Terri-Lynne McClintic And The Tori Stafford Murder

Terri Lynne McClintic teen killer

Terri-Lynne McClintic and her boyfriend Michael Rafferty were responsible for the murder of eight year old Tori Stafford a case that shocked Canada. Tori Stafford was leaving her school when she was approached by Terri Lynne who would be seen on video surveillance walking away with the little girl. Tori Stafford would be brought into a car where she would sit in the back seat of the car driven by Michael Rafferty. The couple would begin to drive away from the school, Rafferty had removed the battery from his cell phone so it could not be stopped. The car would stop three times before they ended up at the place where the horrors would take place. During one of the stops Terri Lynne would go into a hardware store where she would purchase a claw hammer and garbage bags.

When they reached their final location. Terri-Lynne McClintic would go for a walk while Michael Rafferty would sexually assault Tori Stafford. McClintic reportedly came back once and saw Rafferty still sexually abusing the nine year old girl. Terri-Lynne McClintic when she came back the second time would murder Tori by striking the little girl with the hammer. Tori Stafford body would be left in the woods wearing only her shirt.

This teen killer would be identified as the woman on the video and would be arrested over a month later where she would make a full confession. Terri-Lynne McClintic would initially be charged as accessory to murder however that would be upgraded to first degree murder, the highest charge in the Canadian justice system. Michael Rafferty would also be charged with first degree murder along with kidnapping and sexual assault.

The body of Tori Stafford would be found three months after she disappeared.

Terri-Lynne McClintic would plead guilty to murder and would be sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for twenty five years. Michael Rafferty would be found guilty of murder, kidnapping and sexual assault and would also receive a life sentence.

Terri Lyne McClintic And The Tori Stafford Murder Other News

Child killer Terri-Lynne McClintic is back in an Ontario prison after a brief and controversial stint in an Indigenous healing lodge, according to her victim’s father.

Rodney Stafford said on Thursday Terri-Lynne McClintic has transferred back to Grand Valley Institution for Women in Kitchener, Ont.

The “next step,” he said in a Facebook post, which CBC News confirmed, is getting McClintic into maximum security “where she rightfully belongs.” 

Terri-Lynne McClintic pleaded guilty for her role in the 2009 kidnapping and killing of eight-year-old Tori Stafford.

She had been serving a life sentence at Grand Valley before being transferred to the Okimaw Ohci Healing Lodge for Aboriginal Women on Nekaneet First Nation in southern Saskatchewan.

News of the transfer prompted public outrage and a protest on Parliament Hill, led by Rodney Stafford

Correctional Service Canada (CSC) was ordered to review the case and announced changes to its transfer policies earlier this month.​ McClintic was then sent to the Edmonton Institution for Women, a multi-level facility with minimum, medium and maximum security wings.

CSC also said it will do a better job of keeping victims’ families informed about transfers. 

Stafford said McClintic is in a medium security section at Grand Valley. Terri-Lynne McClintic is not eligible for parole until 2031.

Correctional Service Canada does not comment on the location of prisoners.

Terri-Lynne McClintic More News

A young woman convicted of killing eight-year-old Victoria Stafford says she originally told police her boyfriend, Michael Rafferty, killed the girl.

Terri-Lynne McClintic is already serving a life sentence after pleading guilty to first-degree murder in the death and is now testifying at Rafferty’s trial.

He has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder, sexual assault causing bodily harm and kidnapping

Court has heard that Tori was killed on April 8, 2009, and that Terri-Lynne McClintic was arrested on another matter on April 12.

She says Rafferty came to visit her in the detention centre, worried that she would say something to police that would implicate him, but she told him she would take the fall for everything.

Terri-Lynne McClintic also says she wrote her recollection of the events of April 8 in a letter to her lawyer while in detention, including that Rafferty was the one who killed Tori with blows to the head from a hammer — but she testified in court this week that she did it.

