Kaleigh Fryer Teen Killer Murders Father

Kaleigh Fryer

Kaleigh Fryer was fifteen years old when she began to have an affair with an older, married man, Jerry Chiles. According to Chiles Kaleigh repeatedly asked him to murder her father. In the end Jerry would do just that stabbing the victim multiple times causing his death. The murderous pair attempted to make it look like a robbery gone bad. It did not take long for their story fall apart and for one an other turn against each other. Jerry Chiles would testify against Kaleigh in exchange for the death penalty taken off the table. This teen killer would be sentenced to life in prison

Kaleigh Fryer 2023 Information

Kaleigh Fryer

Current Facility: MABEL BASSETT CORRECTIONAL CENTER, MCLOU

Gender: Female

Race: White

Height: 5 ft 5 in

Weight: 134 lbs

Hair Color: Brown

Eye Color: Hazel

Kaleigh Fryer Other News

The tears 16-year-old Kaleigh Lynn Fryer couldn’t produce the morning she found her father dead in a pool of blood burst forth Monday when she was convicted of his murder.

It took a Logan County jury about two and a half hours to convict Fryer of first-degree murder. She was 15 at the time of her father’s death. Jurors recommended she be sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole. A formal sentencing will be June 17 at Logan County Courthouse.

Fryer’s married boyfriend, Jerry Jerone Chiles Jr., 22, admitted to stabbing Lewis Keith Fryer, 50, to death in the man’s bedroom about 3 a.m. on May 12, 2010. Chiles testified against Kaleigh Fryer in return for a sentence of life in prison with the possibility of parole.

Chiles testified Fryer asked him repeatedly to kill her father, left the back door open for him and told him where in the house to find a knife, her father’s keys, a wallet and other items he was instructed to take.

Chiles then stole Lewis Fryer’s car and drove it to south Oklahoma City, where he abandoned it before walking to Crossroads Mall. Chiles testified he called Kaleigh Fryer just before 7 a.m. and asked her to come pick him up at the shopping mall.

She told Chiles there was a lot of blood and that she was going to call 911. Phone records showed Kaleigh Fryer did not sleep through the murder at her father’s Guthrie home as she told investigators.

Instead, she checked her voice mail about 3:30 a.m. and used her phone to access the Internet.

Phone records also confirmed Chiles’ claim that he had called Kaleigh Fryer from a pay phone at the mall just before she called 911. She told police she discovered her father’s body when she woke up about 7 a.m.

Investigators noted in their reports on the morning of the murder that Kaleigh Fryer tried to cry while they talked with her but could not produce any tears.

She was unable to hold tears back Monday as the jurors’ were called one-by-one and affirmed they agreed with the guilty verdict.

During closing arguments, prosecutors described her as a cold, heartless killer who manipulated the simple and childlike Chiles into murdering her father because he was mean to her and made her do chores. Investigators believe Kaleigh Fryer thought she would be able to live with her mother if her father was killed.

“Kaleigh Fryer’s father is dead because she chose Jerry Chiles,” said Lesley March, Logan County assistant district attorney. “Lewis Fryer would be alive today in Guthrie but for Kaleigh’s plan.”

Kaleigh Fryer’s defense attorney, Eric Reynolds, used his closing argument to accuse Chiles of lying to get a lighter sentence for the crime. Reynolds said Chiles likely killed Lewis Fryer because he believed Kaleigh Fryer was pregnant and feared going to jail for having sex with her while she was underage.

“Some people are extremely skilled liars,” Reynolds told the jury. “Jerry Chiles lied to you. He lied to the police. He lied to his girlfriend. He changed his story based on his audience.”

After the verdict was read, Lewis Fryer’s brother, Roy Fryer, said he wanted to thank investigators and prosecutors for doing their jobs and the jury for seeing through Kaleigh Fryer’s lies.

Roy Fryer said the death of one family member at the hands of another has taken a toll.

“We’re a close family,” he said. “We lean on each other like family should. That’s how we will get through this.”

Jerry Chiles Jr 2023 Information

jerry chiles 2021 photos

Gender: MaleRace: BlackHeight: 6 ft 2 in

Weight: 167 lbsHair Color: BlackEye Color: Brown



OK DOC#: 651476Birth Date: 8/20/1988


Current Facility: NORTH FORK CORRECTIONAL CENTER, SAYRE

Reception Date: 1/19/2012

Kaleigh Fryer Now

Kaleigh Fryer is currently incarcerated at the Mable Bassett Correctional Center

Kaleigh Fryer Release Date

Kaleigh Fryer is serving a life sentence

Noah Crooks Teen Killer Murders Mother

Noah Crooks

Noah Crooks was thirteen years old when he murdered his mother. This teen killer would shoot his mother over twenty times causing her death. When asked about what his punishment should be for killing his mother he said he thought he would be grounded. Needless to say the judge did not feel the same way and sentenced the teen to fifty years in prison

Noah Crooks 2023 Information

Name:

Noah Riley Crooks

Offender Number:

6049684

Sex:

M

Birth Date:

07/29/1998

Location:

Fort Dodge Correctional Facility

Offense:

MURDER – 2ND DEGREE, 85%

TDD/SDD *:

12/16/2034

Commitment Date:

05/09/2016

Recall Date:

05/11/2024

Most Recent Board Decision

Decision Type:

RD

Decision:

No release at this time – review in 12 months

Decision Date:

04/11/2023

Effective Date:

Noah Crooks Other News

An Osage teen said he didn’t consider the consequences of shooting his mother 22 times in 2012, killing her.

