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WA GABRIEL DAVIES: Missing from Olympia, WA - 31 Aug 2022 - Age 17 * Found Safe**ARRESTED*

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New details emerge as charging documents for Olympia teen murder suspect are released​

After two 16-year-old males were arrested in connection with the fatal shooting of a man at his Orting home last week, Pierce County has released charging documents associated with the case.

One of the two suspects was later confirmed to be Gabriel Davies, a teenager who went missing under “suspicious circumstances” and was found safe after an extensive search throughout Thurston County, according to PSCD Sergeant Darren Moss.

The second suspect was later identified as 16-year-old Justin Jiwoon Yoon.



At about 9:30 a.m. on Sept. 1, deputies responded to a home in the 21900 block of 190th Street East to conduct a welfare check after a 51-year-old man had reportedly not shown up for work for four days.

According to the charging documents, deputies smelled what they thought was a decaying body. They also saw a German Shepard running inside the house and out into the backyard through a doggy door.

After gaining access to the home, deputies found the man deceased on the floor with a gunshot wound in his head and a significant amount of blood surrounding the body.

After detectives and forensic investigators were called to the scene, a single spent shell casing was found near the man’s body, but no gun had been found.

There were no signs of forced entry into the house and further examination of the victim revealed he had also been stabbed.

Investigators soon learned the victim had previously been in a relationship with Davies’ mother.

A Thurston County detective was later contacted by Yoon’s father, who said he had information about a Pierce County homicide involving Davies.

According to the Thurston County investigation, a member of Davies’ family said Davies and Yoon had gone camping at Panther Lake with friends and family between Aug. 27 and Aug. 28.

Family said Yoon and Davies left the cabin in Mason County on Aug. 28, just after midnight and returned around 6:30 a.m. They left the Panther Lake location again at 11:45 a.m. and didn’t return.

Pierce County detectives examined surveillance footage at the victim’s home and saw two “young skinny males” approach the home from the backyard at about 1:59 a.m. on Aug. 28.

The two people on the footage crawled into the home through the doggy door. At about 2:41 a.m. the victim was spotted leaving the detached garage, then “stumbling” back into the home.

At 2:47 a.m. the German Shepherd suddenly ran out of the doggy door, and one minute later the two people exited the home through a side door.

The two people ran back and forth to the garage before leaving the area around 2:52 a.m.

Detectives believe the two people were Davies and Yoon.

On Sept. 2, Davies’ father called the lead detective with Thurston County, saying, “Gabe was involved in (the victim’s) death.”

According to Davies’ father, Davies was approached by “biker buddies” of the victim, threatening him to steal something from the victim’s home.

Davies confided in Yoon and they developed a “plot” to steal the item from the victim’s safe.

The two went to the victim’s house and snuck through the doggy door.

Davies’ father said when the victim came home, Yoon “ran after him and stabbed him,” and then “Gabe heard a gunshot.”

Davies’ father said Davies went out to the garage to get the item out of the safe when he heard a second shot.

Davies’ father said Davies was followed by the victim’s “biker buddies” and pulled him from his truck on Tilley Road.

The blood found in the truck was from the biker’s smashing Davies’ face against the inside of the truck.

The “biker buddies” then drove Davies around in a Suburban, roughing him up before they let him go. They also took his shirt and shoes.

Just after 8 p.m. on Sept. 3, deputies took Davies and Yoon into custody for charges of second-degree murder, first degree burglary and unlawful possession of a firearm.

Davies later showed detectives where he and Yoon hid two guns that were stolen from the victim’s home.

Both suspects were booked into Remann Hall Juvenile Detention Center.
Not sure I completely buy the story the kid's dad is telling.
 
Not sure I completely buy the story the kid's dad is telling.
Yeahhhh. Did Gabriel supposedly confess all of this to his father? That he only went there to rob him, but his friend stabbed him and then shot him when he was out of the room? And then the "biker buddies" beat him up a little bit? After supposedly knowing that he was involved in their friend's death? Hmmm.
 
