Craig Bjork The Serial Killer You Have Never Heard Of

craig bjork craig jackson

Craig Bjork is a serial killer that most people have never heard of unless they are from Minnesota and have a long memory and the name Craig Jackson rings a bell. Craig Bjork started his criminal ways back in Minnesota when he would murder four people including two of his toddlers.

This mass murder crime is one of the worst in the history of Minnesota. See on that day back in 1982 would murder his girlfriend Ramona Yurkew, another woman, Gwendolyn Johnson, and his two sons Joseph and Jason, ages 3 and 1. Minneapolis Police would enter the home to conduct a wellness check and would find all four victims dead, each had been strangled and stuffed other beds. For that crime Craig Bjork would receive multiple life sentences however he was not done with his murderous ways

Craig Bjork would be sent to a maximum security prison in Minnesota called Stillwater where a few years later would beat to death a fellow prisoner and would receive yet another life sentence. Now the Minnesota Department Of Corrections did not want to deal with Craig Bjork any longer so they had him transferred to the Oregon Department of Corrections.

Craig Bjork would keep his head down for a number of years until 2013 when he would strangle to death his cellmate at the Oregon State Penitentiary. Now Oregon does have the death penalty however a Judge ordered the Minnesota Department Of Corrections to get Craig Bjork out of his State which changed the charges against him and a long story short made him ineligible for the death penalty. Craig Bjork would plead no contest to his sixth murder and would receive yet another life sentence

Craig Bjork 2022 Information

MNDOC Offender ID: 123611

Name: Craig Dennis Bjork

Birth Date: 09/14/1959

Current Status:Incarcerated as of 11/05/1982. Currently at a non-DOC facility.

Sentence Date:11/04/1982

Anticipated Release Date: Life without Parole

Expiration Date: Life

Craig Bjork More News

After his latest murder conviction, this time for strangling his cellmate in Oregon, a Minneapolis man who in the 1980s said God and the devil beckoned him to kill two women and his children could be coming home.

In handing down Craig Bjork’s fifth life sentence, for committing his sixth murder, a judge has asked the Minnesota Department of Corrections to move the 60-year-old prisoner out of Oregon, where Bjork is serving time through an interstate compact that allows correctional systems to trade problem inmates

That means Bjork has escaped Oregon’s death penalty, the sentence prosecutors there sought for him.

“I think it’s disgusting,” said Matt Kemmy, deputy district attorney in Marion County, Ore. “The death penalty is supposed to be for the worst of the worst, and Craig Bjork is absolutely that. This is a man who has been convicted of killing men, women and children — plural of each. Frankly, he should be the poster child for why we have the death penalty.”

Thirty-eight years ago, Bjork, then known as Craig Jackson, committed a spree of four murders that Minneapolis police called the city’s worst of the 20th century. He achieved new notoriety years later as a problem inmate when he beat a man to death in Stillwater prison. In 2013, after Minnesota sent him to Oregon State Penitentiary, Bjork killed his cellmate, a convicted murderer named Joe Atkins.

After Bjork’s conviction for the latter killing, Judge Tracy Prall and Oregon corrections officials agreed that Bjork would stay in Oregon through April, while Minnesota finds new housing for him, according to court documents. Prison administrators here have not yet decided whether to place Bjork in Minnesota or send him to another state, said Department of Corrections spokesman Nicholas Kimball.

Bjork ranks among a tier of violent inmates who pose a dilemma for prisons. He is serving, at minimum, a 170-year prison sentence. With two more murder convictions under his belt, his outlook has hardly changed from when a Hennepin County judge first sentenced him to “never be permitted to walk the streets of any community for the remainder of his life.”

Brad Colbert, who runs a legal assistance clinic for prisoners at Mitchell-Hamline law school, said inmates like Bjork are “why supermax prisons were built,” referring to the long-term, high-security facilities with segregated cells.

“Bjork is really the .001 percent of the .001 percent of people who are incarcerated,” he said. “I think you put him in a place where he can’t hurt anyone else. But you don’t forget that he is not like the other people who are incarcerated.”

In 2017, after a Star Tribune report on Bjork facing the death penalty, he called from solitary confinement in Oregon and spoke at length about his life and murders. Bjork claimed that killing Atkins was an act of self-defense.

“It’s an old penitentiary at the end of the tier,” Bjork said. “It’s dark. We’re alone. Two convicted murderers in the cell in the middle of the night. There is no help, you know?”

