Tag: massacre

  • The real massacre by an LDS militia was ‘much more brutal’


    Bullets fly and arrows whiz amid screams of agony during the chaos that is the “American Primeval” treatment of the Mountain Meadows Massacre, a merciless attack carried out in southern Utah by Mormon militiamen against a wagon train of emigrants from Arkansas in 1857.

    The atrocity marked a moment when long-oppressed members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, fearful of outsiders disturbing their hard-won peace, resorted to violence against civilians, slaughtering all but the youngest children.

    As “glad” as she is to see the massacre remembered, Barbara Jones Brown, director of Signature Books and co-author of the critically acclaimed “Vengeance Is Mine: The Mountain Meadows Massacre and Its Aftermath,” warns that there is little recognizable as real in the Netflix version of the carnage.

    Brown and Darren Parry, former chair of the Northwestern Band of the Shoshone Nation and author of “The Bear River Massacre: A Shoshone History,” appeared on a recent episode of The Salt Lake Tribune’s “Mormon Land” podcast for a side-by-side comparison of history and Hollywood as it relates to the massacre. (Below are excerpts of that conversation, edited for clarity.):

    What does the series get wrong and right about how the massacre began and how it was carried out?

    Brown • The massacre took place during the Utah War.

    Which was what?

    Brown • It was a conflict between the U.S. government, in which it sent troops to occupy the Utah Territory, and the local Latter-day Saint leaders and settlers, who wanted to resist those troops coming into their territory.

    The series was very confusing to me. In it, the massacre seemed to take place just a few miles outside of Fort Bridger, in modern-day Wyoming. In fact, the attack took place hundreds of miles away in southwest Utah, near what is today St. George.

    The perpetrators of the massacre did not wear hoods. In the show, it looked like the KKK, but wearing potato sacks on their heads. In reality, they did not need to wear hoods because they wiped out all the witnesses who were adults. The only people who survived the massacre were 17 young children ages 6 and under, most of whom were babies and toddlers. And they were spared only because they were considered “too young to tell tales” by the Mormon militia.

    The series seems to depict the militia as marauders just coming into the camp. Can you describe how the violence actually unfolded?

    Brown • The way the massacre occurred was actually so much more brutal than the way it was portrayed.

    There was an initial attack by the Mormons, who were intending to run off their cattle. It didn’t work. So they kind of got into a skirmish and the Arkansas immigrants quickly circled their wagons. A five-day siege set in.

    Ultimately, on Sept. 11, 1857, Mormon militiamen, through false promises of protection, said that they were there to rescue the immigrants from the attacking Indians, tricked them, had them walk out and then slaughtered all of them. So not a single Mormon was killed or even hurt in the massacre.

    They did go through afterward and shoot in the head any survivors who weren’t killed in that final massacre. And they did loot the bodies. There is a story of one of the perpetrators pulling a gold watch off the body of one of the victims as depicted in the show. So that part was accurate.

    What about the involvement of Natives in the area?

    Brown • As the series showed, there were a small number of Paiutes involved. We don’t know from the historical record how many were there, but I do want to say that it was relatively small compared to the entire Paiute Nation and the Mormon militiamen who carried this out.

    The Mormons tricked, if you will, or got some small number of Paiutes involved because they wanted to blame the whole massacre on them, and that’s exactly what they did. And so, unfortunately, the Paiute Nation has unjustly borne blame for this, when the focus needs to be put on the white perpetrators who actually orchestrated this.

    In the series, the Paiute say, ‘We participated in the massacre so we could get women and cattle.’ That was a complete falsehood. The Paiute were promised cattle, and that’s what they got.

    (Matt Kennedy | Netflix) Derek Hinkey, portraying Red Feather, gets a touchup from makeup department head Howard Berger on the set of “American Primeval.”

    How accurate was the portrayal of the different Native tribes in the series? What felt authentic and what felt like Hollywood?

    Parry • There wouldn’t have been any Paiutes up by Fort Bridger ever. There would have been plenty of Shoshone. I loved the storytelling around the Shoshone and their culture. They were really honored by the series in a good way.

    What about the culture was authentic?

