Posted in

Interview With An Evil Child (AND WHERE SHE IS TODAY!)

 

They were barely old enough to tie their shoes, yet they committed some of the most horrific crimes ever, and the law decided they deserved to die. These are the most shocking cases of children sentenced to death, where innocence met the electric chair far too soon. Number 10, Michael Bargo.

 Sentence of the court for the premeditated murder of Seth Jackson, you, Michael Shane Bargo, are sentenced to death. Then after you dispose of Seth’s body, after it’s dumped in the quarry, you go to Publix, get some beer, and you start drinking. Yeah, that’s pretty stressful. The courtroom was tense as everyone waited for the judge’s decision.

 Michael Bargo sat at the defense table, quiet,  his eyes fixed forward. He was only a kid, but the crime he was being sentenced for happened when he was much younger, 3 years ago. The case had drawn attention across  Florida because of how violent and detailed it was. Prosecutors, they say there was bad blood between Seth Jackson and Michael Bargo, basically because they had eyes for the same girl.

 In fact, that girl is one of four people already serving life in prison for the murder of this 15-year-old  In 2011, police in Marion  County began searching for 15-year-old Seth Jackson after his family reported him missing. Within days, investigators uncovered a group of teenagers who had plotted  his death.

 Crime scene techs wrapped up sifting through evidence, focused on a bin in the backyard near the fire pit.  Even experienced detectives are shaken as they Michael Bargo was identified  as the one who planned everything. Prosecutors said he organized the trap, arranged the meeting, and gave the final order.

 Seth was lured to a house in Summerfield, attacked, shot several times, and his body was burned in a fire pit behind the house. The remains were collected and dumped in a nearby quarry. Back I’ll I’ll I’ll say it.  This is my question. No, it wasn’t me.  them where the rock quarry was.  Well, well, you want me to say it? You’ve already answered yes, you told them where it was.

 question, please. You did. Move Move forward, please, counselor.  Okay. During the trial, the evidence was clear and  direct. Text messages, witness statements, and the discovery of Seth’s remains left little room  for doubt. Some of Bargo’s friends testified against him, explaining how the plan was made and who took part in each step.

 What did he say when he called you? The deed is done. The jury watched the videos, read the messages, and listened to the timeline of events. There was no emotion from Bargo as the evidence was presented. When the verdict came, the jury found him guilty of first-degree murder. The judge later confirmed the death sentence, describing the crime as organized and without remorse.

 At that moment,  the courtroom reacted sharply. Some of Seth’s relatives cried. Reporters noted how Bargo remained still, showing no expression. Yes. Brenda Franklin, is this your verdict? Yes. Taylor Hitter, is this your verdict? Yes. Evelyn Brown, is this your verdict? Yes. Michael Bargo became the youngest person on Florida’s death row.

 His appeals have continued for years, but the sentence  stands. The case remains one of the most disturbing examples of a planned teenage murder in the state’s history. People still ask how someone  so young could plan a killing with such precision. Number nine, Christa Pike. Can I please have a mama?  [laughter]  The fire can’t Mr.

 Pike, please hold Miss Pike in the courtroom. Please. We didn’t know that She was only 18 when the judge’s words sealed her fate, the youngest woman on death row in America. Christa Gail Pike sat in a Tennessee courtroom in 1996, barely out of high school, as the jury returned a verdict that would shock the nation.

 She was guilty of first-degree murder, and the sentence was death by electrocution. The courtroom fell silent, and for a brief second, even  Pike seemed to realize the weight of what had just happened. It is therefore ordered that you shall be put to death by [clears throat] electrocution in the manner prescribed by law. And that you shall be transferred to the custody of the warden.

 The case began months earlier at the Job Corps training center in Knoxville, a program meant to give young people a second chance. But for 19-year-old Colleen Slemmer, it became a death trap. Pike, along with her boyfriend Tadaryl Shipp and friend Shadala Peterson, lured Slemmer into a secluded area near the University of Tennessee campus.

