Jaered Long Teen Killer Murders Grandmother In Kansas

Jaered Long Teen Killer

Jaered Long was sixteen years old when he fatally stabbed his grandmother to death in Kansas. There is some discrepancy on the spelling of his name as newspapers list him as Jaered and the Kansas Department Of Corrections lists him as Jared.

Anyway the facts remain the same as this teen killer would stab his grandmother with a bread knife several times while she laid in bed. According to Jaered he did not remember arguing with his grandmother or even being mad with her at the time of the brutal murder.

Jaered Long would plead no contest to second degree murder and would be sentenced to over forty eight years in prison.

Jaered Long 2023 Information

Work or Program Participation Not Working

Earliest Possible Release Date (1) Aug 28, 2057

Current Status Incarcerated

Admission Date Mar 22, 2018

Current Location (2) Lansing CF-Central

Custody Level High Medium

Jaered Long Other News

A Lawrence teen has been sentenced to more than 48 years in prison for murdering his grandmother, who relatives said took him in and showed him “unconditional love” — even as his mental health became increasingly troubling.

Jaered Long, 19, was ordered to 586 months in prison on Tuesday, by Douglas County District Court Judge Kay Huff.

“This is, in fact, a tragedy for everybody,” Huff said, acknowledging high emotions in the courtroom, where relatives of the victim were also relatives of her killer.

Huff’s sentence matched recommendations put forth in a plea agreement between prosecutors and Long’s appointed attorney, Forrest Lowry.

Jaered Long was initially charged with first-degree murder in the case, but in April 2017 pleaded no contest and was convicted of second-degree murder as well as two felony counts of battery on law enforcement officers. Jaered Long also initially was charged as a juvenile in the murder case, but the judge later ordered him to be tried as an adult.

Deborah Bretthauer, 67, was found dead Dec. 28, 2015, in her apartment in the 1200 block of George Court. Jaered Long, who was 16 and living with Bretthauer at the time, was arrested shortly thereafter.

Bretthauer had been stabbed with a bread knife dozens of times in her own bed, Lawrence police previously testified. Jaered Long told police he didn’t remember arguing with his grandmother or being angry with her.

Bretthauer was a University of Kansas graduate and a nurse who also taught health courses throughout the region, according to her obituary.

At Long’s sentencing Tuesday, relatives read emotional statements touching on memories of Bretthauer as well as Long’s mental health struggles. They said they hoped Jaered Long would be able to get help during his incarceration.

“My heart still aches,” said Frank Bretthauer, who was divorced from Deborah Bretthauer but still close friends, even taking cross-country trips with her to visit one of their daughters in California. “Some may call this a plea deal, but there is no deal for any of us in this family. The tragedy continues the rest of our lives.”

Long’s aunts said in statements that their mother hoped to help Long by allowing him to live with her. However, they had become concerned for her safety and wanted to get Jaered Long out of her home and into more intensive mental health treatment, something in hindsight they wished they had pushed for more forcefully.

They said Jaered Long had been on medications nearly his entire life and had years of therapy — they did not name a specific mental illness — but nothing seemed to help.

“I wasn’t surprised,” daughter Molly Bretthauer said. “I had feared this day.”

Molly Bretthauer said Long’s “misguided” therapies, unstable living environments and feelings of not being loved enough resulted in him attacking a person who took him in and loved him unconditionally.

Molly Bretthauer said she recalled her mother telling Long, “Jaered Alexander Long, I love you, and I always will no matter what.”

Deborah Bretthauer’s daughter and Long’s mother, Melinda Toumi, mourned both the loss of her mother and her son’s long prison sentence.

“It is painful to me to have Jaered go to prison,” Toumi said. “My other children miss their older brother and their grandmother very much.”

Toumi sat on the side of the courtroom behind Jaered Long, while other relatives sat on the opposite side, behind prosecutors.

“We love you, Jaered,” his mother said as a deputy led Long out of the courtroom following his sentencing. “Call us when you can, OK?”

Long’s lengthy murder case had several unusual, but key, turning points, which ultimately culminated in the 48-year prison sentence.

• Initially, in December 2015, he was charged as a juvenile with first-degree murder.

