Ariz. Boy Charged With Murder Of Father
8-Year-Old Gave Conflicting Stories, But Ultimately Confessed In Video, Police Say
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Video
8-year-old's murder confession
New video released shows the apparent confession of an 8-year-old Arizona boy suspected in the murder of his father and another man. Bill Whitaker reports.
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Photo
This photograph taken Nov. 8, 2008 shows the house where Vincent Romero, 29, and Timothy Romans, 39, of San Carlos, Ariz were found fatally shot in St. Johns, Ariz. on Wednesday (AP Photo/Dana Felthauser)
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The boy gives conflicting accounts of the shootings during an hourlong video of his interview with authorities in St. Johns, but the video ends with him admitting to pulling the trigger. He then buries his head in his jacket.
"I'm going to go to juvie," the boy says after an officer asks what he's thinking.
The roughly 12-minute video posted Monday night on Phoenix television station KTVK's Web site shows part of the questioning the boy underwent as authorities in the eastern Arizona community of St. Johns investigated the Nov. 5 killings. The station said it got the video from the prosecutor's office in Apache County, where the shootings occurred.
"There was blood all over his face, I think," the boy said in the video, referring to his father. "And I think I touched him."
The boy has been charged in juvenile court with two counts of murder in the deaths of his father, Vincent Romero, and Timothy Romans, who rented a room there and was Romero's co-worker.
A defense attorney has said police overreached in their questioning of the boy, who was not represented by a family member or lawyer during the interview.
"I think they're going to have a problem getting that statement into court," defense attorney Benjamin Brewer said earlier this month before a judge issued a gag order in the case. "I believe there were many violations in regards to how it was obtained."
The gag order does not extend to the release of reports or recordings that would be considered public records in Arizona.
The shootings occurred Nov. 5 in an eastern Arizona community about 170 miles northeast of Phoenix.
The boy is due in court Wednesday for a hearing. He is being held in a juvenile jail.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.



NEXT!
Police say the boy shot his father Vincent Romero and "
Well... we KNOW his last name is Romero so OOPS I guess they slipped up!
NEXT!
Posted by newster1 at 08:53 AM : Nov 18, 2008
LMAO!!!!
After listening to the interview for a few minutes, I have a hard time believing this kid killed his Daddy, and another man.
Not saying he did, or didn''t. Just hard to imagine that he did.
Would not the angle of the shot say something? The "blood" on the boy if he touch the father would not be the same as "splatter" from a shot...something''s weird.
I do not know if the boy is guilty or innocent but we are DEFINATELY missing some pertiant information.
dragonmouse,
Yes, we are missing some information. Blood spatter and GSR test take time. It does not happen overnight. Plus, do we really need to know information in an ongoing investigation. The answer is no. None of my business or yours until the boy, police and the family knows what happened that day.
getoffmine1,
It is normally referred to as lying. This kid has the makings of a psychopath.
DaVicar1,
That''s right...murder is not wrong as long as it fits your religious or moral beliefs.
You''re an idiot.
Now there is an image of police mentality, procedure followed reqardless of situation, law and order society based on written words, not ingrained principles of human rights and dignity. You do not make one tragedy better by committing another tradegy.
The shackles are necessary for compliance with guidelines that must be uniformly applied to all. Otherwise, there could be ACLU charges for "special" or "biased" treatment.
These cops violated procedure and they know it...
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Posted by sdcamom at 12:31 PM : Nov 18, 2008
+ report abuse
HUH? you quit teaching because someone''s kid was violent? That makes no sense. A *good* teacher would have reported that child to their parents AND the authorities since you were aware of crimes being committed (harm against another as well as against animals are crimes) and as a teacher, you had a DUTY to do that. The kid would have been taken out of the situation and you would have done your part in getting that child the help he needs. Instead, you quit and he''s probably a bigger psychopath now. Congrats to you.
As for this child... something is fishy here... sounds like the poliec picked up the kid and got his so dam scared that he''ll say anything now. This smacks of police laziness on hunting down the real killers. It doesn''t make sense to me that an 8 year old would gun down 2 people. None whatsoever.
