Erick Blackerby Teen Killer Murders Teenager

Erick Blackerby teen killer

Erick Blackerby was sixteen years old when he beat to death another teenager with a baseball bat. According to court documents Eric Blackerby was watching his brother fight the victim when he jumped in and struck the victim with a baseball bat causing his death. This teen killer would be convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison

Eric Blackerby 2023 Information

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Inmate: BLACKERBY, ERIC MATTHEW
AIS: 00310930
  
Institution: STATON CORRECTIONAL CENTER

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Eric Blackerby was sentenced Tuesday to spend his life in prison for killing another teen with a baseball bat in 2015.

Eric Blackerby was found guilty of murder after a three-day trial in August. He was sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole by Shelby County Circuit Judge William Bostick, III.

“Mr. Blackerby, you’re the person parents fear the worst,” Bostick said before announcing the sentence. “You brought that bat knowing what would happen.”

Erskine Mathis, one of 18-year-old Erick Blackerby’s lawyers, said in court he would appeal the sentence.

Erick Blackerby briefly spoke before being sentenced. “I’m very sorry for the family’s loss, and I do hope the best for them. I’m very sorry.”

The Alabaster teen was just 16 when he was arrested and charged in the death of 19-year-old William Allen Neff.

Neff was beaten to death during a fight at a popular teen hangout spot called “The Slab” in Shelby County. Erick Blackerby was initially charged with first-degree assault, but the charge was upgraded to murder after Neff died two days later.

“He took his bat, and swung it with full force,” Shelby County Deputy District Attorney Roger Hepburn said during opening statements. “He unnecessarily… cruelly killed somebody with that bat. And that’s why we’re here.”

Information presented at trial showed the fight on July 28, 2015 started after Erick Blackerby’s older brother and Neff got into a verbal altercation over a girl they both knew. The two boys arranged the fight at The Slab, and the younger Blackerby attended along with about nine of their friends. Hepburn said during the fight, Neff was losing– he was lying on the ground, with the older Blackerby brother on top of him, when the younger Blackerby brother (Eric) jumped in the fight and and hit Neff with an aluminum baseball bat.

Several other teenagers who were present the night of the fight testified during the trial, along with the Blackerby brothers.

Neff’s mother, Taleigha Palmer, spoke at Tuesday’s sentencing. “My brain doesn’t really work as well as it used to. My heart is always hurting,” she said. She said Neff’s father, Vann, died about a month before the trial began. He had a heart condition, but Palmer said Neff’s death exacerbated his health problems.

She also read a letter from her son John, one of Neff’s brothers. He wrote, “It’s been two years since my little brother was killed… At first, you think of the obvious things… he’ll never marry, he’ll never have children, he’ll never get to grow up.” John’s letter continued, “We’ll never get to argue about movies, or embarrass each other in front of a new girlfriend.” John said a “lifetime of small joys and small moments” is what he misses most about his brother.

Numerous people spoke for Blackerby at the hearing, including the former director of Shelby County juvenile court, John Miller. He said he met Erick Blackerby when the teen was 15 and had been arrested for being a minor in possession of alcohol. Because Blackerby had no prior arrests, he was allowed to participate in a program and avoid prosecution. Miller said during that year he worked with Blackerby, the teen was “respectful, fully compliant, and on time.” He described the teen as “likable, smart, and compassionate” and said he “always took up for the underdog.”

Erick Blackerby’s girlfriend’s father Tom Underhill also spoke on behalf of Blackerby. He said Blackerby is a “very dedicated and hard working young man,” and said he only misses work to attend his daughter’s doctors visits. She is pregnant with Blackerby’s first child.

Two other family friends spoke, and said Erick Blackerby is a kind teenager who made a grave mistake.

Mathis argued at trial Erick Blackerby was afraid of Neff and took the bat to the fight for protection. Mathis said Blackerby was a small teen, and had a “16-year-old brain,” with premature thoughts and logic. “He had no intention of killing anyone. But, unfortunately, he did kill someone,” Mathis said.

