1 / 14
PHOTOS
THUMBNAILS
MORE GALLERIES
EXIT
Read More
Read Story
SHARE
THUMBNAILS
MORE GALLERIES
READ STORY
FACEBOOK
TWITTER
E-MAIL
1 / 14
read captions
Jesse Osborne is escorted by Anderson County Sheriff Deputies as he leaves the courtroom Tuesday. (Photo credit: WLOS staff)
Jesse Osborne, right, waits for the afternoon session to begin during a special hearing before a judge, who will decide the 17-year-old's sentence, Tuesday, Nov. 12, 2019, in Anderson, S.C. Osborne pleaded guilty last year to two counts of murder for killing the boy at Townville Elementary School and shooting his father three times in the head so he could steal a pickup truck to get to his old school in September 2016. (Ken Ruinard/The Independent-Mail via AP)
Clinical psychologist Dr. Albert Gordon Teichner testifies during a sentence-related hearing for defendant  Jesse Osborne at the Anderson County Courthouse, Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2019, in Anderson, S.C.  Osborne, a teen who killed his father at home before fatally shooting a first-grader on a South Carolina elementary school playground, is either a traumatized son who can be rehabilitated or a dangerous and pathological liar with no remorse, according to the conflicting testimony of two mental health professionals Wednesday.  (Ken Ruinard/The Independent-Mail via AP)
Jesse Osborne, left, looks towards his attorney Frank Eppes during a hearing special hearing before a judge, who will decide the 17-year-old's sentence, Tuesday, Nov. 12, 2019, in Anderson, S.C. Osborne pleaded guilty last year to two counts of murder for killing the boy at Townville Elementary School and shooting his father three times in the head so he could steal a pickup truck to get to his old school in September 2016. (Ken Ruinard/The Independent-Mail via AP)
Tiffney Osborne, top, mother of Jesse Osborne, stands near him at the end of a special hearing before a judge, who will decide the 17-year-old's sentence, Tuesday, Nov. 12, 2019, in Anderson, S.C. Osborne pleaded guilty last year to two counts of murder for killing the boy at Townville Elementary School and shooting his father three times in the head so he could steal a pickup truck to get to his old school in September 2016. (Ken Ruinard/The Independent-Mail via AP)
Jesse Osborne, left, watches during a special hearing before a judge, who will decide the 17-year-old's sentence, Tuesday, Nov. 12, 2019, in Anderson, S.C. Osborne pleaded guilty last year to two counts of murder for killing the boy at Townville Elementary School and shooting his father three times in the head so he could steal a pickup truck to get to his old school in September 2016. (Ken Ruinard/The Independent-Mail via AP)
Forensics psychologist Dr. James Ballenger testifies about his three 2017 interviews with defendant Jesse Osborne durin a  sentence-related hearing at the Anderson County Courthouse, Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2019, in Anderson, S.C.  Osborne, a teen who killed his father at home before fatally shooting a first-grader on a South Carolina elementary school playground, is either a traumatized son who can be rehabilitated or a dangerous and pathological liar with no remorse, according to the conflicting testimony of two mental health professionals Wednesday.  (Ken Ruinard/The Independent-Mail via AP)
Clinical psychologist Dr. Albert Gordon Teichner, right, shakes hands with defendant Jesse Osborne after a sentence-related hearing at the Anderson County Courthouse, Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2019, in Anderson, S.C.  Osborne, a teen who killed his father at home before fatally shooting a first-grader on a South Carolina elementary school playground, is either a traumatized son who can be rehabilitated or a dangerous and pathological liar with no remorse, according to the conflicting testimony of two mental health professionals Wednesday.  (Ken Ruinard/The Independent-Mail via AP)
CORRECTS DATE TO NOV 13 - Jesse Osborne sits in court during a sentence-related hearing at the Anderson County Courthouse Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2019 in Anderson, S.C.  An official says Osborne, who is facing 30 years to life in prison for killing a first-grader on a South Carolina school's playground was charged with escape last month. A jail investigator testified Tuesday at  Osborne's sentencing hearing that authorities found a hole in the 17-year-old's cell.  The prosecutors also showed Osborne was planning the 2016 Anderson County shooting. (Ken Ruinard/The Independent-Mail via AP)
Forensic psychiatrist Dr. Ernest Martin testifies  during a sentence-related hearing for defendant Jesse Osborne at the Anderson County Courthouse, Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2019, in Anderson, S.C.  Osborne, a teen who killed his father at home before fatally shooting a first-grader on a South Carolina elementary school playground, is either a traumatized son who can be rehabilitated or a dangerous and pathological liar with no remorse, according to the conflicting testimony of two mental health professionals Wednesday.  (Ken Ruinard/The Independent-Mail via AP)
Jesse Osborne smiles while talking with attorney Frank Eppes during a break in the courtroom after testimony from his grandfather Tommy Osborne at a sentencing hearing at the Anderson County Courthouse Thursday, Nov. 14, 2019, in Anderson, S.C. The teen, who killed a first-grader on the playground of a South Carolina school and his father, faces 30 years to life without parole. (Ken Ruinard/The Independent-Mail via AP)
Dr. Donna Schwartz Maddox talks about interviews she had with the Osborne family after the Townville Elementary School shooting in September 2016, during testimony at Jesse Osborne's sentencing hearing at the Anderson County Courthouse Thursday, Nov. 14, 2019, in Anderson, S.C. The teen, who killed a first-grader on the playground of the South Carolina school and his father, faces 30 years to life without parole.  (Ken Ruinard/The Independent-Mail via AP)
Dr. Donna Schwartz Maddox talks about interviews she had with the Osborne family after the Townville Elementary School shooting in September 2016, during testimony at Jesse Osborne's sentencing hearing at the Anderson County Courthouse Thursday, Nov. 14, 2019, in Anderson, S.C. The teen, who killed a first-grader on the playground of the South Carolina school and his father, faces 30 years to life without parole.  (Ken Ruinard/The Independent-Mail via AP)
Jesse Osborne talks with attorney Frank Eppes during a sentence-related hearing at the Anderson County Courthouse, Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2019, in Anderson, S.C.  Osborne, a teen who killed his father at home before fatally shooting a first-grader on a South Carolina elementary school playground, is either a traumatized son who can be rehabilitated or a dangerous and pathological liar with no remorse, according to the conflicting testimony of two mental health professionals Wednesday.  (Ken Ruinard/The Independent-Mail via AP)
Restart Gallery
Read StoryShare This Gallery

You May Also Like These Photo Galleries

'Rise of Skywalker' is almost here, but a dark side looms
Planned Parenthood shooting suspect insists he's competent
Virginia woman with terminal cancer wants to receive cards: "It helps with the depression"
Post offices to be named for Marilyn Monroe, Ritchie Valens
Adorable Adoptable