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  • 11-Year-Old Clayton Dietz Faces Life In Prison For Killing Dad, Douglas Over A Gaming Console
    2026/02/24

    January 13, 2025, midnight. Douglas and Jillian Dietz sang "Happy Birthday" to their son Clayton, who had just turned 11. They told him to go to bed. Clayton got mad—his Nintendo Switch had been confiscated. At 3:00 a.m., Pennsylvania State Police received a 911 call about a gunshot victim at the family's Duncannon duplex. Douglas Dietz, 42, was dead in his bed with a gunshot wound to the head. Their son Clayton was in the kitchen, and a state trooper heard him say: "I killed Daddy."

    Clayton had been searching for his confiscated Nintendo Switch when he found keys to the gun safe in his father's drawer. Thinking the console might be inside, he opened it and found a revolver instead. Court documents state Clayton loaded the gun, pulled back the hammer, and walked into his parents' bedroom through a connecting closet. Douglas was asleep next to Jillian when Clayton fired, shooting his father in the head.

    Jillian woke to a loud bang and smell like fireworks. She tried to wake Douglas but realized he wasn't responding, then saw blood dripping onto the bed. Clayton appeared in the closet saying "He's dead" before running downstairs yelling "My dad's dead." When asked what he thought would happen when he fired the gun, Clayton told investigators he was mad and hadn't thought about the consequences. Court documents state he admitted "he had someone in mind who he was going to shoot." Jillian later heard Clayton yell: "I killed my dad. I hate myself."

    Douglas and Jillian had adopted Clayton in 2018 when he was 7 years old. Clayton was arrested and charged with criminal homicide. In Pennsylvania, homicide charges automatically begin in adult criminal court, even for children as young as 11. The defense must request a hearing to transfer the case to juvenile court and prove the child would benefit from rehabilitation. If convicted in adult court, Clayton could face life in prison.

    Clayton's bail was denied January 13, 2025. He was held at Perry County Prison. On February 19, 2025, Clayton appeared in court handcuffed and in shackles. His mother Jillian sat next to him. Videos show Clayton tripping as he entered, telling his mother his handcuffs were hurting. He waived his preliminary hearing. Defense attorney Dave Wilson said his goal is to get Clayton into juvenile court. Next court appearance expected in May.

    FAIR USE DISCLAIMER:This video is created for educational and commentary purposes under Fair Use (17 U.S.C. § 107). All footage, images, and audio clips are used solely for transformative critique, analysis, and public interest reporting. We do not own the rights to any copyrighted materials shown. All rights belong to their respective owners. No copyright infringement intended.

    ⚠️ Contains discussion of a child perpetrator and fatal shooting. Viewer discretion is advised.

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    Clayton Dietz, Douglas Dietz, Duncannon Pennsylvania, Perry County, child homicide, juvenile justice, tried as adult, Nintendo Switch, 11 year old, true crime 2025, Beyond Guilty

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    6 分
  • FULL STORY: Paul Caneiro Kills Brother, Keith & His Entire Family For $1.5 Million Insurance
    2026/02/24

