Deceased/Not Found MD - Heather Grogg, 33, & Danielle Tyler, 18, Carroll Co, 6 Apr 2020 *arrest*

  • #681
We just passed the 5 year mark since Jon was killed and are a few days from the 5 year mark for Heather and Danielle. 5 years seems like a very long time without a trial.

The WV inmate search today turns up DS, JB, AB, and NB still in jail. It does not show MM or JS. MM was only briefly listed in the WV jail inmate list. Maybe because he is a federal prisoner not a state prisoner, but that is only a guess.
 
  • #682
The are seeking the death penalty for the ones involved with these murders. Just need for them to decide if the death penalty is possible.
They aren’t going to seek the death penalty
 
  • #683
We just passed the 5 year mark since Jon was killed and are a few days from the 5 year mark for Heather and Danielle. 5 years seems like a very long time without a trial.

The WV inmate search today turns up DS, JB, AB, and NB still in jail. It does not show MM or JS. MM was only briefly listed in the WV jail inmate list. Maybe because he is a federal prisoner not a state prisoner, but that is only a guess.
MM is in federal custody without location mentioned. Search federal inmates. They also took death penalty off table. It once said Ohio Federal Prison
 
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  • #684
Answering my own question or just thinking out loud...MM might have a federal prison ID number because he is a convicted felon from years before this case happened? He was convicted of kidnapping in 2017.
Anyone who gets arrested normally gets an inmate number.
 
  • #685
Monroe Merrell was booked at ERJ in Martinsburg today. Not looking too happy in the pic. I'd imagine the guys in Martinsburg don't take too kindly to his racism
1000003967.webp
 
  • #686
  • #687
We just passed the 5 year mark since Jon was killed and are a few days from the 5 year mark for Heather and Danielle. 5 years seems like a very long time without a trial.

The WV inmate search today turns up DS, JB, AB, and NB still in jail. It does not show MM or JS. MM was only briefly listed in the WV jail inmate list. Maybe because he is a federal prisoner not a state prisoner, but that is only a guess.
I thought I read AB was released.
 
  • #688
I thought I read AB was released.
AB is still in Eastern Regional Jail in Martinsburg, WV today per the inmate search.

AB is April from West Virginia. Maybe you are thinking of Emily? Emily is/was David S's wife and she was charged very early on but released. After so many years it is hard to remember all the people involved.
 
  • #689
Did anyone ever find out anything about what happened to the other missing man who was linked to this case on social media but not anywhere else? I don’t want to violate TOS accidentally but I was wondering if he was ever found.
 
  • #690
I had given up on seeing any progress in this case until a few days ago when I was in Westminster, MD and drove past the apartment complex where the original fight started. I googled a bit today and found out in July of this year the federal government filed a notice to seek the death penalty for MM.

The notice details "heinous, cruel, and depraved manner of committing offense", planning and premeditation, desecration of human remains, drugging victims, sexual assault, and more.

In October the government granted a motion to strike the notice of intent for the death penalty. I have no idea if that means the death penalty is off the table or it only means the government is willing to listen to arguments to strike the death penalty.

The big news for me is there is a scheduled trial date. Feb 2, 2026. Finally.



mm dp.webp


mm dp no.webp
 
  • #691
  • #692
Did anyone ever find out anything about what happened to the other missing man who was linked to this case on social media but not anywhere else? I don’t want to violate TOS accidentally but I was wondering if he was ever found.
The missing man linked to this case in the early days is still living in the Westminster, MD area. He has some traffic citations and lawsuits in the public court records, the latest from early in 2025.

 
  • #693
The trial has now be moved to September 2026. I feel so bad for the family and friends of the people that were killed. They still have no justice or closure almost six years later. I saw a billboard the other day with LM's picture on it. He works at his dad's company. It made me sick to see his face on that billboard. I wonder if the customers know that they are letting a person in their house that was involved with a murder. Wasn't he the one that bought the gas to burn JR's body? But he is out living his life?!?! How fair is this?? LM get's to live his life and be free, while their are family and friends that just wants justice and some closure. Life sure isn't fair at times.

