Pedophile Tracking Sid Landau

SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) — Upon his release from prison in the mid-1990s, twice-convicted pedophile Sid Landau moved in with friends in Southern California, hoping for a new start and a chance to fade quietly into the background.

Instead, a firestorm erupted, fueled by freshly enacted legislation targeting molesters. Within months, Landau found himself relentlessly harangued by outraged parents and saddled with unique notoriety: one of the first sex offenders in California targeted by the full force of Megan’s Law.

http://liarcatchers.com/pedophile_tracking.html

Police in Placentia, Calif., made sure Landau’s name and face were widely known and seen. Parents picketed his house with signs and bullhorns. Neighbors called 911 each time he walked out his door. Soon, Landau lost his job at a thrift store and found himself on the run, chased from various Orange County addresses by angry crowds.

After his subsequent arrest for assaulting a cameraman and serving more time for parole violations, Landau was about to be released in 2000 — but was flagged by authorities as a sexually violent predator under a little-known law and later committed to a mental hospital for treatment.

Now 70 years old, Landau is fighting to reverse that designation and get out of the mental hospital where he has remained for the past dozen years. A judge will decide Friday whether Landau is entitled to a jury trial to challenge his sexual predator status, a label that is given to just 1 percent of all sex offenders in California.

Landau’s public defender, Sara Ross, says his advancing age and health makes him a candidate for release into the community.

“Ultimately, when it comes down to it, Mr. Landau served all of his time. He served each and every minute that the government asked of him and paid his dues and he’s no longer a danger to society. He is in his seventies,” she said. “He hasn’t done anything in 20 or 30 years and he really wants to go home.”

Experts who study California’s statutes on sexually violent predators, however, say Landau faces an extremely difficult fight to regain his freedom.

Under a law enacted in 1996, offenders who are convicted of a sexually violent offense, have at least one victim and are diagnosed with a mental disorder that makes them likely to reoffend can be committed to a mental hospital for treatment after a rigorous legal process that involves findings by doctors, a judge and a jury. Inmates convicted of sex offenses are evaluated by prison staff starting six months before their scheduled release and those who are flagged are forwarded to the state’s Department of Mental Health for further assessment.

There are currently 533 people statewide who have been formally committed to a mental hospital for an indeterminate time because they are sexually violent predators and another 321 who are housed at Coalinga State Hospital awaiting a determination, said Deborah Ireland, a spokeswoman for the hospital about 200 miles north of Los Angeles.

Ninety-one sexually violent predators have been released since 2006, Ireland said, but it wasn’t immediately clear whether those individuals gained release through a jury trial or other avenue.

Offenders are re-evaluated each year and can request a hearing to determine if there is cause to challenge the findings.

At each step, convicted molesters like Landau face significant hurdles because the district attorneys and judges handling their cases are elected officials. And if a case does get in front of a jury, it’s unlikely convicted molesters will find much sympathy, said David Ramirez, a defense attorney who specializes in representing sexually violent predators.

“You’ve got to understand, if you let this person out in the community, there’s a lot of political pressure and the heat could come down for them. If he goes out in the community and kills and rapes an 8-year-old girl walking to school, there’s going to be consequences,” Ramirez said. “And at trial, the prosecutors usually go over it piece by piece. ‘How did you pick your victim? Was it her hair color? Her height?’ The jury is obviously repulsed by that. It’s an ugly process.”

Landau — convicted in 1982 and 1988 for molesting two boys under age 14 — was one of the first sex offenders to be targeted in California by Megan’s Law. The law derives its name from Megan Kanka, a 7-year-old New Jersey girl who was sexually assaulted and killed in 1994 by a previously convicted sex offender; the crime led to the creation of state and federal Megan’s Laws that allow police to provide notification when high-risk sex offenders move into neighborhoods.

After Placentia police disclosed Landau’s name and address, Landau was shuffled from city to city in Orange County and evicted from a number of addresses, including motels.

Landau later sued the Placentia police in federal court, saying they violated his privacy rights, but he lost and went on to serve more time on three parole violations.

On the eve of his final release in 2000, prison officials referred him for evaluation as a sexually violent predator.

Landau was housed for six years in the state mental hospital while he awaited a jury trial to determine whether he should be civilly committed. Two trials resulted in hung juries but Landau was committed for an indefinite period in 2009 after a third jury found him to be a sexually violent predator.

