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Member of Zizian group says she did not kill her parents in Pennsylvania home

Member of Zizian group says she did not kill her parents in Pennsylvania home

Yahoo16-04-2025

The Brief
The daughter of a Pennsylvania couple whose deaths are among six connected to a cultlike group says she has been falsely accused of killing her parents.
Michelle Zajko's denial was part of a 20-page handwritten "Open Letter to the World."
No one has been charged in the deaths of Zajko's parents in late 2022.
CHESTER HEIGHTS, Pa. - The daughter of a Pennsylvania couple whose deaths are among six connected to a cultlike group says she has been falsely accused of killing her parents.
What they're saying
Michelle Zajko's denial was part of a 20-page handwritten "Open Letter to the World" her attorney provided to The Associated Press on Tuesday. Dated March 9, the letter also attempts to defend Jack LaSota, also known as Ziz, whom authorities have described as the apparent leader of the "extremist group" called the Zizians.
"You, the public, are being lied to," Zajko wrote. "And while I don't promise to answer all your questions, I think the truth about my friends and I will make a lot more sense than what you've been reading about in the papers."
The backstory
The group has been linked to killings in Vermont, Pennsylvania and California. A cross-country investigation into LaSota and the Zizians broke open in January when one member of the group died and another was arrested after the shooting death of U.S. Border Patrol Agent David Maland in Vermont.
Authorities say Zajko provided the gun that was used in the Vermont shooting, and in February, she, LaSota and another associate were arrested in Maryland and charged with trespassing, obstructing law enforcement and illegal gun possession after a man told police that three "suspicious" people parked box trucks on his property and asked to camp there.
Zajko also was questioned but not charged in connection with the deaths of her parents, Rita and Richard Zajko, who were shot and killed in their Chester Heights, Pennsylvania, home on New Year's Eve 2022. A few weeks later, LaSota was charged with disorderly conduct after refusing to cooperate with officers investigating the deaths, but Zajko said LaSota was just "in the wrong place at the wrong time."
"The police lied to her & told her that I had confessed (to something I didn't do)," she wrote.
"My friends and I are being described as like Satan's lapdogs, the devil & the Manson family all rolled into one," she wrote. "These papers are flagrantly lying. For instance, there were no truck-fulls of guns, no machine gun, & I didn't murder my parents."
A call and email sent to the Pennsylvania State Police was not immediately answered.
Dig deeper
Members of the Zizian group also have been tied to the death of one of their own during an attack on a California landlord in November 2022 and the landlord's subsequent killing in January. Maximilian Snyder, who is charged with killing landlord Curtis Lind, had applied for a marriage license with Teresa Youngblut, who is accused of shooting at the Border Patrol agent in Vermont.
"The newspapers do not seem to realize that there are multiple groups, & that my friends & I are not with Snyder," she wrote.
Youngblut is accused of firing at Maland during a traffic stop and has pleaded not guilty to federal firearms charges. Felix Bauckholt, a passenger in the car, also was killed in a shootout.
Bauckholt and LaSota were living together in North Carolina as recently as this winter, according to their landlord, who also was renting a duplex to Youngblut in the same neighborhood. Zajko's lawyer said Tuesday that Zajko also had been living in North Carolina before the group moved north to Frostburg, Maryland.
The Source
Information from this article was provided by the Associated Press.

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