“All four of us have to relive this man being in the news every time, and we’re not going to be able to put our loved ones to rest at peace because it’s going to always be there,” said Hoffa. Hoffa said he understands the defense is doing their job. On Wednesday, Donaldson’s attorneys argued their position that there was no meaningful relationship between the offenses and the victims, saying the victims had no connection to each other and were all killed on different dates, at different locations and at different times. RECOMMENDED: COMPLETE COVERAGE OF THE SEMINOLE HEIGHTS MURDERS The string of deaths in 2017 shook Seminole Heights and the Tampa Bay area. The state is seeking the death penalty against Donaldson, who is accused of shooting and killing Monica Hoffa, 32, Anthony Naiboa, 20, Benjamin Mitchell, 22, and Ronald Felton, 60. “Every Christmas, every Thanksgiving, every time that I want to pick the phone up and call my daughter and I can’t, I go through that.”įour days shy of his daughter Monica’s death three years ago, Hoffa still feels the pain of that loss today. “Every birthday, I go through all that pain and anguish,” said Kenny Hoffa. The decision means rather than one trial all together, Donaldson will have four separate trials. A judge granted a motion Wednesday to sever the counts against Howell Donaldson III, the accused Seminole Heights serial killer charged with killing four people in the fall of 2017.
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