HILLSBOROUGH COUNTY, Fla. — Family members of one of the victims in the Seminole Heights murders in 2017 expressed anger and frustration after watching recently released visitation audio and video showing murder suspect Howell Donaldson III meeting with his parents in jail.

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Ronnie Felton was the fourth victim in the string of shootings that terrorized the neighborhood for weeks before Donaldson was arrested. 

His sisters, Cherylene Levy and Sheryl Hicks-Kelly, watched the video and cried. First, they were angry. That anger then turned into frustration.

They said until now they hadn’t heard Donaldson say much, even in court. Hearing his voice on the video, though, took them back to the time these murders occurred.

Donaldson is seen in the video talking to his parents. It's something Levy says she’ll never get to do with her brother.

“It’s very hurtful to know that they can actually go and see him and sit down and we can’t,” Levy said. “I really feel bad, because the parents can go to the jail and sit down and talk to him."

"When we go and want to talk to our brother we have to talk in the air, or we have to go to the graveyard, or we have to get on the phone and talk to each other about our brother," she continued. "We will never see him again.”

Hicks-Kelly said hearing Donaldson’s voice was awful.

“It was upsetting," she explained. "That’s why I started shaking when I actually saw him face-to-face, because looking at him on the news when he first got arrested and looking at him here, it was hurtful then and it's even hurtful more, seeing him continuously talk or whatever."

In the video, Donaldson complained about his experience in jail and was uplifted by his parents.

“When it’s over, we going to say it wasn’t nothing but God,” his father, Howell, said.

But Felton’s sisters say what they heard on that video has them scratching their heads. It also renews their push for justice to be served.

“Me, personally, the right thing to say is, 'if you did this, son, then you got to deal with the consequences that you did and at the end God will see you through,'" Hicks-Kelly said. "Not 'God going to see you through it' and he don’t have any consequences to deal with. They’re still upholding him, as if he didn’t do anything wrong, and that’s the hurting part.”

Donaldson is due back in court on April 23. Felton’s family said they will be in the courtroom.