I don't believe there are any biker buddies at all. His mom dated the man and he was her ex bf BUT some biker buddies wanted him to steal something from his mom's ex? And they were buddies of the victim? Sounds like a bunch of b.s. A 51 year old man has biker buddies who would ask his sort of step son, a minor, to do that and then they beat him up after he did it??? Okay.......... A man was killed because why, all they needed to do was taken something? Bull. Bull. And bull. Yoon's family puts it on Gabe and Gabe's dad puts the killing on Yoon... Hmm.

Are they stories created for themselves? Protecting someone else? What does MOM have to say about all this?

Sounds like the victim had a full coverage surveillance system...

Going totally sideways when LE did their welfare check they saw the dog going n and out the doggy door... The dog actually TOLD the cops how the intruders got in.... Have they realized this? At least the evil little brats didn't kill the dog.

Oh I can't quite figure out how when the bikers beat him up they still allowed the boys to keep guns they stole from the victim.... That was surely very NICE of them now wasn't it...?

Dumb shi*ts. Sounds like they thought they had a great plan too, camping, etc. and all...

Sounds like a family member in each boy's case kind of turned the boys in but the stories told I don't think are full truth... Does dad believe the story, etc. or is it one they helped concoct when the kids realized they were on the radar...?

Didn't have time to read all just going by the parts posted.
 
I can't follow that article at all. The pictures are out of order and some repeat. So I may have missed something but... was there anything about high school discipline? I saw he had an elementary and middle school record, but didn't see high school. But again I gave up after 5 minutes trying to read the thing so I probably missed it.

Regardless, you may be surprised but I have known of several high school football players with ankle monitors. As in, they're facing some sort of criminal charges and need monitoring via ankle monitor, but still playing high school sports.
 
I can't follow that article at all. The pictures are out of order and some repeat. So I may have missed something but... was there anything about high school discipline? I saw he had an elementary and middle school record, but didn't see high school. But again I gave up after 5 minutes trying to read the thing so I probably missed it.

Regardless, you may be surprised but I have known of several high school football players with ankle monitors. As in, they're facing some sort of criminal charges and need monitoring via ankle monitor, but still playing high school sports.
Things have changed since I was school. 👵 If there was even a rumor that a kid drank beer at a party during the week of a sports event, they couldn’t play.🏈
 
I can't follow that article at all. The pictures are out of order and some repeat. So I may have missed something but... was there anything about high school discipline? I saw he had an elementary and middle school record, but didn't see high school. But again I gave up after 5 minutes trying to read the thing so I probably missed it.

Regardless, you may be surprised but I have known of several high school football players with ankle monitors. As in, they're facing some sort of criminal charges and need monitoring via ankle monitor, but still playing high school sports.
they go by attendance and grades here and it was said he wasn't attending and not doing well in grades. That by itself would disqualify them here. They have to maintain a certain attendance percentage AND have to maintain a certain GPA, which i do agree with most of the time.
 
they go by attendance and grades here and it was said he wasn't attending and not doing well in grades. That by itself would disqualify them here. They have to maintain a certain attendance percentage AND have to maintain a certain GPA, which i do agree with most of the time.
Here as well. However, the state just changed our grading "policy" (recommendation) for sports. Districts can do their own thing, but assuming his school went along with the recommended changes from the state, as ours did, he would have been eligible to start the season no matter his grades last year. After the first grade check of this year (for us that is at the end of this month), they need to have a 2.0 (C-average) with up to one failing grade. But anyone could have started the season on the team.
Also, the day he disappeared was only 2 weeks into the season. They would not have had a game at that point yet. Even academically ineligible students are allowed to participate in practice, just not in games. And they would not have started school (the day he disappeared was their first day of school), so there would have been no attendance problem yet for this year.
 
Here as well. However, the state just changed our grading "policy" (recommendation) for sports. Districts can do their own thing, but assuming his school went along with the recommended changes from the state, as ours did, he would have been eligible to start the season no matter his grades last year. After the first grade check of this year (for us that is at the end of this month), they need to have a 2.0 (C-average) with up to one failing grade. But anyone could have started the season on the team.
Also, the day he disappeared was only 2 weeks into the season. They would not have had a game at that point yet. Even academically ineligible students are allowed to participate in practice, just not in games. And they would not have started school (the day he disappeared was their first day of school), so there would have been no attendance problem yet for this year.
I had not thought about it being only the very beginning of school, so you are correct that it wouldn't be an issue...YET. I do believe having something the kids look forward to could be something to get them to at least try to do better in school in order to be able to do the thing they love.
 

