Antonio Evans Teen Killer Murders 6 Year Old Girl

Antonio Evans

Antonio Evans was fourteen years old when he beat to death a child he was suppose to be babysitting. According to court documents Antonio Evans would beat three children in a foster home and would end up fatally beating a six year old girl. This teen killer would be sentenced to thirty years in prison

Antonio Evans Other News

A Tennessee teenager has been sentenced to 30 years in prison in the beating death of a girl he was babysitting.

Shelby County prosecutors say 18-year-old Antonio Evans pleaded guilty Friday to adult charges of second-degree murder and aggravated child abuse.

Prosecutors say Antonio Evans was a 14-year-old foster child when he was left in charge of three other foster children, ages 6, 7 and 9, in the Memphis suburb of Cordova.

The children said Antonio Evans repeatedly punched, kicked and whipped them with a belt and a cord for three days in December 2015. They said Evans threatened them with more abuse if they told anyone.

A 6-year-old girl, Destine King, died at a hospital from injuries she suffered.

Antonio Evans Other News

A Cordova 18-year-old was sentenced to 30 years in prison Friday after pleading guilty to beating a young child to death while babysitting in 2015.

Prosecutors say Antonio Evans was 14 when he was tasked with babysitting three young foster children — ages 6, 7 and 9. Evans himself was being fostered at the time by the daughter of the children’s foster mother.

Over the course of three days, prosecutors say Evans punched, kicked, slapped and whipped the children with a belt and cord. Police were called when 6-year-old Destine King started vomiting and became unresponsive.

King died five days later.

Prosecutors say the surviving children told investigators Evans threatened them if they told anyone.

Evans pleaded guilty Friday to second-degree murder, aggravated child abuse and aggravated child abuse of a child younger than 8.

https://www.wmcactionnews5.com/2019/11/22/teen-babysitter-pleads-guilty-beating-year-old-girl-death/

Antonio Evans 2023 Information

Antonio Evans
Supervision Status:INCARCERATEDAssigned Location:HARDEMAN COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY
Combined Sentence(s) Length:30 YRS 0 MTHS 0 DAYSSupervision/Custody Level:MEDIUM
Sentence Begin Date:12/24/2015Sentence End Date:05/20/2044

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Antonio Evans is currently incarcerated at the Hardeman County Correctional Facility

Antonio Evans Release Date

Antonio Evans current release date is 2044

Christopher Endicott Teen Killer Murders Guardians

Christopher Endicott

Christopher Endicott was fifteen years old when he murdered his guardians in Kentucky. According to court documents the couple were granted guardianship of Christopher Endicott just a few months before the brutal double murder. The teen killer would fatally shoot the couple as they laid in bed before taking off with his girlfriend. Police would send off an Amber Alert and soon Christopher Endicott and his twelve year old girlfriend were found. Christopher Endicott would ultimately be sentenced to twenty years in prison

Christopher Endicott 2023 Information

Christopher Endicott
Name:ENDICOTT, CHRISTOPHER LEE 
Active Inmate
Parole Eligibility Date:3/05/2028
Maximum Expiration of Sentence Date:3/04/2031
Location:Green River Corr. Complex

Christopher Endicott More News

A 15-year-old boy accused of killing a Metcalfe County couple who had taken him in had disagreed with the victims about his relationship with a 12-year-old girl, family members said.

State police charged Christopher Endicott, 15, on Wednesday with murder in the deaths of Gary Holloway, 50, and Barbara Holloway, 51.

The Holloways were granted custody of Christopher in January, said state police Detective B.J. Burton, the lead investigator.

Burton said there was no allegation of abuse or an argument that might have sparked the violence

There is no indication of a possible motive other than that Christopher wanted to run away with his girlfriend, Burton said.

Family members of the victims said that Christopher had been getting in trouble at school for behavior such as talking back to teachers and that the Holloways didn’t want him seeing the girl.

Chesaney Dile, the girlfriend of Jason Smith, a relative of the Holloways, said the couple had taken away Christopher’s cell phone at night.

“I think he done it just for the simple fact he couldn’t get his way,” Dile said.

Still, Christopher had not displayed any violence toward the couple, and the killings came as a shock, said Elizabeth Osborn, who lives with the victims’ son, Stephen Holloway, in Metcalfe County.

“It breaks my heart ’cause none of us seen it coming,” Osborn, 28, said Wednesday, wiping her eyes.

The Holloways lived in a mobile home north of Edmonton with Christopher.

The boy’s father is in prison on theft and other charges, and his mother has been unreliable, Osborn and others said.

Gary Holloway had worked for many years at a dairy farm but was disabled because of emphysema. His wife cared for him.

The Holloways have taken in family members before to help them, and they did the same for Christopher, Osborn said.

Christopher, an eighth-grader, was Barbara Holloway’s second cousin.

Family members said the killings were thought to have happened about 3 a.m. Tuesday.

Family members said Gary Holloway had a 30-30 rifle that he had used to hunt deer. He kept the gun and shells in separate spots, they said.

Christopher found the shells, loaded the rifle and shot the Holloways in their bed as they slept, Osborn said.

Police said the rifle was empty when they found it, she said.

“He just unloaded on them,” she said.

The family had been putting coins and small bills in a water jug at the Holloways’ house to save for a camping trip.

Christopher took the jug and also took some money that Barbara Holloway kept under her pillow, Osborn said.

The couple was known for taking in animals no one else wanted, and had a black pug-chihuahua mix named Lola who slept with them.

Christopher either took the dog, or it jumped in the car with him when he left the Holloways’ mobile home in their 1997 Chevrolet Lumina after the shootings. He dropped off the dog at the adult day-care center in Edmonton where Barbara Holloway’s parents go, knowing someone would find it, Osborn said.

About 5 a.m., a girl that Christopher had been seeing, 12-year-old Kyra Shockley, was reported missing to police in Edmonton.

Family members of the Holloways said the girl lived near the center where Christopher dropped off the dog.

State police were later asked to join the search for Kyra.

Because police had information that Kyra might be with Christopher, police went to talk to the Holloways but got no answer.

Finally, Osborn said, she and Stephen Holloway went into his parents’ house between 3 and 3:30 p.m. Tuesday because they hadn’t been able to reach them by telephone. They found the couple dead in their bedroom.

Gary Holloway was lying beside the bed, and his wife was in bed.

Stephen Holloway first thought they might be sleeping, but his father’s arm was cold when he touched it, Osborn said.

The two ran outside and called 911.

“It’s unexplainable,” Osborn said of what she felt.

Preliminary autopsy reports show Gary Holloway died from several gunshot wounds, while Barbara Holloway was shot once in the head, state police said Wednesday.

Police issued an Amber Alert for Christopher and Kyra at 6:58 p.m. Tuesday because the two were missing and “possibly involved in a double homicide.” The Herald-Leader normally does not identify juveniles, but in this case both names were widely circulated as part of the alert.

A firefighter called state police about 10:40 p.m. Tuesday and said he was following the Holloways’ missing car.

When state police caught up with the vehicle, in Barren County, there was a short chase. The vehicle, which Christopher was driving, went off the road and through a fence.

Police caught Christopher and the girl after a short foot chase.

Burton said it wasn’t clear where the two juveniles were headed.

“They planned it,” Burton said of taking off, “but they hadn’t planned it that far.”

Police charged Christopher after interviewing him. Kyra was released to a parent.

In addition to murder, Christopher is charged with first-degree fleeing and evading police, first-degree wanton endangerment, reckless driving, driving without a license and third-degree criminal mischief.

He was being held in the Adair County Youth Development Center.

Police said the investigation is continuing, and more charges might be filed pending a grand jury hearing.

On Wednesday, family members gathered to clean up the couple’s home, burning their bed.

Gary Holloway liked to hunt and fish, and he and his wife were animal lovers and good people who were always willing to help others, family members said.