Dani would have been 24 years old now......
 
  • #694
DBM.
 
  • #695

5 years of ‘hell’: Three killings, two presidents and a quest for justice in Carroll County​

As criminal case continues, victims’ families seek to keep memories alive​


By Brendan Nordstrom
PUBLISHED: December 17, 2025 at 1:33 PM EST | UPDATED: December 18, 2025 at 8:07 AM EST

Diana Riddle stands in her dining room among the wrapped presents and stuffed animal gifts in her living room for needy families. She is the widow of Jonathan Riddle who was murdered in a killing in 2020. She runs a foundation in his honor that gives Christmas presents to low-income families and scholarship money to an essay winner every year. She also crafts gnomes to help fundraise. (Jeffrey F. Bill/Staff)

Every time Diana Riddle gets an update on the case in the killing of her husband, Jonathan and two other Carroll County residents, she breaks down in tears and her mind goes back to March 2020.
On the night of March 17, 2020, Diana watched an episode of “This Is Us” in their Taneytown bedroom, and Jonathan said goodnight to her. She didn’t know it would be for the last time.

The next day, his burned body was found in the West Virginia woods, and the world started shutting down due to a worldwide pandemic.

It’s been over five years since Jonathan, 33, and two witnesses — Danielle Tyler, 18, and Heather Grogg, 33 — were killed and the case against their alleged killers has once again been delayed until next September in U.S. District Court.

“The last five years have been hell,” Diana Riddle said. “Can this just be over already? It’s torture.”

The latest delay came earlier this month. The Trump administration had filed an intent in July to seek the death penalty for Monroe Merrell, of Westminster, who was indicted on kidnapping and murder charges. The court denied the request in October and an appeal of the decision was dismissed Dec. 4.

While West Virginia and Maryland have abolished the death penalty on a state level, the sentence is still allowed for certain crimes in federal court, where Merrell’s case is being handled.

The decision left Nicole Tyler, mother of Danielle, “sickened and disgusted.”

Earlier this year, the Trump administration had made promises about bringing back capital punishment, and Nicole Tyler wrote a letter to Attorney General Pamela Bondi asking her to intervene in the case against Merrell, a co-defendant in the killings of Jonathan Riddle — who was stabbed and set on fire over $40 in crystal meth — and witnesses Danielle Tyler and Heather Grogg.

Merrell’s attorneys declined to comment on the case.

Merrell is one of six people awaiting trial for their alleged roles in the 2020 homicides of Riddle, Tyler and Grogg. David Sanford Jr., 32, John Black III, 28, and Jeffrey Smith, 28, all of Carroll County, still don’t have trials scheduled for their alleged roles in the killings.

With the wheels of the justice system turning slowly, the families of the victims say they want one thing: to keep their loved ones’ memory alive.

Finding purpose in the Riddle Foundation

Diana Riddle sat at her kitchen table earlier this month and pointed to his obituary on a shelf. Nearby sat the blue urn that holds his ashes.

The couple met at an outpatient rehab facility and were married in 2018. In the months before his death, Jonathan had relapsed into addiction, she said.

“He was such a beautiful soul, and he had a heart of gold,” she said with a soft smile. “Helping out and keeping Jon’s memory alive is the thing that’s keeping me going.”

Following his death, Diana created the Jonathan Travis Riddle Foundation, which funds an annual scholarship for a student who has been affected by drug addiction. The foundation also provides Christmas gifts for families who can’t afford them.

Diana, surrounded by piles of stuffed animals, toy trucks and knitted scarves, said she began the foundation in 2021 and it has given her life more purpose. Every year, she receives donated toys from the community, including from families she had helped in previous years.

Diana started crafting as a form of grief therapy, buying stuffed gnomes from the Dollar Tree and wrapping them in fabric. She sold them for $10 apiece and used the profits for the foundation.

