Matthew Fischer Teen Killer Murders Love Rival

Matthew Fischer teen killer

Matthew Fischer was a sixteen year old from South Carolina who would stab to death a romantic rival. According to court documents Matthew Fischer was hanging out with his girlfriend when the victim texted her. Fisher would start an online confrontation and demanded the victim come over to his girlfriends home so they can settle it. When the victim showed up the two teenagers began to fight before the teen killer pulled out a knife and fatally stabbed the other teenager. Matthew Fischer would be arrested shortly after and plead guilty to manslaughter and be sentenced to eighteen years in prison

Matthew Fischer 2023 Information

Matthew Fischer

Location – Kirkland Correctional Institute

Release Date – 01/25/2033

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A Snapchat message led to a fatal stabbing in South Carolina on Sunday, Mount Pleasant police say.

Matthew Fischer, 16, was visiting his girlfriend when she received a message from 17-year-old Lucas Bennett Cavanaugh, according to an arrest affidavit obtained by PEOPLE. Messages sent via the Snapchat app are only visible for a brief period of time.

Matthew Fischer then used his girlfriend’s device to respond to Cavanaugh, allegedly writing “Come over” and “I’ll kill you, man,” the affidavit reads.

Cavanaugh got in his Volkswagen Jetta and drove to the girl’s home in an upscale suburban neighborhood, where the two boys got into a fight.

Matthew Fischer allegedly pulled a knife and fatally stabbed the 17-year-old in the torso, according to the affidavit. He fled the scene immediately afterwards.

When police arrived, they found Robynn Davis, the mother of the suspect’s girlfriend, comforting the victim as he took his last breaths, according to an incident report provided to PEOPLE.

After fleeing, Matthew Fischer called his mother, who picked him up and took him back to the scene of the crime, where he was taken into custody and read his Miranda rights, the affidavit states.

Davis told local paper The Post and Courier that she “loved and adored” Cavanaugh, one of her daughter’s closest friends.

“He meant the world to me,” she said. “The world was a better place with him in it.”

Fischer has been charged with murder. Though he is just 16, he is being charged as an adult due to the violent nature of the crime.

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As his attorneys stuck to his self-defense account, a 19-year-old from Mount Pleasant who typed text messages about murder before slicing a schoolmate to death was sentenced Wednesday to 18 years in prison for what some called a ruthless crime.

Matthew Fischer was 16 when he stabbed 17-year-old Lucas Cavanaugh during a feud over Fischer’s girlfriend in the town’s Park West neighborhood.

Though Fischer argued he was trying to get out of Cavanaugh’s grasp during a mutual fight — a story that had already failed to prompt a dismissal of his murder charge — prosecutors cited messages in which he talked about killing Cavanaugh a week before the Jan. 18, 2015 slaying.

Avoiding a trial, he pleaded guilty earlier this month to a lesser count of voluntary manslaughter, which carries between two and 30 years behind bars.

During a tearful two-hour sentencing hearing in a packed Charleston courtroom, Circuit Judge Markley Dennis noted Fischer’s youth and mental health struggles at the time of the killing. He said Fischer would need continued help during and after the prison sentence to ensure he “doesn’t slip back into the person he was.”

“It wasn’t self-defense,” Dennis said. “He didn’t need to do it.”

Under state law, Fischer must served 85 percent, or about 15 years, of the total prison term.

Moments before learning his fate, the young defendant turned briefly to dozens of Cavanaugh’s loved ones who had described a widely loved young man who aspired to design cars and start his own business.

Fischer apologized. His father Joey and mother Susan had done the same

I regret it every day,” he said. “I don’t know what I can say. I’m just really sorry.”

Members of Cavanaugh’s family had asked for Fischer to be imprisoned for the maximum term.

“Whatever happens,” his father, Dave Cavanaugh, said, “there will be no justice for Luke. Luke is still dead.”

The three teens involved in the deadly confrontation knew each other from Wando High School.

