World of Warcraft

Murder Suspects Met While Playing WoW

Mother, stepfather admit killing 'Baby Grace'

Published on: 11/27/07

GALVESTON, Texas (AP) — Authorities are trying to determine if the 2-year-old dubbed "Baby Grace" after her body was found in Galveston Bay was repeatedly abused by her mother and stepfather, an investigator said Tuesday.

A woman believed to be the mother of the girl told police she and the girl's stepfather beat and tortured the child to death, court documents show. The girl, believed to be Riley Ann Sawyers, was found by a fisherman in a plastic box Oct. 29, but her identity was unknown for weeks.

The mother told authorities how the girl died "of her own volition," sheriff's Maj. Ray Tuttoilmondo said Tuesday on CBS' "The Early Show." One of the things authorities are looking at is whether or not there was a pattern of abuse against the girl, he said.

"In a little over 20 years of doing this, I've seen a lot ... of heartbreaking cases," he said. "I think this one certainly still remains in our hearts and always will."

Investigators are awaiting DNA test results, but said Monday they are fairly confident of the girl's identity. Her mother, Kimberly Dawn Trenor, and stepfather, Royce Clyde Zeigler II, were arrested early Saturday and are in custody on charges of hurting the girl.

The details in an arrest affidavit paint a chilling picture of the girl's last days. In a statement to police included in the affidavit, Trenor, 19, said she and Zeigler, 24, killed Riley July 24.

The girl was beaten with leather belts, had her head held underwater in a bathtub and then was thrown across a room, her head slamming into a tile floor, the mother said in the document. She said they kept the body in a storage shed for one to two months before they put it in a plastic bin and dumped it into Galveston Bay.

An autopsy revealed that Riley suffered three skull fractures, but the cause of death has not been determined.

Zeigler attempted suicide last week and wrote a note saying, "My wife is innocent of the sins that I committed," according to the court documents.

Trenor said in the document that after her daughter was killed, Zeigler had her forge a document that the Ohio Department of Children's Services had taken Riley away because of allegations of sexual abuse.

Tuttoilmondo said Trenor had told relatives that someone claiming to be a social worker from Ohio, where Riley's father lives, took the girl in July. Riley's paternal grandmother, Sheryl Sawyers, hadn't seen her granddaughter in months when she saw a police sketch of "Baby Grace." Thinking it might be Riley, she called authorities in Texas.

In Mentor, Ohio, on Monday, Sawyers wiped away tears at a news conference and held up the Elmo doll she had already bought Riley for Christmas.

"It's hard to think that I'll never see her again," she said.

Trenor's attorney, Tom Stickler, said she has cooperated with authorities. He declined to comment about her statement to investigators.

"But from what she said, there is no doubt that the girl found is Riley Sawyers," Stickler said.

Trenor and Zeigler were charged with injury to a child and tampering with evidence, Tuttoilmondo said. Bail was set at $350,000 each. The couple's next court appearance was expected to be scheduled on Tuesday.

Trenor and Zeigler met a couple of years ago playing an online game, World of Warcraft, and she moved with her daughter from suburban Cleveland to Spring in June, Stickler said.

Wendell Odom, Zeigler's attorney, declined to comment on the case except to say Zeigler grew up in Spring, about 75 miles north of Galveston, and works as an instrument technician in the oil industry.

The Sawyers family's attorney, Laura DePledge, said they take comfort in knowing that the girl is "resting peacefully and is no longer subject to abuse."

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  • Wed, Nov 28 2007 4:13 AM ()

    wow. more disappointments to the human race.

  • Corrail said 
    Wed, Nov 28 2007 4:13 AM ()

    That is sad and disheartening. I am a parent and to read something this tragic,well, I am at a loss for words. Im truely sorry for the lost child.

    On a side not why mention WoW in a story this sad? You know people are going to come back and blame the game? Just sad...

  • Wed, Nov 28 2007 4:13 AM ()

    yeah i was thinking about that too. and really when you think about it, online gaming does have a lot of freaks in it. makes you just remember that there's a way you deal with people in real life and a way that you deal with online friends.

    sometimes they can be both, one of my best friends i met online.

    edit: and i mean freaks of all kinds. i'm a freak, you're a freak, we're all freaks.

