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News

Syracuse Father Laughs in Court as He Pleads Guilty to Shotgun Murders of Son and Girlfriend

By Matthias Binder April 28, 2026
Upstate NY dad laughs in court as he admits to killing his girlfriend and 11-year-old son
Upstate NY dad laughs in court as he admits to killing his girlfriend and 11-year-old son (Featured Image)
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Upstate NY dad laughs in court as he admits to killing his girlfriend and 11-year-old son

Contents
A Bizarre Courtroom DisplayThe Fatal Night in SyracuseFrom Arrest to Plea BargainQuestions Linger for the Community

A Bizarre Courtroom Display (Image Credits: Pixabay)

Syracuse, N.Y. — A local man displayed an unsettling demeanor in court Tuesday, smiling and chuckling as he admitted to the brutal shotgun slayings of his 11-year-old son and girlfriend more than a year earlier. The hearing in Onondaga County Court marked a pivotal turn in a case that horrified the community, sparing a full trial but leaving observers grappling with the defendant’s apparent lack of remorse.[1][2]

A Bizarre Courtroom Display

David Huff, 44, entered pleas of guilty to two counts of second-degree murder before Judge Ted Limpert. As the judge recited the grim details of the crimes, Huff shook his head, smirked, and let out laughs that drew sharp rebuke. “You find this funny?” Limpert asked directly.[1]

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Huff replied that a joke was stuck in his head, prompting him to continue laughing to himself before urging the proceedings onward. He shrugged off confirmations of the allegations with casual affirmations like “Sure, that’s what happened.” Tension peaked when Limpert referenced the fatal shot to his son’s head. Huff disputed the specifics at first, insisting “Jeremiah was not shot in the head by any means,” though he quickly reaffirmed his guilt to everything stated.[2]

Prosecutor Rob Moran later noted the difficulty a father might face in acknowledging such an act against his own child. Huff’s older son, absent from the scene of the killings, erupted from the gallery, yelling that his father was embarrassing himself. Huff turned to respond that he loved him.[3]

The Fatal Night in Syracuse

The violence unfolded around 9:30 p.m. on March 17, 2025, inside Huff’s stepfather’s residence at 128 Roney Road in Syracuse’s Valley neighborhood. Authorities reported that Huff grabbed a 12-gauge shotgun and fired multiple rounds into Yeraldith Tschudy, his 32-year-old girlfriend from Rochester, before turning the weapon on 11-year-old Jeremiah Huff.[1]

Jeremiah managed a desperate call to his mother — not Tschudy — moments before succumbing to his injuries. She alerted authorities via 911. Investigators also accused Huff of shooting toward his stepfather, leading to an attempted murder charge that went unaddressed in Tuesday’s pleas.[4]

Huff fled the home on foot before police arrived. A search stretched through the night until state troopers apprehended him the next morning near West Seneca Turnpike, roughly two miles from the bloodshed.[5]

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From Arrest to Plea Bargain

Prosecutors initially pursued first-degree murder charges against Huff, carrying the threat of life without parole. Over the ensuing year, his defense team pursued evaluations for a mental health defense. Experts deemed him competent to stand trial, attributing any impairment to voluntary intoxication from drugs and alcohol, the exact substances remaining undetermined.[1]

A plea offer surfaced in October 2025, which Huff accepted this week. In exchange for the second-degree murder convictions, he faces 40 years to life in prison, with sentencing set for May. The deal dismissed the top-tier charges and averted a trial delving deeper into the family’s tragedy.[4]

Questions Linger for the Community

Defense attorney Shaun Chase maintained that Huff had long accepted responsibility, framing the acts amid a mental health crisis exacerbated by substance use. Yet the courtroom exchange underscored unresolved pain for victims’ loved ones present.[1]

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As Huff heads toward a lengthy incarceration, the Roney Road community reflects on a loss that shattered multiple families. The boy’s final plea for help and a father’s incongruous courtroom mirth serve as stark reminders of the unpredictable devastation wrought by such crimes.

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