Shalin Alltus Teen Killer Murders Uncle

Shalin Alltus Teen Killer

Shalin Alltus and her boyfriend Parker Bachtold would shoot and kill her uncle in Washington State. According to court documents Shalin Alltus and Parker Bachtold were staying on her uncle’s property and believed that the uncle was trying to end their relationship so they decided to kill him. After shooting the victim the teen killers would flee the property. Shalin Alltus and Parker Bachtold were both convicted of the murder and sentenced to thirty eight years in prison.

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393403 ALLTUS, SHALIN E Washington Corrections Center for Women

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A five-day trial didn’t reveal why two teenagers shot and killed 39-year-old Patrick Alltus at his Riverside home on Sept. 30, 2014.

But an Okanogan County jury was convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that his niece, Shalin E. Alltus, was just as guilty as Parker Bachtold.

Alltus was sentenced in Okanogan County Superior Court to 38 years and four months in prison on Tuesday, after a jury found her guilty Monday of first-degree premeditated murder, first-degree robbery, theft of a motor vehicle, two counts of theft of a firearm and two counts of unlawful possession of a firearm.

At sentencing, defense lawyer Kelly Seago told the judge that Shalin Alltus had been raped and kidnapped at age 13, and that past and family issues should be considered before sentencing, the lawyer said. Seago also accused Patrick Alltus of sexual misconduct with his niece, and said she was too afraid to reveal that relationship to police.

“He’s the one person I had that I loved,” Shalin Alltus told the judge before she was sentenced. “I was very scared to explain the relationship with my uncle because I don’t want him to be seen as a bad guy,” she said, adding, “I just want you to know I never would have wanted this to happen.”

Judge Henry Rawson told her that she had ample opportunity to tell her story — to a State Patrol trooper who stopped them after they fled the murder, to a motel manager in Oregon, or to Bachtold’s parents before her arrest.

The jury found her not guilty of a special finding sought by the prosecutor that the murder was aggravated. For that special finding, the jury would have had to find that the murder was committed in the furtherance or flight from a robbery or burglary.

They deliberated for about four and a half hours.

Bachtold pleaded guilty to the same crimes earlier this month and was sentenced to 30 years in prison.

Now both 18, Alltus and Bachtold were 16 years old when Patrick Alltus was discovered dead a few days after the killing.

During Alltus’ trial, no clear motive was revealed. But Alltus testified under questioning that she had twice had sex with Bachtold, and that her uncle did not allow them to sleep together.

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A woman who murdered her uncle in Riverside in 2014 must be resentenced, with an appellate court ruling that she was denied a chance to present evidence that might have affected her 38-year-prison term.

After her conviction in 2016, Shalin E. Alltus, now 21, asked Okanogan County Superior Court Judge Henry A. Rawson to order a presentence report and allow her lawyers to investigate mitigating circumstance. Rawson turned her down on all counts, and as a result last week the state Court of Appeals threw out her 38-year sentence.

Rawson should have accepted the request, Appellate Judge Laurel Siddoway wrote for the three-judge panel, in part because Alltus was only 16 at the time of the murder. The issues Alltus sought to raise in a presentence investigation, Siddoway wrote, “were the type of matters our Supreme Court requires sentencing courts to consider when a juvenile is involved.” 

Alltus and her then-boyfriend Parker Bachtold, also 16, shot and killed her uncle Patrick Alltus, 39, in his Riverside home in October 2014. Both had been living on his property, and fled to Oregon after the murder.

Bachtold pleaded guilty to first-degree premeditated murder, first-degree robbery, theft of a motor vehicle, and two counts each of theft of a firearm and unlawful possession of a firearm. At trial Alltus blamed the murder solely on Bachtold, while while Bachtold testified that he and Alltus both shot the victim, with Alltus firing first.

A jury convicted Alltus on all counts, and Rawson sentenced her the following afternoon, turning down her lawyers’ pleas for a delay and presentence investigation. The judge said such report “would add nothing significant” for consideration.

But Alltus’ attorneys said the report would touch on her ongoing psychiatric treatment and counseling, her family history and upbringing, and a rape and kidnapping Alltus experienced at age 13. 

The appellate court said while Rawson’s handling of the sentencing phase did not invalidate Alltus’ conviction, it did require remand for a new sentence, after a presentence report is prepared by qualified investigators with the Department of Corrections.

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The Okanogan County Sheriff’s office is investigating the death of a Riverside man and questioning two teenage suspects arrested in Oregon driving the dead man’s stolen pickup.

The sheriff’s office is investigating the death of Patrick M. Alltus, 39, Riverside, as a possible homicide. On the evening of Sunday, Oct. 5 county deputies responded to a call at 151 Hosheit Road in the Tunk area regarding a death. When they arrived on the scene they contacted a friend of Alltus who said he had found the victim in his residence, according to Sheriff Frank Rogers.

