Humboldt County Saw Nine Homicides in 2021- The Suspects Remain Unidentified in Nearly Half of All the Cases

Humboldt HomicidesHumboldt County’s rugged coastlines, raging rivers, and sky-scraping redwoods can draw a veil over the harsh realities of parts of life behind the Redwood Curtain.

According to the 2020 census, 15.8% of county residents are in poverty. Humboldt County has one of the highest per-capita opioid deaths in the state, and the social-emotional challenges of rural living and isolation are well-documented.

In this environment, beautiful yet cruel at times, the year 2021 saw nine lives taken at the hands of another in Humboldt County.

The cases varied wildly. Two separate, elderly Humboldt County residents were killed by unknown suspects. An 18-year-old took the lives of three in a matter of minutes. A man threatening another with a firearm was subsequently rammed by a vehicle, killed, and the homicide was deemed justified. The bodies of two transient men were found dumped near Blue Lake trails within one month of each other.

Of the nine homicides, four are without publicly identified suspects. That is four families still waiting for justice. Four lives were lost for reasons still unknown.

Redheaded Blackbelt would like to hold space for the community’s sadness and recognize the lives lost by providing an overview of the homicides this year that shook the foundations of those behind the Redwood Curtain.

January 26th, 2021- An Elder Dies of a Gunshot Wound on Bell Springs Road

Richard Grayson Drewry

Richard Grayson Drewry

In the late morning of January 26, 2021, HCSO deputies responded to reports of a gunshot victim near the intersection of Bell Springs Road and Island Mountain Road. Deputies found 85-year-old Richard Grayson Drewry, a well-known Southern Humboldt rancher, sitting inside his vehicle suffering from injuries that resulted from a gunshot wound. Despite life-saving efforts, Drewry died at the scene.

Law enforcement at the scene of Richard Grayson Drewery's homicide. [Lauren Schmitt from KMUD kindly shared these photos from the scene]

Law enforcement searching the area of February 10. [Photo by Lauren Schmitt of KMUD News]

The case remains under investigation and HCSO has yet to name a suspect for the crime. HCSO has asked the public to consider if they may have seen the elder’s vehicle, a blue 2010 For Explorer (CA LIC#PHOODIS), in the hours prior to his death.

Original Coverage:

February 10th, 2021- A Triple Murder on the Bear River Rancheria

Loleta Homicide scene

Law enforcement investigating at the scene of the homicide. [Photo provided]

Perhaps one of the most well-known crimes of the Emerald Triangle in 2021, the murders of Nikki Metcalf, Margaret Moon, and Shelly Moon by the hand of Mauricio Sanchez-Johnson in the early morning of February 10 tore about the Bear River community, tested the capacities of local law enforcement, and required a multi-state collaboration to bring the suspect back to Humboldt County after fleeing the state.

A note to readers, this crime was gruesome. A search affidavit obtained by Redheaded Blackbelt revealed the horrible moments that led up to the crime. Johnson told his brother that morning that he had been “getting with” Shelly Moon when Nikki Metcalf walked into the bedroom and proceeded to confront Johnson. Telling his brother “he wasn’t thinking,” Johnson proceeded to use a 9mm semi-automatic pistol to shoot Metcalf, Margaret Moon, and finally Shelly Moon “because he did not want to have any witnesses.”

Mauricio Johnson and Von Keener

Mauricio Johnson and Von Keener

Within hours of the crime, Johnson, his mother Melissa Johnson, and her boyfriend Eric Von Keener would flee Humboldt County driving two vehicles, equipped with police scanners to listen to law enforcement, and approximately 36 hours after the crimes the trio would be apprehended in Tooele County, Utah.

Johnson would be in the Toole County Jail to mid-May after a multi-month extradition process to stand trial for the homicide.

The case would never go to trial. On October 26, 2021, Johnson pled guilty to three counts of first-degree murder and admitted three special allegations of the use of a firearm causing death. Johnson was sentenced to 150 years to life in prison, and the Humboldt County District Attorney explained the sentence means Johnson “will have a parole hearing in 25 years.” Addressing concerns that there was a potential for parole in Johnson’s future, the District Attorney said, “citizens should recognize the difficulty of receiving parole for people guilty of first-degree murder.”

Original Coverage:

June 23, 2021- A Trinidad Man Succumbs to Gunshot Injuries After Being Dumped at a Cal Fire Station

On the evening of June 23, 2021, employees of the Elk Camp Cal Fire Station near Orick summoned law enforcement after a vehicle occupied by unknown individuals dropped off a man suffering from a gunshot wound and fled the scene.

The victim was determined to be 40-year-old Benjamin Scott Thomas of Trinidad and approximately two weeks after his death his suspected killer would turn himself into the HCSO Sheriff Station in Eureka.