Terri-Lynne McClintic said Wednesday that she couldn’t really believe what happened and that she couldn’t believe she was capable of murder.

“It was against everything that I believe in, everything that I stand for,” she said about the events of April 8.

The letter to her lawyer represented “what I wanted to be true, the truth that I wanted to believe,” she added. “That’s what I told myself was true. So that was the recollection of everything that had happened and everything was true up to the point of the murder.”

Terri-Lynne McClintic testified Tuesday that she abducted Tori outside her Woodstock, Ont., school at the urging of Rafferty, who wanted a “young female.” They drove more than 100 kilometres north to a rural area where he sexually assaulted the Grade 3 student, then Terri-Lynne McClintic used a hammer to kill Tori with blows to the head, she said.

Rafferty, wearing an ill-fitting three-piece suit, frequently smirked and muttered to himself throughout McClintic’s testimony.

McClintic’s name came up in tips almost immediately after Tori was reported missing, court has heard, and after police found out she had an outstanding warrant she was arrested May 12 for a parole violation. Rafferty visited her at the youth detention centre and she assured him she wouldn’t implicate him if police asked her about Tori, she said.

“I said that I would take the fall for everything, that I would say it was all me, that he had more to lose than I did,” Terri-Lynne McClintic said.

She further told him, “he had a life, a job, things going for him and I was just, I really had nothing,” court heard. “I said don’t worry about it, it’s OK. It’s OK. I’m just an 18-year-old junkie anyways.”

Rafferty told her, “you realize what that would consist of right?” and added, “I’ve always wanted conjugal visits.”

During another visit, the couple talked about Terri-Lynne McClintic running away from the detention centre, court heard.

“He said maybe we could be like the next Bonnie and Clyde,” she said.

Rafferty appeared to scoff Wednesday when McClintic said that and stared up at the ceiling, muttering to himself.

Terri-Lynne McClintic said she will never forget what Rafferty said to her the last time she saw him at the detention centre before she confessed to police and they were both charged in Tori’s death.

“I remember touching his face and…he looked up and almost, like, laughed at me and said, ‘You’ll do anything for a little bit of love, eh?’”

Earlier Wednesday, Terri-Lynne McClintic testified that Rafferty didn’t say much right after Tori’s death, “just that we should never speak of this again.”

Court heard the pair changed shoes, drove to a car wash in Cambridge, Ont., and dumped garbage bags that had the hammer Terri-Lynne McClintic says she used to kill the eight-year-old girl. Rafferty had a gym bag in his car with spare clothes, court heard.

“He switched shirts because his shirt had blood on it,” McClintic said, noting he kept the same pants as before.

Terri-Lynne McClintic changed into clothes Rafferty gave her, she said, and the old clothes were thrown out the window once they were back on Highway 401. She also cut parts out of the back seat and threw those out the window as well, court heard.

“There were two spots on the back seat that he couldn’t get clean and had to be cut out,” she said.

When she arrived home her mother asked her where she had been, so Terri-Lynne McClintic told her she had been chased by police into London, she said. Terri-Lynne McClintic then took some OxyContin with her mom, court heard.

She and Rafferty met a few days later to discuss her alibi — she would say they went window shopping in Oakville, about two hours away from where Tori’s body was found, and stopped by a dance studio, Terri-Lynne McClintic said.

“I wrote it down in a journal so I wouldn’t forget what he said… so I wouldn’t mess anything up,” she said.

On Tuesday, McClintic’s first day of testimony included a disturbing telling of Tori’s last hours. She told the court that pent-up rage from her own childhood trauma caused her to kill Tori by attacking her with a hammer several times.

Terri-Lynne McClintic Videos

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Terri-Lynne McClintic will go to trial this fall for allegedly assaulting an inmate at Kitchener’s prison for women.

The six-hour trial will be held Sept. 12 in Kitchener’s Ontario Court.

