Jquan McInnis Teen Killer Murders Man & Infant

Jquan McInnis Teen Killer

Jquan McInnis was seventeen years old when he opened fire on a vehicle killing a man and a infant. According to court documents Jquan McInnis believed that the victim had stolen something from him so he would run up to the vehicle and fire five times striking and killing the man inside. This teen killer would then fire into the back seat killing a seven month old infant. At court Jquan McInnis would be sentenced to two life sentences and must serve thirty years on each count meaning he must serve sixty years before he will be eligible for parole.

Jquan McInnis 2023 Information

MNDOC Offender ID:235357

Name:Jquan Leearthur Mcinnis

Birth Date:03/17/1999

Current Status:Incarcerated as of 02/21/2019.

Currently at MCF Oak Park Heights.

Sentence Date:02/19/2019

Anticipated Release Date:Life –

Jquan McInnis Other News

A then-teenage gunman will be an old man when, or if, he is ever released from prison after receiving a 60-year sentence in the deaths of a man and an infant. 

Jquan McInnis, now 20, was sentenced Thursday in Hennepin County District Court for the fatal 2016 murders of Gustav Christianson II and 7-month-old Jayden Redden. Judge Jeannice Reding called McInnis’ actions on that day “brazen and heartless.” She sentenced McInnis to life in prison with the possibility of parole after 30 years on each first degree murder count and ordered them served consecutively, meaning the convicted gunman will be 78 years old before he can be considered for release. 

McInnis was given credit for three years he’s served in jail since the shootings took place. 

During the trial prosecutors alleged that the shootings were carried out because McInnis believed Christianson had stolen from him. Investigators say the teen obtained a gun and when he passed a car parked near 26th Street East and 11th Avenue South with Christianson inside, McIniss told his companion to drive and park a block away. Prosecutors say McInnis then put his hood up to hide his identity, ran through several yards and fired five times, killing Christianson. As he was leaving, McInnis fired one more shot through the car’s back window, striking the infant in his car seat, although missing the baby’s father, the driver of the car.

During a presentence hearing evidence was presented that McInnis was likely exposed to drugs and alcohol in the womb, which is detrimental to development of the fetus. He was taken from his mother as an infant and placed with her mother and her husband where he suffered “chronic maltreatment,” including a failure of the grandparents to follow up on school and mental health resources that could have helped McInnis.

Instead, he spent a lot of his time on the street, unsupervised, and “spent time with mostly older gang members and learned how to survive on the streets, including using violence as a way of conflict resolution,” Judge Reding said. In deciding not to sentence him to life in prison without parole, the judge noted that both experts who examined McInnis said he is capable of being rehabilitated in prison.

KARE 11 reported that just months before the fatal shootings McInnis had been charged in the armed robbery and assault of a woman, but as a juvenile was given no prison time and released on three years probation.  

https://www.kare11.com/article/news/crime/shooter-sentenced-to-60-years-in-murders-of-man-infant/89-31ff3e75-67c6-4b69-babc-29205c035ac1

Jquan McInnis More News

A man who was 17 years old when he was charged in the shooting deaths of a man and a baby in Minneapolis in 2016 has been sentenced to two consecutive life sentences in prison.

Jquan McInnis had been found guilty of two counts of first-degree murder in 2018, for a crime that happened in October 2016. He was indicted by a grand jury.

The victims were 20-year-old Gustav Christianson II and seven-month old Jayden Redden. Minneapolis Police said that McInnis was riding in a car with then 25-year-old Rashad Austin two years ago when McInnis saw Christianson in a car nearby. He then got out of the car and went up to the other vehicle, firing shots into it before running away.

Redden’s father was also in the vehicle, and ran with the baby toward Children’s Hospital before being met by paramedics, who treated Redden in an ambulance before transporting him to the hospital. He died a short time thereafter.

The two life sentences carry the possibility of parole after 30 years. However, as it was ruled they were to be served consecutively, the earliest McInnis will be eligible for parole will be after he serves a minimum 60 years in prison, when he is about 80 years old.

He has been given credit for the more than three years he has already served.

