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Florida teen kills both parents in 1 year: police

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Florida teen kills both parents in 1 year: police

A teen who killed his father in Oklahoma last year but claimed self-defense, thereby avoiding prosecution, faces first-degree murder charges in Florida for allegedly stabbing his mother to death.

The 17-year-old faces first-degree murder charges in the death of his 39-year-old mother. Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd said at a Wednesday press conference that he is pushing the state attorney’s office to try the teen as an adult and that he’s confident the teen would reoffend if released. 

“When you look at this, you see a kid,” Judd said. “When I look at him, I see a psychopath. I see totally erratic behavior to the point that he’s already, at 17 years of age, shot and killed his father and got away with it and stabbed his mother in the neck so hard that the knife went all the way through.

“Now he’s killed two people and killed his mother and father, and I can assure you – beyond and to the exclusion of every reasonable doubt – based upon his conduct, had he gone to live with his grandmother at the end of this, and she crossed him, she would be next.”

GEORGIA HIGH SCHOOL SHOOTING SUSPECT’S MOM DEFENDS HER SON IN MESSAGE TO VICTIM’S FAMILIES

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A Florida teenager allegedly used this knife to kill his mother. (Polk County Sheriff’s Office)

The teen initially told 911 dispatchers that his mother “fell into a knife” after a “very long fight” on Sunday, Judd said. 

Deputies who arrived at The Hamptons – a 55-and-older community in Auburndale about 50 miles east of Tampa, where the teen’s grandmother is a resident – found him “calm, cool, collected – and he had blood on him,” Judd said.

The 17-year-old reportedly became “uncooperative,” showed “zero remorse” and had no sense of urgency about his gravely wounded mom. 

“He looked the deputy in the eye and said, ‘I know my rights, I want an attorney,’” Judd said.

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Despite the teen’s claims of a protracted fight with his mother before her death, the home was “neat and clean [with] no evidence of any kind of long fight,” Judd said.

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Hewlett Drive

Hewlett Drive in Auburndale, Fla., is where the incident took place. (Google Earth)

Witnesses allegedly saw the teen and his mother shouting at each other outside the residence before the teen grabbed his mother by the hair and dragged her inside as she repeatedly pleaded, “Let me go,” police said.

The teen’s grandmother, who was not present during the altercation, told WFLA that the teen had been verbally and physically confrontational with his mother on several occasions.

After his mother was pronounced dead, a medical examiner determined that the deep knife wound in her neck was inconsistent with an accidental injury.

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“The medical examiner said it’s just not reasonable or plausible that she died the way that he said she did,” Judd said on Wednesday. “It just didn’t happen.”

Judd said that as investigators started “to peel back the layer of this onion,” they “[found] out that this is not just a singular event”; last year, the teen’s father also died by his hand.

“On Feb. 14, 2023, Valentine’s Day, in Lincoln County, Oklahoma, [he] said his dad pulled a knife on him, and he shot and killed his dad,” Judd said. “He shot him once in the chest and once in the head, and he claimed self-defense.”

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Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd

Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd is pushing for the teen to be tried as an adult, he said at a Wednesday press conference. (Polk County Sheriff)

Oklahoma authorities dropped charges against the teen less than a month after the shooting because they could not disprove his “assertion of self-defense,” Judd said.

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The teen’s mother paid $50,000 to bail him out of jail, the New York Post reported. Then he moved into her Charlotte County, Florida, home and was involuntarily committed to a hospital for mental health reasons within a month. 

Around this time, Judd said, he made a threatening statement: “I’ll kill myself, or I’ll kill my mother by shooting or stabbing her.”

In November 2023, the teen “pushed [his mother] to the ground and … stomped on her” after she took away his video game privileges, Judd said. He was arrested and claimed self-defense again, but the argument failed that time, and he spent time behind bars, the sheriff said.

After another argument with his mother in February of this year, the teen fled to his grandmother’s house in Auburndale. The teen’s mother and grandmother both contacted the sheriff’s office around that time and said they felt unsafe around him, Judd said, and at that point, the teen was turned over to family services.

