Posts Tagged ‘guy heinze jr’

Guy Heinze Arrested

September 5th, 2009
Guy Heinze Mugshot

Guy Heinze Mugshot

Did Guy Heinze Jr. Kill his whole family?  Authorities now seem convinced that he did.  The strange story of the Brunswick Trailer Park Muders has gotten a little stranger.  Just a day after allowing him bail on related charges, police have now arrested Guy Heinze and charged him with the murders of eight family members.  A ninth member of the Heinze family remains hospitalized.

It was Guy Heinze’s stunning 911 call that alerted police to the massacre of eight members of the Heinze and Toller families who were living in a Brunswick, Georgia Trailer Park.  The following day, Guy Heinze was arrested on several charges related to his conduct at the scene, but was not charged with the murders.

The initial charges brought against Guy Heinze were possession of marijuana, possession of a class 2 drug (Darvoset), obstruction of justice (taking a shotgun from the trailer and hiding it in the trunk of a car), and lying to police about his whereabouts on the night of the murders.

Just yesterday, it seemed that police believed that Guy Heinze was not involved with the murders, since they allowed his scheduled release on bail with only $20,000 bond.  However at the last minute authorities rescinded the bond due to unspecified technical difficulties.  Now with Guy Heinze’s arrest police have firmly declared that they think Heinze is responsible for the Brunswick Murders.

Unfortunately, police have yet to release any details about what evidence they possess linking Heinze to the murders.  It is not believed that Guy Heinze has made a confession in the case, nor have policed said what they know about Heinze’s whereabouts on the night of the killings.  Much of the details surrounding the case remain a mystery

As of now we don’t know what motive Guy Heinze may have had for killing his own family.  It’s a sad and tragic story, made more poignant by the deaths in the case of a young girl of 15 and a 17-year-old with Down’s syndrome.  With the Guy Heinze arrest, we are now beginning to understand what happened that tragic night.

Brunswick, Georgia Trailer Park Murders: Guy Heinze Jr. Granted Bail

September 2nd, 2009

Guy Heinze Jr. MugshotGuy Heinze Jr., whose possible involvement in the gruesome Brunswick, Georgia trailer park massacre has been a matter of suspicion, has been granted bail on charges related to the case.  The bond was set at a mere $20,000, suggesting that authorities may believe that he was not involved in the New Hope Mobile Home Park killings.  Heinze will remain under house arrest and wear an ankle bracelet.  He will only be allowed to leave his residence for work purposes.

Local police have given off very confusing signals since they arrested Guy Heinze on several charges the day after his riveting 911 call alerted authorities to the murders.  At times, it has seemed as though the believed that Heinze was involved in the massacre, while at other times they have called him co-operative and signaled that he was not considered a suspect.  Allowing him out on bond leads me to believe that he’s not considered a suspect.

Charges Against Guy Heinze Jr.

Guy Heinze was arrested on Sunday,  August 30.  The charges against Guy Heinze are as follows:

  • Possession of a class 2 narcotic without a prescription.  Heinze had Darvoset pills in his truck when police searched it.
  • Posession of marijuana.  A bag of pot was also found in the truck.
  • Tampering with evidence.  Guy Heinze removed a shotgun from the residence after the murders and stashed it in the trunk of a car.  He has said that he believed the shotgun to have been stolen.  No firearms are thought to be involved in the Trailer Park killings.
  • Making false statements to police.  Heinze lied to police about his whereabouts the night of the murders.  Authorities have given no further details about the charge.

Number and Names of Dead in Brunswick Killings

Eight people are confirmed dead in the Brunswick Georgia trailer park murders.  A ninth person, believed to be a young girl, is in critical condition in an area hospital.  Among the dead are Guy Heinze Jr.’s father, Guy Heinze Sr., as well had his father’s half-brother Russell D. Toler Sr, to whom the trailer belonged.  The names of the other victims were Chrissy Toler, 22; Russell D. Toler Jr., 20; Michael Toler, 19; and Michelle Toler, 15; Joseph L. West, 30; and Brenda Gail Falagan, 49.

Russell “Rusty” Toler was a 20 year resident of the New Hope Mobile Home Park where the killings took place.  He also worked at the adjacent Aero-Instant plant, which provided services to the chemical and mining industries.  Toler had been furloughed recently due to the economic recession, but was expecting to be re-hired.  Jacksonville.com offers details of the lives of the other victims.

The family were generally regarded as “good country people”, but the younger generation often got into scrapes with the law.

Georgia Trailer Park Killings: Is Guy Heinze Jr. a Suspect in Murders?

August 31st, 2009

Guy Heinze Jr. MugshotHere’s what we know so far about the Brunswick, Georgia trailer park killings.  Early on the morning of Saturday, August 29th, police received a 911 call from Margaret Orlinski, a neighbor of the Heinze family.  Orlinski was calling at the behest of Guy Heinze Jr, who said he had returned home that morning to discover that his entire family had been brutally beaten.

Seven members of the Heinze family were already dead, and Guy Heinze Jr.’s cousin Michael Toler, who had Down’s Syndrome, would die the following day.  Orlinski soon handed the phone off to a very distraught Guy Heinze Jr., who said, “I just got home and my whole family is dead.”  The first part of Guy Heinze Jr.s conversation with the 911 dispatcher follows.

Guy Heinze Jr.: I just got home and my whole family is dead.

Dispatcher: OK.  Tell me what’s going on, sir.

GHJ: I was out last night and just got home, and everybody’s dead.  My daddy’s dead.  My uncle is dead.

Dispatcher: How many people are there?

GHJ: There’s like six.  My whole family’s dead.  Looks like they been beat to death.  I don’t know man.

Dispatcher:  OK.  You’re 147 Hope Plantation, correct?

GHJ: Yeah, man.  I mean, I don’t know what to do man.

Dispatcher:  OK.  Take a deep breath.  The guy’s coming for you.  Stay on the line, OK?  It’s in slot number 147, right?

GHJ:  Yes ma’am.  I don’t know what to do ma’am.

The website of a local newspaper has the entire 911 call tht you can listen to.  In addition to Margaret Orlinski and Guy Heinze Jr., a maintenance worker at the trailer park later gets on the call.  A full transcript of the call can be found here (.pdf).

Later in the call, Heinze returned to the phone once again.  When asked, “When you came in the house, what did the house look like?,” Heinze replied, “it looks like a (bleep)ing murder scene.”

Authorities finally arrived and removed Guy Heinze Jr.’s cousin 19-year-old Michael Toler, who had been severely beaten, but was still alive, to the hospital.  He died the next day.

Mystery still surrounds Guy Heinze Jr.’s possible involvement with the crime.  He was arrested the following day and charges with possession of prescription drugs and marijuana, tampering with evidence, and obstruction of justice.  The tampering with evidence charge is tied to his removal of a shotgun from the residence.  None of the victims are believed to have been killed by gunfire.  The obstruction of justice charge concerns his lying to police about his whereabouts the previous night.

Statements from the police are thus far confusing and difficult to parse.  Local Police Chief Matt Doering has stated that Guy Heinze Jr. was co-operative, and was not currently considered a suspect.  The FBI has been called in to help with the physical evidence in the case.

Doering has said that more than one person may be involved in the killings.  The trailer home was owned by Russell “Rusty” Toler, the half-brother of Guy Heinze Sr., a long-haul trucker.