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Accused killer of Samantha Woll: ‘I ain’t killed nobody, bro’

The prosecution presented Michael Jackson-Bolanos’s video interrogation during the ongoing trial.

Samantha Woll
JCRC/AJC board member Samantha Woll lighting candles in March 2018. Credit: Courtesy of JCRC/AJC.

During the trial on Monday for the man accused of murdering Samantha Woll, a Jewish community leader in Michigan, prosecutors played video of defendant Michael Jackson-Bolanos responding to questions previously posed by Detroit Police Department Detective Patrick Lane and Sgt. Steve Ford.

When one of the detectives identified himself with the department’s homicide unit, Jackson-Bolanos replied, “I didn’t kill nobody. Hell no.”

The 29-year-old said on the video, “I don’t know s**t about no homicides. I’m not into that s**t. I don’t know nothing about no body. I didn’t encounter no body. ... I ain’t killed nobody, bro.”

Woll, 40, was found stabbed to death outside her home in Detroit’s Lafayette Park neighborhood on Oct. 21, 2023. Investigators have consistently ruled out antisemitism as a motive.

The defendant initially suggested that a sale of sunglasses to a pawn shop had prompted his arrest.

Claiming that he was homeless, Jackson-Bolanos said he had found a pair of sunglasses and sold them at a pawn shop. He offered to pay back the owner. “I’m kind of nervous because I didn’t do nothing,” he said.

Regarding the prosecutors’ claim of Woll’s blood on Jackson-Bolanos’s clothing, he said: “I didn’t hurt nobody. I don’t care what you’re talking about with DNA on my coat, but I did not hurt nobody. … Y’all are really harassing me and playing me about something I didn’t do, bro.”

Phone data had placed the suspect at the crime scene, Woll’s home.

Jackson-Bolanos has been charged with first-degree murder. If convicted, he could receive life in prison.

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The panel conducts research on antisemitic activity and works with public and private entities on statewide initiatives on Holocaust and genocide education.
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