NEWS

Pike County 3-year-old: 'I picked up daddy's hand, and it just fell'

Chris Graves, and Carrie Cochran
Cincinnati
  • A year later, no arrest and pleas for more information
  • A telephone call that still seems surreal
  • Boy likely did not witness killing; but did see 'the bled'
  • $10,000 reward offered in case
Brentley Rhoden, now 4, lays next to the graves of his father, aunt, uncle and grandparents Easter 2017. He was in the home when his dad, Clarence "Frankie" Rhoden was killed.

LUCASVILLE – Just a couple weeks ago as they were driving on Union Hill Road, Brentley Rhoden told his mom he saw his dad. He was in the sky following them.

Didn't she see him, the 4-year-old asked his mom. Didn't she see him? 

"He was so excited. He was saying: 'He's right there, he's right there, he's right there. He's right there on that star," Chelsea Robinson said on Friday, a year to the day she dropped Brentley off at his dad's trailer to spend the night not knowing the fate that would unfold just mere hours later.

"I don't see what he sees,'' she said.

But she knows what her little boy needs. She pulled the car over and waited as Brentley spent a full 10 minutes talking to his dad, Clarence "Frankie" Rhoden, who was shot and killed with seven family members a year ago in their homes in rural Pike County.

She didn't hear all of her son's conversation. But she heard Brentley tell his daddy he missed him.

A year later, pleas for more information

Brentley was one of three small children the killers spared the murderous morning of April 22, 2016. His half-brother, Ruger Lee , then 6 months old,  was found alive between his parents, Frankie Rhoden and Hannah Gilley. Brentley had been sleeping on the couch.

His cousin, Kylie Mae , just five days old, was found alive and physically unharmed in bed with her mother Hanna Rhoden, who was shot presumably while she slept in a separate residence up Union Hill Road.

Ruger and Kylie were taken into protective custody and remained in foster care during custody proceedings last year. A gag order in that case prevents anyone from discussing those children.

No one has been arrested in the state's most complex homicide investigation, with no known motives nor suspects. Also killed in the massacre were Brentley's grandparents, Christopher Rhoden Sr., 40, and Dana Manley Rhoden, 37;  and his uncle, Christopher Rhoden Jr., 16; as well as his great uncle, Kenneth Rhoden, 44, and a cousin, Gary Rhoden, 38.

On Friday morning and at the request of the Rhoden family, the Ohio Attorney General's Office released a video of Brentley's great-grandmother and family matriarch Geneva Rhoden begging anyone with information to come forward.

Pike County Sheriff Charles Reader, left, discusses the ongoing investigation into the unsolved killings of eight family members at a news conference Thursday, April 13, 2017, attended by Attorney General Mike DeWine, whose office is leading the investigation.

A sobbing Geneva Rhoden is comforted by her youngest daughter, Teresa Grebing, in the nearly 30-minute long video. Both women discussed the deep heartbreak that has forever changed the family.

"All those babies, all of them, we lost so much,'' Grebing said. "Those babies lost their parents ...Those babies deserve to be able to be with their family.

"It’s not fair,'' she said.

And on Saturday morning, a private family memorial service was held at Union Hill Church, which a year before served as family and community support command center that day and those to follow. DeWine and Reader attended.

'I picked up Daddy's hand and it just fell'

Brentley's mom, 22, said authorities have told her he likely didn't see anything as he slept during the killings.

Still, she wonders and worries, even as she watches a giggling Brentley eat rainbow ice cream and play with a friend he hasn't seen in a while.

That morning still seems surreal. A friend called to tell Chelsea Robinson about the killings at 8:14 a.m. She didn't believe him. Then he told her Brentley was OK. Barely able to breathe, she raced from her job in Portsmouth, picked up her mom and sped toward Union Hill Road not knowing what she would find. Sheriff's deputies were there, and the trailers were cordoned off with crime scene tape. And there was her smiling, blue-eyed blond boy who is the spitting image of his dad, playing with a neighbor boy.

Brentley saw her and -- as he always does -- ran toward her with his arms spread wide, yelling: "Mama, mama, mama."

She scooped him up. Then she saw a woman she didn't know cradling Ruger, who was wrapped in a blanket and covered in blood. Robinson scooped up Ruger, too. And she and her mom put the boys in the car and stayed there for the first few hours as the state's Bureau of Criminal Investigation agents showed up, she said. Authorities took Ruger and Kylie to area hospitals that morning.

By 5 p.m., Brentley was tired and hungry. He left for home with his mom when she got a call from the BCI to take her son to Nationwide Children's hospital in Columbus, where he was interviewed.

"They let him draw it out,'' she said. "It kind of looked like scribbles. But the way he talked, he didn't really seem to see anything."

That was the last time authorities have spoken with Brentley. She gave a statement that night, and then a couple weeks later police also took DNA from her -- routine in such cases.

As the year has progressed, though, Brentley has shared bits and pieces in a way only a pre-schooler can. Robinson doesn't push. She doesn't ask questions. She just lets him share as he is ready and able.

"For the longest time, he thought his dad turned into a zombie; because he did see the blood,'' she said, adding the family watches AMC's series The Walking Dead, which is about zombies. "He said: 'I picked up Daddy's hand and it just fell.' Then he went back to watching TV."

When Bobby Jo Manley, his great aunt, came pounding on the door after she discovered Christopher, Sr., and Gary Rhoden dead in the trailer next door, Brentley unlocked it and let her in.

Bobby Jo Manley and her father, Leonard Manley, are photographed on Leonard's porch. Bobby Jo called 911 after she found members of her family shot and killed a couple of miles down the road. She described discovering the bodies of her brother-in-law, niece and nephews.

'He still remembers seeing everything bloody,'' Robinson said. "He still calls it 'bled.'"

'Daddy is in heaven with Jesus'

She has always been honest with her son, telling him his daddy is dead and that he is in heaven with Jesus.

They often visit the gravesite where his daddy and grandparents are buried.

Tuesday, Jan. 3, 2017: A hand-painted rock sits atop the grave of Clarence "Frankie" Rhoden's grave at Scioto Burial Park, where he was laid to rest beside his mother, father, brother and sister in McDermott, Ohio in Scioto County.

It is here, too, where he talks with his daddy. Sometimes he will leave a toy or two for his daddy or his nana or his papaw.

Other times, he is quieter.

"He will lay on his grave; just lay on it,'' she said. "And sometimes he will bring out his cars and play derby."

And, to this day, if anyone asks where his daddy is, Brentley simply says:

"My daddy is working on derby cars in heaven with Jesus."

Anyone with information related to the case is asked to call the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation at 855-BCI-OHIO (224-6446) or the Pike County Sheriff's Office at 740-947-2111. There remains a $10,000 reward for information leading to an arrest and a conviction in the case. 

Wednesday, March 22, 2017: Five of the eight Rhoden family members killed April of 2016 are laid to rest beside each other at Scioto Burial Park in McDermott, Ohio.. The graves of Chris Rhoden Sr., Dana Rhoden, and their children, Clarence "Frankie", 20, Hanna, 19 and Chris Jr. 16. Kenneth Rhoden, brother to Chris Sr., and Gary Rhoden, cousin of Chris Sr. and Kenneth, were buried in other cemeteries.