Tony Summers North Carolina Death Row

tony summers

Tony Summers was sentenced to death by the State of North Carolina for a sexual assault and murder. According to court documents Tony Summers would sexually assault and stab Lavell Williams repeatedly causing her death. Tony Summers would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

North Carolina Death Row Inmate List

Tony Summers 2021 Information

Offender Number:0395658                                          
Inmate Status:ACTIVE
Probation/Parole/Post Release Status:INACTIVE
Gender:MALE
Race:BLACK/AFRICAN AMERICAN
Ethnic Group:AFRICAN
Birth Date:05/13/1974
Age:46
Current Location:CENTRAL PRISON

Tony Summers More News

Tony Savalis Summers, head bowed as it had been for more than eight weeks of trial, quietly accepted a jury’s verdict of death Tuesday for the rape and murder of a Greensboro mother in 2006.

Summers, 36, becomes Guilford County’s fifth inmate on death row. A jury last sent someone there in 2002.

No one from Summers’ family was present when jurors returned their verdict about 2:30 p.m. Tuesday in Guilford County Superior Court.

Jurors spent nearly 16 hours deliberating his fate, after last week finding him guilty of first-degree murder in the death of Lavell Williams on Nov. 7, 2006. She was stabbed 39 times after being raped repeatedly in front of her children, who were 16, 11 and 5 at the time, according to testimony. The two oldest children were stabbed but survived after the older daughter, bleeding from neck and chest wounds, fled to a neighbor’s home.

Relatives of the victim declined to comment Tuesday. But one shook prosecutor Stephen Cole’s hand in the hall before the sentencing.

“Good job, sir,” he said.

Detective Tony Hinson said he was pleased with the verdict.

“It speaks to the true facts and evidence presented in this case,” he said. “I realize that it had to be difficult for the jury.”

Jurors declined to comment after the sentencing, although one said as she left, “It’s been a hard road.” Another juror wiped at tears earlier when the judge stood to proclaim the death sentence, reading from a prepared form.

“May God have mercy on your soul,” Judge Brad Long told Summers, who stood quietly by his attorneys.

Assistant Public Defender David Clark and defense attorney Bob McClellan said it was a difficult sentence to hear after getting to know Summers.

“The man I wound up getting to know was not the same man who did this horrendous stuff,” Clark said. “Unfortunately, we were unable to get the jury to see the Tony we did.”

Attorneys spent five weeks selecting the jury, rejecting nearly 80 people before settling on nine women, three men and three alternates.

On Thursday, the jury began deliberating whether Summers should spend the rest of his life in prison without possibility of parole or be put to death. Late Friday afternoon, the jury foreman asked Long if a life sentence would be the default if the jurors could not come to a unanimous decision. Long told them to not worry about the outcome, just to do their best to reach a consensus.

Jurors asked Monday to review more than a dozen pieces of evidence.

During the trial and sentencing phase, the defense argued that Summers suffered from frontal lobe brain damage, which affected his ability to reason and made him more impulsive. He likely was injured during seizures as a child, but he also suffered from abuse and neglect, witnesses testified.

On the night of the murder, Summers was intoxicated and high on cocaine, according to testimony. Medical experts testified that alcohol would have made him more impulsive and cocaine would have fueled aggression.

Cole argued that Summers, who had served prison time for a previous conviction for a sex offense, knew exactly what he was doing.

Summers’ case often drew attorneys and court employees to the trial. Tuesday was no different. More than 20 stopped by to hear the judge sentence Summers to death. He also gave Summers more than 102 years for the remaining charges of rape, kidnapping and assault with a deadly weapon.

Long stayed the execution order, as is customary, because an appeal was automatically filed.

It takes years, perhaps seven to 10 years on average, for death penalty cases to go through the appeals and post-conviction process, said Thomas Maher, executive director of the N.C. Office of Indigent Defense Services.

North Carolina has not executed anyone since 2006; questions about the lethal injection are being debated. The 2009 Racial Justice Act, which allows death row inmates to use statistics to raise questions of bias in their conviction, also likely will delay executions, Maher said.

The last person put to death in the state was Samuel R. Flippen for a 1994 murder in Forsyth County . He died Aug. 18, 2006 .

https://greensboro.com/news/summers-gets-death-row-for-brutal-murder-rape/article_ed405fe7-31a5-5854-ae5c-405c1bc52790.html

William Robinson North Carolina Death Row

william robinson

William Robinson was sentenced to death by the State of North Carolina for a robbery murder. According to court documents William Robinson would shoot and kill Keith Davon Crump during the course of an armed robbery. William Robinson would also shoot the owner of the store who thankfully survived his injuries. William Robinson was arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

North Carolina Death Row Inmate List

William Robinson 2021 Information

Offender Number:0694689                                          
Inmate Status:ACTIVE
Probation/Parole/Post Release Status:INACTIVE
Gender:MALE
Race:BLACK/AFRICAN AMERICAN
Ethnic Group:AFRICAN
Birth Date:06/28/1983
Age:37
Current Location:CENTRAL PRISON

William Robinson More News

A Stanly County resident convicted of first degree murder was sentenced to death Friday.