“At this time we are treating it as a murder investigation. We are not putting out what we found at the scene at this time so that investigators have time to process the scene. It is evident that there was a lot of violence at the scene but we are not sure of exact cause of death for Alltus,” said Sheriff Rogers on Monday.

The two 16-year-old teenagers living at the residence were not on the scene and Alltus’ pickup was missing, so authorities listed the pickup as stolen and put out an alert saying the teens were wanted for questioning. The sheriff’s office also warned that the two might be armed with a shotgun and pistol.

The teens were contacted by Oregon authorities on Oct. 1, but were not arrested at that time and it was still being determined where the teens were headed. Oregon authorities notified the Okanogan County Sheriff’s office on Monday, Oct. 6 that they had located the stolen 2004 Ford pickup from the homicide scene and had also located the two missing teenagers, Parker M. Bachtold and Shalin E. Alltus, in Douglas County, Oregon.

“Both of the teenagers have been taken into custody at this time for the stolen vehicle. Detectives from Okanogan Sheriff’s Office are en route to Oregon to make contact with law enforcement there. Bachtold and Alltus were located south of Eugene Oregon,” said Rogers.

Okanogan County Deputies and members of the Washington State Patrol Crime Lab went to the scene to investigate. The Crime Lab finished processing the crime scene late Monday night. The only information the sheriff’s office is releasing at this time regarding the scene is that the victim was shot several times, according to Rogers.

“Detectives believe that the two teenagers are the suspects in the homicide case and will be trying to determine what happened at the scene and a possible motive,” said Rogers, who added, an autopsy will be scheduled for Patrick Alltus.

Two teens found in Oregon with stolen pickup

Victor Alas and Jose Reyes Teen Killers

Victor Alas and Jose Reyes Teen Killers

Victor Alas was fifteen years old and Jose Reyes was sixteen when they lured a fifteen year old girl into an abandoned house where she was sexually assaulted, tortured and murdered. The pair of teen killers would be sentenced to life without parole

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Alas, a couple of his male friends, and Cathy Cuellar 2 —all teenagers—became acquainted with a middle-aged woman who lived in a nearby apartment. That woman began to allow the teenagers to use her apartment to drink and smoke marijuana. One night,3 the teenagers took Xanax before meeting at the apartment. Although Cuellar, age 15, had experience with alcohol and marijuana, this was the first time she had used Xanax. After a couple of hours in the apartment, Cuellar became very intoxicated. She was slurring her words and stumbling, and she needed assistance to walk. The apartment owner agreed that Cuellar could spend the night.
When Cuellar went to the bedroom, Alas, age 16, went with her. According to Victor Alas, they began a consensual physical encounter in the bedroom. They were interrupted when their friend, Jose Reyes, age 17, knocked on the bedroom door. The owner did not like that the boys were in her bedroom and told them to leave the apartment. Instead of spending the night at the apartment as planned, Cuellar left with Victor Alas and Jose Reyes.
The three went to a vacant apartment approximately one block away that the teenagers frequently visited to take drugs. There, all three went into an empty closet and, according to Alas, had consensual sex.4
However the encounter began, it quickly turned into a brutal, physical attack on Cuellar. She was struck in the head 15 times with an ashtray and a toilet tank lid, causing the shape of her head and facial features to be distorted. She was stabbed over 60 times with a screwdriver. Her eyes were gouged, and a metal hook was lodged in her eye socket. She was beaten with plastic rods from the apartment’s vertical blinds. Then she was impaled, anally, with two of those rods, which severely damaged her intestines and liver. Finally, an inverted cross was carved into her abdomen, with a t-shirt covering a portion of that injury and a bra attached over the t-shirt. There was evidence that most of these injuries, including the impalement, occurred while Cuellar was still alive, though some, such as the “cross” carving, were after she had died. Cuellar’s body was discovered a few days later.
The police quickly received a lead that Jose Reyes and Victor Alas were involved. Reyes was arrested first. Then, Alas was arrested, mid-day, at the alternative school he attended. He was taken to a magistrate for warnings. Afterwards, he was taken to be interviewed in the Homicide Division, where he gave a statement.
Victor Alas told the police that he participated in consensual sex with Cuellar and Jose Reyes in the empty apartment closet but denied that he played any role in the attack other than briefly choking Cuellar with a belt. He said he put the belt around her neck but eventually removed it, leaving her gasping for air. He told the police that he did not cause any of her physical injuries and was not physically involved in causing her death. He blamed Reyes for her injuries and death.
According to Victor Alas, when Jose Reyes began attacking Cuellar, he became scared and went to the kitchen area of the apartment. Although Alas denied any involvement in Cuellar’s severe injuries, he gave the police specific details about her injuries that they had not yet discovered. For example, Alas revealed in his statement that Cuellar had been choked with a belt and that the objects that were used to impale her were plastic rods from the vertical blinds in the apartment. At the time, the police knew neither.
During the interview, Victor Alas told the officers that he discarded the screwdriver in some bushes at a nearby church. Two police officers immediately drove to the church and located the screwdriver where he had indicated.
At the capital murder trial, a forensic DNA analyst with the Houston Forensic Science Center testified that Alas could not be excluded as a source of the DNA found on the screwdriver and inside Cuellar. A medical examiner testified about Cuellar’s injuries and cause of death. She described multiple, severe injuries and informed the jury that most of those injuries occurred before Cuellar’s death, including the gouging of her eyes and the impalement. She testified that Cuellar eventually died from “multiple blunt and sharp force injuries.” Homicide Detective M. Condon testified that “it appeared ․ that it had to be more than one person” involved in Cuellar’s death, given the condition of her body and the “very violent” nature of her death. In his opinion, “it took more than one person to commit this murder.”
Victor Alas testified as well. He admitted using alcohol, marijuana, and Xanax that night. He said that the sexual encounter was consensual. According to Alas, Jose Reyes had been taking pictures when he became distracted by other items on his phone. Reyes began asking Alas some questions, and then, unexpectedly, struck Cuellar in the head with an ashtray. Alas testified that he became shocked and scared. He told Reyes he was going to leave, but Reyes made a statement that he interpreted as a threat. Instead of leaving, he went into the separate kitchen area of the apartment.
Victor Alas testified that, from his hiding place in the kitchen, he heard some muted noises followed by a loud “glass breaking” sound. At that point, he returned to the living room, where Jose Reyes was hitting Cuellar in the head with a toilet tank lid. He then saw the blood and the protruding rods. He yelled for Reyes to leave her alone and for them to leave. Reyes handed him a screwdriver, ashtray, and belt; Alas discarded the three items as they were leaving the apartment. Alas testified that he did not know whether Cuellar was still alive when he and Reyes left the apartment.
Victor Alas testified that he did not participate in any of Cuellar’s injuries and denied that he retaliated against her so she would not report the initial assault to the police. He also recanted his earlier statement to police that he choked her with a belt. He claimed he said something to the police that was untrue because he was scared and thought that was what they wanted to hear.
The jury convicted Alas of capital murder. The trial court announced the automatic sentence of life imprisonment

