Orlando Sentinel

Sheriff on accused family of killers: ‘They left a trail’

Ohio officials hint custody dispute had a role in 2016 deaths

- By Angie Wang and Andrew Welsh-Huggins

WAVERLY, Ohio — Authoritie­s arrested a family of four this week in the gruesome 2016 slayings of eight people from another family in rural Ohio, a crime that prosecutor­s suggested stemmed from a custody dispute.

The announceme­nt marked the culminatio­n of a massive investigat­ive effort that began after seven adults and a teenage boy were found shot in the head at four separate homes in April 2016. The killings terrified local residents and spawned rumors that it was a drug hit.

Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine said a grand jury indicted the four on aggravated murder charges and they could be sentenced to death if convicted. DeWine gave scant detail about why the victims were killed, but he said the custody of a child played a role. He added that the accused had planned the murders for months.

“There certainly was an obsession with custody, obsession with control of children,” DeWine said.

Those indicted were Edward “Jake” Wagner, 26; his father, George “Billy” Wagner III, 47; Billy Wagner’s wife, Angela Wagner, 48; and George Wagner IV, 27.

The four lived near the scenes of the massacre about 60 miles south of Columbus and had long been considered chief suspects, DeWine said.

“They did this quickly, coldly, calmly and very carefully. But not carefully enough,” said Pike County Sheriff Charles Reader. “They left traces. They left a trail.”

The victims were Jake Wagner’s longtime former girlfriend, Hanna Rhoden, 19, who shared custody of their daughter, her parents, siblings and other relatives.

Rhoden had been in bed with her newborn when she was killed. The baby wasn’t hurt.

A coroner said all but one of the victims was shot more than once, including two people shot five times and one shot nine times. Some also had bruising, consistent with the first 911 caller’s descriptio­n of two victims appearing to have been beaten.

“I just might tell you this is just the most bizarre story I’ve ever seen in being involved in law enforcemen­t,” said DeWine, who was elected governor earlier this month.

A lawyer for the Wagner family members maintained their innocence.

DeWine and Reader said the Wagners studied the layouts of the victims’ properties, as well as their habits, routines, sleeping locations and pets. The indictment­s accuse the Wagners of tampering with phones, cameras, a gun silencer, shell casings and parts of a home security system.

DeWine said there was “absolutely no evidence” anyone else was involved.

Investigat­ors scrambling to determine who targeted the Rhoden family and why conducted more than 130 interviews and processed over 100 pieces of evidence and 550 tips, with assistance from more than 20 law enforcemen­t agencies. The last significan­t piece of evidence was collected Oct. 30, DeWine said.

First mention of the suspects came in June of 2017, when authoritie­s announced they were seeking informatio­n about the Wagners, including details on their personal and business interactio­ns, and conversati­ons people may have had with them.

None was named a suspect at the time. Both Jake Wagner and Angela Wagner told the Cincinnati Enquirer that they were not involved in the April 2016 killings.

Angela Wagner said what happened was devastatin­g and Hanna Rhoden had been like a daughter to her. She said that her husband, Billy, and Christophe­r Rhoden Sr., one of the victims, had been more like brothers than friends.

The Wagner family lived in Peebles, Ohio, at the time of the killings but later moved to Alaska, returning in the spring.

Pike County Prosecutor Rob Junk cautioned that the case could last several years, and it’s possible the trial relocated because of the publicity.

The mothers of Angela Wagner and “Billy” Wagner also were arrested in Ohio and charged with misleading investigat­ors. Jake Wagner also was charged with unlawful sexual conduct with a minor for having sexual contact with Rhoden when she was 15 and he was 20, DeWine’s office said.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO/AP ?? Mourners gather around caskets for members of the Rhoden family found shot to death in 2016 near Piketon, Ohio.
JOHN MINCHILLO/AP Mourners gather around caskets for members of the Rhoden family found shot to death in 2016 near Piketon, Ohio.
 ??  ?? Edward Wagner
Edward Wagner

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