Kenneth Jones Murders Stephanie Eldredge

Kenneth Jones was a teen killer from Idaho who would be convicted of the murder of Stephanie Eldredge

According to court documents Kenneth Jones was living in Idaho with his brother and his brother’s fiance Stephanie Eldredge. Stephanie Eldredge would be reported missing in 2007 and would not be found until 2010.

Kenneth Jones would be a suspect earlier on in the disappearance and murder of Stephanie Eldredge however due to lack of evidence he would not be charged.

However Kenny Jones would later reportedly confessed to a cellmate that he had struck Stephanie Eldredge in the head and then suffocated her however since this could not be collaborated with evidence he was not charged

In 2018 Kenneth Jones would be charged with the second degree murder of Stephanie Eldredge. Kenny Jones was already in prison for arson charges would plead guilty to involuntary manslaughter and would be sentenced to 21 years in prison

Kenneth Jones Interrogation Video

https://youtu.be/ZSaj2kqmi1c?si=USOHiXWIqZgEH5aK

Kenneth Jones Now

Kenneth Ryan Jones
IDOC #: 100721
Status: In custody
Age: 35

Mailing Address
Idaho Correctional Institution-Orofino C1

Kenneth Jones Case

Thirteen years after Stephanie Eldredge was reported missing, the criminal case against her killer came to a close.

District Judge Joel Tingey ordered Kenneth Jones, 32, to serve a minimum of nine years in prison for manslaughter with an indeterminate period of six years in prison. He also sentenced Jones to an indeterminate period of five years in prison for destruction, alteration or concealment of evidence, that will be served consecutively with his manslaughter sentence, meaning the time must be served separately.

A misdemeanor sentence of one year for resisting or obstructing officers was also made consecutive with his felony sentences. The unified sentence of 10 to 21 years is also consecutive with his 2011 prison sentence for arson, meaning Jones will not be eligible for parole until 2033.’

Kenneth Jones was arrested in 2019 after Idaho Falls Police Department Lt. Jessica Marley began focusing on the cold case. Jones pleaded guilty in October. When he pleaded guilty, Jones admitted to pushing Eldredge, causing her to fall back and hit her head, which later lead to her death. He then wrapped her body in electric tape and a blanket and buried her in a shallow grave in the foothills.

Bonneville County Prosecutor Daniel Clark said in court that the theme of Thursday’s sentencing would be closure, which had been denied to the Eldredge’s family first when she went missing in 2007, then when her body was found in 2010, buried in the foothills with no explanation for how she got there.

Eldredge’s family members told Tingey how those years of uncertainty affected them. All three of her daughters gave victim impact statements saying they felt the loss of their mother and the shock of finding out it was Jones, the brother of the man Eldredge was dating at the time of her death.

Taylor, Eldredge’s oldest daughter, said she had four photos of her mother to remember her by, and stories from those who knew her.

“I don’t remember her voice,” Taylor said. “I don’t remember her laugh.”

Taylor said she had always been “the girl whose mother was killed,” and that others would ask her about it.

“You’ve ruined the lives of so many, but most of all you’ve ruined your own,” Taylor said to Jones.

Eldredge’s two younger daughters gave similar statements. They grew up without any old videos or recordings of their mother.

“You took another human’s life, and you hid it for 13 years,” the middle child said.

The youngest daughter, who Eldredge was caring for the day she was killed, said Jones lived with her family for 12 years before she knew her uncle was the killer.

“He watched my dad struggle for every day and shrugged it off like it was nothing,” the girl said.

Jamie Robinson, a family member of Eldredge’s, gave an impact statement on behalf of Eldredge’s mother, who has declined in health and was unable to attend the sentencing.

“Not one day goes by without a conversation about Stephanie,” Robinson said. She said Eldredge’s mother had suffered nonstop from her daughter’s death.

Robinson also emphasized the constant fear the family felt when Eldredge disappeared, the horror of learning she had died, and the grief of her funeral.

“I don’t know how to forgive someone who is so evil,” Robinson said of Jones.

Zachary Eldredge, who was Stephanie’s husband before they separated, said he wished Stephanie could have been there to see their child grow.

“I don’t think we can ever be normal with this experience,” Zachary Eldredge said.

Defense Attorney Curtis Smith reached a joint recommendation for the sentence with prosecutors during mediation. He said Jones had been remorseful each time they spoke about what happened. He argued, however, that Jones was 18 at the time he killed Eldredge, and that they were living in a home where drug use was common, creating an unstable environment for him.

