Kip Kinkel Teen Killer School Shooter

Kip Kinkel Teen Killer

Kip Kinkel was fifteen years old when he shot and killed two students in Oregon. Kip Kinkle according to court documents brought a gun to school, Thurston High, and would open fire killing two students. Kinkle who had been suspended for being in a possession of a weapon had earlier shot and killed his parents. The shooting at Thurston High could have been much worse as this teen killer had multiple weapons on him however when his first gun ran out of ammunition he was tackled and held down by fellow students. Kinkle would be ultimately sentence to over a hundred years in prison

Kip Kinkle 2023 Information

Offender Name:Kinkel, Kipland Philip
Age:37DOB:08/1982Location:Oregon State Correctional Institution
Gender:MaleRace:White Or European OriginStatus:Inmate
Height:5′ 10”Hair:BrownInstitution Admission Date:11/10/1999
Weight:220 lbsEyes:BlueEarliest Release Date:01/21/2110

Kip Kinkel Other News

The Oregon Supreme Court on Thursday ruled that a nearly 112-year prison sentence for Thurston High School shooter Kip Kinkel isn’t cruel and unusual punishment given the breadth and severity of his crimes.

Kip Kinkel was 15 when he killed his parents in their Springfield home on May 20, 1998, then showed up the next day at Thurston High with three guns hidden in his trench coat. He killed two classmates and wounded 24 others.

Kip Kinkel, now 35, appealed his sentence, arguing that it amounts to a life sentence without parole and violates the Eighth Amendment because he committed his crimes when he was a juvenile.

Kip Kinkel contends his long sentence falls under a 2012 U.S. Supreme Court decision, Miller v. Alabama. The ruling found that mandatory life sentences for two 14-year-old murder defendants were cruel and unusual punishment because of their age.

The 2012 decision has spurred a re-evaluation of juvenile murder sentences across the nation.

The Oregon Supreme Court, however, was unpersuaded by Kip Kinkel’s arguments.

The court found that Kip Kinkel’s crimes reflected “irreparable corruption” rather than youthful immaturity that could change over time. It noted that Kinkel’s sentencing judge found that he had an incurable illness, either paranoid schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder.

The court found that it couldn’t say Kip Kinkel’s sentence was “constitutionally disproportionate,” given the number of people he killed and injured.

One of seven Supreme Court judges — Justice Pro Tem James Egan — dissented.

Egan wrote that “it is difficult to comprehend how petitioner’s youth at the time of his crimes, in combination with his mental disorder, did not affect the nature and gravity of his crimes.”

The Oregon Justice Resource Center, which advocates for change in the juvenile justice system, praised Egan’s dissent.

“In recent years, the U.S. Supreme Court has recognized fundamental differences between children and adults based on brain science and development,” said Bobbin Singh, the center’s executive director. “The scientific evidence is clear: all young people have inherent potential to grow and change including those who have committed the most serious crimes.”

The majority’s ruling affirms prior decisions by Lane County Circuit Judge Jack Mattison and by the Oregon Court of Appeals, which also found Kip Kinkel’s sentence constitutional.

Kip Kinkel’s attorney, Andy Simrin, said Kinkel still has paths for appeal. A federal habeas corpus case, which had been put on hold, will be reactivated. Kinkel also could ask the U.S. Supreme Court to hear his case, Simrin said.

Kip Kinkel More News

Monday marks the 20th anniversary of the Thurston High School shooting in Springfield, when teen gunman Kip Kinkel opened fire on his classmates. Two students died and twenty-five more were wounded.  The bodies of Kinkel’s parents were found in their rural home, having been murdered by their son the night before. 

Yesterday, we looked at what some survivors of that day have done since. And today, in the final segment of our three-part series, KLCC’s Brian Bull reports on what Kip Kinkel himself has been reportedly up to while serving a 112-year sentence.

To this day, many people wonder about Kip Kinkel…his activities today, as well as why he attacked his school two decades ago. Some note his parents let him go off Prozac in the months before the incident.

Others say Kinkel contended with bullying and anger issues.  Betina Lynn was a teaching assistant in Kinkel’s Spanish class.

“There were a lot of people who very often went out of their way to make him feel like an outsider, to ostracize him, to tease him, to laugh at him, to make his life really hard and uncomfortable.”

