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Author Topic: Ohio Death Penalty News  (Read 21086 times)

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Offline JTiscool

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Re: Ohio Death Penalty News
« Reply #165 on: April 25, 2012, 03:11:20 PM »
Quote
Wiles, they wrote, was deserving of clemency -- a model prisoner and artist whose drawings were used to comfort terminally ill children, a "son, brother, uncle and friend to many" who was remorseful and accepted his punishment "with grace and dignity."


That's nice. I'm sure there are law abiding citizens that can draw better than him.

Quote
"Right now, the criterion for a favorable or unfavorable clemency recommendation appears to be a guessing game and, at best, a moving target."


I'm sure your opinion wouldn't change if everyone was denied clemency. I'm sure you'd praise the parole board if they granted clemency to everyone. Hooray for double standards  ::)

Quote
* Though groups are outspoken in opposition to Ohio's administration of the death penalty, few are showing up on execution days to show their support for Death Row inmates.


Good. There were less idiots outside of the prison I guess.

Quote
"We challenge the media to review the parole board's collective decisions and find any consistent criteria that might assure the people of Ohio or the inmates themselves that we, as a society, are executing only the worst of the worst," wrote Alan Rossman and Vicki Werneke, two of Wiles' attorneys.


You can stop lying. Fact is you don't want anyone executed, ever.

Quote
"We challenge the media to review the parole board's collective decisions and find any consistent criteria that might assure the people of Ohio or the inmates themselves that we, as a society, are executing only the worst of the worst," wrote Alan Rossman and Vicki Werneke, two of Wiles' attorneys.


I agree with this one. How about no one gets clemency? Would that shut your trap?
My reason for supporting the death penalty? A murderer has less of a right to live than his victim and already presents a danger while incarcerated for life. They have nothing to lose when the most they can get is Life in prison without parole.

Offline AnneTheBelgian

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Ohio Death Penalty News
« Reply #166 on: May 18, 2012, 05:45:55 AM »
http://www.chron.com/news/article/Death-as-bargaining-chip-Ohio-prosecutor-slammed-3563186.php

Friday, May 18, 2012

Death as bargaining chip? Ohio prosecutor slammed

ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS, AP Legal Affairs Writer

Updated 01:27 p.m., Wednesday, May 16, 2012

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Within days of a drug-related slaying in suburban Cleveland, six men were indicted on charges that carried the possibility of a death sentence. Six months later, all had been allowed to plead to lesser charges, including four who received probation and never went to prison.

In short, the men quickly went from facing the possibility of being strapped to a gurney and having 5 grams of pentobarbital injected into their veins, to prison sentences more typical for robbers and thieves.

"It probably was a negotiating tool," said defense attorney Reuben Sheperd, who represented defendant Alex Ford. "You'll be more motivated than you were in other circumstances."

Such scenarios are typical in the county home to Cleveland, where prosecutor Bill Mason pursues dozens of offenders on capital charges each year at added expense to taxpayers and at the risk of some defendants ending up on death row for charges that would be minor elsewhere, even as the number of death penalty prosecutions plummets in Ohio and nationwide, according to an analysis of records by The Associated Press.






Photo : In this Oct. 1, 2008 file photo, Cuyahoga County prosecutor Bill Mason answers during a news conference in Cleveland. Mason pursues dozens of offenders on capital charges each year at added expense to taxpayers and at the risk of some defendants ending up on death row for charges that would be minor elsewhere. (Photo: Tony Dejak / AP)





Anne
"DEATH PENALTY OPPONENTS WHO TWIST THE TRUTH TO PROTECT KILLERS ARE ALSO TORTURING VICTIMS FAMILIES" (PETER BRONSON, CINCINNATI ENQUIRER,FEBRUARY 3, 2003)

PRO DEATH PENALTY AND PROUD OF IT !!!

JE MAINTIENDRAI (MOTTO OF WILLIAM I THE SILENT, PRINCE OF ORANGE, 1533 - 1584, MOTTO OF THE NETHERLANDS)

DEO JUVANTE (MOTTO OF THE PRINCIPALITY OF MONACO)

PROUD TO BE BELGIAN !!! I LOVE MY KINGDOM !!!

