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Richardson family murders

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Richardson family murders
LocationMedicine Hat, Alberta, Canada
DateApril 23, 2006; 18 years ago (2006-04-23)
Attack type
Triple-murder by stabbing, familicide, matricide, patricide, fratricide
WeaponsKnife
Victims
  • Marc Richardson
  • Debra Richardson
  • Tyler Jacob Richardson
PerpetratorsJasmine Richardson, 12, and Jeremy Allan Steinke, 23
MotiveRevenge against Jasmine Richardson's family for disapproving of Steinke's predatory relationship with her
VerdictRichardson and Steinke:
Guilty on all counts
Lancaster:
Pleaded guilty
ConvictionsRichardson and Steinke:
First-degree murder (3 counts)
Lancaster:
Obstruction[a]
SentenceRichardson:
10 years in prison, including four years of psychiatric institutionalization and four-and-a-half years of conditional supervision
Steinke:
Life imprisonment with the possibility of parole after 25 years
Lancaster:
1 year of house arrest

Three members of the Richardson family were murdered in Medicine Hat, Alberta, Canada in April 2006.[1] The murders were planned and committed by the family's 12-year-old daughter Jasmine Richardson[2][3][4] and her 23-year-old boyfriend Jeremy Steinke, now going by the name Jackson May.[5] Richardson and Steinke were each convicted on three counts of first-degree murder. Richardson, who had turned 13 before being convicted, is thought to be the youngest person in Canada ever convicted of multiple first-degree murder counts.[6] Her 10-year sentence was completed on May 6, 2016.[2]

Discovery

At 1:00 p.m. on April 23, 2006, the bodies of 42-year-old Jean-Marc "Marc" Richardson and his 48-year-old wife Debra were found in the basement of their home,[7] and the body of their 8-year-old son Tyler Jacob[8] was discovered upstairs. Jacob's young friend had been the one to discover the bodies, having arrived for a playdate with Jacob, and alerted his mother, who then notified police.[9][10][11] Marc had 24 stab wounds, Debra had 12 stab wounds, and Jacob had a slit throat and stab wounds to his head and torso.[12] Absent from the home at that time was the couple's 12-year-old daughter, Jasmine.[9][13] For a time, it was feared that she might have also been a victim, but she was arrested the following day in the community of Leader, Saskatchewan, about 130 kilometres (81 mi) away, with her 23-year-old boyfriend Jeremy Allan Steinke, after investigators had uncovered a stick figure drawing depicting her family being murdered inside Jasmine's locker at school. Both were charged with the three murders.[13][14] Later, on May 3, 2006, Steinke's friend Kacy Lancaster, 19, was charged with being an accessory for driving them away in her pickup truck later in the day and for disposing of evidence.[15]

Perpetrators and background

Jasmine Richardson

Richardson's seventh-grade yearbook photo, c. 2005–2006

Jasmine Richardson (born October 21, 1993) was born to parents Debra (née Doolan) and Jean-Marc Richardson in Ontario, Canada. The Richardsons were recovering drug addicts who had met three years previously at a gymnasium in Sudbury and married the following year. Jasmine's younger brother, Tyler Jacob Richardson—known to his friends by his middle name—was born five years later. Shortly before Jacob was born, the family had relocated to Okotoks, a small farming town outside Calgary, Alberta. With Marc and Debra fully recovered from drug addiction and sober, and their family of four now complete, they moved into an older-built townhouse in Okotoks where they set out to raise their new family and start a new life. The family initially struggled to pay bills and had to rely on food banks, but were able to eventually purchase a home and move to Medicine Hat, in part thanks to a promotion Marc received at his job, in 2005. It was around this same time that Jasmine began to use the Internet more frequently.[16]

Jasmine was described as a bright and studious straight-A student who made the honor roll at her Catholic school and was actively involved in the fine arts program, as well as being an outgoing and sociable young girl who made lots of friends, held an active social life, and enjoyed typical teen interests. However, with her increasing social media usage and interest in the goth subculture, and her continuously becoming friends with older men, her parents began to worry.[17]

In the summer of 2005, Richardson and her friends began frequenting the Medicine Hat Mall, where they encountered a group of older goth kids; enraptured, they soon started hanging out with this group and modeling themselves after them—Jasmine included. Richardson's behavior soon deteriorated after that, with frequent rule-breaking such as repeatedly violating the school dress code in favor of unauthorized gothic attire, and argumentations with her parents. Her social media profiles and the contents thereof were also of great concern to her family; she created numerous accounts on various social networking sites such as MySpace and Zorpia in which she falsified her age as being older than she actually was, posted inappropriate photos, claimed to be bisexual and Wiccan and drink alcohol, and indicated she possessed disturbing interests such as serial killers, scarification, and "kinky shit". On her profile, she listed American serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer and American industrial musician Marilyn Manson, among others, as her "heroes."[18]