What followed was not just a killing, it was a 2-hour torture session. Pike believed Slemmer was trying to steal her boyfriend. Driven by jealousy and rage, she carved a pentagram into Slemmer’s  chest and kept a piece of her skull as a souvenir. When police found the remains, Pike showed no fear. In fact, she bragged about it to others.

campus, and I had every intention of fighting her. Probably when they came through this tunnel, that’s when Colleen began to think that she was in trouble. That chilling confidence was later used against her in court. During the trial, prosecutors painted her as cold, calculating, and unremorseful. The evidence was overwhelming.

Confessions, witnesses, and even the bone fragment Pike kept in her pocket. Her defense tried to argue mental instability, but the jury didn’t buy it. arrested, the first one they interviewed, and I thought that if I went in there and told him that I did every single thing that happened up there, that Tadaryl and Shadala would just get to walk out of there, and they wouldn’t worry about them anymore because they had the real killer.

 When the judge read the final sentence, reporters described the moment as eerie, an 18-year-old girl facing the ultimate punishment with the calmness of someone twice her age. Years later, from her cell in Tennessee’s death row for women, Pike made headlines again after being caught plotting to kill another inmate.

 That confirmed what many already believed. She had no remorse, only defiance. Today, Christa Pike remains the youngest woman ever sentenced to death in modern US history. Number eight, Austin Myers. If you kill me, it won’t fix anything. It won’t bring Justin back. It’s only going to hurt more innocent people.  In January 2014, a small town in Ohio was shaken by the murder of 18-year-old Justin Back.

 The investigation quickly  led police to two suspects, Austin Myers, age 19, and his friend Timothy Mosley, age 18. Both young men were arrested within days, and what started as a robbery case soon turned into one of the most disturbing crimes the state had seen in years.

 According to investigators, Myers and Mosley had planned to steal from Justin, who was a friend of Mosley’s. They believed he kept money and valuables  in his home. On the night of January 28th, the two broke into Justin’s house  while his parents were away. When Justin confronted them, the plan changed from theft to murder.

 He was stabbed multiple times and left dead in his own home. Did Austin say in response to these questions and statements that Justin Back is making as he’s attempting to kill him? In the In the lines of, “It’s all right. Um it’s almost over.” They later wrapped his body in a blanket and dumped it near a creek, hoping no  one would find it.

 Police tracked them down within days using evidence from Justin’s  house and their own text messages. Both confessed, but their statements conflicted because each tried to blame the other. Prosecutors later revealed that Myers had planned the attack in advance, writing down details and steps of how it would happen. That evidence turned the case from a robbery gone wrong into a calculated killing.

 A garrote, or choke wire, is a close-in weapon. It’s very personal. You have to surprise your victim from behind, slip it over his head, around his neck with force. When the trial began, the courtroom was filled with both families. The prosecutors described Myers as the mastermind who pushed Mosley to commit the murder.

 The defense argued that Myers never held the knife and should not face the death penalty.  Why? You heard about the plea agreement, contract. Timmy has a reason to save his own skin at this point.  jury decided otherwise. After days of emotional testimony and evidence, Myers was found guilty of aggravated murder and sentenced to death.

 In 2014, at just 19, Austin Myers became the youngest person on Ohio’s death row. Mosley, who had cooperated with authorities, received a life sentence instead. Myers showed little reaction when the verdict was read, while his parents cried quietly. The victim’s family held each other, finally facing the end of a long and painful trial.

Austin Myers still waits on death row. His execution has been delayed several times, but the case continues to spark debate about youth punishment and whether someone so young can truly understand the weight of taking a life. Number seven, Pedro Espinoza. He needs the biggest punishment he can get, is the death penalty, and from that day on, he can rot in hell.

Thank you. Thank you. On March 2nd,  2008, Los Angeles witnessed a crime that would spark outrage across the nation. That evening, around 8:30 p.m., 17-year-old Jamiel Shaw II was walking home after visiting friends. He was only a few steps from his front door when 19-year-old Pedro Espinoza, a known gang member, approached him.

Espinoza had been released from Los Angeles County Jail less than 24 hours earlier. Without a word, he pulled out a handgun and shot Shaw twice, once in the stomach, then in in head. The young athlete collapsed on the sidewalk, dying only meters away from home. By March 3rd, detectives were already piecing together what happened.

Witnesses told police they saw a man matching Espinoza’s description running from the scene. Ballistic evidence and gang ties quickly led investigators to him. Within days, Espinoza was arrested and charged with first-degree murder. What shocked the public most wasn’t just the brutality of the crime, it was the timing.

