Grandmother Killed Mother And Court Appointed Supervisor Over Bitter Custody Battle

6 months ago
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Grandmother, her boyfriend, and 3 others killed mother and court approved supervisor on their way for a supervised visit with her children over a bitter child custody battle.

The media is portraying these 5 suspects as anti government religious sovereign citizens belonging to a Christian cult called God's Misfits.

But the founder of God's Misfits was interviewed and said he doesn't know them and condemns what they did.

But that doesn't matter to the media because they keep hammering key words "christian cult" and "anti-government". The anger arising from this horrific murder stemmed from a contentious child custody battle. This had nothing to do with the christianity or a cult and not even anti-government. This gruesome murder is a result of the grandmother being filled with so much hatred toward the mother of her son's children.

ABC6 news 4/18/24: TEXAS COUNTY, Okla. -- The bodies of two women who were slain in rural Oklahoma last month were buried in a cattle pasture leased by one of the four suspects - all of whom are accused of plotting the victims' deaths amid a bitter custody battle, according to court documents.

The suspects - Tifany Machel Adams, 54, Tad Bert Cullum, 43, and married couple Cole Earl Twombly, 50, and Cora Gayle Twombly, 44 - each face murder, kidnapping and conspiracy charges after the two women went missing on a drive between Kansas and Oklahoma and were later found dead, according to authorities.

The documents allege Adams and her significant other, Cullum, engaged in a killing plot with the Twomblys that was motivated by a custody battle between Butler and Adams, who is the grandmother of Butler's two children. The group is also accused of unsuccessfu
All four suspects were assigned court-appointed attorneys with the Oklahoma Indigent Defense System, and the agency's policy is not to speak to the press regarding pending cases, according to Charles Laughlin, the agency's executive director.

The location of the bodies of Veronica Butler, 27, and Jilian Kelley, 39, is among several new details included in court filings by prosecutors arguing that the suspects should be denied bail - a request that was granted by a judge Wednesday.

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