In January of 2006, at the Medicine Hat Mall, she was introduced by a friend and schoolmate of hers to 23-year-old Jeremy Steinke. Even while under the mounting pressure of increased scrutiny by her parents, the two became close, frequenting local concerts and the mall together as well as corresponding with one another on social media, and eventually, they began a relationship. Her relationship with her parents was fraught with even more strain as they struggled to retain control over their daughter; she started sneaking out of the house to meet Steinke in secret, and going to concerts without their permission, and she had often spoke of running away from home and wanting out of her parents' household and into foster care over the oppression of their rules. She had also began to develop an animosity towards her younger brother; according to Steinke, he witnessed Jasmine strangling Jacob on one occasion, and Jasmine purportedly expressed embarrassment over her brother having to accompany her at family events. Jacob had reportedly confided in a family friend that he was afraid of his older sister. She had been grounded and had her electronics confiscated after two separate incidents where she had left a terrified Jacob alone at home while she was meant to be babysitting him, to go hang out with her friends and Steinke; and when she had convinced her parents to allow her to go to a punk rock concert, only to sneak away from them and later be caught making out with Steinke in a back alley. According to Jasmine, the latter incident was her breaking point, and she soon began fantasizing about being rid of her parents once and for all.[16]

Jeremy Steinke

Jeremy Allan Steinke (born January 15, 1983) was born to Jacqueline Ann May in Medicine Hat, Alberta. He reportedly endured a lifetime of physical abuse throughout his childhood, at the hands of both his biological father and two of his stepfathers; he recalled a time when his second stepfather had locked him in a deep freezer, and when he defensively broke the arm of an abusive ex-boyfriend of his mother's using a lead pipe. Jeremy and his mother frequently moved around due to the onslaught of violence and chaos in their home, and he spoke of never being able to properly make friends as a result. He attended elementary school in the Medicine Hat neighborhood of South Ridge from first to third grade, and Crestwood from fourth to sixth grade. He was mercilessly bullied at both schools, with children often teasing him about his last name, referring to him as "Stinky."[16]

According to May, he had been diagnosed with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and placed in a program at his school for developmentally disabled youth; this elicited further ridicule from other students. His mother and her various husbands and boyfriends were all alcoholics, and it wasn't long until Jeremy started consuming alcohol himself, which he began at age 14. He also started indulging in various drugs, including shrooms, ecstasy, acid, and marijuana, and he additionally began cutting himself. That same year, he dropped out of high school. At 16, he moved out of his mother's home to live in Saskatchewan with his biological father, but moved out shortly thereafter, following a disagreement with his stepmother. He reportedly tried to redeem himself from being troubled, including enrolling at Medicine Hat College to recoup his high school education and taking on various jobs, including a position at Tim Horton's and a prospective oilman trade apprenticeship, to ensure a stable future, but these avenues failed. He soon dropped out of Medicine Hat College and quit looking for employment.[16]

Steinke came into contact with the goth subculture and slowly began to immerse himself in it, listening to heavy metal music, aspiring to be a metal musician himself, and manufacturing his appearance to 'acceptably' meet the standards of the goth lifestyle, including dressing in all-black, wearing dark eyeliner and face paint, and shaving his head. He recruited much younger adults and teenagers to become his group of gothic friends, and garnered their respect by supplying drugs and alcohol to them. On his VampireFreaks page, created in 2005, he spoke of "liking to kill" prostitutes, "then playing with their insides and eating" them, and expressed his "likes" on the page as "fellow lycan brethren" and his corresponding "dislikes" as "niggers" and "pigs."[16]

He was introduced to the 12-year-old Richardson by a mutual friend within the goth movement and a schoolmate of hers, Kaylee. Their relationship began a month after they met. Steinke maintained that throughout the relationship, he never knew of Jasmine's true age and that she had, in fact, lied to him about her age; however, friends of his expressed disgust at the relationship, emphasizing to Steinke that he was a grown man and she was a child, and encouraged him to break up with her. At the time of the murders, he was unemployed and living in a trailer that he shared with his mother.[16]

Murders

Steinke, drunk and high on a number of different substances including cocaine, marijuana, and ecstasy, entered the Richardson family home through a basement window. He made loud enough noise that it roused Debra Richardson, who went to investigate. Upon her seeing him, he lunged at her and pelted her with slashings and stab wounds; she held up her hands and arms to shield herself from attack. Hearing Debra's screams, Marc Richardson charged into the basement; he went at Steinke with a screwdriver and jabbed Steinke in the eye; however, Steinke overpowered him and started stabbing him repeatedly. Marc's last words were reportedly to ask Steinke why he was doing this; Steinke replied, "Because it's what your daughter wanted."

