Gabriel Gaeta was convicted in the rape and murder of a six year old girl in Washington State. According to court documents Gabriel Gaeta would take the little girl to a remote location where she was sexually assaulted and murdered. The crime went unsolved until the police found the body of the child and through DNA testing were able to link Gabriel Gaeta to the murder.
Gabriel Gaeta took a very long time to proceed through the courts as he was first declared mentally incompetent due to mental illness however after spending time in a mental hospital Gabriel Gaeta would stand trial and would in turn plead guilty to the murder and sexual assault. This teen killer would be sentenced to forty years to life in prison
Gabriel Gaeta 2023 Information
Gabriel Gaeta
Washington State Penitentiary
405810
Gabriel Gaeta Other News
Gabriel Gaeta, the man who pleaded guilty in February to the 2014 rape and murder of 6-year-old Jenise Wright, was sentenced Monday, June 18, to 40 years to life in prison, plus 123 months to be served concurrently.
The sentence is expected to close the legal proceedings on a story that made national headlines but saw a slow resolution due to a number of factors, including questions about Gaeta’s mental health and his competency to stand trial.
In handing down the punishment, Kitsap Superior Court Judge Jennifer Forbes said that she was obligated to take into account additional factors — known as the Miller factors — in juvenile criminal cases such as this: the age of the defendant at the time the crime was committed; the defendant’s life experiences; the degree of responsibility the defendant was capable of exercising; and the defendant’s chances of being rehabilitated.
But while Forbes noted Gabriel Gaeta had experienced a difficult childhood, including physical abuse at the hands of a family member, she did not see a connection between his history and the crime he ultimately committed.
“[I]t’s unclear to this court how these experiences impacted Mr. Gaeta in a way that led to the crimes that he committed against Jenise,” Forbes said, “other than what is obvious — that they appear to contribute some of his mental health issues … but the conclusions that he had a chaotic childhood impacted what he did to Jenise lacks a connection for this court. I’m missing this link.”
“Without knowing the [‘why,’] it becomes difficult to link some of these issues that were identified about Mr. Gaeta to the crime itself,” Forbes added.
In the end, Forbes concurred with the sentence recommended by attorneys for both sides. Gabriel Gaeta will be approximately 57 years old before he has a chance of being paroled.
Gabriel Gaeta and Wright were neighbors in the Steele Creek Mobile Home Park in East Bremerton at the time of her disappearance. Wright was reported missing in August 2017 and her body was found several days later in a mud bog in nearby woods. She had been strangled.
On Aug. 7 — the same day her body was found — a search warrant was executed on Gaeta’s home. The search led to the discovery of blood-stained items, including clothes and a towel. DNA samples taken from Gabriel Gaeta and the crime scene were a match.
Gabriel Gaeta, now 21, was 17 at the time of his arrest. He ultimately pleaded guilty to aggravated first-degree murder and first-degree rape of a child in February.
At a competency hearing on Feb. 22, 2017, Gabriel Gaeta was found not fit to stand trial. Judge Forbes ordered the defendant’s admission to Western State Hospital for a period of up to 90 days for “competence restoration.”
Gabriel Gaeta began a period of “close observation” on May 16, 2017, because of “reported history of engaging in behaviors that appeared to reflect suicidal ideation,” according to an August 2017 report filed by doctors.
He initially refused to take psychiatric medication, but following a violent incident with hospital staff members — doctors reported that Gabriel Gaeta was lying down and facing a wall with a pillow covering his head. He then physically assaulted staffers who attempted to turn him. Kitsap County Superior Court ordered his involuntary medication, after which he was deemed competent.
Gabriel Gaeta did not speak at his sentencing. His attorney, Jeniece LaCross, said Gabriel Gaeta was in no condition to speak, but read aloud a letter he wrote to be entered into the record.
“I took a young girl’s life away from her and from her family and friends,” Gaeta’s letter said. “I feel like that should never happen to anybody, and no one should have to experience that. I can’t put into words how bad I feel about this. I wish I could make amends for this. I don’t know why I did it.”
Gaeta’s mother, Tina Wright, advocated for her son to eventually get a second chance, pointing to his ability to be coached into being a top wrestler at Olympic High School.
“Gabe is a person who can learn, grow … and become a productive member of society,” Tina Wright said.
