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Author Topic: Robert Gleason Jr Rescinds Guilty Plea in 2009 VA Murder of Cellmate  (Read 5733 times)

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heidi salazar

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Va. inmate: 'Only way to stop me' is death row


(AP Photo/Ernie Benko)

POUND, Va. — For seven days, Robert Gleason Jr. begged correctional officers and counselors at Wallens Ridge State Prison to move his new cellmate. The constant singing, screaming and obnoxious behavior were too much, and Gleason knew he was ready to snap.

On the eighth day — May 8, 2009 — correctional officers found 63-year-old Harvey Gray Watson Jr. bound, gagged, beaten and strangled. His death went unnoticed for 15 hours because correctional officers had falsified inmate counts at the high-security prison in southwestern Virginia.

Now, Gleason says he'll kill again if he isn't put to death for killing Watson, who had a history of mental illness. And he says his next victim won't be an inmate.

"I murdered that man cold-bloodedly. I planned it, and I'm gonna do it again," the 40-year-old Gleason told The Associated Press. "Someone needs to stop it. The only way to stop me is put me on death row."

Gleason already is serving a life sentence for killing another man. He fired his lawyers last month — they were trying to work out a deal to keep him from getting the death penalty — so he could plead guilty to capital murder. He's vowed not to appeal his sentence if the judge sentences him to death Aug. 31.

"I did this. I deserve it," he said. "That man, he didn't deserve to die."

Watson was serving a 100-year sentence for killing a man and wounding two others in 1983 when he shot into his neighbor's house in Lynchburg with a 10-gauge shotgun. According to prison records, Watson suffered from "mild" mental impairment and was frequently cited for his disruptive and combative behavior.

Watson was sent to Wallens Ridge on April 23, 2009, a day after he set fire to his cell at Sussex II State Prison. Gleason and Watson became cellmates on May 1, 2009.

In the days the two spent locked in an 8-by-10-foot cell, Watson would talk about how he had "drowned" two television sets because they "had voodoo in them," Gleason said.

He would also belt out "I wish I was in the land of cotton" from the song "Dixie" and other songs at all hours, scream profanities and masturbate. In the chow hall and in the recreation yard, Watson would get inmates to give him cigarettes for drinking his urine and clabbered milk.

"You can't be upset with someone like that," Gleason said. "He needed help."

Gleason said his requests to separate the two were met with mockery and indifference by correctional officers and prison counselors. He said he knew what he'd do once officials refused to put Watson in protective custody.

"That day I knew I was going to kill him," he said. "Wallens Ridge forced my hand."

It was after midnight when Gleason used slivers of bed sheets to tie Watson's hands and arms to his body and fashioned a gag out of two socks. He later removed the gag and gave Watson a cigarette, telling him it would be his last. Gleason said Watson spit in his face when he went to take the cigarette out of Watson's mouth, so he jumped on his cellmate's back and beat and strangled the man.

He then covered Watson's body with a bed sheet to make it look like he was sleeping.

Gleason kept Watson's death a secret through two mandatory standing counts and two meals. Officers only discovered the body when Watson's psychiatrist came to see him at 4:40 p.m. and found him dead, according to court documents.

Prison employees involved in the case denied repeated requests for comment from the AP. Department of Corrections spokesman Larry Traylor also declined to discuss the situation, but said that two officers were disciplined and two others were fired. One of the fired officers was reinstated upon appeal.

Gleason has since been transferred to the "supermax" Red Onion State Prison.

Watson's sister, Barbara McLeod of Longmont, Colo., said Gleason should be forced to spend the rest of his life in prison with no privileges.

"He doesn't deserve to be able to control his own destiny at this point. He doesn't deserve to have his death on the conscience of the state of Virginia," she said.

McLeod said her brother had a history of mental problems that grew worse during his last decade of incarceration. McLeod said she's upset that her brother was housed with such a violent prisoner — and angry that it took so long for guards to realize he was dead.

"Supposedly they are monitoring these prisoners," she said. "I guess not."

During a hearing a week before his June 1 trial was to start, Gleason warned Wise County Commonwealth's Attorney Ron Elkins that he would kill again if Elkins didn't seek the death penalty.

Elkins had offered to let Gleason plead to second-degree murder. He also offered to drop the capital murder charges and come back with a charge that didn't carry a death sentence. Elkins wouldn't say why he made those offers.

However, capital murder cases are typically lengthy and expensive, especially as appeals wind through the courts. Even though Gleason confessed, Elkins said he proceeded cautiously to ensure the case couldn't be overturned on appeal.

Court records show that Gleason told Elkins he had no remorse for killing Watson. He said he learned from his father to own up to his mistakes, and that he needed to prove to his loved ones that actions have consequences.

"There's nothing you guys can do to me to hurt me. Nothing," he told the prosecutor. "But there's something you guys can do to prevent someone else from getting hurt."

