Search Link search
HomeDA Joe Khan
Our Team
  • Internships
  • Social Media Page Guidelines
  • Our Mission
    • Mission and Values
    • Divisions
    • Bucks County Detectives
  • Attorneys
  • Right to Know
  • The Exhibit: District Attorney's Office Newsletter
Victim/Witness
  • Victim Rights and Input
    • Victim Impact Statements
  • Restitution and Compensation
  • Criminal Justice Process
  • Community Resources
  • Notifications
  • FAQ
Programs
  • ARD
  • Veteran's Treatment Program
    • Veteran Mentor Description
  • Drug Court
  • CAP Program
  • District Court Diversion Program
  • Mental Health Resources
Videos
  • MEET OUR TEAM
  • PREVENTION and AWARENESS
  • RECOVERY
  • HEROISM
  • COMMUNITY
  • NEWS
  • COVID-19 RESOURCES
Prevention & Awareness
  • Heroin and Opioid Crisis Outreach
  • Drug Take Back
  • Parental Internet Awareness
  • Ben's Campaign
  • Resources for Residents - Where to Turn for Help
Contact Us
  • Contact Us
FOLLOW
SUBMIT A TIP
  • Login Link LOGIN
  • Map Link CRIME MAP
Bucks County DA
  • Bucks County District Attorney, 100 N. Main Street, 2nd Floor, Doylestown, PA 18901
  • (215) 348-6344
  • Bucks County District Attorney's Office on Facebook
  • Bucks County District Attorney's Office on X
Joe Khan
bucksda.org
CRIMEWATCH / US / PA / Bucks County
  • Login Link LOGIN
  • SUBSCRIBE
  • SUBMIT A TIP
Bucks County District Attorney's Office Homepage
Bucks County District Attorney's Office Logo

Bucks County District Attorney's Office

Joe Khan
bucksda.org
Search Link search Map Link CRIME MAP
  • Bucks County District Attorney, 100 N. Main Street, 2nd Floor, Doylestown, PA 18901
  • (215) 348-6344
  • Bucks County District Attorney's Office on Facebook
  • Bucks County District Attorney's Office on X
  • Home
  • DA Joe Khan
  • Our Team
    • Internships
    • Social Media Page Guidelines
    • Our Mission
      • Mission and Values
      • Divisions
      • Bucks County Detectives
    • Attorneys
    • Right to Know
    • The Exhibit: District Attorney's Office Newsletter
  • Victim/Witness
    • Victim Rights and Input
      • Victim Impact Statements
    • Restitution and Compensation
    • Criminal Justice Process
    • Community Resources
    • Notifications
    • FAQ
  • Programs
    • ARD
    • Veteran's Treatment Program
      • Veteran Mentor Description
    • Drug Court
    • CAP Program
    • District Court Diversion Program
    • Mental Health Resources
  • Videos
    • MEET OUR TEAM
    • PREVENTION and AWARENESS
    • RECOVERY
    • HEROISM
    • COMMUNITY
    • NEWS
    • COVID-19 RESOURCES
  • Prevention & Awareness
    • Heroin and Opioid Crisis Outreach
    • Drug Take Back
    • Parental Internet Awareness
    • Ben's Campaign
    • Resources for Residents - Where to Turn for Help
  • Contact Us
    • Contact Us

Want to Subscribe?

To follow Bucks County District Attorney's Office, click the button below.


Download the CRIMEWATCH app and follow Bucks County District Attorney's Office.

App StoreGoogle Play

Ivory King
Jackie Wilson
SaPhil Taylor
Milika Brinson
Anthony Jackson

Convicted in 1998 Mass Slaying at Bristol House Party, Juvenile Lifer Resentenced to 80-160 Years in State Prison

A man serving four consecutive life sentences for killing four people when he was 17 at a house party in Bristol Township was resentenced on Monday, Nov. 21, 2022, to serve 80 to 160 years in state prison.

Ivory King, now 41, was originally sentenced on Oct. 28, 1998, to four consecutive terms of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole, following his conviction on four counts of first-degree murder and related offenses for the mass murder that happened earlier that year at the Venice-Ashby apartment complex in Bristol.

The resentencing hearing, which began on Friday, was required by a series of federal and state appellate court decisions that declared mandatory life sentences for juveniles to be unconstitutional. Similar proceedings have been held throughout Pennsylvania as a result.

King is the last of six juvenile lifers in Bucks County to be resentenced.

On Friday, Common Pleas Judge Rea B. Boylan heard heart-wrenching impact statements from more than a dozen relatives of Jackie Wilson, 27; Milika Brinson, 22; SaPhil Taylor, 19; and Anthony Jackson, 37, the four people dunned down by King at a Memorial Day party on May 23, 1998.

Through tears, the grieving family members described the pain they continue to feel every day, and urged Judge Boylan to keep King incarcerated for the rest of his life.

“We were given a life sentence,” Jackson’s daughter told Judge Boylan, “and I don’t think he should get any less.”

