Thirty six-year-old Kentuckian Ryan Champion is accused of hiring a hitman, 22-year-old Vito Riservato, to kill his parents and sister and then turning the tables afterwards – killing the man he contracted to perform the gruesome task.Champion was indicted by a grand jury in Trigg County on Wednesday on a count of murder, 3 counts of complicity to commit murder and complicity to commit kidnapping. Initially police charged Champion with four counts of capital murder and one count of capital kidnapping.The bodies of Champion’s family members as well as his ‘gun-for-hire‘ were found last month at the family residence in Cadiz in Western Kentucky. All 4 died of gunshot wounds.Trigg County prosecutor G.L. Ovey, who is promising to seek the death penalty in the case, said it’s believed Champion’s scheme originally began as a murder-for-hire plan which went wrong after the deaths of his family members – resulting in the death of Riservato.Riservato was suspected to be the lone perpetrator in the murders until Ryan Champion was arrested on October 31 after appearing on television and radio interviews boasting he had “turned the tables” on his family’s killer, who he claimed simply entered the home and opened fire. He also said he had only met Riservato once prior to the killings.On social media Champion posted updates stating he had survived and was recuperating but needed to find money and was looking for work.Champion will appear for arraignment on December 10 and is being held in the Christian County jail on a 5 million dollar bond.“In a murder for hire, he would’ve got paid, but … he was murdered,” Ovey said.Ovey wouldn’t speculate on motives surrounding the deaths of Lindsey and Joy Champion, the latter who taught for 30+ years at schools Trigg County. Champion’s 31-year-old sister, Emily Champion, was a veterinarian working in Louisiana who was in Cadiz for a short visit. Ovey said she was restrained with duct tape during the attack which resulted in the kidnapping charge against Champion.Following the indictment Champion spoke to News Edge’s Travis Faulkner at the Christian County Jail. According to that report Champion talked at length about missing his family’s funeral, how he’s been treated in jail, and support from friends. He wouldn’t discuss the details of what happened but he did make it clear that he knows what took place. He says he found solace in some of the charges being downgraded from murder to complicity and believes the charges in the indictment show that the State’s case against him is not as strong as many think.