Murder of Seath Jackson

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Seath Tyler Jackson
Born(1996-02-03)February 3, 1996
DiedApril 17, 2011(2011-04-17) (aged 15)
Cause of deathFatal gunshot wounds
EducationBelleview High School
Known forMurder victim
Parents
  • Scott Jackson (father)
  • Sonia Jackson (mother)
RelativesTwo older brothers

The murder of Seath Tyler Jackson (February 3, 1996 – April 17, 2011) occurred on April 17, 2011, in Summerfield, Florida. On that day, a group of five youths attacked and assaulted 15-year-old Jackson after one of them, who was Jackson's ex-girlfriend, lured him to a friend's house in Summerfield, and Jackson was ultimately shot to death before his body was burned and the ashes disposed of in a rock quarry.

The five youths were later all arrested and charged with the murder of Jackson. Among the five, the 18-year-old ringleader Michael Shane Bargo Jr. (also the shooter) was found guilty of first-degree murder and sentenced to death. The remaining four were all sentenced to life imprisonment for first-degree murder, although one of them was eventually released after having her conviction vacated and pleading guilty to lesser charges of second-degree murder.

Murder

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A few months leading up to his murder, the victim, 15-year-old Seath Tyler Jackson, began dating his then 15-year-old girlfriend Amber Wright in December 2010, but by March 2011, the couple broke up, and according to sources, the break-up itself was bitter. After the end of her relationship with Jackson, Wright fell in love with 18-year-old Michael Shane Bargo Jr. and dated him. Bargo wrongly believed that Jackson had abused Wright, while for Jackson, his posts dated in early March 2011 contained signs of presumed affection for Wright but the later posts contained anger, suggestively accusing Wright of two-timing on him.[1][2]

During the final two or three weeks before the murder, Bargo and Jackson argued and threatened one another, and at one point, during a quarrel at Jackson's house, Bargo purportedly claimed that he "have a bullet with your (Jackson) name on it". Bargo would formulate a plan to murder Jackson, and joining him in the plot was Wright and her brother, 16-year-old Kyle Hooper, as well as their friends, 18-year-old Charlie Ely and 20-year-old Justin Soto. Court documents revealed that Hooper, who was initially a close friend of Jackson, had fallen out with him due to the break-up between Jackson and Wright and having caught Jackson on the bed with a girl Hooper liked, and Hooper admitted to a friend in text messages that he wanted to murder Jackson, thus his reason to join the murder plot.[1][2]

On April 17, 2011, the day of Jackson's murder, under the instructions of Bargo, Wright called Jackson and claimed she wished to reconcile with him and rekindle their relationship. Jackson believed it and was thus lured into Ely's house in Summerfield. After arriving there, Jackson was attacked by the five youths, who beat him up and during the attack, Jackson was hit on the head and shot, but still tried to escape the house. Soto used an axe handle to strike Jackson, and the boys carried Jackson back inside the house and placed him in a bathtub. After this, Bargo shot Jackson to death, and the victim's body was placed inside a sleeping bag, which was placed into a backyard fire pit for several hours. On the morning of April 18, 2011, James Havens, the 37-year-old stepfather of Wright and Hooper, arrived at the house, where he assisted the youths to dispose of Jackson's ashes, which were placed into 5-gallon paint cans and disposed of at a water-filled rock quarry in Ocala, Florida. The youths also cleaned the house with bleach to get rid of Jackson's blood.[1][2][3]

Participants

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  • Top left: Michael Bargo, the ringleader of the five who directly shot and killed Jackson.
  • Top right: James Havens, the oldest involved in the murder of Jackson.
  • Middle left: Justin Soto, the oldest of the five youths involved in the murder of Jackson.
  • Middle right: Charlie Ely, the first to be convicted for Jackson's murder.
  • Bottom left: Kyle Hooper, one of the two juveniles convicted of Jackson's murder.
  • Bottom right: Amber Wright, one of the two juveniles convicted of Jackson's murder.
  1. Michael Shane Bargo Jr. (born April 29, 1992)[4] – aged 18, charged with first-degree premeditated murder with a firearm.[5]
  2. Amber Elizabeth Wright (born March 29, 1996)[6] – aged 15, charged with first-degree murder.[5]
  3. Kyle Lonnie-Duan Hooper (born July 19, 1994)[7] – aged 16, charged with first-degree murder.[5]
  4. Justin Edward Soto (born January 4, 1991)[8] – aged 20, charged with first-degree murder.[5]
  5. Charlie Kay Ely (born July 11, 1992)[9] – aged 18, charged with first-degree murder.[5]
  6. James Young Havens III (born 1973 or 1974) – aged 37, charged with accessory to first-degree murder.[5]