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The second suspect in a grisly murder case was found guilty Friday in what has been described as a satanic ritual killing of a 15-year-old Houston girl.

Victor Alas and Jose E. Reyes were convicted for strangling, stabbing and sexually assaulting Corriann Cervantes last year. They also carved an upside-down cross in her abdomen.

Following a week-long trial in District Judge Brock Thomas’ court, a jury found 17-year-old Alas guilty, giving him an automatic life sentence. During his trial, prosecutors shared a video of Alas confessing to strangling Cervantes.

Later in the trial, Alas testified, an unusual move. “Alas chose to take the stand and say he gave a false statement to law enforcement at the location and that he did not take part in the murder, but the jury saw through that,” prosecutor John Jordan said.

Defense attorney Mario Madrid said Alas’ confession was “very difficult to overcome.”

“It was a difficult case with overwhelming evidence,” Madrid said. “We fought hard but we certainly respect the jury’s verdict.”

The slaying was investigated as a satanic ritual killing because of the cross carved into Cervantes’ abdomen and objects found at the scene.

We’ve always believed that this crime was evil and both people could be easily convicted,” Jordan said. “(Reyes’) jury got a lot more evidence of satanic issues.”

Reyes was convicted last year of capital murder after prosecutors shared letters he sent from jail stating the devil was directing him during the murder. Witnesses testified that Reyes bragged about the slaying as a means of selling his and Alas’ souls to the devil.

Witnesses in Reyes’ trial testified that, on the night of the slaying, the three teens were at a party where they were drinking, smoking marijuana and taking Xanax. Following the party, the group reported left together and began to have consensual sex in a vacant apartment in Clear Lake.

Cervantes was strangled with a belt, beat in the head with a porcelain toilet lid and stabbed repeatedly with a screwdriver. Plastic rods from the window blinds in the apartment were used to gouge out her eyes and then to sexually assault her.

In order to reach a capital murder conviction, prosecutors needed to prove he intentionally killed while also committing a felony or causing serious injury.

Corriann Cervantes Was Brutally Slain

Murder in the name of Satan is not new or as uncommon as we would like to think. However, when we hear about the kinds of acts that are typical in satanic ritual, the details are so brutal that they are almost impossible to fathom. What happened to Corriann Cervantes is no exception.

Corriann was a 15 year old girl who liked to listen to music and take selfies, just like any other teenager. Reports indicate that she also went to church. In February of 2014 her life was brutally cut short by two boys who went to the same alternative school as Corriann in Clear Lake, Texas. The 17 year old boy, Jose Reyes, had already sold his soul to the devil, and devil worship items were subsequently found in his room. His friend, Victor Alas, 16, also wanted to sell his soul to the devil, and he asked Reyes if he could accomplish that by murdering someone. Reyes said yes. Together they decided they would perform a heinous satanic ritual in which they would rape, bludgeon, and mutilate a beautiful girl as an initiation rite for Alas.

