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Left: David Nemyier (Citrus County Sheriff’s Office). Right: Kyle Pazian (Fifth Judicial Circuit State Attorney’s Office).
A man from Florida, who initially claimed to have discovered his father-in-law deceased, is now facing charges of killing the older man. Authorities revealed that the man had been dead for a few days before he was reportedly “found.”
The Citrus County Sheriff’s Office announced that 43-year-old David Nemyier was arrested on April 13 for allegedly shooting his father-in-law, 67-year-old Kyle Pazian. The state attorney’s office revealed on Wednesday that Nemyier was indicted by a grand jury for first-degree murder. This development follows an incident that started on April 9 when Nemyier’s wife had a heated argument with her father, leading to the tragic events.
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As per an arrest affidavit seen by Law&Crime, Nemyier initially informed police that on April 11, after failing to reach Pazian at his home, he and his wife decided to perform a welfare check. Upon arriving, they found Pazian dead on the living room sofa, with “blood covering his face.”
The affidavit stated that Nemyier and his wife and son had been living with Pazian in the same home at the time. That morning, Nemyier was at work while his wife and son were at the home, but according to the affidavit, police said the couple’s stories about what happened had “numerous discrepancies.”
One story allegedly relayed to police by Nemyier was that Pazian was involved in a “tense, ongoing feud” with a Black drug dealer named “Mike,” to whom he apparently owed money.
Nemyier’s wife also initially told police that she and her husband had an argument that morning during which he said he was going to “leave her.” Hours after he went to work, she awoke to find a “knot” on her head. When she asked her father if he knew who could have done that to her, she told police that he reportedly “became frustrated” with her, and she left for the restaurant where Nemyier worked.
The affidavit noted, however, the interactions between Nemyier and his wife, including recordings at the police station where he can allegedly be heard telling her “don’t tell them anything.” When the family was released from the station after questioning, the affidavit said that Nemyier’s wife “was concerned for [her son’s] safety” upon learning that Nemyier had been free to leave. She also reportedly asked an officer for his contact information before she left with Nemyier and their son.