Fischer was visiting his girlfriend on Baltusrol Lane when she got text messages from Cavanaugh. She would later tell police the texts were sent through Snapchat, a service whose messages disappear after a time. The account proved wrong, and investigators from the Mount Pleasant Police Department found the Apple iPod messages.

Fischer grew angry and jealous, but Cavanaugh insisted that he wouldn’t steal the girlfriend.

“I’ll … kill you,” Fischer texted, taking over the conversation. “Come here right now.”

Cavanaugh drove from Sullivan’s Island to Mount Pleasant.

Defense attorneys continued Wednesday to portray Cavanaugh as the aggressor who charged after Fischer once he arrived.

They fought.

One of Fischer’s lawyers, Peter Brown, said Cavanaugh wrapped Fischer in a headlock. That’s when Fischer pulled out a pocketknife that his girlfriend had given him and sliced at Cavanaugh’s arm, Brown said. Cuts on the sleeve of Cavanaugh’s sweater supported the account, the lawyer said.

The last, fatal blow was a stab to Cavanaugh’s gut. His last sight, his loved ones said, was likely of his own gruesome injury.

Lead defense attorney Andy Savage said Fischer should have kicked and flailed to suppress the “threat” he saw in Cavanaugh.

But he “used a knife in self-defense,” Savage said, “when a knife was not appropriate.”

Prosecutors said earlier text messages expressing thoughts of violence and ill will against Cavanaugh showed that he had carried out malicious intentions that had been brewing for some time.

“Obviously, he had a dark and disturbed side,” Assistant Solicitor Jennifer Shealy said at the sentencing. “He thought of murdering people.”

For more than an hour, Cavanaugh’s supporters describing losing an old soul who had friends young and old, gay and straight, black and white — a remarkable diversity for someone his age. He fixed cars by watching YouTube videos and wanted to earn a college degree in automotive design.

His friends and family miss his dinosaur sounds, his mischievous sense of humor.

One friend turned to drugs to cope with the loss.

His youngest brother, Dirk, still sleeps on Cavanaugh’s bedroom floor.

“He’s irreplaceable,” the brother said.

To remember him, they made quilts of his shirts.

“We have cried years’ worth of tears,” his mother, Beth Cavanaugh, said. “To say our lives will never be the same is an understatement.”

Cavanaugh would have turned 20 years old on Thanksgiving. His father looked around that day, thankful for the family, including two other sons, he still has.

“There’s nothing like having something ripped away from you to make you appreciative for what you have,” he said. “But there’s a huge undercurrent of melancholy and despair.”

And that, loved ones said, will never go away.

https://www.postandcourier.com/news/mount-pleasant-teen-sentenced-to-18-years-in-prison-for-schoolmates-fatal-stabbing/article_8fbc2a52-d384-11e7-82c2-3bd67213297b.html

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New details have emerged in the case against Matthew Fischer, the 16-year-old Wando High School student, who is charged for stabbing his classmate after a fight that allegedly started over a girl on social media.

We were originally told that the victim, 17-year-old Lucas Cavanaugh, was sending messages to the suspect’s girlfriend on Snapchat, which is an app that deletes the message right after it is read.

But after digging through dozens of additional police reports that we just obtained today, we now know the teens were texting using iMessage, which is the standard texting application on an iPhone.

The big difference here is the messages aren’t deleted, and the girlfriend involved in all of this lied to police.

In police reports obtained by News 2, the suspect and Cavanaugh exchanged words, but not on Snapchat as we originally thought…instead on an iPod. Newer models of iPods, such as an iPod Touch, allow users to send messages on iMessage.

According to newly released police documents, that iPod, belonging to the girlfriend of the suspect, went missing after the stabbing incident.

The day after the incident, police told her that iPod was a crucial piece of evidence in a homicide case. The girl then handed it over, telling police that she had hid it under boxes and blankets.

According to the documents, she thought police wouldn’t be able to retrieve the messages if they were on Snapchat.

Fischer explained the texts between him and Cavanaugh to police….

Fischer asks, “Could you stay out of our relationship and shut the **** up” to which Cavanaugh responded, “You won’t say that to my face.”

