• NAS Pensacola chief petty officer sentenced to life for murdering husba

    From 4 shots@21:1/5 to All on Sun Sep 29 07:37:31 2024
    XPost: alt.crime, sac.politics, soc.women
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    Following four days of trial and a courthouse closure due to Hurricane
    Helene, U.S. Navy Chief Petty Officer Bree Kuhn was found guilty Friday
    of murdering her husband in their Gulf Breeze home and sentenced to
    Florida's Department of Corrections.

    Kuhn, who was stationed onboard Naval Air Station Pensacola during the incident, was convicted of the first-degree premeditated murder of her
    husband, Collin Turner, after locking him in their garage and shooting
    him four times in the back during a 911 phone call on Sept. 8, 2021.

    Immediately following statements from Turner's family, Circuit Judge
    James Duncan sentenced Kuhn to life in a Florida state prison without
    the possibility of parole, the legal mandatory minimum for her charge.

    Collin Turner's parents speak in court prior to Bree Kuhn's sentencing
    After the jury was dismissed from the courtroom following the
    announcement of their verdict, family of the victim and defendant were
    allowed time to speak to the court.

    "You're honor, this is a letter I never imagined I'd have to write,"
    Turner's mother, Tere, said in court Friday. "When I think of the
    impact the loss of Collin has had on my life, it's difficult to put
    into words.

    "I've watched my husband suffer as he misses his son," she added.

    As Tere Turner finished, her husband and Collin's father, Donald, also
    spoke to the court about the impact of having his son ripped away from
    their family.

    "Bree has deprived the world of a loving son, father, grandson and
    leader," Donald Turner said through tears. "We have been so blessed
    with how many people reached out to us and said how Collin had impacted
    them in such a positive way.

    "We saw the love he gave to the world, and the world desperately needs
    loving leaders like Collin more than ever before," he added. "We call
    this God's light in the darkness. The darkness has not won."

    Following Turner's parents speaking, Kuhn wished to remain silent and
    not make a statement. Kuhn's family in attendance also chose not to
    speak.

    What happened between Bree Kuhn and Collin Turner on Sept. 8, 2021?
    The Santa Rosa County Sheriff's Office received a 911 phone call from
    Kuhn at 12:53 p.m. after she and Turner got into a heated argument
    regarding their three children.

    Deputies went to the home, but left after finding no evidence of a
    physical altercation.

    SRSO dispatchers then received a second call at 5 p.m., this time from
    Turner, but when deputies arrived and found no evidence of physical
    abuse, they again left the premises.

    Turner placed the final 911 call that night at 6:22 p.m., which was
    played during the trial, telling the dispatcher that Kuhn had locked
    him in their garage. Turner told dispatchers that his wife "tried to
    break his arm when he tried to get back in the residence."

    A bang was heard during the call followed by Turner yelling, "Ow!"

    "What was that?" the dispatcher asked.

    "She just shot me!" Turner said. The call then picks up three
    additional shots followed by silence.

    All three of their children were home during the shooting. In 2021,
    Santa Rosa County Sheriff Bob Johnson said that two of the children
    were taken into custody of the Department of Children and Families.
    Turner's 12-year-old stepdaughter was placed with her natural father.

    Bree Kuhn's attorneys claim Collin Turner's abuse led to the shooting
    Randy Etheridge, Kuhn's attorney alongside James Barnes, told the jury
    that Kuhn alleges her husband had been abusive since his medical
    discharge from the Marine Corps, citing his 100% disability status due
    to traumatic brain injury.

    "He had issues with his brain, and you're going to hear Bree say,
    'You're unstable. You're a danger to the kids,'" Etheridge said. "We're
    not talking about a normal person here."

    The defense claims that Kuhn suffered mental, physical and even sexual
    abuse at the hands of Turner that began well before the defendant was
    stationed at NAS Pensacola.

    Hoping to rely on battered spouse syndrome, the defense planned to have
    Kuhn and psychologist Dr. Julie Harper testify Wednesday, but a quick
    change in plans led to Kuhn not wanting to testify, leading the defense
    to not call the doctor to the stand.

    Kuhn's older brother, Eric, did testify on her behalf, saying he heard
    his sister talk about Turner's abuse and heard the shooting over the
    phone.

    "I heard a lot of discourse - Collin screaming, things being hit, at
    one point he was on the phone with police," Eric Kuhn said on the
    stand. "I did hear his voice raised a few times, yes, and I heard
    children crying."

    Eric Kuhn testified in open court he knew his sister had a gun during
    the argument the day of the shooting, but prosecutor Mark Alderman
    brought up a contradiction during cross examination.

    While Eric Kuhn testified to knowing his sister had a gun to defend
    herself and her kids from Turner, Alderman argued the witness had never
    made those statements during his police interview in 2021, nor in his
    Zoom deposition in June 2024.

    When asked about the difference in his testimonies, Eric Kuhn said he
    told investigators about the gun before they began recording his
    interview, but then he made no mention of it again as not to be
    "redundant."

    Eric Kuhn also testified that technology issues with Zoom arose during
    his 2024 deposition that caused only his testimony about the gun to be
    unheard, nothing else.

    (This story was updated to add new information.)

    https://www.pnj.com/story/news/crime/2024/09/27/nas-pensacola-chief- petty-officer-bree-kuhn-convicted-of-murdering-husband-collin- turner/75385754007/

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