Troy Kell Utah Death Row

troy kell

Troy Kell was still a teenager when he committed his first murder however it would be a prison murder that would make him infamous and land him on Utah death row. On this article on My Crime Library we will take a closer look at Troy Kell.

Utah Death Row Inmate List

Troy Kell Nevada Murder

Troy Kell was eighteen years old when he was approached by his friend 15 year old Sandy Shaw to beat up the victim James “Cotton” Kelly aka James Thiede for constantly pressuring her for sex. Troy Kell, Sandy Shaw and William Merritt would kidnap Cotton and drive him out to the desert in 1986 .

Once in the middle of nowhere Troy Kell would shoot Cotton six times in the face. The trio would leave Cotton body and head back to the city. Sandy Shaw and William Merritt in the upcoming days would bring other friends to the murder scene to show off the body. Needless to say police would hear about the murder and the trio would be soon arrested.

It would later be noted that Sandy Shaw never brought people to the murder scene however a friend of hers who she told would. Sandy Shaw would initially be sentenced to life in prison however this would be reduced after the parole board commuted her sentence. Sandy Shaw would spend 21 years in prison.

William Merritt would be convicted at trial and sentenced to eight to twelve years in prison. Merritt would only serve four years however soon after he was released he would be arrested again and sentenced to life in prison.

Troy Kell would be sentenced to life in prison. A number of years after the first murder Troy Kell would be transferred to Utah due to overcrowding.

Troy Kell Prison Murder

Troy Kell was having problems with an inmate named Lonnie Blackmon and according to other prison inmates the two were in constant arguments from their respective cells.

On July 6. 1994 Troy Kell along with another inmate Eric Daniels would be released at the same time as Lonnie Blackmon. Kell and Daniels would attack Blackmon and while Eric held him down Troy would stab the man over sixty five times. The murder would be caught on tape and would be at the center of the documentary Gladiator Days: Anatomy of a Prison Murder

Troy Kell would be sentenced to death and as of 2021 remains on Utah Death Row. Eric Daniels would be sentenced to life in prison.

Troy Kell 2023 Information

troy kell 2021
  • Offender Number: 72819
  • Offender Name: TROY MICHAEL KELL
  • DOB: Thu, 13 Jun 1968
  • Height: 5 Feet 10 Inches
  • Weight: 145
  • Sex: M
  • Location: UTAH STATE PRISON
  • Housing Facility: UINTA
  • Parole Date: N/A
  • Aliases:
    • TROY MICHAEL KELL

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The nation’s top court is considering whether to take up a death penalty case from Utah.

Troy Kell is on death row for the 1994 murder of Lonnie Blackmon inside the Utah State Prison in Gunnison. Kell is accused of stabbing Blackmon numerous times in a racially-motivated murder that was caught on camera. After the slaying, he walked around a cell block with blood on his arms screaming “white power.” Kell’s attorneys argued the killing was self-defense.

The Utah Attorney General’s Office is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to take up Kell’s case, essentially arguing over delays to carry out a death sentence. On Friday, the justices met in conference to determine if they will hear the case.

Earlier this year, the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals dismissed an appeal, saying Troy Kell had not exhausted all his federal and state court processes so they didn’t have jurisdiction to hear it. The court never considered the central issue of the appeal — how long it has taken to exhaust Kell’s death penalty claims.

In its petition to the U.S. Supreme Court, the state said some courts are causing some of the delays and they ought to have the ability to appeal a lower court judge’s determination — which they are unable to do right now.

“The federal district court delayed Mr. Kell’s case unjustifiably,” deputy Utah Solicitor General Andrew Peterson said Friday. “The sovereign state of Utah should be entitled to appeal that decision.

Kell’s lawyers say the Court should not take up the case. In their own filing, they argued that proper procedures are being followed. Those procedures, they said, were set up by the very states complaining about it.

“If the State thinks a claim is truly meritless, it can waive exhaustion and ask the court to grant summary judgment on the merits,” Kell’s lawyer, Dale Baich, wrote. “But the State has not exercised this option and is simply complaining about Rhines, which the district court dutifully followed.”

Death penalty appeals take years to exhaust. Lawmakers in the Utah State Legislature have long complained about delays and have recently pushed legislation to cut down on the appeals process.

Earlier this week, notorious killer Ron Lafferty died of natural causes after decades on Utah’s death row awaiting a firing squad execution. In that instance, Peterson said, there were delays in carrying out the sentence.

“Ten years for federal habeas corpus and two years to decide on appeal that he doesn’t have the right to appeal? In our view, it’s too long,” Peterson said of Lafferty’s case.

In Kell’s case, Utah is getting support in its arguments from other states. Indiana, Alabama, Georgia, Idaho, Kansas, Louisiana, Montana, Nebraska, Ohio, South Carolina and South Dakota all filed a “friend of the court” brief arguing that the Supreme Court itself warned this could happen.

“The Court’s prediction that capital petitioners would abuse Rhines stays to delay their executions has proven correct. District courts have delayed numerous executions by issuing stays based on plainly meritless claims,” Indiana Attorney General Curtis Hill wrote.

The U.S. Supreme Court did not announce on Friday if it would hear the case. A decision could be announced next week, or the justices can hold it over for another conference.

https://www.fox13now.com/2019/11/15/u-s-supreme-court-considers-whether-to-take-utah-death-row-case/

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The Utah Supreme Court on Monday heard for the third time arguments by attorneys representing death-row inmate Troy Michael Kell, who wants his conviction for fatally stabbing a fellow prisoner at a state prison in 1994 to be overturned.