Some of the nearly 200 gnomes Diana Riddle has crafted. She is the widow of Jonathan Riddle who was murdered in a killing in 2020. She runs a foundation in his honor that gives Christmas presents to low-income families and scholarship money to an essay winner every year. She also crafts gnomes to help fundraise. (Jeffrey F. Bill/Staff)
Her garage is now filled with tables of gnomes she makes herself, wrapped in fabric representing sports teams or the American flag. She made one with butterflies to honor Danielle Tyler’s favorite animal.

Diana said at least two student scholarship winners have gone on to become EMTs.

“So, they’re literally saving people’s lives when they’re overdosing,” she said.

The Tylers continue to fight for justice

Sherry Tyler, Danielle’s grandmother, hasn’t touched her granddaughter’s room since the day she went missing in 2020. She sees a doctor and a therapist for her PTSD from losing her granddaughter, and the delays in the trial are “prolonging the pain,” she said.

“I wake up crying because of what happened to her,” she said. “Even almost six years later, it’s like it happened yesterday. People say it gets easier. No, it doesn’t.”

This time of year is especially difficult for the Tylers — Danielle would have turned 24 on Dec. 18.

“It’s a very hard day because she should be here,” Sherry Tyler said. “There’s no reason she shouldn’t be here except these animals decided that they wanted to kill.”

Danielle was a painter and a photographer with big aspirations. At the high school graduation she never got to attend she was given a governor’s award for academic achievement, Nicole said.

The Tylers remembered Danielle as someone who was “perfect” and had “the biggest heart.” They recalled her laugh, her hugs and her smile.

Danielle Tyler was 18 when she was killed April 6, 2020. The trial for her alleged killers has been delayed until next September. (Photos courtesy of Nicole Tyler)
Danielle Tyler was 18 when she was killed April 6, 2020. The trial for her alleged killers has been delayed until next September. (Photos courtesy of Nicole Tyler)
“To know her is to love her,” Nicole said. “I just can’t imagine how anybody could find it in their heart to hurt her, because she would never hurt anybody.”

Charging documents say that Danielle, who was 18 at the time, was killed because she witnessed Jonathan Riddle’s murder. She was taken to West Virginia under promises of safety and instead her drink was spiked and she was suffocated with a bag over her head, police say.

The Tylers still haven’t received a death certificate because the trial is ongoing, Sherry said.

Sherry still goes to the place where Danielle’s body was found, despite others trying to dissuade her.

“That’s where my baby was placed, and that’s where I’m going to go,” Sherry said. “This is all I have.”

Nicole was in rehab when Danielle went missing and has been sober since, because she “was more determined than ever” to not let her daughter down.

The Tylers also award a scholarship each year to a student at Gateway School in Westminster, where Danielle attended. Eventually, they hope to start a nonprofit in her name.

“I want to make sure that good part of her still can shine on, even though she’s gone,” Nicole said. “She may not be able to change the world in the ways that I thought she was going to, but that doesn’t mean that she won’t still be able to make a difference.”

Case delays and the death penalty

The Biden administration placed a moratorium on the death penalty in July 2021, when concerns grew over the first Trump administration’s revival — and proliferation — of executions. That kept prosecutors from seeking the death penalty for Monroe Merrell.

In July, in the wake of the new Trump administration’s re-commitment to seeking capital punishment, prosecutors tried to seek the death penalty for Merrell, court records show. It was denied by Obama-appointed U.S. District Judge Gina Groh because it was too close to trial, and the case was dropped in the U.S. Court of Appeals in November — one of many efforts by local judges to slow down the rush to put criminals to death.

For example, Trump-appointed U.S. Judge Stephanie Gallagher struck down a death penalty request for three alleged MS-13 members accused in savage killings statewide, including a teen girl found dead near Baltimore County’s Loch Raven Reservoir.