• Prosecutors filed a motion to try him as an adult in the case, and in October 2016 the judge agreed.

Huff said at the time that she considered a number of factors, including the seriousness of the offense, Long’s previous history and the rehabilitation resources that would be available to Jaered Long in either the adult or juvenile system, noting that juvenile resources were limited.

“There is no more serious offense than first-degree murder,” Huff said.

If convicted of first-degree murder as a juvenile, Jaered Long would have faced a maximum sentence of just 60 months in prison or to the age of 22.

• After his arrest in the homicide case, Jaered Long picked up additional criminal charges: two counts of felony-level battery on law enforcement officers while he was in custody at the Douglas County Juvenile Detention Center.

Jaered Long also was sentenced for those convictions on Tuesday, to 52 months in prison in one case and 32 months in the other, all to be served concurrently — or at the same time — with his murder sentence.

• In June, when Jaered Long was previously scheduled for sentencing, he got a new appointed attorney– Lowry — after his previous appointed attorneys, Branden Smith and Shaye Downing, withdrew citing potential for a conflict of interest. Further explanation was not made public.

• In December, Lowry told the court that Long wanted to withdraw his no contest plea. Huff heard Long’s request to withdraw the plea Tuesday morning but denied it, leading to his sentencing for the convictions he already pleaded to.

• Some relatives said they had hoped that under a plea agreement Jaered Long would face a shorter prison term, between 25 years and life in prison, which they said would be long enough for him to serve time for the crime and get help for his problems, but still leave hope that he could return to society. Huff said the record showed that was offered as part of a previous plea deal, but that Long rejected it.

DA Charles Branson on Tuesday also described the case as “tragic.”

Branson said the ultimately approved plea agreement was reached with “thoughts to the family’s anguish and the accountability of Mr. Long.”

https://www2.ljworld.com/news/2018/feb/20/lawrence-teen-who-murdered-grandmother-sentenced-m/?print

Jaered Long Videos

Jaered Long More News

Douglas County District Attorney Charles Branson announces Lawrence resident Jaered Long, 19, was sentenced on Tuesday to 586 months in prison for the murder of his grandmother, Deborah L. Bretthauer.  Long was originally charged with first degree murder as a juvenile in the stabbing death of Ms. Bretthauer. 

After filing charges with the Court, the State sought to try Long as an adult.  The District Court Judge granted, after a hearing, the State’s request to prosecute him as an adult.  Long entered a plea to an amended charge of intentional second degree murder, before the scheduled trial, and he avoided the possibility of a life sentence if he were convicted of first degree murder.

Jaered Long, who lived with Ms. Bretthauer, called 911 on December 28, 2015 at approximately 11:47 p.m. and reported a stabbing at his residence.  Long advised dispatch he had argued with his grandmother at her residence and then he left to go for a walk.  He stated when he returned to the residence, he discovered his grandmother with a stab wound to her neck. 

Jaered Long would later report during investigation by law enforcement that his grandmother asked him to clean his room sometime during the evening hours of December 28 and that the request made him angry.  Long stated he told his grandmother that he would clean his room tomorrow.  After playing video games in his room for a period of time, Long retrieved a knife from the kitchen and went to his grandmother’s room where he stabbed her repeatedly.  Jaered Long would later show detectives where he attempted to dispose of the murder weapon.

Jaered Long was also sentenced for another case stemming from two separate batteries on corrections officer while he was in custody.  Long received 52 months in prison on that case.  The sentence will run concurrently to his sentence in the murder case.

Today’s sentencing hearing was held in the courtroom of the Honorable Barbara K. Huff.  The case was investigated by the Lawrence Police Department and was prosecuted by District Attorney Charles Branson and Assistant District Attorney Bryant Barton. 

https://www.douglascountyks.org/depts/district-attorney/county-news/2018/02/21/teen-sentenced-murder-of-his-grandmother-and-other

Jaered Long Other News

A Lawrence man has pleaded no contest in the stabbing death of his grandmother.

Jaered Long entered the plea Thursday to second-degree murder and two counts of battery of a law enforcement officer.

Jaered Long was arrested in December 2015 after his 67-year-old grandmother, Deborah Bretthauer, was found dead in her Lawrence apartment.

