Teen Killed His Family Because They Were Against His Black Girlfriend

Midland, VA — Levi Norwood, a 17-year old white teen, alleged­ly killed his moth­er and broth­er because he believed they were racist for dis­ap­prov­ing of his Black girl­friend. His father recent­ly died after alleged­ly com­mit­ting sui­cide. Levi alleged­ly shot and killed his 34-year old moth­er, Jennifer Norwood, and 6‑year old broth­er, Wyatt, last February inside their home in Fauquier County, Virginia. He then alleged­ly wait­ed for his 37-year old father, Joshua Norwood, to come home and shot him in the head, injur­ing him. Levi fled the scene with a stolen car and went to North Carolina where he was found shoplift­ing at a Target store. He was arrest­ed and is being held at a region­al juve­nile deten­tion cen­ter await­ing tri­al. Most recent­ly, his father was found dead inside their home. Authorities said no foul play is sus­pect­ed and believed he com­mit­ted sui­cide. His cause and man­ner of death have yet been con­firmed by the med­ical exam­in­er. Their rel­a­tives believed Joshua killed him­self because “his pain was so deep, and he saw no oth­er way out,” Joshua’s aunt, Rebecca Norwood, wrote on Facebook, accord­ing to the Washington Post. “He told me he died the night his wife and lil boy were killed and he was just an emp­ty shell of a per­son.” After his death, Joshua was crit­i­cized when his appar­ent racist behav­ior sur­faced on his Facebook. He and his wife were alleged­ly against their son hav­ing a rela­tion­ship with a Black girl.



DETAILED STORY AS CARRIED BY THE WASHINGTON POST.

Father of Va. teen accused of killing his mom and broth­er is found dead in same house;

By Ian Shapira and Michael E. Miller April 21, 2020 at 6:30 p.m. EDT
His moth­er begged him not to give up. But two months after his wife and 6‑year-old son were killed and his old­er son was charged with mur­der, Joshua Norwood saw only one way for­ward, he told his moth­er, Ginny, on Monday. “He said for me not to be sor­ry, be hap­py because he would be with Jen and Wyatt,” Ginny Norwood wrote on her Facebook page.
Joshua hung up and wrote one last mes­sage. “He sent me a text and said, ‘I love you’ and that he need­ed to be with them,” Ginny wrote. Then Joshua returned to the liv­ing room of his Northern Virginia ranch home. It was there, on Valentine’s Day, that he had dis­cov­ered the bod­ies of Jennifer Norwood, 34, and Wyatt, 6. And it was there, at 3:30 p.m. Monday, that Fauquier County sheriff’s deputies dis­cov­ered Joshua’s body. They were called to the house by his moth­er, who lives in Maine.

My boy, my only boy, My son Joshua killed him­self a cou­ple hours ago,” Ginny wrote on Facebook. Her son suf­fered trau­ma to his upper body, but no foul play is sus­pect­ed, the Fauquier County Sheriff’s Office said. An offi­cial cause of death will not be declared until an autop­sy is com­plet­ed, said James Hartman, a spokesman for the sheriff’s office. He declined to pro­vide fur­ther details. The death marks the lat­est tragedy in the Norwood fam­i­ly. Levi, a 17-year-old junior at Liberty High School, has been charged with first-degree mur­der in the killings of his moth­er and broth­er.
Joshua’s aunt, Rebecca Norwood, wrote on Facebook that he had tak­en his life because “his pain was so deep, and he saw no oth­er way out.” “He told me he died the night his wife and lil boy were killed and he was just an emp­ty shell of a person.”

A month after the deaths of his wife and son, Joshua Norwood filed a peti­tion to restore his gun rights. According to his peti­tion, he had been invol­un­tar­i­ly admit­ted to a facil­i­ty or ordered to manda­to­ry out­pa­tient treat­ment in the Richmond area from March 11 to March 13. He was sched­uled for a hear­ing on Tuesday in Fauquier County General District Court, but the pro­ceed­ing was pushed back to May 11 because of the coro­n­avirus pan­dem­ic, accord­ing to court records and the court clerk. “He was real­ly upset that police had tak­en his guns,” said one acquain­tance who had spo­ken to him in recent weeks. “He want­ed to be able to pro­tect him­self, now that he was alone.” In a pre­vi­ous inter­view with The Washington Post, Joshua Norwood described com­ing home with a bou­quet of flow­ers for his wife about 6 p.m. on Valentine’s Day. When he opened the door to their brick house on Elk Run Road, a gun­shot rang out from the base­ment, and the bul­let grazed his head, he said. Norwood, who often car­ried a gun, fired back, and his assailant fled the house.

The father found his wife and youngest son fatal­ly shot and lying under blan­kets in the liv­ing room. It wasn’t until the next day that he learned the alleged cul­prit was his old­er son. “Every day for the rest of my life,” he said, “I’m going to wake up, look in the mir­ror, and I’m going to have a scar down my face, my head, as a mem­o­ry of the worst day of my life, when my fam­i­ly got tak­en away.” Eventually, Levi was tracked down in North Carolina, arrest­ed and returned to Northern Virginia. He is being held at a region­al juve­nile deten­tion cen­ter, await­ing tri­al. It’s unclear how his father’s death will affect his case. Scott Hook, Fauquier County’s commonwealth’s attor­ney, declined to com­ment. In the after­math of the killings, Joshua Norwood had come under scruti­ny for his own behav­ior, fac­ing accu­sa­tions that he was a racist who object­ed to his son’s hav­ing a black girl­friend. His Face­book page fea­tured a well-known say­ing by white suprema­cist David Lane: “We must secure the exis­tence of our race, and a future for white chil­dren.” The Southern Poverty Law Center describes Lane as “one of the most impor­tant ide­o­logues of con­tem­po­rary white supremacy.”

Norwood appears to have made dozens of posts on the white suprema­cist web­site Stormfront. And the acquain­tance, who met Norwood on Stormfront and last spoke to him ear­li­er this month, said Norwood was wor­ried the police inves­ti­ga­tion would reveal his white suprema­cist ties. “He didn’t want any infor­ma­tion com­ing out taint­ing his rep­u­ta­tion or embold­en­ing his son’s defense case,” accord­ing to the acquain­tance, who spoke on the con­di­tion of anonymi­ty to avoid asso­ci­a­tion with Stormfront. But Norwood insist­ed in February that he was not a white suprema­cist. He said he could not remem­ber why he pro­mot­ed Lane’s max­im on Facebook. Levi Norwood’s girl­friend has not returned mes­sages from The Post, and her par­ents have declined inter­view requests.