Their family was struggling to come to terms with the reality that the teen the Holloways took in is accused of killing them.

“I guess the first people to show him love, he didn’t know how to take it,” Osborn said.

https://www.kentucky.com/news/local/crime/article44085774.html

Christopher Endicott Other News

A judge has sentenced a 16-year-old boy who pleaded guilty to killing his guardians to 20 years in prison.

The Glasgow Daily Times reports that Christopher Endicott received the sentence during a hearing Tuesday in Metcalfe County.

He pleaded guilty in October in the 2011 slayings of his legal guardians, Gary and Barbara Holloway. The couple was found fatally shot in their Edmonton home. He also entered guilty pleas to robbery, tampering with evidence and fleeing from police.

Under the plea deal, a 20-year sentence was recommended. However, at the court hearing, prosecutors asked for life without parole and Endicott’s attorneys cited their client’s age in asking for probation.

The judge was not swayed, but he will re-evaluate the sentence when the boy reaches the age of 18.

https://www.wlky.com/article/teen-sentenced-to-20-years-in-double-slaying/3778007

Christopher Endicott FAQ

Christopher Endicott Now

Christopher Endicott is currently incarcerated at the Green River Correctional Facility

Christopher Endicott Release Date

Christopher Endicott current release date is 2031

Andrew Conley Teen Killer Murders Brother

Andrew Conley

Andrew Conley was seventeen years old when he murdered his ten year old brother. According to court documents Andrew would strangle his ten year old brother and when asked why he would do such a thing he would reply “It was like being hungry and seeing a cheeseburger”. This teen killer would be sentenced to life in prison with no parole

Andrew Conley 2023 Information

DOC Number218096
First NameANDREW
Middle Name
Last NameCONLEY
Suffix
Date of Birth05/14/1992
GenderMale
RaceWhite
Facility/LocationPendleton Correctional Facility
Earliest Possible Release Date *
*Offenders scheduled for release on a Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday are released on Monday. Offenders scheduled for release on a Thursday, Friday, Saturday or Sunday are released on Thursday. Offenders whose release date falls on a Holiday are released on the first working day prior to the Holiday.

Andrew Conley Other News

Convicted sibling murderer Andrew Conley wants a reduction in his life sentence.

His mother, changing from her stance nearly a decade ago, would also like him to walk free at some point.

Andrew Conley was just 17 when he strangled his 10-year-old brother Conner in their Rising Sun home as their parents were at work in 2009. The teen covered the boy’s head in a plastic bag, then moved the body to a wooded area near the city park. The next day, he walked into the local police department and confessed the crime.

In 2010, Conley pleaded guilty on the first day of the murder trial and received a sentence of life without parole for the fratricide. He’s been serving that punishment at the Pendleton Correctional Facility.

Andrew Conley appealed the sentence to the Indiana Supreme Court, which affirmed the life without parole sentence even though he was only 17 at the time of the killing.

Attorneys for Conley are now trying other avenues to give him a chance of seeing freedom at some point in his adult life. One of those ways is a change of heart by Conley’s mother.

In an amended pro se petition for post-conviction relief filed in Ohio County Circuit Court on October 12, public defenders Kathleen Cleary and Deidre Eltzroth argue that Bridget Conley has a right to be heard. 

“Bridget Conley, the mother of (Andrew) is also the mother of Conner and is therefore considered the victim in this case… She has a right to be heard at Conley’s evidentiary hearing as to her position on his sentence. She will tell the court that she has changed her position on Conley’s sentence, and she wants him re-sentenced to a term of years,” Cleary and Eltzroth state.

The attorneys also contend that Conley’s rights to effective legal counsel were violated.

Specifically, the attorneys say Andrew was denied right afforded under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments of the U.S. Constitution, as well as several sections of the Indiana Constitution.

The attorneys say Conley should have been advised by his 2010 trial counsel on the first day of the trial that he should plea guilty rather than present an available defense that he was guilty but mentally ill. That advice and Conley’s plea, they argue, was based on a false premise that Conley could not receive a life in prison sentence.

