Levi Norwood was seventeen years old from Virginia when he would murder his mother and brother. According to court documents Levi Norwood on Valentines Day in 2020 would fatally shoot his mother, Jennifer Norwood and his six year old brother Wyatt Norwood. Levi Norwood then steal a car and flee the State however he would be arrested the next day in North Carolina after he was suspected of shoplifting. After many delays due to COVID Levi Norwood would ultimately plead guilty to the double murder. For some strange reason this teen killer plea deal did not include sentencing guidelines so faces life in prison when he is sentenced
Update – Levi Norwood was sentenced to life in prison
Levi Norwood 2023 Information
Levi Norwood More News
A Midland, Virginia teen pleaded guilty Monday in the 2020 murders of his mother and brother.
Levi Norwood, now 19, faced two first-degree murder charges in the fatal shootings of his 34-year-old mother, Jennifer Norwood, and his 6-year-old brother Wyatt, on Valentine’s Day.
Two days later he was picked up by police after allegedly shoplifting hair dye, clothing, and a backpack at a Durham, NC Target. He was 17 at the time of his arrest.
One of the charges was decreased to second-degree murder, 7News has learned.
At the time of his arrest, Fauquier County Sheriff’s Office said there was no history of 911 calls to the home.
His father came home on Valentine’s Day and found his wife and younger son dead inside their home in the 12000 block of Elk Run Road. He called 911 Levi also allegedly shot his father Joshua, but he survived that shooting.
After hours of trying to make contact with the shooter, at about 10:15 p.m. officers entered the home and he was not found. Officers searched the home and the property.
When he was not found in the house, they conducted a bloodhound track to an area off of Route 28 and a massive manhunt was launched. Two days later, a Target store employee reported a shoplifter in Durham, NC and he was taken into custody.
Joel Mosso Merino is a man from Virginia who is wanted for the murder of Hannah Choi and now Crime Stoppers are offering a $40,000 reward for information on his whereabouts. According to police reports Hannah Choi was last seen on surveillance at her home in Alexandria however when police went to her home the next day she was not there. Police found out that the day before she went missing Hannah Choi spent the majority of the day with her ex boyfriend Joel Mosso Merino. Police believe that Hannah Choi suffered a severe injury and she was brought out of the home by Joel Mosso Merino who would dispose of her body. Joel Mosso Merino has not been seen since however there are tips from Georgia that he was seen in the State.
Joel Mosso Merino More News
A $40,000 reward is now being offered through Crime Solvers for information that leads to the arrest of Joel Mosso Merino, 27, of Alexandria. The reward comes from Hannah Choi’s family and generous community donations. Detectives from our Fugitive Track and Apprehension Unit continue to investigate to determine Merino’s whereabouts. Detectives learned that prior to the murder, Merino planned to fly to Los Angeles on Mar. 8. Detectives were waiting for him to arrive at the airport, but he never arrived. Detectives learned Merino traveled to Georgia instead.
nyone with information about Joel Mosso Merino ’s whereabouts is asked to contact detectives at 703-246-7800, option 2. Tips can also be submitted anonymously through Crime Solvers by phone – 1-866-411-TIPS (866-411-8477), by text – Type “FCCS” plus tip to 847411, and by web – Click HERE. Download our Mobile tip411 App “Fairfax Co Crime Solvers”. Tipsters are eligible for the reward whether they call detectives directly or us Crime Solvers. Please leave contact information for a detective to follow up with you.
Thursday morning, detectives from our Major Crimes Bureau were notified by the Charles County Sheriff’s Office after a body was found in a wooded area in Piscataway Park. Officers had previously searched more than 800 acres of this wooded area. Officers from our Search and Rescue planned to return to the park and expand the search Friday, prior to the discovery. This weekend, the Medical Examiner positively identified the body as Hannah Choi.
Victim specialists from our Major Crimes Bureau’s Victim Services Division have been assigned to ensure that the victim’s family is receiving appropriate resources and assistance.