“I didn’t think anything would happen. I thought I would maybe get grounded,” Noah Crooks, who was 13 at the time of the slaying, would later say during a meeting with his father and counselors after he was found guilty of second-degree murder.

Instead, a judge sentenced Noah Crooks to 50 years in prison when he turned 18 in 2016, and on Friday the Iowa Supreme Court upheld the punishment.

Crooks, now 19 and eligible for parole, challenged the district court’s handling of the case, arguing it shouldn’t have been prosecuted under the state’s youthful offender statutes, which allowed the juvenile court to transfer the case to adult court.

He also argued the sentence amounted to cruel and unusual punishment.

In its decision, the Iowa Supreme Court noted that Iowa’s youthful offender law allows the court to track a youth’s progress before deciding any prison sentence. In this case, the court had about five years to track Crooks.

The high court ruled the sentencing court acted within its discretion by imposing the 50-year term, noting a psychologist who examined Crooks in 2012 opined he wasn’t capable of experiencing guilt and remorse. The psychologist concluded there was no treatment that could change his personality traits, and the prospects of rehabilitation before age 18 were nil.

Authorities said Crooks killed his mother, Gretchen, on March 24, 2012, at their home in rural Osage. He approached her once with a .22-caliber rifle while she was making dinner but decided against shooting her then because it wouldn’t have been honorable to shoot her in the back, court records state.

A short time later, he shot her as she sat on a couch. He then sent a text message to his father, who was away at a work-related party, saying he accidentally killed his mother, but his father thought it was a joke.

Crooks then called 911 to report the shooting and express concerns for his own future. He was convicted for second-degree murder during a 2013 and turned over to the State Training School in Eldora until he turned 18 and went before a district court judge for sentencing in 2016.

During his time in Eldora, he avoided addressing the reason behind the slaying. Before the sentencing his father confronted him during a meeting with counselors, and Crooks responded he “thought we would be better off without her,” court records state.

At the May 2016 sentencing hearing, Crooks’ father, William Crooks, said he visited his son several times at Eldora, pushing him to talk about his mother. “In the past four years, you have never once spoken about your mother. You have shown no remorse.

“Four years is not enough to pay for taking your mother’s life. I’m sorry; I love you, Noah, but to let you out would ruin so many more lives.”

Noah Crooks Videos

Noah Crooks Photos

Noah Crooks

Noah Crooks Other News

An Osage teen said he didn’t consider the consequences of shooting his mother 22 times in 2012, killing her.

“I didn’t think anything would happen. I thought I would maybe get grounded,” Noah Riley Crooks, who was 13 at the time of the slaying, would later say during a meeting with his father and counselors after he was found guilty of second-degree murder.

Instead, a judge sentenced Noah Crooks to 50 years in prison when he turned 18 in 2016, and on Friday the Iowa Supreme Court upheld the punishment.

Crooks, now 19 and eligible for parole, challenged the district court’s handling of the case, arguing it shouldn’t have been prosecuted under the state’s youthful offender statutes, which allowed the juvenile court to transfer the case to adult court.

He also argued the sentence amounted to cruel and unusual punishment.

In its decision, the Iowa Supreme Court noted that Iowa’s youthful offender law allows the court to track a youth’s progress before deciding any prison sentence. In this case, the court had about five years to track Crooks.

The high court ruled the sentencing court acted within its discretion by imposing the 50-year term, noting a psychologist who examined Crooks in 2012 opined he wasn’t capable of experiencing guilt and remorse. The psychologist concluded there was no treatment that could change his personality traits, and the prospects of rehabilitation before age 18 were nil.

Authorities said Noah Crooks killed his mother, Gretchen, on March 24, 2012, at their home in rural Osage. He approached her once with a .22-caliber rifle while she was making dinner but decided against shooting her then because it wouldn’t have been honorable to shoot her in the back, court records state.

A short time later, he shot her as she sat on a couch. He then sent a text message to his father, who was away at a work-related party, saying he accidentally killed his mother, but his father thought it was a joke.

Noah Crooks then called 911 to report the shooting and express concerns for his own future. He was convicted for second-degree murder during a 2013 and turned over to the State Training School in Eldora until he turned 18 and went before a district court judge for sentencing in 2016.

During his time in Eldora, he avoided addressing the reason behind the slaying. Before the sentencing his father confronted him during a meeting with counselors, and Noah Crooks responded he “thought we would be better off without her,” court records state.