William Eugene Robinson received the death penalty for the 2006 murder of Keith Davon Crump, an employee of R.J. Tuckers in Albemarle. Robinson had also been convicted for the attempted first degree murder of store owner, Robert James Tucker III, who was shot in the face during the robbery.

Robinson will be transferred to Central Prison in Raleigh to await his execution.

Following the verdict, Robinson’s defense counsel gave notice of appeal. Robinson declined to comment after the verdict was read.

Jonathan Richardson North Carolina Death Row

jonathan richardson

Jonathan Richardson was sentenced to death by the State of North Carolina for the murder of a four year old girl. According to court documents Jonathan Richardson would sexually assault, torture and murder four year old Teghan Skiba. Jonathan Richardson would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

North Carolina Death Row Inmate List

Jonathan Richardson 2021 Information

Offender Number:1019362                                          
Inmate Status:ACTIVE
Probation/Parole/Post Release Status:INACTIVE
Gender:MALE
Race:WHITE
Ethnic Group:EUROPEAN/N.AM./AUSTR
Birth Date:02/18/1989
Age:32
Current Location:CENTRAL PRISON

Jonathan Richardson More News

The jury has sentenced 4-year-old Teghan Skiba’s killer, Jonathan Richardson, to death, according to WTVD.

In July 2010, Teghan Skiba was admitted to the Johnston Medical Center by then-21-year-old Jonathan Richardson after he claimed she had fallen off the bed. However, doctors found she had cuts, bruises and bite marks on her body.

Skiba died days later. An autopsy revealed that the girl died from a blow to the head.

Richardson was found guilty of first-degree murder, felony child abuse, kidnapping, and sexual offense with a child on March 25.

In her closing arguments Thursday, Johnston County District Attorney Susan Doyle told jurors that Skiba suffered unimaginable pain in her final days. She lost over 70 percent of the blood in her body from all the wounds.

“The defendant bit Teghan all over her body over 60 times and she began to slip away,” said Doyle.

Richardson declined to address the court after the death sentence was read.

https://myfox8.com/news/jonathan-richardson-sentenced-to-death-for-murder-of-teghan-skiba/

Antwan Anthony North Carolina Death Row

antwan anthony

Antwan Anthony was sentenced to death by the State of North Carolina for a triple murder. According to court documents Antwan Anthony would shoot and kill 16-year-old Mokbel “Sam” Mohamed Almujanahi, 24-year-old Gaber Alawi, and 26-year-old Nabil Nasser Saeed Al’mogannahi during a robbery at a Farmville Hustle Mart. Antwan Anthony would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

North Carolina Death Row Inmate List

Antwan Anthony 2021 Information

Offender Number:1293151                                          
Inmate Status:ACTIVE
Probation/Parole/Post Release Status:INACTIVE
Gender:MALE
Race:BLACK/AFRICAN AMERICAN
Ethnic Group:AFRICAN
Birth Date:12/02/1982
Age:38
Current Location:CENTRAL PRISON

Antwan Anthony More News

The jury in the Antwan Anthony case has sentenced the convicted murderer of three Farmville Hustle Mart employees in 2012 to death. The jury in the case announced its decision to a judge Tuesday afternoon.

The judge in the case gave the jury extensive instructions before handing the sentencing case to them to determine a verdict. The jury got the case late Friday and briefly deliberated before adjourning for the weekend.

It took the jury one hour to return a verdict in the murder trial, finding Anthony guilty on all counts during the April 1, 2012 robbery of the Farmville Hustle Mart. Anthony is guilty of three counts of first degree murder, three counts of first degree felony murder and three counts of robbery with a dangerous weapon.

According to Pitt County deputies, four armed robbers, including Anthony, entered the Hustle Mart in. Deputies said three employees — 16-year-old Mokbel “Sam” Mohamed Almujanahi, 24-year-old Gaber Alawi, and 26-year-old Nabil Nasser Saeed Al’mogannahi — were shot and killed.

Investigators arrested four suspects in the triple shooting: Raekwon Terrell Blount of Snow Hill, Xavier Shamble of Farmville, Willie Odell Whitehead, Jr.of Pinetops, and Anthony, who is from Bethel.