Megan Blythe Moriarty, a federal public defender representing Kell, said Kell’s prior attorneys failed to investigate 106 claims that Kell identifies as “red flags” in how his case was handled.

Among Kell’s chief concerns is a claim that his attorneys didn’t investigate and present to a jury “mitigating circumstances” that may have swayed jurors to convict Kell to life in prison instead of death for the July 6, 1994 murder of Lonnie Blackmon at the Gunnison prison.

Video footage captured another inmate holding Blackmon, 32, down while a 26-year-old Kell stabbed him 67 times with a shank. Blackmon was serving a sentence for robbery and theft. He had been transferred to Utah’s prison from Arkansas, while Kell had been transferred to Utah from Las Vegas.

Kell, now 42, was convicted in Nevada for the 1986 murder of a Canadian tourist in Las Vegas. He was sentenced to two life sentences. A Sanpete County jury in 1996 convicted Kell of capital murder and sentenced him to die for Blackmon’s murder.

The execution has failed to proceed as the case continues to be held up in appeals.

“This is an ugly case,” Moriarty told the high court. “That is why it required good and thorough [investigation into] post-conviction relief. His counsel didn’t do anything.”

Assistant Utah Attorney General Thomas Brunker disputed Moriarty’s claims, arguing that Kell’s counsel did an in-depth examination of potential post-penalty conviction options. Brunker said “every effort to curb Kell’s violence have been tried and failed” leaving death as the only punishment not tried.

Kell, a white supremacist, yelled “white power” while wiping the blood of Blackmon, an African-American, from his hands as other inmates cheered. Kell stabbed Blackmon nine times in the eyes, a tactic Brunker said was done to ensure the victim experienced the most excruciating pain possible.

Brunker said that evidence in Kell’s case includes testimony from a guard he threatened, saying he had “nothing to lose” by acting out in prison because he was already serving two life sentences in the Nevada case.

If the high court should rule in Kell’s favor, Brunker said, it could open the door for the other eight inmates on Utah’s death row to stall out their cases by filing similar post-conviction relief appeals.

https://archive.sltrib.com/article.php?id=51940093&itype=cmsid

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 Defendant Troy Michael Kell, an inmate at the Central Utah Correctional Facility (CUCF) in Gunnison, Utah, was charged with aggravated murder, a violation of section 76-5-202 of the Utah Code. After being tried in a courtroom located inside the prison facility, he was convicted and sentenced to death.

BACKGROUND

¶ 2 Defendant stabbed fellow inmate Lonnie Blackmon (Blackmon) to death on July 6, 1994.   Prior to the attack, defendant, a white supremacist, had been involved in race-related altercations with several African-American inmates, including Blackmon.

¶ 3 On the day before the killing, defendant and two of his accomplices, Eric Daniels (Daniels) and Paul Payne (Payne), submitted medical request forms to visit the prison’s medical facility.   In addition, Daniels forged a medical request form in Blackmon’s name so that Blackmon would be transported to the medical facility at the same time defendant and his accomplices were being transported.

¶ 4 Moments before the attack occurred, defendant and Blackmon were moved from the upper tier of the building at the CUCF where they were housed to the lower tier where they awaited transfer to the prison’s medical facility.   Both defendant and Blackmon were placed in double locked handcuffs fastened to a belt around the waist.   Their feet were not placed in shackles so that they could safely descend the stairs from the top tier of the cell block.   By this time, Daniels had also been moved to the lower tier to go to the medical facility.   Payne’s request to go to the medical facility had been denied because he was in punitive isolation on the top tier of the cell block.   Nevertheless, at his insistence, Payne was permitted to shower on the lower tier of the cell block rather than in the showers located on the second tier of the cell block, where his cell was located.

¶ 5 While descending to the lower tier, defendant removed his handcuffs with a partial handcuff key that had been altered with a homemade handle made from melted plastic utensils.   Defendant also produced a shank.1  Blackmon was standing with his back to defendant talking to other inmates, when defendant began to stab him repeatedly in the neck, eyes, face, back and chest.   Defendant was free to use his unrestrained hands and arms during the attack, but Blackmon could only kick at his attackers to defend himself because he was still in handcuffs that were attached to his waist.   Blackmon’s efforts were futile in any event because Payne choked and punched him and Daniels held onto his legs during the attack.

¶ 6 For over two and a half minutes, defendant slashed Blackmon with his shank, inflicting sixty-seven stab wounds, only two of which were described by the forensic examiner as being capable of inflicting death in the short term.   Despite Blackmon’s pleas to stop, defendant continued the assault and, in fact, after walking away, returned twice to inflict more wounds, until Blackmon lay motionless on the floor of the cell block.   Blackmon bled to death and defendant was charged with aggravated murder.   A more detailed account of the attack can be found in the companion case of State v. Daniels, 2002 UT 2, 40 P.3d 611.

¶ 7 Following two pretrial evidentiary hearings, the trial court determined to hold defendant’s trial in a regular courtroom located inside the CUCF. This decision was based on security risks particular to defendant, including his criminal background, prison disciplinary record, and overall prison history.   In addition, several logistical problems regarding security existed in trying defendant in either of the two courtrooms available outside the prison.   Because most of the numerous witnesses in the case were either prison guards or high security inmates, the security risks and costs associated with transporting all of them to a courtroom located outside of the county would have been extremely high;  thus, the trial court decided to hold the trial in the courtroom located within the confines of the prison.