At the May 2016 sentencing hearing, Crooks’ father, William Crooks, said he visited his son several times at Eldora, pushing him to talk about his mother. “In the past four years, you have never once spoken about your mother. You have shown no remorse.

“Four years is not enough to pay for taking your mother’s life. I’m sorry; I love you, Noah, but to let you out would ruin so many more lives.”

https://wcfcourier.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/court-upholds-murder-sentence-for-13-year-old-who-thought-hed-get-grounded-for-killing/article_7f96e6ef-d7ab-5988-bfc8-0734fd81bbdf.html

Frequently Asked Questions

Noah Crooks Now

Noah Crooks is currently incarcerated at the Fort Dodge Correctional Facility

Noah Crooks Release Date

Noah Crooks current release date is 2039

Alexander Crain Teen Killer Murders Parents

Alexander Crain

Alexander Crain was fourteen years old when he shot and killed both of his parents in Florida. According to court documents Alexander Crain phoned 911 in the middle of the night telling the operator that he had shot and killed both of his parents and did not know why. Alexander Crain behaviour following his arrest was odd to say the least as when he was being watched by police he would be hysterical but as soon as they turned away, or at least he thought they turned away, his demeanour would be calm. In the end this teen killer would plead guilty to two counts of manslaughter and be sentenced to twenty years in prison

Alexander Crain 2023 Information


alexander crain 2022
DC Number:Y49056
Name:CRAIN, ALEXANDER T
Race:WHITE
Sex:MALE
Birth Date:07/19/1996
Initial Receipt Date:05/11/2012
Current Facility:DESOTO Work Camp
Current Custody:Minimum
Current Release Date:06/23/2028

Alexander Crain Other News

Alex Crain, the 14-year-old boy arrested in the shooting deaths of his parents, has been charged as an adult with two counts of manslaughter with a firearm.

Each count, a first-degree felony, carries a maximum 30-year prison sentence.

Crain is accused of shooting parents Thomas and Kelly Crain in the family’s Golden Gate Estates home on Dec. 9. He was originally arrested on a pair of second-degree murder charges.

Crain is at the Naples Jail Center, where he is being held in medical housing as ‘a precaution,’ Collier County Sheriff’s Office spokeswoman Michelle Batten said. He would be moved to a juvenile wing of the jail when medically cleared, Batten said.

‘He’s separated from other adults,’ she said.

Crain will appear on Thursday before a Collier Circuit judge, who will determine whether to set a bond for the teenager.

Tuesday’s formal filing by Assistant State Attorney Richard Montecalvo follows a lengthy review of the case by the State Attorney’s Office. Crain’s family and attorneys sought to have him charged as a juvenile, a path that would result in milder penalties than an adult filing.

A psychiatric evaluation of Crain was conducted on behalf of the state, and Crain’s attorneys had two more performed, the results of which they shared with prosecutors.

‘(The decision) was based on all of the facts and evidence we are able to review at this time,’ State Attorney’s Office spokeswoman Samantha Syoen said.

Crain’s grandmother, Nancy Ward, declined comment on Tuesday.

Reached by phone, Alexander Crain attorney Mark Rankin said he and co-counsel Brian Bieber anticipated the filing, following a conversation with prosecutors.

Although the adult filing goes against the family’s wishes, Rankin said they were heartened murder charges were not filed.

‘It’s culpable negligence instead of intent to kill,’ he said of the distinction. ‘And I think the state looked at our doctors’ reports and their own doctor’s report and evaluated the unique circumstances?that he’s such a young kid, that it’s his parents.’

Second-degree murder carries a maximum life sentence in prison.

Little evidence has been released publicly in the case. Deputies found the bodies of Thomas, 40, and Kelly, 39, in the master bedroom of their home at 4240 47th Ave. NE, following an emergency call from the home at 8:30 a.m.

Crain was the only other person inside the home.

Evidence of what happened before the shooting, and Crain’s mindset, have yet to be made public.

Such factors are central to a prosecutor’s determination of how to file against a juvenile, said Abe Laeser, a Dade County attorney who spent 36 years as a prosecutor in the 11th Circuit State Attorney’s Office in South Florida.

Not all crimes are created equal, and neither are all juveniles, Laeser said. The psychiatric evaluations in Crain’s case likely plumbed the teenager’s maturity, as well as his mental state.

‘Ultimately I’m going to try to get as much information as I can about the sophistication of the child,’ he said. ‘Age of course is an issue, their mental history, if known, their school history.’

More evidence will come out of the case once the state begins sharing its evidence with Alexander Crain’s defense attorney.

The case is one of several high-profile homicides involving juveniles in recent months.

Last August, 13-year-old Jonathan Rowles was arrested after Collier detectives say he shot and killed his mother in their East Naples home. Prosecutors charged Rowles with a manslaughter as a juvenile.

