Frederick Mundt Ohio Death Row

frederick mundt

Frederick Mundt was sentenced to death by the State of Ohio for a sexual assault and murder. According to court documents Frederick Mundt would sexually assault and murder seven year old Brittany Hendrickson the daughter of his girlfriend. Frederick Mundt would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Ohio Death Row Inmate List

Frederick Mundt 2021 Information

Number A486456

DOB 08/23/1974

Gender Male Race White

Admission Date 12/17/2004

Institution Chillicothe Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

Frederick Mundt More News

On March 9, 2004, seven-year-old Brittany Hendrickson disappeared from her home in Noble County.   The next day, searchers found Brittany’s raped, battered body hidden in a nearby abandoned well.   Appellant, Frederick A. Mundt, was convicted of the aggravated murder of Brittany and sentenced to death.

{¶ 2} The evidence at Mundt’s trial revealed that Brittany’s mother, Misty Hendrickson, became acquainted with Mundt in 1999.   She and her daughters, Brittany and Lindsay, soon moved into Mundt’s house in Lower Salem, Noble County.   In 2004, Mundt and Hendrickson lived there with Brittany and Lindsay, and their infant son, Shay Mundt.   Mundt’s mother, Sarah Mundt, lived nearby with her boyfriend Tim Bowman and their adult daughters, Mundt’s half-sisters, Timica, Teresa, and Mary Anne Bowman.

 {¶ 3} During the late morning or early afternoon of March 9, 2004, Mundt visited the Biolife Plasma Services Plasma Center in Parkersburg, West Virginia to sell his blood plasma.

{¶ 4} March 9, 2004, was a school day for Brittany Hendrickson.   The school bus brought her home that day around 4:10 p.m., and her bus driver saw her go inside the house.

{¶ 5} Five or ten minutes later, Mundt’s stepfather, Tim Bowman, arrived.   Bowman and Sarah, along with their daughter Mary Anne and her date, had plans to play bingo that night in Woodsfield, Ohio. Bowman came to invite Hendrickson to join them.   After checking with Mundt, Hendrickson accepted.   Bowman was at Mundt’s house for five to ten minutes;  during that time, he saw Brittany and Lindsay at play.

{¶ 6} Hendrickson fed her daughters about 4:45 p.m.   Half an hour later, Bowman arrived at Mundt’s house to pick Hendrickson up.

{¶ 7} Hendrickson said goodbye and “told the kids to go upstairs with their dad [Mundt] when they [were] done eating.”   Although Bowman did not enter the house, he recalled hearing Hendrickson telling the girls to eat dinner and go upstairs.

{¶ 8} Around 8:00 p.m., Mundt arrived at the Bowman residence with Lindsay and Shay. Timica and Teresa Bowman were present.   Mundt asked Timica if Brittany was there and said, “[S]he ain’t up home, and I have to find her.”   Leaving the children with Teresa, Mundt and Timica drove to Woodsfield.

{¶ 9} They arrived at the bingo hall around 8:30 p.m.   Mundt approached Hendrickson and asked if Brittany was with her.   Hendrickson replied, “No, I left her there with you.”   She got up, grabbed her coat, and left with Mundt and Timica.   The three then drove back to Mundt’s house.   At 9:18 p.m., Hendrickson called the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office to report Brittany missing.   Officers immediately began to search for Brittany, a search that lasted into the next day.

{¶ 10} On March 10, a civilian volunteer taking part in the search noticed a sheet of tin covering the opening of an old well on property near Mundt’s house.   Moving the tin revealed a chunk of concrete wedged into the opening of the well.   The surface of the well water was visible around the sides of the concrete chunk.   The volunteer looked into the well and saw a pair of green shoes floating amid some debris.   The volunteer reported his find and led sheriff’s deputies to the well.

{¶ 11} The deputies recovered one of the shoes and brought it to Hendrickson, who identified it as Brittany’s.   Other officers removed the chunk of concrete and recovered Brittany’s body from the well.

 {¶ 12} Shortly after the officers recovered her body, Agents Gary Wilgus and William Hatfield of the Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation (“BCI”) arrived at the crime scene.   Wilgus noted numerous abrasions and contusions on Brittany’s head.   Her jeans were undone, and the leg bottoms partly covered her feet.

