A 14-year-old boy shot and killed
his grandparents during a robbery-and-murder scheme concocted with his
close friends so that he could 'run off with their money.'
Justin Staton, 14, (pictured above) was charged as an adult with two counts of capital murder in the July 22 deaths of his grandparents Robert and Patricia Cogdell at their home in Conway, Arkansas.
Justin Staton, 14, (pictured above) was charged as an adult with two counts of capital murder in the July 22 deaths of his grandparents Robert and Patricia Cogdell at their home in Conway, Arkansas.
His accomplice, Hunter Drexler, 17, was also charged with the same count
and court documents reveal that he had egged on his friend to kill his
grandparents.
According to another 17-year-old boy who was at the Codgell's home at
the time of the attack, the murder plan had been conceived while all
three were in juvenile jail together.
'Justin's plan was to shoot and kill his grandparents, split a large sum
of money and credit cards between the three of them and then they would
all run away. Justin estimated their take at $50,000 to $90,000.'
According to police, the hideous crime was carried out about 30 miles
north of Little Rock when police said the teenagers shot the couple and
dumped their bodies in a wooded area nearby.
An affidavit filed with the charges, revealed that Staton told officers
that, after complaining to Drexler about his grandparents, Drexler
suggested that he shoot them.
A 17-year-old girl also at the home when the Cogdells were shot told
police that Robert Cogdell didn't die immediately and was 'choking and
gurgling' on the floor outside his bedroom.
'She told Justin that he needed to do something about the noise Robert
was making and suggested that Robert be put out of his misery,' the
affidavit said. 'Justin walked over and shot Robert one or two times.'
Drexler and the other teenagers were detained in Texas days after the
killings and found with some of Robert Cogdell's personal and work
credit cards.
The other teenagers were not charged with any crimes.
Without speaking specifically about Staton or Drexler, Prosecutor Cody
Hiland blamed a culture that would let young people behave outside
societal norms.
'If the law would allow for you to come into our juvenile courts, you
would see young men and young women who are lonely, and they are angry
and they are bitter, because their mom and dad have checked out to
pursue whatever immediate gratification is driving them at the time,'
Hiland said.
'It's the breakdown of the family. Faith issues. Societal issues,' he
said. 'I can tell you that our juvenile courts are full and that one day
we will reap a bitter harvest when they grow up.'
After the crime, Staton quickly emerged as a suspect according to police.
In May, the Cogdells had called police because the teenager was threatening suicide and had become verbally abusive.
In January, Robert Cogdell and Staton had fought after finding marijuana
in the boy's room and $300 missing from the grandfather's wallet.
Staton had lived with his grandparents but was arrested at his mother's house with $1,540 in a pants pocket.
During one of two interviews with police on July 22, Staton cried a little and said, 'I'm so sorry. I don't know why I did it.'
Staton, of Conway, and Drexler, of Clinton, were also charged with two
counts each of aggravated robbery, theft of property and abuse of a
corpse.
Daily Mail