The crime began Tuesday evening when Corriann Cervantes decided to go out. She went to a friend’s house where she drank and smoked marijuana. Reyes and Alas were also at this party, and they led Corriann to a vacant apartment. Reyes stabbed her while he had sex with her. When she tried to get away they dragged her back in, and he hit her over the head with a toilet tank lid, which broke the lid in half.

Consensual sex turned into a gruesome rape. The two boys stabbed her in the face and body “dozens of times” with a screwdriver. They also bludgeoned her further with the toilet tank lid and an ashtray. While she begged for her life they gouged her eye out. When Reyes bragged about the murder to an individual identified as Miranda Leal, he told her Corriann cried out, “Why are you doing this to me?” But they continued to torture her. They also strangled her and carved an upside-down cross into her abdomen.

A few days after the murder a passerby noticed the door to the apartment open. When he went in he found Corriann’s disfigured body. Reyes and Alas had placed religious objects around her body. They had bashed in her head. Later during the autopsy, the coroner found pieces of porcelain embedded in her face.

After the murder, Reyes told two people explicit details about what they had done to Corriann, and someone reported him to the police. Miranda Leal said that he laughed and smiled while he boasted about the gruesome acts. She didn’t take it seriously, because it seemed just too bizarre for her believe. Once the police arrested Reyes, he confessed to the interrogators. He explained that he was just doing what the devil told him to do, and that the devil watched the whole time they were doing it. Later in court, Reyes smiled for the cameras.

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Victor Alas is currently incarcerated at the Stiles facility within the Texas Department Of Corrections

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Jose Reyes is currently incarcerated at the Ferguson Faciliy within the Texas Department Of Corrections

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Victor Alas is serving a life sentence however is eligible for parole in 2054

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Jose Reyes is serving a life sentence however is eligible for parole in 2054

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A Texas teenager who killed a 15-year-old girl and mutilated her dead body as a sick tribute to Satan will spend the rest of his life behind bars.

Victor Alas, 16, was found guilty of capital murder Thursday for the horrific, ritualistic February 2014 death of Corriann Cervantes, whose body was found raped, covered in stab wounds and marked with a crucifix.

Alias’ co-killer, 17-year-old Jose Reyes, was found guilty of capital murder in December. He, too, was sentenced to life in prison. Both teens were tried as adults.

Reyes claimed he sold his soul to the devil — and he told Alas he could, too, if he killed one of his classmates, Alas told Houston investigators.

The two teen boys lured Cervantes to a vacant Houston apartment in February 2014.

Since she knew Alas, Cervantes likely entered the complex willing, but once inside, the Satanic horror show started, investigators said.

Alias strangled the girl with a belt while Reyes brutally beat her with an ashtray and a toilet tank lid, prosecutors said.

When she bit one of her attackers, the duo gouged her eyes out with a plastic curtain rod and stabbed her with a screwdriver.

The two raped her body after she died and carved an upside-down crucifix into her abdomen.

Cervantes’ body was so badly mutilated that the person who discovered her body — someone who knew the 15-year-old — could not identify the teen. Pieces of the porcelain from the toilet lid were still embedded in her flesh, cops said.

After the savage attack, Reyes bragged about the killing, KHOU reported in December. He repeatedly admitted to the murder, even as he was in jail awaiting trial.

“I was sick-minded stabbing that (expletive) 60 times. It’s all good. It’s what the devil asked for,” he wrote in a jail house October letter.

https://www.nydailynews.com/news/crime/texas-teen-sentenced-satanic-murder-15-year-old-girl-article-1.2263922

Nathaniel Abraham Teen Killer Murders Man

Nathaniel Abraham Teen Killer

Nathaniel Abraham was just eleven years old when he shot and killed a man. According to court documents Nathaniel Abraham was playing with a gun when he took aim at a man some distance away. The man was struck in the head and died instantly. This teen killer would be sentenced to eight years in youth detention. Since his release Nathaniel Abraham can not stay out of trouble and currently he is back in prison serving a long sentence for drugs

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Max Release Date: 2059

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Nathaniel Abraham hardly presented the image of a deadly killer. Wearing oversized prison garb, the 65-pound boy appeared tearful and bewildered at pre-trial hearings. But prosecutors argued that Nathaniel was exactly the type of juvenile offender the 1996 law had meant to target. Police had previously suspected him in almost two dozen crimes, including burglary and assault. For a variety of reasons, however, the boy had never been formally charged.

Nathaniel Abraham’s case drew the attention of attorney Geoffrey Fieger, who had previously defended “Dr. Death,” Jack Kervorkian. Fieger took on the job pro bono and began a series of motions and appeals that delayed the trial until October 1999.