Orlean Almojera, Jenise’s grandfather, choked up while reading letters from family members and then one of his own in which he recounted the grief and sadness the family has gone through over the past three and a half years.
“We are all so sad, angry and heartbroken that we will never get to see our granddaughter finish elementary, high school, graduate, attend college get married and have children of her own.”
Denise Wright, Jenise’s mother, spoke at length about her daughter’s upbeat attitude, liveliness, precociousness and intelligence.
“You could tell she was going to be a special little girl,” Denise Wright said. “Her smile and friendliness would brighten up anyone’s day. She was the sunshine in our family and now it’s gone.
“I will always miss her and love her. And now she has no life to experience, and I feel that he shouldn’t have one either.”
Caril Ann Fugate was the youngest woman in United States history to be convicted of first degree murder. When Caril Ann Fugate was thirteen years old she began dating Charles Starkweather who was eighteen years old. After they were dating for awhile Caril Ann Fugate mother and father were murdered allegedly by Charles Starkweather though there is some belief Fugate had a hand in it. The duo would then go on a multi state crime wave where six people were murdered.
In the end Charles Starkweather would be sentenced to death and would later be executed. Both of the young lovers tried to blame each other for the murders. This teen killer would serve seventeen years in prison before being released. The movie Natural Born Killers is loosely based on Charles Starkweather and Caril Ann Fugate
Caril Ann Fugate Other News
Mass murderer Charles Starkweather’s teen girlfriend, Caril Ann Fugate, is planning another request for a state pardon, and her attorney is trying to turn the request into a campaign issue. John Stevens Berry, a Lincoln attorney and co-author of a recent book about Fugate, said he plans to submit a request soon for a hearing before the State Board of Pardons.
Along with the request, Berry said he will survey the candidates for governor, attorney general and secretary of state — the three offices that comprise the Pardons Board — so voters know where they stand on the request. “People want to know how candidates stand on a lot of issues. I want to know,” the attorney said. “And I want everyone else to know.” Representatives of gubernatorial candidates Democrat Chuck Hassebrook and Republican Pete Ricketts declined requests for comment.
Caril Ann Fugate was 14 years old when Starkweather, 19, went on a killing spree that began in Lincoln and ended in Wyoming. Among the 11 killed were Fugate’s mother, stepfather and 2-year-old half-sister. It stands as the largest mass killing in state history — a notorious crime that has been the subject of movies, books and songs. Starkweather was sentenced to die and was executed on June 25, 1959. Caril Ann Fugate, who said she was forced to accompany Starkweather, was found guilty of being an accessory to first-degree murder in connection with the robbery and murder of one of the victims, Robert Jensen, 17, of Bennet, Nebraska. She admitted taking $4 from Jensen’s wallet just before he and a friend, Carol King, 16, were shot to death. Fugate was sentenced to life in prison. Later, the sentence was commuted to 30 to 50 years in prison, which opened the way for her to be paroled in 1976.
In 1996, she asked for a pardon, saying: “The sentence did not fit the crime.” “Everyone knows I never killed anyone,” Caril Ann Fugate told The World-Herald in 1996. But the board voted 2-0 to reject her request for a hearing. The two members present at the meeting, then-Secretary of State Scott Moore and then-Attorney General Don Stenberg, said mercy wasn’t warranted given the horrendous string of crimes. “In my mind, the State of Nebraska has already been very generous to Caril Ann Fugate,” Stenberg, who is now state treasurer, ssaid of her earlier release from prison. But that decision hasn’t quelled the debate over Fugate’s guilt or innocence. Those who believe she was guilty say she knew her family had been killed and should have escaped from Starkweather. Those who disagree feel the 14-year-old was terrorized by Starkweather, who was five years older, and they say she was not aware of the slayings of her family until the pair were arrested.
That debate was given new life earlier this year by the publication of a book, “The Twelfth Victim,” which argues that Caril Ann Fugate should have been found innocent. Berry co-wrote the book with Linda Battisti, an Ohio lawyer who befriended Fugate and interviewed her several times. One goal in publishing the book, they have said, was to obtain a pardon for Fugate, now 71 and living in Michigan. Berry, a longtime defense attorney, said Starkweather told investigators several times that Fugate was not involved in the slayings, only to change his story just prior to her trial. Starkweather, the attorney said, was baited into changing his story by Lancaster County Sheriff Merle Karnopp, who had Fugate write a note saying that she didn’t want to see Starkweather again. Starkweather ultimately testified that Fugate was a willing participant in the murder spree. Berry said the manipulation of Starkweather’s testimony was just one aspect of the unjust prosecution of Fugate. “His lies convicted Caril,” Berry said. “We are convinced not only that she was treated illegally and unjustly, but was, in fact, innocent.”
