Jeffrey Meyer North Carolina Death Row

jeffrey meyer

Jeffrey Meyer was sentenced to death by the State of North Carolina for the robbery and murders of Janie and Paul Kutz. According to court documents Jeffrey Meyer would break into the home of elderly couple Janie and Paul Kutz and proceeded to murder the couple during the robbery. Jeffrey Meyer would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

North Carolina Death Row Inmate List

Jeffrey Meyer 2021 Information

Offender Number:0280127                                          
Inmate Status:ACTIVE
Gender:MALE
Race:WHITE
Ethnic Group:EUROPEAN/N.AM./AUSTR
Birth Date:11/02/1966
Age:54
Current Location:CENTRAL PRISON

Jeffrey Meyer More News

In December 1986, defendant and Mark Thompson were soldiers on active duty and stationed at Fort Bragg.   Defendant and Thompson began watching a residence owned by an elderly couple, planning to burglarize the couple’s home.   Based on their surveillance efforts, defendant and Thompson knew that Paul and Janie Kutz (the victims) were an “elder couple” who owned two vehicles but “usually traveled” together in the same car.

On 1 December 1986, defendant and Thompson, dressed in “ninja” suits, broke into the victims’ home in Fayetteville, North Carolina.   Surprised by Mr. Kutz, defendant shot him with a blow gun (a martial arts weapon that launches sharp darts from a hollow tube).   When Mr. Kutz continued to advance, defendant stabbed and killed him with a butterfly knife.   Defendant and Thompson also stabbed and killed Mrs. Kutz with butterfly knives.   Thereafter, defendant and Thompson stole jewelry, credit cards, and a television from the Kutz residence.

During the early morning hours of 2 December 1986, military police officer Robert Provalenko intercepted defendant and Thompson as they traveled in a red pickup truck through a restricted area of Fort Bragg.   Officer Provalenko observed that defendant and Thompson were dressed in black pants and ninja boots.   When Officer Provalenko noticed a black-handled butterfly knife in the glove compartment of the truck, directly in front of defendant, he asked defendant and Thompson to exit the vehicle.   Thompson then consented to a search of his vehicle.   During the ensuing search, Officer Provalenko and military police officer George Clark found a second butterfly knife, a pair of nunchucks, a blowgun, and latex rubber gloves.   The officers also found jewelry, a television, and credit cards, all of which were later identified as belonging to the victims.

Later that morning, following a report from the military police about credit cards seized from defendant and Thompson, Cumberland County Deputy Sheriff David Stewart was dispatched to respond to a possible break-in at the victims’ residence.   Upon arriving at the victims’ residence, Deputy Stewart observed signs of a break-in, including an open window and door.   After entering the victims’ residence, Deputy Stewart discovered the victims’ stabbed bodies.   Deputy Stewart found Mr. Kutz’s body lying in a recliner in the den and discovered Mrs. Kutz’s body lying on a bed in the master bedroom.   John Trogdon, a crime-scene technician with the Fayetteville Police Department, examined the victims’ residence and observed footprints consistent with ninja boots in the dirt around the house, as well as on a dining room chair.   State Bureau of Investigation (SBI) Agent Lucy Milks, an expert in forensic serology, tested various evidence seized from the victims’ residence.   Among other things, Agent Milks determined that human blood consistent with the type of both victims was present on the black-handled butterfly knife.   A test conducted on the chrome butterfly knife revealed the presence of human blood consistent with the type of Mrs. Kutz.

SBI agent John Bendure, an expert in fiber analysis and comparison, testified that his testing of the black-handled butterfly knife revealed the presence of light-brown polyester fiber that was consistent with the upholstery of the chair in which Mr. Kutz’s body was found.   Agent Bendure also tested the chrome butterfly knife and associated fiber samples from that knife with a blue blanket found with Mrs. Kutz’s body.   In addition, Agent Bendure testified that fibers from the pink nightgown worn by Mrs. Kutz at the time of her death could be associated with both knives.   Finally, Agent Bendure testified that fibers associated with the blanket and sheets in the bedroom were found on the clothing worn by both defendant and Thompson.