Kip’s history included counseling sessions, experimenting with guns and explosives, and being grounded for pranks. He seemed intrigued by recent school shootings in Arkansas and Pennsylvania.

Once in custody, Kinkel was interviewed by a Springfield Police detective on the attacks against his classmates, and the murder of his parents. The boy referred to voices, and his head not being “right”.

Detective Al Warthen: “So you told me that your mom gets out of the (Ford) Explorer and starts up the stairs from the garage or basement, right?”

Kinkel: Yes.

Warthen: “Do you say anything to her?

Kinkel: Yes, I told her I loved her.

Warthen: “And then you shot – 

Kip:  Yes! God damn these voices inside my head!

Warthen:  Alright, hey…Kip, settle down…

Those voices were expected to play heavily into Kinkel’s defense during the trial. But he dropped his claim of insanity, pleading guilty to 26 counts of attempted murder and four counts of first-degree murder.

Former Thurston High School vice principal Don Stone credits Kip’s sister, Kristin, for sparing Springfield a painful revisit of the tragedy.

“Previous to Kip’s trial, she basically talked him into just pleading guilty.  She felt strongly that he shouldn’t put the community through ah, in essence, a second shooting…the trial.”

On this spring afternoon, Tony McCown sits at the Thurston Fence, a concrete and tile memorial to Kinkel’s victims. He watches as current students mill on and off the campus, like he and Kinkel used to before the shooting.

“Kip was certainly one of my best friends.”

While some people have painted Kinkel as a schizophrenic youth influenced by shock rock, gun culture, and bullying, McCown says the friend he knew didn’t particularly stand out as a troubled soul.

He says he visited and wrote Kip frequently after he was sent to the MacLaren Youth Correctional Facility in Woodburn.  Kinkel was transferred to the Oregon State Correctional Institution in 2007. McCown says he’s only visited his friend recently. But Kip has kept busy.

“Since he’s been in prison, he’s finished a Bachelor’s Degree,” begins McCown. “He’s received his electrical license, and he’s become the prison’s electrician. He teaches yoga in the mental health ward of the prison.

“He’s got an odd, centered peace to him.”

Kinkel himself has not granted any media interviews. His sentencing remains under appeal and was recently upheld by the Oregon Supreme Court. 

However, a former inmate – who also served time for a violent offense committed while a youth – spent nearly six years with Kinkel at the state prison in Salem. 

To protect his identity, we’ve electronically altered his voice.  We’ll also call him “David”. He tells KLCC that he was struck by Kip Kinkel’s transition to a fairly dangerous place. 

“A lot of the times, other individuals, especially with high profile cases, gang members and the rest will attack you pretty quickly,” explains David.  “They’ll see it as an opportunity to score points in their gangs.

“So within the first month or so that he was there, he was attacked. Some man came behind him and struck him, hit him one or two times.  It was unfortunate, it was on the yard, and that’s usually where those attacks happen. And he handled himself well, he didn’t strike back.  Which is really the rule of the prison, you let the guards handle that.” 

David confirms that Kinkel is now an electrician at the facility.  He’s also worked in the prison library and when he’s not exercising, is a voracious reader.

“One of the first ‘connect’ books that we really read together was James Joyce’s Ulysses. He really enjoyed that. What’s another great one?  Crime and Punishment was a book we explored together. 

“So he reads a lot of poetry, he reads a lot of lit, and he’s reading it mostly not just to educate himself, but kind of understanding the broader humanity.”

Among Kinkel’s recurring visitors are ministers, suggesting he’s found religion.  David puts it this way:

“I don’t know about “religion”, I’d say “spirituality”.  And I think spirituality is part of a way to deal with sort of the moral challenges of having hurt so many people.  Any sort of tragedy like this, there’s no fixing it, there’s no repairing it.  

“And I think relying on meditation and prayer and thought towards the people who’ve have been harmed is really kind of his spiritual practice in big part.”

Kinkel says very little about May 21st, 1998, according to his friends.  McCown says that even extends to his correspondence.

“I think he’s presented it in a way that he doesn’t want to hurt anybody, and he’s cognizant that written words could hurt people. So he’s very brief and concise in his letters,” says McCown.

Whether it’s education, or faith, or meditation, and yoga, he’s taken a lot of steps to make sure he can function.  I think that living with those demons made it really hard to function for years.”