{¶ 13} Hatfield found bloodstains and hairs on the chunk of concrete from the well.   Hatfield later weighed and measured the chunk;  it was 36 inches long and 14 inches wide at its widest point and weighed 254 pounds.

{¶ 14} According to Hendrickson, Mundt stated on the morning of March 10 that “they will probably pin this on him * * * because he was supposed to be the last one to see her.”

{¶ 15} Detective Sergeant Mark Warden and Lieutenant Seevers of the Washington County Sheriff’s Office interviewed Mundt after Brittany’s body was found.   Mundt asked whether a condemned prisoner could “choose between lethal injection and the gas chamber.”   Warden then informed Mundt that Brittany’s body had been found and that Warden “felt he was responsible for [her] death.”   Mundt denied it.

{¶ 16} Warden noted that Mundt’s forearms were scratched.   Mundt claimed that the family dog had knocked him down some steps while he was looking for Brittany.   When Warden expressed disbelief, Mundt merely hung his head.   Biolife Plasma Services personnel later testified that Mundt did not have those scratches on his arm when he sold plasma on the morning of March 9.

{¶ 17} Seevers asked Mundt whether Brittany could have been sexually assaulted.   Mundt first said no, then asked, “Well, how would I know?”   The officers then took a DNA swab and collected other trace evidence from Mundt’s person.   As Warden was cataloguing these items, Mundt asked:  “Do you think I should die?”   Warden replied, “Well, do you think you should be put to death?”   Mundt said, “Yes.”

{¶ 18} Dr. P.S.S. Sreenivasa Murthy, a pathologist and deputy coroner for Stark and Wayne Counties, conducted an autopsy on Brittany, assisted by Dr. Anthony Bertin, a urologist, who examined Brittany’s genitalia.

{¶ 19} Dr. Murthy found that Brittany had extensive blunt-force head injuries.   These included multiple lacerations and bruises, a skull fracture, and hemorrhaging and contusions of the brain.   She also had blunt-force injuries to her trunk and extremities.

{¶ 20} Brittany’s lungs were hyperinflated and contained excess fluid, leading Dr. Murthy to conclude that she had drowned in the well.   But because Brittany was 47 inches tall while the water in the well was only 30 to 36 inches deep, Murthy concluded that Brittany’s injuries had left her unable to stand up.    Murthy also concluded that given the severity of her injuries, Brittany would have died within 10 to 15 minutes.   Thus, Murthy concluded that she died both of drowning and of her multiple blunt-force injuries.

{¶ 21} Dr. Bertin, the urologist, observed that Brittany’s panties were soaked with blood.   Her vaginal opening was “imploded,” as if a large object had been forced into it.   Her vaginal walls had been “ripped apart,” with deep, full-length lacerations on both sides.   In Dr. Bertin’s opinion, a rigid object, approximately two and one-half inches in diameter, had been forced up Brittany’s vaginal canal with “considerable force.”

{¶ 22} Diane Larson, a BCI forensic scientist, examined numerous evidentiary items.   Those yielding significant DNA evidence included vaginal swabs taken during Brittany’s autopsy, fabric cut from the crotch of Brittany’s panties, a bloodstained bedsheet found on the bed in Mundt’s master bedroom, and a bloodstained shirt found in Mundt’s bathroom and identified as his.

{¶ 23} Larson found sperm cells on the vaginal swabs and on Brittany’s panties.   She identified a mixture of two DNA profiles on the sperm fraction of the vaginal swabs.   One of the mixed profiles was consistent with Mundt;  the other was consistent with Brittany.   The proportion of the population that could not be excluded as a possible contributor to that mixture was one in 203,800.

{¶ 24} On the panties, Larson identified “two clean separate DNA profiles.”   The major profile, or largest amount, came from sperm and was consistent with Mundt’s DNA. The expected frequency of the major profile was one in approximately 39 quadrillion, 350 trillion persons.   The minor profile was consistent with Brittany’s DNA.

{¶ 25} On the bedsheet, DNA testing showed a mixture of two DNA profiles.   The major profile was consistent with Mundt’s DNA;  the minor profile was consistent with Brittany’s.   The expected frequency of the minor profile was one in 146 million persons.