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But despite making more threats to kill his mother, the teen was reunited with his family despite making threats to kill his mother again about two weeks later, Judd said.

According to the sheriff, the teen got into “an argument about home chores” that led him to “flee from his mother’s house and [go to] his grandmother’s house” on Sept. 6. The suspect’s mother drove to the grandmother’s house the next day, which is when she and the teenager got into the altercation that cost her life.

Judd said he will share any information uncovered in his department’s investigation that could incriminate the teen in his father’s death with authorities in Oklahoma.

“If Oklahoma had been able to act, [the teen’s mother] would be alive and well today,” he said. “But because she took him in and tried to do like a mother should do and took care of him, she’s now dead. Everybody that should be special to him in his life is dead when they cross him,” he added.

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Jimmy Carter’s family reveals how president felt about Biden quitting, which DNC speaker stole the show

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Jimmy Carter’s family reveals how president felt about Biden quitting, which DNC speaker stole the show

Former President Jimmy Carter is paying close attention to the election cycle while in hospice care and grieving the loss of his wife, Rosalynn Carter, their son revealed in a recent interview. 

“He does not believe Donald Trump should be president again,” James Earl “Chip” Carter III, the second child of Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter, told the Washington Post last week. 

Carter, the longest-lived American president at 99, entered hospice care in February of last year, but he has remained committed to following the presidential election, his son said. Last month, the 39th president watched the speakers of the DNC, who gathered in Chicago in support of Vice President Kamala Harris and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz’s presidential campaign. 

Carter’s son said the former president believed Harris’ speech was “great,” but noted another speaker stole the show. 

JIMMY CARTER, LONGEST LIVING US PRESIDENT, TURNS 99

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Former President Jimmy Carter discusses his cancer diagnosis during a press conference at the Carter Center on Aug. 20, 2015, in Atlanta. (Jessica McGowan/Getty Images)

“He thought Michelle Obama was the best, and he thought Kamala was great, too,” Chip Carter said. 

Before the DNC kicked off last month and Carter diligently watched the speakers, he typically spent his days watching baseball games streamed on his TV, as well as 1950s TV shows, such as “Leave it to Beaver,” and eating mini red velvet and caramel flavored cupcakes, his family told the outlet. 

JIMMY CARTER, 99, MARKS ONE YEAR IN HOME HOSPICE CARE

Michelle Obama closeup shot from DNC speech

Former first lady Michelle Obama speaks during the Democratic National Convention at the United Center in Chicago on Aug. 20, 2024. (David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Carter watched President Biden officially drop out of the presidential race at the end of July amid mounting concern over Biden’s mental acuity and 81 years of age, his son told the outlet. Carter looked toward his son during Biden’s address and described the 46th president bowing out in favor of a younger Democratic generation taking the mantle as “sad,” the Washington Post reported. 

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Kamala Harris head on President Joe Biden shoulders

Vice President Kamala Harris is embraced by President Biden during a campaign event at IBEW Local Union #5 on Sept. 2, 2024, in Pittsburgh. (Getty Images)

The former president is four-square against Trump securing a second term, his son explained, saying his father believes Trump is not truthful when he speaks publicly. Chip Carter added that voting for Harris on Nov. 5 is a priority for the former president. 

AS JIMMY CARTER MARKS 1 YEAR IN HOSPICE CARE, ADVOCATES HOPE TO DISPEL HOSPICE MISCONCEPTIONS

Carter will turn 100 on Oct. 1, with Chip Carter pushing back on speculation that his dad is staying alive to reach the milestone. 

“He said he didn’t care about that. It’s just a birthday. He said he cared about voting for Kamala Harris.”

​​”He is big-time interested in this campaign,” Chip Carter added.

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Rosalynn Carter, left, with Jimmy Carter

Rosalynn Carter and former Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter, the Democratic presidential candidate, share a moment aboard his campaign plane. (Getty Images)

Carter suffered tragedy in November, when his wife of 77 years died after she was admitted to hospice care. Rosalynn Carter was 96 and surrounded by her family at their home in Plains, Georgia, when she died on a Sunday in November. 