On 3 December 1986, Dale Wayne Wyatt, then a soldier stationed at Fort Bragg, was detained in the Cumberland County jail waiting to appear in court on a worthless-check charge.   Wyatt testified at trial that he met defendant in one of the holding facilities during his detention.   According to Wyatt, defendant told him that “he was being investigated in a double homicide” and that his clothes were being held as evidence.   Wyatt testified that defendant told him about the murder of Mr. Kutz.   Defendant told Wyatt that when he entered the Kutz residence, he saw Mr. Kutz, shot him with a blowgun dart, then stabbed him with a butterfly knife.

Forensic pathologist Dr. George Lutman performed an autopsy on the sixty-two-year-old body of Mrs. Kutz.   In Dr. Lutman’s expert opinion, Mrs. Kutz’s death was caused by multiple stab wounds.   Dr. Lutman testified that Mrs. Kutz had been stabbed or cut approximately twenty-five or twenty-six times.   Four stab wounds penetrated into the right side of Mrs. Kutz’s chest, and another penetrated into the left side.   Mrs. Kutz also suffered multiple wounds to the liver, a stab wound into her neck that reached to the spinal column, a stab wound that cut the tip of her spleen, and a stab wound that cut one of the tubes from the kidney to the bladder.   Dr. Lutman also noted “defensive wounds” to Mrs. Kutz’s hands, indicating an attempt to fend off an attacker.   The most critical wound was located near Mrs. Kutz’s right shoulder, where a knife “tunneled up” and severed her windpipe and her carotid artery, causing Mrs. Kutz to aspirate blood into her lungs when she inhaled.   Dr. Lutman observed that Mrs. Kutz’s “lungs were markedly expanded with ․ trapped air and blood.”   This aspiration indicated to Dr. Lutman that Mrs. Kutz had remained alive “for some period of time after receiving the wound.”

Forensic pathologist Dr. Fred Ginn performed an autopsy on the sixty-eight-year-old body of Mr. Kutz.   Dr. Ginn testified that wounds to the front of Mr. Kutz’s body included a stab wound above the left eye, a stab wound above the right collar bone down in his neck, a “large gaping wound across the neck,” two stab wounds in the upper left chest, and an “oval shaped stab wound ․ in the sixth rib space.”   Dr. Ginn also noted defensive wounds on Mr. Kutz’s left hand and, on Mr. Kutz’s left shoulder, “a small punctate mark of the size that would be made by a needle or dart.”   Dr. Ginn further testified that wounds to the back of Mr. Kutz’s body included a cut above the left elbow;  three stab wounds into the left side of the chest and one into the right side of the chest;  and stab wounds to the left and right of the spine, with the left wound extending into the left kidney.   A wound to the chest and left ventricle of Mr. Kutz’s heart caused 150 milliliters of blood from the heart to collect between the heart wall and the connective tissue sac that encases the heart.   Dr. Ginn opined that the probable cause of death was the stab wound to the heart.   Dr. Ginn also testified that “between half a minute to five minutes could have elapsed before” Mr. Kutz died from the effects of the stab wounds and that Mr. Kutz “could have been conscious any of that time up to the maximum.”

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/nc-supreme-court/1127457.html

Ted Prevatte North Carolina Death Row

ted prevatte

Ted Prevatte was sentenced to death by the State of North Carolina for the murder of Cindy McIntyre. According to court documents Ted Prevatte and Cindy McIntyre had been dating for about a year when she decided to end it and Prevatte did not take it well. Cindy McIntyre would be fatally shot outside of her home. Ted Prevatte would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

North Carolina Death Row Inmate List

Ted Prevatte 2021 Information

Offender Number:0330166                                          
Inmate Status:ACTIVE
Probation/Parole/Post Release Status:INACTIVE
Gender:MALE
Race:WHITE
Ethnic Group:EUROPEAN/N.AM./AUSTR
Birth Date:12/23/1949
Age:71
Current Location:CENTRAL PRISON

Ted Prevatte More News

 The thirty-two-year-old victim (Cindy McIntyre) was married with two children (Michael and Matthew).   She and her husband, Mike, were estranged but trying to reconcile.   The victim and defendant attended the same church, sang together in the choir, and had been dating for about a year.   Defendant lived with his mother across the street from the victim.

