Richard Shere Florida Death Row

richard shere

Richard Shere was sentenced to death by the State of Florida for the murder of Drew Snyder. According to court documents Richard Shere would and Bruce Demo would murder Drew Snyder as they believed that he was cooperating with police. Richard Shere would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Florida Death Row Inmate List

Richard Shere 2021 Information

DC Number:116320
Name:SHERE, RICHARD E JR.
Race:WHITE
Sex:MALE
Birth Date:07/07/1966
Initial Receipt Date:05/18/1989
Current Facility:UNION C.I.
Current Custody:MAXIMUM
Current Release Date:DEATH SENTENCE

Richard Shere More News

The victim, Drew Snyder, was reported missing in December 1987, and the ensuing investigation led to Shere, whom police contacted three weeks after Snyder’s disappearance. Shere waived his Miranda[2] rights, made a series of statements, and led detectives to various scenes involved in the murder.[3]

According to those statements, Shere said Bruce “Brewster” Demo told him on December 24 that Snyder was going to inform the police about Demo’s and Snyder’s theft of some air conditioners. Demo also advised Shere that Snyder was a “big mouth” who “had ratted out” on Shere as well. Shortly after midnight on the morning of December 25, Shere received a telephone call from Demo advising him that Demo was thinking about killing Snyder, and Demo threatened to kill Shere if he did not help. Shere then went to Demo’s house where Demo loaded a shovel into Shere’s car. They smoked marijuana, drank beer, went to Snyder’s house at about 2:30-3:00 a.m., and talked Snyder into going rabbit hunting.

At some point during the hunt in the early morning hours, Shere placed his .22-caliber pump action rifle on the roof of the car so he could relieve himself. Suddenly, Shere said, Demo grabbed the rifle, and Shere heard the weapon discharge. Shere dropped to the ground and heard Snyder say, “Oh, my God, Brewster,” followed by several more shots. When the shooting stopped, Shere got up and saw Snyder, still breathing, lying on the back seat of the car. Shere said he wanted to take Snyder to the hospital, but Demo took out his own gun, a .22-caliber pistol, and shot Snyder in the forehead, pulled him out of the car, and shot Snyder again in the chest. After the last shot was fired, they loaded Snyder’s body into the trunk and drove to a nearby location where Shere said Demo made him dig a hole and bury the body. Then Shere took Demo home, drove to his own house, cleaned up, and burned the bloodied back seat of his car in the back yard.

At Demo’s suggestion, Shere said, he and his girlfriend, Heidi Greulich,[4] went to Snyder’s house later that day, gathered some of Snyder’s belongings, then drove to Clearwater to dump the belongings, hoping to leave the impression that Snyder had suddenly left town. Shere also said he traded the .22-caliber rifle after the murder. Detectives recovered the rifle and Shere identified it as one of the weapons used to shoot Snyder.

Contradicting Shere’s account, Demo made a statement to detectives in which he accused Shere of firing the first shots. Detective *89 Alan Arick testified in the defendant’s case without objection that Demo said he turned his back to the car to relieve himself when he heard a shot. He turned and saw Shere pointing the rifle at Snyder, then Shere fired at Snyder five or six times through the car’s window. Demo said Shere pointed the gun at him and told him to finish off Snyder, Arick testified. Demo said he fired the pistol two times into Snyder’s head and one time to the heart, including “the fatal shot.” Demo told Arick he made Shere dig the grave because he was upset by what Shere had done to Snyder.

Greulich testified as a court witness about a statement she made to detectives in January 1988. In her statement she told detectives that she overheard Shere’s end of the telephone conversation with Demo in the early hours of December 25. Shere reportedly said to Demo “I can’t believe Drew would turn state’s evidence against me.” When Shere returned home on the morning of December 25, Greulich told detectives, she saw blood on Shere’s jeans and on the back seat of Shere’s car. Greulich testified that Shere told her he alone killed Snyder, but he said that only to protect her, because “[i]f I knew Brewster was out there, Brewster would have hurt me.”

Shere’s friend, Ray Pruden, testified that one night after Christmas Shere told him he shot Snyder to death while out rabbit hunting. He said he shot him ten or fifteen times, then buried the body. Shere did not say that Demo was involved, Pruden testified.

Medical testimony established that Snyder was shot to death with ten gunshots. Three shots were fired into his head, one shot was fired through the chest, and other shots were fired into the back, the buttocks, the right thigh, and the right forearm. Death could have been caused by gunshot wounds to the head or chest. The medical examiner testified that any of the shots could have caused pain had Snyder been conscious, but there was no evidence that Snyder was conscious.

Seven projectiles were removed from the body during the autopsy. Ballistics evidence showed that shots fired into Snyder’s head came from the pistol, one bullet recovered from Snyder’s leg was fired from the rifle, and others could not be clearly identified. Other forensic evidence established that shots had been fired in Shere’s car, that human blood was found on Shere’s boots, and that a hair from Snyder was found on Shere’s jacket.