 Espinoza had been freed the day before despite his violent record and gang affiliation. People demanded answers. In April 2008, Jaime Al Shaw’s funeral drew crowds of mourners, community leaders, and reporters. His parents stood before cameras calling for justice. Arrested. Never missed a minute from school. You know, three-time MVP.

 He played football for 3 years straight. Three-time MVP, player of the year. Shaw had been a top football player with college scholarship offers. While Espinoza was an undocumented immigrant  and a repeat offender, the case exploded into a national debate over gang violence, immigration policy, and the failure of the justice system to protect innocent lives.

 Years passed before the case reached trial. In November 2011, Pedro Espinoza sat in a Los Angeles courtroom silent and expressionless. The jury watched surveillance footage, listened to witness testimony, and heard Shaw’s mother cry as she recalled identifying her son’s body. The defense argued Espinoza had grown up surrounded by poverty and violence, that he was a product of a broken system.

 But the prosecution insisted this was no act of impulse. It was execution-style murder carried out to gain gang respect. He put to death with By May 2012, the jury reached its decision. Guilty of first-degree murder with special circumstances. A month later, the judge pronounced the sentence, death.

 Today, more than a decade later, Pedro Espinoza remains on California’s death row. His appeals move slowly through the system. Number six, Dylann Roof. And 3 hours to return with a death sentence for Dylann Roof. And according to the Associated Press, he’s become the first person sentenced to die under the federal hate crime stat.

 will die by lethal injection after having killed these nine African-American church members at Emanuel AME Church on June 17th, 2015 here in Charleston. On June 17th, 2015, Dylann Roof walked into the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina. He joined a Bible study group, sat quietly for nearly an hour, and then opened fire.

When it was over, nine people were dead. The attack shocked the nation. It wasn’t just another mass shooting. It was a hate crime committed inside a place of worship. By December 2016, Roof was  back in the public eye. This time in a federal courtroom. He faced 33 charges including hate crimes and murder.

As he entered the courtroom, his expression never changed. The families of the victims sat only a few feet away waiting to hear what punishment he would receive. Roof showed no emotion, not even when the relatives of those he killed told  him they forgave him. The trial moved quickly. The trial moved quickly.

 Roof had confessed to the crime and refused to show remorse. During sentencing, prosecutors described him as calm, deliberate, and driven by racial hatred. His defense argued that he was mentally unstable, but Roof dismissed his lawyers and chose to represent  himself. And you represent Mr. Roof Roof, excuse me, Mr. Roof.

 Is that correct? That is correct, now. All right. Who else represents Mr. Roof for the record? Here after the record, Bill McGuire. Jury Sonorash, your honor. Okay. He told the jury he had no regrets and still believed what he did was right. Those statements sealed his fate. In January 2017, the jury reached its decision after only a few hours of discussion, death.

 At just 22 years old, Dylann Roof became the youngest person in modern US history to receive a federal death  sentence for a hate crime. Today, Roof is held on federal death row in Terre Haute, Indiana. His lawyers continue to appeal, but his sentence stands. Even President Joe Biden, who has openly opposed the death penalty, refused to commute Dylann Roof’s sentence.

 The decision showed how deeply the nation viewed the Charleston massacre as a crime beyond forgiveness or political leniency. Number five, Aiden Fucci. He was only 14 when he killed his victim. That single fact was enough to leave a courtroom in disbelief. A child accused of stabbing his classmate more than a hundred times. The defendant, Aiden Fucci, sat quietly as prosecutors described the brutality of what he had done to 13-year-old Tristyn Bailey.

 Tristyn Bailey was conscious, that she was aware, and that she was doing everything she could to fend off this attack. She suffered a painful, horrifying death from someone that she trusted. Every word cut deeper into the silence. Every detail painted the image of a boy who had crossed a line no one believed possible.

 By the time the evidence was laid out, there was no doubt left. Surveillance footage, the knife, and his own disturbing Snapchat posts showed intent and pride,  not confusion or panic. Investigators said Fucci had planned the attack, had even spoken to friends about wanting to kill  someone. The community could not comprehend how a teenager had become capable of such violence. Mr.