Erick Blackerby said at his trial he hit Neff at least twice, and the coroner’s report showed one of those hits was fatal.

An indictment stating Neff died of numerous hits to the head was corrected before trial, and the judge denied hearing a second youthful offender hearing based on the fact that only one hit was the cause of death.

The jury did receive instructions on a self-defense claim, but denied that charge and opted to convict the teen of intentional murder

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Eric Blackerby is currently incarcerated at the Ventress Correctional Center

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Amy Lee Black Teen Killer Murders Man During Robbery

Amy Lee Black Teen Killer

Amy Lee Black was just sixteen when she and her boyfriend robbed and murdered a man in Michigan.  According to court documents Amy Lee Black and her boyfriend Jeff Abrahamson were drinking with the victim at their apartment when an argument broke out. Amy Lee Black would strike the victim over the head with a whiskey bottle. The teen killers would lead the victim out of their home and into a vehicle. They brought the victim to a secluded area where Jeff then stabbed the man to death.

Three days later the teenage couple would be arrested while they slept. Both Amy Lee Black and Jeff Abrahamson would be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Amy Lee Black 2023 Information

Amy Lee Black – Current Facility – Women’s Huron Valley Correctional Facility (WHV)

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Barb VanBogelen was thrilled to hear of Tuesday’s Michigan Supreme Court decision keeping in prison inmates serving no-parole life sentences in connection with murders committed at 17 and younger. Nearly 25 years ago, one of those inmates – Amy Lee Black, then 16 – participated in the robbery and murder of VanBogelen’s husband, 34-year-old David John VanBogelen. “I’m so excited,” Barb VanBogelen said late Tuesday afternoon, July 8, shortly after the high-court decision was announced. “This is what we wanted all along.” In a 4-3 decision, the high court ruled that juveniles sentenced before June 2012 to life without parole for murder won’t get new hearings that could have led some to their release.

One of those affected is Black, now a 40-year-old inmate at Huron Valley Complex Women’s Correctional Facility in Ypsilanti. She’s serving a sentence of life without chance of parole for first-degree premeditated murder. A jury convicted Black of first-degree murder as an aider and abettor in the Dec. 7, 1990, stabbing death of David VanBogelen of Sullivan Township, whom she and her boyfriend had met in a restaurant and decided to rob. She was sentenced in 1991 to life in prison without chance of parole, as Michigan law required. That made her Muskegon County’s only female “juvie lifer” and one of only 10 in Michigan. In addition to aiding 19-year-old Jeff Abrahamson, the confessed stabber, Black confessed to personally bashing VanBogelen in the head repeatedly with a square-sided whiskey bottle earlier in the evening, inflicting wounds a medical examiner said could also have proven fatal.

When he died, VanBogelen left his wife, their 7-year-old daughter, Amanda, and 12-year-old son, David. The U.S. Supreme Court in June 2012 ruled that laws, like Michigan’s, that mandated life-without-parole sentences for juvenile defendants are unconstitutional, although such sentences can still be imposed as long as judges are allowed to decide the issue. But the nation’s high court didn’t state whether the decision was retroactive to convicts who had already been sentenced under such laws. Black filed a motion for relief from her no-parole sentence based on the U.S. Supreme Court ruling. Muskegon County 14th Circuit Judge Timothy G. Hicks in March 2013 declined to rule on her motion until the Michigan high court decided the issue of retroactivity. On Tuesday, the court did so, declaring the ruling was not retroactive.

That appears to end Black’s hopes of being resentenced. That’s fine with Barb VanBogelen. “Just because you’re 16 doesn’t give you the right to commit a murder and then say, ‘Whoops, I’m too young,’” she said. “Juveniles need to realize if you’re going to do a crime, you need to pay the time. “She (Black) was not mentally incompetent. Nobody forced her, and to cry afterward – tough luck. We’ve cried many, many, many a tear over all this,” VanBogelen said. She believes the state supreme court made the right decision. “I’m glad they realized that you can’t go backwards,” she said. “You can make a law that goes forward, but you can’t go back and change the law backwards to accommodate a few people.