¶ 8 At trial, defendant testified that he killed Blackmon because Blackmon had overtly threatened him.   According to defendant, Blackmon wanted to make an example of him to the other inmates to demonstrate Blackmon’s power in the prison.   Defendant stated he believed Blackmon was making a threat when he overheard Blackmon say to another inmate on the day of the killing, “Yeah man ․ it’s on.   You know it,” even though Blackmon made no threatening gestures toward defendant.   Defendant claimed that due to conditions in the prison and circumstances surrounding Blackmon’s threats, he was suffering from “extreme emotional disturbance” at the time of the homicide.   One eyewitness testified, however, that during the attack defendant’s demeanor was “very business like, as cold as cold gets.   It was like he was doing a job.”

¶ 9 Based on his testimony, defendant asked the court to instruct the jury on the defense of imperfect self-defense manslaughter, but the court declined his request.   The trial court did, however, instruct the jury on the lesser included offense of murder, as well as aggravated murder.   The jury unanimously found the defendant guilty of aggravated murder and sentenced him to death.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/ut-supreme-court/1321790.html

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Troy Kell was sentenced to death if that is overturned he will have 2 life sentences without parole to serve

Jayden Sterzer Teen Killer Murders 12 Year Old Girl

Jayden Sterzer Teen Killer

Jayden Sterzer was fifteen years old when he raped and murdered a twelve year old girl in Utah. According to court documents Jayden Sterzer knocked on the twelve year old girls door and asked her to help him to find a lost cat. Jayden Sterzer would lead the girl to an abandoned field where he would sexually assaulted and then strangled her.

Jayden Sterzer was initially sentenced to spend time in a juvenile facility until he turned twenty one years old if his behavior was considered to be positive. However this teen killer would assault a correctional officer and his case would be returned to court where he would be sentenced as an adult to fifteen years to life

Jayden Sterzer 2023 Information

  • Offender Number: 245158
  • Offender Name: JAYDEN MATTHEW STERZER
  • DOB: Mon, 22 Nov 1999
  • Height: 5 Feet 7 Inches
  • Weight: 240
  • Sex: M
  • Location: UTAH STATE PRISON
  • Housing Facility: OLYMPUS
  • Parole Date: N/A
  • Aliases:
    • JAYDEN MATTHEW STERZER
    • JAYDEN MATHEW STERZER

Jayden Sterzer Other News

It was always known that Jayden Sterzer would one day go to the adult prison for raping and murdering his 12-year-old neighbor.

But that day came much sooner than initially expected.

A 3rd District judge on Monday sentenced Sterzer to spend a 15-year-to-life sentence at the Utah State Prison, a decision that came after authorities say Sterzer assaulted a staff member while he was in a juvenile detention center.

Sterzer, now 19, admitted last December that he killed Kailey Vijil in 2015, after he knocked on her door and asked her help to find a lost cat. The then-15-year-old boy brought Kailey to an overgrown pasture about a half-mile from her family’s West Valley City home, where he sexually assaulted then strangled her.

His admissions were part of a “blended plea,” where he admitted to charges in both juvenile and adult court.

Sterzer’s plea was intended to allow him to stay in the juvenile facility for three years to receive treatment until he turned 21 — unless the Youth Parole Authority decided they can no longer help him.

That happened after authorities filed charges against Sterzer for allegedly assaulting a detention center staffer in August. The transfer to adult prison came about a year earlier than expected for Sterzer, who turns 20 in a few days.

Third District Judge Paul Parker on Monday sentenced Sterzer to a 15-year-to-life sentence for murder, and a one-to-15-year term for sexual abuse of a child. The judge ordered the sentences to run concurrent to each other.

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A young man who was convicted as a teen of luring a 12-year-old girl out of her house, raping and killing her, was set free for four hours last week as prosecutors scrambled to secure a new arrest warrant to have him re-booked into jail.

While there are still questions about how such a mistake could have happened, one culprit seems to be an outdated system and a disconnected fax machine.

The breakdown that let the admitted killer out into the public is now prompting conversations about how to prevent something similar from happening in the future

On July 16, 2015, Jayden Sterzer, then 15, went to 12-year-old Kailey Vijil’s West Valley house and lured her away from her home by asking if she would help him find his lost cat. Kailey’s body was discovered by searchers about three hours later in a horse pasture near her home. She died from strangulation.

As part of a plea deal, Sterzer was convicted as an adult on charges of murder, a first-degree felony, and sexual abuse of a child, a second-degree felony. In juvenile court, he pleaded guilty to rape of a child.

He was then ordered to be held in secure care on the juvenile court charge until his 21st birthday, at which time he would go back before a judge to be formally sentenced on his adult convictions. When that day comes, he faces a sentence of 15 years to life in the Utah State Prison for Kailey’s murder.

But on Aug. 14, while at the at the Decker Lake Youth Center, Sterzer allegedly assaulted a staff member, when charging documents say “Sterzer swung at him, punched him, shoved him against a wall, put him in a headlock/chokehold and head-butted him.”

West Valley police were called to Decker Lake and informed of the situation. A decision was made to take Sterzer — now 19, 5 feet seven inches, and 240 pounds — to the Salt Lake County Jail.