Smith said Kenneth Jones had wanted to come forward about the death, but was afraid his family would disown him.

“Kenny could not get over the mental anguish of would his family love him if he came forward and told the truth,” Smith said.

Smith also said Jones had not intended to kill Eldredge when he pushed her during the argument.

Clark said he appreciated Smith’s and the victim’s family’s cooperation during the mediation, but he challenged Kenneth Jones’ version of events.

“The defendant says this was an accident,” Clark said. “The conduct was intentional.”

Clark said that while Jones may not have meant to kill Eldredge, he pushed her on purpose. Clark said Jones also did not call for help, preventing any chance of saving her.

“Stephanie could have survived this at that time,” Clark said.

Kenneth Jones gave a statement, calling himself a “coward” for not coming forward.

“I don’t expect forgiveness from anyone, and I don’t expect anyone to feel sorry for me,” Jones said.

Tingey agreed to accept the binding recommendation made by both attorneys. He said he read Jones’ statement describing what happened, and found it “plausible, but suspect.” He also noted Jones’ decision to not come forward sooner.

“Pleading guilty is a mitigating factor, but that didn’t occur for 13 years,” Tingey said

https://www.postregister.com/news/crime_courts/kenneth-jones-sentenced-to-prison-bringing-closure-to-stephanie-eldredges-death/article_a8d18874-9e8f-5c47-8082-56d61f4f2a4f.html

Kassceen Weaver Murders 10 Yr Old Son

Kassceen Weaver is a convicted killer from Virginia for the murder of his ten year old son

According to court documents Kassceen Weaver would call his wife and tell her that their ten year old son had stopped breathing. Instead of calling for help Weaver would leave the body of his son in his crib for days until the corpse began to smell, Weaver would then put the body into a freezer. Eventually Weaver wife’s brother would call the police to report the ten year old boy missing. Authorities would search the home and find the body of the ten year old

Kassceen Weaver would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to thirty five years in prison with parole eligibility after twenty years

Kassceen Weaver Case

Former University of Richmond basketball star Kassceen “Kass” Weaver was sentenced to 20 years in prison connected to the neglect and death of his three-year-old son Adon and the concealment of the child’s body in the family’s freezer.

Weaver, 51, was convicted earlier this year on all the charges against him, including felony murder, felony child abuse/neglect, and aggravated malicious wounding charges, and faced a maximum of 55 years.

When Adon suffered some sort of medical emergency on the night of Oct. 23, 2018, prosecutors said Weaver failed to seek appropriate medical attention for his child.

They said Weaver then stored the child’s body in a freezer for several years to hide what happened and to prevent his other son from being taken away.

Weaver’s defense team had argued that no one knew what medical emergency Adon suffered that night and could not say if calling 911 would have made a difference.

They added that Weaver said he had attempted CPR, something his wife did to revive Adon when he stopped breathing over a week before.

Weaver did not address the court during the 30-minute hearing on Thursday due to the fact he still faces an aggravated malicious wounding charge involving his now ex-wife.

That case is set for trial in March 2024.

Kass Weaver played college basketball at the University of Richmond from 1992 to 1995.

https://www.wtvr.com/news/local-news/kass-weaver-sentenced-dec-21-2023

Kassceen Weaver News

former University of Richmond basketball star was sentenced Thursday to 20 years in prison after he was convicted of killing his 3-year-old son and hiding the boy’s remains in a freezer for more than two years.

A Chesterfield County jury in July found Kassceen “Kass” Weaver, 51, guilty on charges of homicide, concealing a dead body and child neglect in the Oct. 23, 2018, death of his son Adon.

Weaver declined to give a statement at the sentencing and stated his intent to appeal.

The exact circumstances surrounding Adon’s death remain unclear, but prosecutors said the child suffered multiple broken bones, including a fractured skull and humerus, on the night that he died. Despite his “clear medical distress,” Weaver did not take Adon to the hospital or call 911, prosecutors said.

“Adon was a helpless child,” said Chesterfield Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney Joshua Loren. “And (Weaver) refused to do anything.”

By the time Adon’s mother, Dina D. Weaver, returned home that evening, the boy was already dead, Loren said.

Prosecutors said Weaver put Adon’s body in a crib for several days before “it started to smell,” at which point he placed the body in a vacuum-sealed bag and stored it in a freezer in the home. The family lived in the 6400 block of Lookout Point Circle in Midlothian.