    Parry • The clothing was wonderful. The language was spot-on. It showed that small village where they had a matriarch, who pretty much was the ruler of the small group of Shoshones that were there. And that makes perfect sense to us. We live in a matriarchal society. Our women were our leaders and strong. And so to have a woman who showed strength like that was really one of the highlights for me.

    Brown • Another question we’ve been getting on this note was whether there was scalping at Mountain Meadows as portrayed in the series.

    Parry • That was really confusing to me, because that would have never happened.

    What was Brigham Young’s involvement, if any, in the massacre, and what did he know about it?

    Brown • Did he order the massacre? No. It’s incontrovertible that he did not order the massacre. But did he contribute to a scenario and environment in which the massacre could take place? Absolutely,

    When Young learns that the troops are on their way to occupy Utah’s settlements, the Latter-day Saints, who have been violently driven in the past two decades from Missouri and Illinois, fear the Army’s intentions and don’t want the Army to come in.

    Young comes up with all kinds of resistance strategies, one of which was to burn the supply trains and just keep the Army so they cannot make it into Utah settlements before the snow sets in. The other strategy was encouraging cattle raiding of immigrant cattle companies by Indians. And he’s threatening the United States government — in media and his speeches and so forth — that if the troops come into Utah, he and the Mormons will no longer “keep the trails safe for immigration.”

    (Matt Kennedy | Netflix) Kim Coates, center, portrays Brigham Young in an episode of “American Primeval.”

    When did Brigham learn that the massacre had happened?

    Brown • Rumors about the massacre started spreading north almost immediately after it occurred. And John D. Lee, who was one of the lead perpetrators of the crime, rode north to Salt Lake City.

    On Sept. 29, he went into Young’s office. Apostle Wilford Woodruff was also in that meeting. Fortunately, Woodruff recorded that very day what Lee was saying, and Lee lied to Brigham Young and said it was an all-Indian massacre. Young asked him if any white men were involved. Lee said no — it was just the Indians and that the militiamen just went out the next day to bury the dead.

    Lee ends up being one of nine men indicted for the crime. Years later, he is caught, and there’s enough evidence against him that he is convicted and executed.

    What did you think of the series’ portrayal of Brigham Young?

    Parry • I’ve always kind of given Brigham Young a break. He had a hard job bringing the Saints west and creating a new Zion and so forth. But his rhetoric and how he talked and how some of his words may have incited some of his people and empowered them through Manifest Destiny — you can almost do anything in the name of Manifest Destiny. And we have clear indication of that in 1850, when the Saints were having problems with the Timpanogos Natives in Utah County.

    The locals wanted to completely annihilate the Timpanogos band. Brigham Young preached in a meeting, saying we don’t want to kill them but we need them to move. Eventually, though, he relented and signed an extermination order in 1850 for those members of the Timpanogos band who wouldn’t move. That extermination order was carried out.

    Brown • I’m glad that Darren brings up the fact that there were other massacres of Native Americans by Latter-day Saints in Utah. That’s important to make that point.

    In general, what were relations like between the Mormon settlers and the Native Americans they displaced?

    Parry • Well, it’s kind of a roller coaster. I mean, church founder Joseph Smith, when he dealt with the Native Americans, it’s almost as if he placed them on a pedestal. His successor, not the same. He thought Latter-day Saints might be able to treat these people in a good way, as long as they give them the land and what they want. But expansion and taking over land was by far the goal, and whatever took place to get it was OK, because, you know, it’s God who wants them to be here.

    One of the more colorful characters in the series is Jim Bridger, especially in his interactions with Brigham Young. Were these scenes accurate?

    Brown • That was just really odd to me. The filmmakers have Brigham Young riding all around Fort Bridger. And again, Fort Bridger is hundreds of miles from Salt Lake City, where Brigham Young’s home was and where the headquarters of the church was. He was nowhere near the troops as they were approaching. In fact, he was really afraid of the approaching troops. That’s why he was resisting and setting up Mormon militia to try and stop them from coming.

    (Matt Kennedy | Netflix) Shea Whigham, left, plays Jim Bridger and Kim Coates portrays Brigham Young in an episode of “American Primeval.”

    Did Latter-day Saints burn Bridger’s fort?

    Brown • The Mormons forced him to sell it in 1855, and they burned it down in 1857 before these events transpired in the show. The motivation behind why they burned down Fort Bridger was to stall the troops.

