ROY — Police arrested two people Tuesday who they believe are connected to the slayings of a Roy woman and her son in their home last week.
Pamela Knight Jeffries, 56, and her son Matthew Roddy, 30, were found dead Monday — their bodies stuffed inside a closet in their mobile home at Karol's Mobile Home Estates, 3860 S. Midland Drive.
Roy Police Chief Greg Whinham confirmed for the Deseret News that Jeremy Lee Valdes, 33, and Miranda Mandy Statler, 26, were booked into the Weber County Jail in connection with the investigation. Valdes was jailed on a no-bail hold by Adult Probation and Parole, while Statler was taken into custody on several outstanding warrants, including one no-bail warrant.
"There is a connection between the victims and the suspects," Whinham said. "This isn't random."
Roy police were initially called to the home Nov. 25, after the residents called to report the theft of OxyContin and Valium, Whinham said.
Officers responded again later that same day after neighbors reported that family pets were outdoors longer than usual. Police were, however, were unable to make contact because no one answered the door.
Whinham said police tried again Saturday to make contact with Jeffries and Roddy, but no one answered the door. Because of the Thanksgiving holiday, Whinham said, investigators thought the family may have left town. Their vehicle was not in the driveway.
After the weekend, however, an endangered-persons alert was issued Monday, and the family car was found later that day abandoned in a parking lot in a residential area of Clearfield, the chief said.
"Once we had the vehicle and couldn't figure out why it was there, and couldn't attach occupants, we had enough information to get a judge to sign a warrant to let us get into the house," Whinham said.
Authorities had spent "a considerable amount of time" in the victims' home, Whinham said, conducting a "methodical" search when they found the pair's bodies inside a closet.
"Furniture had been moved to make the closet door less visible," Whinham said. "It was obvious the effort was made to put (Jeffries' and Roddy's bodies) out of view."
The chief declined to identify a preliminary cause of death, saying only that both bodies showed "indications of injury, of trauma." He said he will wait for autopsy results before releasing information about how the pair was killed.
- Cottonwood High School football coach Josh...
- Glenn Beck unleashes his dogs of war
- Four people killed in plane crash in Kane...
- Top 30 elementary schools in Utah by test scores
- Dangerous silence: Why you need to talk to...
- Bus driver on leave after ejecting 7-year-old...
- Mortgage rates at historic lows as home...
- Cathy Free: Free Lunch: Zero, nada, zilch on...
- Glenn Beck unleashes his dogs of war
26 - Cottonwood High School football coach...
23 - Liljenquist pushing to make name for...
21 - KSL-TV welcomes 2 new anchors, new format
19 - Utah woman adopted as baby faces...
18 - Vets heart Mitt: Romney enjoys big...
17 - Man shot brother while showing him...
13 - Rep. Jim Matheson favors getting rid of...
13







DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments