Eric Lankford Teen Killer Murders 3 In South Carolina

eric lankford teen killer photos

Eric Lankford was fourteen years old when he murdered three members of his family in South Carolina. According to court documents Eric Lankford would fatally shoot his father, great aunt and grandmother with a rifle he was given as a present just a few months before. After the fatal triple shooting the teen killer would phone police and would tell them what to do.

When the officers arrived Eric Lankford would peacefully surrender. Eric Lankford would plead guilty but mentally ill to the three counts of murder. Lankford would be sentenced to forty years in prison.

Eric Lankford 2023 Information

Current Location: Kirkland

Release Date: 2051

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The attorney for a Spartanburg teenager said in court Thursday that the teen longed for a supportive family when he murdered his father, grandmother and great-aunt.


Eric Lankford, 18, received a 40-year sentence for each murder after he pleaded guilty but mentally ill. He was 14 at the time of the triple homicide shortly before midnight on Jan. 17, 2011.


Circuit Judge Mark Hayes also sentenced Lankford to five years for possession of a firearm during the commission of a violent crime. The sentences will run concurrently. Lankford will receive credit for the 1,513 days he already has served.


Solicitor Barry Barnette said Eric Lankford used a .22-caliber rifle to murder his father, Joe Robert Lankford, 44; his grandmother, Rachel Gaston Lankford, 80; and great-aunt, Virginia Gaston, 83, at their home at 900 S. Irwin Ave. Ext. Barnette said each victim was shot in the head.
Barnette said Lankford called 911 and reported the shootings before he “peacefully” surrendered to police.


During the plea hearing, Eric Lankford rubbed his handcuffed hands together. He answered the judge’s questions with “Yes, sir” and “No, sir.“
Eric Lankford apologized in court for his actions. He said he would use his time in prison wisely — finish school and receive therapy in order to be a responsible citizen after his release.


There was no explanation for the murders offered at the plea hearing.


Spartanburg County Assistant Public Defender Beverly Jones was Lankford’s attorney. Jones said the crimes defied explanation. She said Lankford loaded the gun and wrote a suicide letter because he planned to kill himself. However, she said he was unable to carry out the act.


Jones said Lankford can’t explain why he shot and killed his relatives. She also said he had no criminal record or behavioral problems in school.She said Eric Lankford was born three months premature and suffered several medical setbacks as an infant. Jones said Lankford’s father questioned his paternity after his birth, and the night he was murdered. When Eric Lankford was 4 years old, Jones said his mother had a psychotic break that resulted in her arrest and hospitalization.“She forcibly tried to board an airplane to go to Jerusalem to see Jesus,” Jones said.


After the incident, Jones said Eric Lankford went to live with an aunt. She said after his parents split, Joe Robert Lankford was granted custody of Lankford and his sister.
Jones said Eric Lankford attended several elementary schools because of frequent moves and that the state Department of Social Services was involved with the family multiple times after receiving complaints, including abuse allegations.


“It wasn’t the system that failed Eric. It was his family,” Jones said.
She said tests revealed that Lankford has several learning disabilities related to impaired brain functioning, which impairs his decision making, judgment and impulse control.


Jones said Eric Lankford wanted to be a volunteer firefighter like his father, or a police officer.
“But dad always reminded him you can’t, because you’re not whole. You’re not a real man. You’ve got something wrong with you,” Jones said.
She said Joe Robert Lankford was a “functioning alcoholic” who had been drinking all weekend leading up to the killings.


“This case is a horrific tragedy and it involved some serious mental health challenges that would have added to the unpredictability of a jury trial. The sentence takes a dangerous person out of our community,” Barnette said in a written statement.


Eric Lankford is not eligible for parole.

https://www.goupstate.com/article/NC/20150312/News/605129433/SJ

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A grand jury has decided that a Spartanburg teenager accused of killing three family members will be charged as an adult.

Eric Lankford, who is now 15, was indicted on three counts of murder and possession of a gun during a violent crime.

On Jan. 17, 2011, Lankford’s father, Joe Robert Lankford, 44, and his great-aunt, Virginia Dare Gaston, 83, and his grandmother, Rachel Gaston Lankford, 80, were killed at their home. A police report said the victims were found in different rooms and that all three had been shot in the face or head.

Prosecutors said Eric Lankford calmly called 911 and told a dispatcher that he had shot his relatives with a .22-caliber rifle. He told dispatchers he would be waiting for them at the home.