Just this month, the Oregon Supreme Court upheld Kinkel’s sentence, affirming rulings from two other courts. Kinkel’s defense is seizing upon several Supreme Court rulings in the last decade that they say can help reduce his sentence.

Portland attorney Andy Simrin says a 2012 case, Miller vs. Alabama, ruled that mandatory life sentences without parole are unconstitutional for crimes committed by juveniles.  Simrin says it’s unlikely Kinkel will survive his time.

“He’s got to live to be 127 years old which is longer than any human in recorded history has lived so far.”

Simrin says there’s a possibility Kinkel’s case could reach the nation’s highest court.

“We can file what’s called a petition for a Writ of Certiorari. It’s like an application to get the case directly into the U.S. Supreme Court. And if you’ve got a good federal issue that they haven’t written on before, then there is some chance they may be interested.”

Tony McCown says were his friend ever to be released ahead of his 112-years, there’d be hard questions.

“Do I personally think that if you let Kip out, that he’d be a risk? Probably not.  Would society be a threat to him?  Yeah, probably. 

“And then as a country, we have to consider what our incarcerated people can contribute anyway, and in a way I think Kip’s demonstrated that you can.  I think he’s having an impact inside prison in a way that most people don’t.”

And David adds that for all his exchanges with Kinkel, he’s never talked with him about seeing a world beyond prison walls.  But he understands that should Kinkel be released, there’d be resentment and fear in any community he lives in.

https://www.klcc.org/post/remembering-thurston-pt-3-look-kip-kinkels-life-behind-prison-walls

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Kip Kinkel is currently incarcerated at the Oregon State Correctional Institution

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Eric Hainstock Teen Killer School Shooter

Eric Hainstock

Eric Hainstock was fifteen when he brought a gun to a Wisconsin school and shot his principal. According to court documents Eric Hainstock brought a shotgun and a revolver to the school and would shoot the principal three times causing his death. This teen killer would try to tell the jury the gun went off by accident however they were not buying it and he was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison

Eric Hainstock 2023 Information

Eric Hainstock
DOC #: 00516990
Birth Year: 1991
Age: 28
Height: 5′ 9″     Weight: 145
Race: WHITE
Hair Color: BROWN
Eye Color: BROWN
Sex: MALE
Dexterity: RIGHT HANDED
PhotoDate: 09/06/2019
Status:  INCARCERATED
Sub-Status: 
Institution:  Oshkosh Correctional Institution

Eric Hainstock Other News

A state appeals court Thursday upheld the murder conviction of Weston High School shooter Eric Hainstock, ruling that he likely would have been convicted even if certain evidence had been withheld from the jury.

Hainstock’s attorney, Gregory Petit of Menasha, said Thursday he plans to file a petition to have the case reviewed by the Wisconsin Supreme Court.

“We will do so promptly,” Petit said Thursday.

Hainstock was 15 years old in 2006 when he shot Weston Principal John Klang during a struggle inside the school. A jury convicted Hainstock of first-degree intentional homicide in 2007.

Prior to the trial, Hainstock’s legal team asked that Sauk County Judge Patrick Taggart not allow the jury to hear statements Hainstock made to police in which he admitted to firing all three shots into Klang on purpose, and said he had been thinking about doing it for months.

But Taggart allowed the evidence, finding that there was no improper police conduct or coercion during the interrogation.

Hainstock appealed his conviction, arguing Taggart had applied the wrong legal standard in allowing the statements as evidence at trial.

The appeals court ruled Thursday that Taggart erred in his interpretation of what constitutes a voluntary confession. Prior court rulings have established that even by-the-book interrogations, or the manner in which a suspect is incarcerated, may be coercive if the suspect is “unusually susceptible to pressure.”

However, the appeals court found the judge’s error was harmless because even if Hainstock’s statement to police had been suppressed, a reasonable jury still would have found him guilty for the following reasons:

• Two classmates testified Hainstock had said Klang wouldn’t live through Homecoming.

• Hainstock testified he brought two loaded guns to school with additional ammunition.

• Hainstock said he was there to “kill someone” when he entered the school, a maintenance worker testified.

• A teacher witnessed Hainstock pointing a gun at Klang’s head as the principal tried to calm him.

• Three wounds from three shots contributed to Klang’s death.