FORMER FIRST LADY ROSALYNN CARTER DEAD AT 96

“Rosalynn was my equal partner in everything I ever accomplished,” President Jimmy Carter said in a statement after her passing. “She gave me wise guidance and encouragement when I needed it. As long as Rosalynn was in the world, I always knew somebody loved and supported me.” 

WHY JIMMY CARTER IS THE FATHER OF THE POST-PRESIDENCY, SAW THE POWER OF HIS STATUS

Jimmy Carter’s grandson, Jason Carter, told the Washington Post that the former president went through a “low period” after her death but has since perked up to discuss the election cycle.  

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“After my grandmother passed, he had a pretty long low period when he wasn’t really engaging much at all,” Jason Carter said. “But now he’s talking about politics again.”

Jimmy & Rosalynn Carter from 2018 file photo

Former President Jimmy Carter and his wife Rosalynn before the game between the Atlanta Falcons and the Cincinnati Bengals at Mercedes-Benz Stadium on Sept. 30, 2018, in Atlanta. (Getty Images)

Jimmy Carter and his immediate family visited Rosalynn Carter’s grave on her birthday last month, where the former president sat silently at her headstone for about 20 minutes. 

“He was looking at her tombstone, and I started talking, and he told me to be quiet,” Chip Carter said. “No doubt he was praying, but he could have been just having a conversation with Mom.”

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Glenn Youngkin spars with Texas journalist over education in front of rowdy liberal audience

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Glenn Youngkin spars with Texas journalist over education in front of rowdy liberal audience

AUSTIN, Texas – Republican Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin faced a hostile liberal crowd as he sparred with a local journalist over his education agenda at the 2024 Texas Tribune Festival. 

Youngkin, who famously won his 2021 gubernatorial race on the issue of education, was the closing keynote speaker at the annual political conference and was grilled in an interview Saturday night with Texas Tribune co-founder Evan Smith. 

“So let me put myself in the frame of mind of an educator… Don’t you trust educators to do their jobs?” Smith asked. “If educators believe that books should be on a syllabus or part of a course, haven’t we, for years, trusted our educators to make decisions that were good enough to educate us? Why would they not be good enough to educate our kids?”

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“Because there were books that were put on the curriculum for classes that families – and remember, Virginia is an incredibly diverse state,” Youngkin responded. “We have a large Muslim population, a large Jewish population, a large Hindu population, a large Hispanic population, a large Black population. I mean, we are an incredibly diverse state, and there are materials that were on the curriculum that really were inconsistent with a family’s personal values. And therefore, this bill was put in front of Gov. McAuliffe at the time – passed unanimously out of our Senate. I mean, unanimous… it was transparency and an opt-out for a replacement, and he vetoed it.” 

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“And that was at the heart of this question, which is who should be making this decision? And I firmly believe that parents should first have full transparency in what’s being taught in school. And second of all, if there is something that is completely counter with their family values, they should be able to request a replacement piece to the curriculum,” Youngkin continued.

Texas Tribune co-founder Evan Smith grilled Republican Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin on his education agenda at the 2024 Texas Tribune Festival on Sept. 7, 2024. (Joseph A. Wulfsohn/Fox News Digital)

Smith then told Youngkin that he now has a “reputation” of being “the governor who bans books,” citing an Axios report alleging that “nearly 400 book titles were targeted for bans in Virginia libraries last year.”

“First of all, the idea of common sense being attributed to a family so they can make a decision about whether their child is reading a book that’s consistent with their family values is something when we explain this, everybody says yes. It doesn’t fit with the progressive narrative. And so what they call that is ‘book banning’ because it doesn’t fit with the narrative,” Youngkin told Smith. 

“Is that what Axios is referring to? There are 400 books that parents can opt out of or have those books been removed?” Smith pressed the governor. 

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Youngkin pushed back, citing a pre-existing law that libraries and school boards can assess what book titles are appropriate for children. 