Offline turboprinz

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Re: Ohio Death Penalty News
« Reply #167 on: November 26, 2012, 11:27:22 AM »
Ronald Post, Death Row Inmate, Is Not Too Fat To Execute: Federal Judge
 11/26/12 12:47 PM ET EST

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- A condemned killer trying to delay his execution because of his extreme weight hasn't raised enough new issues to warrant the legal challenge, a federal judge ruled Monday.

Death row inmate Ronald Post, who weighs more than 400 pounds, is asking the courts to stop his January execution on the grounds his weight could cause him to suffer severe pain during the procedure.

Post is prohibited from challenging his execution by injection because he raised similar claims in his first set of federal appeals in 1997, Judge Lesley Wells said Monday in Cleveland.

In general, death row inmates are only allowed one federal appeal when alleging the same set of facts.

Post "has not demonstrated in his new petition that his medical condition has changed so significantly, or that Ohio's new lethal injection procedures have changed so radically, since he filed his first petition in 1997 that his original core complaints are transformed into something new," Wells wrote.

However, the judge sent the question to a federal appeals court in Cincinnati for a final determination according to federal law governing this type of appeal. The state is opposing Post's requests to delay his execution.

Post, 53, was sentenced to die for the 1983 shooting death of hotel desk clerk Helen Vantz in Elyria. His execution is scheduled for Jan. 16.

Post also wants his execution delayed to try to prove that claims he made a full confession to several people have been falsely exaggerated.

Post's attorneys declined to comment Monday. They have previously argued that Post's medical condition hasn't been stable. At issue, they say, is his condition around the time of his execution, not at the time of an original court challenge.

Post "could not have raised this claim in his earlier petition because the execution was not imminent and his physical and medical condition have not been stable in relation to an execution date," his attorneys wrote in earlier court filings.

Post has also sued to stop his execution as part of a long-running challenge of Ohio's execution procedures in federal court in Columbus. Judge Gregory Frost has scheduled a Dec. 17 hearing.

Post has tried losing weight, but knee and back problems have made it difficult to exercise, his lawyers say.

They also say Post's request for gastric bypass surgery has been denied, he has been encouraged not to walk because he's at risk for falling, and severe depression has contributed to his inability to limit how much he eats.

A doctor who examined Post for his defense team says Post does not have accessible veins in his arms or hands because of his weight and could not receive a lethal injection in his legs because he is so obese.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/26/ronald-post-death-row-too-fat-to-execute-_n_2192990.html
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Offline turboprinz

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Re: Ohio Death Penalty News
« Reply #168 on: December 06, 2012, 09:22:19 AM »
Thursday, 06 December 2012 12:00
Jones Death Row Appeal Denied Featured

An Akron killer should be put to death for the rape and strangulation of an Akron woman back in 2007.

Phillip Jones was convicted of the rape and murder of Susan Yates. Her body was found by a jogger in April of that year, face-up in Mount Peace Cemetery. Jones reportedly told his wife he'd killed Yates, and told police the death was accidental, during rough sex. He appealed, on the grounds any testimony from his wife invoked spousal privilege and his taking part in demonstration on a life-sized doll showing his claim of accidental strangulation prejudiced the jury.

The court turned those points down on a 6-1 vote with Chief Justice Maureen O'Connor, a former Summit County Prosecutor and Judge, writing for the majority. O'Connor was on the Supreme Court bench at the time of the Yates murder.

An execution date for Jones has not been set.

- - -


(Supreme Court of Ohio) The Supreme Court of Ohio today upheld the aggravated murder conviction and death sentence of Phillip L. Jones of Akron for the 2007 rape and strangulation killing of Susan Yates in a Summit County cemetery.

The court’s 6-1 decision was written by Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor.

In the early morning hours of April 23, 2007, a jogger discovered a woman’s body lying face up in Mount Peace Cemetery in Summit County. The jogger ran to a nearby fast-food restaurant and called 911. Thereafter, police arrived and quickly determined that the woman, later identified as Susan Yates, was dead.