For ongoing updates, please read our blog and follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram at @FairfaxCountyPD
Yesterday, detectives searched the area near Piscataway Park in Maryland for a 35-year-old woman reported missing on Sunday, March 6. Hannah Choi was last seen on Saturday, March 5 at her home in the 5300 block of Jesmond Street in the Alexandria section of Fairfax County. Friends arrived at Ms. Choi’s home on Sunday, but Ms. Choi did not answer the door. Ms. Choi missed several appointments and could not be reached. Her friends contacted police out of concern for her wellbeing. Our officers searched the home, and the house appeared to be in order except for bedding which appeared to be missing from a bedroom. Based on her sudden disappearance, detectives from our Major Crimes Bureau assumed the investigation.
Through interviews with friends and family, detectives discovered Ms. Choi spent significant time on Saturday, March 5 with her live-in ex-boyfriend, Joel Mosso Merino, 27, of Alexandria. Detectives believe during their time together Ms. Choi may have sustained a significant injury. Detectives believe Merino then removed Ms. Choi from the home and transported her to another location.
Detectives identified a vehicle they believed Merino was operating the night of Ms. Choi’s disappearance. The vehicle was located the following day, March 7, in Washington, D.C. A search warrant was executed on the vehicle, and although Ms. Choi was not found, detectives discovered evidence to suggest Ms. Choi was harmed prior to her disappearance. Based on the evidence recovered from the vehicle and additional interviews, detectives obtained a warrant for Merino for second degree murder and the disposal of a body.
Detectives from our Fugitive Track and Apprehension Unit immediately assumed the investigation and began tracking Merino’s whereabouts. They quickly determined Merino fled the state and notified the United States Marshals Service to aid in apprehending Merino.
Detectives from our Homicide Squad continue to investigate the circumstances surrounding Ms. Choi’s disappearance. Based on records returned from search warrants, they identified Joel Mosso Merino spent a significant time in a park in Prince George’s County the night of Ms. Choi’s disappearance. Officers from our Search and Rescue along with our partners from the Fairfax County Fire and Rescue Department, George Mason University Police Department, U.S. Park Police and Mason-Dixon Search Dogs searched the area near Piscataway Park for two days. Detectives continue to review evidence to potentially identify additional locations to search.
Detectives are asking anyone who may have information about her disappearance or knowledge of Joel Mosso Merino’s whereabouts to contact them at 703-246-7800, option 2. Tips can also be submitted anonymously through Crime Solvers by phone – 1-866-411-TIPS (866-411-8477), by text – Type “FCCS” plus tip to 847411, and by web – Click HERE. Download our Mobile tip411 App “Fairfax Co Crime Solvers”. Anonymous tipsters are eligible for cash rewards of $100 to $1,000 dollars. Please leave contact information if you wish for a detective to follow up with you.
Victim specialists from our Major Crimes Bureau’s Victim Services Division have been assigned to ensure that the victim’s family is receiving appropriate resources and assistance.
This is the sixth homicide of the year in Fairfax County. Year to date, there were three homicides at this point in 2021.
Megan Hargan has been found guilty by a Virginia jury for the murders of her mother and sister. According to court documents Megan Hargan was deep in debt and decided the best way to pay off her debts is by killing her mother and sister and staging the double murders as a murder suicide. Police arrived at the scene and found 23-year-old Helen Hargan and her mother, 63-year-old Pamela Hargan dead from gunshot wounds. Police initially thought that Helen Hargan had shot and killed Pamela Hargan before killing herself however an arrest over a year later would shake the community to the core when Megan Hargan was arrested for the double murder. Megan Hargan would be convicted of the double murder in March 2022.
Megan Hargan More News
A Fairfax County jury delivered a guilty verdict Monday against a woman accused of killing her own mother and sister in 2017. Megan Hargan, 35, was convicted on two counts of first-degree murder, and two counts of using a firearm in committing a felony.
In July 2017, Fairfax County Police were called to a home on the 6700 block of Dean Drive, in McLean, Virginia, after receiving a 911 call that a person may have been murdered. When police got to the scene, they found two bodies inside the home: 23-year-old Helen Hargan and her mother, 63-year-old Pamela Hargan
Detectives initially believed that Helen Hargan had killed her mother with a rifle before killing herself.