{¶ 26} Mark Losko, another forensic scientist at BCI, testified that testing on Mundt’s shirt revealed a mixture of two DNA profiles.   The major profile was consistent with Brittany’s DNA. The expected frequency of that profile was one in 4.7 quadrillion persons.   The minor profile was consistent with Mundt’s DNA.

{¶ 27} After Mundt’s arrest, his half-brother, Johnny Mundt, visited him in jail.   Johnny testified that he asked Mundt “if he done it.”   Mundt admitted that he had raped Brittany.   Then he asked Johnny “if I can get the stuff out of the house.”   Mundt told Johnny that “the stuff” was behind the stereo.   Johnny agreed to remove it.

{¶ 28} On April 24 and 25, 2004, while Mundt was incarcerated in the county jail, he had several telephone conversations with Johnny.   In these conversations,  Mundt repeatedly urged Johnny to remove and destroy certain “stuff” or “trash” located in the wall behind the stereo in Mundt’s house.   The sheriff’s office recorded these conversations, and the state introduced them at trial.

{¶ 29} These recordings convey Mundt’s sense of urgency and concern for secrecy because he continually expressed his anxiety about when Johnny was going to burn the “trash” and whether he had burned “all of it.”   He warned Johnny that their conversation was being taped and reminded him several times not to let their mother see him burning the “trash.”

{¶ 30} On April 24, Mundt asked Johnny:  “Hey, did you get all that stuff out of there where the radio is?  * * * Would you be able to get that out?”

{¶ 31} Mundt continued:

{¶ 32} “You going to burn that stuff?  * * * Well, make sure Mom ain’t down there when you get burning that.  * * * I really-really hope you can do that for me.”

{¶ 33} “You, uh, sure you can get that stuff out of there?  * * * I’m really a-hoping.  * * * ‘Cause I’m really wanting that stuff out of there.   You hear?  * * * Make sure you get it all.”

{¶ 34} “Yeah, I hope you do that, take-take that trash out.   Out-out back of the stereo.   I really need to get that out of the house.   You hear?  * * * Back behind the stereo, yeah.   Where the wall’s at?  * * * Down in there. * * * You going to burn all that?  * * * That would do me a lot of good.”

{¶ 35} On the following day, Mundt talked to Johnny three more times.   In the first of these conversations, Mundt asked:  “Did you get all that trash burnt?”   Mundt explained that the “trash” was hidden in the wall to the left of the stereo “where the insulation [was] moved,” approximately two feet away from the drywall.   He instructed Johnny to “find all that trash” and “get rid of that for me and burn it.  * * * Don’t have Ma and them up there.”   He also warned Johnny that “[t]his telephone’s taped.”

{¶ 36} In their second conversation on April 25, Mundt pressed Johnny:  “Did you get it?  * * * Did you get all of it?  * * * Make sure you burn all that trash.  * * * Mom and them can’t see that.”

{¶ 37} In his third April 25 conversation with Johnny, Mundt again asked:  “Did you make sure that other trash is burnt?”   He told Johnny to “make sure that burns up nice and good.  * * *   Make sure there ain’t nothing left of it.  * * * ‘Cause they be up there looking through that next.”   Johnny said, “They’re done up there, they ain’t gonna go back up there.”   Mundt replied, “Don’t bet on it.”

{¶ 38} According to Johnny, he eventually found “a little hole” in the corner of a room in Mundt’s house.   In that hole, Johnny found a pair of boxer shorts, a T-shirt, a pair of girl’s socks, and a pillowcase, each spattered with blood.   Johnny put these items into a box and hid the box in another part of the house.   The next day, he took the box home and burned it with the bloodstained items inside.

{¶ 39} On April 26, Mundt talked to Sarah Mundt from jail.   The sheriff’s office recorded this conversation.   Sarah mentioned that Johnny had been burning things the night before, including a box.   Mundt had his mother describe the box, then asked:  “He burn it?”   Mundt pressed Sarah for details:  “Did you go up with him last night?  * * * Did he pour gas on all that trash?  * * * Did it burn?”

{¶ 40} On May 3, 2004, police searched Mundt’s house again.   In a second-floor room, between a floor joist and the exterior wall, they found the space where Mundt had hidden the bloodstained items.

