Willie Wilks Ohio Death Row

willie wilks

Willie Wilks was sentenced to death by the State of Ohio for the murder of a woman. According to court documents Willie Wilks would drive to the victims home in search of her brother and would open fire killing Alexander Morales who was holding an infant in her arms. Willie Wilks would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Ohio Death Row Inmate List

Willie Wilks 2021 Information

Number A653706

DOB 12/13/1971

Gender Male Race Black

Admission Date 05/12/2014

Institution Chillicothe Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

Willie Wilks More News

The Ohio Supreme Court today affirmed the conviction and death sentence of a man who approached the porch area of a Youngstown home with a semiautomatic rifle, shot a woman to death, and wounded a man holding an infant.

The Supreme Court unanimously rejected Willie Wilks Jr.’s challenge to his 2014 convictions and death sentence for the May 2013 murder of Ororo Wilkins and the attempted murders of Alexander Morales Jr. and William Wilkins Jr. The murders stemmed from a running dispute that started earlier in the day between Wilkins Jr., known as “Mister,” and Wilks, who was the boyfriend of Wilkins’ mother.

Wilks argued at trial that he was innocent and raised 19 legal arguments on appeal, known as propositions of law, against his convictions and death penalty. He asserted that the sentence was inappropriate compared with others tried in Mahoning County for aggravated murder who did not receive the death penalty.

Writing for the Court, Justice Judith L. French stated that “the death penalty is both appropriate and proportionate when compared to other course-of-conduct murders for which the death penalty has been imposed.”

In the afternoon of May 21, 2013, Mister and Morales drove to the home of Renea Jenkins, Mister’s girlfriend. Mister lived at the home and went to his upstairs bedroom. Ororo Wilkins, Mister’s sister, and Morales were seated on Jenkins’ porch. Morales was holding Jenkins’ 5-month-old daughter when Wilks arrived.

Morales testified that a dark blue or purple-colored car with a driver and two passengers pulled up to the home. He said Wilks exited the car and walked up to the porch with an “AK rifle” and asked where Mister was. Morales turned with the baby to go inside and Wilks shot him in the back. As Ororo went to pick up the baby, Wilks shot her in the head. Mister stated that he screamed at Wilks from a window in the upstairs bedroom when Wilks was shooting toward the porch, and Wilks shot at him and hit the house.

Investigators found a single 7.62-by-39 mm shell casing on the front porch. They discovered a bullet strike near the front-door window and one on the upper-story siding. Police learned that Wilks had purchased a 2004 purple Dodge Stratus four days before the shooting. The day after the shooting police spotted Wilks driving a minivan owned by his girlfriend, Mary Aragon, who is Mister’s mother. Wilks abandoned the vehicle and fled, but was apprehended after a short chase.

http://www.courtnewsohio.gov/cases/2018/SCO/0424/141035.asp#.YGN9tSjYrrc

Christopher Whitaker Ohio Death Row

christopher whitaker

Christopher Whitaker was sentenced to death by the State of Ohio for the sexual assault and murder of a fourteen year old girl. According to court documents Christopher Whitaker would grab the victim Alianna DeFreeze when she would step off a bus. The fourteen year old girl would be sexually assaulted, tortured and murdered. Christopher Whitaker would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Ohio Death Row Inmate List

Christopher Whitaker 2021 Information

Number A750460

DOB 01/29/1973

Gender Male Race Black

Admission Date 03/28/2018 InstitutionChillicothe Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

Christopher Whitaker More News

Lawyers for the family of a Cleveland girl who was abducted on her way to school and later found killed have sued the teen’s school, claiming staff there never told the family she was absent — a notification they say might have saved her life.

The body of Alianna DeFreeze, 14, was found in a vacant house Jan. 29, 2017, three days after her mother called police when she realized the girl had never shown up to school. Christopher Whitaker, 45, a registered sex offender, was convicted in 2018 of abducting and raping the girl and fatally stabbing and bludgeoning her. He was sentenced to death and awaits execution on Ohio’s death row.