• Hainstock testified the handgun he used needed to be cocked.

• Hainstock testified that at least one of his shots was on purpose.

That evidence was inconsistent with the defense’s theory that Hainstock wanted only to scare someone into listening to his complaints and that the gun went off accidentally, the appellate court ruled.

Hainstock’s attorney also argued that his previous attorney did not represent him properly because the attorney did not try to get the Sauk County trial moved elsewhere. The prior attorney also should have moved to strike or make further inquiries of a juror who apparently had a business relationship with Klang’s brother, the appeal argued.

But the court ruled Thursday that those issues “involved too many unresolved factual elements for this court to review for the first time on appeal.”

https://www.wiscnews.com/reedsburgtimespress/news/local/hainstock-s-appeal-denied-in-klang-s-murder/article_ca08e840-f10d-11e0-8905-001cc4c03286.html

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Eric Hainstock is currently incarcerated at the Oshkosh Correctional Institute

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Michael Carneal Teen Killer School Shooter

Michael Carneal

Michael Carneal was fourteen years old when he murdered three fellow students. According to court documents Michael Carneal brought a shotgun and a rifle wrapped in a blanket to Heath High School in Kentucky. Michael Carneal would open fire on a group of praying students killing three and injuring five. This teen killer was quickly arrested and sentenced to multiple life sentences however he is eligible for parole after twenty five years

Michael Carneal 2023 Information

Michael Carneal 2022
Name:CARNEAL, MICHAEL ADAM 
Active Inmate

Offender Photo(Click image to enlarge)
PID # / DOC #:246005 / 151127
Institution Start Date:6/01/2001
Expected Time To Serve (TTS):LIFE WITH PAROLE AFTER 25 YEARS
Classification:Medium (Level 3)
Minimum Expiration of Sentence Date (Good Time Release Date): ?LIFE WITH PAROLE AFTER 25 YEARS
Parole Eligibility Date:11/16/2022
Maximum Expiration of Sentence Date:LIFE WITH PAROLE AFTER 25 YEARS
Location:Kentucky State Reformatory
Age:36
Race:White
Gender:M
Eye Color:Blue
Hair Color:Brown
Height:5′ 11″
Weight:150

Michael Carneal Other News

On the morning of Dec. 1, 1997, then 14-year-old Michael Carneal arrived at Heath High School. While many thought it would be normal day, Carneal entered the school carrying a pistol, loaded clips, shot gun shells, and hundreds of .22 rounds, along with two shotguns and two rifles wrapped in a blanket. He told his sister the blanket was holding a school project.

He then approached and opened fire on a group of students praying. He killed three teenage girls and hurt five other classmates. Carneal then dropped the pistol and surrendered to the school’s principal.

He pleaded guilty a year later, and was sentenced to life in prison. He was also required to receive mental health care while in prison.

Investigators say Carneal had been bullied, and suffered from paranoia. After the shooting, he was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia, and had to be hospitalized several times due to psychosis.

In 2012, Carneal attempted to withdraw his plea, saying he was mentally ill at the time he made it. A month later, the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals denied his request, stating he could have acted sooner.

He is up for parole in 2023.

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Michael Carneal is currently incarcerated at the Kentucky State Reformatory

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Michael Carneal was sentenced to life in prison, he is eligible for parole in 2023

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In 1997 Michael Carneal walked into Heath High School in Paducah and opened fire on his classmates, killing three students and injuring five others. For the last five years we’ve been left to wonder why. He recently sat down with our Carrie Harned for his first ever television interview since the attack.

Michael Carneal seems to clearly remember the day of the shootings. “I remember pulling out the gun and holding it in front of me,” Carneal recalls. “I really wasn’t focused on the people I was focused on my hands.”

On that fateful day in Paducah, Michael Carneal sealed the fate of three teenage girls in a matter of seconds. But he says the events that led up to the shootings were years in the making. “There was a pecking order and I was probably towards the bottom of it.”

Carneal did, however, point to one event in particular that he identified as the starting point of all the trouble. “There was an incident in middle school that they put in the school newspaper that I was gay,” he said, “and ever since that, that label stuck with me. Everybody, if they wanted to get to me, they would put ‘faggot’ or ‘queer’ on the end.”

Despite the constant teasing, Carneal says he was desperate to make friends.

