Southwest
Gilbert Goons: Arizona rich kid 'gang' accused in teen's murder started among friends, fueled by social media
Arizona officials are working to curb youth violence after a group of teenagers and young adults became friends in middle and elementary school and evolved into a suburban “hybrid gang” tied to various assaults and, now, a murder.
Seven members of the group are accused of murdering their 16-year-old peer, Preston Lord, on Halloween weekend last year in Queen Creek, Arizona, a wealthy suburb southeast of Phoenix.
Treston Billey, 18, Jacob Meisner, 17, Taylor Sherman, 19, Talan Renner, 17, Dominic Turner, 20, William Owen Hines, 18, and Talyn Vigil, 17, have all been charged in Lord’s murder.
“How did a group of well-taken-care-of suburban boys — well-connected in the community, some of them who had great grades, played sports, went to church, had everything going from them — how did those boys end up in this hybrid gang?” Billie Tarascio, a Gilbert-based attorney with Modern Law, unaffiliated with the Gilbert Goons case, told Fox News Digital. “It’s largely, I think, influenced by social media, specifically Snapchat.”
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The seven suspects named in Preston Lord’s murder are charged with first-degree murder and kidnapping. (Dignity Memorial)
Before the murder, various teens affiliated with the group had been accused of assaults across Maricopa County and general mischief in public places, including parking garages and fast-food restaurants, starting in about 2022.
The “Goons” are known for recording videos of assaults and underage drinking, some of which ended up on social media apps like Snapchat, which allows users to send photos that disappear immediately after they have been opened by the recipient. Some of the members fought with “brass knuckles,” according to various witness accounts.
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In screenshots of messages between an alleged assault victim and two “Goons,” the victim wrote, “[Y]’all jumped me w 20 people last time 2 [vs.] 20. I left with scratch … marks on my face,” describing the Goons as “rich a– white kids big a– house w a car that ya daddy paid for.”
Efforts to curb teen violence in Gilbert
“This case — like every case submitted to us — is a unique set of facts. That makes it difficult if not impossible to compare it to previous cases,” a Maricopa County Attorney’s Office spokesperson told Fox News Digital when asked if the prosecutor’s office has ever seen a case like the Preston Lord murder.
On Wednesday, the county attorney’s office launched a new “Report! Don’t Repost” campaign, encouraging “parents and children — who see video of violent attacks in their social media — to report the videos AND the attacks to their local police department.”
“Our message is a simple one: reposting videos like these exacerbates the problem. We want police to have this kind of information so they can develop cases that would ultimately be submitted to us for potential prosecution,” the county attorney’s office said.
How the Gilbert Goons formed
Thousands of Queen Creek Police Department records obtained by Fox News Digital through a records request paint a bigger picture of how the “Goons” formed in Gilbert and how social media fueled that formation.
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A witness who grew up with some of the members told police in an interview after Lord’s death that the “Goons” began a long time ago “when this friend group was in elementary and middle school.”
The seven suspects charged in Preston Lord’s murder. (FOX 10 Phoenix)
She specifically mentioned Meisner, Renner and a third “Goon” who is not charged in Lord’s murder as members of the group who became best friends in 6th grade.
“She stated the group calls themselves the ‘Goonies’ or the ‘G’S.’ She described it as more of a large friend group that hang[s] out. [The witness] stated she was called a Goon up until recently,” a police report states.
“She confirmed she has recorded some of the past fights involving the goons. She stated the girls’ job was to ‘stay out of the way while their boyfriend…took the job. [She] said what made her [a] Gilbert Goon is just by hanging out and drinking.”
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Another female witness called police to report that her son had been “followed by” the Gilbert Goons, who “have been terrorizing the community and many don’t feel safe,” the report states.
The three adult suspects charged in Preston Lord’s murder. (FOX 10/Maricopa County)
“She advised the Gilbert Goons go around and look at attacking people in different places. She advised her son’s roommate was hospitalized after being beat up by the Gilbert Goons, and now many kids are possessing firearms to protect themselves,” the witness report alleges.
Preston Lord’s murder
The Gilbert Goons began making headlines last fall, when they were accused of murdering Lord at a rambunctious Halloween party at a teenager’s home that went horribly wrong over the course of just four hours.