Bjork doesn’t deny the six killings of which he’s been convicted over the years. He is adamant, however, that those acts do not alone define him — that he feels deep remorse and wants to be viewed with more nuance than simply a “monster.”

“I actually am a human being,” he said. “I actually have a conscience.”

Bjork grew up in Des Moines with an abusive father who ranted about his hatred for women and blacks, and taught his son to tell time by beating him when he got it wrong.

He lived mostly with his mother, a cocktail waitress named Shirley Fees, in small apartments crowded by cousins and grandparents.

As a kid, Bjork angrily stamped out all the flowers in his yard. Once he tied two cats together by the tails and watched them tear each other apart, a psychiatrist later testified at Bjork’s trial.

When he was 18, Bjork got his underage girlfriend, Terry, pregnant, and they moved to Minneapolis. Bjork proudly showed off his first son, Joey. “I ought to charge you a dollar to see this baby of mine,” he told people.

But trouble always followed him. Drugs were anesthesia to make it through the day. He carried a gun and ransacked one of his mom’s friend’s mobile homes. A month after Joey’s birth, he spent two weeks in jail. After their second son, Jason, was born, Bjork and Terry broke up. Bjork started dating a waitress at Dulono’s pizzeria, Ramona Yurkew. It was a brutal relationship and Yurkew left several times when she got sick of the beatings.

One day, in February 1982, Bjork decided to will his soul to the devil in exchange for “money, good physique, women, a good family,” according to the psychiatrist’s testimony.

A couple weeks later, Bjork dropped off his sons with a babysitter and spent the day popping speed, drinking whiskey and beer, smoking marijuana, then snorting PCP and amphetamines, according to testimony. He went downtown Minneapolis and drank on Hennepin Avenue, where he met Gwendolyn Johnson, a 20-year-old woman with a history of prostitution arrests. He brought her back to the house and strangled her during sex, then hid her body under the bed.

The babysitter dropped off Jason and Joey, ages 1 and 3, and Bjork choked them to death, too. Then he waited for Yurkew to come home from her shift, and strangled her.

By the time police found the bodies three days later, Bjork was gone. Detectives didn’t know whether he was hiding or dead.

Police tried to find Terry for questioning. She was missing, too.

In April, Bjork turned himself in to the brother of a Minneapolis homicide detective in a pancake house in Kansas. A month later, a father and son foraging for mushrooms in rural Iowa found Terry’s remains.

Bjork was charged with her murder but it never went to trial. He maintains he did not kill Terry.

Looking back on his first murders, Craig Bjork said he was locked into a drug-induced psychosis, disconnected from reality. “I believe that with every fiber of my being.”

He said he’s been sober now for 20 years and feels remorse deeper than he can express. “I literally totally destroyed myself,” he said. “Who could ever punish me more than my own mind would punish me for what I’d done? The law couldn’t come close to what I did to myself mentally.”

When he first entered prison, Craig Bjork fought other inmates. Prison staff caught him in several escape plots, and transferred him back and forth from different prisons to foil his plans. Bjork boasted that he was untouchable. He was already serving three life sentences, and Minnesota didn’t have the death penalty. One staffer recorded Bjork saying he had “nothing to lose by killing any inmate.”

One summer day in 1996, Craig Bjork wrote an internal communiqué to then-Stillwater prison Warden David Crist demanding he be moved back to Oak Park Heights prison. If Crist didn’t comply, Bjork threatened to kill again. “I’m very homicidal,” he wrote. “Trust me if I made a move I’d complete it. I’m very close to committing mass murder in Stillwater. Trust me minimum of 3 bodies, I’d go for 10 and come real close.”

On Thanksgiving Day 1997, a corrections officer found Bjork in the prison kitchen mopping up a dark red liquid. The officer followed drag marks to a garbage cart, where he found the body of inmate Edwin Curry.

Asked about this killing, Craig Bjork said the prison was playing a “punk game” with him, “and I gave them a body.”

“This is what prison is. This isn’t 3M and this isn’t the neighborhood and this isn’t Powderhorn Park,” he said in an interview. “It probably wasn’t the best choice, but it was the choice I made.”

In 2013, Craig Bjork was transferred to the Oregon prison. He killed Joe Atkins on Aug. 16, 2013. Two years later, a grand jury indicted him for the murders of Atkins, Curry, Johnson, Yurkew and his two children — each one enough to carry the death penalty.

As he prepared for the trial, Bjork told the Star Tribune that Atkins tried to kill him in his sleep because Bjork had confronted Atkins for hiding a knife and razor blades in their cell, and that he strangled him in self-defense.