I would buy something and tell people I stole it because I thought that’s what they liked,” Carneal said, “that they wanted to be friends with a delinquent type person.”

After the shootings, Carneal avoided a trial by pleading guilty but mentally ill. Currently, he’s housed in the Kentucky State Reformatory’s psychiatric unit, where he takes medication for depression.

Carneal says he has been dealing with feelings of extreme sadness since kindergarten. “I was angry, I was lonely, I was afraid. I was just full of emotions and I didn’t know how to control them.”

So what he did was plan. At first, his ideas seemed strangely innocent. “If everybody left the school, then I could get on the intercom and talk.”

But then his thoughts grew more sinister. “Before the shootings, I would think about certain people who I would have liked to shot or hit or done something to.”

On December 1st, 1997, Michael Carneal stopped thinking and started taking action. He came to school that day armed with five guns and 1,000 rounds of ammo.

“The first place that I came upon was the lobby where everybody was just standing around,” he recalls. “And for some reason, I just decided I was going to do it there.”

He doesn’t remember much about the shooting itself except its aftermath. “I just remember stopping shooting and seeing a bunch of people on the ground screaming and crying.”

Now, facing the possibility of spending the rest of his life behind bars, Carneal is now aware of the destruction he caused — with plenty of time to think through his deadly plan in ways his 14-year-old mind could not.

“For some reason, I thought that if I did that, I thought that all my problems would just go away,” Carneal said. “But I never really thought about what would happen to the people.”

And looking back now, Carneal says he truly believes one thing could have stopped him. “If somebody would have just pulled me to the side and talked to me about what was going on, I probably — things would have been a lot different. It was in my mind so much it just became like I needed to bring it into action for some reason.”

Michael Carneal pleaded guilty but mentally in October 1998 to the attempted murder of the wounded and the murder of Kayce Steger, Nicole Hadley and Jessica James.

He was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for 25 years, so he won’t be eligible for release until 2022.

Carneal was ineligible for the death penalty because of his age at the time of the crime.

https://www.wave3.com/story/932794/carneal-recalls-1997-high-school-shooting-rampage/?clienttype=printable

Michael Carneal Parole Denied 2022

The Kentucky Parole Board on Monday ordered the man who, at age 14, opened fire on classmates in a 1997 school shooting to spend the rest of his life in prison, denying his request for parole 25 years later. 

Michael Carneal, now 39, told parole board members last week that he would live with his parents and continue his mental health treatment if they agreed to release him. 

He admitted that he still hears voices like the ones that told him to steal a neighbor’s pistol and fire it into a prayer circle in the crowded lobby of Heath High School, located in West Paducah, in December 1997. However, Carneal said that with therapy and medication, he has learned to control his behavior.

Those killed were 14-year-old Nicole Hadley, 17-year-old Jessica James, and 15-year-old Kayce Steger. Five more were injured, including Missy Jenkins Smith, who was paralyzed and uses a wheelchair.

Those killed were 14-year-old Nicole Hadley, 17-year-old Jessica James, and 15-year-old Kayce Steger. Five more were injured, including Missy Jenkins Smith, who was paralyzed and uses a wheelchair.

The Courier Journal reported that the mass school shooting was one of the first in modern U.S. history. The Heath High School bloodshed came just 17 months before Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold killed 12 students and one teacher and injured 21 more at Columbine High School in Colorado.

Jenkins Smith, who had considered Carneal a friend before she was paralyzed by one of his bullets, said she couldn’t sleep Sunday night because she was so anxious about the decision. She said she was in shock after hearing it. “It’s so hard to believe I don’t have to worry about it again,” she told the Associated Press.  “I guess I’ll realize it later. It will sink in.”

Jenkins Smith watched the hearing from her home in Kirksey with another victim, Kelly Hard Alsip, and their families. Her oldest son, who is 15, had been worried that if Carneal were released, he would come to their house, she said.

Jenkins Smith, Alsip, others who were wounded in the shooting, and relatives of those who were killed spoke to the parole board panel last week. Most expressed a wish for Carneal to spend the rest of his life in prison. Carneal told the panel there are days that he believes he deserves to die for what he did, but on other days he thinks he could still do some good in the world.

https://www.foxnews.com/us/kentucky-school-shooter-denied-parole-25-years-later-spend-rest-life-prison