Murder suspect Faith Beamer in ironic Street Talk column

Faith Beamer, aka Fay Beamer, age 38, is one of five suspects arrested for the torture and murder of Nicole Cuevas in Wilkes-Barre.

What she is accused of is very graphic and disturbing.

The Citizens voice reports that “Beamer dug her fingers into Cuevas-Ingram’s eyes, causing severe damage and blindness. Beamer also stabbed and slashed at Cuevas-Ingram’s back, using fishing line to stitch up one of the wounds, police said.”


Back in April 2017, Faith Beamer was asked by the Citizens Voice Street Talk column, “Do you believe in the death penalty?”

Here is what she said.

Faith Beamer, murder suspect, said she believes we need the death penalty.
Faith Beamer said she believes in the death penalty. From “Street Talk,” (April 23, 2017) Citizens Voice, Wilkes-Barre, PA

Pennsylvania technically is a death penalty state, but no one’s been executed since 1999. The last execution was Gary Heidnik, a Philadelphia serial killer who abducted, tortured, and raped six women, killing two, in a dungeon he built in his basement.

There is currently a moratorium on executions in PA and a push to abolish the death penalty in the state.

Extra: More Beamer from news archives

28/22 News has been digging through its archives. They found this footage of Faith Beamer from June 2016. She is at the soup kitchen and appears to be crying for her murdered friend Kurt Swan. I don’t see any tears, though.

Sources:

“Street Talk,” The Citizens Voice, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, Sunday, April 23, 2017, digital archives

[Paywall] “Court records detail history of horrors at murder house,” The Citizens Voice, April 11, 2024

Five things to know about the death penalty in Pa.” The Pennsylvania Capital-Star, Feb 24, 2023

Wilkes-Barre homicide investigation suspect previously interviewed” Pahomepage.com, April 10, 2024

Murder suspect Jason Race for years knew man he and Linnette held captive and physically assaulted

Mugshot of Jason Race, one of the murder suspects in the Nicole Cuevas  homicide.
Mugshot of Jason Race, one of the murder suspects in the Nicole Cuevas homicide.

Back in 2012, Jason Paul Race, one of five people arrested for the horrific torture and murder of Michigan woman Nicole Cuevas at 142 Carlisle Street in Wilkes-Barre, was involved in a sketchy car accident in Plymouth Township.

One of the people in the car with him was Anthony Cook, the man who escaped from the Carlisle Street house of horrors in July 2023 — three months after the murder of Nicole Cuevas.

It’s shocking how quickly this house of people took a vicious turn against another human being. One of them they knew for many years. The other was a newcomer.

The 2012 car accident on Mizdail Road occurred when a Pontiac Aztek with Race, Cook, and a young woman in it was hit by a pickup truck that lost control making a left turn. Both vehicles stopped, but the driver of the pickup took off “when he was confronted by 31-year old Jason Rece [sic].”

The article says the young woman was driving the car, but Race admitted in a later Facebook post that he was actually the person behind the wheel.

From May 27, 2012, Times Leader, Wilkes-Barre, Penna.

Jason Race posted this on one of his Facebook accounts in November 2012:

“This is to all the people who think u know me why cant u just let the past die to clear things up yes i was the one driving when the azteck got smashed but i was only driving cause she asked me 2 drive.”

New details about man whose escape helped crack Nicole Cuevas homicide case; footage of Carlisle St welfare check

Reporter Andy Mehalshik interviews the sister of the man who escaped 142 Carlisle Street; shows footage of police welfare check on ‘house of horrors’.

Previous news reports revealed that a man was held captive and beaten at 142 Carlisle Street but managed to escape in July 2023. (Thank God he escaped!) According to a report by 28/22 News, that man was Anthony Cook.

Officials say Cook’s escape was crucial in advancing the investigation into Nicole Cuevas’ homicide.

Cook, like Cuevas, was reportedly held in the basement and assaulted at the same location, 142 Carlisle Street, after accusations of child molestation were made against him. Per the Citizens Voice, he was beaten by two of the murder suspects, Desiree Linnette and Jason Race, and two individuals described only as “drug dealers.”

Cook escaped through a window on the night of July 27, 2023, and made it to the Turkey Hill at 632 Carey Ave to call 911. When police arrived, they found him “beaten and bloodied,” with injuries to his face.

