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Timothy Hudson Surrenders to US Marshals in Anna Kepner Murder Case — What the New Evidence Means

16 June, 2026 13:41

After months of contested detention hearings, new prosecution evidence finally convinced a federal judge to order the teenager’s custody — exposing the legal fault lines in trying a minor accused of murder and sexual assault as an adult.

For months, prosecutors argued that Timothy Hudson — charged with the murder and sexual assault of his 16-year-old stepsister Anna Kepner aboard a cruise ship in November 2025 — was too dangerous to remain free before his September 2026 trial. The courts repeatedly disagreed. On June 15, 2026, that changed. Hudson surrendered to US Marshals after Judge Edwin Torres issued a new detention order, citing fresh prosecution evidence and a judicial determination that Hudson posed a genuine danger to those around him.

Why the judge changed course

The shift came down to two things: new evidence and a revised judicial risk calculus. Prosecutors submitted additional material that Judge Torres found impossible to set aside — specifically related to what he described in his order as a

“forcible rape”

allegation at the core of the case. Beyond the evidence, Torres identified a pattern of concern: a perceived absence of remorse in the accused and what the judge characterized as an unpredictable risk of dangerous behavior, even within a supervised family environment. Torres also underscored a critical procedural development — Hudson would face trial as an adult, not as a juvenile, fundamentally altering the legal framework governing his detention eligibility.

The May 2026 refusal — and what made this time different

Judge Torres had denied a detention request as recently as May 2026, when Hudson was living under electronic monitoring with his uncle. At that point, Torres acknowledged the severity of the charges but drew a careful distinction based on Hudson’s age, noting:

“The presumption would be we were just not going to take that chance. This is a different animal.”

That caution reflected the genuine tension courts face when a juvenile accused of adult-level crimes falls between the procedural protections of the Juvenile Detention Act and the public safety arguments typically applied to adult defendants. The Act requires a higher evidentiary threshold for pretrial detention of minors — a bar prosecutors had not cleared in February or May.

Competing legal arguments

Assistant US Attorney Alejandra Lopez had argued consistently that Hudson’s presence posed a threat to those living near him, including two minors in the vicinity of his supervised residence. Defense attorney Evan Kuhl countered that his client had complied fully with every release condition — electronic monitoring, mandatory escort by a family member for any movement outside the home — without a single documented violation. The judge’s June ruling effectively concluded that compliance with conditions, while relevant, did not outweigh the updated risk profile the new evidence created.

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