However, in November 2018, police would make an arrest in the case that would change the investigation completely.
Authorities charged Megan Hargan, of Monongalia County, West Virginia, with first-degree murder and use of a firearm in committing a felony. Fairfax County Police accused Hargan of killing her sister and mother and staging the incident to appear as a murder-suicide.
In 2018, Pamela’s sister, Tammy North, said she felt Hargan was motivated by jealousy and greed.
“I believed from day one that she did it,” she said.
North added that Pamela Hargan had bought Helen a house she was due to move into just before the pair were killed.
“Megan Hargan attempted fraudulent money transfers from her mother’s account on the day of the murders,” said Fairfax County Police Department Major Ed O’Carroll.
Now, Hargan has the choice to have her sentencing determined by the jury, or to have a judge decide her sentence.
“We in Fairfax County have no tolerance for such disregard for human life and I am committed to addressing crimes of this magnitude with the seriousness they merit,” Fairfax County Commonwealth’s Attorney Steve Descano said following the jury’s verdict. “We will be asking for a substantial sentence that reflects the seriousness of the crime.”
According to Descano’s office, Megan Hargan pleaded her innocence throughout the case. She was represented by public defenders. WUSA9 reached out to Megan Hargan’s representation for comment but has yet to receive a response.
A McLean, Virginia, woman is guilty of killing her own mother and sister inside their home nearly five years ago, a jury ruled Monday.
Megan Hargan was found guilty on all counts, including first-degree murder, in the shooting deaths of her mother, 63-year-old business executive Pamela Hargan, and her sister, 23-year-old Helen Hargan.
Megan Hargan leaned her head on her attorney’s shoulder as the verdict was read. Her sister Ashley Hargan, who testified against her, cried.
The jury is expected to recommend a sentence later Monday after hearing more evidence. Ashley Hargan will speak. Twenty years to life in prison is possible for each of the two first-degree murder convictions.
Fairfax County Commonwealth’s Attorney Steve Descano said prosecutors would seek a significant sentence.
“We in Fairfax County have no tolerance for such disregard for human life, and I am committed to addressing crimes of this magnitude with the seriousness they merit,” Descano said in a statement. “We will be asking for a substantial sentence that reflects the seriousness of the crime.”
Prosecutors and Megan Hargan’s defense attorneys laid out dramatically different accounts of what happened on July 14, 2017.
Prosecutors argued money was Megan Hargan’s motive and that she attempted fraudulent money transfers from her mother’s accounts on the day of the killings and the previous day, as she closed on a new home.
Defense attorneys described a murder-suicide, claiming that Helen Hargan shot her mother and then herself.
Crime scene tape surrounded the Hargan home in the 6700 block of Dean Drive the day the mother’s and daughter’s bodies were found. Fairfax County police discovered a gruesome scene that included a rifle wedged between Helen Hargan’s legs.
Police initially described the women’s deaths as a murder-suicide. But the investigation suggested a more chilling family tragedy.
Police arrested Megan Hargan in November 2018 — more than a year after the killings — and said they had determined that she gunned down her mother and sister and then staged the scene to frame her sister as the shooter.
Megan Hargan’s defense attorneys argued that case was a murder-suicide and Helen Hargan was responsible. Helen Hargan called her boyfriend and said Megan killed her mom, attorneys said in closing arguments. Then, they argue, she killed herself.
Prosecutors pointed to the single, point-blank gunshot wound in the top of Helen’s head. She was found in a bathroom with the .22-caliber rifle wedged between her legs, with the muzzle pointing up.
“Someone put the gun to the top of her head and pulled the trigger, and it went straight down to her neck. That’s how you get a wound like that,” the prosecutor said.
Megan Hargan’s defense attorneys told jurors that Helen put the gun to her own head and fired using her toes. She wore a sock to avoid leaving evidence on the trigger, they said.
The defense argued Helen was upset after her mom cancelled plans to give the 24-year-old a new house, and because her mother disapproved of Helen’s boyfriend. Also, another sister, Ashley Hargan, said in a recorded police interview that Pamela Hargan had suspected Helen of drug use and had planned to hold an intervention. She told detectives her youngest sister had previously attempted suicide.