Court records indicate that the investigation into Adon’s death began after Dina Weaver’s brother alerted police to Adon’s disappearance. Weaver was arrested in December 2021, over two years after putting Adon’s body in the freezer.

Loren on Thursday asked Judge Edward Robbins to sentence Weaver to 55 years in prison under the maximum sentencing guidelines. He said Weaver’s behavior was “depraved, reprehensible (and) just evil.”

Weaver’s attorneys argued that Adon’s death was “not a typical second-degree murder.”

Kassceen Weaver’s defense team, led by Russ Stone, said Adon had had an “underlying medical condition” that contributed to his death and ultimately “caused him to stop breathing.” They described Weaver’s crimes as “acts of omission, not commission.”

“This is a very different situation from … malicious murder,” Weaver’s attorney said.

Kassceen Weaver’s attorneys added that Weaver was grieving the loss of his son and was hopeful for an opportunity to redeem himself.

Prosecutors rejected the defense’s claims.

“There has been no accountability or remorse shown,” said Loren, adding that the incident was part of a broader pattern of abuse and denial of medical care by Weaver.

Loren also said Kassceen Weaver’s victims included people other than Adon.

In a victim impact statement read to the court, Adon’s grandmother lamented the fact that she would never truly get to know her grandson. In another statement, Adon’s brother said he was in foster care, attending therapy and having panic attacks due to the trauma of the incident.

Adon’s brother is now “missing his brother to grow up with, to play sports with,” Loren said. “These are the things the defendant took away from him.”

The 6-foot-3 Kassceen Weaver was a two-year basketball starter as a guard at UR after transferring from Wisconsin. Weaver averaged 14.1 points as a junior in 1993-94. After averaging 17.8 points as a senior in 1994-95, he was named first-team All-Colonial Athletic Association. Weaver was a Spiders’ co-captain as a senior.

Bill Dooley, who coached Kassceen Weaver at UR, said near the conclusion of Weaver’s senior season: “He’s our go-to guy. We go to him when we need a basket. We go to him when we need to get the ball inbounds. We go to him when we need to break a press. We go to him when we need to stop the other team’s best player. We go to him for everything.”

Kassceen Weaver as a senior was one of the Spiders’ few experienced players on an 8-20 team that frequently used five freshmen and a sophomore center, Rick Edwards, who is now Richmond’s police chief. Weaver, who graduated with a finance degree, went on to play professionally in Poland.

https://richmond.com/news/local/crime/former-university-richmond-chesterfield-basketball-star-sentenced-for-killing-son-concealing-body-in-freezer/article_79881aaa-a030-11ee-8fbd-1b8287a1673e.html

Jennifer Sweeney Murders Tyrita Julius

Jennifer Sweeney is a convicted killer from New Jersey who was convicted of the murder of Tyrita Julius

According to court documents Jennifer Sweeney would convince a friend to murder her girlfriend Tyrita Julius. The friend would shoot multiple times into a car that Tyrita Julius was driving with her daughter. Miraculously both would survive the shooting.

However Jennifer Sweeney was not done trying to kill Tyrita Julius and it would end with her strangling the woman and burying her body in a friends backyard

Jennifer Sweeney would ultimately be arrested, convicted and sentenced to 25 years in prison for arranging the shooting and 75 years in prison for the actual murder

Jennifer Sweeney Now

jennifer sweeney today
SBI Number:000309014D
Sentenced as:Sweeney, Jennifer 
Race:Black
Ethnicity:Unknown
Sex:Female
Hair Color:Brown
Eye Color:Brown
Height:5’7″
Weight:144 lbs.
Birth Date:August 18, 1983
Admission Date:May 6, 2022
Current Facility:EMCF
Current Max Release Date:N/A
Current Parole Eligibility Date:May 14, 2097

Jennifer Sweeney Case

A woman who strangled her girlfriend to death and buried the body in a friend’s yard was sentenced to 95 years in prison on Friday, the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office announced Saturday.

Jennifer Sweeney, a 38-year-old from Tinton Falls, solicited a friend to shoot Tyrita Julius, 41, and, when that plan failed, strangled her to death with an electrical cord.

“This sentencing is a fitting outcome to the prosecution of genuinely monstrous crimes,” said Monmouth County Prosecutor Lori Linskey. “This defendant’s actions were callous, calculated, and vicious, and ended the life of a woman beloved by her family and friends.”