Jquan McInnis Gets 2 Life Sentences In 2016 Shooting Deaths Of Man, Baby

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Alec McKinney Teen Killer School Shooter

Alec McKinney Teen Killer

Alec McKinney (aka Maya McKinney) a transgender teen from Colorado would plead guilty to charges relating to a school shooting. According to court documents Alex McKinney and Devon Erickson would enter the STEM School Highlands Ranch opening fire which would end with one student dead and eight other injuries. Alex McKinney would eventually plead guilty to avoid a life sentence. This teen killer would be sentenced to life in prison anyway

Alec McKinney 2023 Information

Name:MCKINNEY, MAYA E
Age:17
Ethnicity:WHITE
Gender:FEMALE
Hair Color:BROWN
Eye Color:BROWN
Height:5′ 05″Weight:150
DOC Number:189320
Est. Parole
Eligibility Date:
Next Parole
Hearing Date:This offender is scheduled on the Parole Board agenda for the month and year above. Please contact the facility case manager for the exact date.
Est. Mandatory
Release Date:
Est. Sentence
Discharge Date:12/31/9998
Current Facility
Assignment:YOUTHFUL OFFENDER SYSTEM-TRANSFER

Alex McKinney More News

A transgender teenager accused of opening fire with a friend in a Denver-area charter school in May to exact revenge on classmates who bullied him pleaded guilty on Friday to murder and attempted murder charges, prosecutors said.

Alec McKinney, 16, who has been held without bond since the May 7 rampage that left one student dead and eight others wounded, pleaded guilty to 17 criminal counts, including conspiracy and weapons charges, said Douglas County District Attorney George Brauchler.

Alec McKinney is accused along with Devon Erickson, 19, of carrying out the shooting at the Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) School in Highlands Ranch, Colorado.

An 18-year-old student, Kendrick Castillo, was fatally shot when he charged one of the shooters, police said.

The Colorado Public Defender’s Office, which represents McKinney said it does not comment on its cases outside court.

Erickson pleaded not guilty last month to 44 felony counts and is set to go on trial in May.

According to an arrest warrant affidavit, the pair armed themselves with three handguns and a 22-caliber rifle stolen from a gun safe owned by Erickson’s parents.

Both teens consumed cocaine before storming the school, the affidavit said.

Alec McKinney was born female and told police he was in a “pre-op transitioning phase,” and planned the shooting to get back at classmates who had bullied him for being transgender, according to court documents.

McKinney said he had enlisted Erickson to help him carry out the plot, police said.

In December, McKinney’s lawyers unsuccessfully argued to have his case transferred to juvenile court, arguing that he had a troubled childhood, including witnessing domestic violence by his father against his mother.

In denying that motion, Judge Philip Holmes said in a written order that while Alec McKinney “has experienced serious trauma in his life,” the alleged crimes were so serious that he should be tried as an adult.

McKinney, who is scheduled to be sentenced on May 18, faces a maximum sentence of life in prison with the possibility of parole after serving 40 years of his term because he was a juvenile when the crimes were committed.

Erickson, who was an adult when the crimes were committed, faces life without the possibility of parole if he is convicted of murder, or the death penalty if prosecutors decide to seek capital punishment.

https://news.yahoo.com/colorado-transgender-teen-pleads-guilty-231319630.html

Alec McKinney Other News

The juvenile suspect in last year’s STEM school shooting in Highlands Ranch pleaded guilty in the case on Friday.

Alec McKinney had faced dozens of charges, including first-degree murder for the killing of Kendrick Castillo, an 18-year-old student who died in the shooting. Eight other students were wounded in the May 7 attack at STEM School Highlands Ranch.

In Douglas County court on Friday, McKinney pleaded guilty to more than a dozen felonies, including the first-degree murder charge, and one misdemeanor, according to a plea deal detailed in court. The remaining charges in the case would be dismissed under the deal.

The other charges included conspiracy to commit first-degree murder after deliberation, attempted murder after deliberation, attempted murder extreme indifference, conspiracy to commit arson, burglary and criminal mischief and possession of a weapon on school grounds. McKinney also pleaded guilty to a charge of second-degree assault for the two students who were mistakenly shot by a security guard in the response to the attack.

