Ray Cromartie Georgia Execution

Ray Cromartie photos

Ray Cromartie was executed by the State of Georgia for the murder of a store clerk in 1994. According to court documents Ray Cromartie would murder store clerk Richard Slysz during a robbery. Richard Slysz would be executed by lethal injection on November 13, 2019

Ray Cromartie More News

Ray “Jeff” Cromartie is dead, executed at 10:59 p.m. eastern for the 1994 murder of South Georgia convenience store clerk Richard Slysz.

Cromartie’s death by lethal injection became imminent once the U.S. Supreme Court denied his request for a stay of execution shortly after 10 p.m. Cromartie appealed to the Supreme Court Wednesday evening after the federal appeals court in Atlanta rejected his request for a stay late Wednesday afternoon.

The 52-year-old was set to receive a lethal injection of pentobarbitol at 7 p.m. But while Georgia schedules executions for that hour, the state does not proceed until all courts have weighed in, which puts the actual time of death well into the night.

Ray Cromartie died amid uncertainty and contention.

He has always insisted he was not the person who pulled the trigger in the 1994 South Georgia convenience store robbery and murder that sent him to death row.

Two days before Cromartie’s scheduled execution, one of his co-defendants, Thad Lucas, released an affidavit saying he’d overheard their other co-defendant, Corey Clark, confess to being the shooter.

Lucas, who was the getaway driver in the robbery in Thomasville, did not mention Clark’s alleged confession at trial or in a recent interview. Lucas said in the affidavit that he originally didn’t think telling the truth would do any good. State officials argued his statement changes nothing, because Lucas acknowledges he didn’t see the shooting and, thus, can’t know who killed 50-year-old Richard Slysz.

And the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, in its ruling rejecting Cromartie’s request for a stay, disagreed with Cromartie’s lawyers’ contention that Lucas’ recent statement shows their client is innocent of malice murder and his case should be reopened.

A three-judge panel of the 11th Circuit noted that just three days before Slysz was fatally shot in the head, Ray Cromartie committed an almost identical crime against another store clerk in the same town.

There was also testimony at trial that Cromartie picked out which store to rob in the Slysz killing. Given this, the court said, Cromartie has failed to present new evidence that’s so strong that reviewing judges cannot have confidence in the outcome of the trial.

In a concurring opinion, Judge Beverly Martin said that, under the law, Ray Cromartie “has no procedures available to allow us to consider the claims he raises here.”

This includes claims by Cromartie’s new lawyers that the jury should have heard mitigating evidence about their client’s troubled past. This is evidence that may have affected jurors’ views on Cromartie’s moral culpability for the crime that sent him to death row, Martin said.

“Certainly Mr. Cromartie, as well as our criminal justice system, would have been better served if his claims had been considered on the merits,” she wrote.

Slysz’s daughter, Elizabeth Legette, also didn’t see the shooting, which is one reason why she joined in Cromartie’s requests for new DNA testing. Cromartie’s attorneys say the testing — on shell casings and clothing — could prove it was Clark who shot the clerk, not Ray Cromartie.

At trial, Clark testified that Ray Cromartie fired the gun, and lawyers from the Georgia Attorney General’s Office say other witness testimony fits the pattern in Clark’s statements, not Cromartie’s.

Courts have one by one denied Cromartie’s DNA testing request in recent weeks, upsetting the victim’s daughter.

“In the course of the past few months, I have not been treated with fairness, dignity, or respect, and people in power have refused to listen to what I had to say,” Legette wrote in a statement released Tuesday. “I believe this was, in part, because I was not saying what I was expected to say as a victim.”

After 25 years of failed court fights, Ray Cromartie seemed resigned in recent visits with family.

Stepbrother Eric Major talked to him through a metal screen at the Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Prison outside Jackson, which houses the execution chamber.”

He was comforting us,” Major told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “He was never a very emotional person, but he was always a caring person.”

Major didn’t need to square the image of the convicted murderer as a caring person, because he never believed his stepbrother was guilty.

The brothers grew up mostly around Houston, where they had little supervision at home. “We kind of were raising ourselves,” Major said.