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In the wee hours of Dec. 7, 1990, teenagers Amy Lee Black and Jeff Abrahamson met a visibly drunk, cash-flashing stranger in a Muskegon Heights restaurant.

It was a fateful meeting for all three.

By dawn of that Pearl Harbor Day, 34-year-old Dave VanBogelen, of Sullivan Township, lay dead on a remote rural two-track — his head bludgeoned, his body pierced by multiple stab wounds.

By the next Fourth of July, both teens had been sentenced to prison until the day they die.

Black was 16 years and six months old at the time of the crime, a relative newcomer to Muskegon after leaving her mother’s Kalamazoo home.

Today she’s 37, an unhappy resident of the Women’s Huron Valley Correctional Facility near Ypsilanti.

She is one of only 10 female “juvenile lifers” in Michigan.

Black was not the one who stabbed VanBogelen to death. Her 19-year-old boyfriend confessed to that. But she did play a role in the events of that night.

Amy Lee Black has given two conflicting accounts of how deep that role was, starting with a detailed early confession that she recanted in testimony at her May 1991 trial. The jurors and sentencing judge believed her confession, not her second version, which she maintains to this day.

At a minimum: She does admit striking the victim’s head with a heavy whiskey bottle in the couple’s Muskegon Heights apartment, blows that the Muskegon County medical examiner testified could also have led to his death. She accompanied Abrahamson as he helped the disoriented, bleeding victim down stairs and into VanBogelen’s pickup truck. She rode along as Abrahamson drove to the secluded spot near Brooks and Ellis roads, where he repeatedly stabbed VanBogelen

Afterward, Black helped clean up the couple’s blood-spattered apartment. After discarding a gory sofa and other items, the two fled in the victim’s truck to her uncle’s home in Barry County, where police caught up to them three days later while they slept.

Amy Lee Black has always said she didn’t expect Abrahamson to kill VanBogelen.

Today, as in her trial, she blames the events of the night on Abrahamson and says she went along because she was afraid of him. She describes herself as a passive, unwilling participant, her chief fault being a failure to break away and let someone know what was happening. She attributes that to her youth, her dependence on her boyfriend and her failure to understand that she had “options.”

My role basically was that, as Jeff’s girlfriend, I was there with him,” she said in an Oct. 4 interview in Huron Valley’s visiting room. “And the crimes that he committed, I should have told somebody.”

That account contradicts the half-hour taped statement she gave police at her own request shortly after the two were arrested and brought to Muskegon. A transcript is in her court file.

In it, although she said Abrahamson surprised her by ultimately stabbing the victim — she supposedly thought they were just going to drop him off and steal his truck — she said that she plotted with her boyfriend in the restaurant to lure the drunken stranger to their nearby apartment to rob him; repeatedly bashed VanBogelen’s head with a square-bottomed bottle when he wouldn’t pass out from drinking; took cash from his jacket pocket; and “held his head down” in the truck as they drove into the country.

They got about $1,500 cash from VanBogelen, some of which she spent on new clothes, she told police.

In the confession, she attributed her actions to “money,” adding, “I always wanted to know if you could just kill somebody and, and, and the cops not know that it was you. I did. I always wondered that. I never, never thought I’d do it — do nothing like that, though. And, especially, I didn’t kill him, but I helped out my fair share.”

Testifying at her trial, though, she blamed Abrahamson for everything. She admitted hitting the victim with a bottle but said her boyfriend made her do it, after he first broke a bottle over VanBogelen’s head.

Jurors, after hearing both versions, took less than two hours to find her guilty of premeditated murder and armed robbery, as an aider and abettor.

Amy Lee Black maintains she falsely confessed because Abrahamson had repeatedly urged her to do so in the event that they were caught. His idea, she says, was to exaggerate her role and minimize his because she was a juvenile.

“He had explained to me that, because I was young, I wouldn’t (be charged as an adult), and they couldn’t hold me responsible,” she said in the Chronicle interview.

“When you’re young you believe things, stars and stripes and balloons and birds and puppy dogs. Now I think I can’t believe I was that stupid to believe those things.