McKinney’s sentencing is scheduled for May 18. The mandatory minimum sentence for McKinney, 16, is life with the possibility for parole after 40 years, minus earned time. He faces up to a total of life in prison with the possibility of parole after 40 years, plus 407 1/2 years, according to the 18th Judicial District Attorney’s office. However, under a recent state law, McKinney, as a juvenile offender, could become eligible for parole under a special program after 28 years in prison, District Attorney George Brauchler said.

Because McKinney is a juvenile, he was not eligible for life without parole or the death penalty.

John Castillo, Kendrick Castillo’s father, said afterward Friday that the guilty plea “is what we were hoping for” but “no matter what happens in the courtroom, the results are the still the same.”

https://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/stem-school-shooting/juvenile-suspect-in-stem-school-shooting-pleads-guilty

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Devon Erickson 2021 Information

Devon Erickson, 2021
Name:ERICKSON, DEVON M
Age:21
Ethnicity:OTHER
Gender:MALE
Hair Color:BROWN
Eye Color:
BROWN
Height:5′ 11″
Weight:145
DOC Number:192238
Est. Parole
Eligibility Date:09/17/2081
Next Parole
Hearing Date:This offender is scheduled on the Parole Board agenda for the month and year above. Please contact the facility case manager for the exact date.
Est. Mandatory
Release Date:01/25/9999
Est. Sentence
Discharge Date: 
Current Facility
Assignment:CENTENNIAL CORRECTIONAL FACILITY

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Alec McKinney Release Date

Alec McKinney is serving life without parole

Devon Erickson Release Date

Devon Erickson first chance at parole is in 2081

Tucker McGee Teen Killer Murder In Oklahoma

Tucker McGee Teen Killer

Tucker McGee was seventeen when he murdered sixteen year old JaRay Wilson in Oklahoma. According to court documents Tucker McGee, Cody Godfrey and Caleb Mclemore came across the victim who would be beaten and shot in the head. The sixteen year old body was hidden and remained missing for fourteen months until guilt got the best of Cody Godfrey would would tell police. This teen killer who was proven to have shot the victim in the head would be sentenced to life in prison with no parole for thirty eight years.

Tucker McGee 2023 Information

Gender: Male

Race: White

Height: 5 ft 11 in

Weight: 180 lbs

Hair Color: Brown

Eye Color: Brown


Alias: Tucker McGee


OK DOC#: 713239Birth Date: 10/24/1994


Current Facility: LAWTON CORRECTIONAL FACILITY, LAWTO

Reception Date: 5/19/2015

Tucker McGee More News

Charged in connection with the murder of Weatherford teen, JaRay Wilson, Tucker McGee was sentenced Monday to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

More than two years after Wilson went missing, her family said they’ve finally gained some closure.

Tucker McGee was 10 days short of turning 18 the day he killed JaRay Wilson in October of 2012. He could have been facing the death penalty, but since he was 17 at the time, he received the maximum sentence of life without parole.

4/20/2015 Related Story: Man Sentenced To Life Without Parole In Jaray Wilson Murder Trial

JaRay Wilson’s mother said she knows exactly how long it’s taken to get to this day.

“Two years, six months, and six days,” said Jara Wilson, JaRay’s mother.

2/25/2015 Related Story: Testimony Begins In Trial Of Man Accused Of Killing Jaray Wilson

Wilson’s family and friends wept as the judge sentenced Tucker McGee, but McGee remained stone-faced and emotionless.

“He took everything from us. Everything. Our only child. We’ll never be grandparents. We’ll never get to see her grow up. Know what she could have been,” said Wilson.

For 14 months JaRay’s family searched for their missing daughter.

McGee’s defense attorney said his client was high on K2 and hallucinating when he killed her.

“A lot of people have been messed up on drugs and they didn’t murder someone,” she said.

But in the swift 15 minute sentencing, the judge followed the jury’s recommendation of life without parole.

“JaRay can finally rest in peace. That was the first thing I thought of,” said Jara Wilson.

1/29/2015 Related Story: Suspect in Jaray Wilson Murder Case Pleads ‘Guilty’

As part of his plea agreement in exchange for his testimony against McGee, Cody Godfrey pleaded guilty to Accessory after the Fact Monday. Godfrey admitted to moving JaRay’s body after her murder.