When Cavanaugh did show up, Fischer told police he ran towards him and a fight began.

Fischer says Cavanaugh put him in a choke hold and when he was released from that chokehold, choke holden he pulled out a 3 inch pocket knife and stabbed Cavanaugh.

Tonight News 2 went to the home of the girlfriend, which is where this all happened.

We spoke with the girl’s mother who held Lucas in her arms in the moments after the stabbing.

The mother didn’t want to go on camera Monday but she did tell us her daughter was caught in the middle of her best friend and her boyfriend and it’s an extremely difficult situation. She also told us she doesn’t know why her daughter hid the iPod.

According to the reports, she said, the iPod contained nude photos and pictures of marijuana.

Tonight, News 2 also reached out to the suspect’s attorney, Andy Savage, to ask whether he will use the stand-your-ground philosophy when this case goes to trial. News 2 didn’t receive a call back just yet, but we’ll continue to follow this story in the coming days.

Fischer is currently at home on house arrest.

Right now, his first court appearance is scheduled for May 29th.

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Matthew Fisher is currently incarcerated at the Kirkland Correctional Institute

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Matthew Fischer is scheduled for release in 2033

Jacob Matt Morgan

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Jacob Matt Morgan was seventeen years old when he set a fatal fire that would kill his fourteen month old brother. Jacob Matt Morgan would be sentenced to fifteen years in prison

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Jacob Matt Morgan Released From Prison

Jacob Matt Morgan – Family defends teen accused of killing 14-month-old half-brother near Lesslie

Jacob Matt Morgan is incapable of setting a fire or planning to kill anybody, a family member said Wednesday, two days after Morgan, 17, was charged with arson and murder in the death of his 14-month-old half-brother, Josh.

Morgan loved Josh “with everything he had,” said Myke Hill, Josh’s father and the fiance of Morgan’s mother.

“We don’t think he did this,” Hill said. “He didn’t have the mental ability to plan this.”

Jacob Matt Morgan has learning disabilities and has been treated for “mental health” most of his life, Hill said. Morgan was diagnosed with dyslexia, ADHD and several other disorders, he said.

Before his arrest Monday night, Morgan was taking night classes at Rock Hill High School and had a job working on the event staff at Winthrop University. At home, he was a great older brother who loved giving Josh piggyback rides around the house and making him laugh, Hill said.

Warrants allege Morgan set fire to the mobile home on Friday morning on Catawba Church Road in the Lesslie area “with malice aforethought,” intending to kill his half-brother. Investigators based their arrests, in part, on Morgan’s own statements.

Hill and other members of Morgan’s family have concerns about how those statements were collected from Morgan.

At 3 p.m. on Monday, Hill, Morgan and his mother, Julie Morgan, reported to the sheriff’s office to give their statements about what happened on Friday. While Hill and Julie Morgan were done in about an hour, they waited for nearly five hours for Matt Morgan to be finished.

“The officers, their stories kept changing,” Hill said.

Hill and Julie Morgan were told that Matt Morgan’s story kept changing and that perhaps the fire had been started by a pillow leaning against a heater. Just before 8 p.m., officers said Morgan was under arrest for “intentional and voluntary murder” of Joshua.

Jacob Matt Morgan, who turned 17 in February but has the “mental ability of a 12-year-old,” according to Hill, was not allowed to see or speak to Hill or his mother and was not accompanied by a lawyer throughout the “interrogation,” Hill said.

“He cries if you shout at him,” Hill said of Morgan. “I can only imagine how he was feeling with three officers asking him all kinds of questions.”

Officers told Hill and Julie Morgan that Matt Morgan wrote out a long statement, detailing how he planned to set the house on fire to kill Josh, but Hill said Morgan can barely write a paragraph. His disabilities make spelling, reading and writing very difficult. Hill said officers told them they could see the statement if Morgan or his attorney showed it to them.

On Tuesday, 16th Circuit Chief Public Defender Harry Dest said his office will be representing Morgan.