On 1 June 1993, when the victim and her husband saw each other, the victim’s husband gave her a rose, kissed her, and told her he loved her.   Later that same day, the victim and her son Matthew were at home when defendant came in with a present for Matthew.   As Matthew was opening the present, his mother said, “Oh my God.” Matthew turned around and saw defendant pointing a gun at his mother. Defendant had borrowed a gun from his cousin that afternoon.

When Matthew saw defendant with the gun, Matthew jumped up, and defendant pointed the gun at him.   Defendant took the victim and Matthew to the bedroom and made them get down on their knees.   Defendant then hit and kicked the victim.   Defendant pointed the gun at Matthew’s head and said if the victim did not shut up, defendant would shoot Matthew.

Defendant grabbed Matthew and locked him in a bathroom down the hall from the bedroom.   Defendant briefly left the house but shortly returned and brought the victim out of the house, with her hands bound behind her back.   Defendant had his hands on the victim’s neck and shoulder area.   Defendant forced the victim into a car, pulled the victim back out of the car, and then struck the victim three to four times and slammed the victim’s head into the car.   The victim’s hands remained bound behind her back.   Defendant next reached into the car and pulled out a handgun.   When the victim tried to run away, defendant held the gun with both hands, aimed, and fired more than once.   Defendant left immediately after the last shot.

An autopsy of the victim’s body revealed she suffered three gunshot wounds.   Each bullet passed through the victim’s body.   One bullet went through the middle of the victim’s back and completely destroyed her aorta and heart.   Massive bleeding occurred in the chest cavity.   These wounds caused the victim’s death.

Inside the master bedroom of the victim’s house, investigators found a nylon rope tied to a bed frame and a roll of duct tape on the floor.   The roll of duct tape was consistent with the duct tape used to bind the victim’s hands.

Prior to the murder, the victim told a witness she was afraid of defendant because he knew she was reuniting with her husband.   The victim said she was afraid defendant would hurt her, her children, or her husband.   Witnesses also heard defendant say he would kill the victim if he could get away with it and he “[felt] like killing her.”

Before analyzing defendant’s arguments, we first note that defendant’s two trial attorneys in this case are the same attorneys who represented defendant in his 1995 capital trial for this murder.

We also note defendant presented an insanity defense at trial.   Two defense experts expressed opinions that defendant had a paranoid personality disorder and was insane at the time of the shooting.   The State offered rebuttal evidence that on the day of the murders, defendant was observed acting in a calm, friendly manner.   The State’s expert testified that on the day of the murders, defendant was able to understand the nature and quality of his actions as well as the difference between right and wrong.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/nc-supreme-court/1209128.html

Raymond Thibodeaux North Carolina Death Row

Raymond Thibodeaux

Raymond Thibodeaux was sentenced to death by the State of North Carolina for the murder of his wife Bertha Thibodeaux. According to court documents Raymond Thibodeaux would murder his wife Bertha after she threatened to leave him. Raymond Thibodeaux would be arrested convicted and sentenced to death

North Carolina Death Row Inmate List

Raymond Thibodeaux 2021 Information

Offender Number:0515143                                          
Inmate Status:ACTIVE
Probation/Parole/Post Release Status:INACTIVE
Gender:MALE
Race:WHITE
Ethnic Group:EUROPEAN/N.AM./AUSTR
Birth Date:06/22/1954
Age:66
Current Location:CENTRAL PRISON

Raymond Thibodeaux More News

Defendant and the victim, Annette Thibodeaux, resided at 204 Barney Road in High Point, Forsyth County, North Carolina.   Members of the High Point Police Department were sent to their home on 13 April 1998 after an out-of-town caller had contacted police and expressed concern that he was unable to reach the couple.   Police arrived at the Thibodeaux home at approximately 10:00 p.m.