When the trial finally opened on October 29, prosecutor Lisa Halushka wrote down these words for the jury to read: “I’m gonna shoot somebody.” This, she claimed, was what Nathaniel Abraham had said to his girlfriend days before the killing. As the trial progressed, Halushka called witnesses who supported the idea that Nathaniel’s act had been a premeditated murder. He had stolen the rifle, then practiced target shooting at balloons. He had also fired the gun at a neighbor’s house, barely missing the occupant, just before the fatal shooting. Later, Halushka noted that Nathaniel had told police conflicting stories about the shootings—proof that he knew what he had done, and that it was wrong.

Defense attorney Fieger argued that the shooting was an unfortunate accident. Nathaniel Abraham did fire the gun, yes, but was not trying to hit anyone. Fieger also introduced testimony from an expert marksman. The witness said that it would be almost impossible to deliberately hit a small target from more than 200 feet—the distance Nathaniel was from the victim—using the old, battered rifle the boy had fired.

Fieger also called on child psychologists to describe Nathaniel Abraham’s mental state. The boy, these experts testified, had an IQ of 70, and at the time of the murder, his thought processes were like those of a seven-year-old. Fieger tried to prove that Nathaniel lacked the mental capacity to form the intent to kill. A prosecution psychologist witness, however, testified to rebut this claim.

Outside the courtroom, the trial provoked massive public interest. The CBS television magazine 60 Minutes profiled the case, and Oakland County Prosecutor David Gorcyca admitted the Michigan social system had failed to help Nathaniel in the past, despite his impaired intelligence and previous brushes with the law. Gorcyca said he owed the boy’s mother, Gloria, an apology. An upset Mrs. Abraham replied, “Owe me an apology! To say the system failed but they still want to try my child as an adult? This is ridiculous.”

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Nathaniel Abraham Sent Back To Prison For Selling Drugs

Nathaniel Abraham, who made national news when convicted of murder at the age of 11, is headed back to prison.

Abraham, now 33, of Pontiac was sentenced Tuesday in Oakland County Circuit Court to 6 to 40 years in prison for selling drugs to an undercover police officer in Farmington Hills. He pleaded guilty as charged May 28 to delivery of methamphetamine and heroin, felonies that carry up to 20 years in prison.

Abraham was also charged as a habitual offender, fourth offense, which can carry up to life in prison.

“Mom, this isn’t bad — he could have received a much higher sentence,” said defense attorney James Galen, trying to comfort Abraham’s mother, Gloria Abraham, outside the courtroom with a dozen other relatives and friends.

“If he does what he is supposed to do, he will be out before too long.”

Galen referred to the sentence, issued by Judge Rae Lee Chabot, as “extraordinarily kind.”

“Under the habitual offender offense, he could have had up to life,” the attorney said. “I think Judge Chabot recognizes he can better himself.”

https://www.detroitnews.com/story/news/local/oakland-county/2019/06/25/nathaniel-abraham-sent-back-prison-dealing-drugs/1561338001/

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As Nathaniel Abraham’s most recent legal troubles play out in court, the man notorious for being the state’s youngest convicted murderer is being held in isolation at the Oakland County Jail, said his attorney — which he calls “cruel” and unwarranted.

“I think it’s very extreme,” said James Galen, following a court hearing Thursday before Judge Ronda Fowlkes Gross of Pontiac’s 50th district court. “I truly believe it’s in retaliation or retribution for (the incident with deputies that led to his arrest Aug. 6) — and for who he is.”

Abraham, 32, is charged with indecent exposure, alleged by a Pontiac woman Aug. 6, and three felony counts of assaulting a police officer/resisting arrest on Aug. 8 when he was chased down for not appearing in court that day as authorities say he promised to do. One of the assault charges includes causing injury to an officer, punishable by up to four years in prison.

Galen said Thursday that Abraham has been in the jail’s “K-Block” since at least Aug. 20, which he describes as a group of “6-foot by 8-foot cells” each holding one inmate only. “He’s locked in at least 23 hours a day,” Galen said.

What landed Abraham in that section of the jail is unclear, but Galen said he was told by a lieutenant with the Oakland County Sheriff’s Office that it was due to an incident at the jail, yet didn’t elaborate. Galen said he has no knowledge of Abraham being given “any tickets” during his most recent incarceration.

Galen raised the jail issue with Gross during Thursday’s hearing, but the judge said it isn’t hers to decide.

“I do not tell Sheriff Bouchard how to run his jail, and I will not tell Sheriff Bouchard how to run his jail,” Gross said.

Galen also asked for a reduction in Abraham’s $25,000 bond — claiming Abraham isn’t a flight risk and poses no danger to others or himself. Gross said she’s taking it “under advisement,” indicating she may consider a change following a preliminary exam next Tuesday.