Ray Cromartie seemed to Major like an average-enough kid with a job at McDonald’s and a love for music. Cromartie wanted to be like their neighbor, an engineer, but Major doesn’t think it was so much the profession Cromartie wanted to emulate, just the act of wearing a suit to work.

The stepbrothers got into trouble here and there before Major’s mother brought him to live with her in Alabama.

At the mother’s urging, Major went to college.

Cromartie, meanwhile, joined the Army and got kicked out for reasons he never disclosed to Major. Cromartie ended up in Thomasville, his mom’s hometown near the Florida border, and Major stayed in Alabama, where he would later become a state representative.

Cromartie didn’t deny involvement in the robbery attempt at Junior Food Store.

Cromartie and Clark were driven to the store by Lucas, who is Cromartie’s half-brother.

Cromartie had convinced Lucas to give them a ride to steal some beer, according to Lucas. Lucas said he waited in the car behind the store while Cromartie and Clark went around to the front. When Cromartie and Clark fled the store, they were toting two 12-packs of Budweiser.

From where the car was parked, Lucas said he couldn’t see inside the store, so he didn’t realize the clerk was shot until later that night, when Clark pulled him aside and said Cromartie had killed the man.

Shortly thereafter, Lucas now claims, he overheard Clark tell someone else he had killed the clerk himself.

In the days to come, Lucas heard police were also accusing Cromartie of shooting a different clerk, Dan Wilson, who’d taken a bullet to the head during a robbery and survived.

Police said Cromartie acted alone in Wilson’s shooting. Lucas, who said he was not close to his half-brother, never asked Cromartie if he was guilty. “Some things you just don’t ask,” Lucas, 47, told the AJC. But in his affidavit, he said he has actually always believed Clark was the shooter.

“I keep hearing that Jeff Cromartie is the shooter and I know that is probably not true,” Lucas wrote, adding that his own past statements “helped hide the truth.”

Lucas and Clark testified at the trial, avoiding the death penalty and murder charges. Lucas and Clark were released from prison in the early 2000s. Clark was recently arrested on a parole violation and hasn’t responded to a request for comment.

Generally speaking, Georgia’s party to a crime law could have made Cromartie eligible for the death penalty whether he pulled the trigger or not. But his attorneys said that statute didn’t apply because prosecutors explicitly argued at trial that Cromartie fired the fatal shots.

No members of Slysz’s family openly opposed the DNA testing or called for Cromartie to be executed. But Wilson, the victim who survived, very much wanted Cromartie to die, according to retired Thomasville police detective Melven Johnson.

Johnson said the evidence from both shootings left no doubt that Cromartie killed Slysz and shot Wilson.

As the execution neared, Major thought of how his path had diverged from his stepbrother’s many years earlier, when Cromartie headed for prison and Major headed for the Alabama Statehouse.

“But for the grace of God,” Major said, “I would be Jeff.”

Major decided not to attend the execution. Cromartie asked him and other relatives not to come, so they wouldn’t have to endure it, which Major took as further evidence that his stepbrother is a caring person.

https://www.post-gazette.com/news/crime-courts/2019/11/14/Ray-Cromartie-Georgia-executes-1994-killing-store-clerk/stories/201911140161

Justen Hall Texas Execution

justen hall texas

Justen Hall was executed by the State of Texas for the murder of a woman in 2002. According to court documents Justen Hall was a captain of a white national group who would strangle to death Melanie Billhartz. Justen Hall would be executed by lethal injection on November 6, 2019.

Justen Hall More News

Texas executed a 38-year-old man Wednesday night for the 2002 slaying of a woman in El Paso.

Justen Hall was the eighth person executed in Texas in 2019. Just after 6 p.m., he was strapped to a gurney in the Huntsville execution chamber. Hall, identified in court documents as a district captain of a white nationalist gang, was convicted in the strangling of Melanie Billhartz in El Paso.

Billhartz’s cousin, Cameron Rountree,along with Hall’s mother and half-sister, watched from the viewing room as Hall was injected with a lethal dose of pentobarbital at 6:13 p.m. He was pronounced dead at 6:32 p.m.

In his final statement, Hall said he wanted to address Billhartz’s relatives and “apologize for the pain and suffering” he caused.

“And to my mom and Morelia, I love you and I’m going to miss you all,” he said. “I’m ready.”