When officers arrived, the teen came out of the house with no shirt on and his hands in the air.

A .22 caliber rifle was found on the table in the living room, the report said. Fisher said the teen’s father had given the rifle to his son as a birthday gift four months before the shootings.

Eric Lankford has been held at the Department of Juvenile Justice since his arrest.

A court appearance is scheduled next month.

https://www.wyff4.com/article/the-week-ahead-what-you-need-to-know/33111848

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A Spartanburg teen has been sentenced to 40 years in prison for killing three relatives.

Prosecutor Barry Barnette said Thursday that 18-year-old Eric Lankford was sentenced after pleading guilty but mentally ill to three counts of murder and possession of a weapon during a violent crime.

Eric Lankford was accused of killing his father, great aunt and grandmother in 2011. Forty-four-year-old Robert Lankford and 83-year-old Virginia Gaston died when they were shot at their home. Eighty-year-old Rachel Gaston Lankford died at a hospital.

Prosecutors say the teen calmly called 911 and told a dispatcher had shot his relatives with a .22-caliber gun. Barnette says he was found competent to stand trial but was found to have abnormal brain development and learning disabilities.

https://www.postandcourier.com/archives/sc-teen-sentenced-to-40-years-for-relatives-deaths/article_f1b83b5d-365f-524f-befa-1e1acfbde645.html

Tyson Langley Teen Killer Murders 2 In Arizona

Tyson Langley teen killer photos

Tyson Langley would murder two people during a robbery in Arizona. According to court documents Tyson Langley would walk into a Peoria Arizona and would shoot two people in the head. When Tyson Langley was arrested in California and extradited back to Arizona where he would stand trial and be convicted of both murders and robbery. This teen killer was sentenced to two twenty one year sentences to be served consecutively

Tyson Langley 2023 Information

Tyson Langley 2020 photo

Last Name First Name Middle Initial LANGLEY TYSON D

Gender Height (inches) Weight Hair Color MALE 70 176 BROWN

Eye Color Ethnic Origin Custody Class Admission BLUE CAUCASIAN Medium/Moderate 03/05/2014

Projected Eligible Release Date Prison Release Date

Release Type 01/27/2065 Community Supervision Begin Date

Most Recent Location As of Date Complex Unit Last Movement

Status TUCSONASPC-T WINCHESTER 08/14/2019 ACTIVE

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A teenager who pleaded guilty to killing two people during a 2012 Peoria smoke-shop robbery was sentenced to 42 years in prison by a judge Feb. 28.

Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Bruce Cohen sentenced Tyson Langley to consecutive 21-year terms in prison for second-degree murder and armed robbery in a hearing on Friday morning in downtown Phoenix, ending the saga that began when the teen walked into a Peoria smoke shop on Jan. 17, 2012 and shot two people in the head during a robbery.

The family of one of the victims, Melinda Bowen, said they wanted Langley to receive the death penalty, which is not given to minors. They expressed anger with having to pay taxes that will pay for Langley to live in prison until the teen is in his mid-50s.

Lathea Nezilla, Bowen’s older sister, refused to say Langley’s name when she talked in front of the judge.

Why you had to come into our lives is not fair because I don’t want to be in his life,” she said. “But he took someone very dear to me and for that I hate you.”

The family of the second victim, Kenneth Matlock, choose not to speak.

Both the prosecution and defense attempted to speculate about why Langley, an intelligent and good kid, killed two people and shot another. They suggested Langley’s use of the synthetic drugs, his anger after discovering information about his mother and stepfather’s sex lives or a lack of impulse control.

Langley’s stepfather and mother both spoke and apologized to the victim’s families. His mother struggled to begin reading her prepared statement and Langley cried during part of it.

The teen apologized for his actions.

https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/peoria/2014/02/28/teen-sentenced-in-peoria-smoke-shop-murders/5898615/

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TJ Lane Teen Killer School Shooter

TJ Lane Teen Killer

TJ Lane is a school shooter from Ohio who at seventeen years old would bring a gun to school and shoot dead three fellow students. According to court documents TJ Lane, also known as Thomas M Lane III, would bring a .22 calibre gun to school where he would open fire striking and killing three students.

At trial TJ Lane showed no remorse and on the day he was to be sentenced would somehow get hold of a black marker and write the word Killer on his t-shirt. Along with insulting the victim’s families TJ Lane basically made sure that he would receive the maximum sentence which would be life in prison with no chance at parole.