In January, deputies arrested Jorge Saavedra, 14 at the time, on a manslaughter charge after they say he stabbed fellow Palmetto Ridge High student Dylan Nuno, 16, during a fight outside a Golden Gate Estates bus stop. Prosecutors charged Saavedra last week with armed manslaughter, as a juvenile.

Alexander Crain, like Saavedra, was a freshman at Palmetto Ridge High School.

Past homicide cases involving juveniles tried as adults have received heavy attention in the media. Among the most notorious are the Lords of Chaos and Cash Feenz, both Lee County cases involving older juveniles.

In the Lords of Chaos case, a gang of teens that included 17-year-old Pete Magnotti murdered high school Mark Schwebes. Magnotti is now serving a 32-year prison sentence.

The Cash Feenz killings saw three juveniles charged and sentenced as adults in the murders of teenagers Alexis and Jeffrey Sosa. Ashley Toye and Roderick Washington, both 17 at the time, were sentenced to life. Iriana Santos, 16 at the time, pleaded and received 25 years.

In Collier, teenagers Mazer Jean and Jermaine Jones received life sentences after murdering a guard at an Ochopee juvenile detention camp in 1998. Jean was 17 at the time; Jones was 16.

Other juvenile homicide cases are less aggravated, involving vehicle crashes or accidents.

In a recent Collier case, Riccardo Rivas, 18, pleaded no contest on Tuesday to a vehicular homicide charge from a 2009 crash. Rivas, who was 16 at the time of the accident, was sentenced as a youthful offender to one year in prison and four on probation.

Alexander Crain’s attorneys may seek the same designation. A youthful offender distinction during sentencing caps a defendant’s maximum incarceration at six years, to be served in a separate facility from adult prisoners.

‘That’s at least within the realm of possibilities,’ Rankin said of the designation.

Laeser, the former prosecutor, said the program has a downside. A youthful offender who violates probation may face the full guideline sentence, he said.

Alexander Crain Videos

Alexander Crain FAQ

Alexander Crain Now

Alexander Crain is currently incarcerated at the Desoto Annex

Alexander Crain Release Date

Alexander Crain current release date is 2029

Alexander Crain More News

Florida teenager Alex Crain told an emergency dispatcher he didn’t know why he killed his parents in their Naples home, a newly released tape reveals.

In the chilling, 16-minute call obtained Monday by NBC, placed in December 2010, Crain, then 14, confessed immediately to shooting his parents in the bathroom.

“I was sleeping and the next thing I know I had a gun in my hand and my parents were on the ground,” he told the dispatcher.

The Naples Daily News reported the dispatcher told him calling 911 was the right thing to do. He said he was not on any medication, he was not upset with his parents, that he had simply stayed home sick from school.

“I love my parents,” he cried, “I love my parents.”

Crain repeatedly asked why ambulances were taking so long to arrive. He realized later, in the back of a police car, that his parents were dead.

“That’s why there’s no EMS,” a dashboard camera recorded him saying.

Crain was tried as an adult and sentenced to 20 years and two months in prison in April after pleading no contest to two charges of manslaughter. Brian Bieber, his attorney, said Crain was “suffering from a severe mental illness,” but refused to elaborate. Prosecutors said Crain was tried as an adult “when it was determined there really weren’t any mental issues that gave us concern.”

https://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2012/07/03/Tape-reveals-teens-parricide-confession/46501341347586/

Bryan and David Freeman Teen Killers

Bryan and David Freeman

Bryan and David Freeman would murder their entire family while they were still teenagers. According to court documents Bryan and David Freeman were self proclaimed neo Nazi’s and decided their parents Jehovah Witness beliefs were not to their liking. With their cousin Nelson Birdwell would murder their parents and their younger brother. The teen killers were convicted of double murder, they were not charged with the murder of their younger brother, and were sentenced to life in prison without parole.

Bryan and David Freeman 2023 Information

Bryan Freeman

Parole Number:CX3426
Age: 41
Date of Birth: 01/07/1978
Race: WHITE
Height: 6′ 00″
Gender: MALE
Citizenship: USA
Complexion: LIGHT
Current Location: COAL TOWNSHIP
Permanent Location: COAL TOWNSHIP
Committing County: LEHIGH

David Freeman

Parole Number:594HX
Age: 40
Date of Birth: 02/09/1979
Race: WHITE
Height: 6′ 03″
Gender: MALE
Citizenship: USA
Complexion: LIGHT
Current Location: MAHANOY
Permanent Location: MAHANOY
Committing County: LEHIGH

Bryan And David Freeman Other News

Twenty years after stabbing and bludgeoning to death their mother, father and younger brother in one of the Lehigh Valley’s most shocking crimes, former neo-Nazi skinhead brothers Bryan and David Freeman tell an aunt they wish they could change the past.

The brothers, who along with their cousin Nelson “Ben” Birdwell III will spend the rest of their lives in prison for the slayings, were troubled teenagers who found an outlet for their rebellion in the white supremacist skinhead movement.