    What is your advice for anyone who’s about to watch the series?

    Brown • I would just recommend that when you’re watching it, please understand the whole thing is highly, highly fictionalized. There’s so much great history on the Utah War and the Mountain Meadows Massacre and Brigham Young that people can go read and learn the truth about.

    Parry • We’ve got to sit down and have hard conversations — not because we can make things right for those people who died that day, but the world that we live in today really begs for healing. It’s about bringing awareness to a hard subject and fostering dialogue.

    To hear the podcast, go to sltrib.com/podcasts/mormonland. To receive full “Mormon Land” transcripts, along with our complete newsletter and access to all Tribune religion content, support us at Patreon.com/mormonland.

    Note to readers • This story is available to Salt Lake Tribune subscribers only. Thank you for supporting local journalism.



    On September 7, 1857, a group of Mormons from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS) carried out a brutal massacre in southern Utah that has largely been forgotten in history. Known as the Mountain Meadows Massacre, this horrific event saw the slaughter of approximately 120 men, women, and children who were traveling through the area on their way to California.

    While many people are familiar with the more well-known massacres in American history, such as the Wounded Knee Massacre or the Sand Creek Massacre, the Mountain Meadows Massacre is often overlooked. However, the brutality of this event cannot be understated.

    The victims, who were primarily from Arkansas, were ambushed by a group of Mormon militia members disguised as Native Americans. The attackers lured the travelers into a false sense of security before turning on them, killing all of the adults and sparing only the very young children. The survivors were taken in by local Mormon families, who raised them as their own.

    The true extent of the barbarity of the Mountain Meadows Massacre was revealed in a recent study by historians, who uncovered evidence of torture, mutilation, and sexual violence perpetrated by the Mormon militia members. The researchers described the massacre as “much more brutal” than previously believed, shedding new light on this dark chapter in American history.

    It is important to remember and honor the victims of the Mountain Meadows Massacre, and to ensure that their story is not forgotten. This tragic event serves as a stark reminder of the dangers of religious extremism and the devastating consequences it can have on innocent lives.

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    8. Religious violence
    9. Bloodshed in Mormonism
    10. Dark history of the LDS Church

    #real #massacre #LDS #militia #brutal

  • What happened in the Pike County massacre case Friday?

    What happened in the Pike County massacre case Friday?




    On Friday, significant developments unfolded in the Pike County massacre case, shedding new light on the horrific events that shocked the small community. Prosecutors revealed crucial evidence linking the suspects to the brutal murders of eight family members in 2016. The court proceedings also saw emotional testimonies from witnesses, further painting a grim picture of the heinous crime. Stay tuned for more updates on this tragic case as justice continues to unfold. #PikeCountyMassacre #JusticeForTheVictims

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  • 3 family members to be sentenced in connection to Pike County massacre

    3 family members to be sentenced in connection to Pike County massacre


    Members of the Wagner family will learn their sentences Friday morning in Ohio’s largest murder trial.Watch the hearings live in the video player aboveThey all pleaded guilty in connection to the killings of 8 members of the Rhoden and Gilley families back in 2016.The “massacre” was motivated by a child custody dispute.Angela Wagner, her mother, Rita Newcomb, and her son, Jake Wagner, are all being sentenced Friday. They all took plea deals in the case.During her sentencing, Rita Newcomb said “I’m sorry.” She testified for the State during the murder trial of her grandson George Wagner Jr. Newcomb was sentenced to 90 days in jail on an obstruction of official business charge, with 83 days suspended. Newcomb served her seven days already. She has also been ordered to be placed on probation for five years and pay a $750 fine, plus court costs. If she violates probation, she will be taken to jail. Newcomb’s other charges were dismissed. Angela Wagner spoke ahead of her sentencing, saying she knows the pain the Rhodens feel must be “unbearable.” She cited her personal brokenness for letting her get swept up in the murderous scheme.Angela was sentenced to the mutually agreed upon sentence of 30 years with 2,244 days for time served. She must register as a violent offender for 10 years when released. “You are the only person that could’ve stopped the whole thing with one phone call. All you had to do was call in, stop the whole thing. The depravity was that you didn’t see the moral need to shut the whole thing down. Clearly, any decent human being could have done that little bit to save so much,” Judge Jonathan Hein said during Angela’s sentencing. Jake was the only one to plead guilty to murder to get the death penalty thrown out.Jake addressed members of the Rhoden family during sentencing. “There’s nothing I can do to ease the pain you have, loss, anger, hate,” he said.Several members of the Rhoden family walked out as he spoke. Jake said he’s not asking for forgiveness but said “hate will not hear your heart,” saying “Jesus made him get caught.” The trial for his father, Billy, will begin next month.Jake’s brother George was convicted in 2022 and sentenced to serve life in prison.Andrea Shoemaker, the mother of murder victim Hannah Gilley, blasted Rita Newcomb, Angela Wagner and Jake Wagner during the sentencing hearing.”You are evilest mother to plan, carry out and take the lives of three other mothers,” Shoemaker said, directing her comment to Angela.She also addressed Jake and Rita, telling them they ruined her life and innocent children’s lives.”It’s a heartache that never goes away,” Shoemaker said.