He was 16 at the time but was to be tried as an adult for first-degree murder before he entered the plea.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports the two battery charges were filed after Jaered Long attacked two corrections officers while he was held at a juvenile facility.

A Lawrence detective testified at a hearing in September that Bretthauer was stabbed dozens of times with a bread knife.

Jaered Long will be sentenced June 5.

Frequently Asked Questions

Reginald Lofton Teen Killer Murders Man During Robbery

Reginald Lofton Teen Killer

Reginald Lofton was fourteen years old when he took part in the murder of a pizza delivery man in Georgia. According to court documents Reginald Lofton and Jermaine Young lured the victim to an apartment block where he was shot and killed. Police do not know which of the two actually fired the fatal shot however under Georgia law it does not matter. This teen killer was sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for thirty years

Reginald Lofton 2023 Information

Reginald Lofton 2020 photos

YOB: 2001
RACE: BLACK
GENDER: MALE
HEIGHT: 5’06”
WEIGHT: 130
EYE COLOR: BROWN
HAIR COLOR: BLACK

INCARCERATION DETAILS

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

Reginald Lofton Other News

Gwinnett County Superior Court Judge Randy Rich minced no words Thursday morning when sentencing Reginald Lofton, the now-15-year-old convicted of killing a Gwinnett County pizza driver, to life with the possibility of parole.

“I wish I could give you more time than I can,” Rich told the teen. “Because I think you’re a coldblooded killer. I hope you never get out of jail.”

Lofton was convicted last month for his role in the March 1 shooting death of 28-year-old Shane Varnadore, a Papa John’s driver whom authorities believe Lofton and a friend lured to a Lawrenceville-area apartment complex to rob.

Varnadore was shot and killed. Authorities have said they don’t know whether Lofton or fellow suspect Jermaine Young — who has yet to be tried — actually pulled the trigger. Under Georgia’s party to a crime laws, however, it doesn’t matter, as long as it can be proved a suspect “aided or abetted” in the crime or crimes that led to another person’s death.

During Lofton’s trial, the prosecution suggested he, at a minimum, provided the cellphone used to make the calls to draw Varnadore to the Wesley Herrington Apartments, watched part of the incident and took the pizza that was being delivered back to his apartment after Varnadore was killed.

Lofton’s sentence Thursday — and specifically the inclusion of the possibility of parole — was not an unexpected one. Earlier this month, prosecutor Sabrina Nizam and defense attorney LeAnne Chancey both said they agreed it was the only possible outcome. 

In a case from this year, Montgomery v. Louisiana, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that life sentences without parole should not be applied to juveniles convicted of murder. A similar case in Georgia’s Supreme Court ruled that such sentences constitute “cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution.”

Lofton will be eligible for parole in 30 years. He’ll be about 45 years old.

Four friends and family members of Varandore spoke on his behalf prior to Lofton’s sentencing. They described him as a hard-working man who loved to play music and designed video games, and a peaceful type who wouldn’t kill a bug inside his own house.

Tara Varnadore, Shane’s sister, said her 4-year-old daughter recently asked her when she was going to die — “because she wants to see Uncle Shane.”

Nizam had to read a statement from Teresa Varnadore, Shane’s mother, because she was too emotional.

“I feel destined,” the statement said, “to live a life unfulfilled, since part of me is now missing.”

Lofton’s sister, Porsha Porter, also spoke before he was sentenced, arguing that he “deserved a second chance at life.”  

“Instead of throwing him under the jail cell, help him, counsel him, something,” Porter pleaded.

Lofton grew up in Chicago and was put in his sister’s care last year after his mother died and his father was ruled unfit to care for him. The teen — who saw his share of violence and had many run-ins with the law in his hometown — at first denied his own opportunity to speak in court Thursday.

Then, just before he was sentenced, he opted to say a few words. He did not look at the Varnadore family as he spoke.

“I just want to say that I’m sorry for your loss but, um, I did not, um, kill your son,” he said. “And I wasn’t the shooter. That’s it judge.”