On Friday, Deputy District Attorney Ashley Towhey presented as evidence transcripts from King’s original degree-of-guilt hearing in October 1998, King’s prison record that included 15 misconducts and photos and video of the crime scene, along with photos of the victims.

The killings had an impact on generations of families, District Attorney Matt Weintraub said in his closing arguments on Monday.

“What he’s done to these families is irreversible,” Weintraub said. “In one night, he tore an entire Bristol community asunder.”

At 2 a.m. on May 23, 1998, police were dispatched to the Venice-Ashby apartment complex in Bristol for a report of a shooting.

When officers arrived, they located a woman with a wound to her head lying on the ground. The woman, later identified as Lakeisha Monroe, survived the shooting with a head injury and said that she was shot inside the apartment, where a Memorial Day party was being held.

She later testified that when the shooting erupted, a "stampede" of people fled the party, and she was shot while running to get outside.

Inside the apartment, police found three bodies on the floor and a fourth body was found in the front yard. The victims were later identified as Wilson, Brinson, Taylor, and Jackson. The ballistics investigation found that all shots were likely fired from a single revolver.

During King’s 1998 trial, a witness who lived in a nearby apartment complex testified she heard people arguing outside and observed King shoot Jackson. The witness testified she then heard more shots and called police. Other witnesses testified to seeing King firing a gun.

King fled the scene with two other men. One witness at his trial said King confessed that he killed four people at a party and laughed about it. He also bragged he would shoot a detective if he tried to arrest him. King was arrested four days later.

In addition to being found guilty of four counts of first-degree murder, King pleaded guilty in October 1998 to aggravated assault for shooting Moore.

King’s sentence went under review following the 2012 U.S. Supreme Court decision in in Miller v. Alabama that ruled mandatory sentences of life without parole are unconstitutional for juvenile offenders.

In 2016, the Supreme Court further held in Montgomery v. Louisiana that its findings in Miller v. Alabama should apply retroactively, meaning more than 2,000 juvenile lifers nationwide would have to be resentenced.

In June 2017, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled in Pennsylvania v. Batts that there is a presumption against imposing a sentence of life without parole for a juvenile offender. The ruling placed the burden on the Commonwealth to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the juvenile offender is incapable of being rehabilitated before he or she can receive a life sentence.

However, this year the Pennsylvania Supreme Court decided Commonwealth v. Felder, in which it found that intervening clarifications by the United States Supreme Court invalidated their ruling in the Batts case.  Because of this decision, and because King’s murders predated the legislature’s enacted procedure for sentencing juvenile murderers, the prosecution did not have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that King was incapable of rehabilitation before he could receive a life sentence or a term of years which amounts to the equivalent of a life sentence.

The resentencing hearing was prosecuted by District Attorney Matt Weintraub and Deputy District Attorney Ashley Towhey.

Media Contact: Manuel Gamiz Jr., 215.348.6298, mgamiz@buckscounty.org

Created Nov 21, 2022 @ 4:59 PM | Updated Nov 22, 2022 @ 4:23 PM
Ivory King
Jackie Wilson
SaPhil Taylor
Milika Brinson
Anthony Jackson
Bucks County DA
Bucks County District Attorney
100 N. Main Street, 2nd Floor
Doylestown, PA 18901
EnglishEnglish
EnglishEnglishAmharicAmharicArabicArabicChinese (Simplified)Chinese (Simplified)Chinese (Traditional)Chinese (Traditional)DutchDutchFilipinoFilipinoFrenchFrenchGermanGermanHaitian CreoleHaitian CreoleHindiHindiItalianItalianJapaneseJapaneseKoreanKoreanPolishPolishPortuguesePortugueseRussianRussianSpanishSpanishSwahiliSwahiliVietnameseVietnamese
  • Contact Bucks County DA
  • Compliance
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Accessibility
IMPORTANT NOTIFICATION. Individuals accused of crimes and depicted on this and affiliate sites are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Content on the CRIMEWATCH® platform and this website is posted, administered, and owned by law enforcement agencies, and is subject to change at any time. CRIMEWATCH Technologies, Inc., its owners, officers, directors, employees, agents, affiliates, and subsidiaries, provide NO WARRANTY OR REPRESENTATION regarding the contents of the CRIMEWATCH® platform or this website, and are not responsible for its accuracy, timeliness, or relevancy. For information about how to request the removal of inaccurate information, please go here.
CRIMEWATCH Technologies Homepage
CRIMEWATCH® and the Eye Design are registered trademarks of CRIMEWATCH Technologies, Inc. © 2026 CRIMEWATCH Technologies, Inc.

Bucks County District Attorney's Office

CRIMEWATCH - Bucks County

All content is free to read. Subscribe to get email alerts when new updates are posted.

Get notified about press releases, crime alerts, and news from the Bucks County District Attorney's Office.


Also available on

App StoreGoogle Play