A New York man who laughed as he pleaded guilty to killing his son and girlfriend was brutally reprimanded by a judge who sentenced him to life in prison on Friday.
Onondaga County Judge Theodore H. Limpert declared in court that David Huff, 44, would have to serve at least 40 years behind bars after pleading guilty to two counts of second-degree murder in the shooting deaths of his 11-year-old son Jeremiah Huff and his girlfriend, Yeraldith Tschudy, 32.
‘Your actions are reprehensible and you deserve to be incarcerated for the rest of your life,’ Limpert said as he handed down the ruling.
‘Even a sentence of life is not long enough for you,’ he added.
Jeremiah’s mother, Samantha Gallup-Peltier, was also tough as she addressed her ex in a tearful victim impact statement.
‘You are destined for the seventh circle of hell,’ she told Huff.
The father-of-two had originally faced first-degree murder charges and the possibility of life in prison without the possibility of parole before pleading guilty in April, Syracuse.com reports.
He will now be in his 80s before he is first eligible for parole, but Onondaga County Chief Assistant District Attorney Robert Moran insisted in court on Friday that he will likely only be able to leave prison in a casket.

David Huff, 44, will have to serve at least 40 years behind bars after pleading guilty to two counts of second-degree

Jeremiah Huff, 11, was a middle school who was shot in the head by his own father

Yeraldith Tschudy, 32, was fatally shot at close range inside the Syracuse home
Huff has admitted to using a 12-gauge shotgun to kill both victims at close range inside his stepfather’s home on Roney Road in Syracuse just after 9.30pm on the night of March 17, 2025.
He killed both victims and allegedly fired at his stepfather as well before the shotgun malfunctioned.
Following the shooting, the boy’s mother said she received a disturbing phone call from him prompting her to call police, but by the time officers had arrived on the scene, Huff had already fled.
Authorities launched an overnight manhunt. Prosecutors later revealed Huff had briefly hidden inside Upstate Community General Hospital before reemerging.
He was arrested around 9:30am the following morning on West Seneca Turnpike, not far from the scene.
The case dragged on for months as Huff’s legal team explored a potential mental health defense.
Multiple experts evaluated him to determine whether he could be held criminally responsible.
His lawyer Shaun Chase claimed in court on Friday that Huff had been taking ‘Molly,’ a nickname for ecstasy – a synthetic drug that produces stimulant and hallucinogenic effects.

Huff fled the scene but was arrested the next morning after he was spotted not far from the crime scene
Chase claimed his client thought he was hearing voices and very clearly had a psychotic break.
Yet the lawyer had earlier acknowledged that any mental impairment Huff may have experienced was tied to voluntary intoxication from drugs or alcohol – not a qualifying legal defense – and Huff was deemed competent to stand trial.
He instead decided to plead guilty to the second-degree murder charges.
But when Limpert detailed the murders in court in April, Huff was seen smiling and chuckling to himself.
At that point, the judge stopped the proceedings to confront him.
‘You find this funny?’ Limpert asked.
Huff, still laughing, replied: ‘No, no, it’s a joke stuck in my head… Go on.’
The disturbing exchange set the tone in which Huff appeared cavalier throughout.

Huff shocked the courtroom by laughing as the judge read out the details of the murders
When he was then pressed on the charges, his responses were blunt and detached.
‘Sure,’ Huff said when asked if he had killed Tschudy. ‘That’s what happened.’
Moments later, he dismissed key details about his son’s death, pushing back when the judge said the boy had been shot multiple times, including in the head.
‘Jeremiah was not shot in the head by any means,’ Huff insisted – even as prosecutors maintained that he was.
Judge Limpert made clear during the hearing that Huff had the option to proceed to trial if he disputed the facts.
‘No, we’re not coming back,’ Huff said. ‘I’m guilty of all that. Whatever you guys say I’m guilty of.’
Family members hit out at Huff as they gathered in the gallery for his sentencing on Friday wearing custom t-shirts emblazoned with photos of Jeremiah and a common saying of his.
The boy’s mother and older brother also wore shamrock pins to commemorate Jeremiah, who was killed on St Patrick’s Day.
‘A mother quite literally carries pieces of her child forever,’ Gallup-Peltier said when she delivered her victim impact statement. ‘Perhaps that’s where a mother’s instinct truly comes from, because part of our children never really leaves us.
‘And because of that, I know Jeremiah is with me every second of every day.’

Jeremiah Huff’s mother told the court on Friday how her son called to tell her he had been shot
She went on to describe her son as ‘kind, intelligent, gentle, empathetic and deeply thoughtful’ as she spoke about his love of the outdoors and how his hair turned sun-bleached blonde in the summer, describing freckles on his arms as flecks of gold.
‘The loss of Jeremiah did not stop with our immediate family,’ she continued, according to CNY Central.
‘It tore through an entire community, his friends – children who should still be worried about homework and soccer games and summer vacation – are now in therapy. They’re struggling to sleep, trying to understand how a father could do something so horrific to his own son.’
She also noted that ‘children are supposed to trust their parents will protect them from harm, not become the source of it.
‘Imagine Jeremiah’s fear in his final moments, knowing this act was being carried out by his own father,’ Gallup-Peltier said. ‘Hearing the fear and his voice when he called me immediately after he was shot, me promising him I was on my way. That phone call was played over and over in my head daily.’
Gallup-Peltier also said she had lived in fear of Huff’s unpredictable behavior for years and had resigned herself to the fact he might kill her one day – but she never imagined he would hurt his own son.
As she spoke, Garrett Smith, Huff’s older son, was seen wiping tears from his eyes and staring at his father – who never returned his gaze.

Tschudy’s mother, Judith Seoud, described her as a ‘radiant’ woman as she discussed the adversity Tschudy had to overcome immigrating to the country as a teenager
Prosecutor Moran also read a statement from Tschudy’s mother, Judith Seoud, who is now living in Florida.
It described her as a ‘radiant’ woman and discussed the adversity Tschudy had to overcome immigrating to the country as a teenager.
Her father was later assassinated in Colombia in 2011 while she was thousands of miles away.
Still, her mother said, Tschudy worked hard, graduating college and building a life for herself in Rochester.
She then went on to earn a master’s degree in social work and dedicated her life to helping others while raising an autistic child, who will now grow up without her.
‘A girl who had crossed continents, buried her father, raised a child on her own and worked herself to the bone,’ the letter read. ‘That is who David Huff took from this world.’
Seoud then asked the judge to ‘sentence this man in a way that reflects the true magnitude of what he has done,’ according to WSYR.
‘Not just to Jeremiah. But to every life she would have touched, every child she would have protected. Every person who will now have to carry this loss forever.’
Moran also argued at the sentencing that Huff behaved like a petulant teenager after committing the murders, recounting how he tried to deny Jeremiah was shot in the head until prosecutors inundated him with autopsy photos.
When Huff then got the chance to address the court himself on Friday, he apologized for laughing at his arraignment – while his family in the gallery swore at him.
‘See you in hell, David,’ one member of the crowd yelled, according to Syracuse.com.
But Huff just said he loved everyone in the courtroom and acknowledged there was nothing funny about what he did.