Craig Bjork said he never intends to kill another person; he said he could be released from prison today and never harm another soul. But if faced with the same threat in prison, he said, he wouldn’t hesitate to act.

“If some dude up in here threatens my life next week and I think he’s serious, I’m going to do whatever I need to do to take care of myself and defend myself,” said Bjork. “That’s how it is.”

Facing death, Craig Bjork said he wanted a botched execution that sent flames shooting from his body. “We can all go to hell together,” he said. “I mean, you want to kill me? Then botch the execution, screw it up, I want it to be horrific.”

The opportunity for such a spectacle would never come. Last year, as Bjork awaited trial, Oregon’s governor signed a new death penalty law making Bjork ineligible for the punishment.

Asked what he thinks should be done with him, Bjork struggled to arrive at an answer.

“What’s fair? I don’t know,” he said. “It’s a difficult question. It’s almost like asking someone what’s the meaning of life.”

https://www.startribune.com/what-to-do-with-a-murderer-who-keeps-killing-in-prison/568439942/?refresh=true

Brett Pearson Teen Killer Murders Mother

brett pearson photo

Brett Pearson was a seventeen year old from Oregon who would fatally shoot his mother. According to court documents Brett Pearson would fatally shoot his mother and shoot his father who thankfully survived the brutal attack. Brett Pearson would admit to the double shooting and attempted to blame the murder on his drug addiction. Regardless this teen killer would be sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for forty years

Brett Pearson 2023 Information

Can not locate Brett Pearson in the Oregon Department Of Corrections. Due to his age he may be housed in a Juvenile Prison where results are not made public

Brett Pearson More News

In an exclusive jailhouse interview with Fox 12, 17-year-old murder suspect Brett Pearson said he was on meth at the time of the shooting that killed his mother and injured his father.

“None of it was supposed to happen,” Pearson said from the Marion County Jail. “I should still be sitting at home with both my parents eating dinner. I should still wake up every morning in my bed going to school, getting my education. I should see my girlfriend tomorrow morning at 11 o’clock and spending the day with her, making her dinner.”

Pearson broke down crying repeatedly during the interview Friday.

Police found the body of his mother, Michelle Pearson, 44, at their home on Ventura Loop in Keizer at 11:30 p.m. Wednesday. Her husband, 57-year-old Bill Pearson, was also suffering from serious gunshot injuries.

He remains hospitalized and is expected to survive. Police said the bullet that killed Michelle Pearson struck her neck and traveled down to her chest.

“Regardless of being under the influence, it’s still a decision I made,” Brett Pearson said Friday. “It’s still something I did. It’s still something that was very wrong and should never have happened.”

Video: Teen murder suspect says from jail, ‘none of it was supposed to happen’Raw VideoFull jailhouse interview with 17-year-old murder suspect Brett Pearson

Pearson admitted shooting at his father, but claimed his friend, Robert Miller II, 17, shot his mother. Miller was also arrested and is facing murder charges.

Police have not confirmed who fired the shots.

Pearson said he and Miller had planned out the shooting for some time, while they were on meth.

Pearson said he had a great relationship with his parents growing up, and said it was the drugs that made him do it.

“I want people to know that I am sorry for what I did, not because I got caught, not because I’m sitting here in this garment, not because you’re in front of me,” Pearson told Fox 12’s Andrew Padula. “But because I’m truly sorry that I let myself make the choices I made and that I got so far gone that I decided to try to take somebody’s life, including my own parents.”

Miller and Pearson will both be tried as adults. They made their first appearance in court Friday and are being held without bail.

https://www.kptv.com/news/teen-murder-suspect-accused-of-killing-mother-i-was-on-meth/article_48527945-3756-5f69-9f47-8d3b2065a156.html

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Brett Pearson 2021

Brett Pearson is currently in the juvenile division of the Oregon Corrections

Brett Pearson Release Date

Brett Pearson is serving a life sentence however is eligible for parole after 21 years

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A Keizer man convicted of murdering his mother and attempting to kill his father as a teenager filed a civil suit claiming his life sentence in prison is unconstitutional. 

“My sentence is cruel and unusual,” Brett Pearson wrote in a post-conviction petition filed in Marion County. 

He also claimed his attorney failed to argue that his sentence was unconstitutional. If he had, Pearson said, he would’ve been sentenced as a juvenile and might be serving a shorter sentence. 