In an interview with 28/22 News, Patricia London, Cook’s sister, shared disturbing messages she received on her phone. She told Andy Mehalshik that murder suspect Desiree Linnette, who she’d been friends with for more than 15 years, sent her a message saying, “Your brother’s a child molester, he got what he got.” London said she also received a photo of her brother from his ex-girlfriend.

London pointed out the inconsistency in Linnette’s statements: Linnette claimed she wasn’t there [when Cook was held captive and beaten] but Linette also said she’d tried to help him.

“Well if you weren’t there, but then you also tried to help him, which story is correct?” asked London.

Police checked on the child Cook said he was accused of molesting, but Jason Race and Faith Beamer attempted to block the police from seeing the child. For that, they were charged with obstruction. Cook was never charged with any crime related to that allegation.

Sources

April 11, 2024: ‘House of Horrors’ investigation intensifies, PaHomePage

[PAYWALL]: April 10, 2024: Court records detail history of horrors at murder house, The Citizens Voice

April 10, 2024: Man claimed he was held captive in Carlisle Street basement, The Times Leader

 

Update: Montour County Coroner ruled Amy Gregory’s death not suspicious

According to a Montour County coroner’s report, the cause of death of Amy Gregory, once next-door neighbor to 142 Carlisle Street, was determined to be drowning. The manner of death was not listed as suspicious. No details were provided in the report as to what evidence was used to determine the manner of death.

The report was signed on Feb. 11, 2023, the same date Gregory’s remains were found. Whether this tragic death merits further investigation in light of the recent murders at and connected to 142 Carlisle Street is ultimately up to Wilkes-Barre police. 

My heartfelt condolences to the family of Amy Gregory.

Source for this update: Montour County, Pennsylvania, Coroner’s Report for Amy Gregory, signed Feb 11, 2023 by Scott E. Lynn II, Deputy Coroner; on file at the Montour County Prothonotary Office, Danville, Pennsylvania.

Carlisle Street human remains identified, 5 arrested, Debra Fox confirmed dead

At a press conference at Wilkes-Barre police HQ on April 9, District Attorney Sam Sangueldolce announced that the remains found buried in the basement at 142 Carlisle Street have been identified as Nicole Cuevas-Ingram, a 38-year-old woman from Saginaw, Michigan.

She came to Pennsylvania in March 2023 with a friend who later became her murderer. Cuevas was staying at the Carisle Street residence with that friend, Desiree Linnette, age 43, and several others.

D.A. Sam Sanguedolce said he believes Cuevas was in NEPA “really just as a visit.” The Times Leader noted it was for a possible romantic relationship.

Photo of Nicole Cuevas from her Facebook page
Nicole Cuevas-Ingram


The living situation turned sour, and Cuevas was unable to obtain money to return to Michigan. Linnette accused the victim of molesting a child, which seems to be a pattern with her. It is also horrifically ironic given that another suspect in this real-life horror story is a registered sexually violent predator and pedophile.

Somehow, Cuevas ended up handcuffed to a post in the basement, where she was held and beaten for several weeks, per the D.A. Updates indicate she was allowed to go into the kitchen periodically and was given bread and water.

She was beaten severely over the course of weeks. The description of what she endured is horrific:

Nearly all of her ribs were broken.

Her nasal cavity was destroyed.

An ankle was broken.

Her head was shaved.

She was also cut all over her body, with many cuts on her back.

Her hyoid bone in her neck was broken, indicating strangulation.

Her eyes were gouged with fingers.

A tooth was knocked out.

She was kicked and stomped.

The Times Leader reports Cuevas died when one of the murderers stomped on her head. The cause of death is given as asphyxiation.

Following her death, which occurred in April 2023, she was wrapped in a tarp that was tied with electrical cords and rope and buried in the dirt-floor basement.

Shortly after arriving in Wilkes-Barre in March 2023, Cuevas reached out to her family in Michigan for money to buy a bus ticket home.