Megan Hargan’s young daughter was in the home at the time of the shootings.
Tyler Jenkins is a sailor in the US Navy who would come home and find his wife in bed with another man so he would pull out a gun and shoot him three times causing his death. According to court documents Tyler Jenkins would fatally shoot Timothy Paul Talley III, 28, three times however would not shoot his wife. When police arrived at the scene in Virginia Beach Tyler Jenkins asked the officers what he did wrong before being arrested. Tyler Jenkins has been charged with second degree murder and apparently has already confessed to the murder.
Tyler Jenkins More News
A U.S. Navy sailor is behind bars, facing several charges after court documents say he admitted to shooting his wife’s boyfriend three times, killing him.
The documents say before his arrest, Tyler Jenkins, 26, asked Virginia Beach police officers, “What am I doing wrong? Did y’all get the gun that I shot him with?”
It all happened an apartment on Crystalline Place, near Town Center in Virginia Beach on Friday night. Jenkins’ wife called 911 after the shooting.
Police said the victim is 28-year-old Timothy Talley III. Family members said he is also a Navy sailor, but he wasn’t stationed in Hampton Roads.
Documents say Jenkins’ wife told police she was engaged in a “sexual act” with Talley at the time of the shooting. She told investigators she feared for her life, because she thought Jenkins was trying to shoot both of them.
Once police officers arrived, documents say Jenkins told them he fired three shots at Talley, and let investigators know where to find the gun.
Jenkins’ preliminary hearing has been set for May 12. He faces Second-Degree Murder, Attempted Malicious Wounding and gun charges.
Court documents show Jenkins started his time in the Navy in 2014.
A U.S. Navy sailor fatally shot his wife’s boyfriend after catching them “engaged in a sexual act” inside their Virginia Beach home Friday, according to court documents.
Tyler Lamar Jenkins, 26, was arraigned Monday on one count of second-degree murder and a firearms charge in the killing of a 28-year-old California man, Timothy Talley III
A bail determination sheet filed in Virginia Beach District Court said Jenkins’ wife called 911 to report that her husband had shot her boyfriend in their residence. Police responded to an apartment complex in the 4800 block of Crystalline Place at 9:47 p.m., where they found Talley with multiple gunshot wounds and pronounced him dead.
Court documents filed in the case state the wife told police that Jenkins entered the room where she was engaged in a sexual act with Talley, and Jenkins fired a gun at Talley. The incident, she said, made her fear for her life.
A police news release issued Saturday described the slaying as “a domestic related shooting death,” but did not describe the relationship between Talley and Jenkins and didn’t provide a motive for the shooting.
Court records state that after Jenkins told police someone was having sex with his wife in their house, he asked “What am I doing wrong?” Jenkins admitted to police that he shot Talley three times. The gun was recovered at the scene.
According to the bail determination sheet, Jenkins has been employed by the U.S. Navy since 2014. Hewas denied a public defender due to his income and is scheduled to appear in court on May 12. A bond hearing may be scheduled once he retains a private attorney.
David Lee Morse the former Sheriff Investigator from Virginia was sentenced to 60 years in prison for the planning of his wife’s murder. According to court documents David Lee Morse was worried that his mistress was going to tell his wife about their affair so he planned his wife’s murder with the help of three others. David Lee Morse and his mistress Tanna Shelton Fitzgerald would plan the murder of Pamela Morse through text conversations. According to reports with the help of Casey Lynn Rogers and Collin Joshua Russell the deadly foursome planned to make the murder look like a robbery. Pamela Morse would be fatally shot in the head and her Jeep was stolen. David Lee Morse would tell police that he returned home from work to find his wife dead in their bed. The story would soon fall apart and all four would be arrested and charged with murder. Tanna Shelton Fitzgerald would commit suicide before her trial was to begin. David Lee Morse would receive fifty years in prison plus an additional ten years for the conspiracy. Casey Lynn Rogers and Collin Joshua Russell will go on trial later this summer where they will face charges of first-degree murder, use of a firearm in the commission of a felony, and grand larceny of an automobile.