Pearson and his best friend Robert Daniel Miller II were both 17 when they conspired to kill Pearson’s parents. 

According to court records, the friends were using methamphetamine and had been planning the murders for weeks.

Investigators said they were high on meth when Miller shot Wilfred “Bill” Pearson multiple times while he slept. Michelle Pearson was shot in her torso. Brett Pearson fired at least two more shots at his father and grabbed his mother’s purse before fleeing the home with Miller.  

His father survived. His mother didn’t. 

Keizer police arrested Pearson less than an hour after responding to a 911 call at the Pearsons’ Keizer home. Miller was later arrested at a Salem Motel 6.

Keizer men sentenced for mother’s murder

The pair had planned to sell possessions and move to Mexico. According to court records, Pearson promised to pay Miller in exchange for killing his parents. 

Despite being minors, Pearson and Miller were charged with Measure 11 offenses, requiring them to be tried as adults. 

Prosecutors described Pearson, then a student at the Downtown Learning Center in Salem, as a remorseless, master manipulator who convinced Miller to kill his parents because he thought his mother was a “bitch.”

Pearson’s and Miller’s families requested shorter sentences. Pearson’s sister said her brother was helpful and wholeheartedly empathetic. Since Pearson stopped doing methamphetamine, he’d shown more compassion, said his attorney John Storkel.

Both pleaded guilty to aggravated murder, attempted murder and conspiracy to commit murder in 2015 and were sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole after 40 years. 

They were placed in the custody of the Oregon Youth Authority, where they awaited transfer to adult prison once they were old enough.  

Now 21 and imprisoned at the MacLaren Youth Correctional Facility in Woodburn, Pearson petitioned the court to order a reversal of his conviction and sentences, expunge his record and release him from custody.

His previous attempts to overturn his conviction were unsuccessful. Pearson and his attorney filed a brief with the Oregon Court of Appeals claiming his sentence was unconstitutional because he was a juvenile at the time of his crime. 

According to court records, it was his first time making such a claim. He argued for a shorter sentence during his criminal trial but did not suggest the 40-year term was unconstitutional.

In May, the Oregon Court of Appeals upheld his sentence. In its opinion, the appeals court stated that only mandatory life sentences without parole for those who committed their crimes while under the age of 18 were considered cruel and unusual. 

Pearson filed his post-conviction petition on Thursday. A hearing date has not yet been scheduled. 

Pearson will remain at the MacLaren until he is transferred to adult prison. He can remain in Oregon Youth Authority custody until he is 25. 

Ellen Friar Teen Killer Murders Father

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Ellen Friar was fifteen years old when she planned with her nineteen year old boyfriend to murder her father. According to court documents Ellen Friar was dating nineteen year old Gavin Curtis Macfarlane and needless to say her father was not happy. Ellen Friar along with her boyfriend Gavin and 22-year-old Russell Pierce Jones II would plan the brutal murder. The father Aaron Friar would be beaten to death with a baseball bat. The teen killer would be sentenced to twenty five years in prison. Gavin Macfarlane was sentenced to life. Russel Jones is eligible for parole after 10 years

Ellen Friar 2023 Information

Ellen Friar is currently in the Oregon Juvenile system so her information is not public

Gavin Macfarlane 2022 Information

gavin macfarlane 2021 photos
Offender Name:Macfarlane, Gavin Curtis
Age:22dot clearDOB:08/1998dot clearLocation:Eastern Oregon Correctional Institution
Gender:Maledot clearRace:White Or European Origindot clearStatus:AIC
Height:6′ 03”dot clearHair:Blonddot clearField Admission Date:10/18/2018
Weight:170 lbsdot clearEyes:Hazeldot clearEarliest Release Date:Life

Russell Jones 2022 Information

russell jones 2022
Offender Name:Jones, Russell Pierce
Age:27dot clearDOB:07/1995dot clearLocation:Two Rivers Correctional Institution
Gender:Maledot clearRace:Whitedot clearStatus:AIC
Height:5′ 06”dot clearHair:Blonddot clearInstitution Admission Date:08/19/2021
Weight:200 lbsdot clearEyes:Bluedot clearEarliest Release Date:04/04/2031

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It’s a story that’s shocking to everyone who hears it. A 15-year-old girl, her boyfriend, and friend, conspiring to kill her father.

“He loved his girls above anything and I know his heart is breaking right now,” said Michelle Robinson, the victim’s girlfriend.