“Conley’s guilty plea was not knowing, intelligent or voluntary violating his rights,” the attorneys wrote in the petition. “Counsel performed deficiently by advising Conley to plead guilty in a proceeding which afforded him no sentencing benefit and effectively waived his right to a jury determination of his penalty.”

The petition also takes issue with Andrew Conley’s trial attorney not sufficiently cross-examining a pathologist and psychologist who testified at the sentencing hearing.

“Materially inaccurate information used to sentence Conley to life without parole includes information that he was a sociopath or psychopath, had sociopathic symptoms, that the victim was alive at the time the plastic bag was applied, and that the victim suffered a sexual assault,” Cleary and Eltzroth conclude.

Arguments will be heard in Ohio County court in December. The hearing could last more than a week as Conley’s appellate attorneys are planning to have multiple witnesses, including Bridget Conley, a psychologist, and a pathologist.

Dearborn-Ohio County Prosecutor Lynn Deddens said the state will fight any change in Andrew Conley’s sentence.

“We intend to vigorously defend the just sentence imposed by circuit court in 2010. His actions were just as heinous in 2010 as they are today,” said Deddens.

The prosecutor said she may also call witnesses to testify in favor of the life sentence.

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Andrew Conley
Andrew Conley

Andrew Conley Appeal

A Rising Sun teenager’s sentence of life without parole for killing his 10-year-old brother is under review by the Indiana Supreme Court.

Andrew Conley was 17 when he choked, suffocated and beat his brother Conner to death. In February, 12 years after the murder, a unanimous Court of Appeals ordered a new sentencing hearing. The court said Conley’s defense lawyers failed to present evidence that teenagers’ brains aren’t fully developed, and didn’t even bring up a U-S Supreme Court decision predating the murder which suggested life sentences for juveniles are inherently suspect. The court also faulted Conley’s attorneys for failing to present evidence of Conley’s mental health issues, including a history of abuse and neglect.

n oral arguments, the justices offered few clues to their view of the case. Justice Christopher Goff said the U-S Supreme Court ruling presents a major obstacle to upholding a life sentence. But Chief Justice Loretta Rush said her review of the lower court record appears to show Conley’s lawyers did raise the issues surrounding their client’s age, though not in as much detail as on appeal. She questioned whether there’s grounds to throw out Conley’s sentence on grounds which have been heard and rejected before.

Conley is one of just three Hoosiers serving life without parole for a crime committed as a minor. The others were convicted in the murder of a South Bend police officer, and a Muncie stickup attempt which ended in the murder of a Ball State student. But while the U-S Supreme Court took a dim view of treating minors as “the worst of the worst,” the high court stopped short of declaring life sentences at that age unconstitutional in all circumstances. In May, the justices declined to hear an appeal in the Muncie case which urged them to take that step.

https://www.1049waxi.com/2021/09/09/state-supreme-court-reviews-case-of-teen-convicted-of-killing-10-year-old-brother/

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Andrew Conley Now

Andrew Conley is currently incarcerated at the Pendleton Correctional Facility

Andrew Conley Release Date

Andrew Conley is serving life without parole

Levi Elliott Teen Killer Shoots Little Sister

Levi Elliott

Levi Elliott was fifteen years old when he fatally shot his twelve year old stepsister. According to court documents Levi Elliott would fatally shoot Sierra Elliott while his father and stepmother were out of town. Levi would leave the home and hitchhike to where his mother lived. Upon arrival she brought him to a police station to turn her son in. According to Levi Elliott someone broke into their home and shot his stepsister. However this teen killer would be convicted of murder and sentenced to thirty years in prison.