Hill said family members haven’t spoken to an attorney yet nor have they been allowed to see Jacob Matt Morgan since he was taken to give his statement at 3 p.m. Monday.

If Morgan had intentionally set the fire, his behavior on Friday didn’t make any sense, Hill said.

When Hill arrived at the home, Morgan was with a neighbor, barefoot, covered in soot with his hair singed from the heat. He said he woke up to a house filled with smoke and tried to get to the back bedroom, where Josh was sleeping, but couldn’t.

He ran outside to alert the neighbors, then tried to get back in the house to help Josh, but the fire engulfed the home in a matter of minutes, according to neighbors.

“You don’t do things like that when you set a fire,” Hill said.

Jacob Matt Morgan is currently in custody at the York County Detention Center. A $50,000 bond was set on his arson charge, but no bond on the murder charge. Only a circuit court judge can set bond on a murder charge, and Morgan only has been before a magistrate judge.

Law enforcement officials and first responders have said this entire ordeal, including the baby’s death and Morgan’s alleged role in it, has been very trying.

Sheriff Bruce Bryant said some people at the scene, including Morgan, were allegedly screaming at emergency responders on Friday after those responders could not save the child.

Local authorities investigated the fire along with the State Law Enforcement Division, the state Fire Marshal’s Office, the York County Fire Marshal’s Office and the York County coroner.

Officials have yet to give information on the cause of the fire. The baby’s official cause of death has not been released, pending additional testing.

https://www.heraldonline.com/news/local/crime/article13635782.html

Jacob Matt Morgan – York County murder suspect: malicious killer or tortured teen?

Sobs pulsed through the 17-year-old body of Jacob Matt Morgan on Tuesday as police and prosecutors described him as a devious, fire-loving killer. The teen clasped his hands together and prayed for a judge to set him free, then almost passed out when he was ordered back to jail to await trial on murder and arson charges.

Fourteen-month-old Joshua Hill was the victim of his brother’s fascination with fire, investigators said in court, a fascination that led to the March fire at the family’s home and left Joshua gasping for breath.

A toddler dead from smoke, authorities say, because Morgan started a fire for the pure thrill of it.

Prosecutors say Morgan never called 911, even though he had a cellphone in his pocket the whole time, and then lied about the fire and trying to help his brother.

Morgan wept as his lawyer told a judge that police had botched the investigation by failing to test electrical heaters, and then subjected the teen – who has learning disabilities and can barely read and write – to almost four hours of interrogation, after which Morgan confessed to setting the fire

But that confession, said Morgan’s lawyer, is false and was coerced. Worse, public defender B.J. Barrowclough said, it was not recorded – despite police having the technology to record from their patrol cars, using body cameras, cellphones, almost anything, anywhere.

Yet police chose not to videotape the confession of a teenaged kid accused of murder by fire in the death of his own brother? It seems certainly preposterous, if almost inconceivable.

Who is Jacob Matt Morgan? Is he a stone-cold killer at 17, a classic violent, malicious brother who set two fires that day in the mobile home after his parents left him to watch Joshua – after having set a fire two weeks before that did not kill anyone? Is he a scheming killer?

Or is Jacob Morgan the teen who who fell to the courtroom floor and wailed, “No, I didn’t do it!” after a judge ruled that he will face murder charges and potentially life in prison. Is he the kid who cried through the court hearing because he has no clue how he ended up in shackles and handcuffs and leg irons, surrounded by guards with guns?

Judging by Tuesday’s hearing, a jury likely will have to decide. Neither side appears ready to budge on their account of the events that led to Joshua’s death. Defense lawyers are itching to go to trial, and prosecutors are confident enough to give them one.

Morgan’s mother and stepfather, Julie and Myke Hill, say he is not capable of murder. Myke Hall, who is Joshua’s father, said if he thought “for one second” that Jacob killed Joshua on purpose, he would not defend him.

The family and their lawyer say police had to find someone to blame for the fire, and the hapless teen who has autism and other problems finally succumbed to the good-cop, bad-cop routine by the state agent and deputies.