{¶ 41} Police cut out a section of the floor joist from the hiding place.   The joist tested positive for blood.   Mark Losko, the BCI forensic scientist, found a mixture of two DNA profiles on the joist.   The major contributor’s DNA profile was consistent with Brittany’s and would be found in one of 4.7 quadrillion persons.   The minor contributor’s DNA profile was consistent with Mundt’s and would be found in one of 139 persons.

{¶ 42} On June 19, Mundt had yet another phone conversation with his mother from jail, and this too was recorded by the sheriff’s office.   Mundt urged his mother to remove his weights from his house:  “You need to get those weights out of there.  * * *   They’ll use that against me.  * * * They’ll try to say that I lifted those things down there.  * * * Well, at least take some of the weights off the weight bench.  * * * Did you take any weights off it?”

Verdict and Sentence

{¶ 43} At trial, the jury found Mundt guilty of four counts of aggravated murder, each with four death specifications;  two counts of rape, R.C. 2907.02(A)(1)(b) and (A)(2);  and one count of kidnapping.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/oh-supreme-court/1277025.html

Samuel Moreland Ohio Death Row

samuel moreland

Samuel Moreland was sentenced to death by the State of Ohio for five murders. According to court documents Samuel Moreland would murder  girlfriend, 46-year-old Glenna Green, her daughter, 23-year-old Lana Green, and her grandchildren, seven-year-old Daytrin Talbott, six-year-old Datwan Talbott and six-year-old Violana Green, in their Dayton home. Samuel Moreland would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Ohio Death Row Inmate List

Samuel Moreland 2021 Information

Number A190490

DOB 01/30/1954

Gender Male Race Black

Admission Date 05/06/1986

Institution Chillicothe Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

Samuel Moreland More News

At first, Tia Talbott thought Samuel Moreland’s conviction for the 1985 murders of five of her family members would end in his swift execution. Moreland was convicted in the killing of Talbott’s mother, sister, two sons and niece at their home on Dayton’s South Ardmore Avenue.But now more than 30 years later, she is still waiting for it to happen.

“He’s a vicious, cold-blooded killer. He murdered my family,” Talbott said.

Talbott has watched with frustration as Moreland has managed to delay execution for decades through a barrage of courtroom appeals at the state and federal level. It has left her angry at the criminal justice system and wondering if people in the system have forgotten the victims.

“My family is valuable. They’re human beings. They’re worth something and they should act like it and do justice for them,” Talbott said.
An I-Team investigation found Moreland is the Miami Valley’s longest-running resident on the Ohio prison system’s Death Row. He has been in the prison system since May 6, 1986. Repeated attempts to interview Moreland in prison have been denied. The state prison system recently rejected yet another interview request. It comes just as Moreland’s latest legal maneuver won support from a judge to allow re-testing of some DNA evidence from the original trial.

The re-testing effort was spearheaded by Mark Godsey, director of the Innocence Project at the University of Cincinnati Law School. The group has taken up Moreland’s case and has pushed for more DNA testing to help determine guilt or innocence

“Any time there’s DNA evidence that could be done to shed some light on the question, we think it should be done in the interest of fairness and justice,” Godsey said.

One of the original investigators on the case, Dan Baker, who was a Dayton Police Lieutenant at the time, said there is no doubt Moreland is guilty. He too did not anticipate that Moreland would still be successfully fighting the death penalty for more than three decades.

“Sammy Moreland has been able to work the system many, many times,” Baker said

Montgomery County Prosecutor Matt Heck was also part of the original case as an assistant prosecutor. To this day he is still defending the guilty verdict and death sentence from a three judge panel in 1986. Heck remains confident that the re-testing of the DNA evidence will have no influence on the case, stating emphatically that Moreland is the killer

“I don’t think there is any question about it. This individual was positively identified by someone that knew him, someone who was there and someone injured, almost killed at the hands of Samuel Moreland,” Heck said.

According to Heck, the evidence to be re-tested has been moved to a lab, but the work may not be completed for several months. Tia Talbott is hoping that the latest legal move by Moreland will be his last and that when the testing is completed the execution can go forward. What would Talbott say about it then?

