New Jersey Dad Convicted of Fatally Beating Son, 6, Day After Mom Lost Emergency Custody Bid Reports to Prison

Christopher Gregor will have to serve a minimum sentence of 17 years behind bars before becoming eligible for parole on February 28, 2039, according to the DOC. 

The New Jersey man convicted of beating his son to death one day after the boy's mother lost her bid for emergency custody is now in prison. 

According to the New Jersey Department of Corrections (DOC), officers transferred Christopher Gregor, 32, from the Garden State Youth Correction Facility to the New Jersey State Prison in Trenton this week.

This is where Gregor will serve his mandatory 17-year prison sentence after a jury convicted him of aggravated manslaughter and endangering the welfare of a child. Jurors also acquitted Gregor of a second-degree murder charge. 

Those convictions stem from two incidents involving Gregor and his son, Corey Micciolo, who died on April 2, 2021 at the age of six.

Gregor's attorney, Mario Gallucci, said outside court on the day of the verdict that Gregor did not accept the outcome of the trial and would be appealing the verdict.

Should that appeal be rejected Gregor will have to serve a minimum sentence of 17 years behind bars before becoming eligible for parole on Feb. 28, 2039, according to the DOC. 

Corey Micciolo Final Days 

The jury convicted Gregor of endangering the welfare of a child after seeing surveillance video from the gym inside his apartment complex taken on March 20, 2021 that showed him forcing Corey to run at full speed on a treadmill and then picking the boy up and forcing him back on the machine each time he fell. At one point in the video, Gregor even appears to bite his son on the head.

This incident prompted Corey's mother Bre Micciolo to petition the court for emergency custody of her son. A judge denied that bid on April 1, 2001, writing in his ruling that the court "does not find that ... Corey is in danger of imminent and irreparable harm. Therefore, the Court does not find a temporary modification of the parties' custody and parenting time arrangement appropriate at this time." 

The following day, Bre dropped Corey off at Gregor's home. The jury convicted Gregor of aggravated manslaughter after Corey died just a few hours later.

Prosecutors do not know what happened to Corey and did not offer any suggestions during the trial of what could have transpired. The conviction of Gregor on that charge is due in large part to the fact that Bre took Corey to see both a doctor and a specialist on April 1 at the suggestion of the judge who denied her bid. The examinations and tests performed on Corey by doctors that day provided evidence that the boy's fatal injuries were not suffered until he was in his father's custody.

An autopsy determined that Corey's cause of death was blunt force injuries, including blunt force trauma with cardiac and liver contusions with acute inflammation and sepsis. A second autopsy done almost one year later found the manner of death to be homicide.

Gallucci previously spoke with Inside Edition Digital about what he says caused Corey's death.

"Corey Micciolo died from complications from Pneumonia. Our expert and even the Ocean County Medical Examiner agreed on this early diagnosis. While it is tragedy it is not a homicide," Gallucci said. 

Corey Micciolo Wrongful Death Lawsuit 

Bre has also filed a wrongful death suit against the State of New Jersey, Department of Child Protection and Permanency (DCPP).

She says in her civil suit that her son Corey might still be alive had the agency and its caseworkers "adequately, properly, and fully [investigated the] reports of abuse" she made concerning her son and his father.

She accuses the agency of "negligent, reckless, and demonstrated palpably unreasonable conduct" in the suit, and is seeking both wrongful death and survivor damages, having filed the suit on behalf of Corey's estate.

Inside Edition Digital obtained a copy of the suit that was filed in Ocean County Superior Court.

"This lawsuit will not bring my son back, but it will hold  DCPP accountable for him losing his life to a monster," Micciolo tells Inside Edition Digital. "They had an obligation to protect my son, they didn’t do that. They are at fault for my son's death, as well as the person who physically murdered him."

Micciolo gave birth to Corey when she was 17 and Gregor was 22. She raised Corey as a single mother for the first five years of his short life, and then shared custody with Gregor after he petitioned the court for joint custody. That is when the abuse started, according to Micciolo.

"The more he got away with it, the worse the abuse got," Micciolo said. "And he was aware after the first time I reported it [in 2019]."

DCCP did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

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