FREEHOLD – Earlier this week, a judge ruled that a Long Branch teenager charged in the December 31, 2017 shooting death of his mother, father, sister and “grandmother” will face those charges in adult court, announced Monmouth County Prosecutor Christopher J. Gramiccioni.
Police say, Scott Kologi, now 18, faces four counts of first-degree Murder, and one count of second-degree Possession of a Weapon for an Unlawful Purpose.
The State’s motion to waive Kologi’s case to Superior Court was recently granted in Monmouth County Family Court.
A first appearance/ detention hearing in Monmouth County Superior Court is currently scheduled for November 20, 2019, in front of Judge Paul X. Escandon at 1:30 p.m.
The charges stem from an investigation into events occurring in Long Branch on the night of December 31, 2017. Before midnight, members of the Long Branch and West Long Branch Police Departments, as well as members of the Monmouth County Sherriff’s Office, responded to a residence on Wall Street for a report of a shooting.
Scott Kologi was arrested at the residence. As part of the investigation, a rifle was secured and later identified as the weapon used in the homicides. It was identified as a Century Arms Model C39V2 rifle. The four victims were identified as L.K. (44 y.o.), S.K. Sr. (42 y.o.), B.K. (19 y.o.) and M.S. (70 y.o.)
**The grandfather of Kologi who escaped the murderous rampage said the following to Dan Alexander a reporter at NJ101.5:**
"He took it outside and walked around the block to kill people," Adrian said. "On his little walk he decided, 'Oh, I'm not going to kill strangers I'm going to go home and kill my family.'"
Kologi said his grandson's "brain was messed up" by a tumor and nerve damage from childbirth.
"Who knows what his brain was thinking?" Adrian said, unable to finish his thought. "He was making comments that nobody ... "
"I tried to warn Steve and Linda he was saying stuff and acting. (Scott) got mad at me for ratting him out. He was obsessed with killing his family."
This is a joint investigation conducted by the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office and Long Branch Police Departments.
Kologi has been incarcerated at the Middlesex County Youth Detention Center since his arrest.
If convicted of Murder, Kologi would each face a minimum sentence of 30 years in a New Jersey state prison without parole and a maximum sentence of life imprisonment, subject to the provisions of the “No Early Release Act” requiring him to serve 85 percent of the sentence imposed before becoming eligible for release on parole. He would also be under parole supervision for five years following his release from state prison. If convicted of the second-degree crime, Kologi faces a sentence of between five to ten years in prison.
The case is assigned to Monmouth County Assistant Prosecutors Sean Brennan and Barbara Suppa.