“His testimony was very important to the case. Without his testimony I don’t know if we would have ever found JaRay Wilson,” said prosecutor Angela Marsee.

In January 2014, Godfrey led investigators to the area where Wilson’s body was found buried in a shallow grave. Her skull was cracked, and had what appeared to be a gunshot wound.

“She’s not a victim. She’s a person that deserved way more than she got,” said JaRay’s mother.

Caleb Mclemore was also charged with Accessory after the Fact for his role in the murder. He’s currently serving a 25-year sentence.

Tucker McGee More News

A man who was convicted of killing a Weatherford teen nearly six years ago received a new sentence on Monday.

In 2015, a jury found Tucker McGee guilty of first-degree murder in the death of 16-year-old JaRay Wilson in October 2012.

Prosecutors say he shot her in the head along a rural county road, and then buried her body the next day with the help of two other teens.

For months, family members searched for clues related to JaRay’s disappearance. Officials say about 14 months after she was reported missing, one of those teenagers came forward and told police what happened to JaRay.

“She’s kind of been treated like trash throughout this whole process. You know, the boys and the manner of and how they treated her. It’s just hard,” Ronette Thiessan, Wilson’s aunt, said during the trial.

It took a jury just two-and-a-half hours to find McGee guilty of murder. They recommended a life without parole sentence.

“To me, he doesn’t deserve to be out. He took her away from us; he deserves to pay for it,” Jara Wilson, JaRay’s mother, told News 4 in 2015.

In April, a judge followed the jury’s recommendation and sentenced McGee to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

His original sentence was repealed by a court, so McGee had to be re-sentenced on Monday.

A judge sentenced McGee to life in prison, making him eligible for parole after 38 years behind bars

.Man convicted of killing Weatherford teen re-sentenced

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Tucker McGee is serving a life sentence however is eligible for parole in 2053

Thomas McCloud Jr Teen Killer Murders 2 Homeless Men

Thomas McCloud Jr Teen Killer

Thomas McCloud Jr was fourteen years old when he was convicted of two murders in Michigan. According to court documents Thomas McCloud Jr and another young teenager Dontez Tillman attacked a homeless man and ended up beating the sixty one year old man to death. This teen killer would be convicted of a second murder in the same fashion. The fourteen year old would be sentenced to life in prison without parole

Thomas McCloud 2023 Information

thomas mccloud 2020 photos

MDOC Number:748594

SID Number:3533885W

Name:THOMAS JAY MCCLOUD JR

Racial Identification:Black

Gender:Male

Hair:Black

Eyes:Brown

Height:5′ 6″Weight:171 lbs.

Date of Birth:12/01/1993 

Current Status: Prisoner

Earliest Release Date:02/22/2041

Assigned Location:St. Louis Correctional Facility

Maximum Discharge Date:08/22/2068

Thomas McCloud Jr Other News

Every day is long for Thomas McCloud Jr., an 18-year-old prisoner serving a life sentence for crimes he committed at 14, but it’s the final two minutes that feel like an eternity.

Each night before lights out, Thomas McCloud walks past 41 cells — each home to an inmate older than himself — until he reaches his own. And then, in an act he describes as the hardest part of his new life, he locks himself in.

A fitting metaphor, perhaps, for a teen convicted in the brutal and fatal beatings of two homeless men on the streets of Pontiac. But also a chilling reminder of a life sentence that has only just begun.

“It just brings you back,” McCloud says by phone from behind an inch of plexiglass in a no-contact visitor area of the Michigan Reformatory in Ionia.

“I try not to think about it, because it just puts you in depression. But then you walk past all these people who been here so long and then they make you shut your own door. Over and over again. Every night.”

Thomas McCloud won’t have to worry about that walk on this particular night, however. After he puts down the phone, he’ll return to solitary confinement, a punishment he received after a guard overheard him engaging in an inappropriate conversation with another inmate

McCloud, convicted in 2009 on two counts of first-degree murder, is one of 359 prisoners in Michigan currently serving a mandatory life sentence without the possibility of parole for crimes they committed as minors. That’s one out of seven of the 2,500 juvenile lifers nationwide.

