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New details in case of TikToker Claire Miller who killed disabled sister Helen, Obsessed with homicide
CHILLING new details have surfaced in the case of a teen TikToker Claire Miller who claimed she killed her disabled sister Helen and then allegedly boasted about it in a text to friends.

CHILLING new details have surfaced in the case of a teen TikToker Claire Miller who claimed she killed her disabled sister Helen and then allegedly boasted about it in a text to friends.

A judge in Lancaster County is currently considering whether or not the adolescent who is accused of killing her sister a year ago should be tried as an adult or as a juvenile. The verdict of this decision will be handed down soon.
After two and a half days of testimony, both the prosecution and the attorneys for Claire Miller presented their closing arguments on Wednesday afternoon.
Miller, now 16, should be tried as a juvenile, according to the defense, but the prosecution claimed Miller had been planning the murder for months and should serve time in prison.
Miller, according to Miller’s assistant district attorney Amy Muller, was “a child who had it all yet was obsessed with homicide.” Miller sent a pal tens of thousands of texts stating his intention to hurt others, according to Muller.
Muller stated Miller loved her sister, Helen, “Nevertheless, she was a simple target. She was incapable of defending herself.” Helen Miller had cerebral palsy.

Attorney for the defense Bob Beyer argued in response that his client Claire Miller “suffered a psychotic first break” and that she had no intention of hurting the sister she loved.
“Even the greatest and brightest of our children struggle with their own personal demons. We have no choice but to deal with them “Beyer remarked.
Miller was 14 years old on February 22, 2021, when police in Manheim Township, Pennsylvania, reported finding her covered in blood outside of her home. She allegedly admitted to the officers that she had killed her sister, who was 19 years old, with a knife.
Miller’s parents said in court on Monday that they had already lost one daughter and did not want to lose the other to incarceration.
Miller could be rehabilitated, according to doctors who testified, but prosecutors contended that if she were to be released from the juvenile rehabilitation system in five years, she would pose a danger to society.
On July 18, Judge David Workman is anticipated to make a ruling.
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