In 2010, a state psychologist concluded he could be safely released under supervision because of his age and Landau petitioned for his release. The director of the Coalinga State Hospital, however, disagreed with the doctor’s assessment and the judge rejected Landau’s request as frivolous, according to court papers.

Landau appealed and last year, a state appellate court found that the judge erred and remanded the case.

Despite his age, Landau remains a danger to society and has refused treatment while at Coalinga, said Dan Wagner, the Orange County deputy district attorney handling the case.

“Through the years he’s even by his own admission molested at least 10 children and we think the number is quite higher than that. The amount of damage this man has done is just staggering,” Wagner said. “He’s unchanged, he still is attracted to little boys and we’re convinced that … if he were to be released he’d be molesting again in a short amount of time.”

Even if Landau wins his freedom, experts say, it’s unlikely he will fare well.

A sexually violent predator released in 2009 was forced to live in a mobile home in the desert that was paid for by the state. His presence in the tiny town of Desert Center raised the ire of residents and Steven Willett was required to wear a monitoring bracelet, take only supervised trips and submit to regular lie detector tests.

Less than a year later, he violated his parole by following an undercover female sheriff’s deputy onto a bus and inviting her back to his home. Willett was sent back to the state mental hospital.

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Electronic Surveillance Captures Boy’s Death While Being Restrained

The police and state officials are examining a surveillance video that recorded the death of a 16-year-old boy at a private residential treatment center in Yonkers this week as staff members physically restrained him on the floor after a basketball game.

The boy, Corey Foster, who was a resident student at the center, Leake & Watts, became “unresponsive” about 8 p.m. on Wednesday, while three staff members were holding him down in an approved technique called “Therapeutic Crisis Intervention,” Meredith Barber, a spokeswoman for the center, said.

http://liarcatchers.com/electronic_surveillance.html

The staff members released their hold and began CPR as soon as they noticed the teenager’s state, she said, and called 911 as well as the center’s medical staff.

“As part of our cooperation with police in this investigation, we’ve provided a video of the event,” Ms. Barber said Friday. It was recorded by a surveillance camera in the gym, where 38 youths and 14 staff members had been playing basketball before the episode.

“We have no indication that protocol was not followed,” she added. “We also have no confirmation that the cause of death is related to the therapeutic hold, at this time. We just don’t know.”

The New York State Office of Children and Family Services, which licenses such residential programs, has begun its own investigation, a spokeswoman, Susan Steele, said Friday. Its regulations require each authorized agency to maintain daily records of the numbers and types of restraints used, she said.

Citing confidentiality laws, Ms. Steele would not answer questions about Corey. Neither would the New York State Education Department, which oversees the school components of the program, where most of the 70 residents, like Corey, have been placed by local education committees because they need special education. About 20 percent of the residents are in foster care.

Outside Leake & Watts, which was founded in the 1830s as an orphanage and is now located on 30 acres on the Hudson River, several of the dead boy’s friends spoke of their love for him and protested the way he had died in interviews posted on LoHud.com, the Web site of The Journal News of White Plains.

“It was a restraint, but at the same time, it was like foul play,” said Antonio Reeder, 17, a classmate. “They were all on top of him.” Malik Legree, another witness, agreed, saying, “It’s not supposed to be where you’re gasping for your life.”

According to an account given to The Journal News by another witness, William Green, the episode began when staff members tried to clear the basketball court so they could play, and several boys, including Corey, continued playing. In that account, a confrontation escalated, and Foster was “taken down” by several staff members who continued to restrain him though he complained that he could not breathe.

Those accounts were challenged by Ms. Berber, the Leake & Watts spokeswoman, who said, “Unfortunately I’m not really at liberty to discuss exactly what happened at the event.”

She said all staff members were trained in using restraining holds as a last resort, as part of a therapeutic crisis-intervention system, known as T.C.I., widely used with emotionally disturbed children.

“While at recreation at the gym, the young man became agitated. Staff attempted to intervene and de-escalate the situation, all per T.C.I. protocol,” she said. “And after that was not successful, he was placed in a therapeutic hold.”

Corey was pronounced dead at St. Joseph’s Medical Center in Yonkers.