Shaun Patrick McMahon

Shaun Patrick McMahon

Trinidad man 49-year-old Shaun Patrick McMahon was identified as the suspect by the Criminal Investigations Division. They had requested a warrant for McMahon’s arrest. He was booked into the Humboldt County Correctional Facility charged with murder and held without bail. An HCSO press release made note that the case is “still under investigation” and requested anyone with information about the crime come forward.

Original Coverage:

August 3rd, 2021- Death Deemed ‘Suspicious’ After Hoopa Tribal Elder Succumbs to Serious Injuries

Of the nine homicides in Humboldt County this year, the death of 73-year-old Hoopa Tribe member Barbara Jean McNeil remains the death with the least information regarding the circumstances. In the early afternoon of August 3, 2021, Hoopa Valley Tribal Police Officers responded to a Pine Creek Road residence in Hoopa after reports emerged of an elderly female suffering from serious injuries.” McNeil was transported to an out-of-area hospital where she would later succumb to her injuries.

Investigators characterized her death as “suspicious.” HCSO never provided any follow-up information, nor formally announced McNeil’s death was being investigated as a homicide. Through documentation obtained by Redheaded Blackbelt, we have confirmed that HCSO is treating McNeil’s death as a homicide.

Original Coverage: 

August 7th, 2021- Case of Man Using Vehicle to Run Over Another Brandishing a Gun Near Lady Bird Johnson Grove Deemed Justified Homicide

Just before noon on August 7, 2021, HCSO deputies responded to Bald Hills Road near Lady Bird Johnson Grove after receiving reports of firearm brandishing and a traffic collision. Deputies found an injured adult male lying in the roadway and learned the injured male had brandished a firearm at another male on the scene who then “struck the victim with his vehicle out of self-defense.” No arrests were made at the scene.

Once again, through information obtained by Redheaded Blackbelt, we have learned that the injured party would later succumb to those injuries and the homicide would be “ruled justified.” The name of the deceased man is Dustin Warrenburg.

Original Coverage:

September 11th, 2021 & October 10th, 2021- Two Dead Bodies Dumped on Blue Lake Trails in One Month

First, let it be known that investigators have not determined any official connections between these two homicides. That being said, the commonality of where the victims were found and the transient lifestyle of the victims is notable.

Just before noon on September 11, 2021, reports began to emerge of a deceased male near a trail off of Blue Lake’s Hatchery Road. Deputies responded, recovered the remains and the Major Crimes division would identify the deceased as 65-year-old Eugene Steven Sega known to live a transient lifestyle in the Trinidad area. Segal’s cause of death was determined to be blunt force trauma and stab wounds.

Almost one month later, on October 10, 2021, HCSO deputies were dispatched to Taylor Way near the Mad River Levee in Blue Lake regarding reports of a deceased male adult. The body was located and subsequent investigations would determine the deceased to be Levi Harold Hernandez Howard, a 29-year-old man known to live a “transient lifestyle in the Blue Lake area.”

A lengthy press release issued by HCSO on October 25, 2021, would directly state that no connection had been made between these deaths, then went on to outline safety precautions the public could utilize when recreating in the area.

Original Coverage for Eugene Steven Segal:

Original Coverage for Levi Harold Hernandez Howard:

With due respect to the victim of the circumstances described, it must be stated that the suspects listed in this article and the accompanying charges described have not been proven in a court of law (except for Mauricio Sanchez-Johnson). In accordance with the legal principle of the presumption of innocence, any individual described should be presumed innocent until proven guilty.

For every single case listed, if you have information, please consider calling the Humboldt County Sheriff’s Office at (707) 445-7251 or the Sheriff’s Office Crime Tip line at (707) 268-2539.

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42 Please improve the conversation by disagreeing thoughtfully and backing your claims with facts
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Sonnyb
Guest
Sonnyb
4 years ago

A direct result of the marawana industry. You dope smokers buy you’re weed and the money goes to people who do stuff like this. No buyers = no sellers. Pretty simple math. NLM

N vance
Guest
N vance
4 years ago
Reply to  Sonnyb

Are you serious ? ? that is the most fkn ridiculous thing I have heard, and takes away from the reality of these heinous crimes!!

hmm
Guest
hmm
4 years ago
Reply to  Sonnyb

I cant tell if you are mocking this ignorant position or actually espousing it.

Pharmstheproblem
Member
Pharmstheproblem
4 years ago
Reply to  Sonnyb

Moronic statement….