Levi Elliott 2023 Information

DOC ID1277847

Offender Name Levi S Elliott

RaceWhite

SexMale

Date of Birth02/10/1997

Height/Weight6’0″ / 165

Hair/EyesBlonde/Strawberry / Blue

Assigned Location Jefferson City Correctional Center

Sentence Summary30 Years (20, 5, 5 CS)

Active OffensesMURDER 2ND DEGREE; ARMED CRIMINAL ACTION; TAMPER WITH MOTOR VEH-1ST DEG

AliasesLevi Scott Adams (LEGAL NAME); Levi Elliott; Levi S Elliott; Levi Scott Elliott

Levi Elliott Other News

Levi Elliott who was 15 when he was accused of killing his younger stepsister has been convicted of second-degree murder.

KYTV reports a jury returned the verdict against 17-year-old Levi Elliott on Wednesday afternoon following a trial that began Monday. He was also convicted of armed criminal action and tampering with a vehicle.

Investigators said Levi Elliott shot 12-year-old Sierra Elliott at their Polk County home west of Bolivar in March 2012 while his father and stepmother were away. He then drove to Clinton and got a ride to Kansas City, where his mother took him to a police station.

Levi Elliott was tried as an adult in Benton County, where the trial was moved because of publicity about the case in Polk County. Sentencing is set for Dec. 19

Levi Elliott More News

It hits Joy Adams at some point every day.

Sometimes when she first wakes up, sometimes when she sees pictures of her son’s friends and sometimes when she runs into people she hasn’t seen for awhile and they casually ask: How’s Levi doing?

“It’s surreal, even after all this time,” Adams said. “There is still, every day, some point where it just hits me again. It is like a tidal wave. You think this can’t really be happening, this can’t really be our life.”

Adams’ son Levi Elliott is in prison.

He was convicted by a jury in October of fatally shooting his 12-year-old half-sister, Sierra, in rural Polk County.

Levi Elliott — now 18 — was 15 at the time of Sierra’s killing. He was tried as an adult and sentenced in January to spend the next 30 years in prison.

Adams left the courthouse in an ambulance after the verdict was returned in her son’s case. She said hearing “guilty” from the jury foreperson left her in a “catatonic state.”

Adams was almost equally shocked a few months later when a judge handed down the 30-year sentence.

“I was speechless,” Adams said. “My son has absolutely no criminal past… We didn’t see that sentence coming.”

Levi’s lawyer, Robert Calbi, said he was expecting a sentence more in the the 15-year range.

Once Adams started to come to terms with the verdict and the sentence, that initial shock was replaced with an intense drive to clear her son’s name.

“It’s fight mode,” Adams said. “I will spend every day of the rest of my life fighting for my son’s innocence.”

Adams was at a karaoke bar with friends on the night of March 24, 2012, when suddenly a warm feeling came over her body and a voice in her head told her to check her phone.

She looked down and saw that she had a dozen missed calls from Peggy Elliott — Sierra’s mother.

“I stepped outside and I called her,” Adams said. “I could not understand what she was saying. She was just — of course — sobbing, incoherent. And I kept saying ‘Peggy, I don’t understand what you are saying to me.’ And she was screaming ‘You do understand, your son shot my daughter in the head, and now she’s dead.’

“And that was the moment that our lives changed.”

Since she picked Levi up in Clinton that night three years ago and heard his account of the shooting, Adams has never wavered in her belief that her son is innocent. The jury’s verdict in October did nothing to sway a mother’s trust.

Levi Elliott’s version of the story goes like this:

•Levi and Sierra were home alone at their father’s house in rural Polk County on March 24, 2012 when an intruder came inside and shot Sierra.

•Levi got in his father’s truck and drove away, toward his mother’s house in Kansas City, as the intruder followed him.

•The intruder eventually changed routes, and Levi — low on gas by then — stopped in Clinton and called his mom to come pick him up.

Prosecutors argued that Levi shot Sierra and then fled the scene in his dad’s truck. The jury agreed.

Peggy Elliott has testified that although Sierra was unable to speak after the shooting, she was able to answer a question about whether Levi shot her by raising her hand to indicate a “yes” answer.

A small-caliber bullet was recovered from the girl’s head and was consistent with the bullets located inside the residence, a probable cause statement says.

Adams brought Levi to the police station in Kansas City that night back in 2012, and she said everything that happened next has left her disillusioned with the criminal justice system.