  • laeris said 
    Wed, Nov 28 2007 4:13 AM ()

    That's really sickening. "they take comfort in knowing that the girl is "resting peacefully and is no longer subject to abuse.""? Is that psycho-speak for glad they killed her?

  • asp said 
    Wed, Nov 28 2007 4:13 AM ()

    Psychopaths will always be psychopaths.. no matter what game they play.. sometimes they even come in pairs.

  • pjlosey said 
    Wed, Nov 28 2007 4:12 AM ()

    really just so messed up. i just dont understand how/why someone can do that to a little kid.. and yeah the mention of wow... kinda confused on that.

  • Wed, Nov 28 2007 4:12 AM ()

    i think it's more that at least they found the crazy people and can stop them from doing it again instead of them just abusing her and maybe more later for longer and longer with no one knowing.

    there's not much positiveness you can find in the death of a child.

  • Retgar said 
    Wed, Nov 28 2007 4:12 AM ()

    Don't suppose there's a link somewhere? And where the hell did the WoW reference come from, and why does it have any bearing on anything at all?

  • purelex said 
    Wed, Nov 28 2007 4:12 AM ()

    I've been following this case and I didn't realize they'd had any leads (must have missed the article(s)) ... but cases like this continue to amaze me -- I can't imagine how people can be so messed up...

    That and the WoW reference really throws me. It doesn't seem to have any bearing on the case at all, but it makes you wonder about the person behind the character, sometimes...

  • Lifernal said 
    Wed, Nov 28 2007 4:12 AM ()

    Yeah, Horde doesn't have these issues....

    Frickin' allies.

    (Seriously though... in any set of millions of people, there will be psychopaths. Not sure why WoW is salient to the article; I don't recall articles about similar atrocities citing "they met in a bar", or "they met at a wedding.")

  • Tyraelos said 
    Wed, Nov 28 2007 4:12 AM ()

    A truly sad case and a testament to what human beings are capable of.

    No news sites reference WoW at all. Apparently the poster felt it necessary to change the title to completely focus on the fact that they met playing WoW, for what reason? I don't know, as it has absolutely no relevance to the act or case at hand.

  • Sinieya said 
    Wed, Nov 28 2007 4:12 AM ()

    The Sawyer family attorney said that quote...the Sawyers are the NATURAL father and his parents. AKA Grandma and Dadddy...not psycho step dad.

  • Wyveryx said 
    Wed, Nov 28 2007 4:12 AM ()

    The type of inhumane and totally psychotic behaviour should not be tolerated...PERIOD!
    Fry them both up with a side order of fries and get it over with.

    As for the quip about WoW?

    Simple really, since it was only one sentence....it is a sad attempt to localize these types of peoples. Basically trying to start a stereotype and profiling. Violence in game transfers to violence irl.

    The tragic end here cannot be any more saddening. I just wish that the person who wrote the article would stick to the real points of a crime and not incorporate opinion.

  • Wed, Nov 28 2007 4:12 AM ()

    This is just horrid :s Just... no... :-(

  • Wed, Nov 28 2007 4:12 AM ()

    Now I don't want to play world of warcraft knowing ppl can be this crule!!!..

  • DarkXale said 
    Wed, Nov 28 2007 4:12 AM ()

    A heartbreaking story of human cruelty :/

  • Lannik said 
    Wed, Nov 28 2007 4:12 AM ()

    Really now, this tragedy is heart touching, but as others said before me... why does this target the WoW community in special? I don't recall articles saying "they met in bar X" or "they hooked up at the Y night club". The fact that the place where they met has no bearing on the article makes me wonder why Blizzard haven't sued the author of this article yet. There's no other mention of a brand name other then WoW in the whole article and dragging it into this tragic event is a clear intent of blaming (or at least offering some really bad publicity to) the online gaming community for it.

  • Salsa said 
    Wed, Nov 28 2007 4:12 AM ()

    This isn't a WoW news item.

    This has as much to do with WoW, as a news blurb where the robbers of a bankrobbery drove in a Honda have with news about Honda to do.

  • Heckler said 
    Wed, Nov 28 2007 4:12 AM ()

    Right. Not quite a WoW news item. A heartbreaking story, but rather inappropriately placed.

  • Burnzy said 
    Wed, Nov 28 2007 4:12 AM ()

    do not marry you meet in WoW. this will happen to your kids!!!

    thats only reason i can see why Nik posted this

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