Their rejection of their parents’ authority came to a horrific climax Feb. 26, 1995, as Bryan Freeman, then 17, grabbed his mother, Brenda, as she came down the stairs of the family’s Salisbury Township home, stuffed a pair of shorts in her mouth and stabbed her repeatedly.

David Freeman, then 16, and Birdwell, who was 18, went upstairs, where they beat Dennis Freeman with an aluminum baseball bat and metal exercise bar as he lay asleep in bed.

Prosecutors said Birdwell also attacked 11-year-old Erik Freeman, who was also asleep, hitting him repeatedly with a 3-foot pick ax handle.

Armed with a shotgun, the three fled in Brenda Freeman’s convertible to Michigan, where they were arrested three days later.

David and Bryan Freeman pleaded guilty to murdering their parents. And although a jury acquitted Birdwell of Erik Freeman’s murder, he was convicted for his role in killing Dennis Freeman, whose blood had spattered Birdwell’s T-shirt.

“The boys are not what they were back then,” said Sandy Lettich, who is Brenda Freeman’s sister. “They both regret what they did and wish they had never done it.”

Bryan Freeman, who is serving his sentence at the state prison in Coal Township, Northumberland County, has embraced his parents’ religion, becoming baptized as a Jehovah’s Witness, Lettich said.

David Freeman, who is at Mahanoy State Prison near Frackville, has softened from the cold-eyed and mean young man he had become in the months before the killings, she said.

“If you bring up what happened, they cry,” said Lettich, who visits the brothers frequently.

The Freeman murders came during one of the bloodiest years in Lehigh Valley history, with 14 homicides in the first five months.

A day after the Freeman brothers were captured, 17-year-old Jeffrey Howorth used his father’s hunting rifle to gun down his parents, George and Susan Howorth, ambushing them as they returned separately to the family’s Lower Macungie Township home.

“Those kids in Salisbury, they were cool. They killed their parents,” Howorth wrote in an apparent reference to Bryan and David Freeman that investigators found in his bedroom desk.

“I would be rough [cool] if I did that,” the note continued.

Howorth was arrested March 4, two days after the shootings, when the car he was driving ran out of gas in Missouri. In his trial, experts theorized that Howorth drew inspiration from the Freeman killings. He was acquitted of the murders later that year by a jury that found him not guilty by reason of insanity. He was involuntarily committed and remains under state supervision at Wernersville State Hospital in Berks County.

Howorth’s brother, Stephen Howorth, declined to be interviewed, saying in an email that his parents’ murders continue to cause his family pain.

Memories of the murders have faded in the Freemans’ old neighborhood, said 20-year-old Jacob Ross, who has lived most of his life in the Freeman family’s former home in the 1600 block of Ehrets Lane.

Ross said neighbors used to talk about the killings often, but that changed as time wore on and many longtime residents moved away.

“The neighborhood somehow moved past it, and it was always a wonderful place to live,” he said.

In 1995, the Freeman and Howorth killings came as a one-two punch that rattled parents and educators and exposed the harsh reality that Lehigh Valley youth were not immune to indoctrination by hate groups.

The Freeman brothers and their cousin had reportedly attended gatherings at the Longswamp Township home of Mark Thomas, a proponent of white supremacist ideology who later went to federal prison for his role in a nationwide bank robbery ring run by the Aryan Republican Army.

Although they were not known to be part of an organized skinhead group, Bryan and David Freeman looked the part. In the months before the murders, they began sporting shaved heads and military surplus clothes.

Then the Freeman boys turned up at school with neo-Nazi tattoos on their bare foreheads. David’s read “Sieg Heil,” a Nazi salute, while Bryan’s read “Berserker,” to match one on Birdwell’s forehead.

The neo-Nazi affiliations brought an especially sinister element to the murders.

“We got a number of phone calls from the schools, asking what’s going on,” said Robert Werts, then commander of Pennsylvania State Police Troop M in Bethlehem, which investigated the killings.

Barry Morrison, who retired in 2013 as regional director of the Anti-Defamation League in Philadelphia, said he was besieged with calls from reporters asking how to predict and prevent such crimes.

In response, Morrison organized a conference for educators and professionals from other backgrounds to discuss strategies for preventing youth hate crimes. Local police and anti-gang organizations also held workshops on dealing with hate groups.

What made the Freeman killings especially tragic, Morrison said, was that Brenda Freeman had tried to get help for her husband and herself in managing their sons.

Bryan Freeman had been hospitalized twice for mental illness and his brother David was treated for substance abuse and had been held in several juvenile facilities, according to published reports.

As the boys bridled against authority, leveled death threats against their parents and sank deeper into neo-Nazi beliefs, Brenda Freeman called the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission for help. They referred her to Morrison, who said in an interview last week that at first he saw a conversation with Brenda Freeman as an opportunity to gather up-to-date intelligence on white supremacist activities in the area.

But upon speaking with her, he sensed she needed help that he wasn’t equipped to provide and put her in touch with the Allentown Police Department’s community relations officer.