    On November 20, 2018, 5:01 AM. Paul Caneiro, 51, stood outside his burning Ocean Township, New Jersey home with his wife and two daughters next to their white Porsche. A red gas can sat in the driveway. He told police he didn't know who would target his family. Seven hours later at 12:38 PM, his brother Keith Caneiro's mansion in nearby Colts Neck was on fire. Keith, 50, was shot dead on the lawn once in the back, four times in the head. Inside: his wife Jennifer, 45, shot and stabbed. Son Jesse, 11, stabbed multiple times. Daughter Sophia, 8, stabbed multiple times.Paul and Keith were business partners for 31 years. Best friends. Best men at each other's weddings. Keith owned 90% of their tech firm Square One, Paul owned 10%. They co-owned a pest control business equally. But in 2012, Paul was badly injured in a car accident. His personality changed. Prosecutors say he started stealing $11,000 per month for personal use. Keith discovered it. An indictment alleged Paul stole $75,000 total. A lawsuit claimed he took $90,000 from the kids' college fund.Keith wanted out. He was cutting off Paul's $225,000 salary. On November 19 at 7 PM, Keith emailed business associates: money was missing, he was stopping payments to Paul's wife. Seven hours later, surveillance captured Paul's Porsche leaving his home, returning at 4 AM. At 1:30 AM, Paul walked up to Keith's home security system, the cameras stopped. He claimed he'd turned it off for Wi-Fi issues, but it was hard-wired. At 3 AM, neighbors heard gunshots. Prosecutors say Paul killed Keith outside, then murdered Jennifer, Jesse and Sophia inside before setting a basement fire. He returned home and set his own house ablaze to make it look like both families were targeted.Police found bloody jeans and a latex glove in Paul's basement. DNA testing using STRmix software: Sophia's blood. The DNA was 2.7 septillion times more likely to be hers. They found a 9mm Sig Sauer with suppressor in Paul's car. If Keith's family died, Paul would get $1.5 million in life insurance.Paul was charged November 29, 2018 four murders, arson, weapons, theft, 16 counts total. He pleaded not guilty. Trial was delayed by COVID-19 and legal battles over DNA evidence and the seized security system. Both were allowed after New Jersey Supreme Court appeals. Trial began January 12, 2025. Paul's daughters testified he was distraught learning everyone died. Defense blamed a third brother who also stood to gain insurance money. On February 13, 2025, the jury deliberated 5 hours: guilty on all 15 counts. Paul showed no emotion. Jennifer's mother mouthed "Thank you" to the jury. Paul faces life without parole. Sentencing May 12, 2025.FAIR USE DISCLAIMER:This video is created for educational and commentary purposes under Fair Use (17 U.S.C. § 107). All footage, images, and audio clips are used solely for transformative critique, analysis, and public interest reporting. We do not own the rights to any copyrighted materials shown. All rights belong to their respective owners. No copyright infringement intended.⚠️ Contains discussion of child murders and graphic violence. Viewer discretion is advised.🔔 Subscribe to Beyond Guilty👍 Like to support our research💬 Should family members face harsher penalties? Comment belowPaul Caneiro, Keith Caneiro, Jennifer Caneiro, Jesse Caneiro, Sophia Caneiro, Colts Neck, Ocean Township, New Jersey mansion fire, family annihilator, STRmix DNA, true crime 2018, Beyond Guilty, True Crime, Brother Kill Brother, Abuse, Violence, Family Violence, Insurance, Insurance Fraud, Fraud

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    15 分
  • He Taught Kids By Day, Kills Them By Night, Michael White Finally Convicted After 7 Years!
    2026/02/11

    October 22nd, 2016. Around 5:00 AM, a child called 911 from a home on Libby Lane in Jonesboro, Georgia. Intruders had forced their way inside and started shooting. When Clayton County police arrived, they found 11-year-old Tatiyana Coates and 15-year-old Daveon Coates shot to death. Several other children survived and witnessed everything. Police said it was gang retaliation—the Rolling 20 Crips came looking for a 15-year-old boy who'd stolen guns from them. The boy had run away, leaving his younger siblings and the Coates children behind.For over a year, no arrests were made. Then on March 23rd, 2018, police arrested a suspect that shocked everyone. Not at a gang headquarters. Not on the streets. At Toney Elementary School in DeKalb County, during the school day. The suspect was Michael De'Sean White, 26, a fifth-grade teacher. Parents loved him. One grandmother said he was "perfect with those children." But investigators had video of White at the Crips headquarters nine days before the murders. They had witness testimony from gang members saying White kicked in the door with a shotgun that night. They had a sketch that matched him.White had applied to DeKalb County Schools in March 2017—five months after the murders. He passed two background checks with no criminal history showing. Started as a paraprofessional, became a teacher in August 2017. For almost a year, he taught fifth graders while wanted for murdering two children. Prosecutors said he was "kicking in doors at night and killing children and going and teaching children in the morning." His defense attorney argued witnesses testified to help themselves and that emotion outran evidence. The jury disagreed. Michael White was convicted on 44 counts including murder and gang charges. He faces life in prison.FAIR USE DISCLAIMER:This video is created for educational and commentary purposes under Fair Use (17 U.S.C. § 107). All footage, images, and audio clips are used solely for transformative critique, analysis, and public interest reporting. We do not own the rights to any copyrighted materials shown. All rights belong to their respective owners. No copyright infringement intended.⚠️ Contains discussion of gang violence and child victims. Viewer discretion is advised.🔔 Subscribe to Beyond Guilty👍 Like if this case affected you💬 Should background checks be more thorough? Comment below

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    11 分
  • 8 Years After Divorce, Michael McKee Made Monique Tepe Pay For Moving On. Crime Of Passion
    2026/02/10