The Yonkers police have been interviewing the staff members and witnesses. A detective who declined to give his full name said he could not discuss the videotape.

“It’s still under investigation, and we have no comment at this time,” the detective said.

The staff members involved have been placed on administrative leave, which is routine policy, Ms. Barber said. Grief counselors are working with staff members and students, and a candlelight vigil was held for Corey on Thursday night.

“A terrible tragedy occurred, and we’re all very sad,” she said. “We’re a community in mourning.”

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Missing Person Found in Omena Bay, Mich. Near His Canoe

The U.S. Coast Guard has found the body of a 43-year-old man near his overturned canoe Saturday night in Omena Bay, Mich.

Omena Bay, Mich. is about three hours drive south of the International Bridge.

The man had been reported missing by his sister after he failed to return from his canoe trip at 7 p.m. but the man’s dog returned to the home soaking wet.

The man’s identity has not been released.

http://liarcatchers.com/missing_persons_investigations.html

A press release states the Sault Ste. Marie Mich coast guard was notified of the overdue name about 9:30 p.m. and launched a helicopter from Traverse City, Mich. and a response boat from Charlevoix, Mich. to search for the missing canoeist.

The helicopter spotted an unresponsive man wearing a life jacket within minutes of getting airborne.

He was pronounced dead at hospital a short time later.

“Although air temperatures are rising, it is important to consider the cold water temperature and let someone know where you are going and when you plan to return prior to venturing out onto the water alone,” said Keith West, command duty officer at Sector Sault Ste. Marie, in a press release.

Emergency services who responded to the situation included personnel from Coast Guard Air Station Traverse City, Station Charlevoix, the Michigan Department of Natural Resources, Leelanau County Sheriff’s Office, Northport Fire Department and local emergency medical services.

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Private Investigator Believes Death Row Inmate is Innocent

RAIFORD, Fla. – In 35 years on Florida’s death row, Tommy Zeigler’s cries of innocence have swayed a former newspaper editor, the daughter of a police chief who helped put him behind bars and an assortment of others who have come to believe that he didn’t commit one of the state’s most notorious mass slayings of the 1970s.

A reporter wrote a book about him called “Fatal Flaw,” and national TV programs — including “Unsolved Mysteries” — turned a skeptical eye on the evidence. His many supporters now range from a former sheriff’s deputy who helped investigate the slayings to celebrity civil rights activist Bianca Jagger. A private investigator believes in the 66-year-old Zeigler’s innocence so strongly that she picked up his case last year and has worked on it almost full time for free.

http://liarcatchers.com/index.php

On April 11, Zeigler’s longtime lawyers tried again to get the appeals courts to re-examine his case. A new motion claims evidence turned up recently by the investigator pokes more holes in the case against Zeigler and creates enough new reasonable doubt to tip the scales in favor of a new trial. The document claims prosecutors lied and withheld information from Zeigler’s lawyers — including the existence of a key witness.

Prosecutors then and now have portrayed Zeigler as a calculating monster who slaughtered his wife, her parents and another man in the family furniture store on Christmas Eve 1975 to collect insurance money.

Of Florida’s 399 condemned prisoners, only 11 have been on death row longer than Zeigler. Having already survived two death warrants, he can’t help but wonder how soon his time will come now that the state’s death chamber is humming again. Four men have been executed in the past seven months under Gov. Rick Scott — the latest on April 12. Two of them had been there three decades or more. Zeigler knew them well; they were as close to friends as anyone gets in “P-Dorm” at Union Correctional Institution.

“When I left on July 16, 1976, and came to death row, my lawyers told me not to bother to unpack, they’d have me out in six months,” Zeigler said in an interview at the prison recently. “It’s been a long six months.”

___

From the beginning, it wasn’t just his defense team that doubted William Thomas Zeigler Jr. was capable of committing the awful crimes.

At 30 he had more than a million dollars in assets thanks to his family’s furniture store, and was a well-liked and prominent figure in the small town of Winter Garden, just west of Orlando. He and his wife Eunice lived in a nice house not far from the store, doted on their many Persian cats and seemed to get along just fine. He’d never been arrested.

