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Peggy M. (Down) Tiner 1956

Peggy M Tiner of Hood County, TX was born on November 23, 1956. Peggy Tiner was married to Stephen E. Tiner on August 30, 1980 in Dallas County, TX and they separated on July 17, 1989 in Hood County.
Peggy M Tiner
Peggy Marie Down
Hood County, TX
November 23, 1956
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Peggy M Tiner's History: 1956

Uncover new discoveries and connections today by sharing about people & moments from yesterday.
  • Introduction

    Peggy (Down) Tiner was born to William John Down. Peggy Marie Down and Stephen Edward Tiner were both 23 yrs old when they married in Dallas Texas in 1980. They had 2 children and she was 32 and he was 31 when they divorced on July 17, 1989 in Hood County, Texas. Peggy then married Michael L. Miller on December 12, 2014, in Hood, Texas. There are records of a Peggy M Tiner having lived in Mansfield and Granbury Texas. In August 2000, one of Peggy and Stephen's children, Casey Ann, age 16, along with her boyfriend, Thomas James "TJ" Steele age 19, disappeared. Five years later in December of 2005, their bodies were found. Robert Earl "Robbie" Buttrey plead guilty to the 2 murders and on a plea bargain received 5 years in prison, the 2 sentences running concurrently. Buttrey was Peggy's cousin and a good friend of Thomas'. See Murder of Casey Tiner and Thomas ‘TJ’ Steele by Robert Earl Buttrey spotlighted on The Lies That Bind to read an October 2009 article about the murders. After having served two years of a plea-bargained five year sentence, Buttrey petitioned for release from jail. Tiner's family fought Buttrey's release. See PETITION FOR JUSTICE. Also see a 2019 update on the murders and what happened to Robert Buttrey at Is Robert Earl Buttrey Still Alive?.
  • 11/23
    1956

    Birthday

    November 23, 1956
    Birthdate
    Unknown
    Birthplace
  • Ethnicity & Family History

    Peggy is Caucasian.
  • Nationality & Locations

    Peggy is known to have lived in Granbury, Texas, Overton, Texas, and Perry, Ohio. She has lived the majority of her life in Texas and was married and divorced in Texas.
  • Early Life & Education

    Peggy's daughter, Casey Tiner, attended Granbury High School, where she was an "A" student, when she was murdered at age 16.
  • Military Service

    Peggy hasn't served in the United States military.
  • Personal Life & Family

    Peggy married Stephen Tiner in 1980. They had two children, one of whom, Casey, was murdered at the age of 16 in the year 2000. Peggy and Stephen divorced in 1989.
  • date of
    Death

    Death

    mm/dd/yyyy
    Death date
    Unknown
    Cause of death
    Unknown
    Death location
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    Memories
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3 Memories, Stories & Photos about Peggy

Is Robert Earl Buttrey Still Alive?
When Casey Tiner and her boyfriend, Thomas Steele, disappeared in the summer of 2000, their families thought they had run away together. A frantic search ensued for the two, which culminated in the discovery of their bones almost five years later. Investigation Discovery’s ‘Nightmare Fairytale’ chronicles the disappearance and the subsequent search for the teens. The episode also portrays how the answer to the mysterious disappearance was found closer to home than the grieving families expected. If you are intrigued to know more about this particular double murder and where the murderer is today, we have got you covered.

How Did Thomas Steele and Casey Tiner Die? Thomas Stelle, 19, and his 16-year-old girlfriend, Casey Tiner, hailed from Granbury in Texas. The duo were students of Granbury high school and loved singing in the school choir. They were also brilliant students, with Casey scoring Straight “A”s during her time in school. After Thomas and Casey went missing in August, their families believed that they had run away together to California. A police investigation and search ensued, but there were no signs of the missing teens. A year after the disappearance, Thomas’ car was found by the police near Comanche Park with the keys still kept inside.

There were no signs of the missing teens for five years as their family waited and hoped they would come back home safe. In December 2005, a seismograph crew found human skeletal remains on a ranch in Somervell County. The remains were far too decomposed to be identified, but experts, through DNA and dental records, confirmed that the skeletal remains were of the missing couple from Granbury. The bodies were then shifted to the Tarrant County Medical Examiner’s Office, where their deaths were ruled as a homicide. On searching the crime scene, the police also found a sword and a necklace.

Who Killed Thomas Steele and Casey Tiner? Thomas’ best friend and Casey’s cousin, Robert Earl Buttrey, pleaded guilty to the murders. When the police learned that Buttrey was the last person who saw Thomas and Casey alive, they started suspecting him. Shortly before the murder in 2000, Buttrey, along with his best friend, Thomas, and his cousin, Casey, was planning a trip to Las Vegas. Buttrey was in Thomas’ car with the couple on the night of the disappearance. The next morning, Buttrey’s girlfriend received a call from Buttrey, who asked her to pick him up from Peak Road (this pick-up spot was within walking distance of where Thomas’ car was located later). After getting picked up, Buttrey told his girlfriend that he had argued with Casey and Thomas. When the police wanted to question Buttrey, they saw that he had disappeared as well.