Alianna, who had a developmental disability, was last seen getting off a city Regional Transit Authority bus on her way to school around 7 a.m. the morning of Jan. 26, 2017.

As she was walking away from the bus stop, Whitaker started following her, and ultimately forced her into the abandoned home, the lawsuit said. The lawsuit claimed the school, E Prep & Village Prep Woodland Hills, never notified the girl’s family she hadn’t shown up until her mother called around 4 p.m. that day because the girl didn’t arrive home.

The suit said the family was signed up to receive text message alerts from the school, including about unexcused absences, and had expected they’d be notified if the she was absent.

The lawsuit also said school officials should’ve been immediately concerned because of Alianna’s developmental disability and because it was uncharacteristic of her to miss school. It said the school’s failure to notify the family delayed the family in reporting the girl missing to police, and prevented investigators from launching “an immediate and possibly life-saving search for Alianna.”

The delay “significantly and materially lowered the chances of the police finding Alianna alive,” the lawsuit read.

The lawsuit alleged because of the school system’s negligence, the last hours of the girl’s life “were spent in excruciating, paralyzing, debilitating and unthinkable physical and mental pain.”

The lawsuit also claimed the school system lied when they said they had attempted to send an alert through their text message notification system, but it failed.

Operators of the school told The Associated Press they can’t comment on the lawsuit and they’ve tried to be supportive to Alianna’s parents since her death.

Authorities have said Whitaker’s DNA matched evidence from the slaying. Whitaker told investigators he was high on cocaine and blacked out.

Whitaker apologized to the family during his trial’s penalty phase.

“There is no excuse for what I’ve done,” he said.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/cleveland-alianna-defreeze-notification-absence-christopher-whitaker-convicted-family-lawsuit-today-2019-01-30/

Hersie Wesson Ohio Death Row

hersie wesson

Hersie Wesson was sentenced to death by the State of Ohio for the murder of an elderly man. According to court documents Hersie Wesson would talk himself into the home of Emil Varhola, 81, and Mary Varhola, 77. Once inside Hersie Wesson would stab Emil to death and attempted to murder Mary before robbing the home and fleeing. Hersie Wesson would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Ohio Death Row Inmate List

Hersie Wesson 2021 Information

Number A563308

DOB 09/21/1957

Gender Male Race Black

Admission Date 03/23/2009

Institution Chillicothe Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

Hersie Wesson More News

The Ohio Supreme Court today upheld the death sentence imposed on Hersie R. Wesson for stabbing 81-year-old Emil Varhola to death in February 2008 during a course of conduct that involved the attempted murder of Emil’s 77-year-old wife, Mary, and the aggravated robbery of the elderly couple in their home.

Justice Terrence O’Donnell wrote the court’s majority opinion reviewing Wesson’s convictions and sentence in this case.

The decision partially affirms and partially reverses the judgment of the Summit County Court of Common Pleas.

In February 2008, Hersie R. Wesson of Akron asked Emil Varhola, 81, and Mary Varhola, 77, if he could wait at their house until his girlfriend’s bus arrived. The Varholas knew Wesson from the neighborhood, and Mr. Varhola and Wesson sometimes talked. The couple accommodated Wesson’s request. Wesson attacked and stabbed Mr. Varhola, beat and stabbed Mrs. Varhola, then stole jewelry and money before fleeing the house.

Wesson waived his right to a jury trial  and elected to be tried by a three-judge panel.  The judge presiding over the case appointed the other two members of the panel, and the matter proceeded to trial.  The panel found Wesson guilty of two counts of aggravated murder, with each count carrying capital specifications for aggravated murder while under detention, aggravated murder as part of a course of conduct involving the purposeful killing of or attempt to kill two or more persons, and aggravated murder while committing aggravated robbery, in addition to two counts of attempted murder,   two counts of aggravated robbery, and one count each of having a weapon while under a disability and tampering with evidence. The court sentenced Wesson to death for aggravated murder and to 26 years in prison for the other convictions.  