Gallagher said in that ruling that the late death penalty request “leapfrogged important constitutional and statutory rights.”

But Nicole Tyler said: “How many lives do you have to take and destroy before it’s not OK and you’re not allowed to continue?”

Sherry and Diana first met at one of the first hearings. The two said they attend nearly every court date and console each other. The family of Grogg could not be reached for comment.

With the trial now scheduled for Sept. 14, both families are ready to see justice served.

“I will be there. I got to be her voice. They got to know how much she was loved,” Sherry said. “I want them to see my face.”

Have a news tip? Contact Brendan Nordstrom at [email protected] or at 443-900-1353.
 
  • #696
Trial in 2020 triple killing moves forward as death penalty is denied for Westminster man


By Brendan Nordstrom

PUBLISHED: December 12, 2025 at 5:38 PM EST | UPDATED: December 13, 2025 at 5:03 PM EST



A federal trial is now set for a Westminster man accused in a brutal string of 2020 killings for which the Trump administration unsuccessfully sought the death penalty this summer.

Monroe Merrell was 22 and newly released from prison on March 18, 2020, when he allegedly helped stab and set on fire 33-year-old Jonathan Riddle, of Taneytown. Police say Merrell drove Riddle more than 60 miles into West Virginia and killed him over $40 worth of crystal meth.

Merrell, along with three other Carroll County men, then allegedly helped kill two witnesses, Danielle Tyler and Heather Grogg, and, according to the 2020 indictment, plotted to kill a third, unnamed witness.

Merrell had been out of prison just two months before Riddle was killed. He was on mandatory supervision after a 2016 Carroll County kidnapping case for which he was sentenced to five years in prison. Merrell had taken an Alford plea in that case — a plea for which one does not admit to the charge but accepts a conviction.

Now 28 years old and being held at a medium-security Ohio prison, Merrell is slated to stand trial for murder charges Sept. 14, in U.S. District Court.

His attorneys declined to comment on the case.

Three other Carroll County men — David Sanford Jr., 32, John Black III, 28, and Jeffrey Smith, 28 — were indicted in federal court as Merrell’s co-conspirators. Sanford, Black and Smith do not have trial dates scheduled, according to court records.

Grogg, 33, and Tyler, 18, were killed after being taken to West Virginia under promises of safety. Tyler was then allegedly suffocated with a plastic bag by Sanford, and Grogg was shot, after both women had their drinks spiked, police said.

Merrell’s case has faced a series of delays over the past five years, including an attorney with a conflict of interest and a competency concern.

Merrell is one of six people awaiting trial for their alleged role in the 2020 homicides of Riddle, Tyler and Grogg.

Two other suspects from Falling Waters, West Virginia — Norman Bradford, 54, and April Braner, 43 — face charges related to the murders of Tyler and Grogg. There has been no movement on their federal cases since 2020. Emily Day, 33, of Westminster, was charged with accessory to murder in West Virginia’s Jefferson County, but her case was dismissed because of lack of probable cause.

Jonathan and Diana Riddle engagement photo (Jennifer Fahnestock courtesy photo)

Riddle was killed after a dispute with Merrell, who accused him of stealing drugs, in Westminster on March 18, 2020, according to the police affidavit. Merrell restrained Riddle, and Sanford allegedly stabbed him; he was then taken to West Virginia, where he was killed, police say.

Merrell, Sanford and Black were among a group who returned home to Westminster from a St. Patrick’s Day party hosted by the Pagans Motorcycle Club, Sgt. Steve Holz of the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office in West Virginia previously told the Carroll County Times. The federal government classifies the Pagans as a violent outlaw motorcycle gang.

According to the affidavit, Merrell had been living in Falling Waters on a property where Braner and Bradford lived for two weeks following Riddle’s murder.

Merrell’s next court date will be a status conference on Feb. 12.

Have a news tip? Contact Brendan Nordstrom at [email protected] or at 443-900-1353.
 

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