The evening of Oct. 28 began at one house at 5 p.m., where some teens showed up to a party that they described as “Mormon kids that were, like, pretty sober,” so they opted for a change of scenery and went to another location. Many teens made stops at several parties throughout the night.
A Snapchat post circulating that day advertised a “Halloween costume rager” with the address of the home that became the scene of the crime. The post also advertised free alcohol at the party, according to police documents.
Police later questioned the parents who own the home, identified as Roberto and Emily, who said they did not know about the flyer offering free booze at their house. They also told police there was no way the teenagers could have accessed alcohol at their home.
On Oct. 31, after police publicized a reward of up to $10,000 for information leading to an arrest in Lord’s death, one of the suspects texted, “My mom wants in on the [$10,000],” FOX 10 reported. (FOX 10 Phoenix)
“It should be noted, that when speaking with Roberto and Emily, I noticed that they both appeared to be drinking. Emily would look at me but was not speaking much during the interaction. She appeared to have a slight sway to her stance. Emily also had watery and bloodshot eyes. I then also noticed that Roberto had watery and bloodshot eyes. They had slurred speech and there was an odor of alcohol coming from their person,” a police officer wrote.
The Oct. 28 party at their house attracted a crowd of more than 200 teenagers from over a dozen local high schools wearing Halloween costumes. One teenager’s parents hosted the teens in their yard while they apparently drank inside, police reports show.
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Murder victim Preston Lord, a sophomore, was at the party that night with members of his basketball team. At one point, Lord’s friend took a video of a fight that ensued at the party. Suspect Preston Billey apparently asked him to delete the video, police records state.
After that moment, Billey and a group of older boys allegedly started following Lord and his friends, at one point coming up behind one of them and pulling a cheap gold chain he was wearing right off his neck.
Authorities gather near the site of Preston Lord’s October 2023 murder. (FOX 10)
Lord and his friends began to run away from the group of perpetrators and hid behind some bushes, but the group caught up with them, and Renner allegedly punched Lord, knocking him out. Others allegedly kicked and beat the victim until someone finally said, “He’s out,” and the group of attackers ran away, police wrote.
One witness saw “someone” climb over Lord and “dance on top of him” as he lay in the street. Other witnesses who found Lord in the road “dragged him” out of the road and onto someone’s property.
Police initially responded to reports of an assault in the area of 194th Street and Via Del Rancho in Queen Creek at 9:49 p.m. Oct. 28, 2023. Authorities later located Lord “in the roadway” and transported him to a nearby hospital to be treated for “life-threatening injuries.”
He was pronounced dead two days later.
How social media fanned the flames
A large part of the Gilbert Goons’ criminal activity stems from — and was highlighted on — social media. Apps like Snapchat and Instagram allegedly helped the Goons document their assaults and illegal possessions, including weapons, drugs and alcohol, according to police records.
A screenshot of surveillance footage showing the Gilbert Goons fighting in a parking garage. (Maricopa County/ FOX 10)
The group also reportedly came up with the name Gilbert Goons on Snapchat, according to The Arizona Republic.
After Lord’s murder and before any charges were filed, the group members allegedly communicated with each other about his death, leading to some online “vigilantism,” Tarascio said.
On Oct. 28, Renner allegedly said in a message shared around midnight, “I got in a fight, a big group fight, and killed a kid.”
“I guess I’m just too strong.”
Police received multiple tips showing screenshots of a Snapchat message Vigil allegedly sent to a friend, stating, “I hit a kid and this kid … hit his head and then they kicked his head in the ground then I got word he died so idk.”
Screenshots of the message made rounds on social media pages before locals notified police about it, which is part of the reason the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office just launched its “report don’t repost” campaign this week.
On Oct. 28, Renner allegedly said in a message shared about midnight, “I got in a fight, a big group fight, and killed a kid.” (Queen Creek PD)
Rumors spread through local high schools in text messages and on social media as days, weeks and months went by without arrests in Lord’s murder. Some parents wrongly accused other parents and their children who were not involved in Lord’s murder.
In text messages Oct. 30, one of the Goons sent a message that said, “BRO THAT KID DIED.”
The next day, another message involving the Goons said, “Tresty or Talen might be getting charged with murder.”
“It’s not just these boys and the Gilbert Goons. We’re watching that same behavior with groups of boys in our community and in every community,” Tarascio said. “So, what happens is, kids are using Snapchat.