Yates’s name was not released to the media. The next day, the Akron Beacon Journal reported that an unnamed woman was found murdered in the cemetery. After hearing the media report, Jones told his wife, Delores Jones, that he killed the woman, “Susan,” who had been found in the cemetery.

Upset by the information, Delores went to the house of a friend, Charletta Jeffries, and told Jeffries what Jones had said. Jeffries called police, and when Akron police detective Richard Morrison came to Jeffries’ home, Delores repeated her husband’s statements to the detective.

Jones was arrested. When police interrogated him he said only, “All I’m going to say about this is that it was an accident.”

Jones was charged with two counts of rape and one count of aggravated murder with the death penalty specification that Yates was murdered during the commission of rape.

At trial, Jones testified that he accidentally killed Yates while he and Yates were engaging in “rough” consensual sex. Jones claimed that the fatal injuries occurred when he complied with Yates’ request to restrain her breathing during intercourse, and that while he had his hand around her neck he heard a “crack” after which Yates went limp and died.

During cross-examination, the state presented a life-size doll and told Jones to demonstrate how he strangled Yates as he had testified on direct examination, which Jones attempted to do. The state then called a medical examiner, Dr. George Sterbenz, who testified in rebuttal that the type, duration and force of the contact Jones claimed to have had with the victim’s neck was not consistent with Yates’s injuries. Specifically, Dr. Sterbenz explained that Yates died from “violent squeezing force to the neck.” And that “asphyxiation takes quite a number of minutes to occur, and after unconsciousness occurs, the pressure then needs to be maintained until death is accomplished.” Dr. Sterbenz also explained that if Yates had gone limp and died immediately thereafter—as Jones claimed—one would expect to find some kind of injury to the spinal cord. Dr. Sterbenz found no such injury.

Delores agreed to testify on behalf of the state. Because Jones asserted his spousal privilege, the state was not permitted to elicit testimony from Delores about any communication between the couple during the marriage. Therefore, she did not testify that Jones told her that he killed Yates.

But over defense objection, the state presented testimony by Jeffries and Detective Morrison in which each of them repeated Delores’s statements to them that Jones told her that he had killed the woman, Susan, who was found dead in the cemetery.

Finally, the state also introduced testimony by T.J., a woman who described to the jury details of a 1990 incident in which she was choked and sexually assaulted by Jones, for which Jones served 14 years in prison.

The jury returned guilty verdicts on all counts, including the death penalty specification. The jury recommended and the court imposed a sentence of death. In Jones’s appeal to the Supreme Court, his attorneys raised ten assignments of legal and procedural error by the trial court that they alleged were grounds to vacate his convictions or reduce his death sentence to a term of life imprisonment.

In today’s decision, a 6-1 majority of the court overruled all of those claimed errors with the exception of Jones’s objection to portions of the trial testimony by Detective Morrison, which the court found to be harmless error.

Chief Justice O’Connor wrote that the admission of Morrison’s testimony about Delores’s statements to him about Jones’s confession violated the Confrontation Clause. The chief justice explained that Delores’s statements to the detective were testimonial because she made them in the context of a criminal investigation, and not during an ongoing police emergency. The chief justice wrote further, however, that the admission of Jeffries’s testimony about Delores’s statements to her did not violate the Confrontation Clause because an objective witness would not believe that statements made to a friend in an emotional state would be available for use at a trial. And admission of the statements was not barred by hearsay rules because the statements were “excited utterances” that Delores made to Jeffries shortly after her husband had confessed to killing Yates and while Delores was still “hysterical and hyperventilating” from hearing the information.

Chief Justice O’Connor wrote: “We hold that the erroneous admission of Morrison’s testimony relaying Delores’s out-of-court statements was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt in view of the remaining evidence establishing Jones’s guilt. ... Properly admitted evidence establishing Jones’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt includes expert testimony that Jones’s DNA was found on vaginal swabs obtained from the victim and a stain found on the inside of Yates’s skirt. The police also recovered a cross from Jones’s home that was similar to the cross found over Yates’s eye. Delores’s excited utterance to Jeffries provided further evidence linking Jones to Yates’s murder. Moreover, Jones admitted that he killed Yates when he testified on his own behalf.” Based on that evidence, the testimony of T.J. about Jones’s 1990 assault on her, and Dr. Sterbenz’s testimony that Yates’s injuries could not have been inflicted accidentally, the court concluded that the improper admission of Morrison’s testimony was harmless error and therefore not grounds for a new trial.