McClintic was charged with assault causing bodily harm after an alleged altercation at the prison with inmate Aimee McIntyre on Jan. 20. McIntyre is serving a life sentence for first-degree murder.

Terri-Lynne McClintic, 21, is also serving a life sentence for the murder of eight-year-old Victoria Stafford in 2009. She has no chance of parole for 25 years.

McClintic testified at the trial of her former boyfriend, Michael Rafferty, that she delivered the fatal hammer blows to the little girl.

She also talked about kicking and stomping on another female inmate during his trial.

Rafferty, 31, has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder, sexual assault causing bodily harm and kidnapping in Tori’s death. His trial is winding down in London.

Terri-Lynne McClintic made a brief video appearance Wednesday in Kitchener court.

Her lawyer, Geoff Snow, said outside court that he expects prison staff will be among the witnesses at McClintic’s trial.

https://www.toronto.com/news-story/2607106-mcclintic-trial-on-prison-assault-charges-set-for-september-in-kitchener/

John McLaughlin Teen Killer School Shooter

John McLaughlin Teen Killer

John McLaughlin was responsible for the ROCORI High School shooting in Minnesota. According to court documents John McLaughlin walked into ROCORI High School looking for a particular student who he said was bullying him over his acne. McLaughlin would find the student exiting a locker room and proceeded to shoot him in the chest, the teen killer would fire a second shot hitting another student which would cause his death.

The initial victim would try to run from the scene however he would be chased down and shot in the head. John McLaughlin would empty his gun and turn himself over to a teacher. McLaughlin would be convicted of the two murders and sentenced to two consecutive life sentences.

John McLaughlin 2023 Information

John McLaughlin Teen Killer School Shooter

MNDOC Offender ID:218041

Name:John Jason Mclaughlin

Birth Date:07/19/1988

Current Status:Incarcerated as of 08/30/2005.

Currently at MCF Stillwater.

Sentence Date:08/30/2005

Anticipated Release Date: Life

John McLaughlin Other News

On September 24, 2003, John McLaughlin loaded his father’s semiautomatic .22 caliber pistol, put it in a gym bag, and brought it to school with the intention to “shoot some people.”  Specifically, McLaughlin intended to “hurt” fellow ninth-grader Bartell, who, according to McLaughlin, was one of the students who teased him “all the time.”  Bartell and McLaughlin were in the same physical education class.  Shortly before that class was to start, McLaughlin brought the gun to the boys’ locker room and cocked it in the bathroom so no one would see it.  He then hid the gun in his gym bag, sat on a bench, and waited for Bartell.  Other students were getting ready for class in the locker room at this time.  John McLaughlinasked one of these students, R.S., where C.E., another student in the physical education class, was.  R.S. responded that C.E. was gone that day.[1]  

Shortly thereafter, R.S. left the locker room with Bartell, who had changed clothes in an area of the locker room that John McLaughlin could not see.  McLaughlin followed R.S. and Bartell out of the locker room and into a hallway, where he fired the gun at and hit Bartell.  Bartell grabbed his left side as he and R.S. continued down the hallway toward a staircase leading to a gymnasium.  Meanwhile, McLaughlin cleared a jam in the gun and reloaded it.  Before Bartell and R.S. reached the stairs, McLaughlin fired a second shot in Bartell’s direction; this shot missed Bartell, but hit fellow student Aaron Rollins, who was walking toward McLaughlin.  Rollins raised his hands toward the wound in his neck and as he started falling, said, “[h]elp me, I’m hurt.  Help me, I’ve been shot.”  

As R.S. and Bartell climbed the stairs, Bartell lifted his shirt and said to R.S., “Look, I’m shot.”  R.S. and Bartell continued up the stairs and into the gym, looking for their physical education teacher.  Shortly thereafter, McLaughlin entered the gym and approached Bartell.  When McLaughlin was approximately two feet from Bartell, who had turned to face him, McLaughlin shot Bartell a second time, this time hitting him in the forehead.  Student witnesses estimated that the gun was anywhere from one to eight inches from Bartell’s head when McLaughlin pulled the trigger, but a forensic expert determined that the distance was approximately 18 inches to three feet.  Bartell collapsed instantly, and McLaughlin started to walk away. 

