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‘Class clown’ behind 2001 Dartmouth killings granted parole after spending half his life behind bars

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‘Class clown’ behind 2001 Dartmouth killings granted parole after spending half his life behind bars

A teen who has spent two decades behind bars after murdering two Dartmouth College professors — in a conspiracy to earn fast cash to move to Australia — has been granted parole.

James Parker, now just shy of 40, appeared before the New Hampshire state parole board years after pleading guilty to killing Half and Susanne Zantop, in Hanover.

Parker, 16 at the time, has served close to the minimum of his 25-years-to-life sentence for second-degree murder and said during his Thursday parole hearing that he was “deeply sorry.”

His lawyer and Department of Corrections staff said that Parker has taken many steps through the years to rehabilitate himself and help fellow inmates.

Parker acknowledged the “unimaginably horrible” crime he’d committed and said he knows that no amount of time could change or alleviate the pain he’s caused.

James Parker arrives for his parole meeting in Concord, NH on April 18, 2024.

James Parker arrives for his parole meeting in Concord, NH on April 18, 2024. AP

Parker was 16 when he and his then 17-year-old friend, Robert Tulloch, hatched a heinous plan to leave their lives in Chelsea, Vermont, for greener pastures down under.

People who knew the pair were shocked to think the “class clowns” were capable of such a vicious crime.

The trip would need an estimated $10,000 and the pair decided they’d knock on the doors of unsuspecting homeowners under the guise of conducting a survey on environmental issues.

Once inside, Parker and Tulloch planned to tie up their victims, steal their credit cards and ATM information and force them to provide their PIN numbers before killing them. 

Dartmouth Professors Half, left, and Susanne Zantop were murdered on Jan. 27, 2001 in Hanover.

Dartmouth Professors Half, left, and Susanne Zantop were murdered on Jan. 27, 2001 in Hanover. AP

James Parker, 16, is led to the Henry County Courthouse in New Castle, Indiana on Feb. 20, 2001 after being arrested weeks after the killings.

James Parker, 16, is led to the Henry County Courthouse in New Castle, Indiana on Feb. 20, 2001 after being arrested weeks after the killings. Getty Images

Parker revealed that they picked the Zantop house because it looked expensive and it was surrounded by trees.

Half, 62, had let them into his home on Jan. 27, 2001, and within 10 minutes Tulloch had stabbed him and directed Parker to stab Susanne, 55, Parker told police in an interview at the time.

The pair fled the brutal murder scene with Half’s wallet which contained about $340 and a list of numbers. 

After leaving, Parker and Tulloch realized they’d left behind their knife sheaths at the house and couldn’t return after seeing the place swarming with police.

Fingerprints on the knife sheath and a bloody boot print eventually linked the pair to the crime but after being questioned by police they fled and hitchhiked West before they were nabbed at an Indiana truck stop weeks later.

Parker, who cooperated with prosecutors and testified against Tulloch, had sought a sentence reduction in 2018 but withdrew his petition after Zantops’ two daughters objected.

Tulloch, now 40, pleaded guilty to first-degree murder and got a sentence of life without parole.

He’s scheduled for a resentencing hearing in June. 

In 2012, the Supreme Court ruled that it is unconstitutional to sentence a juvenile offender to mandatory life imprisonment without parole. 

Parker, who cooperated with prosecutors and testified against Tulloch, had sought a sentence reduction in 2018 but withdrew his petition after Zantops’ two daughters objected.

Parker, who cooperated with prosecutors and testified against Tulloch, had sought a sentence reduction in 2018 but withdrew his petition after Zantops’ two daughters objected. AP

Tulloch and four other men who received such sentences were granted resentencing hearings in 2014 as a result.

Susanne Zantop was the head of Dartmouth’s German studies department, while Half Zantop taught Earth sciences, both hailed from Germany.

With Post wires

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