In the dumpster. Halloween was just a couple of weeks ago.
I do know my obligations, both legal and moral. I DID report him to the authorities. In the case of my student, no one wanted to believe an 8 year old was capable of such behavior. I quit, because when I tried to get the child help, I was told I had stepped out of line. I could quit, or get fired. This was in private school....the child''s parents already knew his behavior would not be tolerated in public school. Instead of getting their child help, they targeted the teacher....You are right about one thing though...because of my failure in getting him help, he is probably a bigger pschyopath now....congrats to me.
Yeah, great idea. Hang the 8 year old. You''re an idiot.
Not that hard to believe if you know that his father taught him to shoot and how to "kill" praire dogs---------------
Uh... so What?! Just because a kid is taught how to use a gun correctly and responsibly, doesn''t mean he''s a killer. My father taught my 8 year old son what a bullet does to a ground hog. He also taught my son how to aim, shoot, clean and care for his guns. My son is now 15 and has the utmost respect for his guns and for the people around him during hunting season.
And...
I''m still not convinced the boy had anything to do with this at all. How many times were they shot? Does an 8 year old have pinpoint accuracy? I think the police are fishing down the wrong stream.
That is a very unfair observation, Neenga. The truth is that MANY parents would believe a teacher over their little darling. The fact is that the kids of -these- parents aren''t the problem. The kids of parents who believe that their little darling could do no wrong are the problem.
My wife observed a similar situation when subbing in High School many years ago - parents didn''t want to believe their kid was at fault. She wasn''t asked to leave, though. About 5 years after that we were watching the evening news one day and a report came on of a firefighter who had been arrested for arson. It was the same kid.
I hope it comes back and slaps them in the face.
I do aplaud you for trying to bring the kid''s attention to someone else. Do not feel bad or let others make you feel bad about what happened or the choices you had to make. You can only control your actions, and no one else''s.
It bothers me that so few realize what the schools are like today. Some teachers actually watch kids get bullied by others and then afterwads tell the victim "well, maybe you shouldn''t have fought back, it only made him angrier" or "well he comes from a broken home so he''s hurting inside". Yeah, right, and I didn''t?? Yes, I was a victim of a school bully at the age of 11-12. The reason no one did anything about his behavior?--his parents were divorced and he''d been placed with the county.
Since I was still with my mother, I was told to be nicer to him, and if he wanted to beat on me "I should let him". Here I was a girl and 6 inches shorter and I was supposed to let a boy beat up on me if it made him feel better.
Oh yes, things like that happen. Just because you don''t see it, you didn''t go through it, doesn''t mean it didn''t happen.
Is it possible he shot his father and the other man, I would say yes since he was taught how to handle a firearm.
Does he realize what "murder" is?? He might. This is one case where I am going to say this--
If he shot the two men in a premeditated act--jail him, give him counselling, and don''t let him out amonst society for the rest of his life.
If he didn''t commit the crime, find out who did and get this child some help so he can heal from this tragedy.
The trouble is that the child knows that his parents will stick up for him no matter what and if he tells them some very good lies that they will believe him over anyone else. A child like this learns to lie very effectively very early..
My husband knows that he is generally in for a bad time when a parent says that their child could not possibly have done it and that their child NEVER lies.. Which of course means that the parents are calling the teacher a liar and the child learns that adults are fools, and cn be manipulated for his good..
And, there does seem to be some police misconduct. Interviewing a child without a lawyer, social worker or his mother present seems highly suspicious or illegal in my book.
Even a social worker would have been better than no one. They are supposed to work in the interests of the child at all levels, or so we are led to believe.
I am not saying that he hasnt as if he was sexually abused by these two men it is possible that he snapped, I sure would.. He will probably get a far greater sentence than those two 9 year old animals in England did who took that two year old little boy onto the rail way line and stoned and hit him until the train came and ran over him..
