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At approximately 3:00 a.m. on June 13, 2022, residents of a quiet Crofton neighborhood were jolted awake by the sound of gunfire. Not one or two shots—but a rapid succession, loud enough to echo through the early-morning stillness.

Sixteen rounds.

By the time police arrived, 20-year-old Tyrie Tashan Richardson was dead. His body lay inside a home he had once believed was part of his family’s refuge. He had been shot repeatedly, most of the bullets entering his back. Blood pooled beneath him. There were no signs of a prolonged struggle. There was no weapon in his hands.

Standing inside the house was the woman who had known him since high school—the mother of his child.

Within hours, the case would be framed as self-defense. Within months, that narrative would begin to fracture. And within a year, a jury would be forced to confront a far darker question: Was this a spontaneous act of protection—or the final step in a deadly betrayal?

A Young Man with Momentum

Tyrie Richardson was born on April 26, 2002, and raised in a close-knit family by his parents, Lindsay and Roger Richardson. He was the youngest of four children, widely described as energetic, ambitious, and intensely loyal to the people he loved.

Friends and family remembered him as someone who moved fast—fast in thought, fast in business, fast in ambition. He recorded music under the name FSO Gunk. He owned a small food truck business, The D-Spot 4301, and ran a dog-breeding operation. He talked often about building generational wealth and creating opportunities for others in his community.

But more than anything, Tyrie wanted to be a present father.

When his son Cody was born, Tyrie’s priorities shifted. According to his parents, he began taking concrete steps to stabilize his life—financially, emotionally, and socially. He worked relentlessly. He stayed involved. Even during relationship turmoil, he maintained contact with his child and checked in through extended family when communication with Cody’s mother became strained.

That loyalty—to family, to love, to the idea that things could still be fixed—would ultimately put him in harm’s way.

A Relationship Built on Tension

Tyrie met Autumn Anderson in high school. Their relationship was intense, cyclical, and marked by volatility. They broke up and reconciled multiple times. Friends noticed patterns of emotional distance, jealousy, and unresolved resentment.

According to testimony later presented in court, the relationship was not free of violence. Tyrie admitted in recorded conversations that he had physically assaulted Autumn in the past. He also acknowledged infidelity. These admissions complicated public sympathy for him after his death, but prosecutors would later argue that acknowledging past wrongdoing did not make him deserving of execution.

Autumn, for her part, made it clear in private recordings that she no longer wanted to continue the relationship. She described feeling emotionally checked out. She wanted distance.

Tyrie, however, was not ready to let go.

In emotionally charged recordings made weeks before his death, he pleaded with Autumn to try again—for their son, for the life they had already built. He spoke about regret, about growth, about wanting to change.

Autumn did not reciprocate.

A Warning Shot That Went Unanswered

On April 26, 2020—Tyrie’s 18th birthday—he narrowly escaped an ambush. After a night of celebrating, he was fired upon as he returned home. He ran and survived.

Only a handful of people knew where he would be that night.

The incident left Tyrie shaken and suspicious. He reportedly questioned whether someone close to him had knowledge of the attempt. No arrests were made. The case went cold.

Two years later, Tyrie would not survive his second encounter with gunfire.

The Night Everything Collapsed

In the early morning hours of June 13, 2022, Tyrie arrived at his mother-in-law’s house—the home where Autumn was staying with their child.

He had the entry code.
He was not breaking in.
He believed he was coming home.

What happened next is at the center of the case.

According to Autumn’s initial account, she and her new boyfriend, Terrence Kenneth Yansy, were asleep when Tyrie entered the home. She claimed Tyrie became enraged upon seeing them together and that Terrence fired in self-defense.

But forensic evidence would soon contradict critical parts of that narrative.

Sixteen Shots and a Forensic Problem

Autopsy results revealed a disturbing pattern:

Tyrie was shot 16 times

The majority of bullets entered his back

Several shots were fired downward, consistent with him being prone or falling

One bullet struck the back of his head

No defensive wounds were found on the shooter

Investigators concluded that at least part of the shooting occurred after Tyrie was already down.

Forensic analysts testified that this was inconsistent with a sudden defensive response to an immediate threat.

In cases of self-defense, the number, trajectory, and clustering of bullets matter. Sixteen shots—most to the back—raised serious doubts.

The 911 Call That Raised Questions

Perhaps most troubling to investigators was the delay in calling emergency services.

Instead of calling 911 immediately, Autumn contacted her sister. It was the sister who ultimately placed the emergency call.

On the recording, Autumn can be heard calling out for the family dog.

Tyrie lay dying.

This detail would haunt jurors.

The Shooter on the Run

Terrence Yansy fled the scene.

He was captured approximately 24 hours later hiding in a wooded area. He claimed self-defense.

The prosecution would later argue that flight was inconsistent with someone who believed they had acted lawfully.

Two Families, Two Realities

For Tyrie’s parents, the narrative of self-defense was impossible to accept.

They described their son as cautious, street-aware, and not reckless. They insisted he would never enter a dangerous situation unarmed if he believed his life was at risk.

They also rejected portrayals of Tyrie as an absentee or violent intruder. According to them, he had provided housing, vehicles, and financial support to Autumn and their child—even during periods of conflict.

To them, the idea that Tyrie “walked into danger” was not just inaccurate—it was a posthumous character assassination.

Trial and Contradictions

During trial proceedings in 2023, prosecutors highlighted multiple inconsistencies in Autumn Anderson’s testimony.

Her timeline shifted

Her description of Tyrie’s position during the shooting conflicted with forensic findings

Her explanation of events changed under cross-examination

The defense attempted to frame Tyrie as volatile and unpredictable. Prosecutors countered that nothing in the physical evidence supported a chaotic struggle or imminent threat.

The plea deal offered to Terrence—three to eight years—was rejected. When his legal team later attempted to reopen negotiations, Tyrie’s parents refused.

They wanted the truth exposed publicly.

The Verdict

On July 28, 2023, Terrence Kenneth Yansy was sentenced to 18 years in prison for manslaughter. Due to the violent nature of the crime, he must serve a significant portion before parole eligibility.

Autumn Anderson was not charged.

The verdict brought legal resolution—but not peace.

A Case That Still Divides

Public opinion remains fractured.

Some view the killing as the tragic result of a volatile domestic triangle. Others believe Tyrie was lured into a fatal ambush. Many question Autumn’s role—not necessarily as the shooter, but as a facilitator of events that turned deadly.

What remains undeniable is this:

Tyrie Richardson entered a home believing he was seeing his child

He left that home in a body bag

Sixteen bullets ensured he would never speak again

The Uncomfortable Truth

This case forces difficult conversations about domestic violence, jealousy, accountability, and how narratives are shaped after death.

It also raises an uncomfortable question society often avoids:

When someone has flaws—do they lose their right to life?

Tyrie was imperfect.
He was also unarmed.
He was also human.

And he was shot sixteen times.

A Legacy Interrupted

Today, Tyrie’s parents are raising his son. They continue to speak publicly—not for sympathy, but to challenge narratives they believe erase their child’s humanity.

They want Tyrie remembered not as a headline or a statistic, but as a young man with momentum—someone who was trying, imperfectly, to do better.

Justice, in their eyes, was partial.

Truth, they believe, is still unfolding.