Under Michigan law as it stood at the time, Amy Lee Black was tried as an adult, but it was then up to the trial judge to decide whether to sentence her as an adult or juvenile.

If the decision was adult, the sentence had to be life without chance of parole; if juvenile, she’d have to be freed when she turned 21 — less than four years after her July 3, 1991, sentencing. The judge had no middle course.

Muskegon County 14th Circuit Judge Ronald H. Pannucci made his decision after an hours-long sentence hearing. He heard testimony from psychologists, probation officers who had conducted a pre-sentence investigation, social-service workers and others.

A Spring Lake psychologist who tested, interviewed and evaluated Black testified that he believed her to have a manipulative, “sociopathic personality,” without empathy for others, and “the mental maturity of an adult.” He said Amy Lee Black had a poor prognosis for rehabilitation and needed decades in a highly structured environment.

State probation agents and Department of Social Service workers also recommended an adult sentence.

On the other side, two Community Mental Health therapists who had repeatedly counseled Amy Lee Black in jail called her a troubled teen who was remorseful and capable of reform, criticizing the “sociopath” label as inappropriate for one so young. The Muskegon County Jail chaplain also said Black was remorseful. All advocated a juvenile sentence.

At the end of the hearing Pannucci made his decision, based on testimony at the trial and the sentence hearing: an adult sentence was required.

And that meant life without parole.

https://www.mlive.com/news/muskegon/2011/11/amy_lee_black_troubled_teen_gi.html

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Amy Lee Black is currently incarcerated at the Women’s Huron Valley Correctional Facility (WHV)

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Cassie Bjorge Teen Killer Murders Grandparents

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Cassie Bjorge was seventeen years old when along with her eighteen year old boyfriend Johnny Rider murdered her Grandparents.

According to court documents Cassandra Bjorge and Johnny Rider planned the double murders for days before the killing actually took place. On the night of the murders they waited for her Grandparents to go to sleep and then they attacked. Johnny Rider attacked the Grandfather and Cassie Bjorge would drag her Grandmother into the bedroom and began to assault her. The elderly couple would have their throats slit.

The teens would then barricade the bedroom and invite friends over for a party. Police believe the two teen killers stayed in the home for days after the murders. On top of the murder of her Grandparents the teen killers had planned to kill Johnny Rider’s mother and sister.

The two teens would both be sentenced to life in prison

Cassie Bjorge 2024 Information

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NAME: BJORGE, CASSANDRA

GDC ID: 1002246318

YOB: 2000
RACE: WHITE
GENDER: FEMALE
HEIGHT: 5’03”
WEIGHT: 120
EYE COLOR: BROWN
HAIR COLOR: BROWN

MAJOR OFFENSE: MURDER
MOST RECENT INSTITUTION: ARRENDALE STATE PRISON
MAX POSSIBLE RELEASE DATE: LIFE

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A Georgia teen who allegedly confessed to killing her grandparents with her boyfriend, sealing up their room and then hosting a party for unsuspecting friends, also planned to kill several other people WSB-TV reports.

According to WSB-TV, Cassie Bjorge, 17, and her boyfriend, Johnny Rider, 18, planned the murders of her grandparents for days and thought out details such as caulking the doors shut in the house to keep the odor of death from being detected outside.

Gwinnett County Police Detective Dave Brucz told WSB-TV the teens waited outside Bjorge’s grandparent’s home for the lights to go out, then snuck into the couple’s bedrooms.

“Johnny began to attack the grandfather, Cassie then said she had a surge of energy,” Brucz said in court Wednesday. “She then dragged her grandmother into her grandfather’s bedroom, she was duct taped.”

Investigators say the teens then beat the grandparents, Randall and Wendy Bjorge, before slicing their throats and leaving them for dead.

According to the report, Cassie Bjorge confessed to staying in the home and smoking pot for a few days after the murders. She even invited friends over for a party — friends who had no idea what had happened.

Police say Bjorge confessed that she went as far as pretending to be her grandmother via text message so family wouldn’t suspect anything was wrong.