Physical education teacher Mark Johnson was completing some paperwork in the gym when McLaughlin shot Bartell the second time.  As McLaughlin walked away from Bartell, Johnson stood up from his seat in the bleachers and first began to walk toward Bartell, and then toward McLaughlin.  After Johnson took two or three steps toward McLaughlin, McLaughlin raised the gun and pointed it at Johnson.  Johnson stopped immediately, raised his hand, and said “no” in a loud voice.  McLaughlin then lowered the gun, ejected the remaining shells onto the floor, and dropped the gun.  Johnson picked up the gun, grabbed McLaughlin by the wrist, and took him to the school office.  Shortly thereafter, law enforcement officers arrived and transported McLaughlin to the police station.  

While the officers dealt with McLaughlin, emergency response personnel attended to Bartell and Rollins.  Attempts to revive Rollins through CPR were unsuccessful, and he was declared dead upon arrival at a St. Cloud hospital.  Bartell underwent surgery soon after he arrived at the same hospital, but remained unconscious until his death 16 days later.  

In an interview with Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) Agent Ken McDonald immediately after the shooting, McLaughlin initially admitted shooting Bartell in the basement, but moments later, he said that he thought his first shot missed Bartell.  McLaughlin told McDonald that once he reached the gym, he “shot [Bartell] again” from a distance of five to six feet.  When asked where he shot Bartell, McLaughlin responded, “I don’t know, I think right here,” and pointed toward his shoulder.  McLaughlin told McDonald that he did not think he shot anyone other than Bartell, but he acknowledged that he might have, “if [he] missed, maybe.”  Midway through the interview, McDonald learned that one of the victims had died.  When he relayed this information to McLaughlin, McLaughlin started to cry.

McLaughlin denied wanting to kill or “seriously hurt” anybody and told McDonald that he “was just trying to hurt [Bartell] like he hurt me.”  He said that he did not think a .22 gun would do “very much” harm.[2]  McLaughlin also told McDonald that he started thinking about bringing a gun to school approximately one week earlier.  He also said that two days before the shootings he checked the school for metal detectors and security cameras.  Toward the end of the interview, McDonald asked McLaughlin, “Do you think you did something wrong today?”  McLaughlin replied, “[y]eah.” 

John McLaughlin told McDonald that his trouble with Bartell began in sixth grade, and that he was teased “basically about [his] zits and stuff.”  Of the 12 students who testified at McLaughlin’s trial, including several of McLaughlin’s friends, only two told the district court that they had ever observed any conflict between Bartell and McLaughlin.  The conflicts these witnesses described involved pushing, yelling, and “talking,” but not Bartell calling McLaughlin names or teasing him about his acne or anything else.  Two students testified that C.E. called McLaughlin names such as “fag” and “asshole.”  But these witnesses qualified their testimony by stating that C.E. teased “everybody else” in the same manner, that C.E. was “just a kidding type of guy,” and that the conflict between C.E. and McLaughlin was “nothing major.”  A third witness remembered one instance in which C.E. pushed McLaughlin out of the way by McLaughlin’s locker, and McLaughlin responded by acting as if it did not happen.

The student who said he only saw Bartell and John McLaughlin “talking” apparently testified to the grand jury that McLaughlin “was teased almost every day or every other day” and that “[Bartell] and his friends would go up to [McLaughlin] and they would just push him around.”  On cross-examination, this student agreed with defense counsel’s statement that “[your grand jury testimony] was based mainly on rumors that you had heard.”  Another witness admitted on cross-examination that she had heard stories from other students about McLaughlin being teased, even though she never saw it happen.  Defense counsel read from a statement this same witness gave to BCA agents on the day of the shooting, in which she said that McLaughlin “was a pretty good person and he got teased for a lot of things, for just a lot of things.” 

