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The grandfather of a slain Oklahoma burglar says homeowner had "unfair" advantage with AR15. (Image source: KTUL-TV)
Three Oklahoma teenagers were killed last week when they broke into a house and were met by a homeowner with an AR15. Now the grandfather of one of the teenagers is speaking out about his grandson’s death.
According to KTUL-TV, Leroy Schumacher, grandfather of 17-year-old Jacob Redfearn, believes the death of Redfearn was unjustified because the homeowner’s AR15 gave him an unfair advantage over the three burglars.
Speaking to KTUL, Schumacher acknowledged that breaking into a house was “stupid,” but death was not the appropriate consequence.
“What these three boys did was stupid,” Schumacher said. “They knew they could be punished for it but they did not deserve to die.”
“Brass knuckles against an AR-15? C’mon. Who was afraid for their life?” Schumacher said.
The homeowner who pulled the trigger has not been charged with any crimes because police say he acted in self-defense. But Schumacher reinterated his belief that the consequences literally did not fit the crime.
“There’s got to be a limit to that law, I mean he shot all three of them — there was no need for that,” he told KTUL.
In addition to Redfearn, 19-year old Maxwell Cook and 16-year old Jake Woodruff were also shot and killed in the home invasion. Getaway driver, 21-year-old Elizabeth Rodriguez, was uninjured but later arrested and charged with three counts of first-degree murder, one count of first-degree burglary and one count of second-degree burglary.
Police also say Rodriguez admitted to planning the burglary.
Rodriguez went to police in Broken Arrow, a Tulsa suburb, and told them she was involved.
Oklahoma state law says that first-degree murder occurs if “any other person takes the life of a human being during … first degree burglary.” Another condition is if a person causes the death of another person with “malice aforethought.”
In the end, Schumacher said he supports the Second Amendment right to bear arms but doesn’t agree with killing home invaders.
“These boys’ families are going to suffer with this the rest of their lives, we have to live with this the rest of our lives,” he said. “You can’t change history, but you can damn sure learn from it, and maybe some kids will learn from this.”
A 23-year-old Oklahoma man gunned down three teen burglars with an AR-15 rifle during a home invasion at his father’s house in Broken Arrow on Monday, police say.
Zachary Peters appears to have been acting in self defense when he killed the three intruders. They were wearing masks, were dressed in black and two of the three were armed, one with a knife and the other with brass knuckles, the Wagoner County Sheriff’s Office says. The teens ranged in age from 16 to 18 or 19, police say. Peters was identified in court documents obtained by KTUL-TV.
A woman who told police she drove the three teens to the house and planned to be the getaway driver is facing three counts of first-degree felony murder. Elizabeth Marie Rodriguez, 21, fled from the scene after hearing gunshots and later turned herself in at the Broken Arrow Police Department to give the officers the names of the dead teens, KOTV reports.
Clockwise from top left: Elizabeth Marie Rodriguez, Jacob Redfearn, Jake Woodruff and Max Cook. (Facebook)
Felony murder charges can be brought against someone who commits a felony resulting in death in Oklahoma regardless if they actually kill someone, according to state law. Rodriguez was also arrested on three counts of first-degree burglary.
Here’s what you need to know:
1. Peters Woke Up to the Sound of the Break-In, Grabbed the AR-15 & Opened Fire on the Intruders After Exchanging Words
Zach Peters told police he woke up to “loud bangs” when the three intruders broke a glass door in the rear of the house, the Tulsa World reports.
He armed himself with an AR-15 rifle and opened fire on the trio when he confronted them in a hallway after they briefly exchanged words, police said. Two of the burglars died in the home’s kitchen, while a third escaped to the driveway, where he collapsed and died.
“They were dressed in black, all had masks on, and all had gloves on,” Deputy Nick Mahoney told reporters, adding that the initial investigation suggests the teens planned to burglarize the house. “There was a short exchange of words and then gunfire happened.”
Peters lives in the house on Clearview Drive in Broken Arrow with his father, the homeowner, and his mother.
“I shot two of them, now I am barricaded in my bedroom,” Peters said in the call. “I can hear one of them talking.”
Police said all three teens were killed when Peters fired at them with an AR-15 rifle. Two died in the kitchen and a third collapsed and died in the driveway outside.
You can listen to the call below:
A neighbor, Leon Simmons, told KTUL-TV he heard the gunfire.
“Well, I thought it was thunder, I just heard something, I had the doors closed,” Simmons told the news station.
“The shots were so loud — loud enough that I ran to the window to see what had happened,” another neighbor, who didn’t wish to give her name, told the Tulsa World. “Something in me knew it was gunshots, but I didn’t know what had happened until I went to leave my house and saw all the police officers.”
Max Cook, Jacob Redfearn and Jake Woodruff have been identified as the teens fatally shot after police say they broke into a home in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma.
