Richard Beasley Ohio Death Row

Richard Beasley

Richard Beasley was sentenced to death by the State of Ohio for a series of murders committed through Craiglist. According to court documents Richard Beasley and Brogan Rafferty would lure men through the Craiglist website and when they arrived they would be robbed and murdered . Richard Beasley and Brogan Rafferty would be arrested, convicted and sentenced. Richard Beasley to death and teenager Brogan Rafferty to life in prison without parole

Ohio Death Row Inmate List

Richard Beasley 2021 Information

Number A640970

DOB 06/15/1959

Gender Male Race White

Admission Date 04/05/2013

Institution Chillicothe Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

Richard Beasley More News

Craigslist killer Richard Beasley returned to Summit County Common Pleas Court via video Wednesday to be resentenced because of a procedural error during his first sentencing.

The net result was the same, though, with the Akron man sentenced to death and to multiple consecutive sentences for his other crimes.

Beasley, 61, appeared via video from the Chillicothe Correctional Institution, sitting in a wheelchair next to Don Hicks, one of his attorneys. Both wore masks.

The Ohio Supreme Court ruled in January that Beasley must be resentenced for his convictions on numerous non-capital charges because of a technical issue involving his original sentencing. The court upheld his death sentence.

Beasley was convicted of posting bogus job offers on Craigslist to rob and murder three men in 2011. Beasley and his teenage accomplice, Brogan Rafferty of Stow, were convicted in 2013. Rafferty got life in prison without parole, while Beasley was sentenced to death.

The murders made national news because Beasley used Craigslist to lure the men to a remote spot in southern Ohio. The scheme was only uncovered when a fourth man was shot but escaped.

Beasley was convicted of aggravated murder — resulting in the death sentence — and numerous other offenses, including attempted murder, aggravated robbery and kidnapping. Judge Lynne Callahan, who is now on the 9th District Court of Appeals bench, imposed sentences for these other charges to run consecutively to Beasley’s death sentence.

The Ohio Supreme Court, though, ruled that Callahan didn’t follow one of the requirements for consecutive sentences. She needed to specify that “consecutive sentences are not disproportionate to the seriousness of the offender’s conduct and the danger the offender poses to the public,” the court said.

Beasley’s resentencing was delayed several times because of procedural issues related to COVID-19 and the requirement that he have an attorney present with him in prison, as well as one in court.

During the resentencing Wednesday, Donald Gallick, Beasley’s attorney who appeared via video, argued that consecutive sentences for someone already facing the death penalty are unnecessary.

“He’s sentenced to death and they give him consecutive sentences — so he won’t be able commit any crimes after he’s executed,” Gallick said. “To me, that seems nonsensical.”

Assistant Summit County Prosecutor Jacquenette Corgan, however, said Beasley’s sentences should stand.

Summit County Common Pleas Judge Kelly McLaughlin sided with prosecutors, imposing the same multiple consecutive sentences as Callahan. McLaughlin read the phrase that was omitted during the original sentencing

Two family members of Beasley’s victims attended the video resentencing but chose not to speak.

Beasley asked if he could back get a Celtic cross taken during the investigation. He said the necklace has been passed down through his family and he’d like to give it to his daughter who was recently married. He said it has nothing to do with the case.

“There’s no reason for you to keep it,” he said. “That’s the only thing my daughter will have of me.”

McLaughlin said she will talk to the attorneys about his request.

Beasley, who has maintained his innocence, still has post-conviction appeals pending. Hicks and Gallick also are representing him in those appeals.Gallick said the consecutive-sentences issue likely will be one of the subjects of the appeals.

https://www.beaconjournal.com/story/news/2020/09/23/craigslist-killer-richard-beasley-receives-same-sentence/5852172002/

Brogan Rafferty Teen Killer 3 Murders

Brogan Rafferty Teen Killer

Brogan Rafferty was sentenced to life in prison for his role in three separate murders in Ohio. According to court documents Brogan Rafferty and Richard Beasley lured three men with the promise of a job on the website Craigslist. When the men arrived they would be brutally murdered by the pair. Brogan Rafferty lawyers tried to say the teen killer was scared of Richard Beasley and was worried if he did not go along that Beasley would kill him. Richard Beasley was sentenced to death

Brogan Rafferty 2023 Information

Number A633123

DOB 12/24/1994

Gender Male

Race White

Admission Date 11/13/2012

Institution Ohio State Penitentiary

Status INCARCERATED

Brogan Raferty Other News

A teenager was sentenced to life in prison with no chance for parole Friday for his role in a deadly plot to lure men desperate for work with phony Craigslist job offers.

Judge Lynne Callahan sentenced 17-year-old Brogan Rafferty, who had been convicted on Oct. 30 of aggravated murder and attempted murder in the deaths of three men and wounding of a fourth.

The sentencing was delayed from Monday amid talks on a deal for leniency in return for Rafferty’s testimony against the alleged triggerman. Rafferty was looking to avoid a life sentence without hope of parole.

The jury rejected the defense claim that Rafferty feared for himself and his family if he didn’t cooperate with his co-defendant, Richard Beasley of Akron.

The 53-year-old Beasley, described as the teen’s spiritual mentor, has pleaded not guilty and faces a Jan. 7 trial.

Prosecutors say the victims, all down in their luck and with few family ties that might highlight their disappearance, were lured with phony offers of farmhand jobs on Craigslist last year.

One man was killed near Akron and the others were shot at a southeast Ohio farm during bogus job interviews.

Prosecutors say robbery was the motive.

Rafferty, a high school student from Stow, was tried as an adult but didn’t face a possible death penalty because he is a juvenile.

Beasley, an ex-convict and self-styled street minister from Akron, could face the death penalty if convicted.

The surviving victim, 49-year-old Scott Davis of South Carolina, testified as the prosecution’s star witness. He identified Rafferty as Beasley’s accomplice and told the jury a harrowing story.

Davis, who was looking to move close to his family in the Canton area, said he was walking across what turned out to be a bogus job site when he heard a gun cock and turned and found himself face to face with a handgun. He said he pushed the weapon aside, was shot in the arm and fled through the woods.

During Rafferty’s trial, defense attorney John Alexander painted Beasley as the mastermind and said that the first killing came without warning for Rafferty.

The three murdered men were Ralph Geiger, 56, of Akron; David Pauley, 51, of Norfolk, Va.; and Timothy Kern, 47, of Massillon. Authorities say they were targeted because they were older, single, out-of-work men with backgrounds that made it unlikely their disappearances would be noticed right away.

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Brogan Rafferty is currently incarcerated at the Ohio State Penitentiary

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Brogan Rafferty is serving multiple life sentences