This was her last public Facebook post:

This was the last public update on Nicole Cuevas-Ingram’s Facebook page

5 people in custody

Five people have been arrested for murder, conspiracy to commit murder, kidnapping, conspiracy to commit kidnapping, aggravated assault, and abuse of a corpse. Those five individuals are:

• Jason Paul Race, 43 (appears to be the nephew of Debra Fox)
• Faith L. Hoover Beamer, 39 (girlfriend of Race)
• Desiree Kehaun Linnette, 43 (brought Cuevas to Wilkes-Barre)
• Sarai Kamalani Doyle, 24 (daughter of Linnette)
• William Benjamin Wolfe, 54

The D.A. said they expect at least one more arrest related to this case.

Debra Fox confirmed deceased

Debra Fox. Authorities confirmed it was her body found behind the Host Inn.

D.A. Sanguedolce also announced that the body found behind the Host Inn hotel was missing woman Debra Fox, who was the longtime homeowner of 142 Carlisle St. He said the investigation into her death is believed to be related to the murder at 142 Carlisle Street, but more investigation is needed.

When asked by a reporter if any evidence pointed to Debra Fox being involved in the torture of Nicole Cuevas, the D.A. replied with a firm no. However, the investigation is ongoing.

4/10/2024: The Times Leader currently has the most detailed reporting on this horrific crime: https://www.timesleader.com/news/1651111/da-victim-was-tortured-in-basement-of-wilkes-barre-residence

Did you know Carlisle Street was built on an old Native American burial ground? Seriously.

I grew up in Wilkes-Barre, and researching local history and genealogy is a hobby of mine. I learned from old newspaper articles that this section of Wilkes-Barre that includes 142 Carlisle Street was built on an old Native American burial ground. Seriously.

In the 1800s, it was the site of the E.W. Sturdevant Estate, also known as the Firwood Estate, until it was sold to developers in 1894. The Firwood Land Company began to develop the land and divide it into plots circa 1895.

As they were digging to build roads and later foundations, they unearthed several Native American burial sites, per newspaper reports of that time. See here and here. Some reports describe a vast burial ground stretching to the banks of the Susquehanna River, but I haven’t found any documentation to confirm it was that extensive.

Given this history, there’s a small chance the bones found in the basement on Carlisle Street, which was built on the former Sturdevant Estate, might be from an old burial ground. I write “small” chance because you’d think any burial sites would have been unearthed back when the foundation was dug.

But as the meme goes, the entire United States was built on an old Indian burial ground.

1904 Sanborn Map showing the E.W. Sturdevant Estate/Carlisle Street in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania

Remains in woods behind TGI Fridays/hotels confirmed connected to Carlisle Street investigation

A body was found behind the Host Inn in Wilkes-Barre, PA. Photo credit: NEPATrueCrime.com

After a day of much speculation on social media, the coroner, police chief, and DA have confirmed that the body found in the wooded area behind TGI Fridays/the Host Inn is connected to the 142 Carlisle Street investigation. That’s the house where a body was found buried in the basement. It’s also the former home of missing woman Debra Jane Fox.

Investigators are still working to obtain a positive investigation of both sets of remains, “each of which was found to have some degree of decomposition,” says the press release.

No further information is being released at this time due to the sensitive nature of the investigation.

Anyone with information related to this incident is urged to contact the Wilkes-Barre City Detective Division c/o Lt. Matthew Stash 570-208-0911 or Detective James Conmy 570-208-6775.

Links

28 Mar 2024: Wilkes-Barre City Police Department Press Release

28 Mar 2024: DA: Body found near Cross Valley Expressway connected to Carlisle St. death investigation

28 Mar. 2024: Officials: Body found Tuesday related to Carlisle Street investigation

Just last year, another Carlisle Street row house resident disappeared, was found dead under mysterious circumstances

UPDATE Apr. 11, 2024: According to a Montour County coroner’s report, the cause of death of Amy Gregory, once next-door neighbor to 142 Carlisle Street, was determined to be drowning. The manner of death was not listed as suspicious. No details were provided in the report as to what evidence was used to determine the manner of death.

The report was signed on Feb. 11, 2023, the same date Gregory’s remains were found. Whether this tragic death merits further investigation in light of the recent murders at and connected to 142 Carlisle Street is ultimately up to Wilkes-Barre police. 

My heartfelt condolences to the family of Amy Gregory.

Amy Gregory, 38, one-time next-door neighbor of missing Wilkes-Barre woman Debra Jane Fox, vanished in December 2022 and was found dead near or in a river in Feb 2023.