Murder charges

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On April 20, 2011, the five perpetrators of the Seath Jackson murder case were arrested after the mother of the victim reported her son missing, with the police connecting the five to Jackson's disappearance through investigations. The five youths were all charged with first-degree murder. Under Florida state law, offenders convicted of first-degree murder could face the death penalty or life imprisonment without parole.[10][11]

A few days after the arrest of his killers, a memorial service was held for Jackson, and more than 370 people showed up to pay respects for the victim.[12][13]

On May 4, 2011, all the five youths were formally indicted by a grand jury for first-degree murder, with both Hooper and Wright charged and set to stand trial as adults.[5][14]

On July 6, 2011, the prosecution confirmed that they would seek the death penalty against one of the suspects, Michael Bargo, who was deemed to be the ringleader and shooter of the case itself.[15][16]

James Havens, who abetted the disposal of the corpse, was arrested as a sixth suspect and charged for being an accessory to murder. Havens, who was initially ruled mentally incompetent to stand trial in 2014,[17] eventually pleaded guilty in 2018, and faced the maximum sentence of 30 years in prison for the same charge.[18][19]

Trial of the youths

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Charlie Ely

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On September 23, 2011, Charlie Ely was found guilty of first-degree murder by a Marion County jury, hence becoming the first of the five to be convicted for killing Seath Jackson.[20][21]

On October 17, 2011, Circuit Judge David Eddy sentenced Ely to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole, plus a $5,000 fine.[22][23][24]

Justin Soto

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On May 30, 2012, Justin Soto was the second of the five to be convicted after he pleaded guilty to first-degree murder, an act done to avoid a potential death sentence. As the prosecution were undecided about whether to pursue the death penalty for Soto at this point in time, Circuit Judge David Eddy sentenced Soto to life without parole, thus allowing Soto to be spared the death sentence.[25][26]

As of 2025, Soto is incarcerated at the Taylor Correctional Institution.[8]

Kyle Hooper and Amber Wright

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On June 6, 2012, both Amber Wright and Kyle Hooper stood trial together before two separate juries for their roles in the murder of Seath Jackson.[27]

On June 12, 2012, both Hooper and Wright were found guilty by their respective juries for the first-degree murder of Jackson. Given the fact that both siblings were under the age of 18 when the murder was committed, they were not eligible for the death penalty, but faced the maximum sentence of life in prison without parole.[28][29]

On August 22, 2012, Circuit Judge David Eddy sentenced both Hooper and Wright to life without parole.[30] However, this verdict was complicated by the fact that both siblings were juveniles at the time of the offense. The sentencing directly conflicted with a landmark U.S. Supreme Court ruling that had recently barred the mandatory imposition of life without parole for minors, declaring the practice unconstitutional in June 2012. Furthermore, at the time of the siblings' sentencing, there was no state law to set statutory guidelines in sentencing juveniles for crimes punishable by life without parole, which was the only sentence Judge Eddy was bound to pass on the duo for first-degree murder.[31]

Michael Bargo

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On August 20, 2013, the jury found Bargo guilty of first-degree murder, making him the last of the five perpetrators convicted of murdering Jackson.[32][33]

A week after his conviction, on August 27, 2013, by a majority vote of 10–2, the jury recommended Bargo to be sentenced to death.[34][35]