    Members of the Wagner family will learn their sentences Friday morning in Ohio’s largest murder trial.

    Watch the hearings live in the video player above

    They all pleaded guilty in connection to the killings of 8 members of the Rhoden and Gilley families back in 2016.

    This content is imported from Twitter.
    You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

    The “massacre” was motivated by a child custody dispute.

    Angela Wagner, her mother, Rita Newcomb, and her son, Jake Wagner, are all being sentenced Friday.

    They all took plea deals in the case.

    During her sentencing, Rita Newcomb said “I’m sorry.” She testified for the State during the murder trial of her grandson George Wagner Jr.

    Newcomb was sentenced to 90 days in jail on an obstruction of official business charge, with 83 days suspended. Newcomb served her seven days already. She has also been ordered to be placed on probation for five years and pay a $750 fine, plus court costs. If she violates probation, she will be taken to jail. Newcomb’s other charges were dismissed.

    Angela Wagner spoke ahead of her sentencing, saying she knows the pain the Rhodens feel must be “unbearable.” She cited her personal brokenness for letting her get swept up in the murderous scheme.

    Angela was sentenced to the mutually agreed upon sentence of 30 years with 2,244 days for time served. She must register as a violent offender for 10 years when released.

    “You are the only person that could’ve stopped the whole thing with one phone call. All you had to do was call in, stop the whole thing. The depravity was that you didn’t see the moral need to shut the whole thing down. Clearly, any decent human being could have done that little bit to save so much,” Judge Jonathan Hein said during Angela’s sentencing.

    Jake was the only one to plead guilty to murder to get the death penalty thrown out.

    Jake addressed members of the Rhoden family during sentencing.

    “There’s nothing I can do to ease the pain you have, loss, anger, hate,” he said.

    Several members of the Rhoden family walked out as he spoke.

    Jake said he’s not asking for forgiveness but said “hate will not hear your heart,” saying “Jesus made him get caught.”

    The trial for his father, Billy, will begin next month.

    Jake’s brother George was convicted in 2022 and sentenced to serve life in prison.

    Andrea Shoemaker, the mother of murder victim Hannah Gilley, blasted Rita Newcomb, Angela Wagner and Jake Wagner during the sentencing hearing.

    “You are evilest mother to plan, carry out and take the lives of three other mothers,” Shoemaker said, directing her comment to Angela.

    She also addressed Jake and Rita, telling them they ruined her life and innocent children’s lives.

    “It’s a heartache that never goes away,” Shoemaker said.

    This content is imported from Twitter.
    You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.





    In a shocking turn of events, three family members have been sentenced in connection to the infamous Pike County massacre. The massacre, which took place in 2016, claimed the lives of eight members of the Rhoden family in rural Ohio.

    The three family members, who have been identified as George Wagner III, Angela Wagner, and their son George Wagner IV, were found guilty of planning and carrying out the gruesome murders. The motive behind the massacre remains unclear, but authorities believe it may have been related to a custody dispute over a young child.

    The Wagners were sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole, bringing some closure to the devastated community of Pike County. The brutal and senseless nature of the murders shook the small town to its core, and the sentencing of the perpetrators has brought a sense of justice to the grieving families.