Caril Ann Fugate Videos
Caril Ann Fugate 2020
For 60 years, Caril Clair’s life has been overshadowed by one of the most notorious murder sprees in American history.
When she was 14, she had accompanied her 19-year-old boyfriend, Charles Starkweather, on an eight-day rampage through Nebraska that left 10 people dead in 1958.
Starkweather was executed and Clair, then known as Caril Ann Fugate, served 18 years in prison.
She has always insisted she was innocent, that Starkweather had abducted and held her captive during the trail of terror.
Now 76 and living in Hillsdale, Clair has one final chance to plead her case.
She is seeking a pardon from the Nebraska Board of Pardons. The agency is holding a Tuesday hearing on the issue.
“The idea that posterity has been made to believe that I (willingly participated in) a murder spree is too much for me to bear,” she wrote in her pardon application.
Few people believe Clair’s protestations of innocence.
Not the jury, which convicted her of murder. Not an earlier pardon board, which rejected her request for a hearing in 1996. Not the citizenry of Nebraska, who still get angry at the mention of her name
Nobody in Nebraska can quote Great Plains bard Willa Cather, but everyone knows what Starkweather once said about Clair. Starkweather had told reporters that, if he was going to die by electric chair, Clair should be sitting on his lap.
Tom King would be willing to throw the switch. His aunt and her boyfriend were killed after offering to help Clair and Starkweather when their car got stuck on a muddy road.
“She should just keep her mouth shut,” he said about Clair. “We don’t want to hear about it anymore. It just brings up hard feelings all over again.”
King, 54, a Lincoln plumber, then issued an ominous warning.
“She better not come back to Lincoln,” he said. “If she does, she may not make it back out of town.”
Clair, who contends with various health ailments, wasn’t planning to attend the Tuesday hearing in Lincoln.
After leaving prison, she moved in Michigan and has led a quiet life, relatives said. She had hoped to become a “little, dumpy housewife,” washing socks, burning toast.
Instead, Clair toiled 20 years as an orderly at a Lansing hospital before retiring, a stepson said. She got married in 2007, but her husband died in an auto wreck six years later. She has four stepsons.
A life of infamy has left her a shell of a woman, said stepson Tom Clair.
“She wishes she could wash everything away,” he said.
Caril Clair declined to be interviewed for this story.
Unlike the mass shootings of this century, the Nebraska murders happened in what felt like a different America.
The heartland of the 1950s was a seemingly more innocent time and place, historians said. Such tranquility wasn’t supposed to beget such ugliness.
The carnage left such a stain on the country’s psyche that it continues to resonate today. Among the movies it has inspired are “Badlands” and “Natural Born Killers.”
“It was the first crack in America’s innocence,” said Mike O’Hara, a crime historian based in Los Angeles.
Starkweather was a James Dean wannabe who, like the actor, favored a ducktail, blue jeans and an ever-present cigarette dangling from his lips, according to news reports. He also was a short, nearsighted garbageman who had dropped out of high school.
He and his eighth-grade pixie in a ponytail cut a bloody swath through Nebraska in a battered black 1949 Ford painted red where the grille used to be
Before the week-long reign of terror was over, the National Guard had been called and homeowners had huddled behind locked doors with shotguns.
“Things like this weren’t supposed to happen back then,” O’Hara said.
When Clair was tried for murder, the jury didn’t believe her argument of being an unwilling participant.
They were more swayed by the testimony of Starkweather and the prosecution’s argument that she had failed to take advantage of repeated chances to flee from him.
She was sentenced to life in prison. It was later commuted to 30 to 50 years when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled it was unconstitutional for juveniles to be given mandatory life sentences.
After time off for good behavior, she was released in 1976.
In 1986 Joyce DePue of Holt received a call from her daughter. Kathy Ross was preparing to return to work after having a baby and told her mom she had found a perfect babysitter — Caril Ann Fugate.