2. The Woman Accused of Being the Getaway Driver Planned the Burglary & Knew Peters by Name, Police Say
Elizabeth Marie Rodriguez.
Elizabeth Marie Rodriguez, the 21-year-old woman who admitted to being the getaway driver, is also accused of planning the burglary, KTUL-TV reports. According to court documents obtained by the news station, Rodriguez had prior knowledge about the house and knew Zachary Peters by his first name.
“Rodriguez planned the burglary and took the three suspects to the residence on two separate occasions on today’s date wanting to steal items,” police said in a probable cause affidavit. “Rodriguez instructed the three suspects to burglarize the residence while she waited in the driveway in her vehicle until she heard gunshots then fled the scene.”
According to court documents, Rodriguez turned herself in after seeing news of the shooting on TV because she wanted police to be able to tell the families of the three teens about what happened. She refused to give further information to investigators. But another witness has given police information, according to the court documents.
“We know somehow they have some acquaintance, but we don’t know how or why,” Deputy Nick Mahoney told the Tulsa World, of the relationship between Rodriguez and Peters.
Rodriguez is being held in jail without bail pending formal charges. Her arraignment was delayed on Tuesday because the investigation is continuing. She was arrested on probable cause, but the “matter is still under investigation,” prosecutors said.
Elizabeth Marie Rodriguez, 21, is accused of setting up a burglary that led to the shooting deaths of three teens, including her boyfriend, in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma.
3. The District Attorney’s Office Will Determine if Charges Are Filed Against Peters
Zachary Peters volunteered to go to the Wagoner Sheriff’s Office to give a statement to investigators, KTUL-TV reports.
“Preliminary investigation, it looks like it was self-defense,” Deputy Nick Mahoney told the news station.
The case could fall under Oklahoma’s “Make My Day” law, which says a resident has the right to use deadly force if an intruder has entered or is entering the resident’s home, the Tulsa World reports.
The Wagoner County District Attorney’s office will decide if charges are filed against Peters.
“This matter is currently still under investigation. The district attorney’s office is in consult with the Wagoner County Sheriff’s Office for advice on this matter and will continue to work with the Wagoner County Sheriff’s Office in this matter,” First District Attorney Jack Thorp said Tuesday at a press conference. “We do not anticipate filing formal charges until possibly later in this week or early next week.
“At that time there will be a final decision,” Thorp told reporters. “I know there’s questions that have been posed regarding ‘Stand Your Ground’ law as well as the application of the felony murder rule. We hope to hope to answers those questions with our formal filing decision when we reach that decision.”
Thorp said “there’s a lot of things to look at in this case.”
When asked about possible charges against Peters, Thorp said, “at this time, all charges and all the information is going to be reviewed.”
Thorp said, “This is obviously a triple homicide, and so we want to make sure that we cross all of our t’s and dot all of our i’s and insure that we have the maximum amount of information before we make formal decisions. It is complex.”
4. Peters Works at a Local Airline & Is a Criminal Justice Student at Tulsa Community College
Zachary Peters. (Facebook)
Zach Peters works at Omni Air International, a local airline, as a crew schedule, according to his Linkedin profile. He also works at QuickFlight Services at Tulsa International Airport as an operations agent, he says on Linkedin.
He is a student at Tulsa Community College, where he is pursuing an associate’s degree in criminal justice. He is set to graduate this year.
Peters graduated from Broken Arrow High School in 2014.
“I have work experience in both retail and aviation with customer service experience in both fields. I also have my private pilot’s license, and studied the German language for four years,” he says on Linkedin.
Antonia Lopez, a 16-year-old girl who admitted to killing her newborn baby by throwing her out of a second-story window, was sentenced to probation, not prison.
5. Neighbors Say There Have Been Numerous Burglaries Recently in Peters’ Normally Quiet Neighborhood
Wagoner County Sheriff’s Office spokesman Deputy Nick Mahoney said a triple homicide is extremely rare in the quiet county.
“This is not something that happens frequently here,” Mahoney told KJRH-TV. “We don’t generally have triple shootings inside Wagoner County. This is a very nice neighborhood and the neighbors have all been concerned. It’s not something that happens.”
But neighbors say there have been numerous burglaries in the area in recent weeks and reported other suspicious activity.
“Within the past six months we’ve had two or three burglaries out here,” Leon Simmons, a neighbor, told KTUL-TV. Police say they haven’t connected Monday’s incident to any other break-ins.
“We’ve noticed a lot more people driving slow through the neighborhood, more than one at a time,” Simmons told KOTV.
Another neighbor, who didn’t want to be identified, told the Tulsa World she saw a suspicious black truck in the neighborhood, near where the burglary occurred on Monday, in the hours leading up to the incident.