Morrison said he later tried to call Brenda Freeman to follow up, but the phone rang unanswered. Morrison learned of the murders a short time later, he said.

“It was clear to me that just by coincidence she had been killed shortly before I tried to reach her,” Morrison said. “This was a very sobering experience for me. It left me feeling very unsettled.”

Morrison said he has used aspects of the Freeman case in his work educating others about hate groups. He said he still wonders whether the killings could have been stopped if a teacher had recognized a clear red flag from one of the brothers.

Instead of answering the questions on a test in school, one of the brothers scrawled racist and anti-Semitic epithets, an account of attacking his father and a screed describing his support for the neo-Nazi cause. The teacher returned the paper with a note saying he should rethink his ideas.

Today, in the wake of numerous school shooting tragedies, such writings would set off alarms, Morrison said.

“I doubt that a student would submit this kind of garbage … without serious action being taken by the school,” he said.

Werts, who is now director of the Northeast Pennsylvania Counter Terrorism Task Force in Stroudsburg, said that even two decades later, the Freeman case illustrates the importance of parents being involved in their children’s lives, which by many accounts, the Freemans were.

Dennis and Brenda Freeman were described at the time of the killings as decent, normal people who were troubled by the change in their sons but didn’t know where to turn for help. As Jehovah’s Witnesses, they had high expectations of their children, said Lettich, who was close to her sister and spent a lot of time in her home. The boys, however, were difficult to discipline, she said.

“They just didn’t want to have rules. They just wanted to do whatever they wanted to do,” Lettich said. “When you have 16-year-olds who look like men and have the strength of men, it’s kind of hard to control them.”

Werts said there’s little law enforcement can do to intervene in a situation like the one Brenda and Dennis Freeman faced because no laws had been broken. But, he added, there are social service organizations that can help.

The Freeman brothers and their cousin had reportedly attended gatherings at the Longswamp Township home of Mark Thomas, a proponent of white supremacist ideology who later went to federal prison for his role in a nationwide bank robbery ring run by the Aryan Republican Army.

Although they were not known to be part of an organized skinhead group, Bryan and David Freeman looked the part. In the months before the murders, they began sporting shaved heads and military surplus clothes.

Then the Freeman boys turned up at school with neo-Nazi tattoos on their bare foreheads. David’s read “Sieg Heil,” a Nazi salute, while Bryan’s read “Berserker,” to match one on Birdwell’s forehead.

The neo-Nazi affiliations brought an especially sinister element to the murders.

“We got a number of phone calls from the schools, asking what’s going on,” said Robert Werts, then commander of Pennsylvania State Police Troop M in Bethlehem, which investigated the killings.

Barry Morrison, who retired in 2013 as regional director of the Anti-Defamation League in Philadelphia, said he was besieged with calls from reporters asking how to predict and prevent such crimes.

In response, Morrison organized a conference for educators and professionals from other backgrounds to discuss strategies for preventing youth hate crimes. Local police and anti-gang organizations also held workshops on dealing with hate groups.

What made the Freeman killings especially tragic, Morrison said, was that Brenda Freeman had tried to get help for her husband and herself in managing their sons.

Bryan Freeman had been hospitalized twice for mental illness and his brother David was treated for substance abuse and had been held in several juvenile facilities, according to published reports.

As the boys bridled against authority, leveled death threats against their parents and sank deeper into neo-Nazi beliefs, Brenda Freeman called the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission for help. They referred her to Morrison, who said in an interview last week that at first he saw a conversation with Brenda Freeman as an opportunity to gather up-to-date intelligence on white supremacist activities in the area.

But upon speaking with her, he sensed she needed help that he wasn’t equipped to provide and put her in touch with the Allentown Police Department’s community relations officer.

Morrison said he later tried to call Brenda Freeman to follow up, but the phone rang unanswered. Morrison learned of the murders a short time later, he said.

“It was clear to me that just by coincidence she had been killed shortly before I tried to reach her,” Morrison said. “This was a very sobering experience for me. It left me feeling very unsettled.”

Morrison said he has used aspects of the Freeman case in his work educating others about hate groups. He said he still wonders whether the killings could have been stopped if a teacher had recognized a clear red flag from one of the brothers.

Instead of answering the questions on a test in school, one of the brothers scrawled racist and anti-Semitic epithets, an account of attacking his father and a screed describing his support for the neo-Nazi cause. The teacher returned the paper with a note saying he should rethink his ideas.

Today, in the wake of numerous school shooting tragedies, such writings would set off alarms, Morrison said.

“I doubt that a student would submit this kind of garbage … without serious action being taken by the school,” he said.

Werts, who is now director of the Northeast Pennsylvania Counter Terrorism Task Force in Stroudsburg, said that even two decades later, the Freeman case illustrates the importance of parents being involved in their children’s lives, which by many accounts, the Freemans were.