Next Tuesday the U.S. Supreme Court will weigh whether juveniles are too impulsive, their brains too underdeveloped, and their remaining lives too long to receive the same mandatory life sentences as adults who kill.

Because the cases before the high court focus on two 14-year-olds, MLive this week is looking at Michigan’s lifers behind bars at the same age.

McCloud and fellow 14-year-old Dontez Tillman, his best friend and middle school classmate, were tried and convicted in the fatal beating of Wilford “Frenchie” Hamilton, a 61-year-old homeless man found behind a Pontiac nightclub in 2008.

He and another friend, 16-year-old Darrin Higgins Jr., were charged in the beating death of a second homeless man, 65-year-old Lee Hoffman. And all three teens were accused but not charged in two other non-fatal attacks.

Higgins took a plea deal, testifying against his friends in exchange for a lighter sentence. He could be released as early as 2027. McCloud and Tillman — acting on the advice of their mothers — rejected multiple plea deals and stood trial in 2009.

“Mr. McCloud, you killed two people,” Oakland County Circuit Court Judge Steven Andrews said at sentencing. “You killed two men who did you no wrong.”

Tillman’s mom cried aloud during the hearing. McCloud’s sister ran from the courtroom when the sentence was read. Both boys wept, just as some jury members had when they delivered their verdict.

“There’s nothing that can help you brace for your son’s life to be taken at 14,” McCloud’s mother said in a television interview outside the courthouse. “Thomas has been misdiagnosed, he shouldn’t even have been charged as an adult.”

The trial made national headlines, with some speculating the teens killed for sport. “They were boys who beat up homeless people because they wanted to,” Oakland County Prosecutor Jessica Cooper said in an MLive interview last year as she looked back on the case.

McCloud, who is in the midst of an appeal, refuses to discuss specifics of the case but maintains his innocence, admitting he made mistakes but arguing he and his friends never intended to kill anyone.

He blames his conviction, in part, on admissions he made during a police interrogation, suggesting he was high, drunk and thoroughly confused.

“I feel bad for the families (of the homeless men) and my own,” he says. “But at the same time, part of me doesn’t feel bad. You all just killed me too by putting me here for life.”

Through his first two and a half years in prison, McCloud has received nine tickets for minor misconduct violations and two for serious fights. Those numbers are not unusually high, but he’s a Level IV inmate, meaning the state considers him a significant threat.

His last fight of record — a January incident he describes as a rivalry dispute between inmates from Pontiac, Flint and Detroit — resulted in his transfer to Ionia from Lapeer, where he had lived with Tillman and other young prisoners in a special section of the Thumb Correctional Facility.

“I didn’t want to leave Tillman,” he says of his friend. “That was my man. He’s almost like family, blood family. I’m glad he’s still there though, because this place is f—-d up.”

At 18, McCloud is one of the youngest prisoners in the Michigan Reformatory, a high-security prison only minutes from the Ionia Free Fair. He says he’s purposefully made few friends as he looks to stay out of trouble. And while he enjoys joking around with some of the older prisoners, he’s reluctant to disclose his age for fear he’ll become a target.

A lot of them been here longer than I’ve been alive,” McCloud says. “A lot of them try to help you, but I see them and I worry I’m gonna be the next old guy telling young (prisoners) they’ve got to strive to do well and get out.”

McCloud’s childhood, as he describes it, did little to set him up for success. His dad went to prison when he was 6. He received therapy for bipolar disorder and depression at 11. He skipped his first day of school in fifth grade. The next year he began smoking and drinking on a regular basis.

McCloud says he did not learn to read or write until after his arrest, explaining he was forced to take classes at a juvenile detention center while he awaited trial. After sentencing, he began to work on his G.E.D. in Lapeer.

Today, reading is one of McCloud’s favorite hobbies. He’s currently working his way through “Under the Dome,” a thousand-page novel by Stephen King he borrowed from another inmate who had been using it as a TV stand.

But McCloud’s options for learning — and for living — are limited since his transfer to Ionia.

He’s on a waiting list to return to school. He’s afraid to visit the library because of stories he’s heard about sexual assault. He hasn’t saved enough money to buy a TV. He doesn’t have a job. And because he is a high-security prisoner, he only has access to the yard once a day.