“She admitted after the murder she was texting family members because they were worried about them, and she was pretending to be Wendy,” Brucz told the courtroom.

WSB-TV reports the teens are not only accused of killing, Bjorge’s grandparents, but they are also of trying to kill Rider’s sister and boyfriend.

“She also said they were planning on killing Johnny’s family and there were plans on killing her mother also,” Brucz also told the courtroom.

Police told WSB-TV that Bjorge believed her grandparents had become too strict.

“She had basically had enough of her grandparents,” Brucz said.

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A 17-year old girl and her boyfriend received life in prison on Friday for the 2017 murder of her grandparents, reports WSB-TV

Cassandra Bjorge and her boyfriend, Johnny Hiro Rider, pleaded guilty to stabbing and bludgeoning Bjorge’s grandparents to death with a tire iron.

In court Monday, Rider asked for forgiveness and described his actions as “evil,” WSB-TV reports.

“I know what I have done is abominable and evil and is deserving of hellfire,” Rider said. “I would like to express my deepest apologies to the Bjorge family. I’m so sorry for the pain and grief I have caused all of you.”

Bjorge did not speak. 

According to the station, police say the teens used a tire iron, hammer, baseball bat and butcher knives to kill the couple, then caulked doors inside the home to attempt to keep the smell of the bodies inside.  A detective testified last April that Bjorge and Rider stayed in the home smoking pot and partying with friends for several days while Randall and Wendy Bjorge’s bodies laid upstairs. 

Gwinnett County Homicide Detective Dave Brucz reportedly testified last year that Bjorge confessed to the crime.

Johnny began to attack the grandfather,” testified Brucz, “Cassie then said that she basically had a surge of energy. She then dragged her grandmother into her grandfather’s bedroom. She was duct-taped.”

Police also reportedly say that Bjorge and Rider planned to kill several other people, including Rider’s family and Bjorge’s mother, but that Rider backed out of the plan. They are, however, accused of trying to kill Rider’s sister and her boyfriend.

Rider’s sister escaped, and that led to the teens’ capture more than a week after the grandparents’ murders.

https://www.gwinnettdailypost.com/local/gwinnett-teens-get-life-sentences-after-pleading-guilty-to-murder-of-grandparents/article_92faa761-e2e9-5ac2-8445-4db85b751679.html

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Robert And Michael Bever Teen Killers

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Robert and Michael Bever are a pair of brothers who would murder their parents and three siblings in a case that shocked in Oklahoma. According to court documents the two teen killers wanted to undertake a mass shooting outside of the home that would rival the Columbine massacre but instead they took it out on their own family. The parents of the two brothers as well as three younger siblings would all be murdered by knife wounds. Both of the brothers were tried, convicted and sentenced to life in prison terms

Robert And Michael Bever 2023 Information

Gender: Male

Race: White

Height: 5 ft 8 in

Weight: 132 lbs

Hair Color: Brown

Eye Color: Blue


Alias: Michael Bever


OK DOC#: 793381Birth Date: 11/4/1998


Current Facility: LEXINGTON CORRECTIONAL CENTER, LEXIN

Reception Date: 8/20/2018

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Robert Bever

Gender: Male

Race: White

Height: 5 ft 10 in

Weight: 132 lbs

Hair Color: Brown

Eye Color: Hazel



OK DOC#: 748422Birth Date: 9/17/1996


Current Facility: JOSEPH HARP CORRECTIONAL CENTER, LEXIN

Reception Date: 9/29/2016

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Evidence released Friday from the investigation into the Bever family murders includes chilling images of the brothers just after their 2015 arrest, childlike drawings inside Michael Bever’s jailhouse journal and a heartbreaking 911 recording of one of the young victims begging for help.

Michael Bever was convicted last week of killing his parents and three siblings and attacking another sister who survived. A jury has recommended he be sentenced to life in prison with a chance at parole.

His older brother, Robert, pleaded guilty to the same charges and is serving five life sentences.

Among the evidence is a red composition notebook in which Michael Bever made crayon drawings while behind bars at the Tulsa County Jail.