According to court records, on Aug. 20, he was transferred from the youth detention facility to the Salt Lake County Jail.

But on Aug. 26, after no formal charges were filed, Sterzer was released to the custody of his mother.

Salt Lake County District Attorney Sim Gill said Friday it was only after Sterzer was let out of jail that his office learned about what had happened. The new charge had never been screened with his office.

Gill said his office scrambled to write up a new $1 million arrest warrant on the assault charge to get Sterzer back into custody and make sure he could not get out.

Four hours later, Sterzer was rearrested on a charge of assault by a prisoner, a third-degree felony, and re-booked into jail.

Gill said he hasn’t had a lot of time to explore where the breakdown happened.

“For us, the urgency really became the release of a person we prosecuted for murder and the safety of the public,” he said.

But Gill said his understanding of Sterzer’s sentence was that Juvenile Justice Services was ordered to hold him until he was 21. If Decker Lake officials wanted to move him into the adult facility before that time, they should have done the paperwork and gone before a judge first to get an order, Gill said.

“The breakdown occurred when that person was transferred from juvy to county jail separate from that order,” he said. “He is still under a judicial order. You can’t circumvent that just because you don’t want him in your facility any more.”

But Juvenile Justice Director Brett Peterson said protocol was followed, and Decker Lake did the same thing it’s been doing for over 20 years.

Peterson said while he agrees in a general sense with Gill, in this case, Jayden Sterzer is accused of committing a new crime when he was 19.

“It’s a whole different, new criminal episode occurring in our facility. We’re not going to base our decision to call law enforcement on a plea agreement. We’re going to deal with that situation at hand,” he said.

According to Peterson, it’s not up to the staff at Decker Lake whether to transfer a person to jail. He said West Valley police were called and informed about what happened.

As Jayden Sterzer was being taken away, Peterson said the officers were told about Sterzer’s murder conviction.

But West Valley police spokeswoman Roxeanne Vainuku said the role of the officers in that scenario was to transfer the suspect to jail. It is not up to the transporting officers to give the jail a rundown of the criminal histories of every person they take there, she said.

Peterson said his office did send over Sterzer’s case history to jail administrators — by fax.

Salt Lake County Sheriff Rosie Rivera said it was only after Sterzer was released and rearrested, and questions were raised about what had happened, that her staff learned an outdated system was being used to notify the jail about juvenile offenders.

The fax machine that the information was sent to is no longer in service, Rivera said, and the system of faxing information over is one that was set up long before she became sheriff.

“We didn’t even know the fax machine number had been obsolete for a long time,” she said.

Because of that, jail administrators were unaware that Sterzer was still waiting to be sentenced for child murder and rape.

Furthermore, because Sterzer’s criminal history is in juvenile court and he has yet to be sentenced in the adult system, Rivera said there was no warrant history for jail staffers to look up.

“No one saw that document. We didn’t know his previous charges, so he was released on a failed to file,” Rivera said.

If jail administrators had seen that document, Rivera said they would have called West Valley police to let them know that Jayden Sterzer was about to be released so they would have an opportunity to file something to keep him in jail.

Now, because of the series of events that put Sterzer on the streets for four hours, “We have taken a look at our processes to make sure it doesn’t happen again for someone who should never be let out of jail,” she said.

Rivera said background information about an inmate will now be emailed or someone will be called directly. And if a violent or high profile person is about to be released, Rivera said the arresting agency will be given a courtesy call to give them a chance to file something to hold the inmate longer if needed.

The sheriff said Jayden Sterzer “should have never been let out.” Rivera doesn’t want a family like the Vijils to ever have to worry about something like that.

“We don’t want to cause Kailey Vijil’s family any kind of grief after what they’ve been through,” she said. “We don’t ever want this to happen again.”

A court hearing to review the status of Sterzer’s case and what direction the case should go next has been scheduled for Sept. 9

https://www.deseret.com/utah/2019/8/31/20842308/jayden-sterzer-release-utah-kailey-vijil

Aza Vidinhar Teen Killer Murders 2 Brothers

Aza Vidinhar Teen Killer

Aza Vidinhar was fifteen years old when he stabbed his two younger brothers to death in Utah. According to court documents Aza Vidinhar became upset when his younger brothers refused to turn the television down and then he did the unthinkable. Aza would stab his ten year old brother eighty eight times and would stab his four year old brother over twenty times.

The children’s mother would find the two dead bodies and called police. This teen killer was given a massive break when he was allowed to plead guilty to both murders in juvenile court under the condition he would behave while in custody. However an assault on another juvenile would see this teen killer would be sentenced to five years in prison for the assault and a fifteen year to life sentence for the double murder.

Ava Vidinhar would be charged with attempted murder after attempting to kill a fellow inmate in 2021

Aza Vidinhar 2023 Information

  • Offender Number: 222129
  • Offender Name: AZA RAY VIDINHAR
  • DOB: Sat, 25 Apr 1998
  • Height: 5 Feet 9 Inches
  • Weight: 160
  • Sex: M
  • Location: UTAH STATE PRISON
  • Housing Facility: OLYMPUS
  • Parole Date: N/A

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A 17-year-old Davis County boy who murdered his two younger brothers was sentenced Wednesday to 15 years to life in prison.

Aza Ray Vidinhar pleaded guilty in June, admitting that he fatally stabbed 10-year-old Alexander Vidinhar and 4-year-old Benjie Vidinhar in May 2013.