Back in October of 2017, 50-year-old Aaron Friar was beaten to death with a baseball bat. Police say his daughter Ellen Rose Friar, who was only 15-years-old at the time, planned the crime along with her boyfriend then 19-year old Gavin Curtis Macfarlane and 22-year-old Russell Pierce Jones II.

Nearly two years later, Macfarlane is serving life in prison after pleading guilty to murder, tampering with physical evidence, and conspiracy to commit murder. The case is still pending against Jones.

Ellen faced a judge for sentencing this past Tuesday.

She read a letter to the court in which she said she can’t erase the past, but has learned forgiveness from Jesus Christ.

“I’m not the same scared little girl I was over a year ago,” said Friar. “I’ve seen all different kinds of people and now see humanity from a new, compassionate perspective.”

Friar’s attorney says the teenager was manipulated by an older boyfriend and claims the girl endured years of emotional and sexual abuse from her father. But because the case didn’t go to trial, that was never proven in court.

“She’s an extremely intelligent, wonderful young woman… [she] made a mistake and I’m hoping she’s able to learn from that,” said her defense attorney, Alyssa Bartholomew.

But others like Aaron Friar’s girlfriend, Michelle Robinson, say there’s no excuse for what she did.

“From what I witnessed Aaron was a great dad. She could have thought of a million different things to do… running away included,” Robinson said.

Friar was sentenced to 25 years in prison for conspiracy to commit murder and conspiracy to commit burglary in the first degree. She will start her sentence in a juvenile facility until she’s 25, which the judge hopes will provide resources for her to reform her life.

Russell Pierce Jones II is scheduled to be back in court in late April, but his case is pending his fitness to proceed.

https://kobi5.com/news/medford-teen-sentenced-in-dads-murder-99304/

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Ellen Friar is currently incarcerated at the Oregon Juvenile System

Ellen Friar Release Date

Ellen Friar is eligible for 2042

David Bartol Oregon Death Row

david bartol

David Bartol was sentenced to death by the State of Oregon for a prison murder. According to court documents David Bartol was arraigned on attempted murder charges the day before he would stab to death the victim, Gavin Siscel, at the Marion County Jail. David Bartol would be convicted and sentenced to death.

Oregon Death Row Inmate List

David Bartol 2021 Information

david bartol 2021
Offender Name:Bartol, David Ray
Age:50dot clearDOB:01/1971dot clearLocation:Oregon State Penitentiary
Gender:Maledot clearRace:Amer Indian Or Alaska Nativedot clearStatus:AIC
Height:6′ 02”dot clearHair:Blackdot clearField Admission Date:05/10/2012
Weight:200 lbsdot clearEyes:Browndot clearEarliest Release Date:Death

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Bartol was convicted of aggravated murder for the 2013 killing of Gavin Siscel with a homemade knife in the Marion County jail. Bartol had been arraigned on attempted murder charges the day before the killing. Siscel was serving a 30-day sentence for contempt of court, according to the Statesmen Journal.

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A white supremacist gang member was sentenced to death Thursday for the fatal stabbing of an inmate at the Marion County Jail.

The Statesman Journal reports it took the jury less than an hour to make the decision.

David Bartol, 45, was convicted last month of aggravated murder in the 2013 death of Gavin Siscel. Authorities said Bartol made a shank and used it to repeatedly stab Siscel in the eye while Siscel was watching TV in a dayroom. They said it was a random attack. Prosecutor Matthew Kemmy said Bartol was mad at a former co-conspirator for talking to investigators. Because that man was in protective custody, Bartol lashed out at Siscel.

On the morning of the stabbing, he wrote: “It’s a good day for a (expletive) to die.” Later, Bartol wrote that the death was a “free kill for my trophy room.”

Kemmy said Bartol’s attack on Siscel was just one example of his violent and dangerous behavior. The prosecution brought in 160 witnesses and 330 exhibits to illustrate his three-decade history of threats, assaults and intimidation.

Earlier this year, he was sentenced to 55 years in prison after a Portland jury found him guilty of attempted murder in a torture attack on two fellow Krude Rude Brood gang members.

Bartol was accused of sanding off gang members’ tattoos, injecting them with heroin and shooting them.

“David Bartol is a frightening, dangerous person…. that will not change,” Kemmy said.

Defense attorney Steven Gorham said he plans to appeal the death sentence. He said the prolonged trial cost more than $1 million.

“That money should’ve been spent on something more positive that trying to kill David Bartol,” Gorham said.