That’s why it is still so hard for many to believe that he was responsible for the bloody, confusing scene at the W.T. Zeigler Furniture store on Dec. 24, 1975. Prosecutors say it happened like this: Zeigler lured Eunice to the store to kill her, and her parents, Perry and Virginia Edwards, got in the way. A fruit picker Zeigler knew named Charlie Mays was killed, too. Then Zeigler shot himself in the stomach to make it appear as if they’d been the victims of a robbery. He staged it all so he could collect on a $500,000 life insurance policy he took out on his wife just months before. All the victims were shot.

Neither side disputes that Zeigler, at 9:20 that night, called the house of a municipal judge who was hosting a Christmas party with many prominent people in attendance and reported that he’d been shot at the store.

The story Zeigler told that night is the same story he tells today. He says he went to the store to do some last minute Christmas deliveries. Unbeknownst to him, his wife and in-laws, who had come to look at a recliner that was to be her father’s Christmas present, were already dead in various places in the store when he arrived. After finding the lights shut off at the breaker box, he was hit over the head and beaten by two men. He lost his glasses but managed to find and fire one of the guns he kept in the store. He believes Mays — who had cash from the store stuffed in his pocket — was one of the attackers and was killed in the gunfight. Zeigler says that when he came to after being knocked out, he was the only one left alive in the store. Whoever else attacked him had fled.

Zeigler had a reputation in town for sticking up for minorities and migrants who worked picking fruit in the area. He and others believe he was attacked and then framed in a law-enforcement conspiracy because he was about to uncover corruption involving high-ranking local officials, including a loansharking operation that preyed on the migrant workers.

Zeigler was found guilty on July 2, 1976, amid allegations of juror misconduct. One of the jurors, now dead, said in media interviews after the trial that she believed Zeigler was innocent and that she was harassed and coerced into voting guilty by other jurors who wanted to finish up in time for the nation’s Bicentennial celebration two days later. The jury then voted to recommend a life sentence for Zeigler, but the judge — in an exceedingly rare move in Florida — overruled the panel and sentenced him to death.

Zeigler’s appeals were enough to get stays of execution twice after governors signed death warrants. He once came to within a half day of execution. A second sentencing hearing ordered by an appeals court two decades ago resulted in another death sentence. More recent appeals have fallen on deaf judicial ears.

Even so, Zeigler has picked up a growing wave of support through the years. One of his early advocates was David Burgin, who was hired as the Orlando Sentinel’s editor in 1981. Burgin said the more he looked into the case and studied court transcripts, the more he believed his newspaper had treated Zeigler unfairly. He continued to advocate for Zeigler as he moved on to other newspaper jobs through the years, but now is retired and in ill health.

In 2003 he wrote a letter to then-Gov. Jeb Bush calling attention to Zeigler’s case and publicly apologizing for the newspaper’s failure to question prosecutors’ version of events and being biased against Zeigler from the beginning. The newspaper, Burgin wrote, “spent no time trying to cover the case with a hard eye on the defendant’s story.” He said he’s convinced the case against Zeigler was contrived and that he was framed.

“It’s a collection of lies and false assumptions,” the 73-year-old Burgin said in a telephone interview recently. “His whole life is gone, and he’s still getting screwed. It’s just so damn unfair that it’s pathetic.”

___

Lynn-Marie Carty, the St. Petersburg-based investigator, heard about Zeigler’s case last year and was moved to get involved. She said she found a witness whose existence she claims was acknowledged then denied by prosecutors at the time, as well as an attempted robbery at a gas station the same night across the street from the furniture store. Zeigler’s lawyers claim prosecutors knew this information but withheld it at trial.

Carty said the witness didn’t acknowledge anything beyond that he was in the same county at the time. An investigator had testified at trial that the witness’ name was a typographical error in a report. It’s not clear what the witness may have said had he ever testified, but they say proof that he exists supports their contention of perjury.

The daughter of the former police chief of the adjacent town of Oakland now says she believes Zeigler is innocent and may have been framed by her father and others. Robert Thompson was among the first officers on the scene the night of the slayings and drove Zeigler to the hospital.

Christine Cooper said her father died in 1999 “taking a lot of secrets with him.”

Leigh McEachern, a former Orange County chief deputy, said that there was evidence the sheriff’s office didn’t process at the time because investigators assumed Zeigler was guilty. He said that enough new evidence has surfaced since then that he now believes Zeigler to be innocent.