Reginald Lofton Videos

Fredrich Lochridge Teen Killer Murders Sister

Fredrich Lochridge Teen Killer

Fredrich Lochridge was fifteen years old when he shot and killed his ten year old sister. According to court documents Lochridge would shoot his sister in her back and then in the head before cleaning the wounds, placing her in a white dress and hiding her body.

Once the little girl was found Fredrich gave the police a number of stories including (A) He was teaching his sister how to shoot when she shot herself in the chest so he shot her in the head to put her out of her misery (B) He was shooting at a deer and hit his sister instead (C) A mystery assailant attacked his sister and he attempted to shoot him but shot his sister in the head. Eventually he would confess to the murder. This teen killer would be sentenced to fifty years in prison with the last ten to be served on parole

Fredrich Lochridge 2023 Information

Fredrich Lochridge 2021
DC Number:Q32748
Name:LOCHRIDGE, FREDRICK M
Race:WHITE
Sex:MALE
Birth Date:09/30/2000
Initial Receipt Date:02/01/2017
Current Facility:LAKE CITY C.F.
Current Custody:CLOSE
Current Release Date:02/10/2066

Fredrich Lochridge Other News

A Florida teenager who fatally shot his 10-year-old sister has been sentenced to 50 years in prison.

Fredrich Lochridge Jr., 16, was sentenced on Tuesday after he pleaded no contest to a first-degree murder charge for the death of his sister, Izabella Heffernan.

Heffernan’s body was initially found by local authorities last February in a field close to her family’s home in Panama City, Florida.

The autopsy shows the girl had gunshot wounds to her chest and cheek from a rifle.

Lochridge initially claimed he shot his sister after mistaking her for a deer. Then he told police he accidentally shot her while aiming for an attacker.

He finally admitted to shooting his sister in the chest — also by accident — while he was teaching her how to use a rifle.

After, he shot her in the head to end her suffering.

“She started making gurgling noises,” Lochridge said to officers. “I did not know exactly how to deal with that, so I shot her again.”

Lochridge was then sentenced to serve every day of his 50-year prison sentence by Circuit Judge Brantley Clark Jr.

He was also given 10 years of probation to follow.

“You’ll be 66 when you get out of prison. Do you understand that?” Clark asked Lochridge while in court.

Prosecutor Larry Basford told jurors that the family agreed to the terms of the plea bargain.

“The effects on the victim’s family have been devastating,” Basford said. “The father is present, and he accepts the conditions of the plea agreement.”

Basford also added that the State Attorney’s Office considered several factors to determine a sentence appropriate for Lochridge — primarily his youth and clean criminal record.

However, by attempting to hide the murder weapon and deceiving law enforcement, Lochridge demonstrated aspects the office saw as aspects of maturity.

Fredrich Lochridge Other News

A Bay County teenager who killed his younger sister at their Fountain home will spend the majority of his life in prison. Fredrich Lochridge, Jr., 16, pled no contest during a plea hearing Tuesday morning to First Degree Murder.

The teen accepted a 50 year prison sentence followed by ten years probation. “You’re 16 at this time. You will be 66 when you get out of prison. Do you understand that,” Judge Brantley Clark asked. “Yes, sir,” Lochridge replied. Bay County Sheriff’s deputies found ten-year old Isabella Heffernan’s body in a large field behind the sibling’s Fountain home on February 21, 2015. 

Chief Assistant State Attorney Larry Basford referenced the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling that sentences of life without the possibility of parole are unconstitutional for juveniles. In determining an appropriate plea deal, he considered factors like Lochridge’s youth and clean criminal history.

However, he pointed out Fredrich Lochridge did display signs of someone who knew what he was doing. “There are aspects of this crime that we believe demonstrated maturity. That being when the crime was committed, he took attempts to conceal this, the weapon that was used and originally denied his involvement in this case,” Basford said. 

Defense Attorney Kim Jewell responded by saying there isn’t much maturity at Lochridge’s age but agreed to the sentence. “Through our discussions of plea negotiations, I believe those were in fact taken into consideration, his youthfulness,” she added. Jewell placed several class certificates into the record showing the teen has been making progress on his education while he has been in the Bay County Jail.