On appeal to the Supreme Court, Wesson urged that the judge presiding over his trial had lacked authority to appoint the other two members of the three-judge panel.  Justice O’Donnell noted that pursuant to R.C. 2945.06, when a person charged with a capital offense waives a jury trial, the panel hearing the case shall be composed of three judges, two of whom shall be designated by the presiding judge or chief justice of the common pleas court, and if no one holds either position, then they shall be designated by the chief justice of the Supreme Court.  

Justice O’Donnell wrote that the term “presiding judge” refers to the judge who is the presiding judge over a multiple-judge common pleas court, not the judge presiding over a particular trial. “If the General Assembly had intended to allow the judge assigned to preside over a capital murder trial to appoint the other two judges of the three-judge panel, then there would be no need to designate the chief justice of the Supreme Court to appoint the judges when there is neither a presiding judge nor a chief justice of the common pleas court, because there would always be a judge presiding over the capital case,” Justice O’Donnell stated.

“Accordingly, the judge presiding over Wesson’s trial, who was neither the presiding judge nor the chief justice of the Summit County Common Pleas Court, lacked authority to designate the other two members of the panel,” Justice O’Donnell continued. The court, however, rejected Wesson’s argument that his conviction and death sentence should be overturned for this error , noting that he had accepted the trial court’s method of appointing the members of the three-judge panel and forfeited all but plain error.  “[H]ere, Wesson makes no argument — and therefore does not demonstrate — that the appointment of different members to the three-judge panel would have changed the outcome of the proceeding.”  

Wesson also challenged his conviction for committing aggravated murder while under detention and his convictions for specifications charging that he committed aggravated murder while under detention .  

Wesson had been convicted of burglary in 2003 , and the trial court had imposed a three-year discretionary  term of postrelease control rather than the mandatory term required by his offense. He was placed on postrelease control upon his release from prison in 2007.

Justice O’Donnell noted that “Wesson’s 2003 sentence failed to impose a mandatory three-year term of postrelease control, and so that part of the 2003 sentence is void.” He further explained that pursuant to State v. Billiter (2012), an offender cannot be convicted of escaping from an improperly imposed  term of postrelease control. The court therefore reversed Wesson’s conviction for committing aggravated murder while under detention, the related specifications on this count, and a separate specification for committing murder while under detention on the other aggravated murder count.

The Supreme Court also rejected Wesson’s claims that the indictment was invalid, that his statement to police should have been suppressed, that he had been denied the effective assistance of counsel and the right to present a complete defense, that he had been convicted of allied offenses of similar import, that the admission of victim-impact statements amounted to reversible error, and that the death penalty is unconstitutional.  The court then independently reviewed the sentence of death imposed and concluded that the evidence supports the finding that Wesson committed aggravated murder as part of a course of conduct and while committing aggravated robbery.  Concluding that these aggravating circumstances outweigh the mitigating factors and that Wesson’s death sentence is proportionate to those upheld in similar cases, the court affirmed the sentence of death.  

The court’s majority opinion was joined by Justices Paul E. Pfeifer and Sharon L. Kennedy and by Joseph J. Vukovich of the Seventh District Court of Appeals.  Judge Vukovich served as a visiting judge during oral arguments in this case, filling in for Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor, who recused herself.

Justice Judith Ann Lanzinger wrote a dissent. Justice Judith L. French wrote separately to concur in part and dissent in part. Justice William M. O’Neill dissented without opinion.

In her dissent, Justice Lanzinger wrote: “I would not find void any portion of Wesson’s 2003 sentence.  As the mistake was solely in the court’s exercise of jurisdiction in imposing postrelease control (imposing three years of discretionary, rather than three years of mandatory, postrelease control), the sentence was merely voidable. Since the error was not raised on appeal within 30 days, res judicata applies and Wesson remained under the supervision of the Adult Parole Authority. I also dissent from the majority’s judgment affirming the remaining capital convictions. I would vacate the convictions and remand the case to the trial court for the proper selection of a three-judge panel in this case as precedent demands.”