Testimony will be offered at the Aug. 28 preliminary exam for Gross to determine if Abraham will be bound over to circuit court for the charges of assaulting/resisting police. Galen is building his case on what he says is a misunderstanding by Abraham due to a written notice he received after posting an interim bond for the misdemeanor indecent exposure charge, indicating his next court appearance was Aug. 20. However, an Oakland County sheriff’s deputy visited Abraham at his home on Aug. 7 and explained he was instead required to appear Aug. 8. Abraham failed to show up that morning as he was supposed to, and soon after was spotted walking down a street in Pontiac. That led to him being chased down and resulted in the resisting and assault charges.

Abraham also has a hearing before 50th District Judge Preston Thomas on Aug. 28 for the indecent exposure charge.

At age 11, Abraham shot to death a man outside a Pontiac party store, using a stolen rifle. He was incarcerated until just before his 21st birthday. Less than two years later, he pleaded guilty to drug charges and was imprisoned until June 28, 2017. While in prison, he pleaded guilty to assaulting a prison employee. He was released from parole on June 28 of this year.

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Sebastian Burns and Atif Rafay Teen Killers

Sebastian Burns and Atif Rafay Teen Killers

Sebastian Burns and Atif Rafay were convicted of a triple murder in Washington State. The two Canadian born teens would fatally beat Rafay father, mother and sister. The crime went unsolved for a good amount of time until DNA tied the two teen killers to the triple murder. The two would be convicted at trial and sentenced to life in prison however there remains a lot of doubt regarding whether or not their confession was coerced and whether or not they are guilty of this brutal crime

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A teen convinces his best friend to murder his family however years later questions still linger about the case

According to court documents Atif Rafay and Sebastian Burns has been friends for years before the murders occurred.  Atif and his family moved to Washington State but kept in close contact with Sebastien.

On July 12 1994 the two teenagers headed to the Rafay home and Sebastien Burns would murder the entire family with a baseball bat including Rafay father, mother and twenty year old autistic sister.  Atif was suppose to participate in the murders but lost his nerve once they entered the home

According to prosecutors the goal of the triple murders were the half a million insurance policy and the money that would come from selling the family home

Atif Rafay and Sebastian Burns were taken into custody and interrogated for three days before they were released

After the interrogation  Atif Rafay and Sebastian Burns fled to British Columbia Canada where Burns still lived. The RCMP, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, who were cooperating with the police on the other side of the border would set up a sting where an undercover police officer would pose as a crime boss who would try to get the two to confess to the triple murders.

Nearly nine months after the murders new DNA evidence appeared which according to police tied the two to the murders.  Atif Rafay and Sebastian Burns would confess to a murder in order to avoid the death penalty however many believe it was a false confession.

At trial Atif Rafay and Sebastian Burns were found guilty of the triple murders and sentenced to ninety nine years in prison.  It took a long time before the two went to trial as they had to be extradited from Canada which has a policy not to extradite if the death penalty was a possible punishment.  Eventually the prosecutor in the case promised the Canadian authorities that the death penalty would not be used.

Since the trial the two have tried repeatedly to get back into court to get their conviction reversed as they have stuck to their innocence.

Atif Rafay uses his time in prison to help other prisoners get their high school diploma.  After spending years in solitary confinement Sebastian Burns has suffered from severe mental health problems

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Atif Rafay, a target of the controversial “Mr.Big” technique and one of Canada’s most famous convicted killers, has said that he felt “extremely” threatened during the undercover operation meant to extract a confession of murder.

In an exclusive interview from prison – his first since his conviction in 2004 — Rafay attacks the Mr. Big process, saying it “essentially makes you try to be as plausible as you can in your false confession, and that plausibility is what convinces a juror or someone else that ‘Oh, it must be true’…despite all the countervailing evidence.”

Rafay told the CBC’s the fifth estate that he is hoping to have his case reopened, on the basis of the Supreme Court ruling, though that seems unlikely, given that previous appeals in the U.S. to overturn his and Sebastian Burns’ convictions, because much of the evidence against them was obtained by such a sting, have been unsuccessful.

He spoke to the fifth estate’s Bob McKeown from the Monroe Correctional Center outside Seattle, Wash.

Rafay and his friend Sebastian Burns were sentenced to 99 years in jail for the 1994 murder of Rafay’s parents and sister at their home in Bellevue, Wash. The family had recently relocated from Vancouver while Rafay completed his freshman year at Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y.

The jury at the men’s six-month trial was told Rafay was motivated by money and planned the killings while Burns carried them out. The two men have spent nearly half their lives in prison serving three consecutive life sentences with no chance of parole.

Illegal in most countries, including the U.S., the Mr. Big tactic had new limits imposed on it last summer by the Supreme Court, which said the operation risked producing unreliable confessions but did not forbid it outright.