He dreams of a future on the outside, and has kept tabs on challenges to the law in Michigan; a federal anti-lifer case is pending in Detroit, and some inmates have individual claims. He was not aware of next week’s Supreme Court arguments.

But as he begins to show signs of aging — he’s filled out and grown a light beard since trial — he’s afraid of what the phrase “life in prison” might actually mean.

“The scariest thing is to think that I’m going to die in prison,” he says. “It’s always in the back of my mind. I’m scared of dying, period, but it’s worse to think it’ll happen here.”

https://www.mlive.com/news/2012/03/michigan_juvenile_lifer_thomas.html

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Thomas McCloud is currently incarcerated at St. Louis Correctional Facility

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Thomas McCloud max release date is 2068

Kam McLeod and Bryer Schmegelsky Teen Killers

Kam McLeod and Bryer Schmegelsky Teen Killers

Kam McLeod and Bryer Schmegelsky are two teen killers from Canada that would keep Canada on edge during a massive manhunt. According to police reports the two teens made a plan to murder as many people as possible and they expected to be dead within the week What ended up taking place is three murders before the two fugitives would take their own lives. There first murder took place in British Columbia where they would take the life of a professor before days later taking the lives of two people who were on the side of the highway with road problems.

The manhunt would span four provinces and thousands of kilometres. In the end the pair of teen killers would commit suicide but not before filming a brief video confessing to the three murders and what they wanted done with their remains.

Kam McLeod and Bryer Schmegelsky Other News

The RCMP said two teenage suspects charged with the murder of three individuals in British Columbia confessed to the killings via video recordings they left behind before shooting themselves.

The B.C. homicides sparked a massive manhunt across Western Canada over the summer that ended when the bodies of the suspects — 19-year-old Kam McLeod and 18-year-old Bryer Schmegelsky — were found on Aug. 7, some 3,000 km away in the Manitoba wilderness.

The RCMP, which released its investigative findings on Friday, said Schmegelsky and McLeod expressed no remorse and did not give a motive.

“They were cold, they were remorseless, matter-of-fact,” said Assistant Commissioner Kevin Hackett at a press conference.

McLeod and Schmegelsky were charged in the deaths of a couple, American Chynna Deese, 24, and her Australian boyfriend Lucas Fowler, 23, as well as 64-year-old Leonard Dyck, a botany lecturer at the University of British Columbia.

The case shocked Canadians and drew international attention as authorities chased the suspects’ trail across remote parts of Western Canada.

Deese and Fowler were found early in the morning on July 15 along the Alaska Highway in northern B.C., while Dyck’s body was nearly 550 kilometres away from where Deese and Fowler were discovered.

Investigators believe McLeod and Schmegelsky came across Fowler’s van and targeted the couple for unknown reasons. They shot and killed them before continuing up to Yukon.

Fowler and Deese died from multiple gunshot wounds, with some of the shots coming from behind the victims, according to the pathologist’s report.

On July 19, RCMP responded to a vehicle fire near Dease Lake and found Dyck’s body about two kilometres south. He had head and body injuries, including bruises and burns, and a single bullet wound.

Spent casings found at both murder scenes were found to be the same.

The police eventually determined that the burnt-out pick-up truck belonged to McLeod and learned from family members that the two teenagers were on a trip to northern B.C. and Yukon to look for work. Their last contact with family was on July 17.

RCMP determined that the two suspects returned to B.C. days after killing Deese and Fowler, due to car trouble and came across Dyck, who was on an outdoor research trip. The suspects then burned their vehicle to hide evidence, before stealing Dyck’s car, money and other personal items.

The murder confessions were filmed on a digital camera belonging to Dyck.

The search concentrated around the northern Manitoba community of Gillam after Dyck’s burned out Toyota RAV4 was found in the area shortly after the police named them as suspects.

Schmegelsky and McLeod, who were initially reported as missing and possible victims, died from self-inflicted gunshot wounds and were already dead for several days when their bodies were discovered after an exhaustive and challenging search through difficult terrain, police said.

McLeod likely shot Schmegelsky before shooting himself in a suicide pact, Hackett said.