DePue let out a squawk.
“Oh, my God,” she sputtered. “Don’t you know who that is?”
Clair, who worked at Ingham Regional Medical Center, would go on to take care of Ross’ two daughters for 14 years.
She never arrived empty-handed, bringing toys, board games, materials for arts and crafts projects, DePue said. She gave the girls gifts and took them on jaunts to the zoo and arcades.
“I’m here to tell you: I’m 100% behind her. She is a wonderful, wonderful woman,” DePue said. “She deserves anything good that comes to her the rest of her life.”
When ABC ran a miniseries about the murders called “Murder in the Heartland” in 1993, one of Ross’ daughters asked Clair to talk to her ninth-grade class about it.
Clair rarely brought up her past but agreed to do so.
She told the students how important it was to make smart decisions, even at their age, according to a newspaper account.
One mistake could follow them the rest of their lives, she said. Her folly was going out with Starkweather, Clair said.
“I thought I was really hot stuff,” she told the students.
Clair eventually became part of the Ross family, attending birthday parties and holiday dinners.
When Ross’ daughter, Brandi, who was 8 when Clair became her babysitter, announced she was getting married, Clair was one of the first people to respond to her wedding invitation, joining the Rosses on their happy day.
Clair has two passions — TV and slot machines.
Late one night in 2005, she was playing the slots at Soaring Eagle Casino in Mount Pleasant when she met Fred Clair.
She and Clair, a retired machinist who had lost his wife five years earlier, began to get serious and she told him about her past.
Fred called together his sons to share what he had learned.
“Wow, you know, whoa,” Tom Clair said about his dad’s revelation. “I can’t help who my dad wanted to marry.”
For six months, the brothers read everything they could find about their future step-mom.
In the stories, letters and court transcripts, Caril Clair’s version of the events never wavered, they said. They have talked to her numerous times, searching for holes in her defense, but never found any.
They’re convinced she is innocent.
“I couldn’t ask for a better person to be my mom,” said stepson John Clair. “I don’t need a book to know she’s innocent. I know in my heart she is.”
But others looked askance at Caril.
When Fred and Caril Clair got into an auto wreck in 2014, killing Fred and seriously injuring Caril, the police didn’t have any evidence of foul play.
But Caril’s past had given them pause. They asked the stepsons if they knew any reason Caril might want to kill their father. They didn’t and the police dropped the matter.
Clair never wanted to be an archetype.
The more her and Starkweather’s image as unrepentant youth resonated in the culture, the more she tried to escape it.
In 1982, Bruce Springsteen released the song “Nebraska,” which is a first-person account of the killings by Starkweather.
“I can’t say that I’m sorry for the things that we done,” it goes. “At least for a little while, sir, me and her, we had us some fun.”
In 1983 Clair appeared on “Lie Detector,” a syndicated TV show hosted by famed attorney F. Lee Bailey.
The results of her test were inconclusive when she said she was forced to accompany Starkweather on his rampage, according to the show’s polygraph expert.
But Bailey said the crime had been such a horrendous part of Clair’s life that, if she had been lying, the machine would have showed it.
It was far from exoneration but it also wasn’t what Clair usually received — disbelief, even hatred. She put her head on Bailey’s shoulder and cried.
“You can’t know what it’s like to be a person in history and everyone hates you,” she said at the time.
This final bid for forgiveness has been a long time coming.
Nearly a quarter of a century after her first request for a pardon, Clair has been working on a second attempt during most of that time.
The bulk of her argument is contained in a 2014 book written by two lawyers, John Berry and Linda Battisti.
The book, “The 12th Victim,” argues that police and prosecutors made mistakes in the investigation, from withholding evidence to coaching Starkweather’s testimony to failing to advise Clair of her rights.
“The state took advantage of a 14-year-old girl,” Berry said.
He and Battisti are both handling the pardon. They filed the request in 2017, but the pardons board then drastically reduced the number of cases it heard, creating a backlog of hundreds of cases, reported the Omaha World-Herald.
As the bid dragged, stepson Tom asked Caril Clair if she still wanted to go through with it. She did.
“She just wants to proclaim her innocence,” he said. “That’s all she has ever wanted.”
A pardon, by expunging the conviction from Clair’s record, could lead to the restoration of her civil rights.