In this kind of operation, police get murder suspects to confess by posing as a criminal gang and introducing suspects to a fake crime boss, Mr. Big, who says he can help them – but only if they can prove their bona fides, usually by coughing up information about the crime they had been charged with.

In 2014, the Supreme Court ruling called into question the reliability of confessions obtained during such a sting, and legal experts say dozens of cases of convictions could come under review.

Al Haslett was one of the originators of the technique in the early 1990s. Recently retired from the RCMP, he can now talk about his many cases as Mr. Big, coaxing confessions from murder suspects such as Rafay and Burns.

During the operation, Haslett asked Rafay how it felt to “kill your parents and knock off your sister?”

Rafay claimed that they did it for the family’s insurance money, saying he felt “pretty rotten, but it’s tempered by the fact that I felt it was necessary … to achieve what I wanted to achieve in this life.”

In this week’s fifth estate episode, “Cops, Criminals and Confessions,” Rafay says he was angry when he learned Burns had got him involved with the supposed crime gang that was to somehow influence their case.

“I mean, I didn’t approve of the thing at all from the beginning. It seemed like nothing that I wanted to have much to do with.”

He claims they never intended to do anything violent for the crime boss, but they were willing to say whatever was necessary to get his help.

“I didn’t want to become a hit man for him…I wanted to indicate to them that this is not something that I’m ever going to do – and yet at the same time I’m not ever going to rat you out, I’m not going to do anything to compromise your organization.”

In the fifth estate episode, Haslett is asked whether he believes Rafay and Burns could have felt threatened into making their confessions.

Of Burns, Haslett says, “I would never have said I’m ever going to do him any physical harm. If he had that perception, that is something that his imagination could’ve worked [up].”

Asked if he did, indeed, feel threatened, Rafay said, “Yeah actually, extremely so. Really, it was all a dream world created out of movies.

“It would seem very possible after watching Goodfellas that Mr. Big would simply kill me because I was potentially a threat to him. That seemed completely convincing – in a way that would only be convincing to an 18-year-old kid.”

Defence counsel Marie Henein argues in the fifth estate piece that threats of one kind or another are the very essence of the Mr. Big sting.

“When you say it’s imagination, they’re not making it up. It’s because they’re told, ‘You know who you’re sitting with? You’re sitting with somebody that kills people. So you might want to play ball.'”

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/atif-rafay-family-killer-targeted-in-mr-big-sting-wants-case-reopened-1.2912885

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John Hovey Teen Killer Murders Parents

John Hovey Teen Killer

John Hovey was sixteen when he murdered his parents. According to court documents John Hovey would sneak into his parents bedroom and would open fire killing his parents. This teen killer would be sentenced to life in prison however he was not done killing yet. This teen killer thought a paraplegic inmate was telling on him so he stabbed the inmate over two hundred times and would receive yet another life sentence.

John Hovey 2023 Information

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Last Name: HOVEY
First Name: JOHN
Middle Name: RAYMOND
NMCD#: 34833
Offender#: 10056
Offender Status: INMATE
Facility/Region:NMCD CUSTODY

MURDER 1ST DEGREE (D-202-CR-38516)GUILTY PLEA
CON MURDER 1ST DEGREE (D-1314-CR-98-00179)GUILTY-JURY
MURDER 1ST DEGREE (D-1314-CR-98-00179)GUILTY-JURY
TAMPERING W/EVIDENCE (D-1314-CR-98-00179)GUILTY-JURY

MURDER, FIRST DEGREE (CR 38516) Release Date: 99999999

John Hovey More News

As troubled kids go, Johnny Hovey was one of the worst.

So troubled that his mother confided in friends and relatives and a probation officer that she wondered whether he was possessed by the devil, that she thought his hobby of making lifelike corpses and other gruesome props was disturbing, that she feared one day he would kill her.

That last concern proved prophetic.

Before dawn on June 19, 1984, at the family home on Valley Park SW, the 16-year-old Hovey crept into his parents’ bedroom clad only in underwear and his thick, oversized glasses and opened fire.

His father, Raymond Hovey, 36, was shot twice. It took five shots and several hours to kill his mother.

“My son, John Hovey, shot us,” Nancy Hovey, 37, told the first Albuquerque police officer to arrive. “Get him before I die.”

The case of Johnny Hovey was extensively covered by the local news media, the photo of the skinny kid with bushy hair and big glasses a near-constant presence on the front pages for months.

Hovey, as the testimony goes, had a knack for making grotesque mannequins and bloody props, including a decomposing, bloody-eyed corpse he named Susan and rolled about the house in his grandmother’s wheelchair.

His mother had gotten rid of the props. That, one relative testified, was something Johnny Hovey could not forgive.

He was convicted of two counts of first-degree murder in June 1986. A month later, he was sentenced to two consecutive life terms.

Court records show that Hovey was initially transferred to an Oregon prison, then returned. He had also been transferred and returned more than once to a Florida prison (a location he fought hard to be removed from, according to court documents) and one in Washington.