Two rifles found nearby were determined to be the same weapons that killed the three victims as well as the two suspects themselves.

The murders appear to be random crimes of opportunity with no known motive, Hackett said, and authorities have no reason to believe there are other suspects or victims.

Six videos and three still images were found on the camera. The first video, just under a minute long, showed Schmegelsky confessing to the three murders. Schmegelsky said in a second video that they may have to commit suicide, and again took responsibility for Fowler, Deese and Dyck’s deaths without expressing any remorse.

The suspects said in another video they were preparing for their own deaths, but were planning to kill more people. In their final video, which they called their last will and testament, they expressed their wish to be cremated.

The RCMP will not release the videos, Hackett said, due to concerns they could inspire copycat murders. The videos may have been made for notoriety, and the release of the video would sensationalize their actions and be disrespectful to the victims’ families, he added.

Up to 160 police officers worked extended shifts on the investigation, sifting through thousands of hours of CCTV videos, 1,500 calls from the public, and extensive trail of evidence, but found no indication the murders were premeditated and no clues that could shed light on the killers’ motivations.

The RCMP said they ensured the families were always made aware of any information that would be released to the public, including those in Friday’s report.

“We respect that the answers have not reduced the trauma and the grief experienced by the families of Lucas Fowler, Chynna Deese, and Leonard Dyck,” Hackett said. 

Kam McLeod and Bryer Schmegelsky Video

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Kam McLeod and Bryer Schmegelsky
Kam McLeod and Bryer Schmegelsky 1

Kam McLeod and Bryer Schmegelsky Other News

Two fugitives suspected of killing three people before taking their own lives had recorded videos in which they took responsibility for the deaths of the victims, authorities said Friday.

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police said six videos on a digital camera were found near the bodies of the two suspects. Authorities don’t plan to release the videos to the public, but described their contents.

The bodies of the suspects, 19-year-old Kam McLeod and 18-year-old Bryer Schmegelsky, were found Aug. 7 in dense bush in Manitoba. Authorities say they died by suicide.

The teens were charged with the murder of a University of British Columbia botany lecturer Leonard Dyck. They were also suspects in the deaths of American Chynna Deese and her Australian boyfriend Lucas Fowler.

“We have no evidence that leads us to identify what the motive was,” RCMP assistant commissioner Kevin Hackett said. “If there was a motive, it is gone with the accused.”

A manhunt for the teenage suspects had spread across three provinces and involved the Canadian military.

In the first video, which lasts 58 seconds, Schmegelsky says the pair are responsible for the three killings, according to police. They say they are planning to march to Hudson Bay where they hope to hijack a boat and go to Europe or Africa.

In the second, 51-second video, Schmegelsky says they have reached a river that is fast moving. Schmegelsky says they may have to kill themselves, to which McLeod agrees. They again take credit for killing the three people.

In a 32-second video, Schmegelsky says the pair have shaven in preparation for their death. They now plan to kill more people and expect to be dead in a week.

In a 19-second video the pair describe how they are going to kill themselves.

In a 31-second video, McLeod and Schmegelsky states this is their last will and testament. They wish to be cremated.

There is also a six-second video which appears to have been taken unintentionally.

Hackett said the pair looked “cold, remorseless” on the videos.

Fowler and Deese may have been targeted because they were stopped on a remote northern British Columbia highway with vehicle problems, according to Hackett.

“There is no real clear understanding of why they were ultimately targeted, other than the fact they were at the side of the road,” Hackett said.

Police declined to release the videos. The bodies of the suspects were found near Gillam, Manitoba — more than 2,000 miles (3,200 kilometers) from northern British Columbia.

The bodies of Deese and Fowler were found near the Alaska Highway, about 300 miles (500 kilometers) from where Dyck’s body was discovered, on July 19.

The digital camera used to make the videos belonged to Dyck.

Fowler, the son of a chief inspector with the New South Wales Police Department in Australia, was living in British Columbia and Deese was visiting him.

The couple had met at a hostel in Croatia and their romance blossomed as they adventured across the U.S., Mexico, Peru and elsewhere, the woman’s older brother said.

The brother, British Deese, said the couple was on a trip to visit Canadian national parks when they were killed