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The Kansas grandmother accused of killing her daughter-in-law and another woman is a member of a religious gang and said to be an 'unhinged' conspiracy theorist.
Tifany Adams, 54, her boyfriend Tad Cullum, 43 along with Cole and Cora Twombly, 50 and 44, have been charged with murder over the deaths Veronica Butler, 27, and Jilian Kelley, 39, in March.
The four are members of a gang called 'God's Misfits', an antigovernmental religious sect, according to court documents.
Leanne Webb, who met Adams last year, told The New York Post that Adams is 'unhinged' and would post disturbing messages on her Facebook page.
'She has a lot of weird beliefs, and thinks that the rest of the world is corrupt. It was all conspiracy theories and stuff that didn't make any sense,' said Webb.
Tifany Adams (pictured), 54, accused of murdering her daughter-in-law and another woman is said to be an 'unhinged' conspiracy theorist
Veronica Butler (pictured), 27, and Jilian Kelley, 39, were picking up Butler's children on March 30, when they disappeared about three miles from their destination
Butler was going through a nasty divorce and custody battle and Kelley (pictured), a pastor's wife, was one of her supervisors for her visitations with the kids
Webb, who later unfriended Adams, told The Post the grandmother reposted an article in February which claimed modern society was living in a simulation.
'She posted a few times a day sometimes, but it was all stuff like that,' she said.
'It was just bizarre, bizarre stuff, and they were going to raise [her grandkids] to believe the same things.'
The leader of a religious group called 'God's Misfits', who goes by the name Squirrel, denounced the suspects to NewsNation's Ashleigh Banfield.
'Not my God, the God that I serve condemns such hate. I have no relation with them at all,' said Squirrel.
Butler and Kelley were traveling together to pick up Butler's children, ages six and eight, on March 30, when they disappeared about three miles from their destination.
Their bodies were recovered after 'pools of blood' were found next to their empty car. Butler was going through a nasty divorce and custody battle and Kelley, a pastor's wife, was one of her supervisors for her visitations with the kids.
Adams' son, Wrangler Rickman, technically had custody of his and Butler's two children but he was confirmed to be in an Oklahoma rehab facility, leaving the kids largely under Adams' supervision.
Adams (bottom left), her boyfriend Tad Cullum (top left) and fellow gang members Cora (top right) and Cole (bottom right) Twombly and accused of murdering the two women
Butler had wanted more than the weekly mandated visits with her kids but Adams (pictured with Butlers kids)- who was also known to have kept Rickman away from the children - had no desire to give in
Cora and Cole Twombly (pictured) allegedly ordered their daughter to clean the inside of their Chevrolet truck after the killings
Butler had wanted more than the weekly mandated visits with her kids under supervisors such as Kelley, but Adams - who was also known to have kept Rickman away from the children - had no desire to give in.
Adams and Cullum had plotted to kill Butler previously in February, according to a witness.
They created that plan to make it look like an accident, 'because anvils regularly fall off of work vehicles,' records said.
The couple had gone as far as traveling to Butler's Hugoton, Kansas, home to pull off the plan but Butler never left her house, CNN reported.
It appears Adams had a more detailed plan to eliminate the mother of her grandchildren the second time around.
Search records recovered for Adams showed she had looked up the level of pain caused by a taser, various gun shops and how to buy prepaid cell phones.
Adams, later in February, went to a Walmart and bought three prepaid, unregistered phones.
In March, Butler filed a motion to grant her more visitation time with her children. Days later, Adams purchased five stun guns from a nearby gun shop.
On Easter weekend, Butler was set to take the kids to a birthday party with family after picking them up from Adams.
Adams claims Butler told her she could not make the kids visit during a phone call the morning of March 30, but records show Butler was already on her way to picking up Kelley.
Adams and Cullum had plotted to kill Butler previously in February, according to a witness
Bulter and Kelley's bodies were recovered after 'pools of blood' were found next to their empty car
Kelley, it should be noted, is not the regular supervisor of Butler's visits. A woman named Cheryl Brune usually went with Butler, but Butler believed she was unavailable that day.
Burne, however, told police that she had been available but Adams had called her and told her to take a couple of weeks off.
Adams and Cullum left around 9 a.m. to met up with Cora and Cole Twombly, according to Cora's 16-year-old daughter, who said they were on a 'mission.'
The group had all been provided with burner phones so that they wouldn't be using personal devices. Adams had left the grandchildren at the home of another 'God's Misfits' couple that hosted meetings the night before the killings.
Cullum was working the night before on a pasture that he rented to let cattle graze and asked the owner if he could do some heavier work on the land.
The landowner told police he was going to use a skid steer and a bulldozer to remove a tree and bury concrete.
When the Twomblys' daughter woke up on Saturday morning, the day Kelley and Butler went missing, her mother and Cole Twombly were gone.
When they arrived home a couple of hours later, they ordered the girl to clean the inside of their Chevrolet truck. She asked them what had happened and they shockingly admitted to the killings.
They responded the mission had not gone as they planned but they no longer had to worry about Veronica Butler, the girl told police in an April 3 interview.
The two adults said they'd blocked the road to stop Butler and Kelley and lured them to where the other members were waiting for them.
Cora Twombly was asked if they had put the bodies in a well. She responded: 'Something like that.'
The daughter asked why Kelley had to die and Twombly said that her supporting Butler made her guilty by association.
Adams picked up her two grandchildren around the same time the Twomblys got back home on March 30, according to police.
Melissa and Joey Padilla, two relatives of Butler, went out and searched for her after she didn't arrive with the kids at the party.
Around noon, they found the abandoned vehicle along with pools of blood and contacted police, who began their investigation. That sparked a missing person report and a request from the public's help for information.
In March, Butler (pictured) filed a motion to grant her more visitation time with her children. Days later, Adams purchased five stun guns from a nearby gun shop
Kelley, pictured with her pastor husband Heath Kelley, Kelley, is not the regular supervisor of Butler's visits. The regular supervisor said Adams had called her and told her to take a couple of weeks off
Days later, police got search warrants for Adams phone, which unveiled the searches. On April 13, the four suspects were arrested despite not yet finding the bodies.
The next day, police found the bodies as the lack of traffic cameras extended the investigation.
Police had tracked the burner phones to the property Cullum had worked on that night, about eight-and-a-half miles from where Butler's car had been found. Authorities said all three phones were discovered near Butler's car around the time she and Kelley disappeared.
Authorities discovered a hole that was dug, filled back in and covered with hay on the pasture. Inside the hole, they found two sets of remains confirmed to be Butler and Kelley.
Butler's relatives had to be restrained from the accused during their court appearance on April 17, with family members screaming that Adams was a 'f****ing b****' while the others were 'sorry pieces of sh*t'.