close
close

Waukesha death examination; Medical Examiner identifies the man, woman

Donald Mayer and his wife Tatiana Casap (photo provided by the family)

The medical examiner's office in Waukesha County has now identified Donald Mayer and Tatiana Casap when people were found dead in a village Waukesha last week.

On Monday, the prosecutors accused 17-year-old Nikita Casap, a car and a weapon from the house in which his mother and stepfather were found dead. No charges were submitted in connection with their death.

WARNING: Details of this report can be annoying for some readers. Discretion is recommended.

Waukesha deaths, Kansas arrested

The background story:

The Sheriff department of Waukesha County said a call that requested a family's social examination on February 28 at around 9:45 a.m. The deputies reacted to the family of the family on the Cider Hills Drive, part of a subdivision south of the Gesene road in the village of Waukesha and found a local dead. The next day, the Sheriff department confirmed that a second person was found dead in the house.

Register today: Get daily headlines and break Nachrichten -E emails from FOX6 News

Court files state that a woman was found in a hallway with towels over her legs and a ceiling over her body. Her body showed signs of decomposition and she had a possible starting wound in her back, and a possible bullet hole was in a wall nearby on which her body was found. A second person, a man with a gray beard, was found dead in an office that was covered with a bunch of clothing. He had “an obvious wound” on the back of the head.

On March 5, the medical examiner's office identified the deceased as 51-year-old Donald Mayer and 35-year-old Tatiana Casap. The family had previously identified Mayer and his wife.

Family photo: Nikita Casap, Tatiana Mayer, Donald Mayer

The prosecutors said that the 17-year-old Casap was not at home at the time the welfare check was at home, and the family's dog was missing. A search for the house unveiled paperwork, in which Mayer bought a pistol, but the weapon was not found during the search for the house.

When the death examination was in progress, the police in Wakeeney Kansas stopped a vehicle that led a stop sign. The vehicle came stolen from Wisconsin, and the young driver was custody after objects were found “agreement with information” in connection with an examination of Wisconsin in the vehicle.

A criminal complaint states that Casap was the driver and the family dog ​​was in the vehicle. A weapon was seen on the passenger side “in a simple view”. The driver's driver's licenses were in the vehicle as well as unused ammunition and shell covers.

Free download: Get Breaking News Warnings in the FOX LOCAL Mobile app for iOS or Android

Grab deeper:

With regard to the welfare examination, the complaint was that Nikita Casap had previously had a perfect number of visitors at school, but had not been present for two weeks, and no apologies were made available to the school.

Court files said that a family member received “suspicious or strange text messages” from Mayer's phone on February 23 and has not heard from family members since then. A member of the member also contacted Mayer's workplace in accordance with the complaint, in which a manager said he was in text messages from February 13 to February 25, because Mayer said: “He was sick and couldn't make calls.”

Shipping contacted all local hospitals in accordance with the complaint, and none of the three inhabitants were found. The investigators also learned that there was a vacation in mail for the address in which the deceased were later found. A neighbor informed the investigators that he passed Mayer's Volkswagen Atlas shortly after noon on February 23 – and Nikita Casap was the driver.

Law enforcement scene near Cider Hills and Heather, Waukesha

The MPs learned that Nikita Casap had not issued a driver's license. Advanced location labels showed that a “device” that is connected to the 17-year-old left at around 10 a.m. on February 24th. This was followed by a route through Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska, Wyoming and Colorado-Wo.

On the route, the court files found that the device stopped at “The largest truck stop in the world in Walcott, Iowa. Monitoring video from this place and this time showed Mayers Volkswagen Atlas. Based on a school photo, Nikita Casap and a small dog seemed to be the only person in the vehicle.

The source: The information in this report comes from the Sheriff department of the Waukesha County, the district prosecutor's office of Waukesha and the Wisconsin Circuit Court.

Crime and public security tailwanews