In 1997, an escape plan he is accused of masterminding while incarcerated in New Mexico was thwarted. In 1998, he was accused of stabbing a paraplegic inmate 230 times in New Mexico, and in 2000 he was given an additional life sentence plus 16 years.

That’s the last the public heard about Hovey.

Earlier this month, Roman Garcia of Omnibus Investigations of Santa Fe contacted me about the Hovey case. He had been the initial defense investigator for Hovey, he said, and while cleaning out files, he had come across a document he thought Hovey might want. He didn’t specify what the document was.

He tried to locate Hovey on the state Department of Corrections website but found nothing. A Department of Corrections employee he spoke with told him she could find no record of Hovey’s ever having been in the New Mexico prison system.

“I reminded her the he got escape charges, filed a tort claim against (the prison warden), had habeas actions and even killed another prisoner while incarcerated,” Garcia said in an email. “Her refrain: ‘Oh, really? He was never here.’ ”

It’s as if Hovey had never existed.

It may seem that way to the public when an inmate is transferred out of or into New Mexico to serve out a prison sentence through an interstate compact.

“It can be difficult for not only the survivor but the family of the inmate in that often they are not sure when or where an inmate might be taken out of state,” said Joan Shirley, victim advocate for the Resource Center for Victims of Violent Death.

Currently, 76 inmates convicted in New Mexico are incarcerated out of state, while 83 inmates from out of state are serving their time in New Mexico facilities, said Alex Tomlin, public affairs director for the Department of Corrections.

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A man serving three consecutive life sentences for murder asked a judge Monday to bring him back to New Mexico from a Florida prison where he says he’s been treated inhumanely.

John Hovey, 34, was sentenced to life in prison by a Valencia County jury in July, 2000, for killing a fellow inmate, Tim Lucero, at the Central New Mexico Correctional Facility in Los Lunas. Testimony at Hovey’s trial revealed Hovey and another inmate stabbed Lucero over 230 times while Lucero was sitting in his wheelchair in his prison cell.

Hovey, who, at the time of Lucero’s murder, was serving two life sentences for killing his parents in Albuquerque almost 20 years ago,, testified Monday he was not receiving proper psychological treatment in the Florida prison system.

District Court Judge John Pope didn’t make a decision Monday as to whether he’ll bring Hovey back to New Mexico. After hearing Hovey testify about Florida’s alleged prison conditions, Pope said he would take the matter under advisement for 10 days.

“Mr. Hovey isn’t my concern,” Pope said. “I have no sympathy for him. He does not have a right to say where he’s going, but I do want to make sure he’s not subjected to cruel and unusual punishment. I don’t want an inmate or guard killed because he (Hovey) gets depressed.”

Hovey, who didn’t testify at his own trial, took the stand and described the lack of medical and psychological treatment he’s received after his 2000 conviction. He testified he has been transported 11 different times to several New Mexico prisons as well as several prisons in Texas and Arizona and three prisons in Florida.

Hovey said he’s being housed in “close management” (solitary confinement) and only gets to see a doctor once a month for two or three minutes at a time. He said he isn’t offered psychological treatment in the Florida prison because he’s from New Mexico.

“All the time I was there, I was only treated twice,” Hovey said. He also testified that, because he is in “close management,” he’s not allowed his eye glasses, letters, books or attorney/client interaction and is kept in an unventilated cell without air conditioning. He also testified he’s not allowed an am/fm radio or television set and is only allowed one hour of recreation per week.

“I was never given a reason why I was sent to Florida,” Hovey said. “They (corrections officials) told me different lies. They first said New Mexico sent me to Florida for my own protection, and then they said I was a threat to New Mexico.

“This has messed me up quite a bit,” Hovey said. “I’m worse than I was before.”

Under cross examination, Hovey told Deputy District Attorney Ron Lopez that he was wrongfully convicted of killing his parents in 1984. He told Lopez he didn’t remember killing Lucero but said, after his trial in 2000, “I have no doubt I was involved.”

“I don’t agree I’m still a high security risk,” Hovey said. “I feel I’m more of a threat to myself.”

Lopez believes that the only reason Hovey wants to return to New Mexico is that if he kills again in Florida, he would be more likely to be sentenced to death.

“He shouldn’t be allowed to dictate to the state of Florida how he should be treated,” Lopez said. “He’s just not happy about being in Florida.”

Hovey’s attorney, Kari Converse, told Pope that her client’s constitutional rights are being violated in the Florida prison system. She said her client is being subjected to cruel and unusual punishment.

Lopez told Pope that, if he allows Hovey to come back to New Mexico because he doesn’t like how he’s being treated, the court will be inundated with requests from everyone in prison who wants to come back to New Mexico.

https://news-bulletin.com/hovey-wants-to-return-to-nm-prison/

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