The court also rejected Jones’s claim that his fair trial rights were violated when the prosecutor asked him to use a life-sized doll and demonstrate how he accidentally killed Yates, as he had described on direct examination. The majority noted that Jones had not objected to performing the demonstration. Moreover, nothing in the transcript indicates Jones was required to simulate having sex with the doll, as Jones claimed, or to do anything other than briefly demonstrate how he claimed to have accidentally caused Yates’s fatal neck injuries.

The majority held that the demonstration was relevant to impeach Jones. The chief justice explained that, when a defendant testifies in his own behalf, he “subjects himself to the same rules, and may be called on to submit to the same tests as to his credibility as may legally be applied to other witnesses.”

She wrote: “Jones’s demonstration showed how he placed his hands around Yates’s neck, as he had described on direct examination. ... (T)he prosecutor and Dr. Sterbenz used the doll during Dr. Sterbenz’s rebuttal testimony to clarify Jones’s explanation about what happened with Yates. In turn, Dr. Sterbenz used autopsy photographs to explain that it was physically impossible for Jones to have killed Yates in the manner that he had demonstrated. ... To further explain, Dr. Sterbenz testified that Yates died from strangulation relating to neck compression, which restricts the blood flow and which would have had to have been maintained for some time after Yates became unconscious. In sum, Dr. Sterbenz found all Jones’s explanation of the strangulation to be inconsistent with the autopsy.”

“Jones’s demonstration directly aided the jury in understanding, and thus assessing, the credibility of his version of events. Likewise, use of the demonstrative doll during rebuttal aided the medical examiner’s understanding of Jones’s explanation of the critical events and his ability to scientifically assess Jones’s story. In turn, the jury was aided by Dr. Sterbenz’s opinion. We readily conclude that the demonstrative evidence was relevant to Jones’s claim that he accidentally killed Yates.”

The court also rejected Jones’s allegation that he was unfairly prejudiced when the trial court allowed the jury to hear “other acts” testimony by T.J. about Jones’s sexual assault on her that took place 17 years before the events resulting in Yates’ death.

Chief Justice O’Connor wrote that other acts evidence is admissible when it is offered not as proof of a defendant’s bad character or propensity to commit crimes, but as “proof of motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident.” In this case, she wrote, “T.J.’s testimony was admissible to prove lack of mistake or accident. Jones told police after he was arrested, ‘[A]ll I’m going to say about this is that it was an accident.’ Thus, T.J.’s testimony was material because Jones claimed that he accidentally killed Yates, and the testimony was therefore properly offered by the state in its case-in-chief to prove absence of accident.”

The chief justice noted that T.J.’s testimony established similarities in the details of the 1990 and 2007 incidents, i.e., that Jones transported both women, whom he barely knew, to remote locations and then beat, choked and sexually assaulted them. She also pointed out that “T.J.’s testimony also helped to establish Jones's motive for murdering Yates to escape detection or apprehension. ... After being raped and released, T.J. immediately notified police that Jones had raped her; he was convicted and was then incarcerated for 14 years. T.J.’s testimony supports the state's argument that Jones killed Yates so that she could not notify the police that he had raped her.”

Chief Justice O’Connor’s opinion was joined by Justices Evelyn Lundberg Stratton, Terrence O’Donnell, Robert R. Cupp and Yvette McGee Brown. Justice Judith Ann Lanzinger concurred in judgment only.

Justice Paul E. Pfeifer dissented, indicating that he found merit in several of Jones’ assignments of error, and that based on those defects in the trial court’s proceedings he would remand the case for a new trial.

With regard to the court’s requirement that Jones demonstrate his conduct with Yates by laying on top of and choking a life-size doll before the jury, Justice Pfeifer wrote that in his view the demonstration was merely “courtroom drama” because Dr. Sterbenz always intended to testify that there was no way Yates’ injuries could have been caused by the hands of a person lying on top of her, and did not use the doll to demonstrate his theory that Yates’ injuries were the result of being placed in a headlock or strangled with a ligature. “Thus,” wrote Justice Pfeifer, “the demonstration on the doll forced on Jones by the state and then again staged by the prosecutor and by Dr. Sterbenz during rebuttal served no purpose other than to inflame the jury. It was not probative of anything.”