Witness to systemically wrong policing
Guest
Witness to systemically wrong policing
4 years ago

Too bad the HCSO only care about cutting down plants and stealing peoples money……..sad for our community

Do Better
Guest
Do Better
4 years ago

Poor choice of words in the Bear River triple homicide. Describing the murder as “savage” when it was done by a Tribal person on a Tribal reservation is disrespectful. C’mon Kym. It’s not just a “cool” slang that the kids use, this word has a long historical context with disparaging Native Americans.

Kym Kemp
Admin
4 years ago
Reply to  Do Better

Sigh. I hate to remove words from a writer’s pocket. Savage means violent and uncontrolled–which is an accurate description of what occurred. But an outdated definition is also associated with Native Americans in a derogatory way. I’ll pull it reluctantly because I think it was neither intended nor going to be read that way by the vast majority of viewers but, the derogatory meaning is still recent enough that some, like you, will read it that way.

I like stars
Guest
I like stars
4 years ago
Reply to  Kym Kemp

Way to cave to the wokeness! The murders and rape are savage acts. The PC word police are ridiculous.

It's your fault I outraged myself
Guest
It's your fault I outraged myself
4 years ago
Reply to  I like stars

Nice that the messenger is getting criticized from both sides. Everyone feel superior now?

Jeffersonian
Guest
Jeffersonian
4 years ago
Reply to  Kym Kemp

Dont cave in

elvis costanza
Guest
elvis costanza
4 years ago
Reply to  Kym Kemp

Evidently, there are worse “crimes” than murder.

Canyon oak
Guest
Canyon oak
4 years ago
Reply to  Kym Kemp

Actually, many native youths are influenced by hip hop, and refer to themselves as “Sav’s” in my area.
“Young Sav” etc.
Ironies abound when people identify with their own hollowed oppression.
Persecution becomes a tradition when it is steeped into culture.
The tradition of fixating on oppression is practiced by many of today’s descendants of slaves in America.
We see this very clearly in certain communities that are backward looking.
One has to wonder if every people need to look back to when they were oppressed, in order to justify their own pride now.

Greenville J
Guest
Greenville J
4 years ago
Reply to  Canyon oak

Not just native kids claiming to be savages. Its common in much of our youth

ytperson
Guest
ytperson
4 years ago
Reply to  Kym Kemp

Use a thesaurus and maybe hire a pc reader? If a reader caught it, the editor isn’t doing their job. Not that hard to do better in this day and age. Excuses are easy to make.

hmm
Guest
hmm
4 years ago
Reply to  Matt LaFever

This is common today. People look to be offended, and then are able to leverage their offensive to silence or control artists. In doing so they gain esteem amongst their peers.

In this case I believe Kym was being tested by “Do Better” who was not themselves genuinely offended, and she failed.

No?
Guest
No?
4 years ago
Reply to  Matt LaFever

The etymology of the word doesn’t match with your definition. That’s become common usage but the history is important.

The literal translation from the original Latin root is “from the woods” and the original use in English was “wild or untamed.” Why the definition changed over time to mean brutal is exactly why it’s offensive to Native Americans today.

Canyon oak
Guest
Canyon oak
4 years ago
Reply to  Matt LaFever

Omg,
well put Matt

Lynn H
Guest
Lynn H
4 years ago
Reply to  Matt LaFever

Matt, it’s obscure to many people and I’m sure using it as an insult didn’t even cross your mind. Intention is so much more important than anything else and people misunderstand each other all the time. But it’s good for you to know that it can still be a loaded term when used to refer to Native people or their actions. 150 years isn’t the same time frame from culture to culture. Some people today have Savage as a last name- it was used to denote race on census and church records in Canada especially till pretty late and sometimes it stuck.

Thanks for the article. You did a nice job on it.

Last edited 4 years ago
Nino brown
Guest
Nino brown
4 years ago
Reply to  Do Better

It’s you pointing that out that keeps that view, using a word that has a meaning which can apply to all as a description isn’t derogatory, if we don’t use it for ONLY some ppl. Then we’re actually reaffirming that concept and fear it. …. as far as historical relevancy, savage comes from salvatico(us); meaning wild. They were referred to as the “noble savage”; wild and respected.
The word today takes a new meaning.

Dinky
Guest
Dinky
4 years ago
Reply to  Do Better

You know what’s disrespectful and disparaging? Brutally murdering people.

Connie Dobbs
Member
Connie Dobbs
4 years ago
Reply to  Dinky

So is remaking 6 millennia of human society to suit your 22-year-old palate.

Victor
Guest
Victor
4 years ago
Reply to  Do Better

Sounds like your triggered. No pun intended

Mick back home
Guest
Mick back home
4 years ago
Reply to  Do Better

Speaking of the Bear River triple homicide and as a resident of Utah, I thank this state’s law enforcement for quickly capturing the suspect and sending him back to California. We’re just a smidge less lax than the Golden State when it comes to doing crime and most of us are real good with that. And getting caught transporting your dope through here=life changing consequences, and not the good kind. Peace out, HumCo peeps.

