MINNEAPOLIS — The man found guilty of killing four Minnesotans and abandoning their bodies in an SUV in a cornfield in western Wisconsin has been sentenced to more than a century in prison.
Antoine Suggs was found guilty in April of second-degree murder in the deaths of Nitosha Flug-Presley, 30, Loyace Foreman III, 35, Matthew Pettus, 26, and Jasmine Sturm, 30. A judge sentenced him to a total of 1,244 months — just over 103 years — on the four counts, to be served consecutively.
Investigators said the four were fatally shot in the head in St. Paul in Sept. 12, 2021. Their bodies were found later that afternoon inside an SUV in a field near Sheridan Township, Wisconsin.
Suggs’ father, Darren Osborne, pleaded guilty to aiding an offender and was sentenced in December to 58 months, with 458 days of credit for time served. While Suggs drove the four bodies to Wisconsin, Osborne followed in another vehicle.
According to a criminal complaint, Osborne initially denied knowing anything about the killings. In a later interview, he said Suggs told him about the shootings and said he “snapped.”