But William Keller, the State Law Enforcement Division fire investigator who handled the case, and veteran prosecutor Willy Thompson say Morgan is no innocent. He loved the flames, the power and the thrill and the carnage, they say, so much that it ended with his brother in a tiny body bag.

Morgan lied to try to cover up the crime, Keller said, then came clean when caught in the lie. The interrogation was how police get information, he said, after a teen who kills tries to weasel out of responsibility for his crime.

Thompson’s quiet words shook the courtroom walls: “Jacob Morgan knew that child was going to die.”

Morgan used “meanness” and had “a warped fascination with fire,” Thompson said, and he watched the flames spread from one of the two fires he set.

If a jury believes that Jacob Morgan is the teen described by Thompson and Keller, he will spend 30 years – maybe the rest of his life – in prison.

If a jury sees him as the confused, learning-disabled teen depicted by his family and his lawyer, he will go home in months or years after a trial.

https://www.heraldonline.com/news/local/news-columns-blogs/andrew-dys/article20774481.html

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Christopher Pittman Teen Killer Murders Grandparents

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Christopher Pittman was just twelve years old when he murdered his grandparents. According to court documents Christopher was involved in an altercation at school, interrupted the piano player at church and would be disciplined by his grandfather later that night for his actions. Pittman responded by grabbing a shotgun and shooting his grandparents who were sleeping in their bed. Christopher using a candle and paper would set fire to the house and would take off stealing his grandparents car and a bit of money. Soon the teen killer would get stuck and would be arrested by police.

Initially he told police he was kidnapped after his grandparents were murdered however he would soon confess to the double murder. On the main aspects at his trial was whether or not the use of the antidepressant Paxil had anything to do with the double murder. Apparently not as this teen killer was sentenced to thirty years in prison which was later reduced to twenty five years on appeal. Christopher Pittman is scheduled to be released in 2023

Christopher Pittman 2023 Information

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Christopher Pittman – Current Facility – Anderson – Current Release Date – 2023

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In November of 2001, Christopher Pittman (Appellant) shot and killed his paternal grandparents, Joe Frank and Joy Pittman, at close range with a .410 shotgun.   At the time of the incident, Appellant was twelve years old and had recently come from Florida, where he lived with his father, to live with his grandparents in Chester, South Carolina.

Shortly before moving to Chester with his grandparents, Appellant’s relationship with his father became strained.   Specifically, Christopher Pittman had attempted to run away from home, and also had threatened to harm himself with a knife.   In response to this behavior, Appellant’s father committed him to an inpatient facility.   While at the facility, Appellant began taking the antidepressant Paxil.   Soon after a short period of commitment, Appellant’s father had him released from the facility and agreed to allow Appellant to live with his grandparents in Chester.

Upon moving to Chester, Christopher Pittman enrolled in school and began to actively participate in church with his grandparents.   His grandmother also continued Appellant’s treatment for depression by taking him to a local physician to refill his Paxil prescription.   The physician did not refill the Paxil prescription, but instead offered free samples and a prescription of Zoloft.1

On the day of the murders, the assistant principal of Appellant’s school called Appellant’s grandparents to the school in response to an incident which occurred the previous day on the school bus.   During the incident in question, Appellant allegedly choked a second grade student.   After leaving the school, Appellant and his grandparents attended choir practice.   The church musician testified that she admonished Appellant for kicking her chair, at which time his grandfather took him outside to talk to him.   Upon their return, the musician noted that Appellant had an angry expression.

According to Christopher Pittman, when they returned home, his grandparents locked him in his room and his grandfather warned him that he would paddle Appellant if he came out of the room.   Later that night, Appellant came out of his room and his grandfather paddled him.   After his grandparents went to bed, Appellant waited for ten minutes, loaded a shotgun, entered their bedroom, and shot his grandparents to death in their bed.   Appellant then lit several candles and positioned them so that the house would catch on fire after he left.   Appellant collected some money, weapons, and his dog, took the keys to his grandparents SUV, and drove away.