Although the cases might be completely unconnected, the coincidence is significant enough to mention here.

Gregory had lived at 140 Carlisle St, part of the same row of houses and immediately next door to 142 Carlisle St, where human remains were discovered buried in the basement on Feb. 27, 2024. News reports from the time of her disappearance describe Gregory as living in nearby Kingston, PA, but 140 Carlisle appears to have been her family home.

Screenshot from PeopleFinders.com, showing Amy Gregory’s association with the 140 Carlisle Street address.

Amy Gregory was last seen at about 5:30 p.m. on Dec. 21, 2022, leaving home on foot to see her children’s father [he has not been named publicly]. Her family reported her missing the following day, Dec. 22. She was six months pregnant.

Tragically, her remains were discovered on Feb. 11, 2023, by individuals walking near the Susquehanna River in Montour County. The discovery was made near Sharp Ridge and Susquehanna roads in Mayberry Township, about 50 miles southwest of Wilkes-Barre. An unofficial source states her body was found floating in the river.

Amy Gregory was found in the area near Sharp Ridge and Susquehanna roads in Mayberry Township

The local fire department assisted at the scene to recover the body from the difficult terrain, per a news report. State police from Stonington, Milton, Montoursville, and Wilkes-Barre City Police also assisted. 

The last update I can find about this case is from Feb 21, 2023, when Montour County Coroner Scott Lynn told Eyewitness News that the cause and manner of Gregory’s death are pending further investigation and testing results.

This is such a terrible case. Not only did she disappear just a few days before Christmas, but she was six months pregnant. She was also the mother of two children.

Anyone with information is urged to contact Detective Andres at 570-208-4128 or the Pennsylvania Crime Stoppers at 1-800-4PA-TIPS.

This is a screenshot from a GoFundMe for funeral costs, with a comment from Danielle Fox, daughter of missing woman Debra Fox, that says “A good neighbor and friend will be missed.”

Links

21 Feb 2023: Cause of death for Luzerne County woman remains pending

12 Feb 2023: Body of missing Wilkes-Barre woman found in Montour County

Body found in river near Kirby Park: Still no news

Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania

On March 12, 2024, authorities retrieved a body from the Susquehanna River near the Kirby Park side of the Market Street Bridge. Since then, there have been no updates regarding the identity of the individual or the circumstances surrounding their death.

The body was found floating face-down in the swiftly flowing river, which was experiencing higher-than-normal water levels of 13 feet at the time. This water level is considered elevated for this section of the Susquehanna.

The above is literally the only information I can find about this case, so I’ve created this blog post to keep tabs on it.

Links

https://www.pahomepage.com/news/body-reported-in-susquehanna-river-in-wilkes-barre/

Body found behind TGI Fridays/hotels in Wilkes-Barre

Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania

Update March 28, 2024: Officials announced the body found in the woods behind TGI Fridays/hotels is linked to the 142 Carlisle St. death investigation, at the former home of missing Wilkes-Barre woman Debra Fox.

March 27, 2024

What is up with the recent spate of unidentified remains in Wilkes-Barre? We still haven’t had an update about the body found in the Susquehanna River near Kirby Park on March 12. And the investigation into the remains found in a basement at 142 Carlisle Street in Wilkes-Barre is ongoing.

Yesterday, authorities found a body in the area behind the TGI Fridays on Kidder Street in Wilkes-Barre. This location is part of a complex that includes three 2-star hotels: the Host Inn All Suites, Wilkes-Barre Inn & Suites, and Fairfield Inn.

The Times Leader reported that a significant police presence, including Wilkes-Barre police and state troopers, arrived at the scene shortly before noon on Tuesday, March 26, 2024. The body was discovered at the bottom of a steep embankment in a wooded area behind the Host Inn All Suites Hotel.

The terrain was so dense that the Public Works Department had to clear access using chainsaws and pole saws. Wooden planks were also used to create makeshift steps on the steep slope. Luzerne County Coroner Jill Matthews removed the body shortly before 3 p.m.

PaHomePage spoke with a Wilkes-Barre man who said told them he’s observed police searching the woods behind the hotel for months. “I’ve seen them coming in and out; detectives have been digging every day,” he said.

Really?

Police Chief Joseph Coffay told the Times Leader more information will be released later.

Links