The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Arrests made in slayings of family

- By Angie Wang and Andrew Welsh-Huggins The Associated Press Welsh-Huggins reported from Columbus. Associated Press Writers John Seewer in Toledo and Dylan T. Lovan in Louisville, Kentucky, contribute­d to this report.

A family of four was arrested Tuesday in the gruesome 2016 slayings of eight people from another family.

WAVERLY >> A family of four was arrested Tuesday in the gruesome 2016 slayings of eight people from another family in rural Ohio in a crime that prosecutor­s suggested stemmed from a custody dispute, authoritie­s said.

Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine said a grand jury indicted the four on aggravated murder charges and could be sentenced to death if convicted.

DeWine gave scant detail about why the victims were killed, but said the custody of a young child played a role. He said they had carefully planned the killings for months.

“There certainly was an obsession with custody, obsession with control of children,” said DeWine, who earlier this month was elected governor.

He added: “I just might tell you this is just the most bizarre story I’ve ever seen in being involved in law enforcemen­t.”

Authoritie­s said marijuana growing operations were found at three of the four crime scenes. That’s not uncommon in this corner of Appalachia but stoked rumors that the slayings were related to drugs, one of many theories on possible motives that percolated in public locally.

DeWine said Tuesday “there’s an undercurre­nt of drugs” in the case, but there’s no evidence the killings were drug-related. He wouldn’t elaborate.

Arrested were four members of the Wagner family, who lived near the scenes of the killing about 60 miles south of Columbus. They’ve long been considered the chief suspects, DeWine said.

One of those arrested was Edward “Jake” Wagner, 26, who was a long-time former boyfriend of 19-year-old Hanna Rhoden, one of the eight victims, and shared custody of their daughter at the time of the massacre.

Wagner was also charged with unlawful sexual conduct with a minor for having sexual contact with Rhoden when she was 15

years old and he was 20 years old, DeWine’s office said.

The others arrested were Wagner’s father, George “Billy” Wagner III, 47; his wife, 48-year-old Angela Wagner; and George Wagner, 27.

Police in Kentucky say the FBI tracked “Billy” Wagner to Lexington, where he was arrested without incident at around 12:30 p.m. Tuesday. Lexington police weren’t sure if he had been living in the area.

The mothers of Angela Wagner and “Billy” Wagner also were arrested in Ohio and charged with misleading investigat­ors.

It’s the culminatio­n of a massive investigat­ive effort since seven adults and a teenage boy were found shot in the head at four homes in April 2016.

Investigat­ors scrambling to determine who targeted the Rhoden family and why had conducted over 130 interviews and processed over 100 pieces of evidence and 550 tips, while getting assistance from more than 20

law enforcemen­t agencies.

The last significan­t piece of evidence was collected on Oct. 30, DeWine said.

DeWine and Pike County Sheriff Charles Reader painted a picture of a meticulous­ly planned crime. The suspects studied the layouts of the victims’ properties, habits, routines, sleeping locations and pets, they said.

The indictment­s accuse the Wagners of tampering with phones, cameras, a gun silencer, shell casings and parts of a home security system.

“They did this quickly,

coldly, calmly, and very carefully. But not carefully enough,” Reader said. “They left traces. They left a trail.”

Authoritie­s in June of 2017 announced they were seeking informatio­n about the Wagners, including details on personal or business interactio­ns and conversati­ons that people may have had with the four.

None was named a suspect at the time. Investigat­ors also said they had searched property in southern Ohio sold by the Wagners.

Both Jake Wagner and Angela Wagner told the Cincinnati

Enquirer they were not involved in the April 2016 killings.

Angela Wagner said in an email to the newspaper that what happened was devastatin­g and Hanna Rhoden was like a daughter to her.

Wagner also told The Enquirer that her husband, Billy, and Christophe­r Rhoden Sr. were more like brothers than friends.

John Clark, a lawyer who has been representi­ng the Wagners, has said previously that four of the Wagner family members provided laptops, phones and DNA samples to investigat­ors and agreed to be interviewe­d about the slayings.

“We look forward to the day when the true culprits will be discovered and brought to justice for this terrible tragedy,” Clark said in a statement Tuesday. He added: “The Wagners are also very hopeful that in the ensuing months there will be a thorough vetting of all the facts.”

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

Clark once told The Cincinnati Enquirer that the family was being “harassed while the real killer or killers are out there.”

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

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. The coroner’s report didn’t specify which victims had which wounds.

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

“This has been so long coming. Thank God!” Verlina Jarrell, of Circlevill­e, Ohio, co-administra­tor of a Facebook page about the “Pike County massacres” with some 650 members, told The Associated Press.

The victims were identified as 40-year-old Christophe­r Rhoden; his exwife, 37-year-old Dana Rhoden; their three children, 20-year-old Clarence “Frankie” Rhoden, 16-yearold Christophe­r Jr., and 19-year-old Hanna; Frankie Rhoden’s fiancée, 20-yearold Hannah Gilley; Christophe­r Rhoden Sr.’s brother, 44-year-old Kenneth Rhoden; and a cousin, 38-yearold Gary Rhoden. Hanna Rhoden’s days-old baby girl, another baby and a young child were unharmed.

It appeared some of them were killed as they slept, including Hanna Rhoden, who was in bed with her newborn nearby, authoritie­s said. The child, Hannah Gilley’s 6-month-old baby and another small child weren’t hurt.

Three funerals were held for the victims.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pike County Sheriff Charles Reader, left, speaks alongside Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine, right, during a news conference to discuss developmen­ts into the slayings of eight members of one family in rural Ohio two years ago, Tuesday in Waverly, Ohio. A family of four, the Wagner family, who lived near the scenes of the killings, was arrested Tuesday.
JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pike County Sheriff Charles Reader, left, speaks alongside Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine, right, during a news conference to discuss developmen­ts into the slayings of eight members of one family in rural Ohio two years ago, Tuesday in Waverly, Ohio. A family of four, the Wagner family, who lived near the scenes of the killings, was arrested Tuesday.
 ?? OHIO ATTORNEY GENERAL’S OFFICE VIA AP ?? These undated images released by the Ohio Attorney General’s office, show from left, George “Billy” Wagner III, Angela Wagner, George Wagner IV and Edward “Jake” Wagner. Authoritie­s announced Tuesday that the family of four has been arrested in the slayings of eight members of one family in rural Ohio two years ago.
OHIO ATTORNEY GENERAL’S OFFICE VIA AP These undated images released by the Ohio Attorney General’s office, show from left, George “Billy” Wagner III, Angela Wagner, George Wagner IV and Edward “Jake” Wagner. Authoritie­s announced Tuesday that the family of four has been arrested in the slayings of eight members of one family in rural Ohio two years ago.

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