Fredrich Lochridge will be eligible for a sentence review at 25 years. He will also get credit for 343 days of time served.

https://www.mypanhandle.com/news/teen-accused-of-killing-his-sister-takes-plea-deal/

Joel Loarca Teen Killer Murders Teenager

Joel Loarca Teen Killer

Joel Loarca was fifteen when he murdered another teenager. According to court documents Joel Loarca was outside of a Rhode Island high school with a number of gang members when a confrontation broke out. Joel Loarca would pull out a gun and fire at the rival group however the bullet would strike a student who was waiting for a bus nearby. This teen killer would plead guilty to the murder and would be sentenced to life in prison plus an additional ten years for gun possession.

Joel Loarca 2023 Information

Inmate Number: 160569

Name: Joel Loarca

Facility: Intake Service Center

Joel Loarca Other News

The teenager charged in the death of a 15-year-old outside of a Providence school last September pleaded guilty in Superior Court Friday morning.

Joel Loarca, 17, was sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole plus an additional ten years for the murder of William Parsons.

“Parsons was a high school student, waiting for a ride home. He was in no way involved in the altercation,” prosecutors said in court Friday.

On September 5, 2018, Loarca, a member of the Hanover Boys gang, got into a fight with two people around 2 p.m. outside of the Providence Career and Technical Academy. Prosecutors say Loarca pulled a gun from his waistband, and fired one shot.

His bullet hit the 15-year-old as he was in a crowd of students, waiting for a ride home from school.

“He grabbed his face and ran. Parsons collapsed in front of the sign outside PCTA, subsequently dying from his injury.”

Parsons’ family members filled the benches in court Friday, many wearing t-shirts that read, “Rest In Paradise William ‘Eddy’ Parsons”. The courtroom was filled with emotional as Parsons’ mother, Michelle, broke down into tears as Loarca entered in shackles. Another relative left the room, consumed with grief.

The prosecutor read a victim statement on behalf of Michelle Parsons, as she sat beside him.

“My son was the sweetest child since he was little, and even more respectable as a teen. How do you get killed the second day of school for nothing?”

She wrote that his death has left her forever changed.

“I cannot sleep anymore without medication, I have been diagnosed with severe PTSD.” 

William Parsons’ father, William Parsons Sr., passed away just nine months after his son, she wrote. William Jr. is survived by two sisters.

“I will never forgive the person who killed my son, and just remember, what goes around, comes around.”

Loarca will serve his sentence at the ACI in Cranston. He’s eligible for parole after serving 25 years. If he were to get parole, Loarca would be behind bars for a total of 35 years.

Joel Loarca More News

A teenager admitted in Superior Court to killing another teenager outside of the Providence Career and Technical Academy.

Joel Loarca, 17, pleaded guilty to five criminal counts on Friday related to the fatal shooting of William Parsons outside of the school in September of 2018. It came days after Loarca waived his juvenile status and agreed to be tried as an adult.

Parsons’ mother, Michelle Parsons, was overcome with grief in court as loved ones tried to console her.

Special Assistant Attorney General Peter Roklan read a statement on her behalf. “I cannot sleep anymore without medication. I have been diagnosed with severe PTSD,” he said. “The love I feel for my son no medicine can cure.”

Loarca was sentenced to life in prison, plus an additional 10 years. Loarca pleaded guilty to one count each of first-degree murder, carrying a pistol without a license, possession of a firearm on school grounds, assault with a dangerous weapon, and discharge of a firearm during the commission of a crime of violence.

“I will never forgive the person who killed my son and just remember what goes around comes around,” Roklan said as part of the victim’s impact statement.

Prosecutors said on September 5, 2018, Loarca got into a fight with other students outside of the Providence Career and Technical Academy.

He then pulled out a .357 Magnum Taurus revolver and fired a shot, striking Parsons, who wasn’t even involved in the argument.

Police have said Parsons was an innocent bystander who was waiting for his father to pick him up after the second day of school.

Parsons was a sophomore at Central High School. He had planned to try out for the school’s basketball team and aspired to become a Rhode Island State trooper.

“My son was the sweetest child since he was little and even more respectable as a teenager. I wish I could’ve been there before he died,” Roklan said.

Police say Loarca fled from the scene and accidentally shot himself. First responders treated him for a gunshot wound about half a mile from the school.