He often drew about death, the murders of his family and other killers he admired, including Colorado movie theater shooter James Holmes and cult leader Jim Jones.

In his initial police interview, Michael says he only stabbed one of his brothers but later admits to stabbing his mother, cutting his finger in the process.

Michael said he pretended to try to help his brothers and sisters but really tricked them until Robert could kill them. When asked how he felt about the attack hours later, he told the detective he didn’t want to think about it.

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One of two Broken Arrow brothers who are imprisoned for the murders of five family members was assigned additional life sentences this year.

Robert Bever, now 24, was ordered to serve three life sentences on top of his six others after he attempted to attack prison staff in July 2019 with an 8-inch long “sharpened instrument.”

One of the two staff members Bever approached at Joseph Harp Correctional Center, a social services specialist, wrapped him in a bear hug and ordered him to drop the weapon, a report states.

Information on whether the confrontation resulted in injury to staff or the inmate was redacted in the report, but Bever was charged with two counts of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon and one count of possessing a weapon in a penal institution.

He was convicted upon pleading guilty in August, and a Cleveland County judge ordered him to serve three concurrent life sentences that will run consecutively to his previously earned life sentences.

Bever and his younger brother, Michael Bever, plotted for at least a year to kill their family and start a mass-killing spree.

They murdered five of their family members and critically injured another in 2015 before fleeing from police. The teenage sister survived, and the youngest sibling, age 2, was discovered alive in the home, unharmed and apparently forgotten by the brothers.

Parents David Bever, 52, and April Bever, 44, along with three of their children, Daniel Bever, 12, Christopher Bever, 7, and Victoria Bever, 5, died in the attack.

Police found Robert and Michael Bever nearby.

Robert Bever, then 18, was convicted a year later of five counts of first-degree murder and one count of assault and battery with a deadly weapon. He received five life sentences without parole and a life sentence with the possibility of parole.

Michael Bever, 16 at the time of the attack, was convicted in 2018 of five counts of first-degree murder and one count of assault with intent to kill. He received five life sentences and one 28-year sentence. He’s now 22.

The two surviving children were adopted by a Tulsa family, and the Bever home was demolished, making way for a neighborhood park that was dedicated in 2019.

The brothers remain in the Joseph Harp Correctional Center in Lexington, according to online DOC records.

https://tulsaworld.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/broken-arrow-family-killer-robert-bever-gets-additional-life-sentences-for-attempted-attack-on-prison/article_bc799210-290c-11eb-87dd-03c07f6bd5ae.html

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 A new ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday may be used in a Tulsa County murder case.

The ruling would make it easier to sentence minors convicted of murder to life in prison without possibility of parole.

The Supreme Court will no longer require that in order to sentence a juvenile to life in prison without the possibility of parole, a judge or jury would have to determine the defendant is both permanently incorrigible and irreparably corrupt.

Now, a minor can be sentenced based off circumstances of the case alone.

Tulsa County District Attorney Steve Kunzweiler said this gives him the opportunity to get the possibility of parole revoked for Michael Bever, who was convicted of brutally stabbing his parents and three siblings to death in 2015 and attacking a sister who survived

Michael was 15 at the time of the murders. His older brother, Robert Bever, pleaded guilty to the murders and was sentenced to life in prison without parole.

The judge sentenced Michael to consecutively serve five life terms, each estimated at 45 years, in addition to 28 years for the assault. He currently has the possibility of parole, but not until he serves 85% of his more than 200-year sentence.