In August 2006, Buttrey turned up in Arizona and was immediately arrested and transported to Tarrant County, where he was wanted on a misdemeanor assault charge. A year later, police figured out that the necklace found at the murder site belonged to Buttrey. Sharie Heading, another cousin of Casey’s, alleged that the sword found at the crime scene originally belonged to Steele, but Buttrey used it to murder the couple. Once the police linked Buttrey to the murders through the necklace and the sword, they charged him with two counts of murder.

Is Robert Earl Buttrey Still Alive? Just before his trial was about to begin, Buttrey pleaded guilty to the two counts of murder. With very little evidence to go to trial, prosecutors accepted his plea in exchange for two concurrent five-year sentences. In 2010, Buttrey was eligible for parole, but the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles denied his parole, saying that he had been issued a “serve-all” order. In 2011, Buttrey was released from prison. On August 14, 2017, Robert Buttrey was driving a black Ford Focus on US 377. At around 5:40 pm, a grey Toyota Rav 4, traveling east on US 377, cut across into the westbound lane and struck Buttrey’s car head-on. The vehicles collided between Tolar and Bluff Dale, just west of Campbell Road. Robert Earl Buttrey and Carylane Bowen Bogan (who was driving the Toyota) were declared dead on the spot.

- TheCinemaholic dated March 19, 2021 written by Shraman Mitra
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PETITION FOR JUSTICE
WFAA Staff and WFAA.com (WFAA) Published: 3:30 PM CDT October 19, 2009

FORT WORTH - The families of two murdered North Texas teens are now fighting against the parole of their killer only two years after he was locked behind bars.

Both families of Casey Tiner and her boyfriend, TJ Steele, waited six years hoping the teens would return after they disappeared in the summer of 2006.

Tiner loved the Granbury High Choir. She was 16 and a straight "A" student. Steele breezed through school ahead of her.

When they first vanished, everyone thought they had run away together. But, according to investigators, their friend Robbie Buttrey knew better. When the couples' bones were finally identified in 2006, authorities charged him with both murders.

"We know that she laid there for at least an hour, and probably suffered and maybe was calling out for us," said Sharie Heading, Tiner's cousin.

But, Heading can't know that for sure. There wasn't much evidence left to prove exactly what happened in the remote woods near Glen Rose nine years ago.

With flowers in hand Thursday, Tiner's family visited for the first time the spot where the couple's bones were discovered.

"It's just very, very upsetting to live like that over and over and over," Heading said. "But, what else can we do? There's nothing else we can do?"

With little evidence for trial, Somervell County prosecutors recently accepted Buttrey's guilty plea in exchange for a five-year sentence.

Tiner's grandma, Shirley Down, shuddered with frustration while talking about Buttrey's possible release.

"I'm really irate," she said. "I can't say what I really feel, but that's mild."

Some members of Tiner's family have launched a petition drive to try to keep Buttrey locked up for at least the full five years. After waiting in jail for more than two years, he's already eligible for parole.

Tiner's mother has still been unable to clean out her daughter's room, which is where Christmas and birthday gifts bought while the teen was missing remain unopened.
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Murder of Casey Tiner and Thomas ‘TJ’ Steele by Robert Earl Buttrey spotlighted on The Lies That Bind
Thu Sep 19, 2019 at 4:30pm ET
By Angelica N. Sumter

The murder of Casey Tiner and Thomas “TJ” Steele by Robert Earl Buttrey, who was Tiner’s cousin and Steele’s best friend, is spotlighted in the latest episode of The Lies That Bind on Investigation Discovery.

When Tiner, 16, and her 19-year-old boyfriend, Steele, went missing from Granbury, Texas, on August 7, 2000, family members and friends thought they ran away together to elope in California.

It wasn’t until five years later in December 2005 that they found out that Tiner and Steele were dead. A seismograph crew found their skeletal remains in a field in Somervell County.

Their bodies were transported to the Tarrant County Medical Examiner’s Office, where their deaths were ruled a homicide.

Buttrey was named a person of interest after police learned he was the last person to see Tiner and Steele before they went missing.

In August 2006, Buttrey was arrested and booked into the Somervell County Jail. He was charged with two counts of murder the following year after a necklace and sword found at the crime scene linked him to the murders.

Police learned through an investigation that on August 10, 2000, Buttrey got into an argument with Tiner and Steele before he killed them with the sword that they gave him for his birthday.

Family members believe the motive for the murders of Tiner and Steele was money.

A year after the killings, investigators found Steele’s car near Comanche Peak with the keys still inside.

In July 2009, Buttrey pled guilty to murdering Tiner and Steele. He was later sentenced to 25 years in prison.

Buttrey initially had to serve half of his prison sentence to be eligible for parole, but it was denied in 2010.
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Peggy Tiner's Family Tree & Friends

Peggy Tiner's Family Tree

Parent
Parent
Partner
Child
Sibling
Marriage

Stephen E. Tiner

&

Peggy M. (Down) Tiner

August 30, 1980
Marriage date
Dallas County, TX
Marriage location
Unknown
Status
July 17, 1989
Divorce date
Hood County, TX
Divorce location
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Friendships

Peggy's Friends

Friends of Peggy Friends can be as close as family. Add Peggy's family friends, and her friends from childhood through adulthood.
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1 Follower & Sources
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