B.K., who knew John McLaughlin since elementary school and developed a friendship with him in middle school, told the court that she exchanged e-mail messages with McLaughlin during the summer before ninth grade and after the school year started.  During this time, John McLaughlin told B.K. that he had a girlfriend named Suki Renoko, and he asked B.K. if she would exchange e-mail messages with Renoko.  B.K. began to correspond with Renoko, but she soon became suspicious that there was no such person and that Renoko was actually McLaughlin.  She testified that the messages contained overly personal questions that typical 14-year-olds would not ask and had the same spelling errors as McLaughlin’s messages.  In one message from “Renoko,” McLaughlin characterized himself as a “sniper.”  In another, he described an incident in which he cut the face of someone who stabbed his sister.  Before classes began on the day of the shooting, John McLaughlin e-mailed B.K. under his own name and wrote, “befor[e] [I] go to[o] far [I] have to ask you not to tell any one about this not the news cops or parents ok * * * so [I] guess this is goodbye my love.”  B.K. did not receive this message until after the shootings when she returned home from school.

Approximately six months after the shootings, the Stearns County Juvenile Court certified McLaughlin to stand trial as an adult.  John McLaughlin appealed the certification to the Minnesota Court of Appeals, which affirmed the certification order.  The parties then agreed to a bifurcated bench trial in which McLaughlin would stipulate to guilt in the second-degree murder of Rollins during the trial’s first phase and would attempt to prove a mental illness defense during the second phase.  There was no stipulation as to Bartell.  At the close of the first phase, the district court found John McLaughlin guilty of first-degree murder in Bartell’s death, second-degree murder in Rollins’ death, and possession of a dangerous weapon on school property.  In the second phase, the court heard testimony from six mental health experts—three retained by McLaughlin, one by the state, and two by the court. 

https://mn.gov/law-library-stat/archive/supct/0701/opa052327-0111.htm

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John McLaughlin

John McLaughlin More News

Students and staff at ROCORI High School are marking the 10th anniversary of a fatal school shooting in a low-key manner at the request of families involved.

Teens and educators paused for a moment of silence Tuesday to remember the Sept. 24, 2003, high school shooting that killed two students — 14-year-old Seth Bartell and 17-year-old Aaron Rollins. Ninth-grader John McLaughlin was convicted in the shooting and sentenced to life in prison.

Cold Spring Mayor Doug Schmitz told the St. Cloud Times there’s a frustration among residents of the small community that it’s known only for the school shooting and the fatal shooting of police officer Tom Decker last November.

Schmitz said the community is moving forward, but will never forget

Frequently Asked Questions

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John McLaughlin is currently incarcerated at the Stillwater prison

John McLaughlin Release Date

John McLaughlin is serving a life sentence

Bethany McKee Teen Killer Murders 2 In Illinois

bethany mckee teen killer photos

Bethany McKee was eighteen years old when she participated in a robbery that ended with two murders. According to court documents Bethany McKee, who was pregnant at the time, and three others – Joshua Miner, Adam Landerman and Alissa Massaro planned the robbery of the two men. In the end the two men were strangled to death.

This teen killer did not participate in the actual double murder however her participation would end with a life without parole sentence. According to prosecutors Brittany McKee led the two men to their murders

Bethany McKee 2023 Information

bethany mckee 2020 photos 1
Parent Institution:LOGAN CORRECTIONAL CENTER
Offender Status:IN CUSTODY
Location:LOGAN

Bethany McKee More News

A Shorewood woman convicted in the 2013 grisly killings of two Joliet men has asked the Illinois Supreme Court to review her case and overturn her life sentence.

Bethany McKee, 23, was sentenced to life in prison three years ago after being found guilty of murder for the strangulation deaths of Terrance Rankins and Eric Glover. The two men were found dead inside a residence on Hickory Street.