This teen killer would make the news a couple of years later by briefly escaping from prison

TJ Lane 2023 Information

Number A640654

DOB 09/19/1994

Gender Male

Race White

Admission Date 03/20/2013

Institution Warren Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

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A convicted high school shooter in Ohio built a 13-foot ladder out of old cabinets to escape from a prison along with two other inmates, a jailbreak that put the community where Thomas “T.J.” Lane carried out his killing spree on edge, the state department of corrections said in a report Friday.

Lane, 20, broke out of Allen Correctional Institution in Lima, Ohio, on Sept. 9, and remained on the loose until he was captured six hours later. Lane is serving three life sentences for killing three students in a hail of gunfire at Chardon High School in 2012. Prison officials personally met with the victims’ families to explain how Lane was able to escape, NBC station WKYC reported.

The report from the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction said Lane and the other two inmates, Lindsey Bruce and Clifford Opperud, fashioned their ladder over several months from materials inside a crawlspace located adjacent to the recreation yard. The door was padlocked, but the inmates were able to break in anyway, the report said. On Sept. 9 they used the ladder to get on top of a building near the prison entrance at around 7:40 p.m. and jump 15 feet down to the ground and escape through a soybean field, the report said.

Bruce was arrested almost immediately, but Lane was on the run for almost six hours, until he was arrested at 1:20 a.m. in a wooded area near the prison. Opperud, a convicted robber and burglar, was arrested at 4:22 a.m. by officers who tracked him with a police dog. The prison will be upgrading padlocks with more secure locks, razor wire was added on top of the building the inmates used to escape, and the area where the prisoners built their ladder was closed. The report found the inmates had “unimpeded” access to the maintenance area on their way to and from the recreation yard.

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Henry Laird Teen Killer Beats Mother To Death

henry hank laird teen killer photos

Henry Laird was seventeen years old when the teen killer from Oklahoma would beat his mother to death. According to prosecutors Henry Laird would attack his mother with a shotgun and would use the barrel of the weapon to strike his mother twenty times causing her death. At trial Henry Laird told the court that he was not responsible for the murder however the jury felt differently and would find the teen killer guilty and sentenced him to life in prison

Henry Laird 2023 Information

henry laird 2020 photos

Gender: Male

Race: White

Height: 5 ft 9 in

Weight: 150 lbs

Hair Color: Red

Eye Color: Blue



OK DOC#: 716239

Birth Date: 11/6/1995


Current Facility: JOSEPH HARP CORRECTIONAL CENTER, LEXIN

Reception Date: 7/1/2015

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A jury has given a Tulsa teen life with the possibility of parole after finding him guilty in the murder of his mother. Henry “Hank” Laird was convicted of beating his mother to death with a shotgun on January 22, 2013. 

It took jurors less than two hours of deliberations to find him guilty Thursday, and it didn’t take the jury long to decide his punishment. 

The death penalty was not an option, so they had to decide between life or life without the possibility of parole. Laird was just 17 when he beat his mother to death, so the defense wanted a life sentence.

The state hoped the harshest punishment.

“The jury has decided to give him mercy, mercy that he did not give to his mother,” said Assistant District Attorney Julie Doss. “But we respect that decision.

“He beat her, if you remember, with the barrel end of a shotgun at least 20 times.”

As the murder weapon was carried out of the courthouse, and the murderer taken back to jail; the case is closed.

But that doesn’t necessarily mean closure for the family: the elderly parents or the sister and brother-in-law of Linda Laird.

“They not only lost Linda, their daughter and their sister, but they also lost Hank, who was a family member too – so they’re overall very sad,” Doss said.

A psychiatrist testified Hank Laird started spiraling out of control when he was 10 years old, just after his father died of a heart attack. Laird told the doctor he blamed his mother for the death, that he thought his mother poisoned his dad.

The doctor said that’s when Laird’s aggression towards his mother began, and was also when his substance abuse began. The psychiatrist said Laird turned to drugs and alcohol so he didn’t have to face his grief.

“It contributed,” said Defense Attorney Greg Graves. “It put him in a situation that none of us would want to be in.”

The doctor said Laird’s drug usage was so severe, it kept his brain from developing like a normal kid. Laird went to multiple treatment facilities but relapsed each time he got home.

The doctor said Laird had a learning disability and had only completed eighth grade.