But that’s not what she’s really after, Tom Clair said.
She’s more interested in the symbolism of the move, he said. It would represent a formal forgiveness of the crime. It wouldn’t make her innocent but it could be the closest she ever gets to it, he said.
Caril Ann Fugate Photos
Caril Ann Fugate More News
The granddaughter of two of the 11 victims of Charles Starkweather’s murderous spree — an author who’s spent years studying the case — said Monday that Starkweather’s girlfriend, Caril Ann Fugate, deserves a pardon.
Liza Ward, whose grandparents S. Lauer and Clara Ward were killed in their Lincoln Country Club home in December 1958, said she’s convinced that the then-14-year-old Fugate was an unwilling hostage who was terrorized by Starkweather to accompany him and couldn’t escape.
“I could not find a single piece of evidence that she was guilty beyond a reasonable doubt,” said Ward, 44. “What I found, in fact, was that she was the victim of a system, an old boys network, that was fueled by the anger, fear and grief of the time.”
“It was just unbelievable to me, the miscarriage and mishandling of justice,” she said.
Ward traveled from her home in Duxbury, Massachusetts, in hopes of testifying on Tuesday before the Nebraska Board of Pardons, which will consider giving a pardon to Fugate, 76.
Fugate, who maintained her innocence, was convicted of first-degree murder and felony murder in the commission of a robbery and spent 17 years in prison before being paroled in 1976.
But Lincoln lawyer John Stevens Berry, who is representing Fugate — who now goes by her married name, Caril Ann Clair — said she was wrongly convicted, based on the testimony of Starkweather, who changed his story and implicated her after being informed that she didn’t want to see him ever again.
“She was railroaded; she was innocent,” said Berry, who co-wrote a book about her case. “They should (give her a pardon) because it’s the right thing to do.”
Seth Cunningham was seventeen when he was arrested for two murders. According to court documents Seth Cunningham would be arrested for the first murder that took place during a robbery and while in custody he would be charged with a second murder that took place a few months before the killing he was arrested for. This teen killer would be convicted of both murders and sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for forty years.
Seth Cunningham 2023 Information
Age:
22
DOB:
09/1997
Location:
Eastern Oregon Correctional Institution
Gender:
Male
Race:
White Or European Origin
Status:
Inmate
Height:
5′ 10”
Hair:
Brown
Institution Admission Date:
07/06/2017
Weight:
170 lbs
Eyes:
Brown
Earliest Release Date:
Life
Seth Cunningham Other News
A 19-year-old Oregon man connected to the shooting deaths of two strangers has been sentenced to life in prison.
The Herald and News reports ) that Seth James Cunningham received the sentence Friday in Klamath County Circuit Court and will be eligible for parole after 40 years
Cunningham on Thursday took a plea deal involving the shooting deaths of 21-year-old Aaron Dillon Andrews and 39-year-old Tyler Devore Nelson.
Cunningham did not admit guilt in Nelson’s death, but admitted prosecutors have enough evidence to convict him.
Authorities say Cunningham shot and killed Nelson in 2014 as Nelson walked on a trail in Klamath Falls. Cunningham shot and killed Andrews in 2015 after the two bumped into each other while dancing at a party.
Seth Cunningham More News
A man who prosecutors say randomly killed two men was sentenced to life in prison.
Klamath County District Attorney Eve Costello said Seth Cunningham shot and killed Tyler Nelson with a .22 caliber firearm while Nelson was walking down the OC and E Woods Line State Trail on November 13, 2014.
Cunningham told a companion he just wanted to see if he could kill someone, according to the D.A.’s office.
On December 28, 2015, Cunningham encountered Aaron Andrews at a party. The two had an altercation after they two bumped into one another while they were both dancing.
During the party, Andrews stepped outside to relieve himself and was followed by Cunningham.
Witnesses said they heard three shots, after which they found Andrews face-down in the snow. He was shot once in the face and twice in the back.
Cunningham had told numerous people about both murders after they occurred.
On June 30, the D.A.’s office said Cunningham pleaded guilty to both murders following settlement negotiations.
He was sentenced to life in prison on each charge, with a possibility for parole after 40 years.