 Fucci, having entered a plea of guilty to the crime of first-degree murder, I adjudicate you guilty of the premeditated first-degree murder of Tristyn Bailey. In the courtroom, Fucci’s parents watched as prosecutors replayed clips of their son laughing in a patrol car after the murder. He made faces at the camera, bragged, and asked if his friends knew what he had done. The jury watched in silence.

The Bailey family stared forward holding each other as the details were read out again. 114 stab wounds, 49 to the hands and arms as she tried to fight back. Aiden Fucci became one of the youngest killers in American history to receive a life sentence. Number four, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. And we are coming on the air because the jury deciding the fate of Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev has reached a verdict.

 They have sentenced him to death. On May 15th, 2015, the courtroom in Boston waited in tense silence as the jury prepared to announce its verdict. Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, just 21 years old, stood quietly beside his attorneys. He was the man responsible for the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing, an attack that killed three people and injured more than 260 others.

 When the words death sentence were read aloud, he showed no reaction. The judge confirmed the decision that made Tsarnaev the youngest person on federal death row in modern American history. Two years earlier, on April 15th, 2013, Tsarnaev and his older brother, Tamerlan, had planted two homemade bombs near the marathon’s finish line.

 The twin blasts ripped through the crowd within seconds, turning a day of celebration into one of horror. Boston went into lockdown. Hospitals filled with victims and the city’s streets emptied as thousands of police officers searched for the brothers. During their flight, they murdered a police officer, hijacked a car, and exchanged gunfire with law enforcement.

 Tamerlan was killed during the shootout while Dzhokhar escaped and hid inside a boat in a backyard. He was captured  the next day, bleeding and barely conscious. Actually, an unarmed 19-year-old curled up and bleeding in the back of a boat. During the trial, prosecutors portrayed Tsarnaev as a deliberate and unremorseful killer who knew exactly what he was doing.

   They showed photos of the bombing’s aftermath and presented a message he had written inside the boat where he blamed America for Muslim deaths overseas. His defense team admitted his involvement but argued that his older brother had pressured and influenced him. The jury disagreed.

 The evidence, the bombs, the victims, and the deliberate planning outweighed any claim that he had acted under duress. Interestingly, a few survivors publicly opposed the death penalty saying that another execution would not bring them peace. Years later, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev’s case continues through appeals and his name still divides opinion across the country.

 He was only 19 when he carried out an act that shocked the world. Number three, Mackenzie Shirilla. The court having had count two tried to a pursuit of labor finds its then that Mackenzie Shirilla guilty of murder to a Davion Flanagan violation of our revised code section On July 31st, 2022, a quiet Ohio suburb woke up to the sound of sirens and wreckage that didn’t look like an accident.

 A mangled Toyota Camry was wrapped around a brick wall in Strongsville. Inside were three teenagers. Two were dead. One, 19-year-old Mackenzie Shirilla, was alive. Could you please be careful taking this one off so it doesn’t break the bracelet, please? You got it. You got it. Handcuffs replaced jewelry as Shirilla was ultimately tried, convicted.

 That morning began as another tragic car crash, but months later, it would become one of the most chilling murder cases the state had ever seen. In August 2023, the courtroom in Medina County fell into complete silence as Shirilla  stood before the judge to hear her fate. Her face was pale, her hands trembled slightly, but her expression remained distant.

 Judge Nancy Margaret Russo’s words cut through the air with finality, life in prison for the deliberate murders of her boyfriend, 20-year-old Dominic Russo, and his friend, 19-year-old Davion Flanagan. 20-year-old Dominic Russo and friend 19-year-old Davion Flanagan. No chance of parole for 15 years. The courtroom didn’t erupt. It just sat there, stunned.

 The case had shocked even seasoned prosecutors. Footage from a nearby business showed Shirilla’s car accelerating straight into the brick wall at over 100 miles per hour. No signs of braking, no attempts to turn. Data from the car’s black box confirmed it. She had floored the accelerator until the final second. Investigators found that the crash was not spontaneous, but carefully planned after a heated argument with her boyfriend.