On December 13, 2013, Bargo was sentenced to death by Circuit Judge David Eddy, who described the murder of Jackson as the "most cold, calculated and premeditated case" he ever presided in his 32 years of judicial service. Bargo became the youngest person to be condemned to Florida's death row, which also incarcerated 403 other prisoners at the time of his sentencing.[36][37]

Re-sentencing of Wright, Hooper and Ely

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Appeals and re-sentencing of Wright and Hooper

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On May 30, 2014, the Florida 5th District Court of Appeal allowed the appeals of both Kyle Hooper and Amber Wright, vacating the former's life sentence in favour of a re-sentencing hearing while ordering a re-trial for the latter. The court found that Wright should be re-tried due to her not advised of her Miranda rights by the police, while for Hooper, the court found that the sentencing had to conform with the guidelines required to sentence juveniles to life, where they were entitled to the possibility of parole.[38]

On January 14, 2016, following a re-trial before another jury, Wright was found guilty once again for the first-degree murder of Seath Jackson.[39]

On February 23, 2016, Wright was once again sentenced to life in prison, but was entitled to the possibility of parole after 25 years out of her life sentence.[40][41]

On December 8, 2016, Circuit Judge Anthony Tatti sentenced Hooper to life imprisonment with the possibility of parole after 25 years.[42][43]

As of 2025, at the end of their re-sentencing hearings, Wright is detained at the Homestead Correctional Institution,[6] while Hooper is imprisoned at the Everglades Correctional Institution.[7]

Ely's appeals and release

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After her conviction and trial, Charlie Ely appealed against her conviction and sentence, stating that she was represented by ineffective counsel during her trial. Eventually, in March 2020, U.S. District Judge Roy B. Dalton Jr. allowed the appeal of Ely and accepted her claims of ineffective counsel. As a result, Ely was ordered to receive a re-trial.[44][45]

On June 17, 2020, Ely pleaded guilty to lesser charges of second-degree murder and was re-sentenced to ten years in prison. On account of her good behaviour in prison and the time served, Ely was released from prison immediately after her sentencing.[45][46]

Death row (Bargo)

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As of December 2013, the month he was sentenced to death, Michael Bargo was one of eight prisoners incarcerated on Florida's death row for murders committed in Marion County.[47]

As of 2025, Bargo is incarcerated on death row at the Union Correctional Institution.[4]

First appeal and vacatur of death sentence

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In December 2014, Bargo filed an appeal to the Florida Supreme Court, seeking to overturn his murder conviction and death sentence.[48]

On June 29, 2017, the Florida Supreme Court allowed Michael Bargo's appeal against his death sentence, overturned it and ordered Bargo to undergo a re-sentencing trial, in light of the 2017 reforms to Florida's death penalty laws, which decreed that death sentences could only be issued based on unanimous jury verdicts, thus overturning the state's previous requisite of non-unanimous death penalty verdicts by the jury (at least seven jurors were needed to agree on a death sentence).[49][1]

This new law, however, was only in effect for merely six to seven years, as in April 2023, the Florida state government reformed the death penalty laws to ensure a person be executed with at least eight jurors out of 12 voting in favour of capital punishment, partly due to the Parkland mass shooter Nikolas Cruz escaping the death penalty for murdering 17 students and school staff members during a 2018 school shooting, after the jury failed to unanimously agree on a death sentence.[50][51]

Re-sentencing and death penalty

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On April 3, 2019, Bargo's re-sentencing trial began before another jury, and the prosecution once again sought the death penalty for Bargo.[52]

On April 10, 2019, the jury unanimously recommended Bargo to be sentenced to death for murdering Jackson.[53][54]

On September 12, 2019, Circuit Judge Anthony Tatti formally reinstated the death penalty for Bargo.[55]

Further appeal processes

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On June 24, 2021, Bargo's second appeal against his death sentence was denied by the Florida Supreme Court.[56][57]

Aftermath

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In the aftermath, in 2021, true crime documentary series Sleeping With a Killer re-enacted the murder of Seath Jackson and it aired as the 12th episode of the show's first season.[58]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d Bargo v. State [2017], Florida Supreme Court (United States).
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  56. ^ Bargo v. State [2021], Florida Supreme Court (United States).
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