
Girl, 17, shot dead by strangers while driving to home of groomer who was sexually abusing her
Kaylee Dutton, 17, died on a lonely stretch of road near Cedar City, Utah, when 12 bullets were fired into her car late in January of this year after she was mistaken for a stalker.
The teenager was hit at least once by a .223 caliber bullet and crashed her red pickup truck into a fence. She was dead on arrival at Cedar City Hospital.
Dutton had been driving near the home of Justin Driffill, 27, who was arrested and charged last October with unlawful sexual conduct against Dutton.
She was under the age of consent in Utah - 18 - at the time of her killing.
Driffill pleaded guilty to unlawful sexual conduct against Dutton, a third degree felony, at a court in Cedar City Wednesday. He will be sentenced later this year.
Dutton's mother Kimberlee told ABC4 that the family had been close friends with Justin from when she was a toddler and that Kaylee worked with Justin after she graduated high school.
She believes that Kaylee might still be alive today if the relationship with Driffill, who has pleaded guilty, had never started saying her daughter was in love with him.
Kimberlee said: 'If it weren't for that, I just, we all just truly believe that she wouldn't have been in that neighborhood that night, and she would still be here.'
Michael Hess-Witucki and Ethan Galloway both pleaded guilty to killing Kaylee, saying they thought Kaylee had been stalking them.
Kaylee's family also told the outlet that they have no closure surrounding Driffill's guilty plea.
Kimberlee added: 'A guilty plea doesn't really undo the damage that he did to her. It doesn't really bring back her life, but it does prove what we've been saying all along.
'The truth is at the end of the day he hurt her, and he knew it.'
Charging documents in the case, seen by St George News, say that Kaylee had detailed to investigators the sexual contact between her and Driffill.
Investigators in the case recovered message exchanges between the two over Snapchat, Driffill told officers he was aware of their age difference.
Driffill is to be sentenced later this year after his guilty please, while Hess-Witucki and Galloway are also awaiting sentencing for murdering Kaylee.
Iron County Sheriff Ken Carpenter said the pair admitted their roles in Kaylee's death and Galloway wrote a letter to her family explaining his actions.
'Both suspects admitted that their actions had resulted in serious bodily injury and death of the victim,' an arrest affidavit read.
'Their justification for chasing the victim's vehicle was they believed they had previously observed the victim's vehicle in their neighborhood and presumed the occupants of the victim's vehicle were (stalking) them.
'At the conclusion of the interview, Ethan wrote a letter of apology to the parents of the victim, describing the reasoning why he chased the victim's vehicle and shot the victim-driver.'
'Both suspects admitted that their actions had resulted in serious bodily injury and death of the victim,' an arrest affidavit read.
'Their justification for chasing the victim's vehicle was they believed they had previously observed [it] in their neighborhood and presumed the occupants were [stalking] them.
'At the conclusion of the interview, Ethan wrote a letter of apology to the parents of the victim, describing the reasoning why he chased the victim's vehicle and shot the victim.'
Galloway and Hess-Witucki saw Kaylee's car at their home block and chased after it in a black 2018 Chevrolet Silverado, flashing the car's high beam headlights.
Kaylee and her 18-year-old friend saw the pickup truck pursuing them and drove almost six miles north and then west out of town.
Hess-Witucki pulled alongside them just before the intersection of Midvalley Road and 4300 W and Galloway sprayed the car with bullets.
Kaylee's friend survived with only a leg injury. The unidentified passenger called 911 at 10:32pm. Dispatch audio indicates that first responders arrived at the scene 20 minutes later.
A local SWAT team arrested Galloway and Hess-Witucki outside their home at about 5:45pm the following day.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
4 minutes ago
- The Independent
Kilmar Abrego Garcia wants criminal case thrown out over Trump administration's ‘vindictive' prosecution
Kilmar Abrego Garcia is asking a federal judge to throw out a criminal case against him, claiming he was 'singled out' by President Donald Trump's administration for 'having the audacity to fight back, rather than accept a brutal injustice' after he was wrongfully deported to a brutal prison in his home country. Despite admitting in court that he was wrongfully deported to El Salvador in March, government lawyers and top administration officials spent weeks insisting Abrego Garcia would never be allowed back into the country following a high-profile lawsuit challenging his arrest and removal. He was abruptly flown back to the United States in June to face a criminal indictment in Tennessee, where a grand jury indicted him on federal smuggling charges. Prosecutors cannot abuse the law to 'punish someone for exercising his constitutional rights,' lawyers for Abrego Garcia wrote on Tuesday. 'Yet that is exactly what has happened here.' 'Kilmar Abrego Garcia has been singled out by the United States government,' they added. 'It is obvious why. And it is not because of the seriousness of his alleged conduct.' Last month, the federal judge overseeing his criminal case ordered his release from jail before trial, finding that prosecutors failed to show 'any evidence' that his history or arguments against him warrant his ongoing detention. That order arrived moments after another federal judge overseeing his wrongful deportation case blocked the Trump administration from immediately arresting and deporting him after he is set to be released from jail. The court agreed to pause his release from pretrial detention so attorneys can 'evaluate options' as they brace for immigration officers to arrest and remove him a second time. That pause is set to expire this Friday August 22. Abrego Garcia's attorneys argue he was only charged because 'he refused to acquiesce in the government's violation of his due process rights.' 'Rather than fix its mistake and return [him] to the United States, the government fought back at every level of the federal court system,' attorneys wrote. 'And at every level, [he] won. This case results from the government's concerted effort to punish him for having the audacity to fight back, rather than accept a brutal injustice.' The Independent has requested comment from Homeland Security. In court filings, Abrego Garcia's attorneys detailed the 'severe mistreatment' and 'torture' he experienced during his month-long detention inside El Salvador's Terrorism Confinement Center, or CECOT. His attorneys say the 29-year-old father was subject to 'severe beatings, severe sleep deprivation, inadequate nutrition, and psychological torture' at the facility. 