Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Aiden Fucci, 14, Faces First-Degree Murder Charge In Tristyn Bailey's Stabbing Death

Tristyn Bailey and Aiden Fucci
News4Jax

Editor's Note: This story contains graphic details. 

Tristyn Bailey, a 13-year-old St. Johns County girl killed earlier this month, was stabbed 114 times, according to 7th Judicial Circuit State Attorney R.J. Larizza.

He released the information during a Thursday afternoon news conference after her accused killer, Aiden Fucci, was indicted as an adult on a first-degree murder charge by the St. John’s County Grand Jury earlier in the day. Bailey’s body was found in the woods near Durbin Crossing on May 9.

Of the 114 stab wounds, at least 49 were on her hands, arms and head, and were defensive in nature, Larizza said.

A buck knife linked to Fucci by teenage witnesses has been recovered, Larizza said, adding the knife, which was found in a pond near Bailey’s body, matches her stab wounds. Larizza attributed the information to the chief medical examiner.  The tip of the knife was found in her scalp.

DNA evidence has also been found, Larizza said. Fucci’s DNA was found on Bailey’s body. Her DNA was found on a pair of shoes and a shirt in his room after Fucci was arrested.

Larizza said the number of times Bailey was stabbed is enough evidence to prove premeditation.

“Every time that arm went back, and every time that arm went down, that's premeditation,” he said.

Teenage witnesses claim Fucci told them days before Bailey was killed he was going to kill “a random person” by taking them to the woods and stabbing them, according to Larizza.

Fucci, a classmate of Bailey’s at Patriot Oaks Academy, was previously charged as a juvenile with second-degree murder, but his case has now been transferred to adult court after Thursday’s indictment.

Although he is being charged as an adult, he will not face the death penalty if convicted. Under U.S. Supreme Court case Roper v. Simmons, minors cannot be sentenced to the death penalty.

Fucci could receive life in prison without the possibility of parole if found guilty. His next court date has not been announced.

Tristan Wood can be reached at newsteam@wjct.org or on Twitter at @TristanDWood.

Tristan is WJCT’s 2021 Summer Reporting Intern. He has previously worked as the City and County Commission reporter for the Independent Florida Alligator, Gainesville’s student-run newspaper, and Fresh Take Florida, a news service working in partnership with the Associated Press to cover the Florida Legislature and select political news stories across the state.