Early the next morning, two hunters found Appellant wandering around in the woods with a shotgun.   Appellant told the hunters that he had been kidnapped by a black man who had shot his grandparents and set their home on fire.   Appellant further told the hunters that he was able to escape when the kidnapper got the SUV stuck in the woods.   He further stated that the kidnapper had shot at him before throwing the vehicle’s keys and running into the woods.   Upon hearing this story, the hunters, who were also firemen with the Corinth Fire Department, took Appellant to the fire station where they alerted the police.

A search ensued for the black man who allegedly committed the crimes as Appellant suggested.   During this time, Chester deputy Lucinda McKellar (McKellar) arrived to speak with Appellant.   Under the impression that Appellant was a victim and possible witness to the crimes, McKellar took an oral and written statement from Appellant.   In the statements, Appellant related the story that he had told the hunters.

As the search for the alleged kidnapper continued, the Chester police were also conducting an investigation of the crime scene.   At some point in the afternoon, McKellar’s supervisor notified her that the information from the crime scene and the search of the vehicle indicated that Appellant was a possible suspect in the crimes.   At that time, McKellar took Appellant to the police station.

When they arrived at the police station, McKellar took Appellant to a conference room and told him that they needed to have an “adult conversation.”   Pittman sat down at the table and McKellar explained the Miranda rights.   At that time, Appellant gave the officers a third statement in which he confessed to the murders and detailed the events of the night.   McKellar wrote the statement and Appellant read and signed it.

After his confession, the police arrested Appellant for double homicide and arson.   The prosecution filed a motion with the family court to waive its jurisdiction, which the family court granted.   After several pretrial motions, various continuances, and delays, Appellant’s trial was held from January 31, 2005 to February 15, 2005.   The jury convicted Appellant on both counts of murder.   The trial judge sentenced Appellant to the shortest sentence possible under the mandatory minimum sentencing guidelines-two concurrent terms of thirty years imprisonment.

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Christopher current release date is 2023

Jesse Osborne Teen Killer School Shooter

Jesse Osborne Teen Killer

Jesse Osborne was fourteen years old when he fatally shot his father and then drove to an elementary school where he would fatally shoot a six year old boy. According to court documents Jesse Osborne would fatally shoot his father who has been described as abusive before driving to Townville Elementary School where he would open fire striking the six year old boy in the leg who would die in the hospital three days later. This teen killer who was tackled by a firefighter during the school shooting had spent the last few years trying to keep his case in juvenile court however that would be a battle that he would lose. Today Jesse Osborne was sentenced to life in prison

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On a day another deadly shooting took place at a school across the country, Jesse Osborne, the teenager responsible for a shooting at a South Carolina elementary school in 2016, was sentenced to life in prison.

Judge Lawton McIntosh handed down the sentence in Anderson after tearful, heart-wrenching statements from family members of Jacob Hall, the 6-year-old first-grader who Osborne mortally wounded on a playground at Townville Elementary School.

Osborne was 14 at the time and is 17 now.

He has 10 days to appeal his sentence.

“We’re very disappointed in the result, but the courts will undoubtedly have to continue dealing with sentencing juveniles to life without parole and will have to continue to deal with the issue of school shootings,” said Frank Eppes, Osborne’s lead attorney.

Filled with emotion of their own, Osborne’s family members portrayed the teenager as a victim of abuse at the hands of his father, Jeffrey Osborne, the 47-year-old man who Jesse Osborne shot and killed before driving 3 miles to the school in rural Upstate South Carolina on Sept. 28, 2016.

Osborne pleaded guilty in December to killing his father and Jacob, and to attempted murder related to trying to kill other students and a teacher on the playground. This week’s hearing was mandated by state law because of his age at the time of the crimes. The judge considered the circumstances of the crimes, Osborne’s maturity level, his home and family life, and whether it is believed he can be rehabilitated.

