- Craig Jones, 22, confessed to planning a killing for a week before murdering his sister.
- Victim identified as 26-year-old Taylar Hill of Bellefontaine Neighbors, Missouri.
- Police say Jones struck her with a dumbbell before stabbing her multiple times.
- Authorities charged him with first-degree murder and armed criminal action.
- Jones was arrested without incident and allegedly admitted his intentions.
Missouri authorities say a 22-year-old man meticulously plotted to kill for about a week before carrying out the brutal slaying of his own sister with a dumbbell and a knife.
Craig Jones has been charged with first-degree murder and armed criminal action following the death of 26-year-old Taylar Hill, according to court records.
Police say the attack unfolded Tuesday evening inside a home on Bliss Drive in Bellefontaine Neighbors, a suburb north of St. Louis.
Investigators allege that Jones struck Hill multiple times in the head with a seven-pound dumbbell before retrieving a steak knife and stabbing her repeatedly.
The Bellefontaine Neighbors Police Department responded to reports of a stabbing shortly after 8 p.m. and found Hill suffering from life-threatening wounds. She was rushed to a hospital but did not survive.
The St. Louis County Police Department later took over the case at the request of local authorities. Jones was located shortly after the incident and taken into custody without resistance, investigators said.
In a chilling confession, Jones admitted to detectives that he killed his sister and had been preparing to kill “someone” for roughly a week, according to the criminal complaint. Authorities noted that the murder was intentional, unprovoked, and carried out against an unarmed victim.
Jones is currently being held as he awaits arraignment, which was scheduled for Thursday. Prosecutors have not yet commented on whether they will pursue additional charges.
The killing has sent shockwaves through the Bellefontaine Neighbors community, where residents are grappling with the disturbing nature of the crime.