Crime & Safety

Hatboro Man Used Military Knife To Kill Neighbor Over Snoring: DA

The two were known to police due to "ongoing arguments," information from the DA said. The accused man faces a third-degree murder charge.

Officials said a Montgomery County man stabbed his neighbor to death, after the two had been arguing about the accused's loud snoring.
Officials said a Montgomery County man stabbed his neighbor to death, after the two had been arguing about the accused's loud snoring. (Montgomery County DA's office )

UPPER MORELAND, PA —A Hatboro man stabbed his neighbor to death on the threshold of his own home after a lengthy argument over nighttime snoring being heard through the residences' walls, officials said Friday.

The Montgomery County District Attorney's office said that 55-year-old Christopher Casey has been charged with third-degree murder for stabbing 62-year-old Robert Wallace to death on Sunday.

The stabbing took place in Casey's home within the 300 block of Fitch Road, in the Hatboro section of Upper Moreland Township, according to officials.

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Casey called 911 at 6:34 p.m. on Sunday and said he stabbed Wallace after Wallace broke his window, saying, "I attacked my neighbor. He came to attack me," according to court documents.

The two were known to police due to "ongoing arguments," said the District Attorney's office. The two homes have a shared wall and Wallace, who lived with his elderly mother, had complained about Casey's snoring at night, according to court documents.

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Responding Upper Moreland Township Police officers found Wallace with stab wounds in his chest, about 50 feet from the home near the intersection of Winner and Fitch roads, officials said. First responders transported him to Abington Hospital for emergency surgery, and a doctor pronounced him dead at 7:06 p.m.

Casey had a self-inflicted stab wound to his right leg, said police; he was also transported to Abington Hospital. Police determined there was no one else inside Casey's residence at the time.

Officers also found "a large, military-style knife" and a cell phone on Casey's front porch, and noticed a window screen was removed and laying in the grass, with the window next to the front door open.

Officers interviewed Casey on Sunday evening at the hospital, where he told police that his snoring had been a source of contention with Wallace for about a year and a half.

Casey said that on the evening of the stabbing, he was having dinner when Wallace knocked on his front window and yelled, "I'm gonna kill you," according to court documents.

According to Casey's testimony: Wallace ripped off the screen and then opened the unlocked window. The two talked for about 20 minutes through the window, and Wallace had "settled down a little bit."

Wallace did not try to get in the house, but "was leaning in" and wanted to shake hands with him, and also offered Casey financial help "with expenses associated with a corrective nose surgery designed to eliminate snoring."

Casey said he unlocked his front door, but retrieved a large knife and a taser which were sitting on his recliner, court papers show.

"Casey explained he also grabbed a blue colored blanket and used it to cover the knife and taser in an effort to conceal the weapons from Wallace's sight," police wrote in an affidavit of probable cause.

"Casey further explained he hid the weapons from Wallace's sight because Casey wanted to "surprise him (Wallace).'"

At the front door, Casey said he greeted Wallace and then stabbed him in the chest, while Wallace was in the threshold. He admitted to stabbing Wallace three or four times, then accidentally stabbing himself.

Casey further told police that he did not believe Wallace's intent to "try to work this out," and described him as being "angry" and "volatile." He admitted that Wallace was not directly threatening him and did not demonstrate menacing behavior, and said he concealed the knife because he wanted to "surprise him."

On Monday, the Montgomery County Coroner's office determined that Wallace's cause of death was multiple stab wounds, and the manner of death was a homicide.

Police arrested Casey on Thursday, Jan. 18 and charged him with third-degree murder, voluntary manslaughter, and possessing an instrument of crime. Casey was booked at Montgomery County Correctional Facility, where bail was set at $1 million. A preliminary hearing is set for Jan. 29.

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