According to prosecutors, police were able to find the gun after he hid it.

Loarca is eligible for parole after he serves 25 years for the life sentence.

https://turnto10.com/news/local/teen-gunman-sentenced-to-life-in-prison-for-murder-of-central-high-student

Joel Loarca Videos

Nicholas Lindsey Teen Killer Murders Police Officer

Nicholas Lindsey Teen Killer

Nicholas Lindsey was sixteen years old when he fatally shot a St. Pete’s police officer. According to court documents Lindsey would fatally shoot the St. Pete’s police officer who was responding to a call in the area that someone was walking through the back yards of the residences with a brick in his hand. When another police officer responded to the call he would found the fallen officer suffering from several gunshot wounds. At trial it was revealed that most of the shots were from close range. This teen killer would be sentenced to life in prison without parole.

Nicholas Lindsey 2023 Information

Nicholas Lindsey 2021
DC Number:C06556
Name:LINDSEY, NICHOLAS L JR
Race:BLACK
Sex:MALE
Birth Date:02/13/1995
Initial Receipt Date:03/29/2012
Current Facility:TOMOKA C.I.
Current Custody:CLOSE
Current Release Date:SENTENCED TO LIFE

Nicholas Lindsey Other News

For a third time, Nicholas Lindsey was sentenced to life in prison for the 2011 murder of St. Petersburg police Officer David Crawford.

In a hearing Friday attended by dozens of police officers and Crawford’s family and friends, Pinellas-Pasco Circuit Judge Thane Covert read a 26-page order outlining why he believes Lindsey, 21, should continue to spend the rest of his life in a prison cell.

Nicholas Lindsey, who was 16 at the time of the murder, is entitled to a review of his sentence after 25 years under new sentencing guidelines for juveniles.

“This is a tragic situation,” Covert said. “A police officer lost his life. His family, friends, and colleagues lost a valued member who was serving this community with valor.

“This young man has lost his ability to live freely for many years.”

Last week, Lindsey’s attorneys argued in front of Covert that his sentence should be reduced to 40 years based on a new law passed by the Legislature in light of a U.S. Supreme Court decision that found mandatory life sentences for juveniles violated constitutional protections against cruel and unusual punishment.

Covert denied the motion. But under current law, a judge must consider several factors before sentencing a juvenile convicted of murder to life, including the defendant’s age, potential for rehabilitation and the effect on the victim’s family.

Defense attorneys argued that Lindsey showed signs of rehabilitation because he obtained his GED and attended several other classes while in prison.

Prosecutors disagreed, and presented 10 disciplinary reports from the Florida Department of Corrections that showed while in prison Lindsey has engaged in fighting, cut another inmate’s face with a sharp object and was found with contraband: marijuana and a cellphone.

“It cannot be said that the defendant’s actions reflect a strong potential for rehabilitation,” the judge said. “His violent behavior has continued since the murder.”

On Feb. 21, 2011, Crawford responded to a report about a possible car break-in near Eighth Street and Third Avenue S. Crawford, a 25-year police veteran, saw Lindsey and stepped out of his cruiser to talk with him.

The 46-year-old officer was holding only a notepad when Lindsey, brandishing a gun he bought for $140, fired five times.

Crawford died one month after St. Petersburg police Sgt. Tom Baitinger and Officer Jeffrey Yaslowitz were also killed in the line of duty.

A jury convicted Lindsey of first-degree murder in 2012, and Covert sentenced him to life in prison without the possibility of parole, the only possible sentence at the time.

Then the Supreme Court ruled that mandatory life sentences for juvenile offenders were unconstitutional and that courts must consider mitigating factors.

In 2013, Lindsey got such a hearing. Covert again gave him a life sentence.

The next year, the Florida Legislature passed a law in response to the Supreme Court decision. The law called for a minimum sentence of 40 years for first-degree murder, resulting in Lindsey’s attorneys’ motion and the third sentencing.

After the hearing, Crawford’s daughter, Amanda, embraced loved ones outside the courtroom.

“It’s just,” she said of Lindsey’s life sentence. “My dad lost his life. He needs to serve his life.”

Nicholas Lindsey Videos