    While the details of the case are chilling, the sentencing of the three family members serves as a reminder that justice will prevail, even in the face of such heinous crimes. The community of Pike County can now begin the long process of healing and moving forward from this tragic chapter in their history.

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  • WATCH LIVE: Pike County massacre

    WATCH LIVE: Pike County massacre


    STORY TO BE UPDATED WHEN SENTENCES ARE HANDED DOWN.

    Jake Wagner:

    Angela Wagner: Judge Jonathan Hein sentenced her to 30 years in prison. According to our media partners at the Cincinnati Enquirer, When Angela is released, she will serve two to five years of probation, and will have to register as a violent offender for 10 years

    Rita Newcomb: Judge Hein sentenced her to five years of probation and a suspended sentence of 90 days of which she has already served seven. Newcomb asked the judge if she has to go to jail. Judge Hein said no unless she “acts out”.

    PREVIOUS STORY BELOW

    WAVERLY, Ohio (WXIX) – Three members of the same family who took plea deals years ago in the 2016 Pike County massacre case are finally being sentenced today.

    That includes Edward “Jake” Wagner, 32, and his mother, Angela Wagner, 54.

    The visiting judge overseeing the cases, retired Darke County Common Pleas Court Judge Jonathan Hein, filed court papers rescheduling their sentencing hearings for Friday at 10 a.m.

    Angela Wagner’s mother, Rita Newcomb, also will be sentenced at that time, according to related court filings.

    As part of their plea deals, Jake and Angela Wagner both testified for the state against the eldest Wagner son, George Wagner IV, at his 2022 murder trial.

    Once they are sentenced, however, it’s not clear whether they will return to the stand to testify for the state again, this time against Jake’s father and Angela’s husband, George “Billy” Wagner III, 53.

    Following Friday’s sentencing, a hearing is scheduled for Billy Wagner. It could be announced in that hearing if Judge Hein will move his trial to another county after saying he didn’t think that an impartial jury could be seated in Pike County.

    FULL SECTION | Pike County Massacre

    The Wagner family from left to right: George "Billy Wagner III, Angela Wagner, George Wagner...
    The Wagner family from left to right: George “Billy Wagner III, Angela Wagner, George Wagner IV and Edward “Jake” Wagner.(FOX19 NOW)

    The victims of the April 2016 massacre were Christopher Rhoden Sr., 40; his older brother, Kenneth Rhoden, 44; his cousin, Gary Rhoden, 38; Chris Rhoden Sr.’s former wife, Dana Lynn Rhoden, 37, and their children: Clarence “Frankie” Rhoden, 20, Hanna May Rhoden, 19, Christopher Rhoden Jr., 16, and Frankie’s fiancé, Hannah “Hazel” Gilley, 20.

    Two infants and a toddler were spared by the killers and left behind at the murder scenes: a 5-day-old baby girl, a 6-month-old baby boy, and a 3-year-old boy.

    Prosecutors have said the motive in the murders was the custody and control of the young daughter of Jake Wagner and one of the victims he confessed to shooting in the head twice, Hanna May Rhoden, 19.

    The young couple began dating when she was 13 and he was 18. She became pregnant with their daughter at 15.

    They broke up in 2015 after their daughter was born in 2013.

    Jake Wagner testified during his brother’s trial he didn’t want the relationship to end.

    Hanna Rhoden had a second child, a baby girl, with another man and was dating another man at the time of her murder.

    Her baby was just five days old when the victims were found on the morning of April 22, 2016.

    Jake Wagner testified during his brother’s trial that he shot most of the victims, including Hanna Rhoden as she was propped up in bed breastfeeding her new infant.

    He said on the stand he positioned her body after he shot her so she could keep breastfeeding her newborn, whose life he spared.

    He also testified he picked up the shell casings and cell phones and took them.

    But, according to other testimony, he missed one shell casing that investigators found under the baby’s crib.

    George Wagner IV, 33, was convicted of all counts including eight counts of murder even though the state and defense both agreed he never shot anyone and Jake Wagner also testified to that.

    George Wagner IV is currently appealing his conviction and asking that his sentence be thrown out: eight life sentences and 121 years on 16 other charges.

    Jake Wagner, meanwhile, is being held at the Gallia County Jail, state and county records show.