In an unusual plea deal, the teen was allowed to plead guilty to Alex’s murder in juvenile court, and a similar plea was entered in adult court for Benjie’s death. Attorneys agreed that he would not be sentenced for the murder in adult court until he was released from the juvenile system — either at age 21 or until juvenile authorities determined they no longer could help him.

But the deal unraveled in late March, after Vidinhar was sentenced to the Utah State Prison for up to five years for assaulting a fellow inmate at an Ogden juvenile-detention facility.

Because he is now in adult prison and no longer in the care of Juvenile Justice Services, he was sentenced in adult court on the murder case.

Second District Judge David Hamilton ordered the conviction for the murder case to run consecutively to the assault case.

Deputy Davis County Attorney Brandon Poll had asked for consecutive terms, saying he believes Vidinhar has “a callous indifference toward life.”

Poll said Vidinhar had stabbed Alex 88 times, while the younger brother was stabbed 22 times. Poll said the teen has told interviewers that he planned to kill his brothers once before because they were being too noisy, but didn’t do it after the boys became more quiet and he felt “weird” about murdering them.

Throughout his pre-sentence interview with Adult Probation and Parole, the teen said he didn’t care how the murders affected his parents and showed a lack of empathy, the prosecutor argued.

“Over and over again, he indicates that he doesn’t really care how his crimes affected others,” Poll told the judge.

Defense attorney Todd Utzinger had asked for concurrent prison terms, saying his client had a “long road ahead of him.” Utzinger said that while Vidinhar did make statements that he didn’t care how his crimes affected others, he also has made remarks showing some remorse.

“One of the difficult things about offenders this young is you really don’t know where they are emotionally,” Utzinger said after the sentencing. “All we know now is we have an immature kid who has some problems.

“… He’s a young person who, at a very young age, needed significant treatment that he hasn’t received, and unfortunately, now, is less likely to receive in the prison,” he continued. “I think he’s a kid who has a lot of serious mental health issues that we don’t understand at this point.”

When the judge gave Vidinhar a chance to speak Wednesday, the teen responded, “There’s nothing.”

Vidinhar’s father and grandfather attended the sentencing hearing, but did not speak in court.

Vidinhar, then 15, was arrested May 22, 2013, after his mother called 911 to report finding Benjie dead on the floor of her West Point home. Alex was later found dead in another part of the house; both boys had been stabbed to death.

A motive for the killings has never been publicly revealed.

https://www.sltrib.com/news/courts/2015/05/14/utah-teen-who-murdered-his-2-brothers-sentenced-to-15-years-to-life/

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 A Utah man who is serving time in prison for allegedly killing his brothers is facing a new criminal charge.

Aza Ray Vidinhar, 22, was charged in the Third District Court with assault by a prisoner, a third-degree felony, court documents state.

Vidinhar is accused of punching and kicking a fellow inmate during an altercation on Jan. 12.

According to charging documents, the inmate had been arguing with people and Vindinhar told him to come to his cell. When the inmate refused, Vidinhar reportedly became upset and hit the man’s head against a wall.

Aza Vidinhar was sentenced in 2015 to 15 years to life in prison for murdering his younger brothers.

Aza Vidinhar, who was 15 at the time, was babysitting his brothers, ages four and 10, when they were stabbed and killed.

He was in the juvenile court system until he pleaded guilty to assaulting another boy. He was sentenced to up to five years in prison for the crime.

A judge ruled that the sentences must be served one after the other.

Aza Vidinhar New Charges

A young man serving a potential life sentence in the Utah State Prison for the high-profile killings of his two younger brothers is now accused of trying to kill an older inmate.

Aza Ray Vidinhar, 23, was charged Thursday in 3rd District Court with attempted murder and aggravated kidnapping, both first-degree felonies.

Vidinhar is already serving a term of 15 years to life in prison for murdering his two brothers, Alex and Benjie, ages 10 and 4, inside their West Point home on May 22, 2013 — stabbing one of them 88 times and the other 28 times. Vidinhar was only 15 at the time.

In his latest case, Vidinhar went into another inmate’s cell on March 12 and told the man “that he had already killed two young people with his hands and now wants to fulfill his dream of killing someone old with his hands,” according to charging documents.

Vidinhar entered the 66-year-old inmate’s cell with a cord in his hand, shut the cell door behind him, and told the man “that he was going to kill an old man and to make it easy on him,” the charges state.

“Stop fighting it and just let me kill you,” Vidinhar told the man after wrapping the cord around his neck, according to the charges.

Another inmate who was walking by heard the victim yell, “Help me, this guy is going to kill me,” and went to notify a corrections officer, investigators say.

When the inmate and officer returned to the cell, they could still hear the victim’s pleas for help “but they were faint,” the charging documents say. When the deputy unlocked the cell door, the second inmate helped pull Vidinhar off the man he was allegedly attacking.

This is not the first time Vidinhar has been accused of attacking another inmate. In February, he was charged with assault by a prisoner for punching another inmate. He was convicted of the crime in March and sentenced to a term of zero to five years in prison to be served concurrently with his 15-years-to-life sentence, court records state.