Bartol will join more than 30 other inmate on Oregon’s death row. The state has had a moratorium on executions in place since 2011. It’s been nearly 20 years since an inmate was executed.

Dayton Rogers Oregon Death Row

dayton rogers

Dayton Rogers was sentenced to death by the State of Oregon for the murders of six women. According to court documents Dayton Rogers, who is a serial killer, is responsible for the murders of at least six women in 1987. Dayton Rogers would confess to a seventh murder while incarcerated. Dayton Rogers would be sentenced to death.

Oregon Death Row Inmate List

Dayton Rogers 2021 Information

dayton rogers 2021
Offender Name:Rogers, Dayton Leroy
Age:67dot clearDOB:09/1953dot clearLocation:Two Rivers Correctional Institution
Gender:Maledot clearRace:White Or European Origindot clearStatus:AIC
Height:5′ 09”dot clearHair:Browndot clearField Admission Date:03/04/1988
Weight:200 lbsdot clearEyes:Browndot clearEarliest Release Date:Death

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Rogers is known as Oregon’s most prolific serial killer. He tortured and stabbed six women in 1987, leaving their bodies in a remote wooded area outside Molalla. Rogers, a foot and bondage fetishist, targeted young women who were heroin addicts. He sawed off some of their feet. One woman was gutted from her sternum to her pelvis. Jurors sentenced Rogers to death in 1989, 1994 and 2006, but the Oregon Supreme Court overturned the verdicts when laws changed or on legal technicalities. Another jury sentenced him a fourth time in 2015.

Dayton Rogers Other News

Dayton Leroy Rogers, Oregon’s most prolific serial killer, was sentenced the death for the fourth time after another resentencing trial Clackamas County Circuit Court Monday.

Rogers was convicted in 1989 of killing six women two years earlier. Since then, the court has three times struck down death sentences imposed on him.

On Friday, his attorneys in closing statements asked for the jury to grant him life in prison, saying Rogers is “humiliated and full of shame” and that he is not a danger to people in prison.

The prosecution had asked for the death penalty, saying Rogers is a danger to people both inside and outside of prison, and that his victims and their families deserve justice.

Prosecutors pointed out that the former Canby lawnmower repairman tortured, stabbed and mutilated his victims, dumping them in a forest near Molalla in Clackamas County. Seven victims were found at that site. One of them was finally identified in 2013.

Before that murder case, he was also found guilty of murdering a woman whose body was found in 1987 in parking lot behind an Oak Grove Denny’s restaurant. 

The Oregon Supreme Court struck down Rogers’ death sentences in 1992, 2000 and 2012. The first time was to comply with a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that invalidated Oregon’s death penalty law.

In 2000, the Oregon high court ruled that the jury incorrectly considered only the options of death and life in prison with the possibility of parole. There should have been a third choice: life without the chance of parole.

In 2012, the justices said jury selection was done improperly and the judge incorrectly allowed evidence of Rogers’ gay experiences as a teenager.

Though it is rare to have four separate sentencing trials, it’s not unprecedented.

For example, Randy Lee Guzek was sentenced to death three times for killing a central Oregon couple in 1987, and each time the penalty was overturned. A jury imposed it for a fourth time in 2010, and it has stuck.

Rogers’ first known attack was at age 18 in 1972, when he stabbed a 15-year-old Eugene girl after taking her to a wooded area to have sex. In 1973, after striking two girls with a soda bottle, he was sent to the state mental hospital. After his release in 1974, Rogers’ crimes continued for more than a decade.

At his 2006 sentencing trial, Rogers argued that he was changed a man after nearly two decades in prison.

“There is never a day that I don’t struggle from the very core of my heart and soul over the despicable acts I’ve committed,” Rogers said.

After the latest court proceedings, Rogers attorneys said they planned to file a motion for a mistrial based on a violation of jury rules. They claim that the jury foreman posted on social media about the trial.  Blog posts were entered into evidence and a judge will decide on a retrial at a later date once the motion is filed.

That could mean Rogers would go up for his 4th appeal.

Governor Kate Brown announced shortly after taking office early this year that she will continue former Governor John Kitzhaber’s moratorium on the death penalty in Oregon.

On Saturday, spokeswoman Kristen Grainger said, “Governor Brown has asked her general counsel to consult various experts, including those directly involved with the implementation of the death penalty in Oregon, and advise her how to proceed. That process is underway.”

https://www.kgw.com/article/news/local/ore-serial-killer-rogers-sentenced-to-death-for-4th-time/283-156017