    Billy Wagner’s trial was set to begin on Jan. 6, but a change of venue followed by a flurry of court filings has delayed that.

    He has pleaded not guilty all all 22 charges, including eight counts of aggravated murder, from the execution-style slayings of his son’s ex-girlfriend and seven of her family members in April 2016.

    Two key decisions remain pending in the appeals court:

    • Whether Judge Hein can dismiss the possibility of Billy Wagner facing the death penalty against the state’s wishes and without them requesting it in an official motion
    • Whether he can move the trial out of Pike County against the wishes of a victim identified only in court records as “T.R.”

    “The judge has sort of knocked out the death penalty on his own,” explained FOX19 NOW legal advisor Mark Krumbein. “So, there’s so many things, you know, up in the air right now. Something like this case is really unique. It is in my career. In all of the homicides I’ve handled, I’ve never seen anything like this before.”

    If and when the appeals court upholds the new venue decision, the judge has yet to announce the new location.

    Jake Wagner pleaded guilty in April 2021 to eight counts of aggravated murder and 15 other charges including felony conspiracy, four counts of aggravated burglary and multiple counts of tampering with evidence.

    In all, Jake pleaded guilty to 23 charges.

    As part of the plea deal, he agreed to a sentence of eight life sentences without parole and to cooperate with prosecutors and testify against his family members.

    We are fully satisfied,” Wagner’s defense said during the hearing on April 22, 2021. “He knows he’s going to die in prison without any judicial relief.”

    Jake Wagner then testified for the state the following year against his own brother.

    Jake Wagner shot and killed five of the victims, including the mother of his child, Hanna May Rhoden, 19, and shot and wounded a sixth, her father Chris Rhoden Sr., according to his confession and his testimony.

    Special Prosecutor Angie Canepa has said Jake confessed and apologized for the crimes. In an interview, he led investigators to the weapons and vehicles used in the killings.

    Community reacts to guilty plea in Pike County massacre

    Angela Wagner pleaded in September 2021 to conspiracy to commit aggravated murder, several counts of aggravated burglary, tampering with evidence, and other charges as part of a plea deal.

    Eight counts of aggravated murder were dismissed.

    The prosecution said at that time they were recommending she receive 30 years with no possibility of the death penalty.

    Angela Wagner confirmed on the stand at her eldest son’s trial that her entire family, including herself, participated in the massacre. She was not present, however, when the slayings occurred, she stressed.

    Jake Wagner backed that up in his testimony, saying on the stand that he and his father did all the shooting after the family plotted and planned the killings for months.

    He said he had to talk his mom and brother into it.

    One of George IV’s defense attorneys asked Angela at his trial if the goal of her plea deal was to try to get out of prison eventually one day and see her grandchildren.

    Yes, she responded. She also testified she had regret and remorse and “I am more than sorry but that’s not enough.”

    ‘I have regret’: Angela Wagner cross-examination wraps up in Pike County massacre trial

    Now 69, Newcomb withdrew her plea of not guilty in Pike County Common Pleas Court five years ago this month and entered a plea of guilty to an obstruction official business charge, a misdemeanor.

    That crime is punishable by up to 90 days in jail, prosecutors said at the time.

    She was accused of forging custody documents related to the case and then lying about it to a grand jury and to investigators.

    When then-Judge Randy Deering asked Newcomb if she was coerced into pleading guilty, she responded: “It’s not a good, Christian thing to lie, so I didn’t want to do that anymore.”

    One of the special prosecutors, Canepa, has said in court a handwriting expert determined Newcomb did not sign the custody documents herself.

    Canepa also has said Newcomb admitted to falsely testifying before the grand jury and investigators because her daughter, Angela Wagner, told her to.

    A pre-sentencing investigation was not ordered at the time of Newcomb’s plea hearing.

    Judge Deering also never set her sentencing date.

    He ordered Newcomb to comply with the conditions of her bond and to not have contact with any relatives in the case.

    Judge Deering released her at that time on house arrest and ordered the removal of her electronic ankle monitor.

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    Copyright 2024 WXIX. All rights reserved.