“The pain is still going to be there, but the monster is gone,” said Talbott. She too, believes the evidence will point to Samuel Moreland.

https://www.whio.com/news/team-still-alive-death-row/vR4v8IbLqCraYoqx4jq5wN/

Lee Moore Ohio Death Row

lee moore

Lee Moore was sentenced to death by the State of Ohio for a robbery murder. According to court documents Lee Moore would abduct the victim  Melvin Olinger at gunpoint and force him into the trunk of a car.  Melvin Olinger  was driven to a remote location where he was robbed and fatally shot. Lee Moore would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Ohio Death Row Inmate List

Lee Moore 2021 Information

Number A305700

DOB 10/19/1974

Gender Male Race Black

Admission Date 12/16/1994

Institution Chillicothe Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

Lee Moore More News

On the evening of January 14, 1994, defendant-appellant, Lee Edward Moore, Jr., and Jason Holmes abducted Melvin Olinger at gunpoint and forced him into the trunk of his blue Ford Taurus. Moore drove Olinger’s car to Mt. Healthy, dropped Holmes off, and picked up Larry Kinley. The two drove Olinger’s car to a factory area in Cincinnati, where Moore ordered Olinger out of the trunk, robbed him of his wallet, and shot him in the head, killing him. Moore later admitted committing the crimes but claimed that the shooting was accidental. Moore was subsequently convicted of aggravated murder, kidnapping, and aggravated robbery, and sentenced to death.

On January 14, at approximately 7:20 p.m., Melvin Olinger, a suburban Chicago businessman, visited his parents in Fairfield. Olinger then went to a funeral home during calling hours for a friend who had passed away. Later, he went to Gina’s, a bar, around 9:00 to 9:30 p.m., where he talked with Charlotte James. He told her that he was going to visit his mother that evening before returning to Chicago the next day. Olinger stayed in the bar for about fifteen minutes.

That same evening, Moore and Jason Holmes drove to Fairfield, intending to steal a car. Moore waited outside Gina’s and saw Olinger get out of his blue Ford Taurus and enter the bar. When Olinger returned to his car, Moore confronted him with a gun and told Olinger to get in. Moore drove the Taurus to the rear of the bar and forced Olinger to climb into the trunk. Moore drove the Taurus to Larry Kinley’s house in Mt. Healthy while Holmes followed in Moore’s Ford Fairmont.

Moore and Kinley drove to a store in the Taurus, leaving Holmes behind to babysit. Moore told Kinley how he had stolen the car and that he was going to get it painted and modified. Moore told Kinley that he was driving to the Cumminsville area of Cincinnati to show the car to a friend. Instead, Moore drove to a factory area at 3366 Llewellyn Street. On the way, Moore told Kinley that he was going to kill the man in the trunk. When Kinley asked Moore why he was going to kill the man, Moore responded, “This ain’t nothing․ We’re not going to get caught for it.”

Upon driving into the factory area, Moore headed toward a dumpster. He stopped the car and let Olinger out of the trunk while Kinley remained in the car. Kinley testified that he didn’t see what happened because the trunk lid was up, but that he heard Moore tell Olinger to empty his pockets. Kinley testified that Moore directed Olinger to the corner by the dumpster and that he heard Olinger beg and plead to Moore about Olinger’s sick mother.

Kinley heard a gunshot, then Moore jumped into the car. According to Kinley, Moore laughed and asked him, “Did you see his dome get shot off?” After leaving the scene, Moore directed Kinley to take the credit cards out of Olinger’s wallet. Kinley said that Moore sounded upset because he had forgotten to ask Olinger for the personal identification number to his Jeanie card.

In a taped statement to police, Moore claimed that he asked Olinger for his wallet after directing him to the dumpster. When Olinger dropped the wallet and stepped forward, Moore said that he panicked and “accidentally pulled the trigger. But it was an accident․ I had a large amount of drinks an’ ․ some marijuana. An’ it truly truly was an accident.”

Moore and Kinley returned to Kinley’s house, where Moore told Holmes what had happened. Moore told Holmes that he planned to keep the Taurus and that Holmes could use his Fairmont any time he wanted. At Moore’s request Kinley took the Michigan plates off Olinger’s Taurus. Kinley then took one of the plates off Moore’s Fairmont and put it on the Taurus.

The next day, Moore and Kinley went out to get “some stuff.” Moore used Olinger’s credit card to purchase over $1,000 worth of clothing and jewelry at two J.C. Penney stores in the Cincinnati area. A sales clerk became suspicious and contacted Penney’s loss prevention officer. The officer observed two black males place their purchases in the trunk of a blue Ford Taurus with Ohio tags and drive away.