Posted by thgdriver1 at 06:13 PM : Nov 18, 2008
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Remember he is a child of 8 yrs. old. Children should not be tried for murder in the 1st degree.
Posted by truthrocks at 09:15 PM : Nov 18, 2008
and your book is wrong. In the case of legal matters, persons under the age of majority are usually NOT allowed to speak for themselves and a person as young as 8 would not have understood the word "incrimination" or the ramifications of waiving Miranda rights. In short, just as contracts signed by children are usually not legal, any confession wrung from a child without benefit of counsel is not legal. Get a better understanding of the law--children cannot waive rights since it is usually illegal for anyone under 14 to9 EVER represent themselves in any legal matter. The police really botched this.
Posted by truthrocks at 09:15 PM : Nov 18, 2008
Police are NOT asllowed to ask ANY questions whatsoever without reciting the Miranda rights. This is why they recite it as soon as they arrest a person. Any questions asked after the reading of the Miranda rights is a signal that the individual is waiving those rights. If they failed to Mirandize that child, they are wrong and it will be thrown out--if they did Mirandize that boy, they are wrong, because it can be ruled that the child was too young to know what he was being told. This is a catch -22 and almost looks like the police are deliberately trying to destroy their own case.
all if this may be a tactic to get the boy off and ensure that no one else can try him for the same thing. (If it goes to trial and he is acquitted or the case is dismissed due to procedural misconduct--the case is tainted and the boy walks) To defy the court gag order in the case of a juvenile is highly suspicious.
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An 8-year-old (hunter) doesn''t understand what murder is?
Get real.
all if this may be a tactic to get the boy off and ensure that no one else can try him for the same thing. (If it goes to trial and he is acquitted or the case is dismissed due to procedural misconduct--the case is tainted and the boy walks) To defy the court gag order in the case of a juvenile is highly suspicious."
First, tape was not leaked. It was turned over to the media through a public records release according to CNN. Second, the person being questioned has to request the attorney and unless you have been already arrested for the crime and in custody, the police do not have to advise you of your rights. The question is going to be "Was the kid arrested and then interrogated without rights advisement?" or were they merely just doing an interview without the kid actually being in police custody? I
In checking with Arizona''s juvenile criminal ordinance it doesn''t appear that the police have to have a parent present to question a juvenile.
Wrong!
Ding! Thank you for playing!
These cops browbeat an 8-year old for hours until he agreed with anything and everything they said. That 11:00:00 timestamp wasn`t noon. They had the kid up at midnight the day of the "non-arrest".
These cops are idiots.
In checking with Arizona''''s juvenile criminal ordinance it doesn''''t appear that the police have to have a parent present to question a juvenile.
Posted by pbcityvet at 01:51 AM : Nov 19, 2008
Ahem--when there is an ongoing case with a gag order there is no "public record release" public record releases usually take place some time after a case is no longer relevant. If info can be obtained via a "public record release" in an ongoing case ; a gag order would have no meaning and would not have been issued.
You need to first differentiate between adults and children because the law is not the same--but even if brought in for questioning, a person must be advised that things they say can and will be used against them in a court of law--this is a matter of legal procedure--anything that is said without that is hearsay and off the record. In the case of a child, it gets really sticky because the police must prove that the boy understood that he did not have to answer questions and had to also understand the meaning of incrimination. This was an 8 year old--this case will probably be thrown out--if not by the first court--it will be thrown out on appeal in either the state or federal supreme court--there is a reason for procedure and no state can interrogate any individual without establishing their rights and giving them a choice--a child would not be brought in for such questioning due to the problem with them understanding the situation--they would have to have counsel. AZ law is no exception to this.
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by perk235
November 19, 2008 10:07 AM EST
- In the case of a child, it gets really sticky because the police must prove that the boy understood that he did not have to answer questions and had to also understand the meaning of incrimination. This was an 8 year old.....
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See all 49 Commentsposted by harbinger09
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Although some think that these rules protect criminals, the recent release of 6 people in Nebraska, 5 of which had confessed to a crime they didn''t commit, shows how important rules of engagement are.