Zeigler is heartened by the new attempts to prove his innocence, but at the same time he’s gotten used to new supporters enthusiastically joining the effort only to go on their way when they find they can’t get anything done for him.

“Every year,” he said in the interview last month, “another piece of this puzzle comes together.”

Zeigler’s attorneys are now asking a judge to grant him a new trial based on a number of claims, including that prosecutors used false and misleading testimony and concealed evidence, and that the new evidence would likely produce his acquittal.

“Newly discovered evidence establishes that the State concealed material information from the defense in this case — a case based on circumstantial evidence and involved an initially deadlocked jury,” said the motion, filed in state circuit court last week.

State attorney’s office spokeswoman Danielle Tavernier declined to comment on the case except to say that prosecutors will fight the new motion in court.

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Drug Dog Sweeps Rogelio Martinez-Alvarez

WILLMAR — Rogelio Martinez-Alvarez, 36, of Glencoe, pleaded guilty Friday to charges of first-degree drug possession and storing meth paraphernalia in the presence of a child, charges filed after cocaine and multiple items of drug paraphernalia were found in an October 2011 search of a Regency Estates West home.

As part of a plea agreement in Kandiyohi County District Court, two additional felony charges for fifth-degree drug possession and receiving stolen property, along with gross misdemeanor charges of child endangerment and possession of a weapon by a user of controlled substance will be dismissed. Martinez-Alvarez will be sentenced, likely to 60 months in prison, on May 21.

http://liarcatchers.com/drugdogsweeps.html

Martinez-Alvarez and Maria De Jesus Magana, 44, of Willmar, were both charged after police officers executed a search warrant on Oct. 26 at a home in Regency Estates West and found 51 grams of cocaine, more than two pounds of marijuana and a stolen handgun.

Magana was found guilty March 23 of felony charges of first- and fifth-degree drug possession and for storing methamphetamine paraphernalia in the presence of a child, plus a gross misdemeanor of child endangerment, in a court trial before District Judge Donald M. Spilseth. Her sentencing is May 8.

CEE-VI Drug Task Force agents, plus officers from the Willmar Police Department and the Kandiyohi County Sheriff’s Office, served the warrant along the 400 block of 30th Street Northwest.

Martinez-Alvarez, Magana and a 3-year-old child were located in the home. When they entered the home, officers used Mace on a large dog described as a pit bull. The dog was removed and taken to Hawk Creek Animal Shelter in Willmar.

According to the complaint, the search revealed 2.32 pounds of marijuana in multiple containers, 51 grams of cocaine, multiple items of drug paraphernalia, a stolen 9mm handgun and 94 rounds of ammunition. The gun was identified as a weapon stolen from a Willmar gun store.

Most of the marijuana, drug paraphernalia and ammunition were located near the child’s bed, hidden in a dog food bag. Marijuana was also located in the drawers of several pieces of furniture in the bedroom. The cocaine was hidden in caulking tubes in a dresser drawer.

Officers also located more than $3,600 in cash at the home, with most of it hidden between mattresses.

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Wrongful Death Bashara Gives Handwriting Sample

On Friday, at a Michigan State Police post in Taylor, Bob Bashara spent three hours providing a handwriting sample to investigator’s who are investigating his wife’s murder.

Bashara arrived at the post with a private investigator, retired FBI agent J.D. Gifford.

According to court records the samples will be compared to writing on a greeting card, an envelope, a letter and a check that were seized during searches by police.

http://liarcatchers.com/wrongful_death.html

“Police were cordial,” Bashara told reporters who had gathered outside the post. “I was open and honest with them.”

Before he left, Bashara criticized the press.

“I have been tried and convicted in the media,” he said.

“This is the land of America, where you’re innocent until proven guilty.”

David Griem, Bashara’s attorney, filed a motion in Wayne County Circuit Court to be present when his client gave the handwriting sample.

Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Timothy Kenny ruled that because Bashara had not been charged that there was no right for counsel to be present.

Jane Bashara was reported missing from her Grosse Pointe Park home on January 24; her body was found in the backseat of her SUV in a Detroit alley the next day by a tow truck driver. She had been beaten and strangled.

Joseph Gentz, a handyman who did work for Bob Bashara, has been charged with murder and conspiracy in Jane Bashara’s death. He has reportedly told police, prosecutors and friends that he killed her after being promised money and a vehicle by her husband.

