
Bowling coach had been messaging 17-year-old victim before murder-suicide, her father said
The tiny community of Bedford Township, Michigan, about an hour south of Detroit, has been reeling since news emerged that Ryne Leist shot and killed one of his young charges, 17-year-old Gwendolyn Smith, before authorities say he killed himself.
As community discussion of the June 14 tragedy unfolded on Facebook, allegations of creepy behavior from Leist emerged before one resident urged others to not to jump to conclusions.
Advertisement
That's when Smith's father Levi jumped in.
'I've seen enough of the emails he sent my daughter before he killed her to know it's not speculation,' Levi Smith cryptically posted in a Facebook discussion group for Bedford Township.
4 Gwendolyn Smith had just graduated high school two weeks before.
Matthew Kennerson/Facebook
Advertisement
'He deserves to rot in a special hell,' Smith said of Leist, 33.
Leist volunteered as the coach of the bowling club at Bedford High School, where Gwendolyn Smith was on the team. He is believed to have shot the girl multiple times in her stepfather's home, authorities said.
Smith's stepfather returned home at around 6 p.m. to discover the mortally wounded teen and her alleged killer.
Gwendolyn Smith, described as a 'kind,' 'talented' and 'extraordinary young woman,' had just graduated high school two weeks before.
Advertisement
4 Levi Smith said he'd seen the emails Leist sent his daughter.
Facebook/Heather Smith
Former friends and classmates of the Leist meanwhile, told a different tale about the coach.
'I do remember him being a loner,' said Monica Mckenzie. 'Somehow he slipped through the cracks.'
Kara Thornton said she knew Leist when she was 15 and he was 20.
Advertisement
'He got my name tattooed on his arm. We never dated, I never wanted to,' said Thornton, who now lives in Hawaii.
4 Thornton said Leist got her name tatooed on his arm even though they never dated.
'He would try sleeping with me and my friends, he'd meet us at parks and then drive us to the middle of nowhere, giving us alcohol…he was always so gross, always trying to date underage girls,' she claimed.
'A few years back he was trying to be a 'photographer' to take nudes of women,' she added.
'It's hard looking back and realizing how f—d it all was, haven't thought about him in years.'
4 Leist was a volunteer bowling coach with the Bedford High School.
WTOL 11
It's unclear if Leist broke into the victim's stepfather's home or was let in, said authorities, who didn't specify the nature of the relationship between the two.
The Monroe County Sheriff's Office did clarify that 'Gwendolyn did not consider the relation between the two of them to be romantic.'
Advertisement
Smith's death was ruled a homicide by the medical examiner's office, and Leist died of suicide.
Leist volunteered as a coach with the school's bowling club, a gig he'd obtained through his employment at the local bowling alley.
He had recently resigned from that position.
Levi Smith could not be reached for comment.

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


USA Today
25 minutes ago
- USA Today
Former Oregon Ducks WR Ryan Pellum commits to play for DeSean Jackson at Delaware State
Former Oregon Ducks wide receiver Ryan Pellum has reportedly found a new home after entering the transfer portal last year and leaving Eugene. According to On3's Pete Nakos, Pellum is transferring to Delaware State, where he will play for DeSean Jackson and the Hornets. Pellum announced his transfer back in January of this year. He was one of four wide receivers in his class to enroll at Oregon, and he was rated by the 247Sports Composite as the No. 145 player and No. 26 WR in the 2024 class. As a freshman, Pellum played just 11 snaps, eight of which were on special teams. Not long after announcing his transfer from Oregon, Pellum was arrested on charges of aggravated assault using a semi-automatic firearm and discharging a gun on Christmas night in East Long Beach that sent a man to the hospital. He pleaded not guilty to these charges. Pellum will now be a name to know at Delaware State, where Jackson will coach his first year in 2025. In 2024, Jackson completed his first year as a football coach, working with the staff at Woodrow Wilson High School in Long Beach, Calif. Now he is taking over an FCS school and looking to lead Delaware State to success in the MEAC. Should he be able to do that, it wouldn't be a surprise to see Jackson move up the coaching ranks and become a hot name in the FBS world. Contact/Follow @Ducks_Wire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oregon Ducks news, notes, and opinions.


