A 17-year-old is accused of killing his parents with a hammer and then call home to dozens of friends to a party while the parents' bodies lying in the bedroom, police said on Monday in Port Saint Lucie (Florida). Tyler Hadley is charged with two counts of first degree murder, a fact that would have happened on Saturday, officials said.
The young man held without bail at a juvenile detention center. The parents, Blake and Mary-Jo Hadley, believed to have been beaten with a hammer on their heads and torsos sometime after your child invite their friends to a "mega party" that night at his home around 1 : 15 pm Saturday. Researchers believe that the parents objected to the party, and the young man then attacked them, hid the bodies in the master bedroom just before the festivities begin.
About 60 people attended the party that night, according to Port St. Lucie Police spokesman Tom Nichols. The noise and the music was strong enough to cause a noise complaint and visiting police officers. A patrol arrived at the house at 1:30 am on Sunday to warn people about noise, but the celebration was already finished and the agents were removed, said Nichols.
Then, authorities received an anonymous call about an alleged murder in this place and returned home at 4:20 am. After reviewing several rooms they found the bodies covered with towels, files, books and other household items, including the hammer would have been killed. The mother, 47, was an elementary school teacher. The father, 54, worked for a power company.
The young man held without bail at a juvenile detention center. The parents, Blake and Mary-Jo Hadley, believed to have been beaten with a hammer on their heads and torsos sometime after your child invite their friends to a "mega party" that night at his home around 1 : 15 pm Saturday. Researchers believe that the parents objected to the party, and the young man then attacked them, hid the bodies in the master bedroom just before the festivities begin.
About 60 people attended the party that night, according to Port St. Lucie Police spokesman Tom Nichols. The noise and the music was strong enough to cause a noise complaint and visiting police officers. A patrol arrived at the house at 1:30 am on Sunday to warn people about noise, but the celebration was already finished and the agents were removed, said Nichols.
Then, authorities received an anonymous call about an alleged murder in this place and returned home at 4:20 am. After reviewing several rooms they found the bodies covered with towels, files, books and other household items, including the hammer would have been killed. The mother, 47, was an elementary school teacher. The father, 54, worked for a power company.
No comments:
Post a Comment