At approximately 5:30 p.m. on January 20, police apprehended Moore and Kinley as they waited for an order in the drive-through lane of a McDonald’s restaurant. Moore was placed in a holding cell at the Mt. Healthy police station. Officers confiscated several items of clothing from Moore which were believed to have been purchased with Olinger’s credit card. Shortly after midnight, Moore was advised of his Miranda rights and signed a waiver of rights form.

Moore was then taken to the downtown Cincinnati police station for questioning. Although the weather was cold and snowy, Moore was required to walk a short distance to and from the police car in his stocking feet, since his shoes had been confiscated as evidence. At approximately 6:30 a.m., while “crying a little bit” and sniffling, Moore admitted to police that he had robbed and kidnapped Olinger and that he had shot and killed Olinger. He claimed that the shooting was accidental.

Based on information supplied by Kinley, police located Olinger’s body. The chief deputy coroner determined that Olinger had died of a single gunshot wound to the head fired from a distance of between six and twenty-four inches away.

The grand jury indicted Moore on three counts of aggravated murder, one count of aggravated robbery, and one count of kidnapping. All counts carried a firearm specification. All three aggravated murder counts carried three death-penalty specifications: (1) aggravated murder to escape detection for kidnapping and/or aggravated robbery (R.C. 2929.04[A][3] ); (2) aggravated murder committed in connection with kidnapping where Moore either was the principal offender or committed the aggravated murder with prior calculation and design (R.C. 2929.04[A][7] ); and (3) aggravated murder committed in connection with aggravated robbery where Moore either was the principal offender or committed the aggravated murder with prior calculation and design (R.C. 2929.04[A][7] ).

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/us-6th-circuit/1624147.html

Caron Montgomery Ohio Death Row

caron montgomery

Caron Montgomery was sentenced to death by the State of Ohio for a triple murder. According to court documents Carom Montgomery would stab to death 31-year-old Tia Hendricks, their 2-year-old son Tyron, and Hendrick’s 10-year-old daughter Tahlia. Caron Montgomery would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Ohio Death Row Inmate List

Caron Montgomery 2021 Information

Number A665402

DOB 05/22/1974

Gender Male Race Black

Admission Date 05/31/2012

Institution Chillicothe Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

Caron Montgomery More News

For the fatal stabbings of three people, including his own son, Caron E. Montgomery was sentenced to death by a panel of three Franklin County judges this afternoon.

Montgomery, 37, could have been sentenced to life in prison. A unanimous decision was necessary to impose the death penalty.

Common Pleas Judges Guy Reece, Pat Sheeran and Richard S. Sheward began deliberating his fate yesterday afternoon after hearing closing arguments from both sides.

The judges ruled last week that Montgomery was subject to the death penalty because he purposely killed two or more people, including two victims under the age of 13, and killed one of the children to escape detection

Montgomery’s defense attorney told the judges that he should be spared the death sentence because his mother and the system failed him.

But prosecutors said the aggravating circumstances of the crimes far outweighed any mitigating factors.

Montgomery pleaded guilty last week to the stabbing deaths of his former girlfriend, Tia Hendricks; their 2-year-old son, Tyron Hendricks; and her 10-year-old daughter, Tahlia Hendricks. They were killed on Thanksgiving Day in 2010.

Members of Tia Hendricks’ family told The Dispatch that she had broken up with Montgomery, who was convicted of domestic violence against her in 2009, but allowed him to stay in her apartment on Broad Meadows Boulevard on the North Side. That’s where the bodies were found.

A death sentence was last imposed in Franklin County in 2003, when James T. Conway III received two for separate murders. He remains on Death Row.

https://www.dispatch.com/article/20120515/news/305159670

Jonathan Monroe Ohio Death Row

jonathan monroe

Jonathan Monroe was sentenced to death by the State of Ohio for the murders of two women. According to court documents Jonathan Monroe would murder Travinna Simmons and Deccarla Quincy, on April 17, 1996. Jonathan Monroe would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Ohio Death Row Inmate List

Jonathan Monroe 2021 Information

Number A383816

DOB 09/30/1973

Gender Male Race Black

Admission Date 12/03/1999

Institution Chillicothe Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

Jonathan Monroe More News

In 1996, Shannon Boyd had known Monroe for a few years and had sold drugs with him.   According to Boyd, on April 16, 1996, Monroe phoned Boyd and asked him if he wanted “to take a ride.”   Monroe picked Boyd up and told him he had to meet someone on the east side of Columbus.   They then drove to the Classic Lounge.