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5g6t-5eQbd-0iVd-Kp442xSC5djZAD9G9R1UO0

Offline v1976ra

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He's asking for it, so I say let him have it. As for Wallen's Ridge, this aint the first time they've come under attack, and probably wont be the last either.

Offline Granny B

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It is obvious from the story, that the corrections officers there did not care about Watson's welfare.  Gleason kept begging them to move Watson and they would not.  They are at fault in this death too.

But I can't help but think that Watson is better off dead than in prison too.  If Gleason had not killed him and he had been moved elsewhere, someone else might have done him in for the same reasons. 

" Closure? Closure is a misused word in the English language.  There is no such thing as closure for the family of a murder victim.  There will never be any closure for the death of our loved ones until we are dead ourselves.  The families have a lifetime sentence of anguish and sadness." 
Susan Levy

Offline mark

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It is obvious from the story, that the corrections officers there did not care about Watson's welfare.  Gleason kept begging them to move Watson and they would not.  They are at fault in this death too.

But I can't help but think that Watson is better off dead than in prison too.  If Gleason had not killed him and he had been moved elsewhere, someone else might have done him in for the same reasons.


Yes i agree GOB the sad thing is that if they had moved Gleason which i assume is not an onerous request the other dude would still be alive


Could they not have put him in his own cell due to his vulnerability and his mental instability, whatever the dude did to wind up in the same cell as Gleason he did not deserve to die, the state had a duty of care to look after the welfare of both convicts and it seems it failed miserably on both counts
Such heavy words are so lightly thrown but i would still leap in front of a flying bullet for you

heidi salazar

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Here are links to the 3 prisons involved

Sussex II

Wallens Ridge State Prison

Red Onion State Prison

Seems to me they were both being held in the wrong class facilities in the first place.

heidi salazar

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I'm thinking they outta give him the  :(

Inmate who said he'd kill more linked to 2nd death

A Virginia inmate who warned prosecutors he would kill again if not given the death penalty for strangling his cellmate was involved the death of another inmate, authorities said.

Wise County Commonwealth's Attorney Ron Elkins confirmed late Saturday that Robert Gleason Jr. was "involved" in the death of 26-year-old Aaron Alexander Cooper, though Elkins refused to elaborate. Gleason, who was already serving a life term for murder before killing his cellmate last year, has not been charged in the death.

Cooper died Wednesday in the recreation yard for inmates housed in segregation at the maximum security Red Onion State Prison in southwestern Virginia. Elkins is awaiting a report from the medical examiner on Monday, but he said authorities believe Cooper was strangled.

Authorities are trying to figure out how it could have happened, because each inmate is placed in a separate, small caged-in area for recreation. Elkins said authorities believe Cooper was strangled with a piece of clothing, towel or bed sheet that was somehow reached through the chain link fence that separates the inmates on the recreation yard.

Elkins said he didn't know when charges might be filed against Gleason.

Gleason is scheduled to be sentenced Aug. 31 for killing his cellmate at Wallens Ridge State Prison last year. He fired his attorneys and pleaded guilty in May, telling prosecutors he would kill again if they didn't seek the death penalty in his case.

"I murdered that man cold-bloodedly. I planned it, and I'm gonna do it again," the 40-year-old Gleason told The Associated Press. "Someone needs to stop it. The only way to stop me is put me on death row."

Elkins said he may wait until after Gleason is sentenced to determine whether to charge him in Cooper's death. He was set to visit Red Onion Monday morning to review video surveillance of the incident.

"If he gets the death penalty I'm not really sure what we'll do," he said.

Death penalty cases are costly and time-consuming. Gleason has said he would not appeal his case if given the death penalty.

Gleason already was serving life for another murder when he killed 63-year-old Harvey Gray Watson Jr., a man with a history of mental illness who had been placed in Gleason's cell a week earlier.

Gleason said he begged correctional officers to move Watson, who he said sang, screamed profanities and masturbated in the 8-by-10-foot cell they shared for seven days. He said Watson also got inmates to give him cigarettes in exchange for drinking his urine or clabbered milk on the recreation yard.

On the eighth day — May 8, 2009 — correctional officers found Watson bound, gagged, beaten and strangled. His death went unnoticed for 15 hours because correctional officers had not followed proper procedure for inmate head counts at the high-security prison in southwestern Virginia.

Prison employees involved in that case have denied repeated requests for comment from the AP. Department of Corrections spokesman Larry Traylor declined to discuss the situation, but said that two officers were disciplined and two others were fired. One of the fired officers was reinstated upon appeal.

Traylor said the department was investigating Cooper's death. He referred all questions regarding Gleason to the commonwealth's attorney.