“They are underdeveloped. They make dumb decisions. Those dumb decisions might include taking naked pictures of themselves, sending naked pictures … to people, harassing people, threatening people, getting in fights, recording it and sharing it.
“They’re getting more and more positive attention from social media. And they’re hearing nothing from their parents and law enforcement, so their behavior escalates.”
“And then what happens is they watch the popularity that comes from these videos. They’re sensational, and they’re getting all this feedback that says, ‘Yes, yes, keep sharing’ … and they do, and they keep amping it up. And now they’re flashing guns, and they’re flashing drugs,” the family law attorney said.
The seven suspects were not charged until March. Each defendant is facing a first-degree murder charge, and they have all pleaded not guilty. Fox News Digital reached out to the defendants’ attorneys.
The Queen Creek Police and Maricopa County Attorney’s Office host a press conference about charges in the Preston Lord murder case. (FOX 10)
Attorney Eric Crocker, who is representing Treston Billey, called the case “troubling” because prosecutors are calling the Gilbert Goons a “hybrid gang,” which is not defined under Arizona law.
“[T]here’s concern whether my client can even get a fair trial,” he told Fox News Digital, calling the “hybrid gang” term “highly prejudicial.”
Crocker added that Billey is presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. The other attorneys did not immediately respond.
All seven defendants appeared in court together for the first time Aug. 8. Their trial is not scheduled to begin until July 2025, but Renner’s attorney reportedly thinks that time frame is unreasonable given the mounds of electronic and physical evidence to sort through in the case, according to ABC 15.
Snap Inc., the parent company of Snapchat, and Meta, which owns Instagram, did not respond to Fox News Digital. Both companies complied with law enforcement requests for information, according to police documents.
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Arizona governor vetoes Charlie Kirk memorial license plate, sparking GOP outrage: ‘This bill falls short’
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Democratic Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs is facing fierce backlash after vetoing a bill that would have created a specialty license plate honoring slain Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk, a move Republicans are blasting as a stunning act of partisanship after his assassination.
Kirk, who was assassinated while speaking at a Sept. 10 Turning Point USA event at Utah Valley University, lived in Arizona with his wife, Erika, and two children.
The proposed specialty plate, referred to as the “Charlie Kirk memorial” plate or the “Conservative grassroots network special plate,” featured a photo of the late Kirk and the TPUSA logo in front of an American flag background.
Below the license plate number were the words “FOR CHARLIE.”
A custom Arizona license plate, featuring a Turning Point USA and Charlie Kirk design, shared by state Sen. Jake Hoffman. (Senator Jake Hoffman via X)
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Of the $25 fee required for the plate, $17 would be an annual donation deposited into the Conservative Grassroots Network Special Plate Fund, according to the legislation.
While the recipient of the Grassroots Network Special Plate Fund was not explicitly designated as TPUSA in the bill, it noted the director of the fund would allocate revenue annually to a nonprofit organization, founded in 2012, that focuses on restoring traditional values, maintaining a grassroots activist network on high school and college campuses in Arizona, and assisting college students with voter registration and absentee ballots.
People gather at a memorial to mourn Turning Point USA Founder Charlie Kirk outside Turning Point USA headquarters Sept. 12, 2025, in Phoenix. (Charly Triballeau/AFP via Getty Images)
TPUSA, founded by Kirk in 2012, is well known for its grassroots activist networks on high school and college campuses. It is headquartered in Phoenix, Arizona.
The $25 fee and annual $17 donation are consistent with the fees for the other 109 nonprofit license plates offered by the Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT).
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The state Senate passed the bill, 16-2, with the House of Representatives voting 31-23 in favor prior to Hobbs’ veto.
Specialty plates in Arizona are authorized by the legislature and sent to the governor to be signed into law. They have been offered since 1989.
In a letter explaining the veto, Hobbs cited concerns with the bill “bring[ing] people together,” claiming it would “insert politics into a function of government that should remain nonpartisan.”
Democratic Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs is facing fierce backlash after vetoing a bill that would have created a specialty license plate honoring slain Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk. (Rebecca Noble/Getty Images)
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“Charlie Kirk’s assassination is tragic and a horrifying act of violence,” Hobbs wrote. “In America, we resolve our political differences at the ballot box. No matter who it targets, political violence puts us all in harm’s way and damages our sacred democratic institutions.
“I will continue working toward solutions that bring people together, but this bill falls short of that standard.”