{¶ 3} Boyd later testified that inside the lounge, Monroe began talking to Deccarla Quincy and Travinna Simmons, whom Boyd described as flirtatious.   The women invited Boyd and Monroe to smoke marijuana with them, and they all agreed to meet at Quincy’s apartment nearby.   Federal authorities were watching Quincy’s apartment because the women were reputed to be dealers in large quantities of drugs.

{¶ 4} According to Boyd, he and Monroe got into Monroe’s car, and Monroe told Boyd that he planned to smoke marijuana with the women and have them call their friends.   He told Boyd that while Boyd stayed with the women, he would ride around with the women’s friends, rob them, and then come back to get Boyd and act as if nothing had happened.   But Boyd refused to go along with the plan, and when Monroe tried to give him a gun, Boyd refused that, too.   Monroe shoved the gun under his driver’s seat and told Boyd:  “Quit being a pussy.”

{¶ 5} Monroe and Boyd exited the car and followed the women into Quincy’s third-floor apartment.   Boyd noticed that the cigars in Quincy’s apartment were not the type he preferred for making marijuana cigars, so he went back to Monroe’s car to retrieve his own cigars.   When Boyd reentered Quincy’s apartment, Simmons and Quincy were sitting on a couch, and Monroe was standing in front of them holding a gun.   The gun was different from the one Monroe had showed Boyd earlier.   Boyd told Monroe that he did not want to go along with what Monroe was doing.   Monroe pointed the gun at Boyd and asked him, “Do you want to die?”   When Boyd replied no, Monroe told him to shut the door and do what he said.

{¶ 6} Boyd stated that Monroe gave him a pair of yellow latex dishwashing gloves to put on.   Monroe then told Boyd to tape the women’s hands and ankles with clear packing tape that was on a table in the apartment.   While Boyd taped the ankles and wrists of the woman he referred to as the “big girl” (Simmons), one of the glove’s fingertips came off after getting stuck on the tape.   When Boyd began taping the ankles of the “smaller girl” (Quincy), Monroe told Boyd he was doing it wrong and told him to get a knife from the kitchen.   Monroe taped Quincy’s ankles and then began asking the women where the drugs and money were.   The women repeatedly denied having any.   Monroe took the knife Boyd had brought from the kitchen and began poking the women with it, asking them where the drugs were.   When the women denied having any drugs, Monroe stabbed them.   Monroe then told Boyd to separate the women.   Boyd grabbed Simmons and dragged her into a bedroom.

{¶ 7} According to Boyd, Monroe put Simmons in a headlock while demanding drugs and money and stabbed her in the chest when she said that she and Quincy did not have any.   Monroe put Simmons on a bed, then picked up Quincy from the couch and carried her into another bedroom.   Boyd then panicked and ran out of the apartment and down the outside stairwell.

{¶ 8} Monroe later told a cellmate that after Boyd ran away, Monroe “went ahead and dumped them in the head,” meaning he shot both women in the head.   Boyd heard gunshots when he was at the bottom of the stairwell.   He then ran to a nearby gas station, where he called a cab.

{¶ 9} Bennett and Patricia Wise lived in the apartment below Quincy’s.   Bennett was awakened by the scuffling and screaming coming from Quincy’s apartment.   Patricia, who was in the living room talking on the phone, also heard screaming and scuffling.   She called 911.   Patricia and Bennett heard someone running down the apartment-complex stairwell, and Bennett looked out from a window and saw a thin man wearing a greenish-yellow jacket running “real fast” from the apartment stairwell.   Bennett recalled hearing “maybe four” gunshots.   After the shots were fired, he saw a shorter, stocky, heavy man with a “mini-afro” run from the apartment stairwell with a gun in his hand.   Other witnesses described Monroe as having been heavyset at the time of the murders.