Bob Bashara said he had nothing to say about Gentz’s claims.

“Throughout this whole mess, we have fully cooperated and we continue to do so,” Bashara said.

“Bob Bashara wants to find out who killed his wife.”

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Missing Persons Search Continues for Sierra LaMar

MORGAN HILL, Calif. — Biggest Missing Person Search Executed in Morgan Hill. More than 100 deputies searched parts of Morgan Hill and Gilroy with helicopters, dirt bikes, K-9 units and search teams on foot.

Since Sierra LaMar went missing March 16th more than 1,400 tips have come for deputies to follow. Law enforcement has dedicated more than 10,000 hours to look for Sierra.

http://liarcatchers.com/missing_persons_investigations.html

While no evidence has been found yet deputies say that may be a good sign. “Just because we have limited evidence it is not necessarily a bad thing because its evidence that helps us out in the case but for all we know she still could be out there alive,” said Sgt. Jose Cardoza.

Search & Rescue Director Jeff Thomas says today’s search is much more difficult. “The terrain today is more steep than in the past we’re not searching on the flatlands very much today,” said Thomas. Deputies say search crews are equipped with gear to climb up steep cliffs and trails. “We’re going to be going down into the creek searching both sides of the creek and heading east of the creek,” said rescue workers.

The huge search has been in the works for a few weeks now but deputies kept their lips sealed as to why. They’ve been staying within a 12 mile radius near the spot Sierra was last seen but on Saturday they headed more South into Gilroy.

While it’s the 5th week deputies have spent searching for Sierra they keeping getting new information that keeps leading them to go out looking for her. “We continue to look because we continue to find new things there are areas we’re not willing to let go of that we want to increase the coverage on,” said Thomas.

Deputies have no made any more search plans for next week. Volunteers at Burnett Elementary School plan to meet Sunday and Wednesday for community searches.

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Wrongful Death Brenda Howard

State Police arrest two people after a woman is murdered in her own home.

John Smith, 41, and Chasity Hagan, 34, are charged with murder and burglary.

http://liarcatchers.com/wrongful_death.html

A family member found Brenda Howard, 63, dead inside her home in Monroe County Friday night.

Investigators say she had been beaten and stabbed.

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Private Detective David Sloan Arrested on Rape Charges

A man has been charged with rape in Floyd County and when police went to arrest him, they say he had been shot.

http://liarcatchers.com/index.php

It happened in the Wayland community. Police say 38-year-old David Slone was found with a single gunshot wound.

Slone was taken to the hospital for treatment. Slone and 40-year-old Kathleen Keen were later arrested in connection with a rape investigation.

Keen was charged with assault in the case.

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Wrongful death Jeremy Stewart and Nicholas Presha

ORANGE COUNTY, Fla. (WOFL FOX 35) – Next to the burned outline where 18-year-old Jeremy Stewart was murdered, his father James Stewart, asked questions without answers. “I hear the stories of him being tied and gagged and shot and burned. How did it happen? Did they suffer?” asked James Stewart, as he was surrounded by hundreds of mourners at this site where the bodies were found. “I wanna know so I can stop creating stories in my head, and figure out the real story so I can have closure.”

http://liarcatchers.com/wrongful_death.html

The grief stricken father also spoke about how affectionate his 18-year old son was, and how he loved to play jokes on his father. But Sheriff’s detectives say Jeremy and his best friend, 16-year- old Nicholas Persha, were both discovered by a jogger along Cady Way Trail in Winter Park on Sunday. Detectives say the teen’s hands were tied, and they were shot in the back of the head.

In the midst of their suffering, other family members describe Jeremy as a fun loving jokester, who’s only blemish was a recent arrest as a passenger in a stolen car. He pled down to trespassing, and was in the midst of serving probation. But the family says a recent media report claiming the teen’s death might be connected to drugs, is impossible for them to believe.

“I know the two of them. They were not thugs. They were good, good kids,” said Stewart.

The Orange County Sheriff’s Office says they have little information about who murdered the two teens. Family member say they can’t stop asking themselves painful questions with no answers.

“Was he begging for his life?,” asked Wanda Stewart, Jeremy’s grandmother. “And for somebody to shoot him in the head? And burn him?“

She paused as tears began to run down her face. “That’s evil… nothing but evil.”

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