WILLMAR, MINN. – Robert Warwick and Brok Junkermeier were a familiar sight around town, a pair of teens with trouble in their pasts who often hung out together, sometimes outside the gas station where a former teammate worked.
Junkermeier was 19, a recent high school graduate with a history of petty crimes, described as someone who had been picked on occasionally in school and didn't have a lot of friends.
Warwick, 17, had just finished his junior year at an alternative school. Friends described Robbie, as they called him, as a quiet kid who recently had gotten involved in drugs, particularly marijuana. Warwick appeared to be the leader of the group whenever he, Junkermeier and Devon Jenkins, 16, got together, they said.
Now Warwick and the two others are in custody in Kandiyohi County, with Warwick accused of instigating the break-in by his friends that led to the killing of his 79-year-old grandmother.
Lila Warwick, an active church member and volunteer, was mourned Saturday by hundreds of relatives, friends and community members at her funeral.
Cheri Ekbom, Lila Warwick's daughter and Robbie's aunt, said something made her think of Robbie immediately as a suspect when she heard of her mother's killing.
"He was the first thought that came to my mind. I knew he was a hurting, angry boy. He needed some help. He was hanging with some unhealthy people," Ekbom said.
According to police and prosecutors, Robbie Warwick was the impetus behind the plan that led to Junkermeier's attack on the elderly woman early Monday morning while Jenkins stood watch. Junkermeier forced her to write him a check for $1,500 before choking and stabbing her to death, authorities say.