SHERIFF’S
OFFICE
MAKES
ARREST
IN
DELTONA
MURDER
From
the
onset,
there
was
much
about
Wednesday’s
report
of
an
unknown
intruder
beating
a
56-year-old
Deltona
man
to
death
that
didn’t
make
sense.
First,
the
doors
to
671
Stallings
Ave.
were
all
locked
and
there
were
no
signs
of
forced
entry
into
the
home.
Then,
despite
claiming
that
he
was
in
an
adjoining
bathroom
during
the
attack,
the
victim’s
stepson,
27-year-old
James
Stevens,
insisted
that
he
saw
and
heard
nothing.
And
then
there
was
the
fact
that
Stevens
was
covered
in
blood,
from
head
to
toe.
While
not
admitting
to
the
murder,
Stevens
would
eventually
acknowledge
that
there
was
no
home
invasion,
no
one
else
entered
or
left
the
bedroom
where
his
stepfather
was
killed
and
that
the
blood
on
him
“looks
bad.”
For
investigators
with
the
Volusia
County
Sheriff’s
Office’s
Major
Case
Unit,
that
all
added
up
to 1st-degree
murder.
On
Friday,
investigators
obtained
a
warrant
charging
Stevens
with
the
murder
of
his
stepfather,
Francis
Ahern.
Deputies
were
dispatched
to
the
scene
at
1:44
a.m.
Wednesday
morning
after
Stevens
called
911
to
report
a
home
invasion.
Stevens
was
initially
very
calm
on
the
phone,
but
then
became
more
animated.
“Someone
broke
in
the
back
door.
They
beat
my
stepfather
up
pretty
good,”
he
told
the
Sheriff’s
Office
dispatcher.
As
the
dispatcher
asked
questions
and
tried
to
get
additional
information,
Stevens
hung
up
the
phone
about
a
minute
into
the
call.
The
dispatcher
called
back
and
kept
Stevens
on
the
phone
until
deputies
arrived.
When
deputies
got
there,
Stevens
was
covered
in
blood,
including
his
face,
hands,
legs
and
feet
as
well
as
his
clothing.
Ahern’s
body
was
face
down
in
the
bedroom,
where
he
and
Stevens
reportedly
had
been
injecting
cocaine.
Paramedics
pronounced
Ahern
dead
at
2:09
a.m.
Once
the
Sheriff’s
Office
obtained
a
search
warrant
and
crime
scene
technicians
entered
the
house
to
look
around,
they
found
broken
pieces
of a
hand-held,
electric
massager
scattered
around
the
body
in
the
master
bedroom.
The
broken
pieces
along
with
the
power
cord
had
blood
on
it,
and
several
pieces
of
the
massager
were
wrapped
in
tissue
and
dumped
in
the
commode,
as
if
someone
had
been
trying
to
flush
them
down
the
toilet.
Stevens
told
investigators
that
he
injected
cocaine
into
Ahern
at
his
request
and
then
went
into
the
bathroom
in
the
master
bedroom
to
shoot
up.
He
said
that
he
must
have
blacked
out
because
he
didn’t
see
or
hear
anything
and
had
no
idea
who
killed
Ahern
or
how
he
had
gotten
blood
all
over
himself.
Crime
scene
technicians
noted
that
the
blood
was
splattered
on
both
the
front
and
back
of
Stevens’
shirt,
which
would
be
consistent
with
close
contact
by
the
person
who
committed
the
murder.
During
its
examination
of
the
victim’s
body,
the
Volusia
County
Medical
Examiner’s
Office
concluded
that
Ahern
died
of
strangulation,
both
by
hands
and
the
bloody
power
cord.
They
also
concluded
that
the
victim
sustained
no
fewer
than
13
blows
to
the
head,
although
they
weren’t
fatal.
On
the
day
that
the
body
was
found,
Stevens
consented
to a
voluntary
interview
with
Sheriff’s
investigators.
However,
they
didn’t
have
enough
to
hold
him
at
that
time.
On
Thursday,
Stevens
called
investigators
and
asked
them
for
a
ride
to a
drug
rehabilitation
center.
Investigators
agreed,
and
along
the
way,
Stevens
said
he
wanted
to
talk
again
about
the
killing.
That’s
when
he
admitted
that
there
was
no
home
invasion
and
that
the
bedroom
door
remained
closed
while
he
was
in
the
bathroom
and
no
else
came
in
or
out.
While
he
acknowledged
things
looked
bad,
investigators
said
Stevens
seemed
uncertain
if
he
had
killed
Ahern.
But
one
thing
investigators
did
notice:
fresh
bruises
on
Stevens’
arms
and
hands.
Once
the
interview
ended,
investigators
dropped
off
Stevens
at a
drug
rehabilitation
center
in
Daytona
Beach.
However,
he
was
never
admitted,
and
investigators
launched
a
search
for
him
early
Friday
afternoon
after
consulting
with
prosecutors
at
the
State
Attorney’s
Office
and
then
obtaining
the
1st-degree
murder
warrant
from
Circuit
Court
Judge
Joseph
Will.
Shortly
after
3
p.m.,
Sheriff’s
investigators
tracked
down
Stevens
at
the
Salvation
Army
in
Daytona
Beach
and
took
him
into
custody.
After
processing,
Stevens
will
be
brought
to
the
Volusia
County
Branch
Jail
in
Daytona
Beach
and
held
without
bond.