“It was not new and on top of that… the fact that parents, Republicans, independents and Democrats believe that they should be at the head of the table in their child’s life, and they should have a say in their child’s life and things shouldn’t happen to their children without parents knowing and being involved, is common sense. It is a strong majority that believes this,” Youngkin said. “And so that what the progressive left wanted to do was change the narrative. And so ‘this is all about book banning.’ It’s not about book banning. This is about empowering parents to have-“

Some in the crowd let out audible groans to Youngkin, prompting Smith to tell them “please” with a pausing gesture.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE COVERAGE OF MEDIA AND CULTURE

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“This is about having parents to have full transparency what’s going on in their kids’ lives,” Youngkin finished his thought.

Glenn Youngkin at Texas Tribune Festival

Youngkin faced boos and jeers from the liberal Texas Tribune Festival audience as he defended his education policies. (Joseph A. Wulfsohn/Fox News Digital)

“And the authors of books that have been removed from library shelves who say Virginia is censoring us. You say what to them?” Smith followed. 

“I say first of all, Virginia is not censoring,” Youngkin responded. “What school boards, local school boards are doing is exercising their legal and responsible right to assess whether books are appropriate in the schools and whether they are age appropriate.”

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“You worry that there’s been some over-correction here?” Smith asked. “I mean, I remember Toni Morrison’s ‘Beloved’ coming up in the context of this discussion. I don’t know that you or anybody on your campaign specifically called that book out, but we know that that book became part of this conversation. I mean, I remember reading ‘Beloved’ in school, in English class. Is that the kind of book that we want to pull off of a library shelf?”

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“What grade did you read it in?” Youngkin countered.

“I mean, high school,” Smith answered.

“Is it appropriate for a first-grader or second-grader?” Youngkin then followed. “I’m just asking.”

That exchange sparked some boos from the liberal crowd. 

Evan Smith, Glenn Youngkin at Texas Tribune Festival

Smith and Youngkin repeatedly clashed during the closing keynote conversation at the 2024 Texas Tribune Festival.  (Joseph A. Wulfsohn/Fox News Digital)

Moments later, Smith quoted Youngkin’s neighboring colleague, Democratic Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, who said during last month’s Democratic convention in Chicago “Loving your country doesn’t mean lying about its history,” prompting him to ask Youngkin whether he agreed.

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“I have consistently and clearly said we must teach all of our history, the good and the bad, all of it. All of it,” Youngkin said. “What I’ve also said is we shouldn’t blame people today for what’s happened historically. We just want everybody to understand it. It’s why when we’ve eventually got to the finish line on our history curriculum, we have, I believe, rated the best history curriculum in America today because we tell all of our history. We in fact made sure that we were going to include a broad, broad education associated with slavery, with reconstruction, with civil rights, also with the Holocaust. And we need to make sure that our students understand these pivotal moments in our history so that we don’t ever repeat them.”

 

Youngkin later added, “I have to say, what the progressive left does really well is push people into this ‘either or’ moment. It’s either this or that. And I don’t live there. I believe we can live in a ‘both and’ world. We can teach all of our history, the good and the bad, and we can make sure that we’re not penalizing or trying to blame people today for what happened a long time ago. We can do both of these things, and if we do this well, then in fact, we have a generation of students who are educated and are in an ability to make the right decisions going forward, because we’re gonna have to hand our state and our country to this next generation of students.”

The liberal attendees did offer Youngkin applause when he touted his administration’s effort to give teachers raises, but later they reacted against him after he noted that Democratic state lawmakers blocked legislative efforts towards passing a school voucher program. 

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Suspected Georgia school shooter’s mom says teachers noticed red flags before she called to warn them

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Suspected Georgia school shooter’s mom says teachers noticed red flags before she called to warn them

The mother of the suspected gunman in last week’s shooting at Georgia’s Apalachee High School says she warned the school the morning of the attack, and teachers had already noticed red flags.  

In an interview with ABC News published Tuesday, Marcee Gray said she called the school counselor on the morning of Sept. 4, 2024, the day of the shooting, to warn officials about a concerning message she’d received from her son, Colt Gray. 

“The counselor said, ‘Well, I wanted to let you know that, earlier this morning, one of Colt’s teachers had sent me an email that said Colt had been making references to school shootings,” Gray told the outlet. “Between my gut feelings, the text messages and now this email, you all need to go, like, run to the classroom.” 

