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On Thursday, a Wisconsin teenager received a life sentence for the chilling murder of his parents, reportedly intended to bankroll a plot to assassinate former President Donald Trump.
Eighteen-year-old Nikita Casap entered a plea agreement in January, admitting to two counts of first-degree intentional homicide. These charges are related to the deaths of his mother, 35-year-old Tatiana Casap, and his stepfather, 51-year-old Donald Mayer.
According to NBC DFW, the tragic incident took place in 2025 when both victims were found shot dead in their Waukesha Village home.
The plea deal led to the dismissal of seven additional charges against Casap, which included two counts of concealing a corpse and theft.
As previously highlighted by CrimeOnline, the grim discovery of Donald and Tatiana’s bodies occurred on February 28. Concerned family members, who had not heard from the couple for approximately two weeks, requested a welfare check, leading to the discovery.
Court documents showed that deaths occurred on or about February 11 at their home on Cider Hills Drive. Casap hid them and continued to live in the home until the decaying bodies were eventually found.
Authorities apprehended Casap in Kansas on February 28 after tracking the GPS on Donald Mayer’s vehicle. He was initially charged with operating a motor vehicle without the owner’s consent and theft of movable property.
NBC DFW reported that at the time of Casap’s arrest, the complaint showed he had $14,000 cash, jewelry, passports, his stepfather’s gun and the family dog.
The complaint also stated that Casap purchased a drone and explosives to carry out his plans.
Investigators learned that Casap planned to carry out a plot to “overthrow the government of the United States and assassinate President Trump,” as outlined in a manifesto entitled, “Accelerate the Collapse.”
The manifesto outlined “a political revolution in the United States” to “save the white race” from “Jewish controlled” politicians.
Casap reportedly spoke with a Russian national on the app Telegram to further the plot.
During Casap’s sentencing, Judge Ralph Ramirez stated, “I choose to find he’s not eligible for extended release because I do not know … when and if and whether a profound and significant change can occur.”
[Feature Photo: Nikita Casap/Waukesha County jail. Tatiana Casap and Donald Mayer/family handout]