“It has completely changed the way that I see our police force, our judicial system, the courts,” Adams said. “It took the trust that I once had, and it shattered it.”

Adams said she and her lawyer are working toward appealing the verdict in Levi’s case. For now, however, she is trying to make the most of a tough situation

When Levi was first transported to prison after the trial, he was taken to Farmington Correctional Center, south of St. Louis.

Adams would make the five-hour drive to see her son every Saturday. And they would visit for a couple of hours as Levi sat in a caged room.

“I put on a face while I am in there,” Adams said. “And then I cry when I leave.”

About two months ago, Levi was transferred to Crossroads Correctional Center in Cameron — about an hour away from Adams’ home in northern Kansas City.

Now Adams can have four-hour “contact” visits with her son every Saturday where they talk and play cards. She said he is in a better situation, but it still breaks her heart to see him in jail.

Adams said Levi is stoic during their visits and he does his best to shield her from any negative emotions.

But she worries.

Adams said she feels guilty going out to eat or doing something fun out of fear that Levi will feel like he is being forgotten.

Levi’s case consumes Adams, but for a long time she had a place to go during the day to get away from the legal troubles. Adams said she kept her personal struggles separate from her work at a doctor’s office in Kansas City for as long as she could, but eventually co-workers started seeing her son’s mugshot on the news.

Adams said one day she called a meeting before work and spilled everything to her co-workers.

“I just really didn’t want to delve into it,” Adams said. “I think more than anything I didn’t want pity. I didn’t want people to look at me and treat me differently than they had for 10 years.”

Adams said her only goal now is to make sure her son has a future.

“If I can’t get this turned around, he will never have a wife, he will never have children, he will never know the love that we are intended to know,” Adams said. “It breaks my heart.”

Adams said her heart also breaks for Sierra, and she can’t imagine how tough the past three years have been on her ex-husband James and his wife Peggy — Sierra’s parents.

Adams said Sierra’s death and Levi’s conviction have shaken her faith in God, and split her family

Prior to the shooting, Adams had virtually no relationship with her daughter, Ashley Elliott.

Over the past three years, however, Adams and Ashley have grown closer. Adams frequently helps care for Ashley’s young daughter.

Ashley — who also believes Levi is innocent — said she now has no contact with her father or anyone on that side of her family.

“The first time I got the call, it was ‘Your sister has been shot, your brother is missing,'”Ashley said. “I thought it was a joke… It was very surreal. It was like your entire world stops in five minutes and everything around you keeps moving.”

Ashley said she has gone to visit Levi frequently over the last few months, and he beams when he gets to hold his niece. Ashley just wishes Levi got to be an uncle for more than four hours per week.

Adams said even after 18 years and a murder trial, she still sees Levi as a kid.

She said she can barely breathe — when that moment hits her each day and she realizes her son is facing 30 years in prison.

Levi’s lawyer said he is in contact with Adams on a regular basis and he has been impressed with her drive.

“She is a mom that believes her child has been wronged and is doing everything in her power to see that changed,” Calbi said. “Her resolve has been as strong today as when this whole thing started.”

Adams said she would switch places with Levi in a heartbeat. But for now all she can do is fight for her son.

“He is my youngest,” Adams said. “He has always been my baby.”

https://www.news-leader.com/story/news/local/ozarks/2015/05/10/mother-convicted-teen-really-life/27086847/

Levi Elliott FAQ

Levi Elliott Now

Levi Elliott is currently incarcerated at the Jefferson City Correctional Center

Levi Elliott Release Date

Levi Elliott is scheduled for release in 2044

Edgar Concepcion Teen Killer Murders 3 Year Old Child

Edgar Concepcion

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

Edgar Concepcion 2023 Information

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

Edgar Concepcion Other News

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Edgar Concepcion Other News

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Edgar Concepcion Now

Edgar Concepcion is currently incarcerated at the Iowa State Penitentiary

Edgar Concepcion Release Date

Edgar Concepcion is serving a life sentence