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Who’s who in Lori Vallow Daybell’s trial in Arizona?

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PHOENIX (AP) — The case of Lori Vallow Daybell took investigators from Arizona to Idaho and Hawaii to unravel a twisted plot built on bizarre claims that evil spirits possessed her family.

She already is serving three life sentences in Idaho for murdering her two youngest children and conspiring to kill her lover’s wife.

Now, she faces another life sentence after an Arizona jury on Tuesday found Vallow Daybell guilty of conspiring with her brother to kill her estranged husband, Charles Vallow.

Prosecutors say she was after money from a life insurance policy. They also contend doomsday prophecies peddled by her boyfriend and soon-to-be husband Chad Daybell played a role in Vallow’s 2019 death in metro Phoenix.

Vallow Daybell says her brother Alex acted in self-defense, and that Vallow’s death wasn’t a crime but a tragedy.

Jurors deliberated for about three hours over two days. Vallow Daybell, who isn’t a lawyer, represented herself in the case and didn’t call any witnesses or put on any evidence in her defense.

Here’s a look at some of the people connected to the case:

Lori Vallow Daybell, the defendant

Vallow Daybell, 51, a beautician by trade and mother of three, has been married five times.

She married her high school sweetheart when she was 19. It ended quickly, but she married again in her early 20s and had a son. With her third husband, Joseph Ryan, she had a daughter. That ended after a few years, and Ryan later died in his home of a suspected heart attack.

In the summer of 2019, her fourth husband — Charles Vallow — was shot to death by her brother.

That’s when she moved with her daughter, Tylee Ryan, and younger son, Joshua “JJ” Vallow, to southeastern Idaho, where she could be closer to Chad. That September, the children disappeared, and prosecutors said Chad and his wife at the time, Tammy Daybell, applied to increase Tammy’s life insurance benefit.

Tammy died the next month, and Chad Daybell and Vallow Daybell got married two weeks later. Authorities grew suspicious about Tammy’s death and had her body exhumed for an autopsy, which determined she died of asphyxiation. The children’s bodies were found in 2020, buried in Chad Daybell’s yard.

During her sentencing, Vallow Daybell said “accidental deaths happen.” She claimed the spirits of the three victims visited her regularly and were all happy in the “spirit world.”

In Arizona, she will be sentenced for her role in Vallow’s death after she again goes on trial, which is scheduled for later this year. She is charged in that case with conspiring to murder Brandon Boudreaux, the ex-husband of Vallow Daybell’s niece. Boudreaux survived the attempt.

Charles Vallow, husband and victim

Charles Vallow, a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, entered the picture several months after Vallow Daybell and Joseph Ryan divorced. Vallow Daybell joined the faith — commonly known as the Mormon church — and the two married in 2006. They later adopted “JJ” Vallow.

The marriage soured by 2019. Charles filed for divorce, saying in court papers that Vallow Daybell believed herself to be a deity tasked with helping usher in the biblical apocalypse.

The two were estranged but still married when Vallow Daybell’s brother, Alex Cox, shot and killed Charles outside his suburban Phoenix home. Cox told police the shooting was in self-defense and was never charged in the case. He died months later of a blood clot in his lungs.

Chad Daybell, husband convicted in triple-murder trial

Chad Daybell, 56, married Tammy Daybell in 1990. They had five kids and a home in rural southeastern Idaho. He also was a member of the Mormon church and loosely crafted his works of fiction on its teachings.

Prosecutors have said that Chad Daybell met Vallow Daybell at a conference in Utah in 2018. Chad insisted they had been married in several previous lives and that she was a “sexual goddess” who would help him save the world. The couple led a group of friends in trying to cast out evil spirits by praying and doing what they called “energy work,” prosecutors said.

They believed a person could become a zombie in some cases, and the only way to banish a zombie was to kill the person, friends said. One friend told police she heard Vallow Daybell call the children zombies before they disappeared.

Idaho jurors convicted Chad in 2024 in the triple-murder plot. They deliberated just over a day before sentencing him to death.

Alex Cox, brother

Friends of Cox and Vallow Daybell testified in 2023 that the siblings were very close and that Cox believed he was put on Earth to serve as her protector.

During Vallow Daybell’s trial in Idaho, prosecutors presented witnesses and evidence that appeared to tie Cox to the deaths, including GPS data on his phone that was traced to where the children’s bodies were found.

Cox’s wife, Zulema Pastenes, testified that her husband also believed people could be possessed and become zombies. She said Cox called himself the “fall guy” after learning that Tammy’s body was being exhumed, but he didn’t elaborate.

Adam Cox, brother and trial witness

Adam Cox, 56, and one of Vallow Daybell’s four siblings, testified at her Arizona trial on behalf of the prosecution.

Cox was living in Wichita, Kansas, at the time of the alleged crime. Cox and Vallow had planned an intervention to bring Vallow Daybell back into the mainstream of their shared faith in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints before Vallow was killed.

Cox said Vallow Daybell told people that Vallow was no longer living and that a zombie was inside his body.

Cox, a morning radio host at the time, traveled to the Phoenix area for the intervention. He was supposed to stay with his brother Alex, but Alex didn’t respond to his calls or texts. He later learned that Alex was staying at Vallow Daybell’s home, leading Adam to become suspicious his siblings were planning something.

Alex Cox claimed he acted in self-defense when he fatally shot Vallow. Cox died five months later from what medical examiners said was a blood clot in his lungs.

The intervention never occurred. Adam Cox said he learned of Vallow’s death about two days after from a friend who found out online.

Kay Woodcock, Vallow’s sister and trial witness

Kay Woodcock is Vallow’s sister and JJ’s grandmother. She testified in the Arizona trial.

In 2019, she persuaded police in Idaho to check on JJ after her regular phone calls and visits with the boy stopped. A search for JJ and Tylee ensued, with police asking for the public’s help and the Woodcock family creating a website where people could leave tips. A reward also was offered.

Charles Vallow adopted JJ as a baby because the boy’s biological parents were unable to care for him.

In the Idaho proceedings, Woodcock told jurors that JJ was born with some disabilities and was diagnosed with autism. After Charles died, Woodcock feared Vallow Daybell no longer wanted the boy. She also worried that JJ may had witnessed his father’s death.

The Associated Press

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