In November 2015, Julius was shot eight times while driving in Linden, causing her to crash into a utility pole. Her teenage daughter who was sitting in the passenger seat was also hit.

Both survived the shooting.

Police found Julius’ remains in August 2016, five months after she was reported missing by her mother.

Her body was found wrapped in garbage bags with an electrical cord around her neck in the backyard of Andre Harris, who was later identified as the gunman in the 2015 shooting.

Harris, 38, took a plea deal that required him to testify against Sweeney.
He told the jury that Sweeney believed Harris was cheating on her and wanted her dead for the perceived betrayal.

Sweeney was sentenced to 25 years for ordering the shooting and 75 years for her role in the murder.

https://www.audacy.com/1010wins/news/nj-woman-sentenced-to-95-years-for-murdering-girlfriend

Jennifer Sweeney News

New Jersey woman has been sentenced to nearly 100 years behind bars for both arranging the unsuccessful assassination of her lover and for later strangling the woman to death with an electrical cord, officials said.

A superior court judge gave Jennifer Sweeney a 95-year prison sentence in the 2016 murder and 2015 attempted murder of Tyrita Julius, 41, the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office announced on Saturday. Julius was killed just months after Sweeney orchestrated a failed assassination attempt on her ex-lover’s life, Judge David F. Bauman said in court, the Asbury Park Press reported.

Sweeney was sentenced to 75 years for Julius’ slaying and an additional 20 years for the assassination attempt.

“This sentencing is a fitting outcome to the prosecution of genuinely monstrous crimes,” Acting Monmouth County Prosecutor Lori Linskey said in a press release statement on May 7. “This defendant’s actions were callous, calculated, and vicious and ended the life of a woman beloved by her family and friends.”

Sweeney, a 38-year-old Tinton Falls woman, was found guilty in September of charges of first-degree murder, first-degree conspiracy to commit murder, first-degree attempted murder, desecration of human remains and tampering with physical evidence in Julius’ death and in the prior, failed attempt. Sweeney was also convicted on a trio of weapons’ offenses.

Andre Harris, the gunman and high school friend who Sweeney contracted to carry out the failed 2015 shooting of Julius, received a 16-year sentence for his involvement in the murder plot. Harris —who took a plea deal — had testified against Sweeney during trial.

He told investigators that Sweeney orchestrated the failed assassination attempt on Julius because she suspected Julius was cheating on her, NJ.com reported.

On Nov. 24, 2015, police officers responded to a residence in the 900 block of Middlesex Street in Linden, New Jersey after reports of a shooting. Authorities found Julius in the driver’s seat of her car, which had struck a utility pole near her home. She was shot eight times but managed to survive. Her teenage daughter also suffered a gunshot wound in the failed assassination attempt. No arrests were immediately made in the brazen shooting.

In March 2016, Julius was reported missing by her family. Julius’ mother told investigators that her daughter was with Sweeney shortly before Julius vanished.

“Authorities were told at that time that Tyrita had been spending time with a female friend in Tinton Falls the day before, but failed to return home later that evening,” the prosecutor’s statement added.

Months later, Julius’ body was found wrapped in two garbage bags in the backyard of Sweeney’s friend Harris’ Long Branch home. She had an electrical cord wrapped around her neck, prosecutors said.

Sweeney and Harris were later arrested and indicted by a Monmouth County grand jury in December 2016, according to a copy of the case’s indictment obtained by Oxygen.com.

Sweeney must serve a minimum of nearly 64 years in prison on the murder charge before she’s eligible for parole, prosecutors said. She must serve the entirety of her 20-year term on the attempted murder charges. She won’t be eligible for parole until she’s more than 100 years old, according to state laws.

Jennifer Sweeney and Harris are being held at a Monmouth County detention facility pending their transfer to a New Jersey state prison, prosecutors said.

Robin Kay Lord, Sweeney’s attorney, wasn’t immediately available for comment when contacted by Oxgyen.com on Tuesday afternoon.

https://www.oxygen.com/crime-news/jennifer-sweeney-sentenced-95-years-tyrita-julius-muder

Meagan Grunwald Murders Officer In Utah

Meagan Grunwald was a seventeen year old teen killer from Utah when she was convicted of the murder of Utah County Sheriff’s Sgt. Cory Wride.