Josue Fuentes-Ponce is a MS 13 gang member who was convicted in the murder of a fourteen year old girl in Maryland. According to court documents Josue Fuentes-Ponce along with three other teens would lure the victim to an abandoned field where she was beaten and stabbed to death with a machete. Josue Fuentes-Ponce and the other MS-13 gang members thought that the victim was going to tell the police about a previous gang kidnapping. This teen killer would be sentenced to life in prison however he only needs to serve fifty years
Josue Fuentes-Ponce Other News
A 17-year-old, who pleaded guilty to the brutal gang-linked slaying of a 14-year-old Maryland girl last spring, has been sentenced to 50 years in prison.
Josue Fuentes-Ponce, who was 16 at the time of the killing, had pleaded guilty to first-degree murder, conspiracy to commit murder and participating in a gang.
Josue Fuentes-Ponce was one of four teens who authorities said drove Ariana Funes-Diaz to a wooded area in Riverdale, Maryland, in April and attacked her with a baseball bat and a machete. Her body was discovered near a creek a month later.
Police said the teens, who were members of the MS-13 street gang, were worried Funes-Diaz would rat them out for an earlier gang-related kidnapping and robbery in D.C.
Josue Fuentes-Ponce was formally sentenced to life in prison, but the judge suspended all but 50 years. In addition, he will be subjected to five years of supervised probation after his release.
One of the other teens charged in the slaying, 18-year-old Joel Escobar, pleaded guilty in November and is due to be sentenced Feb. 26.
Edwin Rios, 19, has pleaded not guilty and is set to go on trial in April.
Another defendant — also a 14-year-old girl — was initially charged as an adult, but her case was moved to the juvenile court system.
In a separate, earlier case, Fuentes-Ponce and Escobar were arrested in May 2018 on charges of attempted murder and attempted robbery, and were transferred to a state-run youth detention center. They were eventually released following the disposition of that case.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement said both teens were in the country illegally, and local authorities failed to honor a detainer request to hold the teens. State and local authorities said they were following state guidance, which calls compliance with ICE detainers voluntary.
Teen gets 50 years in MS-13 killing of 14-year-old Maryland girl
Josue Fuentes-Ponce More News
A 17-year old MS-13 gang member was sentenced to life in prison on Monday with all but 50 years suspended for his involvement in the murder of 14-year-old Ariana Funes-Diaz.
Josue Fuentes-Ponce had been charged with first-degree murder, involvement in committing murder while part of a criminal gang and conspiracy to commit murder in Funes-Diaz’s death in April.
Josue Fuentes-Ponce entered a guilty plea to those counts on October 30, 2019
Fuentes-Ponce and three others lured Funes-Diaz to a tunnel in Riverdale on April 18 where they then beat her to death with a machete and a baseball bat, police said.
In May, officials said the group believed Funes-Diaz was going to tell the police about a crime they had all committed the day before in Washington, D.C.
Co-defendant Joel Escobar, 18, entered a guilty plea on November 25, 2019, and is scheduled to be sentenced on February 26, 2020.
Edwin Rios, 19, is scheduled for trial beginning April 13, 2020.
The charges against the remaining co-defendant, who is 14, were handled in juvenile court.
Josue Fuentes-Ponce will face five years of supervised probation upon his release from incarceration, according to the release.
MS-13 Gang Member Sentenced To 50 Years In Prison In 14-Year-Old Ariana Funes-Diaz’s Murder
Josue Fuentes-Ponce News
Three Maryland teenagers have been charged as adults in the brutal slaying of a 14-year-old girl who police said may have planned to go to authorities about a crime she and the suspects committed last month
Josue Fuentes-Ponce, 16, of Bladensburg, Joel Escobar, 17, of Northeast Washington, D.C., and Cynthia Hernandez-Nucamendi, 14, of Lothian, are each charged with first-degree murder in the death of Ariana Funes-Diaz. Funes-Diaz’s body was found Wednesday in a creek in Riverdale, about eight miles northeast of Washington, D.C.
An autopsy conducted Thursday found that Funes-Diaz died of blunt force trauma, according to officials with the Prince George’s County Police Department.
Funes-Diaz was reported missing from Anne Arundel County on or around April 18, along with Hernandez. The two girls were considered “critical missing juveniles.”
Anne Arundel County authorities said the teens were seen in the Washington, D.C., after they were reported missing and were believed to be in D.C. or Prince George’s County.