Justice Pfeifer wrote that in his view not only Detective Morrison’s testimony but also the testimony of Charletta Jeffries about Delores Jones’ statements to them constituted inadmissible hearsay that should have been excluded at trial, because the state’s only purpose in proffering that testimony was to defeat Jones’ statutory privilege to bar trial testimony by his wife disclosing private communications between them.

Justice Pfeifer also disagreed with the majority’s conclusion that the “other acts” testimony of T.J. about Jones assault on her 17 years before Yates’ death was admissible as evidence establishing the identity of Jones as Yates’ attacker or refuting his claim that her death was an accident. He wrote: “Proof of identity is a straw man. Jones readily admitted he caused the death of Susan Yates. Proof of absence of mistake or accident has little rational connection to Jones's 17-year-old attempted rape of T.J. ... The best and only evidence that Yates’s death was not accidental came from Dr. Sterbenz. Jones’s conviction for attempted rape was far more remote in time than this court has ever allowed as an Evid.R. 404(B) exception. ... The conclusion that the prosecutor tendered T.J.’s testimony for the purpose of proving Jones's bad character and criminal propensity is inescapable and violates Evid.R. 404(B).”

Justice Pfeifer concluded: “Out of the tens of thousands of serious criminal cases that Ohio judges and prosecutors handle each year, we review only a few. It is our responsibility to assure fairness by requiring judges to enforce the rules, statutes, and constitutional protections afforded every citizen accused of a crime. ... Jones did not get a fair trial. It should be a do-over, without the doll, without any testimony about the privileged spousal conversations, and, most assuredly, without the prior-acts testimony. To affirm will embolden prosecutors to increasingly follow an aggressively edgy path to assure convictions and to encourage judges to be accommodative with little fear of reversal.”

http://akronnewsnow.com/news/local/item/63665-jones-death-row-appeal-denied
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Offline turboprinz

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Re: Ohio Death Penalty News
« Reply #169 on: January 09, 2013, 11:03:18 AM »
Ohio Supreme Court weighs DNA testing for inmate convicted in 1990 slaying of Portage County couple

By Ed Meyer
Beacon Journal staff report
Published: January 8, 2013 - 11:09 PM | Updated: January 9, 2013 - 12:23 AM

A Portage County man on death row wants new DNA tests on a cigarette butt found at the scene of a 1990 double murder.

Prosecutors told the Ohio Supreme Court Tuesday morning that even if such testing were granted, it would be meaningless.

Tyrone Noling, now 40, was convicted and sentenced to death in the shootings of an elderly couple, Bearnhardt and Cora Hartig, at the kitchen table of their Atwater Township home.

Initial DNA testing of the butt — found on the Hartigs’ driveway — already excluded Noling and one of his three co-defendants, according to evidence at his 1996 trial.

Portage County Prosecutor Victor V. Vigluicci stressed that point as justices questioned both sides on the long-debated issue.

Even if the cigarette butt points to the DNA of another man, Vigluicci argued, such a finding would prove nothing because “somebody [could have] flicked a cigarette butt out of their car as they passed the Hartigs’ home. It has nothing to do with the crime scene.”

Justice Judith Ann Lanzinger then asked whether the crux of the issue was a “different animal” — not simply excluding Noling and one of his co-defendants, but “absolutely identifying a specific person.”

Vigluicci replied: “If this was DNA that was found on the victim, or semen, or [saliva], or blood or something tested initially and it was inconclusively determined, ‘We don’t know who it is,’ then you’re right. Then it would be important, but that’s not this animal.”

After 38 minutes of oral arguments — eight minutes over what had been the allotted time for both sides — Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor said the matter would be taken under advisement.

The high court’s decision, likely months away, would not actually grant Noling new testing of the cigarette butt. What it would do, as the defense has requested, is send the issue back to a lower court for reconsideration.