He was also convicted of assault by a prisoner in 2015.

https://www.deseret.com/utah/2021/7/15/22579251/man-who-murdered-2-brothers-tries-dream-of-killing-someone-old-charges-say

Meagan Grunwald Teen Killer Murders Police Officer

Meagan Grunwald

Meagan Grunwald was seventeen years old when she took part in a crime spree that would leave one police officer dead and another injured. According to court documents Meagan Grunwald was driving a car with her boyfriend Angel Garcia-Juaregui. Her boyfriend would start shooting at a police car who was trying to pull them over. One of the police officers would be struck in the head and the other officer was fatally injured. Angel Garcia-Juaregui would later die in a shootout with police.

This teen killer tried to say she did not realize that the officers were shot however this was proven to be false in court. Meagan Grunwald would be sentenced to thirty years to life in prison

Meagan Grunwald 2023 Information

Meagan Grunwald
  • Offender Number: 223233
  • Offender Name: MEAGAN DAKOTA GRUNWALD
  • DOB: Mon, 5 Aug 1996
  • Height: 5 Feet 6 Inches
  • Weight: 160
  • Sex: F
  • Location: UTAH STATE PRISON
  • Housing Facility: TIMPANOGOS
  • Parole Date: N/A
  • Aliases:
    • MEAGAN DAKOTA GRUNWALD

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A young woman convicted in a 50-mile crime spree that left one Utah sheriff’s deputy dead and another wounded was sentenced Wednesday to 30 years to life in prison with the possibility of parole.

State Judge Darold McDade handed down 18-year-old Meagan Grunwald’s term following emotional testimony about the January 2014 chase from the injured lawman.

Utah County Sheriff’s Deputy Greg Sherwood told the judge that after he was shot in the head and fighting for his life in his police cruiser, Grunwald drove past him without stopping to help.

“She could have ran towards me, and I would have protected her with all my energy,” he said. “Instead, she made the choice to run.”

Grunwald cried during the hearing as she read quickly from a brief written statement.

“It’s hard for me to ask for forgiveness when I have a hard time forgiving myself,” she said.

Meagan Grunwald will get credit for the year and half she already has served behind bars in jail. At the earliest, she could be released in 2044, when she’s 47 years old.

Prosecutors said Meagan Grunwald was a willing accomplice ready to do anything to stay with her 27-year-old boyfriend, including driving a speeding getaway car in the three-county chase.

During her trial, the teenager tearfully told a jury she was afraid to stop driving when the man she loved turned the gun on her and threatened to kill her family.

The boyfriend, Jose Angel Garcia-Jauregui, was killed in a shootout with police.

Meagan Grunwald was convicted in May of 11 counts, including aggravated murder, attempted murder, aggravated robbery and use of a controlled substance. She was found not guilty on one count of attempted aggravated murder.

The maximum penalty Meagan Grunwald could have faced was life in prison without parole. She was ineligible for the death penalty because she was 17 when it happened.

She was charged and convicted under Utah laws that allow an accomplice to be considered equally responsible for a crime.

Utah County Sheriff’s Sgt. Cory Wride, 44, was killed during the crime spree.

Wride’s widow, Nannette, said his family wanted Grunwald to have a chance at parole because she’s young and might make something of herself.

“I’m going to be rooting for her to be someone better,” Nannette Wride told reporters.

Before Grunwald was sentenced, Wride addressed the crying teenager in court.

“You are forgiven, and I hope, sweet girl, that one day you can forgive yourself,” Wride said as Meagan Grunwald put her head down and sobbed.

The shootout and chase came after Cory Wride happened upon the couple’s pickup on the side of a road. Garcia-Jauregui had a warrant out for his arrest and gave the deputy a fake name. When Wride grew suspicious, Garcia-Jauregui stuck a gun out the truck’s rear window and shot the deputy as he sat in his police cruiser.

Grunwald’s lawyer said she was a scared girl who trusted an older, manipulative man. Attorney Dean Zabriskie said as the couple fled from police through three central Utah counties, Grunwald was driving with a gun to her head.

Zabriskie said Wednesday that Meagan Grunwald survived her time in the truck because Wride stopped to help her, and she considers him her savior.

“Now she wishes she would have done something,” he said. “She wishes she would have done something, even at the risk of her life.”

Zabriskie said Grunwald plans to appeal her conviction.

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Meagan Grunwald is currently incarcerated at the Utah State Prison

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Meagan Grunwald is currently going through a resentencing process in which she must serve 30 years before she is eligible for release which would be 2044.

Meagan Grunwald Appeal

The Utah Supreme Court has overturned the murder conviction of Meagan Grunwald.

Grunwald was the getaway driver for her boyfriend, who shot and killed Utah County Sheriff Sgt. Cory Wride in 2014. Grunwald was originally found equally liable for Wride’s death.

Utah’s High Court ruled that there was a reasonable probability a jury would not have convicted the now 23-year-old if it weren’t for errors in jury instructions during her trial.

Wride’s widow, Nannette Wride, was extremely emotional when she heard the news of the reversal on Friday.

“I stand in utter shock and numbness, because I don’t understand,” she said.  “I am ashamed of the state we live in. Cory pulled up behind someone with their hazards on that snowy day. He was there to help them, and he was shot to death. To have the conviction overturned is like losing six years of healing. It’s incredibly painful.”

Meagan Grunwald remained in prison, where she has been since July 2015, on a remaining conviction of aggravated robbery tied to the car chase, which also wounded Utah County Sheriff’s deputy Greg Sherwood.

The first-degree felony charge carries a sentence of at least five years and up to life.