David Lee Morse More News
retired Henry County investigator has been found guilty of first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder in the death of his wife.
Judge David Williams heard closing arguments Wednesday morning and, without delay, rendered a guilty verdict on both charges against David Lee Morse, 67, of 1385 Wingfield Orchard Road.
“This is one of the most pre-planned murders I’ve ever seen,” Henry County Commonwealth’s Attorney Andrew Nester said. “He might not have pulled the proverbial trigger, but he did everything he could do but pull the trigger.”
Over the course of three days in Henry County Circuit Court, the prosecution and defense unraveled a twisted story that involved four people and ended with Pamela Morse, 63, dead of a gunshot wound to the head.
David Lee Morse attorney, Michael McPheeters, moved to strike both charges against his client, claiming the commonwealth had failed to prove its case beyond reasonable doubt, but in particular, he asked the charge of first-degree murder be dropped because the evidence was clear his client was not the shooter
“David Lee Morse engaged in bad behavior, but he didn’t want harm to come to Pam,” said McPheeters.
Nester pointed out that if it is proven a person’s deliberate and premeditated behavior causes someone’s death, the person does not have to be the shooter in a shooting death to be found guilty of murder.
Williams denied McPheeters’ motion to strike on both counts.
“The phone messages between Ms. Fitzgerald and Mr. Morse are literally a play-by-play,” said Nester. “He said those text messages were going to cause him a lot of headaches, and they have.”
The trial began on Monday with the replaying of the 911 call made by David Lee Morse at 7:52 a.m. on March 13, 2020.
“My wife’s been shot,”David Lee Morse said between sobs. “I just got in from work and she’s in the bed. She’s been shot.”
David Lee Morse, who had investigated countless cases in 12 years with the Henry County Sheriff’s Department and for 13 years prior to that for the Patrick County Sheriff’s Department, told the dispatcher that his wife was “cold to the touch” that she had “been shot in the head” and that there were no suspects around.
“She’s not breathing at all,” David Lee Morse said.
While waiting for police and rescue to arrive, David Lee Morse told the dispatcher he last spoke with his wife around 9:30 the night before as he was leaving for work in Woolwine, and she asked him to pick up some biscuits and gravy from Hardee’s on the way home in the morning.
“You were bringing breakfast to a dead woman,” Nester said to David Lee Morse after Morse took the stand Tuesday afternoon. “You knew she was already dead.
David Lee Morse said he remembered coming home and noticing his wife’s Jeep was gone, so he went inside the house, saw everything was in disarray, put the breakfasts down in the kitchen and then made his way down the hallway, eventually finding his wife dead in bed.
“Your body and mind just goes numb,” said Morse. “I don’t remember talking to the police. I’ve listened to the tapes played in this courtroom and wondered ‘where did that come from.’”
David Lee Morse said since his arrest he had been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder, depression and anxiety and was taking medication.
Nester had already played the bodycam footage of the officers on the scene, and Morse could be seen telling officers “I have a 2010 Jeep that’s missing” and “two guns are missing from the bedroom, maybe more.”
David Lee Morse “admitted he had been seeing Tanna Fitzgerald, and he didn’t think his wife knew about the affair,” said VSP Special Agent Billy McCraw. “He said he didn’t think Fitzgerald was involved.”
McCraw said as they began processing the scene they swabbed for red stains found in the bathroom and kitchen, collected a couch pillow in the den that had a hole in it and what appeared to be gunpowder burns on it and recovered a bullet near the body.
VSP Special Agent Matt Wade said he first met Morse at the property on Wingfield Orchard Road the day after Pamela Morse was found dead.
Morse “was nervous and said he was afraid Tanna Fitzgerald was going to show up at his house,” Wade said. “He spent the night of May 13 at his sister’s house in Patrick County.”
Wade testified that investigators learned that Fitzgerald had been seen walking along the U.S. 220 bypass near a rock quarry, located her and took her to the Virginia State Police Station on Fisher Farm Road in Martinsville to talk with her.
“She told us she would tell us everything if she could see David Morse first,” Wade said.