There have been two previous denials of a new round of tests in Portage County Common Pleas Court — based on Noling’s exclusion as the contributor of the DNA on the butt.

“The trial court saw that when it rejected both of these applications for subsequent DNA testing. What better evidence can there be for the defense that we tested it and excluded them? And the jury had this information,” Vigluicci said, his voice rising.

Noling’s defense, led at the hearing by Carrie Wood of the Ohio Innocence Project, argued that a law the Ohio legislature enacted in 2010 allows for retesting of biological evidence, if the defendant can show that advances in DNA testing could disclose new evidence.

Wood said police investigators had compared the saliva on the butt to a sample taken from another man, Dan Wilson, and found he could not be excluded as a possible source.

Wilson lived near the Hartig home in Atwater in 1990, and later was sentenced to death for an unrelated murder. He was executed in June 2009, but his DNA profile remains on file in the state’s computerized database, Wood said.

“Mr. Noling,” Wood told the justices, “is innocent of the crime and, at the very least, deserves a new trial. He does not deserve to be on death row for a crime that Dan Wilson confessed to — not under police interrogation, but confessed to his stepbrother.”

DNA testing technology available today “allows you to identify a single individual,” Wood said. What the legislature did under the 2010 law was open the way for more such testing, “not less,” she said.

Justice Paul Pfeiffer, however, said the bottom line in Wood’s argument was “not proof that [Wilson] is the perpetrator. It would be proof that a cigarette butt that he touched was in the victim’s driveway. That’s all it’s proof of, isn’t it?”

Testimony by Noling’s three young co-defendants, identifying him as the perpetrator, was the centerpiece of the 1996 trial — six years after the crime, and after Noling had first been discarded as a suspect by investigators in the Portage County Sheriff’s Office.

All three of the co-defendants, including one on the witness stand, have since recanted their testimony against Noling.

Attorney Kelly Culshaw, who represented Noling in an unsuccessful federal appeal, contacted the Beacon Journal by email after the oral arguments and said there were many more factual issues in the case than those that arose Tuesday in Columbus.

“Mr. Noling has maintained his innocence for over 20 years and passed a polygraph,” Culshaw wrote. She added that Wilson confessed to the Hartig slayings to his older stepbrother, Nathan Chesley, in 1990. A police report later was issued on the confession.

But it was not until 2009, Culshaw said, that actual prosecution case notes on the confession were turned over to Noling’s lawyers “via a public records request,” she said.

Information from the Ohio Innocence Project’s defense of Noling can be found at www.tyronenoling.com.

Noling is awaiting a date of execution while serving his sentence at Chillicothe Correctional Institution.

http://www.ohio.com/news/local-news/ohio-supreme-court-weighs-dna-testing-for-inmate-convicted-in-1990-slaying-of-portage-county-couple-1.363433
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Offline turboprinz

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Re: Ohio Death Penalty News
« Reply #170 on: February 15, 2013, 02:07:12 PM »
Akron man Dawud El Spaulding sentenced to death in fatal shootings
Published: February 15, 2013 - 01:49 PM | Updated: February 15, 2013 - 01:52 PM

A 30-year-old Akron man has been sentenced to death for the fatal shootings of two people and a related shooting that left a man paralyzed.

Summit County Common Pleas Judge Paul Gallagher imposed the death penalty Friday morning for Dawud El Spaulding in an hourlong court hearing.

Gallagher set the execution date for March 3, 2014, but under Ohio law such sentences carry automatic appeals.

Spaulding previously was convicted of two counts of aggravated murder, one count of felonious assault and other crimes in the December 2011 slayings of Ernest “Ernie” Thomas and Erica Singleton, the mother of Spaulding’s 7-year-old son and 2-year-old daughter.

Patrick Griffin was the first victim. He was shot hours earlier that same day at a Grant Street home. The 2 a.m. shooting left him paralyzed.

Some six hours later, after Spaulding fled, he returned to the home and fatally shot Singleton and Thomas just moments after they left the steps of Thomas’ front porch.

In court Friday, Spaulding, who was clad in red-striped jail clothes and guarded by nine sheriff’s deputies and courthouse security commanders, showed no emotion as he sat between his two attorneys at the defense table.