Hall killed Billhartz while out on bond from a previous murder charge, according to media reports. Newspaper articles identified that previous murder victim as Arlene Diaz. During a 2017 court hearing, Hall admitted killing Diaz.

“And to the Diaz family that I had to put you through this, it should have never happened,” Hall said shortly before his death Wednesday, according to prison officials.

Hall’s lawyers filed a motion last month asking an El Paso court to push back Hall’s execution date until experts can evaluate his competency. The motion stated Hall refused contact with counsel for at least two years and argued that his behavior signaled a drastic decline in his already troubled mental state.

Hall stated he was competent to represent himself — and two doctors agreed in 2017. He asked courts to waive his appeals and schedule an execution date.

“I do not like the person I have become, and I need to be put down like the rabid dog that I am,” he wrote to a trial judge on Oct. 6, 2016.

But Hall’s attorneys have questioned his competency, pointing to a history of delusion, paranoia and suicidal behavior. In January, a court ruled against reconsidering Hall’s competency.

“Mr. Hall’s campaign to drop all appeals and cut off all communication with his counsel for the past two and a half years further confirms that he is being driven by his paranoid delusions to seek to use the State’s power to facilitate his own self-destruction,” the attorneys wrote in their motion to an El Paso district court.

El Paso District Attorney Jaime Esparza said in a statement that Hall has confessed to two murders and “demonstrated that, if given the opportunity, he will commit acts of violence that constitute a continuing threat to society.”

On Oct. 28, 2002, Billhartz and Ted Murgatroyd, an alleged gang prospect, got into an argument near a drug house, according to court documents. After Billhartz threatened to call the police — drawing authorities to the gang’s meth lab — she disappeared with Hall in her truck. Murgatroyd said Hall came back hours later with Billhartz’s body in the back of the cab, according to court records. Hall told Murgatroyd to get a shovel and machete to bury Billhartz. The two drove to New Mexico, where Hall told Murgatroyd to cut off the victim’s fingers to prevent DNA from being found before dumping Billhartz’s body, records state.

Weeks later, Murgatroyd led investigators to the body. Hall, then 21, was arrested later that day and confessed to the killing on Nov. 25, 2002.

He was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death in 2005.

https://www.texastribune.org/2019/11/06/texas-death-row-inmate-justen-hall-execution-scheduled/

Charles Rhines South Dakota Execution

charles rhines execution

Charles Rhines was executed by the South Dakota government for a robbery murder committed in 1992. According to court documents Charles Rhines would go to his former place of work and during the commission of a robbery would stab to death Donnivan Schaefer. Charles Rhines would be executed on November 4, 2019

Charles Rhines More News

A convicted killer who fatally stabbed a former co-worker during a 1992 burglary used his last words Monday to speak directly to the parents of his victim, saying he forgave them “for your anger and hatred towards me.” But the victim’s parents refused to acknowledge the man who killed their son, instead focusing on the young man whom they called a blessing.
  
Charles Rhines was executed by lethal injection at 7:39 p.m., after the U.S. Supreme Court denied to halt his execution despite three late appeals.
  
“Ed and Peggy Schaeffer, I forgive you for your anger and hatred toward me,” Rhines said, before thanking his defense team. “I pray to God that he forgives you for your anger and hatred toward me. Thanks to my team. I love you all, goodbye. Let’s go. That’s all I have to say. Goodbye.”

Rhines, 63, ambushed 22-year-old Donnivan Schaefer in 1992 when Schaefer surprised him while he was burglarizing a Rapid City doughnut shop where Schaeffer worked. Rhines had been fired a few weeks earlier.

Rhines ambushed him, stabbing him in the stomach. Bleeding from his wound, Schaeffer begged to be taken to a hospital, vowing to keep silent about the crime; instead, he was forced into a storeroom, tied up and stabbed to death.

Steve Allender, a Rapid City police detective at the time of the killing who is now the city’s mayor, said Rhines’ jury sentenced him to death partly because of Rhines’ “chilling laughter” as he described Schaeffer’s death spasms.
  
“I watched the jury as they listened to the confession of Charles Rhines on audiotape and their reaction to his confession was appropriate. Any human being would be repulsed by the things he said and the way he said them,” Allender told KELO.
  