After observing the home for an hour, police approached and knocked on the door several times.   When defendant answered, the officers standing at the doorway could see in clear view what appeared to be a woman lying face down between two couches in the living room.   Also visible were what appeared to be blood stains on the walls and both couches.   Based upon these observations, the police asked defendant to step outside, and they began to search the residence.

After placing defendant in a patrol car, Forsyth County Sheriff’s Detective Dwayne V. Hedgecock advised defendant that law enforcement officers were there because there was a dead body in his house.   In trial testimony, Detective Hedgecock described his subsequent conversation with defendant thusly:

“He said, ‘A dead body is in my house?’   He asked me who was in the house and I replied, ‘A female.’   He said, ‘You mean a woman?’   And I replied, ‘yes.’   He looked at me in a very puzzled manner when he asked about the body․  He asked me again why I was there and if I was a police officer.   I told him that I was a detective with the Forsyth County Sheriff’s Office and that I was there to investigate what had happened.   He again asked me if there was a dead woman in his house, and I said, ‘Yes, Ray, there is.’   He said, ‘You’re kidding me.’   I said, ‘No, Ray, I’m not kidding you.’ ”

At the same time inside the Thibodeaux home, Forsyth County Sheriff’s Deputy Robert Shinault, Jr., examined the body of the victim, noting there was a hole in the back of her skull and that her hands were severely bruised and discolored.   He also found a phone cord wrapped around her neck.

Police Detective Elizabeth Culbreth, also on the scene, testified that she discovered a white trash bag in a box in the corner of the dining room.   It contained a telephone that appeared to have blood on it.   In the spare room, she saw a shirt that appeared to have blood on it.   Detective Culbreth also noted a number of beer cans in the garbage bag and other cans around the house.

When Detective Hedgecock entered the house and went into the bedroom, he observed that the mattress and box spring of the bed had been pulled away, exposing the floor underneath.   He also observed that the area immediately surrounding the victim was covered with blood splatter, and that there were faint footsteps in blood trailing from the bedroom into the kitchen.

North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation Special Agent Jennifer A. Elwell, who was employed as a forensic serologist, testified as to a number of items of evidence seized in the investigation.   The shirt found in the spare room of the home showed the presence of human blood, as did the aforementioned telephone.   A watch found in the bathroom and the tissue paper it was wrapped in were also examined for blood tracings.   The tissue reacted positively to phenolphthalein, the chemical used to test for human blood.   A small stain on the watch, as well as two shade-control rods found in the living room, also tested positive for human blood.   Agent Elwell testified that a hammer found at the scene also contained traces of human blood on its surface.

Forsyth County Sheriff’s Sergeant Darrell O. Hicks was tendered and accepted at trial as an expert in the field of latent fingerprint identification.   Sgt. Hicks used an original fingerprint card of defendant as a comparison to prints lifted from the crime scene.   He concluded that the bloody fingerprints taken from the two shade-control rods and telephone were those of defendant.   He further testified that there were no fingerprints found on the hammer, and that it appeared to have been wiped clean.