Brent Jex, president of the Utah Fraternal Order of Police, spoke for the nearly 4,000 members of the police union, advocating for a retrial and final justice for Sgt. Wride.

“The facts are there. The elements are there. The need for justice is there,” Jex said. “The decision to retry could be made today, even within the hour by Utah County Attorney David Leavitt.”

Members of the order were waiting to see what action the Utah County prosecutor will take, if any.

“This affects our community, the ways we function, and the safety we feel here,” said Shante Johnson, communications director for the Utah Fraternal Order of Police. “Meagan Grunwald 100% was not a victim. She participated wholly in what happened that tragic day.”

Grunwald’s attorneys took the argument to the Utah Court of Appeals in 2018, where they failed to overturn the conviction. However, the Utah Supreme Court ruled in favor of the faulty jury instruction, reversing the capital murder conviction.

“For that technicality to be a single word is rare,” Jex said. “Whether the law enforcement community can feel confidence that the Utah County prosecutor will do the right thing… we are about to find out, and the effect will be significant.”

The Utah Fraternal Order of Police released a statement on the overturned conviction on Friday:

“Our hearts are heavy with the news that the Wride family, their friends, the community, and every man and woman serving in law enforcement will be forced to re-live the trauma that Meagan Grunwald inflicted upon them with her callous and murderous actions.

“Today, the Utah Supreme Court ordered a retrial based on technicality – that the original judge issued slightly faulty instructions to the jury. We are all called upon to make difficult judgements, and will not turn our anger upon the justices. However, let there be no doubt – on that day, Ms. Grunwald actively participated in the murder of Sergeant Cory Wride, and she should pay for her actions by spending the rest of her life in prison.

“We are confident that the horror of that day will once again be taken up by the brave, extraordinarily dedicated prosecutors of the Utah County Attorney’s Office under the leadership of Utah County Attorney David Leavitt. On behalf of our nearly 4,000 members, we stand by to support those efforts and see final justice for Sergeant Wride – with the life imprisonment of his murderer. Let the people of Utah County be called once again to hear the horrific details of Ms. Grunwald’s actions, and let them once again order her removed from society for the rest of her days. There are no jury instructions that will save her.

“We leave you with Ms. Grunwald’s words to officers at the end of the chase she led them on that day, which included shooting a second officer in the face. As she discovered her lover laying in the road, she did not ask police for help, nor was she distressed that officers had been shot and killed. Instead, she saved her concern for her boyfriend: ‘You f—— a——-, you didn’t have to shoot him. You f—— shot him. Oh my god, you f—— shot him.’”

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After more than 11 hours of deliberation, the jury found Meagan Grunwald guilty of 11 of the 12 charges against her, including aggravated murder.

As the jurors sat to listen to the clerk read the verdicts, many looked noticeably upset, not just fatigued.

Grunwald, 18, was convicted of being an accomplice to murder in the shooting death of Sgt. Cory Wride of the Utah County Sheriff’s Office. Jose Angel Garcia-Juaregui, her ex-boyfriend, was shot and killed Jan. 30, 2014 in Juab County after an hours-long crime spree that left Wride dead, Deputy Greg Sherwood seriously injured and countless others traumatized.

“No one wins in these kinds of situations,” said Blake Wride, father of Cory Wride. “Do we feel happy? No. Did it bring Cory back? No. But like I said earlier today, when people make choices, there’s consequences.”

Sherwood was in court every day of the trial, and after hearing the verdict, he said, “It shows that if you make bad choices and you hang out with the wrong people, there are going to be consequences for it.

“It’s a sad situation, it’s not the great end for anybody, but my family and I and the Wrides are grateful to have this in the past and move on.”

After the verdict was read, Grunwald’s family broke down into hysterics and tears. Her mother shouted, “I love you, baby” as the teen was led out of the courtroom. As the verdict was read on her dozen charges, she cursed the judge, jury and even the Wride family, and her family had to help her out of the courtroom.

Beyond the charge of aggravated murder for the death of Wride, Grunwald was found guilty of aggravated attempted murder and the discharge of a firearm in the shooting of Sherwood.

She was found not guilty of attempted aggravated murder of trooper Jeff Blankenagel.

She also was found guilty on two charges of discharging a firearm, two charges of criminal mischief, a charge of accident involving property damage, failure to stop, aggravated robbery and a charge of possession of methamphetamine.

Deliberations began Friday afternoon after prosecutors said Meagan Grunwald’s tearful testimony — that her boyfriend pointed a gun at her and threatened her family, forcing her to drive the car during the fatal crime spree — rang hollow.

The jury returned a verdict at about 12:30 a.m. Saturday. An appeal of the verdict is likely, according to Grunwald’s attorney, Dean Zabriskie.

“We’re very, very disappointed and of course, she’s devastated,” he said. Grunwald tried to maintain composure as the guilty verdicts were read, but by the time Judge Darold McDade was discussing a sentencing date with her attorneys, she was in tears. 

“Do we agree with it? Of course not.” Zabriskie said. “Do we accept it? Yes, we do.”

Nanette Wride, Cory Wride’s widow, was not in the courtroom to hear the verdict. She is in Washington D.C. already for a special ceremony in which her late husband’s name will be added to the Fallen Officers Memorial.