Eight-year-old Jacob Richardson was upstairs, frightened, having heard the entire altercation. He was stabbed multiple times and his throat slit; investigators found evidence that he had fought valiantly against his attacker, and it was alleged that he had utilized his toy lightsaber to defend himself in the attack. Who had been the one to inflict the stab wounds on Jacob and slit his throat is debated; Steinke claims that it was Jasmine, Jasmine insisted it was Steinke. They apparently rationalized the murder of Jacob with the notion that he was too emotionally sensitive to be orphaned and thus, he had to die, as well.

After the murders, Jeremy sped away frantically in his truck, leaving Jasmine with the bloody crime scene. She rinsed off the knife used to kill her brother, filled a canvas bag with clothes and toiletries and took her mother's purse. She used her mother's credit card to withdraw cash from an ATM at 7-Eleven to dispatch a taxicab to Jeremy's trailer. When she arrived, they had sex.

Later in the morning, they went to a house party hosted by a friend of Steinke's, at an address not far from where the Richardsons laid dead. Witnesses observed Jasmine Richardson laughing and talking joyously with other attendees, as well as her sitting in Steinke's lap and passionately making out with Steinke, giving no indication of what had transpired mere hours before. Steinke was also reported as showing off his eye injury, inflicted by Richardson's father in their earlier scuffle, to partygoers. At one point, Steinke blurted out that he had killed his girlfriend's family, stating that he "gutted them like fish," with Richardson corroborating and adding, "My little brother gargled."

After the party, they fled along with Kacy Lancaster, Kaylee, and another teenaged girl to Leader, Saskatchewan, where they were located at a convenience store and arrested.[16]

Motive

According to friends of Jasmine, Richardson's parents had grounded her for dating Steinke because of the age disparity.[19] Her friends had also criticized their relationship.[19] According to friends of Steinke, he told them he was a 300-year-old werewolf.[20] He allegedly told his friends that he liked the taste of blood, and wore a small vial of blood around his neck.[21] He also had a user account at the VampireFreaks.com website.[22] The girl had a page at the same site, leading to speculation they met there.[23] An acquaintance of Steinke also contended that the couple had actually met at a punk rock show in early 2006;[24] however, it was clarified in Robert Remington and Sherri Zickefoose's 2010 book Runaway Devil: How Forbidden Love Drove a 12-Year-Old to Murder Her Family that the couple had actually met by being introduced to one another by a mutual friend. The couple were also found to be communicating at Nexopia, a popular website for young Canadians.[25] Various messages they sent to each other were available to the public, before the accounts were permanently removed by Nexopia staff.[25]

Through private messages on Nexopia, the two had begun devising plans to kill Richardson's family; ostensibly freeing her of her parents' reign. Jasmine messaged Steinke a month before the murders, "So, I have this plan. It begins with me killing them, and it ends with me living with you." School friends of Jasmine also concur that she was the one who initiated the discussion, contending that they had overheard her speaking with Jeremy on the phone at recess about killing her parents. Jeremy's friends were also aware of these plans, and in fact, he had asked several of them to assist him in the act; they had refused. Steinke had written to a friend on his public Nexopia page, three days before the murders: "I on the other hand would rather do morbid stuff to others, like Jaxz' rents [sic] for example! Which I'm going to do this weekend."[26]

Richardson's own user page, under the name "runawaydevil", falsely said she was 15 years of age and ended with the text "Welcome to my tragic end".[27] Just hours prior to committing the murders, Steinke and some friends reportedly watched the 1994 film Natural Born Killers, about a young couple who go on a violent killing spree. Steinke told his friends that he and his girlfriend should go about their plans in a similar manner, but without sparing her little brother.[28] Steinke also said to an undercover officer, "You ever watch the movie Natural Born Killers?... I think that's the best love story of all time...".[29]