“[T]he majority’s opinion in this case is yet another example of the inconsistent holdings of this court in cases in which the trial court judge acted contrary to a statutory mandate,” she continued. “The majority reverses Wesson’s conviction for aggravated murder while under detention and for the corresponding specification on Count Two due to a postrelease-control error. So on the one hand, the majority collaterally declares a portion of Wesson’s 2003 sentence void because the trial judge imposed three years of discretionary rather than mandatory postrelease control. Then on the other hand, although the trial judge did not have authority to appoint the other two judges of the three-judge panel in this capital case, the majority affirms Wesson’s remaining capital convictions. Apparently, a postrelease-control error is more important than a procedural error in a capital case. I cannot agree with this inconsistency. I would hold that any error in the court’s exercise of jurisdiction is voidable rather than void.”

Justice French concurred with the majority in all aspects except vacating Wesson’s conviction and specifications for aggravated murder while under detention. She wrote that she agrees with Justice Lanzinger that his 2003 sentence was not void.

http://www.courtnewsohio.gov/cases/2013/SCO/1023/090739.asp#.YGN5TijYrrc

James Were Ohio Death Row

james were

James Were was sentenced to death by the State of Ohio for a prison murder. According to court documents James Were was involved in a prison riot (lucasville) that left a prison officer dead. James Were would be convicted and sentenced to death

Ohio Death Row Inmate List

James Were 2021 Information

Number A173245

DOB 01/20/1957

Gender Male Race Black

Admission Date 04/15/1983

Institution Ohio State Penitentiary

Status INCARCERATED

James Were More News

On Easter Sunday, April 11, 1993, 450 Lucasville inmates, including an unlikely alliance of the prison gangsGangster DisciplesBlack Muslims and the Aryan Brotherhood, rioted and took over the facility for 11 days. The prisoners’ main concerns were serious overcrowding and mismanagement of the facility and Muslim frustration stemming from mandated tuberculosis testing.[5] In the Netflix documentary series Captive, inmate Siddique Abdullah Hasan (Carlos Sanders) claims that Muslim prisoners refused the test because it contained phenol, and therefore went against Islamic restrictions concerning the handling and consumption of alcohol. Investigations conducted after the riot found that the gangs were also collaborating to murder inmates accused of being informants.[6] One corrections officer and nine inmates were killed during the riot.[6] Five inmates believed to have been informants were beaten to death at the start of the riot. Two inmates were repeatedly stabbed to death and a third had paper and plastic stuffed into his mouth before being strangled to death by cords.[3]

During negotiations, the inmates did not feel they were being taken seriously and there was discussion of killing a corrections officer in retaliation. Though the group never reached a decision on the killing, one of the prisoners decided to act. According to the prosecution, Officer Robert Vallandingham, who had been taken hostage, was handcuffed and strangled with a dumbbell from the prison weight room. However, testimony by Dr. Richard Fardal, Franklin County Deputy Coroner, disputed the claim that Officer Vallandingham was killed by a weight, saying that there was “no injury to the voice box or the trachea” and that “Mr. Vallandingham died solely and exclusively as a result of ligature strangulation.” Testimonies vary as to which prisoner was responsible for his murder.[5] During those 11 days, representatives from the Gangster Disciples, Black Muslims and Aryan Brotherhood, met every day in an improvised leadership council.[7]

The riot eventually ended after 11 days on April 21. Prison officials agreed to review the prisoners’ complaints, which resulted in the prisoners’ surrender.[3]

Communications issues experienced during the response to the riot contributed to the state’s decision to build an interoperable statewide radio system.

Michael Webb Ohio Death Row

michael webb

Michael Webb was sentenced to death by the State of Ohio for the murder of a three year old boy. According to court documents Michael Webb would set off a fire in his home that would end up taking the life of his three year old son. Michael Webb would be sentenced to death.