North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation Special Agent David Freeman was tendered and accepted as an expert in the field of forensic DNA analysis.   Agent Freeman examined the evidence and concluded that the blood located on the hammer and tissue paper matched the DNA profile of the victim.   He also testified that blood samples taken from the shirt, telephone, and watch all had a DNA pattern consistent with that of the victim.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/nc-supreme-court/1347450.html

Lyle May North Carolina Death Row

lyle may

Lyle May was sentenced to death by the State of North Carolina for the murders of a mother and her son. According to court documents Lyle May would stab to death Valerie Sue Riddle, 24, and her four year old son Mark Laird Jr. Lyle May was arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

North Carolina Death Row Inmate List

Lyle May 2021 Information

Offender Number:0580028                                          
Inmate Status:ACTIVE
Gender:MALE
Race:WHITE
Ethnic Group:EUROPEAN/N.AM./AUSTR
Birth Date:02/16/1978
Age:43
Current Location:CENTRAL PRISON

Lyle May More News

A former Brunswick man who moved to North Carolina in 1997 received two death sentences for the fatal stabbing of a woman and her 4-year-old son in Asheville, court officials said.

Lyle Clinton May, 20, was found guilty earlier this month of two counts of first-degree murder in the deaths of Valerie Sue Riddle, 24, of Arden, N.C., and her son, Mark Laird Jr. May was sentenced Thursday in Buncombe County Superior Court.

May was accused of stabbing Riddle as her son watched, and then kicking and stabbing the boy until he died at an Asheville mobile home. Their bodies were found July 9, 1997, along a scenic highway.

May’s parents, Bernice and Patrick May of Brunswick, have said they knew their son had violent tendencies but that they never expected he would be charged with murder.

Bernice May described May’s life as being “one continuous roller-coaster ride since he was 16.”

Nathaniel Fair North Carolina Death Row

nathaniel fair

Nathaniel Fair was sentenced to death by the State of North Carolina for the murder of Reubin McNeill. According to court documents Nathaniel Fair would stab to death Reubin McNeill during the course of a robbery. Nathaniel Fair would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

North Carolina Death Row Inmate List

Nathaniel Fair 2021 Information

Offender Number:0125241                                          
Inmate Status:ACTIVE
Probation/Parole/Post Release Status:INACTIVE
Gender:MALE
Race:BLACK/AFRICAN AMERICAN
Ethnic Group:AFRICAN
Birth Date:11/16/1964
Age:56
Current Location:CENTRAL PRISON

Nathaniel Fair More News

Nathaniel Fair Jr. has been found guilty of the first degree murder of Wake County assistant principal Reubin McNeill. Fair was also found guilty of robbery with a dangerous weapon.

The charges could carry the death penalty. The sentencing phase of the trial is scheduled to begin Thursday morning at 9:30.

McNeill’s family cried as the verdict was read. The emotional trial lasted five weeks and there were some accusations of sexual encounters and drug abuse that disturbed the victim’s family.

The jury deliberated for five hours Tuesday, then resumed deliberations Wednesday morning before reaching a verdict.

McNeill’s widow said that with the verdict in, she can concentrate on dealing with the loss of her husband.

During the trial, jurors heard different stories from the defense and the prosecution. Monday, as both sides presented their closing arguments, the family of Reubin McNeill heard two versions of how he died last August.

Lawyers for Fair maintained McNeill was stabbed to death by a local drug dealer known as T-Bone. The prosecution questioned the credibility of Fair’s testimony.

“None of [Fair’s story] was corroborated,” said prosecutor Susan Spurlin. “It was what he said happened. There are a lot of parts that I do not think were true.”

“The story appeared to unfold as he testified. He appeared, I argue to you, to be making it up as he went along,” said prosecutor Shelly Desvouges.

Prosecutors apparently made a more compelling case. A lot of physical evidence including samples of Fair’s blood on McNeill’s clothes and stolen Explorer helped.

For their part, defense attorneys cast doubt on the state’s witnesses, including a prison inmate who testified about an alleged conversation with Fair after the murder.

“Haywood McCoy told you the defendant was upset when he saw that the car was gone and that he told him ‘I cut a guy up,'” Spurlin said.

“We see people every day and we judge them, judge these witnesses,” said defense attorney Thomas Manning of the jury.

The defense also told jurors that despite some DNA evidence linking Fair to the crime, there was a lack of evidence proving he did it.

https://www.wral.com/news/local/story/134074/