At her trial, Will County prosecutors said McKee and three others — Joshua Miner, Adam Landerman and Alissa Massaro — plotted to rob and kill Rankins and Glover. McKee, who knew Rankins, told her friends he always carried cash with him and agreed to help lure him and Glover to the apartment to rob the two men, prosecutors said.

Though she did not participate in the strangulation of the two men, state law requires a mandatory life sentence when found guilty of two murders. McKee was found guilty under the theory of accountability, where prosecutors argued she knew — or should have known — that the two men could be killed as part of the robbery. In developing the plan to rob the two men, Miner said he and Landerman could kill them and the four developed a signal for the two women to leave when the robbery would happen, prosecutors argued at trial.

Both Miner, 29, and Landerman, 24, are serving life sentences for the murders. They also are appealing their convictions.

Massaro, 23, pleaded guilty to a lesser charge of robbery and concealing a homicide in exchange for her testimony. She received a 10-year sentence and is eligible for parole in 2018 according to the Illinois Department of Corrections website.

An appellate court upheld McKee’s sentence in June. In July, her attorneys filed a request for the Illinois Supreme Court to review the case.

The request argues the justices should review the case because of conflicting rulings from other districts involving similar cases. McKee’s attorney, Bryon Kohut, also argues McKee was just 18 years old at the time of the killings, had no criminal background and suffered from “considerable mental health issues” and “horrific abuses” as a teenager.

Kohut points to two other Illinois cases that involved murders and convictions based on the accountability theory. In those cases, the mandatory life sentence was eventually ruled unconstitutional based on the defendants’ young ages, lack of criminal history and support of family, according to court documents filed last month.

Kohut said the earliest the state’s high court could review the case is September.

In an appellate court ruling upholding Will County Judge Gerald Kinney’s decision to impose a life sentence, appellate court justices in their written ruling noted McKee “actively participated” in planning the crime and was an “instigator.” They noted she lured the two men to the apartment, made the suggestion to rob Rankins, used money that was stolen from the two men to buy gas and stole various items, including baby boots, from Glover’s car after he died, according to court documents.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/suburbs/daily-southtown/ct-sta-joliet-hickory-street-murders-appeal-st-0802-20170801-story.html

Bethany McKee Other News

Bethany McKee, 20, will spend her natural life in prison after being sentenced on Tuesday for her role in the 2013 murders of Eric Glover and Terrance Rankins.

Glover and Rankins, both 22, were strangled to death. Their bodies were found with plastic bags over their heads inside a home on Hickory Street in Joliet, Ill.

“She is the reason he was there,” said Jamille Kent, Rankins’ mother. “It would have never happened if she didn’t bring him there.”

McKee was found guilty in the murders by a judge in August. On Monday, her defense attorney’s motion for a new trial was denied.

Joshua Miner, 26, the mastermind behind the murders, was found guilty last month. His sentencing is set for later this month.

Adam Landerman, 21, is also charged in the murders. He is awaiting trial.

A fourth suspect, Alissa Massaro, pleaded guilty to robbery and concealment of a homicidal death for which she received a 10-year prison sentence.

Defense attorneys argued that McKee did not physically harm the men, that she is mentally ill, had been abducted into a sex trafficking ring at 14 and had a history of substance drug abuse.

McKee apologized to the families in court. Crying, and at times hard to understand, she read a statement saying, “had I known this was going to happen I would have made better choices.”

Judge Gerald Kinney was critical of the state’s sentencing guidelines.

“If given discretion, I would impose a sentence that was significant but would not be the maximum,” he said.

As the state mandates, Judge Kinney sentenced McKee to natural life in prison.

“She’s confused,” said Bethany McKee’s father, Bill McKee. “She has no idea what’s going on.”

The Rankins family, while still grieving, say they are grateful to Bill McKee. It was McKee who actually called police which led to discovering the victims.