Cooper was serving 34 years for crimes including carjacking and robbery

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100801/ap_on_re_us/us_cellmate_slaying_2


Offline v1976ra

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Quote

Authorities are trying to figure out how it could have happened, because each inmate is placed in a separate, small caged-in area for recreation. Elkins said authorities believe Cooper was strangled with a piece of clothing, towel or bed sheet that was somehow reached through the chain link fence that separates the inmates on the recreation yard.




Yet more proof that just locking up violent killers won't stop them from committing further acts of violence. I have personally seen both of these prisons and can tell you they are amongst the most secure facilities in the country. If viscous murderers can find a way to kill under these conditions then really, whats left to stop them besides execution....  ???


Offline Jeff1857

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I feel like whoever decided to let him recreate or interact with other inmates bare some kind of responsibility for this. This scumbag should have obviously been in deep adseg with no interaction at all. Of course I was reading a blog that stated one inmate on TX DR severely stabbed another one fairly recently and that's as deep isolation as it goes so nothing is absolute.

Offline Angelstorm

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Sounds like he's acting out to try and ensure they give him the DP.

I really don't know quite what to think of this one - on one hand I'm inclined to agree with the sister (lock him up for life since he actually wants the DP), but on the other I think that he should  :( so that he can't kill anyone else - whether it be another inmate or an innocent next time.....


Offline v1976ra

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The POS has promised he will keep killing unless they execute him. Even if he's locked in the darkest dungeons of the most secure prison, human interaction will be a given at some point. He will have to be fed, have medical appointments, etc. He has already shown total disregard for human life, so what's to keep him from attacking a guard or another staff member in the future?

Even in a segregated unit, it's not uncommon for inmates to sit and think 24/7 how they can hurt someone, whether it be with a shank or by throwing feces. He's killed 3 people and has said he will keep killing unless they execute him. Enough said...

The prison officials should stop playing politics, admit that the f'd up and get this POS fast tracked to DR.

Offline Angelstorm

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The POS has promised he will keep killing unless they execute him. Even if he's locked in the darkest dungeons of the most secure prison, human interaction will be a given at some point. He will have to be fed, have medical appointments, etc. He has already shown total disregard for human life, so what's to keep him from attacking a guard or another staff member in the future?

Even in a segregated unit, it's not uncommon for inmates to sit and think 24/7 how they can hurt someone, whether it be with a shank or by throwing feces. He's killed 3 people and has said he will keep killing unless they execute him. Enough said...

The prison officials should stop playing politics, admit that the f'd up and get this POS fast tracked to DR.


Good point.   :( him.

heidi salazar

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Va inmate tied to prison murders befriended victim

A Virginia inmate who is accused in two prison slayings had befriended his latest victim and asked the man's mother to be his pen pal.

Robert Gleason Jr. is accused of killing 26-year-old Aaron Cooper at Red Onion State Prison last week.

Gleason pleaded guilty earlier this year to killing his cellmate at another prison. He told prosecutors he would kill again if they didn't give him the death penalty.

Gleason is set to be sentenced on Aug. 31. Prosecutors say they will wait until then to charge Gleason in Cooper's death.

Prosecutors say Gleason lured Cooper to the fence dividing their cages in the recreation yard on July 28 with a gift: a gang necklace. Prosecutors say it was actually a noose fashioned from torn bed sheets that Gleason used to strangle Cooper.

http://www.wtvr.com/news/dp-va--cellmateslaying0806aug06,0,7678124.story
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Vigil planned in Norfolk for Va. inmate killed in prison

A vigil is planned for a Norfolk man who was killed in a southwest Virginia prison last week.

Prosecutors say 26-year-old Aaron Alexander Cooper was strangled at Red Onion State Prison by an inmate who had warned officials he would kill again if not given the death penalty for killing his cellmate last year.

Robert Gleason Jr. is awaiting sentencing on that murder Aug. 31. He was serving life for killing a man in Amherst County. Prosecutors have not yet charged him in Cooper's death, but say surveillance video shows he was involved and that he has confessed.

Cooper was serving 34 years for crimes including carjacking and robbery.

The vigil will be held from 7:30 to 9 p.m. tonight at Oakdale Presbyterian Church in Norfolk.



heidi salazar

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This 2001 file photo provided by Kim Strickland, shows her son Aaron Cooper, who was slain at the Red Onion maximum security prison in southwestern Virginia. Cooper was killed by an inmate who had warned officials he would kill again if not given the death penalty.

Aaron Cooper told his mother, Kim Strickland, that he and Gleason talked about God and other things to pass the time in prison.
(AP Photo/Kim Strickland, File)

Offline ICE75

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Too bad that this sot is not in Prince William County.  I am quite certain that Commonwealth Attorney Ebert would accomodate his request to go to DR.
ICE75

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He is cold blooded, calculated & remorseless - sounds like the DP & a fast track to the chamber is in everyone's best interests here.