Specialty license plates with political interests already approved by the state include the “Choose Life” Plate, which benefits the Arizona Life Coalition and its mission to promote anti-abortion advocacy and education; the “In God We Trust” Plate, which benefits conservative Christian legal advocacy group Alliance Defending Freedom; and the Arizona Realtors’ “Homes for All” Plate, which funds affordable housing projects.
Charlie Kirk, founder of Turning Point USA, speaks during the Turning Point Action conference in 2023 in West Palm Beach, Fla. (Lynne Sladky/AP Photo)
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Another approved plate, “Alice Cooper’s Solid Rock Plate,” which benefits Solid Rock Teen Centers, features a portrait of the legendary musician, who has made political comments about social issues including gender identity.
Republican state Sen. Jake Hoffman, who sponsored the bill, posted a fiery statement on social media after the governor’s action, claiming her “grotesque partisanship knows no bounds.”
“Even in the wake of a global civil rights leader — an Arizona resident and her own constituent — being assassinated in broad daylight for his defense of the First Amendment, Hobbs couldn’t find the human decency to put her far-Left extremism aside simply to allow those how wish to honor him to do so,” Hoffman wrote. “Katie Hobbs will forever be known as a stain on the pages of Arizona’s story.”
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On Saturday, TPUSA COO Tyler Bowyer shared an X post that said, “Deport Katie Hobbs.”
TPUSA, Bowyer and Hobbs’ office did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s requests for comment.
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Air Force veteran warns ‘cartels don’t collapse — they fracture’ after notorious drug lord killed
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Nearly two weeks after Mexican forces killed notorious cartel boss Ruben “El Mencho” Oseguera Cervantes, questions remain about how the powerful Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) will respond and whether the blow will meaningfully disrupt the flow of fentanyl into the United States.
Carlos De La Cruz, a 20-year U.S. Air Force veteran who deployed after 9/11 and later served along the southern border, told Fox News the cartel leader’s death marked a major victory, but warned Americans should not mistake it for the end of the fight.
“When I say that this is a significant win, I mean it,” De La Cruz said. “El Mencho ran one of the most violent cartels on the planet.”
Oseguera, who rose to prominence in the post–El Chapo era, oversaw CJNG’s aggressive expansion across Mexico and into key trafficking corridors feeding U.S. drug markets. Under his leadership, the cartel became a central architect of fentanyl and methamphetamine trafficking and drew a $15 million U.S. reward for information leading to his capture.
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Smoke rises from burning vehicles after a military operation that a government source said killed Mexican drug lord Nemesio Oseguera, known as “El Mencho,” in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, on Feb. 22, 2026. (Screen grab obtained from a social media video. @morelifediares via Instagram/YouTube via Reuters)
But De La Cruz cautioned that removing a cartel kingpin does not dismantle the organization.
“Cartels don’t collapse when you just cut the head off — they fracture,” he said. “And part of that fracture is going to see a lot of short-term violence while all these factions fight over territory.”
Following Oseguera’s killing on Feb. 22, the U.S. State Department issued travel alerts in multiple Mexican states, citing road blockages and criminal activity tied to security operations, underscoring concerns about instability in the aftermath.
Drawing on his military background studying enemy command structures, De La Cruz described the cartel fight as a long-term campaign requiring sustained pressure.
A mughsot of Ruben “Nemesio” Oseguera Cervantes, known as “El Mencho,” beside graffiti depicting the letters of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, covering the facade of an abandoned home in El Limoncito, in the Michoacan state of Mexico. (Eduardo Verdugo/AP Images; Drug Enforcement Administration)
“You don’t win a war with just one airstrike,” he said. “The goal is dismantling the networks and going after their financing.”
De La Cruz, who is running for Congress and is the brother of Texas Republican Rep. Monica De La Cruz, argued that CJNG’s Foreign Terrorist Organization designation gives U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies expanded tools to target cartel infrastructure and financial pipelines.
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A soldier stands guard by a charred vehicle after it was set on fire in Cointzio, Mexico, Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026, after the cartel leader’s death. (Armando Solis/AP Photo)
But he stressed that the fentanyl crisis should be viewed as a domestic security emergency, not a distant foreign problem.
“For decades, they were using their territories as launching pads to pump chemical weapons into America — because that’s exactly what fentanyl is,” he said.