The state said Linda didn’t discipline her son because she was terrified he’d kill her in a drunken rage. Records show Linda once said she was OK with him tearing up the house because that means he wasn’t beating up on her.

He was drunk the night he killed his mother. a crime he told me he didn’t commit. 

Reporter Tess Maune: “Are you sorry for beating your mother to death?”
Hank Laird: “I didn’t do it.”
Reporter Tess Maune: “Who did it?”
Hank Laird: “I believe Josiah Sklar did it.”

Josiah Sklar was in the house night Linda was murdered. He testified against Laird and has been charged with accessory after the fact.

The state said Laird never implicated Sklar was involved, even when had the chance during his police interrogation.

That interview was played in court and Laird told detectives he remembered beating his mother, but didn’t mean to kill her.

“Here’s someone that, even after being convicted, after sitting and listening to his own statement where he implicated himself very strongly, he’s still wanting to say he didn’t do it,” said Assistant District Attorney Julie Doss. 

“That’s a danger.”

Prosecutor Alisa Hopkins said Laird had been running from what he did for two years, but that running stopped with the murder conviction and life sentence.”Linda Laird caught up with him today,” Hopkins said.

Laird will be eligible for parole in 38 years. He’ll be 57 years old, one year older than his mom was when he killed her.

“Certainly at this point, our hope is that he will get some type of rehabilitation so that when he is released back, if that ever happens, he won’t pose a threat,” said Julie Doss, assistant DA.

https://www.newson6.com/story/5e3622982f69d76f620467b6/jury-recommends-life-sentence-for-tulsa-teen-in-mothers-beating-death

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Alec Kreider Teen Killer Murders 3 People

Alec Kreider Teen Killer

Alec Kreider was sixteen years old when he murdered three people. According to court documents this teen killer would go into the home of a classmate where he would fatally stab the father and stabbed the mother. Kreider would go to the room of his classmate where a brief fight took place before he would stab the teenager to death. Alec would go back to the parents room where he would finish off the mother.

The teenage daughter would wake the next day and would run to a neighbours home for help. Alec Kreider would not be arrested for a month when Alec would tell his father what he had done and his father called police. Alec Kreider would be convicted on all three murders and sentenced to three life sentences with no parole. Alec Kreider would come up for a retrial following the sentencing reform but would take his own life before that could take place.

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The entries in Alec Kreider’s old journal painted a picture of a teenager on the brink of killing himself, a 16-year-old who deeply loathed rules, restrictions and the people who imposed them.

“Ever since I was young I was defiant of rules and their consequences, which of course laid the foundation for my current anger, depression and violent nature,” he wrote.

His words were a glimpse into a disturbed mind that meandered into suicidal and murderous thoughts.

“Never did I believe killing a man is wrong. No, no killing out of cold blood is wrong. But that is all. I often wondered … if I set out to destroy the world, if God would stop me,” he wrote in another entry.

He’d been increasingly wanting and needing to kill, he wrote on June 6, 2007 — nearly a month after he murdered his best friend and the boy’s parents.

The bloody massacres of a Thomas Haines, his wife Lisa, and their son, Kevin, rattled the quiet, upper middle-class suburb of Lancaster, Pa.

Kreider — a high school student who, though somewhat of a loner, had friends and good grades — suddenly became the callous murderer who will be the subject of a crime book and a documentary years later.

People could only speculate about why he killed a family who welcomed him into their home for years. Although he pleaded guilty to murder charges, he never explained why he stabbed his best friend and his friend’s parents to death that early morning of May 12, 2007.

That reason will never be known.

On Friday, about two weeks before he would’ve turned 26, Kreider hanged himself in his cell at a state correctional facility in Camp Hill, Pa.

Kreider’s death marks the end of a tragedy that ruined two families — his and that of the young woman who lost her father, mother and brother all in one day.

Lancaster County District Attorney Craig Stedman, who prosecuted the case a decade ago, can think of only one reason Kreider chose the Haines home.

“It was an easy target,” he said.

It was close to where Kreider lived. Having been to their home many times, he knew that the Haineses, like others in that quiet neighborhood, didn’t lock their doors.

Armed with knives, he walked in shortly after 2 a.m. He stabbed Thomas and Lisa Haines first while they were sleeping in their bedroom, Stedman said. Thomas Haines died immediately, while his wife lived a few more minutes.

Then Kreider walked down the hall to his best friend’s room.