Gray said the last message she’d received from her son was, “I’m sorry, Mom.” She said his father had received similar texts, one that said, “I’m sorry” and “You’re not to blame for this.” 

A woman believed to be Marcee Gray sits inside a car outside the home of suspected Apalachee school shooter Colt Gray and his father, Colin Gray, in Winder, Ga., Sept. 6, 2024.  (Ben Hendren for Fox News Digital)

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She also said she’d called Apalachee nearly a week earlier because “I wanted Colt to be admitted to an inpatient treatment. Colt was on board with it.” 

When she heard about the shooting, Gray said, she “fell to the ground and just started screaming.” 

“I knew what had happened. I just knew in my gut,” she said, calling it “unfathomable” what happened to the victims.” 

“If I could take their place, I would,” Gray told ABC News. “I would in a heartbeat.” 

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Fox News Digital has contacted Gray and the district for additional comment. 

Colt Gray mugshot

Suspected shooter Colt Gray, 14  (The Barrow County Sheriff’s Office)

Officials say Colt Gray, 14, shot and killed students Christian Angulo and Mason Schermerhorn, both 14, and teachers Richard Aspinwall, 39, and Cristina Irimie, 53. Eight other students and a teacher were injured — seven of them shot — and are expected to recover.

Marcee Gray’s sister, Annie Brown, told The Washington Post her sister had texted her saying she spoke with a school counselor and warned staff of an “extreme emergency” before the killings. Brown said Marcee Gray urged them to “immediately” find her son to check on him.

APALACHEE HIGH SCHOOL SHOOTING SUSPECT COLT GRAY AND FATHER APPEAR IN COURT FOR SEPARATE HEARINGS

Brown provided screenshots of the text exchange to the newspaper, which also reported that a call log from the family’s shared phone plan showed a call was made to the school at 9:50 a.m. Warrants for Gray’s arrest say the shooting started at 10:20 a.m.

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courtroom image of shooter

In this image from a video monitor, suspected gunman Colt Gray, left, sits in the Barrow County Courthouse during his first appearance for the shooting at Apalachee High School Sept. 6, 2024, in Winder, Ga.  (Brynn Anderson-Pool/Getty Images)

The boy’s grandfather, Charles Polhamus, has told multiple news outlets that Marcee Gray got a text from her son Wednesday saying he was sorry. Polhamus told CNN Marcee Gray drove to Winder, more than 200 miles from Fitzgerald, immediately after the shooting.

Authorities have said Gray’s father, Colin Gray, gave Colt access to the semiautomatic AR-15 style rifle used in the shooting. It’s not clear how Gray brought the gun to campus or what he did with it in the two hours between school starting at 8:15 a.m. and when shots first rang out.

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Colt Gray was charged last week as an adult with four counts of felony murder in the shooting and faces a maximum penalty of life in prison without parole or life with the possibility of parole if convicted.

Colin Gray became the first parent of a school shooting suspect to be charged in Georgia, District Attorney Brad Smith said Friday. Colin Gray was charged with second-degree murder, involuntary manslaughter and cruelty to children for providing his son with the rifle.

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Colin Gray is jailed in Barrow County after declining to seek bail in a brief court hearing Friday in Winder. Colt Gray is being held in a juvenile detention center after declining to seek bail. Neither has been indicted nor entered a plea.

Gray former home

Alleged Apalachee school shooter Colt Gray and his father Colin Gray’s former neighborhood in Jefferson Sept. 6, 2024. Both lived in the home until an eviction in May 2022. (Ben Hendren for Fox News Digital)

It’s unclear if Barrow County School authorities knew before the shooting that Colt and Colin Gray previously had been interviewed by a sheriff’s deputy in neighboring Jackson County in May 2023 after a report of an online threat to shoot up a middle school that Colt Gray, then 13, attended.

Colin Gray told the investigator back then that Colt had access to unloaded guns in the house but knew “how to use them and not use them.” He also said his son had struggled since he and his wife separated and that Colt was picked on in school.

Fox News Digital’s Timothy H.J. Nerozzi and Greg Norman and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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