“He did the right thing and we appreciate that, so our prayers go out that family as well,” said D’Arcy Kent, Terrance Rankins’ uncle.

https://abc7chicago.com/bethany-mckee-terrance-rankins-eric-glover-joshua-miner/380156/

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Bethany McKee

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Bethany McKee Now

Bethany McKee is currently incarcerated at the Logan Correctional Facility

Bethany McKee Release Date

Bethany McKee is serving a life sentence

Amanda McGhee Teen Killer Murders 2

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Amanda McGhee was fifteen and pregnant when along with her older boyfriend Andrew Mann murdered her father and stepmother. According to prosecutors Amanda McGhee and Andrew Mann planned the double murder for weeks. The teen killers would first shoot her father, who would lay dying for several hours before calling her stepmother home and fatally shooting her. Amanda McGhee would be sentenced to forty five years in prison and Andrew Mann would receive a life sentence

Amanda McGhee 2023 Information

amanda mcghee 2020 photos
Supervision Status:INCARCERATEDAssigned Location:TENNESSEE PRISON FOR WOMEN
Combined Sentence(s) Length:45 YRS 0 MTHS 0 DAYSSupervision/Custody Level:MEDIUM
Sentence Begin Date:07/01/2007Sentence End Date:06/30/2049

Amanda McGhee Other News

A woman convicted of killing her father and stepmother in 2007 is now petitioning to have her prison sentence reduced.

Amanda Dawn McGhee, now 26, was only 15 years old when she plotted with her boyfriend, Andrew Bryan Mann, to kill Terrance and Alisa McGhee. The murders took place on June 29, 2007.

In a taped confession, McGhee told investigators that she and Mann plotted the murders over a number of weeks. McGhee told interrogators that the original plot had involved battery acid, but said she and Mann decided to use her father’s gun instead.

McGhee, in the taped interrogation, told police her father Terrance McGhee lay alive for hours in his bed making strange noises before he died. McGhee said she called her stepmother Alisa McGhee at work the day of the murders to tell her she loved her, and to ask when she’d be home.

McGhee was 15 years old and pregnant with Mann’s child. He was 21 at the time. McGhee gave birth while in Knox County Juvenile custody.

McGhee was sentenced in 2009 to 20 years for the death of her father, and 25 years for the death of her stepmother. She’s serving the two sentences consecutively, for a total of 45 years in prison.

She is petitioning for relief from conviction, and her case is set to be heard Nov. 9.

https://www.wvlt.tv/content/news/Woman-serving-45-years-for-killing-father-stepmother-petitions-for-relief-485013481.html

Amanda McGhee More News

The girl who plotted to kill her father and stepmother in 2007 at their Jolly Lane home pleaded guilty Monday to two counts of second degree murder.

Amanda Dawn McGhee was sentenced to 20 years for the death of her father, and 25 years for the death of her stepmother. She’ll serve the two sentences consecutively, for a total of 45 years in prison. However, she can get a 15 percent reduction in her sentence for good behavior.

McGhee conspired with her boyfriend, Andrew Bryan Mann to kill Terrance and Alisa McGhee. The murders took place on June 29, 2007.

In a taped confession, McGhee told investigators that she and Mann plotted the murders over a number of weeks. McGhee told interrogators that the original plot had involved battery acid, but said she and Mann decided to use her father’s gun instead.

McGhee, in the taped interrogation, told police her father Terrance McGhee lay alive for hours in his bed making strange noises before he died. McGhee said she called her stepmother Alisa McGhee at work the day of the murders to tell her she loved her, and to ask when she’d be home.

McGhee was 15 years old and pregnant with Mann’s child. He was 21 at the time. McGhee gave birth while in Knox County Juvenile custody.