The Schaeffers made clear they didn’t want to talk about Rhines. Patty Schaeffer appeared before reporters holding a photo of her two sons, including Donnivan, as children, and then displayed a graduation photo of him.
  
“We were so blessed to have this young man in our family and in our life,” she said. “Today is the day that we talk about Donavan, the guy who loved his family, his fiancé, and his friends.”
  
Media witnesses to the execution said Rhines appeared calm, and it took only about a minute for the pentobarbital used by the state to take effect. They said when he finished speaking, he closed his eyes, then blinked, breathed heavily and died.
  
Rhines had challenged the state’s use of pentobarbital, arguing it wasn’t the ultra-fast-acting drug he was entitled to. A circuit judge ruled it was as fast or faster than other drugs when used in lethal doses and speculated that Rhines wanted only to delay his execution.
  
The U.S. Supreme Court rejected that appeal, as well as his arguments that he was sentenced to die by a jury with an anti-gay bias and that he wasn’t given access to experts who could have examined him for cognitive and psychiatric impairments.
  
Pentobarbital was used last year when South Dakota executed Rodney Berget, who killed a prison guard during a 2011 escape attempt. Berget was pronounced dead 12 minutes after the lethal injection began, and a transcript released afterward said Berget asked after the injection was administered: “Is it supposed to feel like that?” His comment prompted a national group that studies capital punishment to call on the state to release more details about the drug used.
  
After attending Schaeffer’s funeral, Rhines moved to Seattle. Authorities thought the move was odd because Rhines had vowed to never return to Washington state, where he had spent time in prison. Allender said authorities initially interviewed Rhines and felt something was off, but Rhines wasn’t arrested until four months later, after Rhines told his former roommate about the killing.
  
Rhines wrote to the Argus Leader in May 2013, saying that when he saw a grieving mother on the news in an unrelated case, he realized what he had done to Schaeffer’s mother.
  
“Just at the cusp of her beloved child becoming an independent person, a responsible adult with a family and friends surrounding him and his mother waiting expectantly for grandchildren to spoil, having all that snatched away for almost no reason at all and the hole it has had to have left in her heart,” he wrote. “Prosecutors talk of closure, but that wound will never close, no matter how long it is there.”
  
Peggy Schaeffer, Donnivan’s mother, rejected the words as insincere.
  
Schaeffer’s family declined to speak with The Associated Press in advance of Rhines’ execution. In June, when a judge scheduled the execution, Peggy Schaeffer told reporters, “This step was one big one for justice for Donnivan. It’s just time.”
  
In the afternoon, about 30 protesters gathered in snow flurries outside the state prison where Rhines was to be executed, praying and singing hymns. Denny Davis, director of South Dakotans for Alternatives to the Death Penalty, said they accept Rhines’ execution but hope to steer public opinion against capital punishment.
  
“It is about a culture shift and changing the values of people,” he said. “Why would we want to put this person to death when society is already safe?”

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/south-dakota-execution-today-charles-rhines-executed-for-fatally-stabbing-co-worker-2019-11-04/

Russell Bucklew Missouri Execution

Russell Bucklew execution

Russell Bucklew was executed by the State of Missouri for a murder committed in 1996. According to court documents Russell Bucklew would shoot and kill Michael Sanders who he believed was dating his ex girlfriend Stephanie Ray Pruett. Russell Bucklew would attempt to shoot Pruett son before he kidnapped and sexually assaulted Stephanie. Russell Bucklew would be executed by lethal injection on October 2, 2019

Russell Bucklew More News

Missouri executed Russell Bucklew on Tuesday evening despite concerns from his attorneys that he did not receive an adequate defense and that his rare lifelong disease would lead to a bloody and gruesome death. 

Bucklew was declared dead at 6:23 p.m. Central time and showed no obvious signs of distress, according to the Associated Press. As Bucklew lay strapped on the gurney before the lethal drug was injected, he “twitched his feet” and looked around. Shortly after the injection, he took a deep breath and ceased movement, the AP reported. 