Jasmine Richardson

Under the Youth Criminal Justice Act, Richardson's name could no longer be published in Canada after she became a suspect. Under the same act, twelve is the youngest possible age at which a person can be charged with a crime; convicts who were under fourteen years of age at the time they committed a crime cannot be sentenced as adults, and cannot be given more than a ten-year sentence.[30] On July 9, 2007, Richardson, who had by then turned 13, was found guilty of three counts of first-degree murder.[31] She is believed to be the youngest person ever convicted of a multiple murder in Canada.[31]

On November 8, 2007, she was sentenced to the maximum allowed under law for someone her age, 10 years imprisonment.[32] Her sentence included credit for eighteen months already spent in custody, to be followed by four years in a psychiatric institution and four-and-a-half years under conditional supervision in the community.

In September 2011, Richardson began attending classes at Mount Royal University in Calgary, Alberta during the final years of her sentence.[33] She was released from a ten-year sentence at a psychiatric hospital in the fall of 2011, and in October 2012, it was reported her rehabilitation was going well, and she expressed remorse for her actions that experts considered genuine.[34]

In May 2016, her sentence was completed and she was freed of any further court-ordered conditions, restrictions, or supervision after a final sentence review on May 6, 2016.[35]

Her criminal record was set to be expunged in 2021, provided that she engage in no further criminal activity; however, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, it was formally expunged a year early, in 2020.

Jeremy Steinke

Steinke admitted to the murder of the parents in conversation with an undercover police officer while in custody; he also asserted that Jasmine was the one to murder her little brother Jacob. While both of them were in jail, he and Richardson exchanged letters in which they professed love to one another and vowed to visit one another no matter what. In one of these letters, Steinke proposed marriage to Richardson, which she accepted.[36] During early court proceedings, it was theorized that he would be prosecuted for statutory rape due to his unlawful relationship with Jasmine, but this charge was ultimately never pursued. He was tried in November 2008 and found guilty by a jury on three counts of first-degree murder for the killings of the three Richardson victims.[37] On December 15, 2008, Steinke was sentenced to three life sentences, one for each first-degree murder count. The sentences are to be served concurrently, and Steinke will be eligible for parole after serving twenty-five years.[38] While in prison, Steinke legally changed his name to Jackson May, to honor his mother Jacqueline May, who died on March 29, 2016.[39]

Kacy Lancaster

The accessory to murder charge against the couple's friend Kacy Lancaster was dropped, and she pleaded guilty to an obstruction charge in Medicine Hat provincial court. She received one year house arrest as part of the plea bargain and was ordered to refrain from drugs and alcohol.

In the media

  • The Richardson family murders have been featured on the Investigation Discovery show Deadly Women, with Jasmine as the subject and referred to simply as "J.R." due to her age. It is the first segment of the episode "Forbidden Love."
  • The story has been featured on Killer Kids, an American-Canadian documentary show.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ An accessory-to-murder charge was dropped after a plea deal.