De La Cruz, who said he worked side by side with Customs agents while deployed to the border, warned that cartel networks are highly adaptive and that any gains could be temporary without sustained follow-through.
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Smoke rises after violence hit Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. (Courtesy of Scott Posilkin)
“These networks, they’re going to adjust. They’re going to adapt and they’re going to adapt quickly,” he said. “We have to continue to go after the money launderers, especially on our side of the border, because that’s the full fight.”
While Oseguera’s death removes one of the most dominant figures in Mexico’s criminal underworld, De La Cruz said the mission is personal.
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“I took an oath to defend this country,” he said. “And I intend to stand by that oath.”
Fox News Digital’s Greg Wehner contributed to this report.
Stepheny Price covers crime, including missing persons, homicides and migrant crime. Send story tips to stepheny.price@fox.com.
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Search for Nancy Guthrie enters 5th week, cadaver dogs on hold
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TUCSON, Ariz. — More than five weeks after the suspected abduction of Nancy Guthrie — the 84-year-old mother of “Today” co-host Savannah Guthrie — Arizona authorities say cadaver dogs used earlier in the investigation are not currently being deployed as the search continues.
The elder Guthrie is believed to have been kidnapped from her home in the Catalina Foothills in northern Tucson around 2:30 a.m. on Feb. 1.
While no suspects have been publicly identified, and she has not been found, cadaver dogs had been deployed earlier in the case, according to Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos. They have not been visible in weeks.
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A member of the Pima County Sheriff’s Office remains outside of Nancy Guthrie’s home, Monday, Feb. 9, 2026 in Tucson, Ariz. (AP Photo/Ty ONeil; Nathan Congleton/NBC via Getty Images)
“They are available if needed in the future,” he told Fox News Digital.
There are a number of reasons not to be using cadaver dogs at this stage in the investigation, according to Betsy Brantner Smith, a retired police sergeant and spokeswoman for the National Police Association.
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Savannah Guthrie visits the Today show at Rockefeller Plaza in New York on Thursday, March 5, 2026. (Charles Sykes/Invision/AP)
One would be if there’s credible information that Guthrie is still alive.
“Anything is possible,” Nanos told Fox News Digital last week, adding that he would not discuss specific leads or evidence in the case.
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Brantner Smith, who is not involved in the case, said departments may hold back K-9 resources for several reasons. Those could be that authorities don’t have a good idea of where to search, they think she might be concealed in a place where dogs would have a hard time detecting her, or they believe she’s been taken to Mexico, according to Brantner Smith.
Law enforcement agents walk around the neighborhood where Annie Guthrie, whose mother Nancy Guthrie has been missing for more than a week, lives just outside Tucson, Ariz. (Ty ONeil/AP Photo)
“I do believe that the sheriff’s department has much more information that they are not releasing to the public,” she told Fox News Digital. “And I’m not sure at this point why that would be, unless they have a solid suspect and don’t want to tip them off.”
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Most departments, including the Pima County Sheriff’s, don’t have their own cadaver dogs and borrow them from state and federal authorities or neighboring jurisdictions.
An investigator looks inside a culvert in the neighborhood where Annie Guthrie, whose mother Nancy Guthrie has been missing for more than a week, lives just outside Tucson, Ariz., on Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2026. (Ty ONeil/AP Photo)
In Guthrie’s case, the sheriff’s department sought K-9 assistance from the local Border Patrol office earlier in the investigation.
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PCSD deferred further comment on the K-9s to Customs and Border Protection, which did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
A member of the Pima County Sheriff’s Office walks around Nancy Guthrie’s home on Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2026 in Tucson, Ariz. (Ty ONeil/AP Photo)
The biggest lead so far has been Nest camera video showing a masked intruder on Guthrie’s doorstep the morning of her abduction.
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He is described as about 5 feet, 9 inches to 5 feet, 10 inches tall and of medium build.
Nancy Guthrie, 84, has been missing from her Arizona home since Jan. 31, 2026. (Don Arnold/WireImage/Getty Images)
He was wearing a black Ozark Trail backpack.
Authorities have said they won’t consider the case cold until they run out of viable leads to follow up on — and tens of thousands have come in so far.
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Savannah Guthrie has asked anyone with information to dial 1-800-CALL-FBI.
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There’s a combined reward of more than $1.2 million for information that leads to her mother’s recovery.
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