'A group of the most senior officials in the United States sought vengeance: they began a public campaign to punish Mr. Abrego for daring to fight back, culminating in the criminal investigation that led to the charges in this case,' his attorneys wrote. His lawyers admitted that motions to dismiss on grounds of selective or vindictive prosecution are rarely granted but 'if there has ever been a case for dismissal on those grounds, this is that case,' they said. 'The government is attempting to use this case — and this Court — to punish Mr. Abrego for successfully fighting his unlawful removal. That is a constitutional violation of the most basic sort,' his attorneys wrote. Abrego Garcia — who entered the country illegally as a teenager after fleeing gang violence in El Salvador — was deported on March 15 despite an immigration judge's order that blocked his removal from the country for humanitarian reasons. Government lawyers admitted in court documents that he was removed from the country due to a procedural error and several federal judges and a unanimous Supreme Court ordered the Trump administration to 'facilitate' his return. Still, the government spent weeks battling court orders while officials publicly said he would never step foot in the United States, characterizing him as a serial abuser and criminal gang member. Emails and text messages provided to members of Congress appear to show that administration officials and government lawyers were sympathetic to his wrongful removal and made efforts to get him out of El Salvador before the case made headlines, which caused major headaches for the White House. A two-count indictment in Tennessee accuses Abrego Garcia of participating in a years-long conspiracy to illegally move undocumented immigrants from Texas to other parts of the country. He faces one count of conspiracy to transport aliens and one count of unlawful transportation of undocumented aliens. But in their request to keep him in jail before trial, federal prosecutors also claimed he is a member of transnational gang MS-13, and 'personally participated in violent crime, including murder.' Prosecutors also claim he 'abused' women and trafficked children, firearms and narcotics, and there is also an ongoing investigation into 'solicitation of child pornography.' Abrego Garcia is not facing any charges on those allegations and a federal judge determined that the government failed to link those allegations to evidence that implicates him.


Reuters
4 minutes ago
- Reuters
Gabbard revokes security clearances of 37 current, former US intelligence professionals
WASHINGTON, Aug 19 (Reuters) - U.S. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard said on Tuesday, opens new tab that she had revoked security clearances of 37 current and former intelligence professionals whom she accused of "politicizing and manipulating intelligence." Gabbard said in a social media statement that the action was taken at President Donald Trump's direction. Gabbard has repeatedly alleged weaponization of the U.S. intelligence community, and last month the U.S. Department of Justice said it was forming a strike force to assess her claims. Trump has leaped on recent comments from Gabbard in which she threatened to refer officials from the administration of Democratic former President Barack Obama to the Justice Department for prosecution over an intelligence assessment of Russian interference in U.S. elections. Republican Trump has accused Obama, without providing evidence, of leading an effort to falsely tie him to Russia and undermine his 2016 presidential campaign. A spokesperson for Obama had denounced Trump's claims, saying, "These bizarre allegations are ridiculous and a weak attempt at distraction." It was not clear if all of those on the list released by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence - including a former spokesperson for Obama's National Security Council and Biden's coordinator for global COVID response - had indeed served as intelligence professionals. An ODNI spokesperson did not immediately respond to questions about the backgrounds of those whose security clearances had been revoked. Gabbard says there was a "treasonous conspiracy" in 2016 by top Obama officials to undermine Trump, claims that Democrats called false and politically motivated. Trump won the 2016 election. An assessment by the U.S. intelligence community published in January 2017 concluded that Russia, using social media disinformation, hacking, and Russian bot farms, sought to damage Democrat Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign and bolster Trump. The assessment determined the actual impact was likely limited and showed no evidence that Moscow's efforts changed voting outcomes. Russia has denied it attempted to interfere in U.S. elections.


Daily Mail
34 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Christian school releases SCRIPTURE-inspired statement after teacher, 34, is arrested for sex with student
A Virginia Christian school released a biblically-inspired statement after one of its teachers was arrested for having sex with a minor. Katelin Campbell, 34, an English teacher at CH Friend School for seventh through 12th graders, was arrested on August 14 for an incident that occurred on November 1, involving a teenager, PEOPLE reports. Details about the alleged incident remain have not been released, and it is unclear whether the male victim was a student at the private Christian academy. But school headmistress Dana Jones told WSET that an accusation against Campbell was brought to her attention last month and she immediately alerted police and fired the educator. 'We chose integrity instead of [the allegations] being swept under the rug,' she said in a statement. 'Scripture is very clear that if it was done in the dark, it was going to be brought to light,' Jones continued. 'We understand that [by] taking it to the police department, it was going to come shine a light onto us. 'We took what we were told and let them carry on with their investigation.' Campbell is now charged with taking indecent liberties with a child by [a] person in [a] custodial relationship and consensual intercourse with or by a child age 15 or older. She was booked at the Halifax County Adult Detention Center, but was released on a $2,500 bond. Daily Mail has reached out to the Commonwealth Attorney's Office for more information about the allegations against Campbell.