Dennis and Brenda Freeman were described at the time of the killings as decent, normal people who were troubled by the change in their sons but didn’t know where to turn for help. As Jehovah’s Witnesses, they had high expectations of their children, said Lettich, who was close to her sister and spent a lot of time in her home. The boys, however, were difficult to discipline, she said.

“They just didn’t want to have rules. They just wanted to do whatever they wanted to do,” Lettich said. “When you have 16-year-olds who look like men and have the strength of men, it’s kind of hard to control them.”

Werts said there’s little law enforcement can do to intervene in a situation like the one Brenda and Dennis Freeman faced because no laws had been broken. But, he added, there are social service organizations that can help.

“Any parent who has a child who has a swastika tattooed on his neck and ‘Sieg Heil’ on his forehead, you’d best be looking for help at that point. And in the Freemans’ case, they did.” Werts said. “It just didn’t work.”

“Any parent who has a child who has a swastika tattooed on his neck and ‘Sieg Heil’ on his forehead, you’d best be looking for help at that point. And in the Freemans’ case, they did.” Werts said. “It just didn’t work.”

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Bryan Freeman is currently incarcerated at the Coal Township Facility

David Freeman Now

David Freeman is currently incarcerated at the Mahandy Facility

Bryan Freeman Release Date

Bryan Freeman is serving life without parole

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David Freeman is serving life without parole


Toni Fratto Teen Killer Murders Love Rival

Toni Fratto

Toni Fratto was seventeen when she helped murder a romantic rival. According to court documents Toni Fratto was dating Kody Patten and was jealous of the relationship he had with the victim Micaela Costanzo and demanded her boyfriend help get rid of the sixteen year old. Micaela Costanza was brought to a remote location where she was hit over the head, straddled by Fratto while Kody Patten slit her throat. The sixteen year old was buried in a shallow grave. This teen killer would end up pleading guilty to her role in the murder and was sentenced to life in prison with parole eligibility after eighteen years. Kody Patten was sentenced to life without parole

Toni Fratto 2023 Information

Toni Fratto

FLORENCE MCCLURE WOMENS CORRECTIONAL Center

Toni Fratto Other News

Toni Fratto was sentenced to spend life in prison plus an additional 20 years for her involvement in the murder of West Wendover teen Micaela Costanzo.

Before being sentenced, Fratto, 19, of West Wendover turned to the mother and family of the victim and offered an apology in Elko District Court Monday morning.

“I would like to apologize to Micaela’s family and friends and those that loved her dearly,” Fratto said while she made sobbing sounds but shed no tears. “I’m sorry for what I did to Micaela, and I’m sorry for what I did not do, and that was protect her. I know saying I’m sorry does not do justice and it does not change what has happened. But I truly am sorry.”

Fratto and co-defendant Kody Patten, 19, of West Wendover were charged with Costanzo’s murder, which occurred March 3, 2011. District Attorney Mark Torvinen sought the death penalty for both defendants after they pleaded not guilty to the charges.

On Jan. 26, Fratto changed her plea. In exchange for a guilty plea to second-degree murder, Fratto agreed to testify as a state witness, if called, during Patten’s trial, which is scheduled July 31 in Elko District Court.  

Before Senior Judge Dan Papez sentenced Fratto, Torvinen called to the stand family members of the victim who testified to the impact the murder had on their lives, and gave Papez a recommendation for sentencing.

Micaela’s mom, Celia Costanzo; father, Theodore Costanzo; and sister, Kristina Lininger, each asked Papez to consider giving Fratto the maximum sentence allowed.

Celia Costanzo exemplified her daughter’s innocence in court by describing the type of person Micaela was in high school and around the house.

Micaela was involved with many extracurricular school activities including playing basketball, running track, participating in a People to People leadership program, and editing the school newspaper. Micaela wanted to be an author, her mother said. She was an avid writer of short stories and poetry.

In the home, Micaela was close with her five siblings and had a nurturing relationship with her nieces and nephews.

After the murder, the Costanzo family became inward, and struggled to cope with basic functions of life, Celia Costanzo said. One daughter dropped out of college.  

A grieving Celia Costanzo spoke with difficulty, nearly hyperventilating between words.

“It basically destroyed me. I don’t sleep. I have nightmares,” Celia Costanzo said. “I haven’t been able to go to work and work a full shift.”

Celia Costanzo said she has had difficulty when her grandchildren asked her to read books to them that Micaela used to read.

“My kids were everything. I lived to try to give them the best that I could,” Celia Costanzo said. “We were very, very close. All of us did everything together. With Micaela being gone, there’s a part of me that has been ripped away.”

“And not a day, a moment, a second (goes by) that I don’t think about her and what we would be doing.”

Micaela’s father, Theodore Costanzo, testified to the confusion and pain he has suffered.

“I don’t know where to start,” he said on the stand. “I still think that I’m dreaming. I think this can’t be happening here. Everyday.”

Lininger said the murder has made her fearful for herself and her children and stepchildren.

“It’s had a tremendous impact … I’ve always been a protective parent — now I’m overly protective,” Lininger said. She said she constantly worries even when her children are with friends, and she feels scared in West Wendover where before she didn’t.