In a Wednesday phone call with The Appeal, Bucklew’s attorney, Cheryl Pilate, said that the Missouri Department of Corrections took several steps to avoid a botched execution, including sedating him beforehand with Valium and elevating the gurney to ensure he would not choke on his own blood should a tumor caused by his illness burst. The state uses a single dose of pentobarbital in its executions and has refused to reveal its supplier. Witnesses did not observe the insertion of the IV, Pilate said. 

“The reality is they’re completely strapped down, their extremities are completely covered up, which is not a transparent process,” said Pilate. “We truly don’t know what he experienced.”

Jeremy Weis, another Bucklew attorney, told The Appeal that in the days before his death, prison officials did not administer Bucklew’s pain medication on time and stopped giving him Klonopin, an anti-anxiety medication that he had been taking for years. 

Pilate said she and Bucklew’s other attorneys were on the phone with Bucklew about an hour before the execution. Before they could say goodbye, they were cut off mid-sentence. “The line went dead. This is deliberate,” she told The Appeal. “The cruelty is the point.”

A Missouri Department of Corrections spokesperson did not immediately return a request for comment from The Appeal. 

In September, Bucklew’s attorneys asked Governor Mike Parson to spare his life and commute his sentence to life without parole. On Tuesday morning, Parson’s spokesperson, Kelli Jones, said in a statement that his request had been denied. She did not return a request for comment from The Appeal asking to explain Parson’s reasons for the denial. 

Bucklew was the 89th prisoner Missouri executed since 1976, when executions resumed after a Supreme Court ruling, and the first since Parson became governor. 

Bucklew was convicted of murdering Michael Sanders in 1996 and sentenced to death the following year. The killing was capital because Bucklew had raped his ex-girlfriend, Stephanie Ray, during the commission of the crime. 

It would be more than two decades before Bucklew’s defense team would conduct an investigation into his background, a constitutional obligation in death penalty cases. Their failure to do so during his trial, his current attorneys have argued, meant that the jury, when deciding Bucklew’s fate, never considered the abuse and addiction he suffered early in his life.

In 2018, Bucklew’s attorneys discovered that at the time of his crime, he was addicted to opiates he had been prescribed for his disease. The medications, they learned, also sent him into a rage. The opiates were used to treat cavernous hemangioma, a rare condition that caused blood-filled tumors to form. For years, Bucklew’s legal team argued that executing Bucklew by lethal injection would cause the tumors to burst and he would suffocate on his own blood, amounting to torture. Bucklew’s execution had been stopped twice before over this issue. 

In April, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Bucklew’s execution could proceed, despite the risks. In his majority opinion, Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote that the Eighth Amendment does not guarantee a painless execution. 

“This is the first time in this country that a person has been executed when consensus was clear that it could be torture,” the ACLU wrote in a press release on Tuesday night. International leaders from the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights had condemned Missouri’s attempts to execute Bucklew on those same grounds.  

Former Cape Girardeau County Prosecutor Morley Swingle, who prosecuted Bucklew in 1997, was present at the execution. Afterwards, he boasted that Energizer contacted him asking him to stop using “homicidal Energizer bunny” in reference to Bucklew, a Missouri Net reporter tweeted

Leading up to the execution, Bucklew told The Appeal in a statement through his attorneys that he had been “feeling emotional but nothing over the top.” He wrote that he hoped Parson would let him live because he was remorseful for his crime and had changed during his incarceration. Notably, he said, he had been taken off the medications that caused him to become angry. 

“I want people to know that they should live your life with honor, always keep your word, respect your elders and think before you act,” he said. “These are the things I have learned in life.”

https://theappeal.org/missouri-executes-russell-bucklew-threat-botched-execution/

Robert Sparks Texas Execution

robert sparks execution photos

Robert Sparks was executed by the State of Texas for a triple murder. According to court documents Robert Sparks would stab his wife to death as he believed that she was poisoning him. Robert Sparks would then stab to death his two stepsons ages ten and nine before tying up and sexually assaulting his two stepdaughters. Robert Sparks would be executed by lethal injection on September 26, 2019

Robert Sparks More News

A Texas inmate who claimed he was intellectually disabled was executed Wednesday for fatally stabbing his two stepsons during a 2007 attack in which his wife also died.