References

  1. ^ "Three bodies found Medicine Hat, Alta., home". The Globe and Mail. April 23, 2006.
  2. ^ a b Sutton, Candace (August 21, 2016). "The girl who massacred her own family walks free after 10 years". News.Com.Au. Retrieved November 13, 2017.
  3. ^ Hunter, Grey (2014). Hegde, Nischal (ed.). The Best of American True Crime. Lulu Press, Inc. p. 30. ISBN 9781312377769.
  4. ^ Chalmers, Phil (2009). Inside the Mind of a Teen Killer. Nashville, Tenn.: Thomas Nelson Inc. p. 162. ISBN 9781595551528. OCLC 213845230.
  5. ^ "Mass Medicine Hat killer Jeremy Steinke changes name, seeks appeal" Archived November 4, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, http://www.calgarysun.com/, January 12, 2012.
  6. ^ "Children who kill children: 6 high-profile cases". CBC News. September 3, 2013. Retrieved February 13, 2016. When a 13-year-old Alberta girl was found guilty in the 2006 murder of her eight-year-old brother and her parents, it was believed she was the youngest person in Canada to be convicted of multiple counts of first-degree murder.
  7. ^ Punch, Rachel. "Do youth sentences fit the crime? (comment on this story)". The Sudbury Star. Archived from the original on September 16, 2012. Retrieved July 2, 2008.
  8. ^ "Net holds dark hints on slayings". Retrieved September 15, 2018.
  9. ^ a b Dohy, Leanne (April 24, 2006). "Triple murder shocks city". Calgary Herald. p. A.1. Archived from the original on April 25, 2014. Retrieved June 19, 2006.
  10. ^ Sherri Zickefoose, Tony Seskus and Robert Remington, "Road to a massacre", National Post, April 29, 2006. Archived March 19, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ Zickefoose, Sherri, "Bodies of slain family flown to Ontario for funeral", National Post, May 1, 2006. Archived May 14, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ "The Richardson Family Murders: How A 12-Year-Old Helped Murder Her Family with Her 23-Year-Old Boyfriend". People.com. Retrieved November 2, 2024.
  13. ^ a b "12-year-old charged in Medicine Hat", CBC.ca, April 24, 2006 [1]
  14. ^ "More charges possible in triple murders". Archived from the original on May 22, 2006.
  15. ^ Third person charged, Edmonton Journal, May 4, 2006
  16. ^ a b c d e f g Remington, Robert; Zickefoose, Sherri (2010). Runaway devil: how forbidden love drove a 12-year-old to murder her family. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart. ISBN 978-0-7710-7361-8. OCLC 277067438.
  17. ^ Remington, Robert; Zickefoose, Sherri (2010). Runaway devil: how forbidden love drove a 12-year-old to murder her family. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart. ISBN 978-0-7710-7361-8. OCLC 277067438.
  18. ^ "www.myspace.com/x_madness_x". web.archive.org. July 10, 2007. Retrieved November 17, 2024.
  19. ^ a b Breakenridge, Dave, "Pre-teen's tryst 'gross' Friends of 12-year-old accused killer disapproved of boyfriend, 23"[usurped], Calgary Sun, April 28, 2006.
  20. ^ "Mother Of Accused Family Killer Speaks Out Against Vilification Of Son", CityTV Calgary, April 26, 2006. Archived February 9, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ "Chilling stories emerge; Mother of accused in triple slaying denies her son was a werewolf", Daily Herald-Tribune, April 28, 2006.
  22. ^ Algar, Selim, ‘VAMPIRE’ BLOG AN EERIE SITE, New York Post, April 29, 2006.
  23. ^ Reynolds, Richard, "Accused killer, 12, linked to goth site", The Sydney Morning Herald, April 28, 2006.
  24. ^ "Medicine Hat Murder Suspects Appear in Court", 630 CHED AM, April 26, 2006.
  25. ^ a b Walton, Dawn, "Net holds dark hints on slayings", The Globe and Mail, April 26, 2006.
  26. ^ "Reddit - Dive into anything". www.reddit.com. Retrieved November 17, 2024.
  27. ^ Johnsrude, Larry, "Goths say Medicine Hat killings give them bad name" Archived March 11, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, Edmonton Journal, April 26, 2006.
  28. ^ Steinke, girlfriend smiled at murder coverage: Witness
  29. ^ The Calgary Herald (November 19, 2008). "Steinke: "You ever watch the movie Natural Born killers?"". CanWest MediaWorks Publications Inc. Archived from the original on November 8, 2012. Retrieved June 2, 2010.
  30. ^ "If convicted, girl would be free in 10 years". Archived from the original on August 13, 2014.
  31. ^ a b "Medicine Hat girl guilty of first-degree murder". cbc.ca. CBC News. July 9, 2007. Archived from the original on December 22, 2007. Retrieved February 13, 2016.
  32. ^ "Teen gets maximum sentence for Medicine Hat killings". cbc.ca. CBC News. November 8, 2007. Retrieved November 8, 2007.
  33. ^ Child Murderer Facing November Release
  34. ^ "Medicine Hat teen killer sentence reviewed". CBC News. October 1, 2012.
  35. ^ Labby, Bryan (May 6, 2016). "J.R., who stabbed family to death with boyfriend at age 12, is free after 10-year sentence". CBC News. Retrieved May 6, 2016.
  36. ^ Girl on trial for murder agreed to marry lover, Toronto Star, June 30, 2007.
  37. ^ "Steinke allegedly admitted to murder". CTVCalgary.ca. November 18, 2008.
  38. ^ "Steinke gets life in triple-murder". Calgary Herald. December 16, 2008. Archived from the original on April 25, 2014. Retrieved July 24, 2009.
  39. ^ "May - Cook Southland Funeral Chapel | Medicine Hat, AB". cooksouthland.com. Retrieved November 17, 2024.

Further reading

  • Remington, Robert; Zickefoose, Sherri. Runaway Devil: How Forbidden Love Drove a Twelve-Year-Old to Murder Her Family. McClelland & Stewart. ISBN 978-0-7710-7360-1.