Robash141
Guest
Robash141
4 years ago

While it’s not much consolation to the victim’s loved ones, nine murders seems like pretty low number compared to other recent years

sick and tired
Guest
sick and tired
4 years ago
Reply to  Robash141

I was thinking the same. Also looks as though they are mostly solved w exception. In past years I seem to rememeber a lot more unsolved murder. Maybe Im wrong.

Nooo
Guest
Nooo
4 years ago
Reply to  sick and tired

Me too.

hmm
Guest
hmm
4 years ago
Reply to  Robash141

We have the 8th or 9th highest rate of homicide per capita of California counties, depending on if you count the justified homicide or not.

Connie Dobbs
Member
Connie Dobbs
4 years ago
Reply to  hmm

there’s also like, 15 people here

elvis costanza
Guest
elvis costanza
4 years ago
Reply to  Robash141

Agreed, but I think most victims in any given year are not found. They get thrown over a bank somewhere in the woods.

Scars
Guest
Scars
4 years ago
Reply to  elvis costanza

I agree, perhaps some of the missing people are in fact well covered homicides yet to be discovered.

And what about the hit and runs in eureka? Is that on the list? My sister in law was ran over by 2 cars in front of enf and they were never caught.

I hope for peace of mind for all their loved ones and that murderes are caught.

Connie Dobbs
Member
Connie Dobbs
4 years ago
Reply to  Robash141

They didn’t let us out much last year.

N vance
Guest
N vance
4 years ago

Let’s all keep in mind that these are the identified murders, but we have SO MANY more that have gone missing. Can we get an article on that Kym? There’s alot!

Jay Hell
Guest
Jay Hell
2 years ago
Reply to  N vance

Keep the unsolved cases open! Kadie Jones rip

FogDog
Guest
FogDog
4 years ago

I bet there are a few more “missing” or unreported that never made it off the hill.

willow creeker
Member
4 years ago

So out of nine murders, they ‘solved’ one case where it was a drunk/high kid who didn’t attempt to cover his tracks at all, and another case where the guy turned himself in.

No Joke
Guest
No Joke
4 years ago
Reply to  willow creeker

And the 3rd where it was justified

Jeffersonian
Guest
Jeffersonian
4 years ago

It’s all about drugs and misfits. When this behavior is condoned by society, this is the result. With the left firmly entrenched in Ca, there is no end in sight.

Last edited 4 years ago
Farce
Guest
Farce
4 years ago

Well…many people know this but still it isn’t being spoken publicly- the guy dropped off at the Cal Fire station and the guy run over by the truck near Lady Bird…They both happened or started farther up Bald Hills Rd on a property owned by that marvelous groovy guy Charles. He packs as many people up there as he can and just lets it go, collecting a percentage of each scene. These people do not know each other, in same cases do not like each other but this is Charles’ social experiment. Then Yeehaw is somehow held up as a peaceful hippie vibe that we should all rally behind but really…murders are happening at the Bald Hills Yeehaw Experiment. Yet when the cops went up to bust the neighbors they let that shitshow slide…confusing the priorities demonstrated

Jeremy
Guest
4 years ago
Reply to  Farce

I wanted too.say something that its nice we all see that Justice works right that some drunk high 18 year old could shoot three middle-aged residents native Americans let it be known in the head while he was drunk and high really some teenagers can’t even drive and you all believe that this kid shot all those people and then said I didn’t want to leave any witnesses now come on who says that it’s like a movie it’s not real go put a gun in this dude’s hand and yeah I’m not stupid I know my being danger in my life by saying something but hey I don’t have a life and it’s sad to see some kid throw it away he may be afraid but I have no fear I ran out of that a long time ago

Legallettuce
Guest
Legallettuce
4 years ago
Reply to  Farce

Brother Thomas was dropped off at the Cal Fire station. The individual who is accused is in Jail. Dusty, well not much to say but Dusty being Dusty. Again, the individual responsible in his cause of death involved law enforcement.

They both were my workers and I knew each personally. Spent many days with those two in the hills. They both were good souls no matter how much you wanna correlate Charles and YeeHaw! to their deaths there is no correlation.

As far as what Charles does I support and no one needs to discuss our way of life publically. Maybe if you took the time to actually know some of those humans instead of you looking at them with your higher than mighty judgment of others you might have a different perspective.

Redwood Riot
Guest
Redwood Riot
4 years ago

Just wanted to point out that none of the murders happened on “Murder Mountain” lol