Maggie Haines, the couple’s daughter, narrowly escaped. Court records say she heard someone screaming for help and ran out of her bedroom — while Kreider was killing her brother next door.

She went to her parents’ room and found her bloodied mother still alive. Lisa Haines told her daughter to get help. After Maggie Haines ran out to a neighbor’s house, Kreider went back to her parents’ room and slit her mother’s throat, Stedman said.

Police arrived at about 2:30 a.m. By that time, Kreider had escaped, leaving bloody shoe marks inside the house, court records say.

The slayings went unsolved for weeks. People who didn’t use to lock their homes lived in fear, Stedman said. Because there were no signs of a break-in, nothing had been stolen, and the Haineses did not have enemies, investigators believed a serial killer was on the loose.

At school, Kreider gained sympathy from classmates who knew he was close to Kevin Haines, Stedman said. He even went to the funeral.

By June, Kreider had been placed on suicide watch at a hospital outside Lancaster. He hated being watched, he wrote in his journal.

“The foolish administrators and doctors of this institution are idiotic enough to ignore the statements, concerns and warnings in relation to my need to be alone and free,” he wrote June 6, 2007. “It has been a horribly long day that is only becoming worse and worse.”

On June 12, 2007, for reasons that weren’t entirely clear, Kreider told his father that he had killed his friend and his parents.

The next day, he pondered about his uncertain future — and entertained the idea of not having one. He also wrote about a girl who didn’t reciprocate his love.

His father went to police June 14, 2007. Kreider was arrested and charged with burglary and three counts of criminal homicide two days later.

Investigators found the knives, Kreider’s shoes that matched the bloody foot prints in the Haines home, and his journal. In one of the pages was a one-line entry that authorities believe Kreider wrote about an hour after the murders: “Alexander was born on May 12th at 3:30 2007”

Stedman believes Kreider was referring to himself — that he was reborn as Alexander after he killed.

Killing, Stedman said, “energized” him.

“He was the true pathological killer,” he said. “He definitely was one of the most frightening and evil people that I’ve prosecuted.”

But Robert Beyer, a defense attorney hired by the Kreider family, emphasized that Kreider was “just a boy,” and that he was vilified after he was turned over to police.

“When he was actually charged, people really came down on him,” Beyer said. “He’s a 16-year-old boy with problems.”

During Kreider’s sentencing hearing in 2008, prosecutors played a video of Maggie Haines as she talked about her life after the deaths of her loved ones — the recurring nightmares, the long periods of crying, the painful thought of not having a father to one day walk her down the aisle, the waves of panic caused by the slightest sound of the wind.

“My biggest concern should’ve been what grades I was getting on my college finals, not what caskets to bury my parents in,” said Haines, who was 20 when her family was killed.

Kreider was sentenced to three consecutive life terms.

Kreider’s father, Timothy Kreider, would later write, “Refuse to Drown: A Father’s Unthinkable Choice,” a book about the painful decision of turning his teenager over to police, and the years of tormenting himself over his son’s crimes.

“I got caught on the downward spiral of blame and insecurity wondering what I could have done to keep Alec from doing what he did. There was a constant voice in my head asking me, ‘Where did I fail?’ ” he wrote, according to LancasterOnline.

A woman who answered the phone listed under Timothy Kreider’s name said he has no comment.

In the book, he revealed that his son expected to be protected even after what he had done, according to LancasterOnline.

He wrote that even before his son confessed, the thought of him being the killer had entered his mind.

In 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court found that mandatory life imprisonment without parole for juveniles was unconstitutional. Four years later, the high court’s justices decided that the ruling should be retroactive, meaning it would apply to those who were sentenced before 2012.

That opened the door for Kreider to one day be released from prison — a possibility that brought a sense of betrayal to the victims’ families, Stedman said.

“The agonizing part of this is that the family was told at the time of the plea that he’s done. He can never get out,” he said.

Kreider killed himself while his case was being reevaluated.

“The reality is this is a tragic ending to a horrible drama,” Beyer said. “He was a boy. He’s still a boy and he’s dead. That’s not good for anybody.”

Beyer said the anger from the people in the small Pennsylvania community was driven by the fact that they never got an explanation from Kreider about why he did what he did.

“If he wanted the public to know,” Beyer said, “the public would’ve known.”

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Alec Kreider Suicide

Alec Kreider committed suicide in 2017