{¶ 10} Patricia also looked out the apartment window during the commotion.   She first saw a young, tall, thin man run out wearing what she described as a  “bright lined yellow jacket.”   Shots were still being fired in the apartment above when she saw the first man.   After the first man fled the scene, Patricia saw a stocky black man come out of the stairwell.   Patricia recalled that all the shots were fired from the apartment above.   She estimated that seven or eight shots were fired.

{¶ 11} Columbus Police arrived on the scene shortly thereafter and found the bodies of Simmons and Quincy.   The apartment appeared to have been ransacked.   Shell casings found in Quincy’s apartment indicated that the women had been shot with a nine-millimeter firearm.   Also found at the crime scene were pieces from a yellow rubber glove.   Police collected blood from the front door of Quincy’s apartment.

{¶ 12} Although both women had suffered several sharp-instrument wounds, the coroner attributed Quincy’s death to a gunshot wound to the head and Simmons’s death to multiple gunshot wounds, including a fatal gunshot wound to her head.

{¶ 13} The murders remained unsolved for several years.   In January 2000, Detective Richard Bisutti of the Columbus Police Cold Case Unit was assigned the case.   He had information that Monroe had been scheduled to make a drug transaction with one of the victims on the day of the homicides.   The detectives began viewing Monroe as a suspect in the slayings after blood samples they obtained from him matched blood recovered from the crime scene.

{¶ 14} During the fall of 2000, Boyd implicated Monroe in the murders and made a plea bargain with the prosecutor to plead guilty to two counts of involuntary manslaughter in exchange for his testimony against Monroe.   Charles White, who shared a cell with Monroe in the county jail in November 2001, also implicated Monroe based on conversations he had with Monroe while they were incarcerated together.

{¶ 15} Mark Hardy, a firearms examiner, concluded that the casings recovered at the scene, as well as bullets recovered from the two murder victims, were fired from a nine-millimeter firearm, likely a semiautomatic pistol.   Hardy found that three different brands of ammunition were used in the slayings;  however, no evidence suggested that more than one weapon was involved.

{¶ 16} Lynn Bolin, a forensic scientist with the Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation (“BCI”) specializing in DNA analysis, testified that blood found on the front door of Quincy’s apartment was a mixture from various sources.   The major DNA profile found in the mixture was consistent with Monroe’s.   Although the two victims could not be excluded as minor contributors to the mixture found on the apartment door, Boyd was excluded as a contributor.   Bolin opined that Monroe could not be excluded as the source of the major DNA profile of the blood.   The profile found occurs in one in every 29.140 quadrillion in  the Caucasian population, one in every 2.336 quadrillion in the African-American population, and one in every 1.538 quadrillion in the Hispanic population.

{¶ 17} In April 2001, a grand jury indicted Monroe on eight counts of aggravated murder for the killings of Quincy and Simmons.   Each count included a firearms specification and four death-penalty specifications:  murder in connection with (1) an aggravated burglary, (2) an aggravated robbery, and (3) kidnapping (R.C. 2929.04[A][7] ), and (4) murder as part of a course of conduct involving the killing of two persons (R.C. 2929.04[A][5] ).   Monroe was also indicted on one count of aggravated burglary, two counts of aggravated robbery, and two counts of kidnapping.

{¶ 18} During a jury trial, the state presented a number of witnesses, including Boyd. Monroe presented three defense witnesses, including Boyd and White.   Defense witness Nathaniel Gilmore, who had lived with Boyd after the murders, testified that Boyd had told him that he murdered the two women and had never mentioned that anyone was with him.   White testified that when he and Boyd were in jail, Boyd told him that he and Monroe had stabbed and shot the two victims.   When another inmate expressed disbelief that Boyd could ever stab or shoot anyone, Boyd revised his story and said that Monroe was the one who had stabbed and shot the two women.   When called by the defense, Boyd denied ever having talked to Gilmore about the murders and denied telling White that he had stabbed the victims.   The trial court gave a limiting instruction to the jury that the testimony by Gilmore and White regarding what Boyd had told them was admitted solely to test the credibility of Boyd and was not to be considered for any other purpose.

{¶ 19} After deliberation, the jury found Monroe guilty as charged.   At the conclusion of the penalty phase, the jury recommended death, and the trial court imposed the death sentence.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/oh-supreme-court/1423989.html