    December 30th, 2025. Dr. Spencer Tepe didn't show up for work. His manager knew something was wrong—Spencer was never late. A wellness check was requested at his Columbus home. The officer went to the wrong address. An hour later, a friend called 911. "There's a body. There's a body. Oh my God." Police found Spencer, 37, and his wife Monique, 39, shot to death in their bedroom. Their two young children were alive downstairs. No forced entry. No weapon. The family had moved in just six days earlier.Surveillance showed a silver SUV near the home multiple times before the murders. Police tracked it to Dr. Michael McKee, 39, a vascular surgeon in Rockford, Illinois. Also Monique's ex-husband. They'd met at Ohio State in 2005, married in 2015, divorced in 2017. Friends told police Michael was abusive and obsessive. He'd told Monique she would always be his wife. On December 6th, while Monique and Spencer were at a football game, surveillance captured Michael at their empty house for several hours.Three weeks later they moved in. Six days after that, someone entered with no forced entry and shot them both with a silenced weapon around 3:50 AM. Michael's phone was left at his hospital in Illinois with no activity during the murder window—a seven-hour drive each way. Police found the SUV at the hospital with fresh scrape marks where a distinctive sticker had been. Found a suppressor-equipped firearm in his Chicago condo that matched the crime scene ballistics. Arrested him January 10th, 2026.Michael McKee was indicted on four counts of aggravated murder and one count of aggravated burglary. He's pleaded not guilty. If convicted, he faces life in prison. His trial is pending.FAIR USE DISCLAIMER:This video is created for educational and commentary purposes under Fair Use (17 U.S.C. § 107). All footage, images, and audio clips are used solely for transformative critique, analysis, and public interest reporting. We do not own the rights to any copyrighted materials shown. All rights belong to their respective owners. No copyright infringement intended.⚠️ Contains discussion of domestic violence and murder. Viewer discretion is advised.🔔 Subscribe to Beyond Guilty👍 Like if this case affected you💬 Comment your thoughts belowMichael McKee, Michael David McKee, Monique Tepe, Spencer Tepe, Columbus Ohio, vascular surgeon, domestic violence, ex husband murder, silencer suppressor, true crime 2026, double homicide, Beyond Guilty, Crime Of Passion, true crime, couple vilonce, divorce, divorce violence, ex wife murder, Columbus, Ohio, Trending, News

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    10 分
  • Charles Broomfield Blamed Intruders For Killing Jacqueline Neill One Set Of Footprints Destroyed His Lie
    2026/02/08

    At 6:00 AM on January 27th, 2026, Charles Broomfield's phone buzzed with a text from his fiancée Jacqueline Neill. "This ain't going to work out. You've got to find someplace else to go." They'd been together for eight years. Had a 5-year-old son together. But that morning, Jacqueline wanted him gone. They argued inside their Grand Rapids home. And according to Charles, something inside him just saw red.

    An hour and forty minutes later, a 911 dispatcher received a call from the house on Worden Street. The man on the phone was hysterical. Sobbing so hard she couldn't understand what he was saying. He finally managed to communicate that two people had broken into his house and someone was shot. Police arrived within minutes and found Charles Broomfield standing calmly in the living room. His fiancée Jacqueline was dead on the floor near him. Upstairs, officers found Jacqueline's two sons from a previous relationship—15-year-old Cameron Kilpatrick and 13-year-old Michael Kilpatrick—both shot dead in their beds.

    Charles told police an elaborate story about two intruders. One killed Jacqueline downstairs while the other followed him upstairs, took his gun from an unlocked box, threatened him and his 5-year-old son, then killed the teenage boys. He said he saw their footprints in the snow and that's when he called 911. But when police looked outside at the fresh snow, they found only one set of footprints. From the house to a gun box in the backyard and back again. Not three sets. One.

    Medical personnel examined the bodies and determined Jacqueline, Cameron, and Michael had been dead for at least 40 minutes before police arrived. A neighbor heard four gunshots maybe an hour before she saw police cars. Charles's timeline didn't match. Police tested the shell casings found at the scene—one near Jacqueline in the living room, more near the boys upstairs. All fired from the same gun. Charles claimed two suspects, but only one firearm killed everyone.

    In Charles's bedroom, officers found keys on a lanyard around his neck with a photo of his 5-year-old son. The lanyard read "Number One Dad." The keys fit the padlock on the gun box perfectly. At the police station, Charles eventually confessed to killing all three victims. He later gave a jailhouse interview where he said Jacqueline was one of the best things that ever happened to him, but after her text that morning, he snapped and blacked out. Then he changed his story again, claiming it wasn't him who pulled the trigger but one of his alternate personalities—Chuckie, Charlay, Charlie, Charles, or Chas. He has no criminal record and says he belongs in a psychiatric hospital, not prison. The prosecutor isn't buying it.