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Amanda McGhee is currently incarcerated at the Tennessee Prison For Women

Amanda McGhee Release Date

Amanda McGhee first chance at parole is in 2049

Morgan McDonald Teen Killer Stabs Teen To Death

morgan mcdonald teen killer

Morgan McDonald was seventeen years old when she stabbed another teenager to death. According to court documents Morgan McDonald confronted the victim about a man they both have had a relationship with. When the argument escalated the teen killer would stab the other woman in the neck. Although people tried to help the teen she would die from her injuries. Morgan McDonald would be arrested fleeing the scene in North Carolina. Morgan McDonald would be convicted and sentenced to twenty five to thirty one years in prison

Morgan McDonald 2023 Information

morgan mcdonald 2020 photos 1
Offender Number:1488550                                          
Inmate Status:ACTIVE
Gender:FEMALE
Race:WHITE
Ethnic Group:EUROPEAN/N.AM./AUSTR
Birth Date:05/21/1998
Age:22
Current Location:ANSON CI

Morgan McDonald More News

A 19-year-old Camden County woman was sentenced from 25 to 31 years in prison for the death of Summer Faith Waaga, who was 18 at the time of her murder.

According to officials, Morgan Lynn McDonald, 17 at the time, stabbed Waaga on March 13, 2016, in the neck, after confronting her at a sleepover at a home on Butler’s Lane in the county.

News 3 spoke with a friend of both girls back in 2016 who was there when it all happened.

Wyatt Dail says he and Summer had spent the night with other friends at the house on Butlers Lane after watching movies.

The next morning, he says McDonald, whom he had previously dated, came to the house upset.

“Morgan comes in there and starts asking me all kinds of questions, asking me why I didn’t go pick her up the other day and why I’m hanging out with Summer,” said Dail.

At that point, the two girls started arguing.

“Morgan walks out of the room and goes in the room Summer’s in, and then I heard some commotion so I got up to see what happened, and Summer comes up to me and she’s just covered in blood, head to toe,” Dail said.

Dail says he tried to get Summer in a car to get to the hospital but realized they weren’t going to make it.

“The neighbors called the police. They were out on the porch.  I looked around in her car to try to find something to stop the blood. I grabbed a t-shirt and she had a pretty bad cut or wound on her neck, so I tied it around there and I was pulling it as tight as I can, trying not to choke her,” Dail said.

Police were called about an assault with a deadly weapon at 11:35 a.m.

When they arrived, they found Summer Waaga lying on the ground in front of a home with a knife in her neck.

A neighbor tried to perform CPR on the woman. She was later pronounced dead at the hospital.

McDonald was detained after fleeing the scene and heading toward Elizabeth City State University.

https://wtkr.com/2018/05/23/camden-co-woman-sentenced-to-decades-in-prison-for-stabbing-death-of-teen/

Morgan McDonald More News

A teenager is behind bars in North Carolina accused of stabbing a teenager to death over the weekend.

Officers say Morgan McDonald stabbed Summer Waaga in the neck Sunday.

Police say an argument at a home on Butlers Lane led to the stabbing.

“I just think about how much happiness Summer brought to her mom, and just the peace that her mom would have when they were together, and just how happy that they both were together,” said neighbor and family friend Marie Langemeier. “If they weren’t together, it just seems like the happiness wasn’t there on either end until they were back together.”

Elizabeth City police officers found Waaga in front of a home in the 1000 block of Butlers Lane around 11:35 a.m. Sunday A neighbor was attempting to perform CPR on Waaga when officers arrived.

Medics got there and took Waaga to hospital where she died.

Friends and loved ones turned out for a vigil at the Elizabeth City waterfront park to honor Waaga.

McDonald is in the Albemarle District Jail without bond. She is charged with first degree murder. According to North Carolina law, you are considered an adult once you reach the age of 16.

McDonald’s case is expected to go before a grand jury on April 4.

Frequently Asked Questions

Morgan McDonald Now

Morgan McDonald is currently incarcerated at the Anson Correctional Institute

Morgan McDonald Release Date

Morgan McDonald first chance of parole is 2041