Kunzweiler released the following statement on Friday:

Yesterday the United States Supreme Court rendered a decision which clarified the standard upon which murder defendants who are under the age of 18 should be evaluated when it comes to sentencing. Specifically, the Supreme Court ruled that it was unnecessary to determine a murderer under 18 was “permanently incorrigible” in order to be sentenced to life without the possibility of parole. This is a significant ruling because the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals adopted the “permanently incorrigible” standard just prior to the completion of the Michael Bever jury trial. Mr. Bever was charged along with his brother Robert Bever with murdering five members of their immediate family and nearly killing a sixth. The jury in the Michael Bever case was instructed that he had to be found “permanently incorrigible” in order to be sentenced to life without the possibility of parole. Our office will review the Supreme Court’s ruling to evaluate whether we have any avenue to revisit his sentence, which was five life sentences (with the possibility of parole). I have long stated that I do not believe that he should ever be released from prison based upon his role in the deaths of his family members. If there is a judicial path to reconsider his sentences, we will pursue it. Certainly, based upon this ruling I believe the Oklahoma legislature should enact legislation to correspond Oklahoma’s murder sentencing laws with the Supreme Court’s pronouncement.

https://ktul.com/news/local/supreme-court-ruling-michael-bever

Daniel Bartlam Teen Killer Murders Mother

Daniel Bartlam Teen Killer

Daniel Bartlam was just fourteen years old when he went into his mothers room and struck her repeatedly with a hammer before setting the house on fire. Bartlam would originally tell police that someone had broken into the home but soon the story fell through. Police would find a story that this teen killer had written which basically described step by step the murder that took place. Daniel Bartlam would be sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for seventeen years

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Daniel Bartlam was dubbed the “Coronation Street killer” after beating his mother Jacqueline to death with a claw hammer at their home in 2011.

He then padded the 47-year old’s body with paper, doused it in petrol and set the house alight in a bid to cover his tracks.

At Daniel Bartlam trial it was revealed the youngster had copied a storyline from the ITV soap, which he loved.

Videos of the murdering Corrie character John Stape, with whom he was obsessed, were found on the teenager’s computer. Daniel Bartlam, now 22, was jailed for life in April 2012.

Trial judge Mr Justice Flaux told him the killing was “grotesque and senseless” and ordered him to serve a minimum of 16 years.

But now Jacqueline’s partner Simon Matters has received a letter from the Ministry of Justice telling him that Daniel Bartlam is to have his sentence reviewed as he has moved to an adult prison.

Simon says he is “horrified” by the decision, which he believes means his stepson may be out in as little as two years.

The 49-year-old added: “I am absolutely and utterly against this. I don’t believe that he can be rehabilitated.”

The letter from the Ministry of Justice reads: “This review will look at whether his tariff can be reduced as the belief is that a youngster has the ability to change more rapidly than adult offenders.”

It reveals that the review will happen late this year or early next, and adds: “You have the right to submit a victim personal statement for the High Court to consider.”

Simon said: “I was always told categorically that he would serve his 16 years. I thought he’d come out in 2028 and that would be it and I’d cross that bridge in 2028.

“I never thought I’d be crossing that bridge this year or next year.”

Simon met Land Registry worker Jacqueline, from Redhill, Notts, on a night out in 2008.

He began to spend time with Daniel and his little brother, Jacqueline’s sons from a previous marriage. But as their relationship progressed, Simon began to find Bartlam’s behaviour odd.

He discovered soiled towels in the teenager’s room, as well as a huge stack of secret 18-rated horror movies like Saw.

To his disgust, he also discovered some of Jacqueline’s underwear stashed in a briefcase.

The arguments between Daniel and his mum escalated, with Simon having to step in to prevent Bartlam hitting her. Simon said: “There was a weakness on Jacqui’s part to stand up to him.

“There was probably a bit of a hole in the parenting, but then who was I to judge?”

Daniel became increasingly introverted and would sit in his room, writing violent stories.

In one, he described a character called Daniel Bartlam who killed his mother with a hammer.

The shocking fantasy became horrifying reality on April 25, 2011, when Simon had been working away for two weeks.

Returning home on Easter Monday, he saw on the TV news that there had been a fire in Nottingham and immediately thought: “Daniel.”

Now, Simon is terrified that twisted Daniel Bartlam has tricked prison officials with his good behaviour.

He said: “With what he did, and the horrific nature of it, and the way he was so manipulative, my only fear is the fact that he will have manipulated the Parole Board and pretended he’s better.

“That’s my only fear. I don’t fear him.”