    The family had moved into that house just six days before the murders. Jacqueline's daughter is now raising her 5-year-old brother, the boy who survived that morning. Conrad Kilpatrick, Cameron and Michael's father, called his sons the most beautiful souls. A handwritten sign appeared in the yard: "Believe them, protect them." So here's what we know: Charles Broomfield was inconsolable on the 911 call but calm when police arrived. He created an elaborate story about intruders that fell apart in minutes. And now he claims multiple personalities made him do it. The question is whether any of it was real, or if it was all just another performance.

    ⚠️ Contains discussion of domestic violence and child death. Viewer discretion is advised.

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    Charles Broomfield, Jacqueline Neill, Cameron Kilpatrick, Michael Kilpatrick, Grand Rapids Michigan, Worden Street, Kent County, triple murder, domestic violence, fake 911 call, home invasion hoax, Number One Dad, alternate personality defense, true crime 2026, murder confession, crime documentary, true crime story, family annihilation, Beyond Guilty, Michigan crime

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    9 分
  • Teacher Naomi Craig Raped 12-Year-Old Boy, Got Pregnant, Husband Thought Baby Was His"
    2026/01/29

    In November and December 2025, Naomi Tekea Craig posed for three professional maternity photoshoots in Mandurah, Australia. Seven to eight months pregnant. Glowing. Photographers called her a Christina Aguilera doppelgänger. An absolute bombshell.

    She posted the photos to social media. Friends congratulated her. Her husband was thrilled. Their second child was almost here.

    Nine days after those photos were posted, on December 16th, 2025, Naomi Craig sexually abused a child for what would be the last time. A 13-year-old boy. The same boy she'd been raping since he was 12 years old. The same boy whose baby she was carrying in those maternity photos.

    The baby she was pregnant with in those glamorous photoshoots? Born January 8th, 2026. DNA testing confirmed the father wasn't Naomi Craig's husband. It was the 12-year-old boy she'd been raping for over a year.

    Naomi Tekea Craig was a 33-year-old music teacher at Frederick Irwin Anglican School in Mandurah, Western Australia. Married. Mother of one. Known to students and colleagues as Naomi Woods. Living what appeared to be an ordinary life in suburban Australia.

    But in October 2024, Naomi Craig began sexually abusing a 12-year-old boy. The abuse went on for 14 months. At least 15 separate incidents. And somewhere around early 2025, Naomi got pregnant.

    Her husband spent almost the entire pregnancy believing the baby was his. In late December, he was still calling it "our baby." He told people the baby would arrive in two weeks. He had no idea his wife was raping a child. No idea the baby wasn't his.

    The victim's friends say his behavior changed within months of the abuse starting. The once easy-going student became a troublemaker. Started talking about sexual things. Posted about older girlfriends. By September 2025, when Naomi Craig was five months pregnant, the 13-year-old boy was posting about fatherhood and the kind of dad he hoped to be.

    Just weeks before Naomi Craig gave birth, the boy posted on social media that there was "no DNA test needed." He already knew the baby was his. And according to school students around Mandurah, the boy still has plans to run away with Naomi Craig once her sentence is up. That's what grooming does.

    On January 27th, 2026, Naomi Tekea Craig appeared in Mandurah Local Court via video link. She'd given birth just two weeks earlier. Magistrate Clare Cullen read 15 charges aloud. Five counts of sexually penetrating a child under 13. Five counts of sexually penetrating a child over 13 and under 16. Persistent sexual conduct with a child. Possessing child exploitation material. Indecent dealings.

    After each charge, Naomi Craig responded the same way. "Guilty, your honour."

    She's prohibited from seeing anyone under 18 without supervision. The only exception is her newborn—the baby fathered by a rape victim who was 12 years old when she got pregnant.

    Naomi Craig's next court appearance is March 27th, 2026. In Western Australia, those who commit sexual offences against children can be sentenced to up to 20 years in prison. Given the number of charges, the age of the victim, and the fact that she became pregnant as a result of the abuse, Naomi Tekea Craig is likely looking at a lengthy sentence.

    But no sentence undoes what she did. No punishment gives that 13-year-old boy his childhood back. No verdict erases the fact that there's now a baby in the world conceived through the rape of a 12-year-old child.

    ⚠️ This video contains discussion of child sexual abuse. Viewer discretion is advised.