Sentencing will be on July 8. Grunwald faces a life prison term.

https://www.heraldextra.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/meagan-grunwald-found-guilty-of-aggravated-murder-10-other-charges/article_5d268d97-0f2f-517f-ba91-61b888d20b2a.html

Edgar Concepcion Teen Killer Murders 3 Year Old Child

Edgar Concepcion

Edgar Concepcion was fourteen years old when he was arrested for the sexual assault and murder of a three year old child. According to court documents Edgar was sexually assaulting the three year old child and when she began to try he murdered her. This teen killer was convicted and initially sentenced to life in prison without parole however that would change thanks to a Supreme Court ruling and was resentenced to life with the possibility of parole

Edgar Concepcion 2023 Information

NameEdgar Concepcion, Jr.
Offender Number6629452
SexM
Birth Date01/15/1995
LocationIowa State Penitentiary
OffenseMURDER 1ST DEGREE
TDD/SDD *LIFE
Commitment Date

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A 21-year-old Charles City man convicted of the murder and sexual abuse of his 3-year-old cousin while he was still a juvenile may not be spending the rest of his life in prison after all.

Edgar Concepcion Jr., who was 14 at the time of the murder of Krystel Banes of Charles City in July 2009, was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole in November 2010.

He was re-sentenced Thursday to life in prison with the possibility of parole due to recent changes in the law regarding penalties for those convicted of serious crimes committed when they were juveniles.

“Life with parole does not necessarily mean you are ever going to get out of prison,” District Court Judge James Drew told Edgar Concepcion during the re-sentencing hearing in Floyd County District Court.

He said it is up to the Iowa Board of Parole if Concepcion is ever released and when that might happen.

“None of us has got a crystal ball,” he said.

A jury found Edgar Concepcion guilty in June 2010 of first-degree murder, first-degree sexual abuse, second-degree sexual abuse and child endangerment.

In November 2010 Concepcion was sentenced to life on the murder and first-degree sexual abuse convictions. He was sentenced to up to 25 years in prison for second-degree sexual abuse and up to five years for child endangerment.

In January 2014 the Iowa Court of Appeals ordered that Edgar Concepcion be resentenced on all the convictions except the one for child endangerment.

The state appeals court ordered the re-sentencing because of a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that states cannot automatically sentence juveniles to life without parole without considering the circumstances of each case based on the age of the juvenile, the nature of the crime and other factors.

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A Charles City man who murdered his 3-year-old cousin as a 14-year-old teen back in 2009 and was sent to prison with no chance at freedom has now been granted a shot at parole someday.

Edgar Concepcion Jr. was just 14-years-old in 2009 when he committed the crimes of felony A first degree murder and felony A first degree sexual abuse in the death of his cousin, 3-year-old Krystel Barnes. He was sentenced in 2010 to life in prison on both counts by a jury. He has been incarcerated ever since with no chance at parole.

This week, Concepcion Jr. was re-sentenced to life in prison with a chance at parole.

Concepcion Jr.’s new lease on life began on September 28, 2013, when his attorney, Michael Adams, filed a motion in Floyd County District Court for re-sentencing, and an appeal on the conviction had been filed in 2011.

According to the Appeals Court ruling, Concepcion Jr. appealed his convictions following a jury trial to murder in the first degree, sexual abuse in the first degree, sexual abuse in the second degree, and child endangerment, as well as his sentence to life without parole. On appeal, he asserted forty-seven claims, including constitutional challenges to various aspects of the proceeding, a sufficiency of the evidence challenge, and a claim his sentence to life without parole constitutes cruel and unusual punishment.

The appeals court concluded in a later ruling that the majority of Concepcion’s claims are either waived, not preserved, or without merit and upheld his convictions.

However, pursuant to a subsequent U.S. Supreme Court ruling on sentencing of minors, Concepcion’s sentence to life without parole must be vacated, the Appeals Court ruled.

“Consequently, we affirm his convictions but vacate his sentences to first degree murder, first degree sexual abuse, and second degree sexual abuse, and remand for a new sentencing hearing as to those three counts,” the ruling stated.  This led to the re-sentencing and the shot at parole, someday.

Edgar Concepcion Jr. moved to the United States from the Philippines in 2006 with his parents. He had intermediate English-speaking skills at the time of his 2009 crimes.

According to court documents made public, in 2009, the parents of Krystel Barnes, then a three-year-old child, entrusted Concepcion and his cousins to watch her while they were at work. Over a period of approximately three weeks, Concepcion repeatedly sexually abused Krystel. On July 10, 2009, Concepcion was again watching Krystel while her parents worked. Krystel informed Concepcion she had to vomit, so Concepcion took her to the bathroom where he sexually assaulted her. While Krystel was lying on the floor of the bathroom, Concepcion sat on her torso and pushed “hard” on her chest. Concepcion strangled Krystel until her “eyes rolled back in her head” and she was “weak.” Concepcion then carried Krystel upstairs and his sister called 911. At that point, Concepcion described Krystel as “her eyes are like closing and then her mouth’s like purple.” An ambulance arrived and transported Krystel to the hospital, where she was pronounced dead. Concepcion and his family went to the hospital where he as well as various family members were interviewed by police. No Miranda warnings were given to Concepcion nor was an official translator provided; however, Concepcion’s interview was recorded and he allegedly made incriminating statements

https://northiowatoday.com/2016/02/05/chance-at-parole-granted-to-former-charles-city-man-who-murdered-cousin-as-a-teen/

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Edgar Concepcion is currently incarcerated at the Iowa State Penitentiary

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Edgar Concepcion is serving a life sentence