“This is the sentence that we hoped for and that these crimes called for,” said Solicitor David Wagner. “You can’t come into our community, into our schools, and do what he did. I hope this sends a message to anyone else who would think about doing something like this.”

Osborne spent 13 or 14 hours a day alone in a basement or bedroom that had little natural light and was in “total isolation” in the months before the shooting, according to his grandfather Tommy Osborne.

The teen had been expelled from middle school after bringing a hatchet and a machete in his backpack, and he was taking online classes at home. He normally would have gone to his grandparents’ house after school to do homework and have a meal, but he didn’t see them as often then, according to testimony Thursday in the Anderson County Courthouse.

His father owned a chicken farm, but he was having financial trouble and had borrowed money from his family. Jeffrey Osborne had a temper, and especially when he drank, he became dark and threatening, according to testimony from his family and a psychiatrist who saw Jesse after the shooting.

Tommy Osborne testified that Jeffrey, his son, had once threatened him when Jeffrey was under the influence of alcohol.

“After that, I made sure I had some kind of protection,” Tommy Osborne testified. “I carried a .38.”

And Jeffrey Osborne did more than threaten his family, according to testimony. His son, Jesse, told his grandparents that his dad had “hit him with a ball bat.” Ryan Brock, Jesse’s half-brother, testified earlier that Jeffrey Osborne was horribly abusive to Jesse.

“He would make him pull his pants down… get sticks, belts, whatever he could find, and just start whaling on Jesse,” Brock said. “I could hear the screams throughout the house.”

Jesse was mostly alone with no friends except a group of people he communicated with on the internet, according to testimony from his grandfather.

The portrait of Jesse Osborne that was presented Thursday was starkly different from the one prosecutors presented earlier in the week.

Prosecutors described him as the boy who planned the Townville school shooting for days and maybe weeks. The boy who videoed himself combing his hair just before the shooting and saying that he needed to “look fabulous” because of what he was about to do. The boy who hoped to kill dozens more than he did, according to messages attributed to him.

Late Thursday, prosecutors recalled psychiatrist James Ballenger to the stand. Ballenger already said he was “pessimistic” about how much good treatment would do for Jesse Osborne. He was asked again Thursday about whether Osborne can be rehabilitated.

“I certainly think he is dangerous and I think he will remain dangerous,” Ballenger said. “Anything under God’s green earth is possible, but I wouldn’t say (rehabilitation) is likely.”

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Eric Lankford Teen Killer Murders 3 In South Carolina

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Eric Lankford was fourteen years old when he murdered three members of his family in South Carolina. According to court documents Eric Lankford would fatally shoot his father, great aunt and grandmother with a rifle he was given as a present just a few months before. After the fatal triple shooting the teen killer would phone police and would tell them what to do.

When the officers arrived Eric Lankford would peacefully surrender. Eric Lankford would plead guilty but mentally ill to the three counts of murder. Lankford would be sentenced to forty years in prison.

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Current Location: Kirkland

Release Date: 2051

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The attorney for a Spartanburg teenager said in court Thursday that the teen longed for a supportive family when he murdered his father, grandmother and great-aunt.


Eric Lankford, 18, received a 40-year sentence for each murder after he pleaded guilty but mentally ill. He was 14 at the time of the triple homicide shortly before midnight on Jan. 17, 2011.


Circuit Judge Mark Hayes also sentenced Lankford to five years for possession of a firearm during the commission of a violent crime. The sentences will run concurrently. Lankford will receive credit for the 1,513 days he already has served.


Solicitor Barry Barnette said Eric Lankford used a .22-caliber rifle to murder his father, Joe Robert Lankford, 44; his grandmother, Rachel Gaston Lankford, 80; and great-aunt, Virginia Gaston, 83, at their home at 900 S. Irwin Ave. Ext. Barnette said each victim was shot in the head.
Barnette said Lankford called 911 and reported the shootings before he “peacefully” surrendered to police.


During the plea hearing, Eric Lankford rubbed his handcuffed hands together. He answered the judge’s questions with “Yes, sir” and “No, sir.“
Eric Lankford apologized in court for his actions. He said he would use his time in prison wisely — finish school and receive therapy in order to be a responsible citizen after his release.