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Disgraced news achor admitted to COVID fraud scheme in text to hubby: ‘We don't quite qualify'
A former Emmy-nominated TV news anchor convicted in a billion-dollar COVID fraud scheme sent a scandalous text to her partner in crime that joked about cheating taxpayers out of taxpayer money. Stephanie Hockridge-Reis, who worked for a local station in Phoenix before becoming a fintech entrepreneur, sent the message to her husband, Nathan Reis, after applying for Payment Protection Program (PPP) loans during the height of the pandemic. 'This is us trying to apply for free money — when we don't quite qualify. lol,' she texted Reis, 47, according to a federal indictment obtained by The Arizona Republic. 5 Former TV anchor Stephanie Hockridge-Reis sent an scandalous text to her husband joking about cheating t taxpayers out of government funds. House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis The couple was accused of fraudulently obtaining over $300,000 in PPP loans for themselves, including one application that falsely claimed he was a veteran and an African American. Reis took a plea deal on Monday and will be sentenced in November. Hockridge-Reis, 42, was found guilty on one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud in June by a jury in the Northern District of Texas. She was acquitted on four additional counts of wire fraud. Sentencing is scheduled for Oct. 10. She faces up to 20 years in prison. The Post has sought comment from the duo. 5 The anchor and her husband, Nathan Reis, were convicted of a billion-dollar COVID cash scheme in June. Facebook / Stephanie Hockridge The couple's Scottsdale-based fintech firm, Blueacorn, which the couple co-founded in 2020, processed over $12.5 billion in PPP loans — with somewhere between $250 million and $300 million going to the company's ownership, including Hockridge-Reis. Blueacorn received over $1 billion in taxpayer-funded processing fees for facilitating PPP loans but spent less than 1% ($8.6 million) on fraud prevention and only $13.7 million on eligibility verification, according to a congressional investigation. The PPP was an $800 billion federal loan initiative launched in 2020 to help small businesses keep workers employed during the pandemic. It was part of a broader effort — including grants, tax credits and emergency loans — aimed at stabilizing the US economy and preventing mass business closures and layoffs. 5 The former KNXV-TV anchor claimed that her actions were a 'sincere effort to support small businesses' in navigating a chaotic government problem during an era of 'unprecedented need.' Facebook / Stephanie Hockridge Investigators claimed that the couple used the proceeds to enrich themselves personally, however. The former KNXV-TV anchor claimed that her actions were a 'sincere effort to support small businesses' in navigating a chaotic government problem during an era of 'unprecedented need.' As part of the proceedings, Congress said it obtained a video created by Reis and Hockridge-Reis showing off large amounts of cash in a bar on Dec. 21, 2021. According to public records, Reis relocated to San Juan, Puerto Rico, which has no capital gains tax, following his work at Blueacorn. 5 Reis took a plea deal over his role in the funding scandal. KPNX Another video months earlier showed Hockridge and Reis on the balcony of a luxury beachfront apartment in San Juan, The Post previously reported. A congressional report found that Blueacorn routinely failed to properly vet applicants and charged illegal 'success fees' to borrowers — violating Small Business Administration rules. The report also detailed how Blueacorn's leadership instructed staff to prioritize speed over accuracy. 5 Hockridge-Reis was once a familiar face in Arizona households. She spent seven years as an anchor at KNXV- TV, the ABC affiliate in Phoenix. Facebook / Stephanie Hockridge Hockridge-Reis was once a familiar face in Arizona households. She spent seven years as an anchor at KNXV-TV, the ABC affiliate in Phoenix, and had previously worked as a reporter for CBS News Radio in London. She was nominated for an Emmy and named 'Favorite Newscaster' by Arizona Foothills Magazine. Her conviction marks one of the highest-profile PPP fraud cases to date involving a public figure. Fraud related to COVID-19 relief programs was unprecedented in US history, with losses estimated in the hundreds of billions. The PPP, Economic Injury Disaster Loans and unemployment insurance programs were especially vulnerable — with watchdogs reporting widespread misuse, insider abuse and systemic failures in fraud prevention.


Newsweek
2 hours ago
- Newsweek
Teenagers Allegedly Steal and Crash Train—Police
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Two juveniles have been charged with numerous counts after allegedly entering multiple rail facilities and causing a train crash in Laurens, South Carolina. A spokesperson for the Laurens County Sheriff's Office declined to comment to Newsweek, due to the incident taking place out of its jurisdiction. Newsweek reached out to the Laurens Police Department via phone and email for comment. Why It Matters Railroad yards and live tracks present unique hazards like moving equipment, heavy railcars and energized systems that authorities warn can have life-threatening consequences. There were 65,000 cargo thefts on U.S. railways in 2024, according to the Association of American Railroads, representing a 40 percent year-over-year increase. That number of thefts equates to approximately 180 cargo thefts per day nationwide. Cargo theft is estimated to have cost Class I railroads over $100 million in 2024 alone. A blue train travels along tree-lined tracks in Lancaster, South Carolina. A blue train travels along tree-lined tracks in Lancaster, South Carolina. Getty Images What To Know The Laurens Police Department wrote in an August 11 Facebook post that the two juveniles, whose names and ages were not made public, purportedly started a locomotive engine that was linked to two others and drove the three engines out of a yard and onto a line toward Greenville, South Carolina. The connected train subsequently collided with parked railcars while attempting to return the equipment to the yard, causing a derailment and property damage, according to law enforcement officials. "While attempting to return the engines to the yard, the juveniles collided with parked railcars, causing a derailment of the engine and significant damage to one of the cars," officials said. Both juveniles were charged with the following crimes: second-degree burglary; grand larceny (over $10,000); malicious damage to property (over $10,000); willful destruction of railroad property; and injury to railroad. They are detained at the South Carolina Department of Juvenile Justice in Columbia. Investigators opened the case on Saturday evening after the incident reportedly took place between about 5 p.m. and 8 p.m. and involved property belonging to Carolina Piedmont Railroad and CSX Transportation. It remains unclear as to how exactly the suspects gained access to the equipment and how they operated the locomotives. What People Are Saying Laurens Police Chief Heath Copeland on Facebook on August 11: "This was a dangerous and reckless act. Railroad property is not a place to play. Trains, rail lines, and yards present serious risks, and unauthorized access can have life-threatening consequences." What Happens Next Laurens Police officers continue to investigate the incident. Law enforcement encourages civilians to report activity that seems out of the ordinary.