Pierce County authorities deny teens’ claim that threats from biker gang led them to kill Orting man​

Ever since the first court appearances for Gabriel Davies and Justin Yoon — the two Orting teens accused of killing a man last month — both have insisted that they are victims, too.

Davies and Yoon claim that they killed Dan McCaw because they themselves were being threatened by a biker gang.

But according to new reporting by the Tacoma News Tribune, Pierce County authorities are doubling down on their doubts that the teens were ever threatened.

While authorities said McCaw did appear to have ties to questionable biker groups, they said they have yet to uncover any evidence that those gangs threatened either teen.

“At this point, it doesn’t sound like anyone else was actually involved in the killing of our victim,” said Sgt. Darren Moss with the Pierce County Sheriff’s Department.

From the beginning of the case, Davies’ father has insisted that his son and Yoon committed the crime because a biker gang had ordered them to steal something from McCaw’s house.

But even if that did happen, deputies said these teens still face an uphill legal battle.

“It doesn’t really help with the whole homicide portion because they still committed murder. Told us about it, told us more details,” said Moss.

These details are still sending shockwaves through the area.

According to the Tacoma News Tribune, Davies eventually led investigators to the site where he dumped the weapons connected to the murder.

Detectives say they recovered several weapons there, including a gun with the same type of bullets found at the crime scene.

Both teens are facing several charges, including first and second-degree murder.
 
From the Olympian

Looks like his whole life was a no win situation in a way…. Not that it excuses what he did but it might help to understand…
It is confusing. It sounds like dad and the kids were unhappy with the "stepdad" or he was abusive to the kids and eventually kids went to live with dad. But then they didn't feel safe and dad's and reported abuse and were sent back to mom who apparently eventually split from the stepdad but must have still had some connection there as she did a welfare check on him AND it sounds like they worked at the same place, am I getting this all correct?

And then some time after that man would have "raised" them or been involved in their lives (or was he still?) now the kid kills him?

Mom missing almost all of the same days of work as the murdered man is interesting...
 
I can't follow that article at all. The pictures are out of order and some repeat. So I may have missed something but... was there anything about high school discipline? I saw he had an elementary and middle school record, but didn't see high school. But again I gave up after 5 minutes trying to read the thing so I probably missed it.

Regardless, you may be surprised but I have known of several high school football players with ankle monitors. As in, they're facing some sort of criminal charges and need monitoring via ankle monitor, but still playing high school sports.
I just read it here and had the same takeaway. The last incident mentioned I think was 2018 and it is 2022 and so he likely may have been in jr. high yet.
 
Olympia teen accused of staging disappearance to avoid murder charges pleads guilty
A 17-year-old Olympia boy who seemed to vanish on his way to football practice last year, then reappeared the day his mother’s ex-boyfriend was found shot and stabbed to death, pleaded guilty Wednesday to murdering the man.

Gabriel Davies and Justin Yoon pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in Pierce County Superior Court. Charging papers alleged they broke into an Orting home in the middle of the night in August 2022 clad in dark clothing, stole firearms and knives and killed Daniel McCaw. McCaw was left dead in his laundry room for days, only to be discovered by law enforcement after he didn’t show up for work.

The teens have remained in custody on $1 million bail since they were arrested last year and charged as adults. After their guilty pleas were entered Wednesday morning, Judge Thomas Quinlan ordered them held without bail until sentencing, set for Nov. 3. With no prior criminal history, the teens face a sentencing range of 10 years, three months to 18 years, four months in prison.

Prosecutors will recommend Davies be sentenced to the low end of the standard range, though Quinlan noted he can impose a different sentence. The maximum term Davies and Yoon could see is life in prison.
 
Washington state teens sentenced to 12 years following staged disappearance, murder plot
Two Washington state teenagers will spend 12 years in prison for the killing of a man in September 2022.
Gabriel Davies, 17, and Justin Yoon, 17, had both pleaded guilty in adult court to the murder of Daniel McCaw, 51.

Davies and Yoon agreed to a sentencing recommendation of 123 months. A judge then added 27 months to their sentences, for a total of 150 months behind bars.
 

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