According to court documents Meagan Grunwald and her boyfriend Jose Angel Garcia Juaregui were approach by the Officer as they sat in a pickup. Juaregui would fire at the Officer fatally wounding him. Megan would take off and a police chase would ensue where Jose Angel Garcia Juarequi would be killed and another Officer would be injuries

Meagan Grunwald would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to life in prison. However on appeal Meagan sentence was reduced to thirty years in prison

Meagan Grunwald Now

Offender Number: 223233 Offender Name: MEAGAN DAKOTA GRUNWALD Location: UTAH STATE CORRECTIONAL FACILITY Housing Facility: USCF D

Meagan Grunwald Case

A Utah woman will serve up to 30 years in prison for her involvement with the death of a police officer as a teenager, a sentence that comes after the state Supreme Court overturned her original conviction.

Meagan Grunwald’s boyfriend fired the fatal shots, but her role as a 17-year-old getaway driver originally got her a sentence of up to life in prison in the slaying of Utah County Sheriff’s Sgt. Cory Wride.

“While we have extended the hand of forgiveness, we have not forgotten,” his widow, Nannette Wride said Monday, according to FOX 13.

He was shot by Jose Angel Garcia Juaregui in 2014 after Wride happened upon the couple’s pickup truck on a snowy day in 2014.

Grunwald drove off after the shooting, sparking a multi-county chase that ended with Juaregui’s death. Another deputy, Greg Sherwood, was shot in the head and survived.

Grunwald later testified that the 27-year-old Juaregui had forced her to drive.

Prosecutors, though, argued she wanted to help him. She was convicted of murder under Utah accomplice law, but the state’s top court later overturned the verdict, citing faulty jury instructions.

Grunwald later pleaded guilty to second-degree felony charges of manslaughter and assault on a police officer.

Grunwald has already served about seven years.

https://www.thespectrum.com/story/news/2021/06/22/utah-woman-gets-new-sentence-30-years-deputys-2014-death/5310684001/

Meagan Grunwald News

On July 8, 2015, Ms. Grunwald was sentenced to 25 years to life for the aggravated murder, 15 to life for attempted aggravated murder, and additional terms for her various other crimes.

At approximately 1:00 p.m. on January 30, 2014, Sgt. Corey Wride of the Utah County Sheriff’s Office stopped to assist a white Toyota Tundra parked along Highway 73 in Eagle Mountain, Utah. After making contact with the occupants in the vehicle, Sgt. Wride returned to his vehicle and was typing on his computer.

Jose Angel Garcia Juaregui, a passenger in the Tundra, opened up the back window of the Tundra and fired 7 shots at Sgt. Wride. While still firing the shots, Meagan Grunwald, the driver of the Tundra, sped away. Sgt. Wride died from injuries sustained from the gunshot wounds. Approximately 1 hour 30 minutes later, the Tundra was spotted in Santaquin, Utah and Deputy Greg Sherwood began pursuit.

During the pursuit, Grunwald aggressively applied the brakes–closing the distance between the Turndra and Deputy Sherwood’s vehicle– while Juaregui once again opened the Tundra’s back window and fired several shots at Deputy Sherwood. Deputy Sherwood suffered a serious injury to his head but he survived the gunshot wounds. Additional officers pursued the Tundra into Juab County where the pair carjacked a vehicle and continued fleeing. Officers were able to spike the tires of the newly carjacked vehicle and after crashing the vehicle, both Juaregui and Grunwald jumped from the vehicle and attempted to flee. Officers exchanged gunfire with Juaregui and Juaregui was shot and killed.

On April 28, 2015, a jury of six women and two men began hearing evidence in the case against Meagan Grunwald. After almost two weeks of trial, where nearly 70 witnessed testified, the jury found Grunwald guilty of aggravated murder, attempted aggravated murder, aggravated robbery, felony discharge of a firearm, evading police, criminal mischief and failure to remain at the scene of an accident. Grunwald was found not guilty of one count of attempted aggravated murder. Grunwald will be sentenced on July 8, 2015, and faces the possibility of life in prison.

https://www.utahcounty.gov/Dept/Atty/Media/NewsDetails.asp?ID=132016

Madison Wine Murders Parents In West Virginia

Madison Wine was a sixteen year old teen killer who would be convcited of the murders of her parents in a fatal fire

According to court documents Madison Wine would set her adoptive parents, Robert and Charolette Taylor, house on fire killing them and severely injuring a six year old girl.

