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Third suspect arrested in Lake County after killings of 3 teens

16-year-old captured in Lake County Saturday April 8, 2023
Triple homicide suspect arrested
MCSO

OCALA, Fla. — A 16-year-old boy wanted as part of an investigation into the killings of three teenagers in S.E. Marion County was captured by authorities, days after another teenager and a 12-year-old were charged in the deaths.

Tahj Brewton, 16, was arrested Saturday by U.S. marshals in Groveland. He is facing charges of carjacking with a firearm, aggravated assault, grand theft of a motor vehicle, fleeing or attempting to elude a law enforcement officer and tampering with an electronic monitoring device, the Marion County Sheriff's Office said in a statement.


The two suspects previously in custody, 17-year old Robert Robinson and 12-year-old Christopher Atkins, were charged with first-degree murder last week. Prosecutors are reviewing the case to determine whether the suspects will be charged as adults.

The shooting suspects and victims were all in a vehicle belonging to 16-year-old Layla Silvernail at the time of the killings, Marion County Sheriff Billy Woods said at a news conference last week. Authorities have not released the names of the other two victims, a 16-year-old girl and a 17-year-old boy.

Law enforcement officials were “shocked” by the young ages of the victims and alleged killers.

The night of the March 30 shooting, deputies found Silvernail on the side of a road in rural Marion County in northern Florida. She later died from a gunshot wound, the sheriff said.

The next morning, deputies were called to a nearby location where a teenage boy was found dead, also from a gunshot wound, Woods said.

On April 1, investigators found Silvernail’s vehicle partially submerged in a small pond near Ocklawaha, about 9 miles from where the bodies were found. They searched the vehicle and found a teen girl dead in the trunk.

Woods said all of the youths were together committing crimes when the victims were killed, and each was involved in gang activity. But authorities have nothing specific pointing to a rivalry. “However, in some shape or another, each were associated with a gang," the sheriff said.

“At some point these three individuals turned on our three victims,” Woods said. “They fled the scenes, but left a lot of evidence in their wake.”

Woods said the two suspects confessed to shooting the victim found in the vehicle's trunk. Woods said the teens got the guns while breaking into cars, but he didn't provide many other details about the shootings or how many guns were involved.

Woods noted the quick actions of law enforcement agencies, including the FBI, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, the U.S. Marshal’s Office and the Ocala Police Department in solving the crime. He also commended local citizens for providing tips that led to the two arrests.

Woods said the 12-year-old was arrested March 31 by Ocala police following an “affray” at school, and he was already in custody when charges were filed in the teens' slayings. The 17-year-old suspect was arrested at his home Thursday night.

Woods expressed frustration that juveniles are not being held accountable for their actions.

“We need to hold them accountable and then hope that we can change them,” he said. “They deserve the full extent of the law,”