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this all so much bullshit, he is a known abuser that coldbloodedly premeditated this woman's gruesome murder, there's no doubt in my mind the other bitch was there & probably helped,out would be better if he just conveniently died in prison because he still thinks his mommy and money is going to get him out, I am surprised she hasn't been on here with only gawd can judge
 
Before the punishment was formally handed down, Berreth’s family and others impacted by her death told Judge Scott Sells how her death had affected them.

Victim impacts are always the same statements. Why wouldn't they be?
If a family member said, "here are sveral reasons why the victim was a terrible person who deserved to be the victim of this brutal crime" would the judge lighten the punishment? Of course not.
 
He got life!


Actually, he got life plus an additional 156 years.

Judge Scott Sells handed down Frazee's sentence shortly afterward. Frazee received the mandatory life in prison without parole for the two murder counts, which were merged. For each of the solicitation charges, he received the maximum 48-year sentence, which run consecutive to one another. And for the tampering with a deceased human body count, Frazee was sentenced to the maximum of 12 years, which also run consecutively.

In total, he received life in prison without parole, plus an additional 156 years.

Then there is this....
Krystal Kenny is only facing A MAXIMUM of 3 years for tampering with evidence, for her role of cleaning up the crime scene.
Fucking gross.

Krystal Lee Kenney, Frazee’s ex-girlfriend whom he solicited to help him kill Berreth, has not yet been sentenced. She faces a maximum of three years in prison for tampering with evidence.


The link provides a very detailed timeline of the trial, some impact statements from her family, as well as Kelsey's parents plans for custody of her daughter.
So sad.
 
Krystal Kenney will be sentenced today.
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And he has filed an appeal

CRIPPLE CREEK, Colo. — The man serving a life sentence for killing his fiancee in Woodland Park has filed notice that he will appeal his conviction. The Notice of Appeal was filed on Jan. 6 at the Court of Appeals in Denver, according to the clerk at the Teller County Courthouse.
Patrick Frazee, 33, was found guilty in November of killing 29-year-old Kelsey Berreth on Thanksgiving 2018.

The court document filed earlier this month is the first step in the appeal process.
 
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The Idaho woman who took a plea deal in order to help prosecutors put a now-convicted murderer behind bars for the rest of his life was denied parole by the state parole board on Wednesday.

Krystal Lee Kenney, 34, was denied discretionary parole after a board hearing Wednesday morning, according to a person with knowledge of the decision, and will be eligible to go before the board again this time next year during her annual parole application hearing, the person said.

Kenney is currently at the Denver Women's Correctional Facility.

...

In March, two months after she was sentenced, she requested to move to a halfway house. That request was rejected.

According to the state parole board site, her estimated mandatory release date is set for July 7, 2022.
 
It could be that the state didn't have enough evidence on him without her assistance, simply couldn't have gotten his conviction without it... and the state had a choice to make, and it included needing to in-a-sense pay for what they got from her.

... sigh. I guess between this and the other alternative...

but puke.
 
Victim impacts are always the same statements. Why wouldn't they be?
If a family member said, "here are sveral reasons why the victim was a terrible person who deserved to be the victim of this brutal crime" would the judge lighten the punishment? Of course not.
They serve a good purpose. It's to the psychological benefit of the victim's loved ones.

ETA: the court isn't going to pass out bats and let you do as you will, but at least you get to verbally stand and deliver. Used to be you couldn't even do that.
 
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Wow this is fucking disgusting.

Colorado sure is a pussy state, that's undeniable. Sickening.

What a rotten fucking bitch.

She's white though....so that explains a lot.
 
Mar 24, 2021
The woman who helped cover up evidence at the scene where Woodland Park mother Kelsey Berreth was murdered and later testified against Berreth’s killer has been paroled and released from prison after being resentenced this week for her role in the crime, state records show.

Krystal Lee Kenney was in a relationship with Berreth’s fiancé Patrick Frazee when he killed Berreth in her condo on Thanksgiving Day 2018. Kenney, a nurse from Idaho, then helped Frazee clean up the bloody murder scene, something she testified to at trial.

Frazee was eventually convicted of the murder and sentenced to life in prison without parole. Kenney’s testimony was key to that conviction.
Last month, the Colorado Court of Appeals threw out Kenney’s original 3-year sentence for felony tampering with evidence in the case. The higher court found that Teller County District Court Judge Scott Sells exceeded the maximum sentence allowed by her plea agreement, improperly relying on outside facts to push her prison time into the aggravated range for the crime.
Sells resentenced Kenney to 18 months in prison with the same start date as her original sentence, Jon Sarché, spokesman for the Colorado Judicial Department, said in an email.

That start date, according to Colorado Department of Corrections records, was Jan. 28, 2020. But Kenney, now 34, was released on parole Tuesday, records show.
It’s not uncommon for inmates to be released early. The Colorado Revised Statutes dictate that inmates sentenced for Class 6 felonies, like Kenney, are eligible for parole after serving at least 50% of their time, contingent on other factors.
“Based on the new sentence, Ms. Kenney was now past her mandatory release date and she was released from the Denver Women’s Correctional Facility on parole on Tuesday,” department of corrections spokeswoman Annie Skinner wrote in an email Thursday. “The Department of Corrections does not decide how much time an individual serves in prison. The Department follows the sentence that the court issues and calculates the time based on the relevant state statutes.”

Kenney is now assigned to the department’s parole division, records show.
 
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