He made no statements or comments to the many family members and friends of the victims, who were seated in the public gallery.

“I just want to get this over with,” he told the judge.

When Gallagher asked him again if he wished to address the court, Spaulding shook his head back and forth, saying nothing.

Gallagher followed a previous recommendation by the jury in imposing the capital sentence.

http://www.ohio.com/news/akron-man-dawud-el-spaulding-sentenced-to-death-in-fatal-shootings-1.373539
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Offline turboprinz

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Re: Ohio Death Penalty News
« Reply #171 on: February 20, 2013, 12:39:46 PM »
Supreme Court won't set execution date for Ross County killer
Wednesday February 20, 2013 12:18 PM

The Ohio Supreme Court today denied motions to set an execution date for Lawrence Landrum, convicted for slashing the throat of an 84-year-old Chillicothe man in 1985.

Ross County Prosecutor Matthew S. Schmidt twice last year filed motions asking the court to set an execution date. He argued that justice is long overdue in the case and that two family members of the murder victim, Harold White Sr., have cancer and hoped to live long enough to see his killer put to death.

But the Ohio Public Defender, which represents Landrum, countered by pointing out that he has appeals pending regarding the claim that he was not adequately represented by previous attorneys.

The Supreme Court did not cite its reasoning in 6-1 decision; Justice Terrence O’Donnell was the dissenter.

Landrum had an execution date in 1996, but that was set aside. Numerous appeals have followed. The U.S. Supreme Court refused to consider the case.

Landrum was convicted for killing White by cutting his throat during a burglary on Sept. 19, 1985. The coroner’s office testified at the trial that they had trouble obtaining a blood sample because White’s body was nearly drained of all blood from the murder.

http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2013/02/20/supreme-court-execution-date.html
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Offline turboprinz

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Re: Ohio Death Penalty News
« Reply #172 on: March 27, 2013, 02:13:14 PM »
Capital punishment: Four slated for execution this year
Wednesday March 27, 2013 8:31 AM

The case of Ohio Death Row inmate Warren Waddy of Columbus illustrates why some people are frustrated with capital punishment.

Waddy, 59, has been on Death Row for 9,300 days — more than 25 years — since his conviction for strangling 22-year-old Paula Mason of Columbus with a jump rope after breaking into her apartment, tying her up, and beating her. Ronald Reagan was president at the time.

But Waddy’s case appears to have no resolution in sight. It is one of four cases cited in Attorney General Mike DeWine’s annual Capital Crimes report, released yesterday, as being held up in court due to claims that they should not be executed because of mental retardation. The case has cleared state courts, but layers of federal appeals remain untapped after a quarter-century of litigation.

DeWine’s report, which must be submitted by April 1 to the governor and state legislators, noted that five new death sentences were handed down in Ohio courts last year, including one for Caron E. Montgomery of Franklin County. Montgomery was sentenced to death by a three-judge panel for the Thanksgiving Day 2010 stabbing deaths of his former girlfriend, Tia Hendricks; the couple’s 2-year-old son, Tyron Hendricks; and her 10-year-old daughter, Tahlia Hendricks. The previous death sentence in Franklin County was in 2003 for James T. Conway III, who is on Death Row awaiting an execution date.

Ohio has executed 50 men since resuming capital punishment on Feb. 19, 1999, after a long hiatus. Wilford Berry, a Cleveland killer who voluntary waived his final appeals, was the first person executed in Ohio in 36 years.

There has been one execution this year, Frederick Treesh, of Cleveland, on March 6. Earlier this year, Gov. John Kasich commuted the death sentence of Ronald Post, of Elyria, to life without the possibility of parole. Four more executions are scheduled this year, with five slated in 2014 and two in 2015.

Franklin County Prosecutor Ron O’Brien asked the Ohio Supreme Court late last year to set an execution date for another local man, Alva Campbell, convicted for murdering 18-year-old Charles Dials in 1997 after escaping from sheriff’s deputies on the way to a court hearing. A date has not been set.

The state has 142 people on Death Row, including one woman. That is a far cry from more than 200 a few years ago.