Robert Sparks received a lethal injection at the state penitentiary in Huntsville for the slayings of 9-year-old Harold Sublet and 10-year-old Raekwon Agnew in their Dallas home. Sparks, 45, became the 16th inmate put to death this year in the U.S. and the seventh in Texas.

“I am sorry for the hard times. And what hurts me is that I hurt y’all … even y’all, too,” Sparks told his relatives and friends who watched through a death chamber window, turning his head at one point to address family members of his victims who stood behind a separate window.

As the lethal dose of pentobarbital began, he said, “I love you all” and then added, “I feel it.”

He took two deep breaths almost immediately, snored three times and then all movement ceased. He was pronounced dead 23 minutes later, at 6:39 p.m. CDT.

Seven more executions are scheduled this year in Texas, the nation’s busiest capital punishment state.

Prosecutors said the attack in September 2007 began when Sparks stabbed his wife, 30-year-old Chare Agnew, 18 times as she lay in her bed. Sparks then went into the boys’ bedroom and separately took them into the kitchen, where he stabbed them. Raekwon was stabbed at least 45 times.

Sparks then raped his 12- and 14-year-old stepdaughters, authorities said.

“The day when the situation was going on, he said that we wouldn’t make it,” one of the stepdaughters, Lakenya Agnew, said after witnessing Sparks’ execution. “Twelve years later, we’re both standing here. … I want him to know we’re not suffering. We’re hurt emotionally but physically we’re fine.”

She added that Sparks being put to death “kills the nightmare.”

The Associated Press usually doesn’t name victims of sexual assault, but Agnew spoke publicly and identified herself.

On Wednesday with the execution time approaching, the U.S. Supreme Court declined a request by Sparks’ attorneys to stop the lethal injection. They had alleged his trial jury was improperly influenced because a bailiff wore a tie with an image of a syringe that showed his support for the death penalty. In the ruling, Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote that while she didn’t disagree with the denial, she found the bailiff’s actions “deeply troubling.”

Sparks also had alleged a prosecution witness at his trial provided false testimony regarding his prison classification if a jury chose life without parole rather than a death sentence.

The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Tuesday declined to stop the execution on claims he was intellectually disabled, saying his attorneys had not presented sufficient evidence to show Sparks was mentally disabled and his attorneys had failed to raise such a claim in a timely manner.

In August, the 5th Circuit did grant a stay for Dexter Johnson, another Texas death row inmate who also claims he is intellectually disabled. In that case, the appeals court ruled Johnson had made a sufficient showing of possible intellectual disability that needed further review.

“My co-counsel and I may have lost this battle, but we remain undeterred soldiers in the enduring war for capital conviction integrity,” said Seth Kretzer, one of Sparks’ appellate attorneys.

After being arrested, Sparks told police he fatally stabbed his wife and stepsons because he believed they were trying to poison him. Sparks told a psychologist that a voice told him “to kill them because they were trying to kill me.”

Sparks’ lawyers had argued he suffered from severe mental illness and had been diagnosed as a delusional psychotic and with schizoaffective disorder, a condition characterized by hallucinations.

A psychologist hired by Sparks’ attorneys said in an affidavit this month that Sparks “meets full criteria for a diagnosis of” intellectual disability.

The Supreme Court in 2002 barred execution of mentally disabled people but has given states some discretion to decide how to determine intellectual disability. However, justices have wrestled with how much discretion to allow.

Sparks’ attorneys said that at the time of his trial, he was not deemed intellectually disabled, but that changes since then in how Texas makes such determinations and updates to the handbook used by medical professionals to diagnose mental disorders would have changed that.

On whether Sparks’ jury was improperly influenced by the bailiff’s tie with an image of a syringe, the Texas Attorney General’s Office said the jury forewoman indicated she never saw the tie and had no knowledge of it affecting the jurors.

The attorney general’s office said the testimony from the prosecution witness on prison classification was corrected on cross-examination.

“Sparks committed a heinous crime which resulted in the murders of two young children. He is unable to overcome the overwhelming testimony” in his case, the attorney general’s office said in its court filing with the Supreme Court.

https://dfw.cbslocal.com/2019/09/25/inmate-dallas-robert-sparks-executed-stabbing-deaths-stepsons/