x
Breaking News
More () »

Maryland man gets life in prison for role in 2016 triple homicide in Franklin County

Johnny Jenkins-Armstron, of Baltimore, was one of those hired to kill Wendy Chaney at a Mercersburg farm in 2016. Two other victims were also killed.

HARRISBURG, Pa. — Note: The video is from 2019.

Another suspect in a 2016 triple homicide in Franklin County was sentenced to life in prison after pleading guilty to charges stemming from his role in the victims' deaths, federal prosecutors said Tuesday.

Johnny Jenkins-Armstrong, 26, of Baltimore, admitted to playing a role in the June 25, 2016 murders of Wendy Chaney, Brandon Cole, and Phillip Jackson at Jackson's farm in Mercersburg, U.S. Attorney Gerard M. Karam said in a press release.

The sentence was the result of a seven-year investigation into the three murders, which occurred on a property along Welsh Run Road in Mercersburg, Karam said.

According to prosecutors, when Pennsylvania State Police officers were called to the scene, they found the bodies of Chaney, Cole, and Jackson in a barn on Jackson’s property. 

All three were found with their hands zip-tied behind their backs. They had been shot and set on fire. Jackson and Cole were shot once in the head. Chaney was shot twice, once in the back and once in the back of her neck. 

Chaney and Cole were already dead, while Jackson died of his injuries shortly after arriving at York Hospital.

The investigation determined Chaney was in a relationship with co-defendants Kevin Coles and Torey White and had been previously assisting both with their drug distribution operations. 

Coles, White and another one of the co-defendants, Devin Dickerson, learned that Chaney was cooperating with federal authorities and contracted for her to be murdered. 

Corbett and co-conspirator Jerell Adgebesan, who worked for Corbett, recruited members of a Baltimore-based gang known as the Black Guerilla Family and others from Baltimore to travel to the Jackson property and kill Chaney. 

Adgebesan knew the contracted killers from Baltimore. 

Jenkins-Armstrong was one of those hired to perform the killings, the investigation determined.

The killers were told there was $20,000 in a safe located in Jackson's barn. They were promised that they could take the money as payment for killing Chaney, along with any drugs or firearms they could find on the property.

When they arrived, the killers found Chaney was not alone, as expected. Cole and Jackson were also there.

The killers murdered Chaney to protect the drug trafficking activities of Corbett, Coles, White, Dickerson, and others, while Jackson and Cole were killed to prevent them from being witnesses in an investigation of Chaney's murder.

The killers never found any money on the property but did steal some drugs and firearms.  

Other suspects charged in the case are:

Jerell Adgebesan, age 35, of Baltimore and Hagerstown, MD: sentenced to life imprisonment for participating in the murder of three people including a federal witness

Devin Dickerson, age 31, of Hagerstown: pleaded guilty to conspiracy to distribute heroin and crack cocaine and is awaiting sentencing

Torey White, age 32, of Waynesboro: convicted by a federal jury in May of three counts of first-degree murder and is awaiting sentencing;

Michael Buck, age 30, of Hagerstown: pleaded guilty to Hobbs Act robbery and to being an accomplice to the use of a firearm during Hobbs Act robbery and is awaiting sentencing

Nicholas Preddy, age 29, of Baltimore: pleaded guilty to attempting to kill a witness and was sentenced to 30 years in prison

Kenyatta Corbett, 41, of Baltimore: sentenced to life in prison after pleading guilty to homicide and robbery charges

Terrance Lawson, age 31, of Baltimore: sentenced to time served for attempting to intimidate a witness

Tyrone Armstrong, age 30, of Baltimore: sentenced to time served for attempting to intimidate a witness

Christopher Johnson, age 31, of Baltimore: pleaded guilty to multiple counts including murder for hire and is awaiting sentencing

Mark Johnson, 35,  of Baltimore: pled guilty to obstructing the grand jury’s investigation and was sentenced to 110 months in prison

Llesenia Woodard, 46, of Hagerstown: pled guilty to providing false testimony to the grand jury investigating the murders and is awaiting sentencing

Kevin Coles, age 36, of New York, NY and Hagerstown: found guilty in April of multiple crimes, including murder for hire, robbery, and drug trafficking, and was sentenced to multiple consecutive life sentences;

Yolanda Diaz, 31, of Hagerstown:  indicted on multiple counts of perjury and obstruction of justice based upon her testimony at the Coles trial. 

Joshua Davis, age 30: previously pled guilty to participating in the conspiracy to locate and kill an individual believed to be cooperating with federal authorities in the investigation of the triple murders. Davis was sentenced to serve 100 months in prison.

Download the FOX43 app

Before You Leave, Check This Out