“I beg that you give (Fratto) the same thing that she gave my sister. Show her (no mercy). She doesn’t deserve a chance,” Lininger said to Papez. “I hope you give her the maximum that you possibly can. That’s what she took away from all of us. I never get the chance to tell my sister that I love her or give her a hug. (Fratto) gets to call her parents whenever she wants.”

Defense attorney John Springgate called Fratto’s mother, Cassie Fratto, to testify on behalf of her daughter before sentencing.

Cassie Fratto testified to Toni Fratto’s character, particularly before she became romantically involved with Patten.

“Toni is very courageous, kind, compassionate, (and) very respectful. She would be your best friend. She would do anything for you. She loves life,” Cassie Fratto said tearfully.

Fratto and Patten began dating during their sophomore year of high school. Sometime during the relationship, Patten got kicked out of his  house and the Frattos allowed him to move into their home.

Cassie Fratto testified to seeing a school surveillance tape of Patten being physically abusive to Fratto by pushing her against a wall and choking her.

“Knowing what you know about that attack on her, why would you open your home to that person?” Springgate asked.

“Toni was very much in love with Kody,” Cassie Fratto said. “We were afraid that if we did not (open our home) that he would take Toni away from us and our family.”

According to Cassie Fratto, since Toni Fratto’s incarceration and separation from Patten, she has noticed a change in her daughter’s demeanor. She also said she hoped time served would help her daughter rehabilitate.

“She was losing herself … What I see now is, we have our Toni back. She’s come to the realization of the abuse that she was put through by being in a relationship with (Patten),” Cassie Fratto said.

“She is realizing the importance of being new and true to yourself. She wants to help others that suffered through abuse, through the pain and anguish of someone taking your life away from you,” Cassie Fratto said.

In his closing argument, Torvinen asked Papez to consider the brutality of the murder when making his sentence.

“It’s as horrific a murder as I suspect you will ever see. That word is inadequate to describe the circumstances of this event. Moreover, it’s as innocent a victim as anyone might envision,” Torvinen said.

“Ms. Fratto participated in a sequence of events which has inflicted an agony on Micaela’s family and friends which probably surpasses understanding,” said Torvinen. “They will suffer, as you’ve seen here, each and every day of their lives. The state has asked that you impose the maximum sentence available to you under the law.”

“I would submit that the question here is: Is she a sheep or is she a wolf?” said Springgate. “She is in fact a documented victim of both physical and emotional abuse.”

Springgate argued Fratto was emotionally and cognitively immature, that she is of low-average intelligence, and that her personality is one susceptible to peer pressure.

Papez addressed the brutality of the case mixed with the confusion of an unanswered question: Why did Fratto help murder Costanzo? Which neither Springgate could answer after the sentencing nor Torvinen inside the courtroom.  

“Why such a senseless murder of a precious life?” he asked.

“It is even more puzzling when I look at your record,” Papez said. Letters Papez received from Fratto’s friends and family described her as kind, responsible and supportive.

“The attack was brutal, it was vicious, it was violent. All shockingly so,” he said.

Papez gave Fratto the maximum sentence of life and a consecutive sentence of 20 years, and a restitution fine of $3,909. She will be parole eligible after 18 years in prison.

https://elkodaily.com/news/local/teen-killer-eligible-for-parole-after-years-in-prison/article_b9fe8eee-88a4-11e1-a2c9-0019bb2963f4.html

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Toni Fratto Parole Denied 2021

 A Nevada woman convicted of second-degree murder in the death of a West Wendover teenager a decade ago has lost her first bid for parole.

Toni Fratto, 28, has been imprisoned since 2012 for her role in the killing of 16-year-old Micaela Constanzo, whose body was found in a shallow grave about 5 miles (8 kilometers) from the Utah line.

Elko District Attorney Tyler Ingram told the Elko Daily Free Press on Monday that Fratto’s parole was denied. She had appeared before the Nevada Board of Parole Commissioners via a video conference in February.

Kody Cree Patten, 28, was convicted of first-degree murder in Constanzo’s death in 2011 and sentenced to life without the possibility of parole.

Fratto was sentenced to a minimum of 10 years for second-degree murder, but both she and Patten received an additional 8-10 years for the use of a deadly weapon in the commission of the crime.

Prosecutors say the two were involved in a relationship at the time of the killing.

Ingram said if Fratto had been granted parole on the murder charge, she would not have been released from prison, rather she would have started serving the second sentence.

Her next parole hearing is scheduled May 2024.

https://mynews4.com/news/local/parole-denied-in-2011-murder-of-west-wendover-teenager

Toni Fratto FAQ

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Toni Fratto is currently incarcerated at the Florence McClure Correctional Facility

Toni Fratto Release Date

Toni Fratto is serving a life sentence however is eligible for parole as of 2021.

Toni Fratto Parole

Toni Fratto was denied parole in 2021