The report said there have been 18 commutations since 1991, including four by Kasich, five by former Gov. Ted Strickland, one by Gov. Bob Taft, and eight by Gov. Richard F. Celeste. In recent years, 23 Death Row inmates died of natural causes while awaiting execution.

The 50 killers executed so far were responsible for murdering 81 people, including 18 children.

The full report, including the legal status of all Death Row cases, is available online at http://bit.ly/XEQdfm.

http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2013/03/27/four-slated-for-execution-this-year.html
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Offline turboprinz

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Re: Ohio Death Penalty News
« Reply #173 on: April 05, 2013, 10:56:04 AM »
Ohio judge sentences convicted 'Craigslist' killer to death
By KIM PALMER, REUTERS April 5, 2013 2:24am


AKRON, Ohio - An Ohio judge sentenced Richard Beasley to death on Thursday for the murder of three down-on-their-luck men who responded to an ad he placed on the Craigslist website for a nonexistent job.

Prosecutors had called Beasley a "false prophet," and a con man who manipulated his victims to keep himself out of prison, acting as the mastermind and triggerman in the killings he was convicted of committing along with a teenage accomplice.

"Beasley is a master manipulator even up to today, constantly trying to manipulate and lie," Summit County Prosecutor Sherri Bevan Walsh told reporters afterward, calling it a well-deserved sentence.

After Summit County Common Pleas Judge Lynne Callahan imposed the sentence, Beasley, 53, told her he believed his convictions would be reversed and he would be found innocent.

"I want to make sure you understand: I have killed nobody," said Beasley, who was wearing prison red and white stripes and sitting in a wheelchair.

Beasley has complained of constant neck and back pain from an auto accident and has asked for special mattresses and shoe inserts while in prison.

Beasley was convicted in March of kidnapping and killing David Pauley, 51, of Norfolk, Virginia; Ralph Geiger, 56, of Akron, and Timothy Kern, 47, of Massillon, Ohio.

He was also convicted of the attempted murder of Scott Davis, 49, a South Carolina man who answered the Craigslist ad and was shot in the arm while escaping after meeting Beasley and the teen accomplice, Brogan Rafferty.

The ad had promised a $300-a-week job as a ranch hand in rural Ohio, but the job did not exist.

Beasley and Rafferty were convicted in separate trials. Rafferty was 16 at the time of the crimes and therefore not eligible for the death penalty. He was sentenced to life in prison without parole and plans to appeal his conviction.

Jurors had unanimously recommended that Beasley be sentenced to death. Under Ohio law, the judge had the option of imposing the death penalty or sentencing him to life in prison.

Davis as well as friends and family of the men killed were allowed to speak after the death sentence was imposed.

Davis said he had felt God's presence come over him after he was shot and later when he was walking through the woods looking for help, recalling his painful recovery from the wound. He also told Beasley he planned to attend his execution.

"I will be there as you go, smiling," Davis said.

Afterward, Davis told reporters that Beasley was simply "a liar" when asked about his claim of innocence.

"When he was shooting at me I saw nothing in his eyes," he said.

Debra Bruce, Pauley's twin sister, said her brother had thought the job would provide a fresh start, calling Beasley "an evil and vile person."

Beasley's mother, Carol Beasley, told jurors during the sentencing phase in March to spare her son, who she said was abused physically and sexually as a child - including by a stepfather, who beat him with an extension cord.

The attacks were among a series of incidents in which people advertising goods for sale or responding to ads on Craigslist and other social media have been attacked and killed.

In 2009, a former medical student was accused of killing a masseuse he met through Craigslist. Last year, two men in Tennessee were accused of killing a man and a woman for "unfriending" the daughter of one of the suspects on Facebook.

http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/302464/news/world/ohio-judge-sentences-convicted-craigslist-killer-to-death
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Offline deeg

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Re: Ohio Death Penalty News
« Reply #174 on: April 05, 2013, 02:14:02 PM »
Surprise another "innocent" heading off to death row. 

In my line of work, managing programs assisting people with barriers find and retain employment, luring people in need for job opportunities, especially hurts my heart.  So many people, skilled, unskilled, well and under educated, are desperate for jobs and are having trouble finding a job providing sufficient wages. 
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