 Prosecutors called it a premeditated act of murder carried out with a steering wheel instead of a weapon. As the footage played in court, family members wept.  Some couldn’t bear to look. The defense tried to claim she lost control or blacked out. The judge didn’t buy it, saying her actions were controlled, methodical, and intentional.

 Shirilla cried as the verdict was read,  her mother breaking down behind her. Number two, Marlin Joseph. Counsel will be appointed by separate order to represent you for that purpose. Marlin Maurice Joseph, may God have mercy on your soul. This court is now in recess. On January 11th, 2018, the courtroom in Palm Beach County, Florida, was tense as the verdict was read.

 28-year-old Marlin Joseph sat emotionless, staring ahead while the judge announced his sentence, death. Around him, quiet gasps broke through the room. The families of his victims held hands, some crying, others just staring at the man who had taken their loved ones. The judge called his crime cruel, calculated, and inexcusable.

 At that moment, Joseph became one of the youngest people in the country to face sentence for a double murder that stunned even hardened detectives. When police say her son shot and killed Calada and her 11-year-old daughter Kyra. I just want justice for my girlfriend and her daughter. He’s my son and I love him, but The killings happened just days after Christmas in 2017.

Police said Joseph shot and killed 36-year-old Calada Crowell and her 11-year-old daughter Kyra inside their West Palm Beach home. The details were brutal. Investigators testified that Joseph first shot Crowell, his girlfriend’s mother, and then chased the young girl outside as she tried to escape. He shot her multiple times.

Witnesses said she was pleading for her life. Both died instantly. The motive was as senseless as the crime. Joseph was angry that the woman had confronted him about mistreating her daughter. After the killings, he fled the state, sparking a week-long manhunt that ended when US Marshals found him hiding in Lake Worth.

 This video you’ll see only on five,  police escorting Marlin Joseph, the man accused of murdering a West Palm Beach mother and daughter. During the trial, prosecutors described him as cold and remorseless. They said he planned the attack, reloaded his gun, and left no doubt about his intent to kill.

 The jury took less than two hours to convict him of two counts of first-degree murder. When the death sentence was announced, one juror later said there was no other choice. In court, Crowell’s family members spoke through tears, calling the murders pure evil. Joseph remained still, showing no emotion as the judge read his final words.

 For your crimes, you are sentenced to death. Outside, reporters asked whether justice had truly been served. Number one, Alec McKinney and Devon Erickson. When Mr. Erickson, do you think that will be it? Yeah, I’m going to do that. On June 25th, 2021, a courtroom in Douglas County, Colorado, fell completely silent as the judge prepared to deliver a sentence that would close one of the state’s  darkest school shooting cases.

 Alec McKinney, then just 18, sat beside his co-defendant Devon Erickson, both wearing prison uniforms, both emotionless. When the judge spoke, his words landed heavily. Devon Erickson was sentenced to life in prison without parole, while McKinney, who had been only 16 at the time of the shooting, received life with the possibility of parole after 40 years.

 The courtroom reaction was tense. Families of the victims broke down in tears, some quietly  shaking their heads. The crime dated back to May 7th, 2019, when two teenagers walked into STEM School Highlands Ranch armed with handguns and opened fire on their classmates. The attack killed 18-year-old Kendrick Castillo, who died while trying to tackle Erickson, and injured eight others.

The scene that day was described as chaos. Students hiding under desks, teachers blocking doors, gunfire echoing through the hallways. Investigators said both shooters had planned the attack for weeks, targeting specific students, and even recording videos discussing  how they wanted to make history.

 During trial, prosecutors detailed how McKinney and Erickson had taken their parents’ guns, entered  the school through a side door, and began shooting inside a classroom where dozens of students were trapped. McKinney, the younger of the two, testified that he was struggling with mental health issues and had been manipulated by Erickson, but evidence showed that he had been deeply involved in planning the attack.

 The prosecution called it a cold, deliberate act meant to cause maximum harm. I believe we share equal responsibility for everything that happened. Why? Um No one tried to stop anyone. Um no one forced anyone into this. We were both mutually agreeing. As the sentencing ended, Kendrick Castillo’s parents gave emotional statements, saying their son’s bravery saved countless lives.

The judge agreed, calling Castillo a hero. Both shooters stared straight ahead, showing little emotion. The case drew national outrage, not only for the violence, but for the age of those responsible.