Madison Wine would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to to two life sentences however due to her age at the time of the murders she will be eligible for parole after 15 years

Madison Wine Now

madison wine today

Offender ID (OID) Number: 3641235

Name: Wine, Madison Alexis

Sex: Female

Birth Date: 2/26/2003

Height: 5′ 2″

Weight: 170 lbs.

Race: White

Location: LCC

Intake Date: 10/27/2022 1:02:00 PM

Next Parole Hearing: 1/1/5000

Maximum Parole Discharge Date: Not Available

Projected Release Date: Not Available

Madison Wine Case

The young woman who was found guilty of murdering her adoptive parents in May 2019 by setting their house on fire received two life sentences, but because she was a minor at the time of the offense she will be eligible for parole in 15 years.

Madison Wine was sentenced Thursday before Judge JD Beane in Wood County Circuit Court.

She was sentenced to two life sentences in the deaths of Robert and Charolette Taylor who died in a fire Wine set on May 5, 2019, at their home in Davisville. She received an additional sentence of 20 years for a charge of arson, 3-15 years for the attempted murder of a minor in the home and a 1-5 year sentence for cruelty to animals for dogs who were killed at the house with a credit of 1,236 days credit for time served. All of the sentences are to run consecutively.

Madison Wine read a statement to the court and the victims where she talked about never having a voice until now and yet she was still speechless.

“Nothing I say is going to change how you feel about me and I have to accept that,” she said. “I wish I could take all of your pain and carry within myself, because I deserve nothing less.

“I don’t know how to apologize for the damage I have caused. I am sorry I have dragged you into this nightmare where you can’t seem to wake up from. I wish I could take it all back.”

She did not feel she was the murderer everyone thought she was and her actions were not intentional, but accidental.

“In a world like this, even accidents have consequences,” Madison Wine said. “Here I am. I am not complaining. I deserve this.

“I deserve every bad thing that is coming to me.”

She didn’t want to ask people not to hate her because that would be too much and she was not asking for forgiveness, because what happened was unforgivable, she said.

“I just want you to know that I didn’t mean for any of this to happen,” Wine said, adding she does care about what happened and reiterated it was an accident. She never intentionally set out to hurt anyone.

“I’m not heartless. I do have feelings,” she added. “I miss them and I wish they were here.

“I would take it back in a heartbeat if I could. I put myself here and I need to suffer the consequences.”

Sherri Bee, the ex-wife of Robert Taylor and mother to their three children, said she wanted Wine to be punished to the fullest extent of the law.

Her family has be traumatized by the crime and will continually deal with the emotional toll from it. She talked about them having to go through a burnt house to find personal belongings and disposing of the remains of three dogs.

She and Rob were married for 23 years and had their ups and downs, but said they were at a point where they were friends. Bee talked about Rob talking about Madison fondly, being proud that she completed high school early and was prepared to help her pay for college, but that the girl had issues with some of the disciplinary measures the Taylors had when she didn’t follow the rules.

“My prayers are that Madison pays to the fullest extent (of the law) for this,” Bee said. “My hope is she will never be paroled.

“My children and grandchildren will have painful memories for the rest of their lives for which they cannot be paroled from. In my opinion, she should never be released into the public.”

Roane County Prosecutor Josh Downey, appointed to represent the state, explained that since Madison Wine was 16 years old and a minor at the time of offense, she would be eligible for parole in 15 years, regardless of the sentence handed down. He reiterated that she would only be eligible for parole and was not guaranteed to get it.

Defense Attorney Ryan Umina asked the court to set aside the verdict and have Madison Wine found not guilty by reason of mental illness in which she would still be remanded to the custody of the state for treatment in a mental health facility. If that was not possible, he requested the verdict to be set aside and have a new trial granted. His argument centered on the expert testimony of two doctors during trial and how the jury was instructed to weigh what they said in their deliberations.

“This was an emotionally charged case,” he said. “No one denies that. It was a horrific tragedy, but it was an accident.”

Downey objected, saying the jury adequately determined their verdict.

Beane denied the motions, saying the jury was instructed to weigh the testimony of experts as much as anyone else.

Defense attorney J. Morgan Leach said they felt there were areas where they could mount an appeal. He said he and Umina wished to remain as Wine’s attorneys and go through that process.

https://www.newsandsentinel.com/news/local-news/2022/09/wine-receives-two-life-sentences-for-parents-deaths/