Current:Home > ScamsCalifornia family sues sheriff’s office after deputy kidnapped girl, killed her mother, grandparents -ChatGPT
California family sues sheriff’s office after deputy kidnapped girl, killed her mother, grandparents
View
Date:2025-04-14 09:51:24
LOS ANGELES (AP) — A California family is suing a Virginia sheriff’s department that hired a deputy who sexually extorted and kidnapped a 15-year-old girl at gunpoint, killed her mother and grandparents, and set their home on fire.
Austin Lee Edwards, 28, died by suicide during a shootout with law enforcement on Nov. 25, hours after the violence in Riverside, a city about 50 miles (80 kilometers) southeast of downtown Los Angeles. The teenager was rescued.
Edwards had been hired as a Washington County sheriff’s deputy in Virginia just nine days before the killings, even though a 2016 court order prohibited him from buying, possessing and transporting a firearm. The court order stemmed from a psychiatric detention after Edwards cut himself and threatened to kill his father.
The girl’s aunt, Mychelle Blandin, and her minor sister filed the lawsuit Thursday in federal court in the Central District of California against the Washington County Sheriff’s Office and Edwards’ estate. The lawsuit says the department was negligent in hiring Edwards and seeks damages through a jury trial. The sheriff’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Authorities have said Edwards had posed online as a 17-year-old boy while communicating with the teenager, a form of deception known as “catfishing,” and asked her to send nude photos of herself.
The girl stopped responding to his messages, prompting Edwards to travel across the country to her home in California. The lawsuit alleges that he showed his law enforcement badge and service weapon to Mark Winek and Sharon Winek, the girl’s grandparents, and said he was a detective and needed to question the family.
The suit says Edwards slit the throat of the teen’s mother, Brooke Winek, and tried to asphyxiate her grandparents by tying them up with bags over their heads. At least one of them was still moving when he set their home on fire, the lawsuit says.
Blandin said the killings “destroyed our family.”
“I am bringing this lawsuit because my family wants to know how Edwards was hired as a sheriff’s deputy and given a gun when the courts expressly ordered he could not possess a firearm,” Blandin said in a statement. “He used his position as a sheriff to gain access to my parents’ home, where he killed them and my sister. I want the Washington County Sheriff’s Office held accountable for giving a mentally unfit person a badge and a gun.”
Edwards was hired by the Virginia State Police in July 2021 and resigned nine months later. He was then hired as a deputy in Washington County last year.
The slayings — and their connection to Virginia — prompted Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin to ask the state’s inspector general for a “full investigation,” which found that a background investigator for the state police failed to check the correct database that would have pulled up the mental health order.
The state police, which is not listed as a defendant in the lawsuit, has since changed its employment processes and background investigation policies and training.
A spokesperson for the state police did not immediately respond to a request for comment Thursday.
veryGood! (741)
Related
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- How a Contrarian Scientist Helped Trump’s EPA Defy Mainstream Science
- Tracking health threats, one sewage sample at a time
- Why anti-abortion groups are citing the ideas of a 19th-century 'vice reformer'
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Deforestation Is Getting Worse, 5 Years After Countries and Companies Vowed to Stop It
- Eminem's Daughter Hailie Jade Announces Fashionable Career Venture
- Mike Ivie, former MLB No. 1 overall draft pick, dies at 70
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- What Does ’12 Years to Act on Climate Change’ (Now 11 Years) Really Mean?
Ranking
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- U.S. charges El Chapo's sons and other Sinaloa cartel members in fentanyl trafficking
- Small U.S. Solar Businesses Suffering from Tariffs on Imported Chinese Panels
- A robot answers questions about health. Its creators just won a $2.25 million prize
- Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
- In New Jersey Solar Decision, Economics Trumped Ideology
- San Francisco, Oakland Sue Oil Giants Over Climate Change
- Supreme Court extends freeze on changes to abortion pill access until Friday
Recommendation
Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
NASA spacecraft captures glowing green dot on Jupiter caused by a lightning bolt
Tracking health threats, one sewage sample at a time
Why millions of kids aren't getting their routine vaccinations
Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
Climate Change Is Shifting Europe’s Flood Patterns, and These Regions Are Feeling the Consequences
Major Tar Sands Oil Pipeline Cancelled, Dealing Blow to Canada’s Export Hopes
Why the VA in Atlanta is throwing 'drive-through' baby showers for pregnant veterans