Wade said Morse agreed to meet with Fitzgerald at the police office and said he recorded the encounter on his iPhone.
On the video, played on a large-screen monitor in the courtroom, Fitzgerald and Morse could be seen hugging, and Fitzgerald could be heard asking Morse multiple times if he was “okay.”
“He told her to tell us everything, and she said, ‘What do you mean everything?’ and he took a long time to say, ‘You tell them every conversation we had,’” Wade said.
Wade said that Fitzgerald provided him with the code to an electric lock on a door to Morse’s house, and he got a search warrant and went back to Morse’s house to see if the code would open the lock, and it did.
Wade had recorded himself opening the lock, and the video of him doing so was also played on the large monitor in the courtroom.
Wade said he also had noticed the security camera near the door was not plugged into the receptacle nearby.
Morse’s attorney, Michael McPheeters, asked Wade what he knew about the affair between Morse and Fitzgerald and if he was familiar with Fitzgerald’s mood swings.
“They said they had been seeing each other since December 2019, and she could become hostile if he didn’t do what she wanted,” said Wade. “She threatened to expose the relationship” and “was capable of being very upset.”
Wade testified that Morse had told him that Fitzgerald didn’t have the code to the lock and had never been in his house, but the code that Fitzgerald gave him did open the lock.
Testimony then turned to the house at 525 Holley Ridge Road in Franklin County where investigators found Fitzgerald with Casey Lynn Rogers, 27, of Meadows of Dan.
Collin Joshua Russell, 37, of Roanoke also was found on the property, along with Pamela Morse’s stolen Jeep, which had been partially spray-painted.
“Rebecca Lynn Bowman Rogers, the mother of one of the defendants, gave over a bag of jewelry, and about 140 yards down a logging road, we found a .357 magnum revolver in a green cardboard box, unloaded and separated from other guns on the property,” said VSP Special Agent Lee Willis.
Wade was called back to the witness stand again and testified that on May 18 he received a call about 1:30 in the morning and met Morse at the police station on Fisher Farm Road.
“He gave over a letter he said he had found in his door that said ‘Life without you is not worth living,’” said Wade. “We did a well-being check on Tanna Fitzgerald, and she was fine,” and said the letter had been from her.
Nester then began detailing a string of text messages between Fitzgerald and Morse in the overnight and early-morning hours leading up to the discovery of Pamela Morse’s death.
Investigators utilized a special software to extract deleted messages from the phones of Fitzgerald and Morse that included a conversation about where surveillance cameras were located on Morse’s property.
“How many cameras and where?” a question from Fitzgerald’s phone asked.
“They are unplugged,” a response from Morse’s phone read.
“Could she plug them back in?” another question came from Fitzgerald’s phone.
“No. If you would rather wait it’s your call,” was the response.
At 4:48 a.m. on the day Pamela Morse was found dead, a text from David Morse’s phone to Fitzgerald said, “People are waking up now.”
“It’s already in progress,” came the response from Fitzgerald’s phone. “I’ll turn myself in, I’ll take the blame.”
Rogers and Russell are charged with first-degree murder, use of a firearm in the commission of a felony and grand larceny of an automobile. Rogers is due back in court on Jan. 26.
Russell is also charged with conspiracy to commit murder and is due in Henry County Circuit Court on Dec. 22 to have his trial date set.
Charges of first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit first-degree murder against Fitzgerald were dismissed after Fitzgerald died in October 2020 while in the Henry County Jail after notifying deputies that she had taken an excessive amount of prescription blood pressure medication, a Henry County Sheriff’s Office release stated.
Morse retired from the Henry County Sheriff’s Department more than a decade ago. He was among the investigators assigned to the still-unsolved shooting deaths of Michael, Mary and Jennifer Short in 2002.
First-degree murder is a Class 2 felony in Virginia and is punishable by imprisonment for 20 years to life and a fine not to exceed $100,000. Conspiracy to commit murder is a Class 5 felony and is punishable by imprisonment for 1 to 10 years.
Morse will be sentenced in Henry County Circuit Court on Feb. 22.
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