Ohio Death Row Inmate List

Michael Webb 2021 Information

Number A246589

DOB 11/08/1948

Gender Male Race White

Admission Date 07/17/1991

Institution Chillicothe Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

Michael Webb More News

Webb lived in a modest home in Goshen, Ohio, with his wife Susan, two teenage daughters, Tami and Amy, and two young sons, Charlie and Mikey.  State v. Webb, 70 Ohio St.3d 325, 638 N.E.2d 1023, 1026 (1994).   Early on the morning of November 21, 1990, Tami awoke in her basement bedroom to the smell of gasoline.  Id. at 1027.   Webb soon came into her room and told a frightened Tami that he smelled gasoline and that he thought someone had “rigged” the house.  Id. Without telling Tami to get out of the house, Webb proceeded upstairs while Tami hid under her covers.  Id.

Soon after Webb went upstairs, an explosion occurred on the main floor of the house, throwing Webb from the hall outside the master bedroom into the bathroom.  Id. at 1027-28.   Webb’s wife and youngest son were asleep in the master bedroom at the time, and Mikey slept in his bedroom across the hall.   Id. Tami and Amy safely escaped the resulting fire through the exterior basement door as soon as they heard the explosion.  Id. at 1027.   Webb escaped the house by breaking through the bathroom window, cutting himself and bloodying his hands in the process.  Id. Firefighters rescued Webb’s wife and youngest child from the master bedroom.  Id. Mikey died from smoke inhalation, apparently while hiding under his bed to seek refuge from the flames.  Id.

Law enforcement investigated the cause of the fire.   Fire Chief Murphy discovered a plastic gasoline can from Webb’s garage in the front foyer as well as a “very definite pour pattern or trailer” leading down the hallway from the foyer to the main floor bedrooms.  Id. From there, trailers led into both bedrooms, including over Mikey’s bed to the rear wall of his bedroom.  Id. An unignited gasoline trailer also led downstairs to the basement, where gasoline had been poured on Tami’s and Amy’s beds.  Id. Several pieces of physical evidence linked Webb to the fire:  a two-liter soda bottle containing gasoline found downstairs, which had Webb’s fingerprints on it;  Webb’s partial bloody fingerprints on a matchbook outside, with the prints corresponding to the “peculiar way” Webb held a matchbook when lighting matches;  and a plastic gas can from Webb’s garage found in the foyer.  Id. Webb, it turns out, had a motive as well:  He began an extramarital affair in 1990 and told his mistress he planned to leave his wife so he could be with her, id.;   and he had just finished draining $102,000 (plus interest) from his daughters’ trust accounts within the past year, a theft that would be hidden by their deaths because he was their heir.

An Ohio jury convicted Webb of the aggravated murder of Mikey and eleven other counts not relevant to this appeal.  Id. After a mitigation hearing, the jury recommended the death penalty, and the trial court agreed. 

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/us-6th-circuit/1499044.html

Michael Webb Death

A condemned Ohio prisoner scheduled for execution next year for killing his 3-year-old son in an arson fire has died of a heart attack, the state said.

Michael Webb, 73, was sentenced to die for setting a 1990 fire at his Clermont County house in southern Ohio. Authorities said Webb meant to kill his wife and children and collect insurance money to be with his mistress.

Records show the family escaped but his son, also named Michael, died of smoke inhalation. At the time of his sentencing, Webb did not dispute the fire was arson, but denied being the one to start it.  

Webb died of cardiac arrest at a Columbus hospital May 2, said JoEllen Smith, spokesperson for the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction.

Webb was scheduled to die in July 2023, though the likelihood of that happening was small. Gov. Mike DeWine has postponed multiple executions in recent years in keeping with his contention that lethal injection is no longer an option in Ohio because of the ongoing lack of drugs with which to put inmates to death.

The state’s last execution was July 18, 2018, when Ohio put to death Robert Van Hook for killing David Self in Cincinnati in 1985.

https://www.10tv.com/article/news/local/ohio-death-row-inmate-dies-heart-attack-ahead-next-years-scheduled-execution/530-ba6effa4-6ac1-41dc-9a1c-873885333165