed his adoptive parents in Lancaster County has been re-sentenced, but he still won’t have a chance of parole unless he lives to the age of 97. Michael Bourgeois, now 33, will serve 80 years to life for the 2001 murders of Lucy and Terry Smith at their Ephrata home, the district attorney’s office said.

Bourgeois, who was previously serving consecutive life terms, was in court for re-sentencing Friday because of a 2012 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that said mandatory life sentences for juveniles are cruel and unusual punishment. Bourgeois and a co-defendant, Landon May, bound and beat the Smiths in their home for hours before shooting them to death.

In a 2002 interview with prosecutors, Bourgeois said he killed his parents because he “wanted to get rid of them.” Lucy Smith was a principal at Elizabeth Martin Elementary in the School District of Lancaster. The district attorney’s office said Bourgeois testified for about an hour on Friday, saying he didn’t know right from wrong and was “coerced” by May and others he was hanging with around at the time.

On cross-examination, he admitted he knew killing someone and committing other crimes were wrong. Judge David Ashworth, while ordering the sentence, said he considered Bourgeois’ age but also his “chilling, depraved and heinous acts.” Bourgeois will get credit for the prison time he’s served. The district attorney’s office said he wouldn’t be eligible for a parole hearing for about 64 years.  

Michael Bourgeois More News

A Lancaster County man who was 17 when he participated in the torture-murders of his adoptive mother and stepfather had his 80-year-to-life prison sentence upheld Friday by a state appeals court.

The Superior Court panel rejected Michael Lee Bourgeois’ claim that county Judge David Ashworth didn’t fully consider his “distinct youthful attributes” when he resentenced Bourgeois in October 2017.

Bourgeois initially was sentenced to life in prison for the September 2001 slayings of Terry and Lucy Smith in the family’s home. He pleaded guilty to two counts of first-degree murder. His co-defendant, Landon May, was convicted by a jury and receive two death sentences.

Bourgeois had to be resentenced because of a 2012 ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court that bans automatic life without parole sentences for juvenile killers.

In the state court opinion denying Bourgeois’ appeal, Judge Carolyn H. Nichols noted that prosecutors wanted Ashworth to resentence Bourgeois to 100 years-to-life behind bars. She rejected Bourgeois’ argument Ashworth imposed an illegal de facto life prison term.

Nichols cited Ashworth’s observation that each of the murders “was carried out in a dispassionate and calculated manner, each victim was tortured and mutilated, and each murder showed an exceptionally callous disregard for human suffering.”

A forensic pathologist concluded Terry Smith had been stabbed 47 times, his neck was slashed at least five times, he was shot five times and then was asphyxiated. Lucy Smith was cut 51 times, was shot in the head, was beaten with a hammer and was finally smothered, the pathologist concluded.

Terry Smith was the president of a local company. Lucy Smith was an elementary school principal.

Bourgeois turns 35 next week. In his failed appeal he complained that Ashworth’s sentence will prevent him from becoming eligible for parole until he’s 97. That, he said, is nearly 20 years past the average life expectancy for a man in Pennsylvania.

https://www.pennlive.com/news/2019/04/80-year-to-life-prison-term-is-justified-for-teen-killer-who-tortured-and-murdered-his-parents-pa-court-rules.html

Michael Bourgeois Other News

An inmate at Lancaster County Prison already serving consecutive life terms for murdering his adoptive parents in 2001 had his sentence changed to 80 years to life Friday at a re-sentencing hearing in Lancaster County Court.

According to the Lancaster County District Attorney’s Office, Michael Bourgeois, 33, had a new sentence issued by Lancaster County Judge David Ashworth. He was back in court for re-sentencing due to the 2012 U.S. Supreme Court decision that declared life sentences against juveniles unconstitutional.

Bourgeois was 17 years old when he killed his adoptive parents, Lucy and Terry Smith, in their Ephrata home.

Judge Ashworth, while ordering sentence, said he considered Bourgeois’ age at the time of the crimes – about 17 ½ years – but said Bourgeois’ “chilling, depraved and heinous acts” must also be considered.

“Youth matters,” Judge Ashworth said, “but so do the lives of the victims.”

Bourgeois and a co-defendant, Landon May, tortured the Smiths for hours inside their Sand Court home before they died.

Bourgeois testified for about an hour Friday, saying he did not know right from wrong and was “coerced” into committing the crimes by May and other individuals he was hanging around at the time.

Assistant District Attorney Travis S. Anderson, on cross examination, revealed that was not the truth.

Anderson’s questioning prompted Bourgeois to admit he knew killing someone and committing other crimes were wrong.

Bourgeois told police after the murders, as Anderson pointed out, the murder plot was his idea.

“I decided I wanted to get rid of them,” Bourgeois told police in a 2002 interview.

Anderson took Bourgeois through the grisly torture and killings, at one point asking Bourgeois which side of a hammer he used to bludgeon his mother.

“Both,” Bourgeois said, looking down.

What happened when Lucy Smith begged for her life? Anderson asked Bourgeois.

“I still ended up killing her,” Bourgeois replied.

Anderson called Lancaster County District Attorney Craig Stedman to testify. Stedman, as assistant district attorney then, prosecuted Bourgeois and May, and conducted that 2002 interview with Bourgeois.

Of that interview, Stedman described Bourgeois’ demeanor as “flat” and “cold.”

“It stood out to me and stands out to me to this day,” Stedman testified, saying Bourgeois described the crimes matter-of-factly, as if recollecting a commute to work.

Stedman called the crimes’ impact on Lancaster County as “monumental.”

“It terrorized the community,” Stedman testified. “To this day I feel the emotions. It rocked Lancaster County.”

Bourgeois will get credit for the prison time he has served, meaning he would likely get a parole hearing in about 64 years.

https://www.fox43.com/article/news/local/contests/lancaster-inmate-serving-life-for-killing-adoptive-parents-in-2001-gets-new-sentence/521-e3e6173f-d382-49c8-95b9-4df95cbd6a33

Michael Bourgeois FAQ

Michael Bourgeois Now

Michael Bourgeois is currently incarcerated at the Mahandy Facility

Michael Bourgeois Release Date

Michael Bourgeois is not eligible for parole until 2081