There was no explanation for the murders offered at the plea hearing.


Spartanburg County Assistant Public Defender Beverly Jones was Lankford’s attorney. Jones said the crimes defied explanation. She said Lankford loaded the gun and wrote a suicide letter because he planned to kill himself. However, she said he was unable to carry out the act.


Jones said Lankford can’t explain why he shot and killed his relatives. She also said he had no criminal record or behavioral problems in school.She said Eric Lankford was born three months premature and suffered several medical setbacks as an infant. Jones said Lankford’s father questioned his paternity after his birth, and the night he was murdered. When Eric Lankford was 4 years old, Jones said his mother had a psychotic break that resulted in her arrest and hospitalization.“She forcibly tried to board an airplane to go to Jerusalem to see Jesus,” Jones said.


After the incident, Jones said Eric Lankford went to live with an aunt. She said after his parents split, Joe Robert Lankford was granted custody of Lankford and his sister.
Jones said Eric Lankford attended several elementary schools because of frequent moves and that the state Department of Social Services was involved with the family multiple times after receiving complaints, including abuse allegations.


“It wasn’t the system that failed Eric. It was his family,” Jones said.
She said tests revealed that Lankford has several learning disabilities related to impaired brain functioning, which impairs his decision making, judgment and impulse control.


Jones said Eric Lankford wanted to be a volunteer firefighter like his father, or a police officer.
“But dad always reminded him you can’t, because you’re not whole. You’re not a real man. You’ve got something wrong with you,” Jones said.
She said Joe Robert Lankford was a “functioning alcoholic” who had been drinking all weekend leading up to the killings.


“This case is a horrific tragedy and it involved some serious mental health challenges that would have added to the unpredictability of a jury trial. The sentence takes a dangerous person out of our community,” Barnette said in a written statement.


Eric Lankford is not eligible for parole.

https://www.goupstate.com/article/NC/20150312/News/605129433/SJ

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A grand jury has decided that a Spartanburg teenager accused of killing three family members will be charged as an adult.

Eric Lankford, who is now 15, was indicted on three counts of murder and possession of a gun during a violent crime.

On Jan. 17, 2011, Lankford’s father, Joe Robert Lankford, 44, and his great-aunt, Virginia Dare Gaston, 83, and his grandmother, Rachel Gaston Lankford, 80, were killed at their home. A police report said the victims were found in different rooms and that all three had been shot in the face or head.

Prosecutors said Eric Lankford calmly called 911 and told a dispatcher that he had shot his relatives with a .22-caliber rifle. He told dispatchers he would be waiting for them at the home.

When officers arrived, the teen came out of the house with no shirt on and his hands in the air.

A .22 caliber rifle was found on the table in the living room, the report said. Fisher said the teen’s father had given the rifle to his son as a birthday gift four months before the shootings.

Eric Lankford has been held at the Department of Juvenile Justice since his arrest.

A court appearance is scheduled next month.

https://www.wyff4.com/article/the-week-ahead-what-you-need-to-know/33111848

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A Spartanburg teen has been sentenced to 40 years in prison for killing three relatives.

Prosecutor Barry Barnette said Thursday that 18-year-old Eric Lankford was sentenced after pleading guilty but mentally ill to three counts of murder and possession of a weapon during a violent crime.

Eric Lankford was accused of killing his father, great aunt and grandmother in 2011. Forty-four-year-old Robert Lankford and 83-year-old Virginia Gaston died when they were shot at their home. Eighty-year-old Rachel Gaston Lankford died at a hospital.

Prosecutors say the teen calmly called 911 and told a dispatcher had shot his relatives with a .22-caliber gun. Barnette says he was found competent to stand trial but was found to have abnormal brain development and learning disabilities.

https://www.postandcourier.com/archives/sc-teen-sentenced-to-40-years-for-relatives-deaths/article_f1b83b5d-365f-524f-befa-1e1acfbde645.html