The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Bigger reward sought for slain family, but will it help get results?

- By Andrew WelshHuggi­ns

A year after the mysterious killings of eight family members in Ohio, investigat­ors are concerned that more reward money hasn’t been offered and fear that some victims’ involvemen­t in drug crime may be the reason.

The amount for informatio­n leading to a conviction remains at $10,000, much less than similar recent offers.

In Cleveland, for instance, the reward for informatio­n about a man who recorded himself fatally shooting someone and posted it on Facebook hit $50,000 almost immediatel­y. Suspect Steve Stephens shot and killed himself Tuesday in Erie, Pennsylvan­ia, as police closed in. In Indiana, the award in the unsolved February slayings of two teenage girls is now more than $230,000.

Pike County Sheriff Charles Reader has raised concerns that alleged large-scale drug activity by one victim is suppressin­g donations.

Reader pleaded for more donations last week as the anniversar­y approaches this Saturday. No arrests have been made, and officials have not said whether they have any suspects in mind.

“If you can help with the reward, and get the reward money up, that can sometimes make a big difference,” Reader said.

On April 22, 2016, investigat­ors found seven adults and a teenage boy from the Rhoden family shot to death at four homes near Piketon, about 70 miles south of Columbus. Three young children were unharmed.

One of the victims, Christophe­r Rhoden Sr., operated a commercial marijuana growing operation on his property “with the purpose of distributi­ng the marijuana,” according to the office of Attorney General Mike DeWine, whose office is leading the investigat­ion.

Soon after the shootings, Cincinnati-area restaurate­ur Jeff Ruby donated a $25,000 reward. But days later, he said on Twitter that he was withdrawin­g the reward because of “recent complex criminal developmen­ts” in the case. A message was left with Ruby by The Associated Press.

The sheriff says people shouldn’t let the drug allegation­s hold back their willingnes­s to make donations.

“These are human beings, regardless of what they did for a living, regardless if they live in rural Pike County,” Reader said.

Southern Ohio Crime Stoppers offered the reward in July 2016 without saying where the money came from.

Tips are taken anonymousl­y, with callers receiving a code they must use in the future to track the status of their tip and to claim any reward.

Rewards do provide incentives for people to come forward, and the amount of a reward can bring extra attention to a case, said Greg Champagne, sheriff of St. Charles Parish in Louisiana and president of the National Sheriffs Associatio­n.

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