The last time someone was sentenced to death in Pitt County was when Mark Squires was sentenced in 2000. Sammy Perkins was the last person from Pitt County to die while on death row. Two others from Pitt County are currently on death row.

https://wcti12.com/archive/antwan-anthony-sentenced-to-death-for-murder-of-three-hustle-mart-employees_20160526055247833

Seaga Gillard North Carolina Death Row

Seaga Gillard

Seaga Gillard was sentenced to death by the State of North Carolina for a double murder. According to court documents Seaga Gillard would shoot and kill April Lynn Holland, 22, and Dwayne Garvey, 28 during a robbery attempt. Seaga Gillard would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

North Carolina Death Row Inmate List

Seaga Gillard 2021 Information

Offender Number:1428278                                          
Inmate Status:ACTIVE
Probation/Parole/Post Release Status:INACTIVE
Gender:MALE
Race:BLACK/AFRICAN AMERICAN
Ethnic Group:AFRICAN
Birth Date:11/21/1988
Age:32
Current Location:CENTRAL PRISON

Seaga Gillard More News

A Wake County jury on Monday decided to impose the death sentence on Seaga Edward Gillard, convicted of killing two people nearly three years ago at a Raleigh motel.

The unanimous decision came about two hours after the jury resumed deliberations Monday morning.

Gillard did not show any emotion as the jury’s decision was read.

The death penalty sentence is the first by a Wake County jury in over a decade

The jury began its deliberations around 2:30 p.m. Friday afternoon in the punishment phase of the trial after nearly 90 minutes of instructions from Wake County Superior Court Judge Paul Ridgeway.

Gillard, 30, was convicted two weeks ago by the same jury of several charges, including two counts of first-degree murder, attempted robbery with a firearm and attempted first-degree rape.

The trial for another defendant in the case, Brandon Xavier Hill, is pending

Security cameras at the motel near Crabtree Valley Mall captured the deaths of Holland and Garvey. During the first phase of the trial, jurors saw the grisly black-and-white footage in which Gillard opened fire on Garvey inside a motel hallway.

Before jurors began deciding what punishment to impose, prosecutors tried to convince the panel that Gillard deserved capital punishment.

“It’s about justice (and) our law says this is about maximum justice,” said Wake County Assistant District Attorney David Saacks, who argued that Gillard’s decision to kill April Lynn Holland, 22, and her boyfriend, Dwayne Garvey, 28, deserved the death penalty.

But defense attorneys urged jurors to reject capital punishment.

“The only way he leaves prison is in a casket,” Edd Roberts said. “He will never know the freedoms we take for granted.”

Prosecutors told the jury that Holland, who was three months pregnant, was working as a prostitute at the motel, while Garvey, the father of her three children, was her partner in the operation.

Saacks told the jury Friday that despite the couple’s involvement in running a prostitution enterprise, their lives still mattered.

After the jury’s verdict had been announced, Jacqueline Garvey, the mother of Dwayne Garvey, took the stand to talk about the loss her family has suffered.

“You unjustly changed and hurt people’s lives forever, especially (for) his children who will grow up without their father in his life,” she said.

Angela Holland, sister of April Lynn Holland, tearfully told the court how her sister’s death profoundly affected her, saying she started heavily drinking alcohol to cope with her loss.

“I know you don’t care about what you did,” Angela Holland said. “And I hate you for that.”

The state of North Carolina hasn’t executed anyone since August 2006.

A tangle of legal fights, such as the protocol used to carry out death sentences, whether physicians could participate and whether the way the death penalty has been enforced is racially biased, have essentially created a de facto moratorium on capital punishment in the state.

Gretchen Engel, executive director of the Center for Death Penalty Litigation, said in a written statement that prosecutors should not have sought capital punishment for Gillard.

“Since taking over as Wake district attorney, Lorrin Freeman has pursued the death penalty more than any other prosecutor in North Carolina, costing taxpayers millions of dollars,” Engel said in a written statement. “That is a poor investment, even in this case. Executions have been on hold since 2006 and most death row prisoners in North Carolina have been awaiting execution for more than 20 years. Gillard will now join them, awaiting an execution that is unlikely to ever be carried out.”

There are currently 140 people on death row at Central Prison.

The last person from Wake County to be sentenced to die is Byron Waring in 2007.

The last time a Wake County jury imposed the death penalty was in 2007, when a jury sentenced Byron Waring to death for the murder of Lauren Redman.

The last time an inmate was executed in North Carolina was in 2006 when Samuel Flippen was put to death.

The Forsyth County man had been convicted of the murder of his 2-year-old stepdaughter.

https://www.wral.com/seaga-gillard-sentenced-to-die-for-2016-double-murder-at-raleigh-motel/18233770/