Maj. Brian Reilly, commander of Prince George’s County’s Criminal Investigations Division, said Thursday during a news conference that the department’s gang unit got a tip Monday about a possible murder back in April in which the victim was dumped in a wooded area of Riverdale. Investigators from Prince George’s County, along with agents from the FBI and the U.S. Attorney’s Office, searched the woods in the 6300 block of 64th Avenue.
“We ultimately found our murder victim there, in the creek,” Reilly said.
Dominic Culpepper was fourteen years old when he murdered another teenager. According to court documents Dominic Culpepper and two other youths believed that the victim had stolen a pound of marijuana from them. The group met the victim under the pretense of buying marijuana however the meet quickly turned violent and Culpepper would fatally beat the teenage victim with a baseball bat. When he went to court Dominic was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to life in prison however due to his progression in jail he was able to appeal his sentence and it was reduced to forty years. This teen killer is due to be released in 2039
Dominic Culpepper 2023 Information
ID Photo
DC Number:
S11166
Name:
CULPEPPER, DOMINIC
Race:
ALL OTHERS/UNKNOWN
Sex:
MALE
Birth Date:
03/04/1987
Initial Receipt Date:
05/17/2002
Current Facility:
LIBERTY C.I.
Current Custody:
CLOSE
Current Release Date:
02/07/2039
Dominic Culpepper Other News
A 14-year-old boy was convicted of first-degree murder Wednesday for fatally beating another teen-ager with a baseball bat.
A jury deliberated two days before convicting Dominic Culpepper in the June 25 slaying of Frank Wesley McCool, 16. Culpepper faces a possible life sentence.
Prosecutors said Culpepper concocted a plan to lure McCool to his home so he could beat him in retaliation for stealing a half-pound of marijuana.
Two other teen-agers pleaded guilty to second-degree murder earlier in the case for their parts in helping lure McCool to the home.
Dominic Culpepper Videos
Dominic Culpepper Photos
Dominic Culpepper More News
A 15-year-old boy received a life sentence Friday for fatally beating a rival teen with a baseball bat.
Dominic Culpepper was convicted in February of first-degree murder for the June 25 slaying of Frank Wesley McCool, 16.
“I can only ask that you forgive me,” Culpepper said to McCool’s family in court. “If you can, find it in your hearts to have mercy on me and forgive me for what I’ve done. I’m sorry.”
Public Defender Adam Tebrugge will appeal, the Sarasota Herald-Tribune reported for Saturday’s editions. Tebrugge told Circuit Judge Bob Bennett that the sentence amounts to cruel and unusual punishment, a violation of Culpepper’s Eighth Amendment right.
Culpepper concocted a plan to lure McCool to his Sarasota County condo so he could beat him in retaliation for stealing a half-pound of marijuana.
Two other teens, Vincent Norcia, 14, and Frank Tritschler, 15, pleaded guilty to second-degree murder for their parts in helping lure McCool to Culpepper’s home.
Norcia received an 18-month to seven-year sentence in August and Tritschler received a 10-year prison sentence in December. Both testified against Culpepper.
Frequently Asked Questions
Dominic Culpepper Now
Dominic Culpepper is currently incarcerated at the Liberty Correctional Institute
Dominic Culpepper Release Date
Dominic Culpepper is scheduled for release in 2039
Dominic Culpepper More News
A teen-ager accused of luring an acquaintance to a home where he was beaten to death with a bat pleaded guilty to second-degree murder on Monday.
Vincent Norcia, 14, was one of three teen-agers charged in the June 25 slaying of 16-year-old Frank Wesley McCool.
Norcia, who agreed to testify against the other teens _ Dominic Culpepper, 14, and Frank Tritschler, 15 _ was the only one charged as a juvenile.
Norcia faces a maximum sentence of seven years in a rehabilitative juvenile detention facility. He will be sentenced Aug. 27, the Sarasota Herald-Tribune reported
Prosecutors say Tritschler and Norcia lured McCool to Culpepper’s home. Investigators say Culpepper believed McCool broke into the apartment a week earlier and stole a half-pound of marijuana and several hundred dollars.
Culpepper beat McCool to death with a baseball bat and then dumped his body in nearby woods, police said. Culpepper and Tritschler are being charged as adults for the second-degree murder. They face possible life sentences.
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