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    12 year old victim, child exploitation, pregnancy from abuse, true crime 2025, true crime Australia, crime documentary, teacher predator, grooming case, maternity photoshoot, DNA test, plea guilty, true crime story, Beyond Guilty, Australian true crime

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    10 分
  • Delbert Cornish Shoots Daughter Onyx, Watches Her Die 20 Minutes, Waits To Kill Son Lucian
    2026/01/29

    On December 10th, 2024, Delbert Cornish walked into a sporting goods store in Nampa, Idaho and bought a 9mm handgun. He had a plan. Kill his three teenage children—Onyx, Lucian, and Ian. Then kill himself.

    For eight months, Delbert thought about it. Different methods. Different times. On August 18th, 2025, he decided today was the day.

    That morning, 18-year-old Onyx Cornish was asleep in her bedroom after working a late shift at Wendy's in Caldwell. Delbert picked up the gun and walked toward her room. As he approached, Onyx opened the door. Surprised to see her father standing there with a weapon.

    Delbert raised the gun. Shot Onyx through the top of her head. She fell backward into her room.

    Then he sat down. And for the next 20 minutes, Delbert Cornish watched his daughter Onyx gasp for breath. Never called for help. Never tried to save her. Just watched her die.

    When it was over, he shot her cat Sammy. Took a hatchet to Onyx's bedroom. Covered her body in a Pride flag. And waited for his 15-year-old son Lucian Cornish to come home from school so he could kill him too.

    But Lucian fought back. At 15 years old, he stared down the barrel of his father's gun and refused to die. Lucian disarmed Delbert, escaped, and called 911.

    Delbert Cornish sat in court nearly a year later and apologized. Said he supported Onyx's queer identity with an open heart. Said once he saw Lucian's eyes, he couldn't follow through. The judge wasn't buying it.

    Before sentencing, Judge Brian Lee did something unusual. He toured Idaho's maximum security prison alone. Walked every cell. Saw where he was sending Delbert Cornish. Then he came back and sentenced him to die there.

    "The acts you committed were nothing less than pure evil," Judge Lee told Delbert.

    Onyx Cornish's family wore shirts with the number 3—her favorite number. Her mother Crystal Thompson said Onyx was a light in the world. Bold, fearless, full of life. And Delbert destroyed that.

    Lucian Cornish survived, but he lives with trauma. Visions of his father Delbert pulling the trigger. He listens to music with one headphone off because he thinks he still hears his dad's voice.

    On January 28th, 2026, justice was served. Delbert Cornish received fixed life. No parole. Die in prison. But no sentence brings Onyx Cornish back.

    ⚠️ This video contains discussion of violence, child death, and trauma. Viewer discretion is advised.

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    Delbert Cornish, Onyx Cornish, Lucian Cornish, true crime, Idaho murder, Caldwell Idaho, Canyon County, filicide, parent kills child, murder suicide attempt, true crime 2025, crime documentary, LGBTQ victim, Pride flag, Judge Brian Lee, maximum security prison, true crime story, crime investigation, brave survivor, 15 year old hero, family annihilation, Beyond Guilty, true crime channel

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    20 分
  • Mother Kills Son Hours Before His 18th Birthday After Failed Suicide Pact
    2026/01/29

    At 4:15 AM on February 21st, 2025, Katie Austin Lee called 911 from her Michigan apartment. "My son won't stop breathing," she told the dispatcher. "He made me promise to do it."

    When police arrived, they found 17-year-old Austin Dean Pikaart dead with his throat slit—just hours before his 18th birthday. His mother was holding a knife, begging officers to kill her.

    Katie claimed Austin didn't want to turn 18. That they'd made a pact. That she was saving him. But Austin can't confirm that story. He's dead. And all we have is the word of a woman who believed the FBI was watching her through mind-reading drones.

    For five years, Katie and Austin barely left their apartment. Isolated. Katie spent hours on social media, falling deeper into conspiracy theories about concentration camps and government surveillance. Her mental health collapsed. And on February 20th, she decided they would die together.

    The overdose failed. So she waited until he passed out. Then she took a knife and cut his throat while he slept.

    Austin's family doesn't believe he wanted to die. They say Katie is a monster, not a mother. But Katie says she loved him more than anything. That her broken brain thought she was protecting him.

    So what really happened in that apartment? Did a 17-year-old boy truly want to die the day before his birthday? Or did a mentally ill mother convince herself of a lie to justify murder?

    On January 19th, 2026, Katie Austin Lee was sentenced to 60-90 years in prison. The judge called her actions "pure evil." Austin's family wore shirts that said "Justice for Austin." And somewhere in Michigan, a mother sits in a cell knowing she'll die there.

    ⚠️ This video contains discussion of suicide, mental illness, and child death. Viewer discretion is advised.

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    14 分