California Teen Avoids Heavy Sentence in Matricide by Pinning the Blame On Boyfriend

Photo of Accused Murderers Steven Colver and Tylar Witt
There’s no doubt about it, the mother/daughter dynamic can be tough.  Words and actions can be easily misconstrued—on both sides—and it can ultimately lead to a lot of pain and heartache.

And, evidently, murder.

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In 2009, Joanne Witt of California was brutally stabbed to death in a plot hatched by her daughter Tylar, then just fourteen years old, and Tylar’s 19-year-old boyfriend, Steven Colver.

Seems Ms. Witt had the audacity to go to the police and file a statutory rape claim against Colver, now twenty-one, giving authorities Tylar’s diary as evidence.

Tylar Witt clearly felt that matricide was a just reward for her …

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Media Uses Amber Alert in Sort of Disingenuous Way

Photo of Matthew Slocum in Police Custody

When I got home from teaching summer school one day last week, I turned on the news to decompress.  The first thing I saw was an Amber Alert running across the screen, which naturally grabbed my attention.

The story as given was basically that a guy named Matthew Slocum (who, the Amber Alert was sure to note, had swastika tattoos on both forearms) had killed his mother, stepfather, and stepbrother before burning down their home in New York State and fleeing with his girlfriend, Loretta Colegrove and their four-month-old son, Raymond.  They gave Slocum’s car make and model (bastard drove a pretty sweet-looking Ford Mustang) as well as his license plate number.

Oh, and the Amber Alert stated that poor Miss Colegrove was being held against her will.

Anyway, Slocum was apprehended in the sleepy New Hampshire town of Gilsum, with WMUR reporting at the time that “the woman and child he had been holding for several hours inside a Gilsum, N.H., home were found safe”.

The story has changed a bit since then.

From WMUR:

Police said they initially believed Colegrove was being held by Slocum against her will, but they believed otherwise after the surrender in Gilsum.

For now, investigators said she is not facing charges.

Colegrove’s family described her relationship with Slocum as volatile.

Cindy Colegrove, Loretta’s sister, said, “We didn’t like how he was treating my sister.”

Look, there is no question that Matthew Slocum is a monster.  The details of the crime he stands accused of in New York are chilling.

Investigators said Slocum shot his mother and stepfather in bed and then turned the gun on his teenage stepbrother in the living room of their home.

After the killings, police said he dumped gasoline on the porch and set the home on fire.

“There are witness interviews (and) forensic evidence that (are) still processing. It’s being conducted at the scene, so there’s really a whole host of steps that need to be taken,” said Capt. Stephen James, of the Washington County Sheriff’s Office. “Until that point occurs, we (are not really) in a suitable position to address matters relative to motive.”

And yet WMUR accurately noted that Slocum’s “peaceful surrender” in a New Hampshire town so small that it doesn’t even have its own …

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New Hampshire Killer Fails In Effort To Blame Mother For His “Insanity”

Photo of Christopher Gribble Testifying in his Murder Trial

In October of 2009, Kimberly Cates of New Hampshire’s Mont Vernon was savagely and senselessly murdered by a group of angry, antisocial adolescent boys.  Her daughter Jaimie was also stabbed and beaten but survived the attack.

Steven Spader was found guilty of first-degree murder last fall.  In light of Spader’s fate, his chief accomplice, Christopher Gribble, decided to go the “not guilty by reason of insanity” route … and failed miserably. 

Yup, Gribble, like Spader, was found guilty of first-degree murder (Judge Gillian Abramson actually said in court, “Infinity is not enough jail time for you”) … and deemed “sane”.

Sanity is an interesting concept, one that means different things to many people.  To me, anybody that cold-bloodedly kills someone else is completely insane—but that doesn’t mean the person should not be punished to the fullest extent of the law.

I mention this because one of Gribble’s tactics involved laying the blame for his “insanity” directly on the doorstep of his mother, sharing in court details of what he considered to be a “troubled” childhood and exposing fantasies he had about killing his mother, Tamara, who he claims abused him.

From WMUR:

[Gribble] at first declined to go into detail about his fantasies, smiling and saying he didn’t think his lawyers wanted him to get too specific while on camera. But when his lawyer pushed for detail, he obliged.

“Things like cutting little pieces of her off, little bit by bit,” he said. “Listening to her scream like I screamed. Telling her, ‘Hey! How’s it feel now?’”

According to Gribble, his mother’s overprotective and overbearing nature in raising him directly correlated to the killer he became … and therefore should allow him to get away with murder.

Yeah, freaking logical, right?

Tamara Gribble did admit in court to breaking a wooden spoon when she was hitting her son, but that it was a one shot deal and that she never again hit him.

Here’s the thing.  Corporal punishment is completely legal.  There’s a line, of course, and an argument could be made that breaking a spoon over your kid’s body is crossing it … but does it excuse a murder that was almost Mansonesque?

I was spanked as a child.  A lot, actually.  It has never once occurred to me to kill someone, like, seriously commit murder. 

This is a pale comparison, but I had a hard enough time holding onto my golden retriever, Puck, when she was euthanized at the age of fourteen so she wouldn’t have to die alone.  Watching a dog that I knew and loved pass away before my eyes was horrible, and it was the right thing to do (Puck was arthritic, incontinent, and starting to suffer) … the idea of causing the flame of a human life to extinguish is just unspeakable.

And Christopher Gribble took a human life.  He can blame his mother all he wants—mothers tend to make convenient targets in situations like this—but the fact is that many people walk this earth having endured far more than a broken wooden spoon that wouldn’t hurt a fly.

Judge Abramson was right … infinity is not long enough.



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Actor Michael Brea Commits Matricide … With a Sword

Photo of Michael Brea
I guess if you’re a little-known actor, one approach to getting your name in print is to kill your mother with a sword. I’m not trying to be flip, either … I mean, killing your mother is bad enough. Is it really necessary to skewer the woman? Yup, I guess we’ll all remember your name now, Michael Brea.

From AOL News:

Officers responding to a call of a family dispute found 55-year-old Yannick Brea kneeling in the bathroom of her Brooklyn apartment at about 2:20 a.m. She had cuts to her head and was pronounced dead at the scene, Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said.

“In a bedroom was her son … with a 3-foot sword,” Kelly said.

Police have charged actor Michael Brea with stabbing his …

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