    Join us as we watch live coverage of the trial for the Pike County massacre, where eight members of the Rhoden family were brutally murdered in their homes in 2016. The trial is set to begin today and we will be providing live updates on the proceedings as they unfold. Tune in to follow along with the latest developments in this tragic case. #PikeCountyMassacre #JusticeforRhodenFamily

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  • Jake, Angela Wagner to be sentenced for 2016 Pike County massacre

    Jake, Angela Wagner to be sentenced for 2016 Pike County massacre


    WAVERLY, Ohio — Edward “Jake” Wagner, his mother, Angela, and his grandmother, Rita Newcomb, are all scheduled to be sentenced Friday for their parts in the 2016 murders of eight members of the Rhoden and Gilley families in Pike County.

    You can watch the hearing live in the player below:

    LIVE: Jake, Angela Wagner to be sentenced for Pike County murders

    Found dead that day were 40-year-old Christopher Rhoden Sr., 37-year-old Dana Rhoden, 20-year-old Hannah “Hazel” Gilley, 16-year-old Christopher Rhoden Jr., 20-year-old Clarence “Frankie” Rhoden, 37-year-old Gary Rhoden, 19-year-old Hanna May Rhoden, and 44-year-old Kenneth Rhoden.

    Prosecutors filed a request on December 10 and again on December 30 asking the Supreme Court of Ohio to disqualify Judge Jonathan Hein from the Pike County cases.

    Both requests were denied, paving the way for sentencing to continue as scheduled.

    There will also be a hearing in George “Billy” Wagner III’s case that same day, scheduled for 1 p.m., court records show.

    Hein announced to the courtroom during a November 20 hearing that he planned to throw out the death penalty in Billy’s case before trial begins, and officially sentence other members of the Wagner family.

    Both Jake and Angela made complicated plea deals with the state in 2021 and have yet to be sentenced, since those deals hinged on testifying during any trials tied to the murders — including Billy’s.

    In the deal with Angela, prosecutors agreed to drop eight charges of aggravated murder in exchange for the plea, and recommended she serve 30 years in prison with no early release.

    Jake’s guilty plea is more complicated: He pleaded guilty to 18 counts, including aggravated murder. Prosecutors agreed to dismiss the possibility of the death penalty for all members of the Wagner family in exchange for Jake’s testimony at any trials. He could still receive up to eight consecutive life sentences for the murders.

    Now, with the death penalty no longer on the table for Billy and the prosecution’s main witnesses scheduled for sentencing, it’s unclear whether Jake or Angela will still have to testify at Billy’s trial.

    Newcomb, Angela’s mother, was charged with obstructing justice and forgery charges in 2018 and also took a plea deal in 2019.

    Further complicating the case, Hein has also decided to rule in favor of defense attorney’s requests to move Billy’s upcoming trial out of Pike County. On November 25, Hein ruled there has been too much public and media interest in the case to seat an impartial jury.

    “The court finds that the intense scope of media coverage in this case — and other closely related cases — was so pervasive that prejudice is presumed,” reads Hein’s decision. “The small population of Pike County and the intense media coverage leads the court to conclude that no jury could truthfully answer that they have no prior knowledge of the horrendous factors of this case.”

    So far, where exactly Billy will face trial has not yet been announced.

    You can read the latest about about the Pike County murder case, including the trial of George Wagner IV, here.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=videoseries





    In a shocking turn of events, Jake and Angela Wagner, the parents of one of the victims in the 2016 Pike County massacre, are set to be sentenced for their involvement in the brutal killings. This case has captured the attention of the nation, as eight members of the Rhoden family were found dead in their homes in a planned and calculated attack.

    The Wagners were arrested in 2018 and have been awaiting their sentencing ever since. They have been charged with multiple counts of aggravated murder, conspiracy, and other crimes in connection to the massacre. It is believed that they orchestrated the killings in order to gain custody of their granddaughter, who was also a victim in the massacre.

    The sentencing hearing is sure to bring closure to the families of the victims, as well as shed light on the motives behind this heinous crime. Justice must be served for the lives that were senselessly taken on that tragic day in Pike County. Stay tuned for updates on this developing story.

    Tags:

    Jake Wagner, Angela Wagner, Pike County massacre, 2016, sentencing, family murder, Ohio, Wagner family, Rhoden family, SEO tags

    #Jake #Angela #Wagner #sentenced #Pike #County #massacre

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