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After fire ravaged a house in the quiet suburban street of Georgia Drive, Redhill, neighbours learned doting mum Jacqui Bartlam had been found dead inside.

One said at the time “you see things like that on the TV but when you know the person, you just can’t believe it”.

The fire was no accident. Police found Jacqui, 47, had died from head injuries and they were treating her death as murder.

Soon their attention turned her own son – 14-year-old Daniel Bartlam.

Bartlam lived with his mother, younger brother and dog in Georgia Drive.

He was a member of a film club, liked Star Wars, Doctor Who and playing games on his computer.

But he had developed an obsession with Coronation Street villain John Stape, who battered stalker Charlotte Hoyle with a hammer before leaving her body in the wreckage of a tram crash to cover up his crime.

Bartlam immersed himself in his fantasy world to such an extent the boundaries between real life and fiction became tragically blurred, the court at his trial had heard.

On Easter Monday 2011, he acted out a script he had written on his computer – about a boy called Daniel Bartlam who bludgeoned his mother to death.

As his mother lay in bed, Bartlam struck her seven times on the head and face with a claw hammer.

Then he rolled her body onto the floor, packed newspaper around it, poured petrol on it and set it on fire.

Bartlam left a lump hammer nearby, making it appear as though it was dumped by an intruder who had escaped out of the window.

He then wiped the weapon he had used with cleaning fluid and hid it in his bedroom, before he escaped with his brother and dog from the burning house

Like the boy in his play, Daniel pretended to police that the attack had been by an intruder.

But unlike the ending to his fictional play, Bartlam did not get away with murder.

He was convicted by a jury.

The judge gave him a life sentence and ordered he serve a minimum of 16 years before parole, and he described it as a “grotesque and senseless killing”.

“Unfortunately for you it was more difficult to destroy a body than you thought and the pathologist, who examined your mother’s body, was able to say with certainty that the attack had been with a claw hammer, rather than the lump hammer you left in the room,” he said.

Bartlam told police the intruder attacked his mum, but police found versions of the script on his computer.

Realising the finger of suspicion would turn on him, he admitted he killed his mother, but claimed that he had been driven to it by her physical and verbal abuse.

This gave him a defence in law of “loss of control” which, if proved, would reduce an allegation of murder to manslaughter.

But, by their unanimous guilty verdict to murder, the jury rejected his defence.

The judge said: “Whilst there clearly were arguments between you and your mother, not untypical between mothers and their teenage children, I am quite satisfied there was no physical or verbal abuse by your mother, such as you alleged in your evidence at trial.”

At the time the Post asked for reporting restrictions to be lifted that prevented Bartlam, then 15, from being named.https://get-latest.convrse.media/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.nottinghampost.com%2Fnews%2Flocal-news%2Fchilling-story-behind-nottinghamshire-boy-4603792&cre=bottom&cip=31&view=web

Bartlam had attended independent primary school Greenholme, Lenton, and then Dagfa School, Beeston.

He moved to Christ the King School, Arnold, after his parents’ divorce.

The court heard in 2010 he was reported missing from home by his mother and was found by police walking around Nuthall.

In May of that year, he was referred to a school counsellor after an incident in class, where he became upset and began shouting and screaming at his tie which he called “Fred”. He told classmates that his tie was trying to hurt him.

Daniel Bartlam revealed during counselling he was having bad dreams, felt sad and angry and was hearing voices telling him to act.

Shaun Smith QC, who prosecuted the case in 2012, had told Nottingham Crown Court: “He said the ‘voice’ tells him to hurt particular people who have upset him and made him angry and that he was almost fully controlled by it and finding it hard to resist.”

By March 2011, just six weeks before the killing, a mental health assessment was carried out at Thorneywood Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services. It said Bartlam demonstrated no mental illness and he was judged as being little or no risk or threat to himself or others, the court was told.

Before his trial, Daniel Bartlam was examined by mental health experts for the prosecution and defence and they agreed that he did not have a psychiatric or psychological condition.

https://www.nottinghampost.com/news/local-news/chilling-story-behind-nottinghamshire-boy-4603792