The jury found Shere guilty and recommended the sentence of death by a vote of seven to five. In its written findings to support the death sentence, the trial court found three aggravating circumstances: 1) the murder was committed to disrupt or hinder the lawful exercise of a governmental function or the enforcement of laws by eliminating a witness;[5] 2) the murder was especially evil, wicked, atrocious, or cruel;[6] and 3) the murder was committed in a cold, calculated, and premeditated manner without any pretense of moral or legal justification.[7] In mitigation, the court wrote that it considered numerous possible mitigating circumstances, rejected some, and found that “the aggravating circumstances far outweighed the mitigating circumstances.”

https://law.justia.com/cases/florida/supreme-court/1991/74352-0.html

George Hodges Florida Death Row

george hodges

George Hodges was sentenced to death by the State of Florida for the murder of Betty Ricks. According to court documents George Hodges was mad that Betty Ricks filed a criminal complaint against him for indecent exposure so he would murder the woman outside of her work. George Hodges was arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Florida Death Row Inmate List

George Hodges 2021 Information

DC Number:117157
Name:HODGES, GEORGE M
Race:WHITE
Sex:MALE
Birth Date:08/15/1957
Initial Receipt Date:08/11/1989
Current Facility:UNION C.I.
Current Custody:MAXIMUM
Current Release Date:DEATH SENTENCE

George Hodges More News

In November 1986 Plant City Police arrested Hodges for indecent exposure based on the complaint of a twenty-year-old convenience store clerk. Around 6:00 a.m. on January 8, 1987, the day Hodges’ indecent exposure charge was scheduled for a criminal diversion program arbitration hearing, the clerk was found lying next to her car in the store’s parking lot. She had been shot twice with a rifle and died the following day without regaining consciousness.

Hodges worked on the maintenance crew of a department store located across the road from the convenience store. A co-worker told police that she saw Hodges’ truck at the convenience store around 5:40 a.m. on January 8. Hodges, however, claimed to have been home asleep at the time of the murder because he did not have to work that day. His stepson, Jesse Watson, and his wife, Jesse’s mother, supported his story. The police took a rifle from the Hodges’ residence that turned out not to be the murder weapon. The investigation kept coming back to Hodges, however, and the police arrested him for this murder in February 1989.

At trial, Watson’s girlfriend testified that, during the summer of 1988, she asked Hodges if he had ever shot anyone. She said he responded that he had shot a girl and had given Watson’s rifle to the police and had disposed of his.  Hodges’ wife, contrary to her original statement to the police, testified that she did not know if Hodges had been in bed all night or when he had gotten up, that her son and husband had identical rifles, and that she did not know that Hodges had been arrested for indecent exposure.

As did his mother’s, Watson’s trial testimony differed from his original statement. He testified that he and Hodges had identical rifles and that his, not Hodges’, had been given to the police. He said that he awakened before 6:00 a.m. the morning of the murder and heard Hodges drive up in his truck. Hodges then came into the kitchen carrying his rifle. When asked why he did not originally tell the police about this, he responded that he had wanted to protect Hodges. Watson also said that, two months after the murder, he saw the rifle in the back of Hodges’ truck, wrapped in dirty plastic, and that there was a hole in the ground near the toolshed. He also testified that, several months later, Hodges told him that he had shot the girl at the convenience store.

The jury convicted Hodges as charged, and the penalty proceeding began the following day. At the end of the defense presentation counsel told the court that Hodges had become uncooperative, and Hodges stated on the record that he did not want to testify in his own behalf. After the jury retired to decide its recommendation, it sent a question to the court regarding the instructions. The court had the parties return to discuss the jury’s request, but, shortly before that, Hodges had attempted to commit suicide in his holding cell. Defense counsel moved for a continuance and said that he could not waive Hodges’ presence. The court, however, held that Hodges had voluntarily absented himself, told the jury that Hodges was absent because of a medical emergency, and reread the instructions on aggravating and mitigating circumstances. When the jury returned with its recommendation of death, Hodges was still absent.

After accepting the jury’s recommendation, the court appointed two mental health experts to determine Hodges’ competency to be sentenced. These experts’ reports cautioned that Hodges might attempt to commit suicide again because of his anger and frustration, but concluded that he was competent to be sentenced. After considering these reports and hearing argument on the appropriate sentence, the court sentenced Hodges to death.

https://casetext.com/case/hodges-v-secretary

Norberto Pietri Florida Death Row

norberto pietri

Norberto Pietri was sentenced to death by the State of Florida for the murder of a police officer during a prison escape. According to court documents Norberto Pietri would escape from prison and was driving a stolen truck when he was pulled over by West Palm Beach Police Officer Brian Chappell . Norberto Pietri would shoot and kill the Officer as he approached the truck. Norberto Pietri would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Florida Death Row Inmate List

Norberto Pietri 2021 Information

DC Number:096867
Name:PIETRI, NOBERTO
Race:HISPANIC
Sex:MALE
Birth Date:03/13/1963
Initial Receipt Date:03/30/1990
Current Facility:UNION C.I.
Current Custody:MAXIMUM
Current Release Date:DEATH SENTENCE

Norberto Pietri More News

The Florida Supreme Court on Friday upheld a sentence of death for an escaped convict who fatally shot West Palm Beach police officer Brian Chappell three decades ago.

In one of dozens of death penalty cases the high court has decided in recent weeks, justices ruled that Norberto “Spiderman” Pietri isn’t entitled to a new sentencing hearing even though Florida’s former capital punishment system was struck down as unconstitutional, in part, because it didn’t require unanimous jury decisions.

While only eight of 12 jurors voted that Pietri should be put to death, his conviction became final in 1995. The Florida Supreme Court has previously ruled that only those sentenced to death after after June 24, 2002 could seek new sentencing hearings if the jury decision wasn’t unanimous.

The date marks the release of a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in an Arizona case that turned on similar issues. The decision put Florida officials on notice that its death penalty system was flawed, the state high court ruled.

Scores of police officers turned out at a hearing last year to persuade Palm Beach County Circuit Judge John Kastrenakes to keep Pietri on death row.

Noting that Pietri escaped prison, killed Chappell — who “didn’t even get his gun out” — and continued to commit violent crimes until he was recaptured, Kastrenakes called Pietri’s death sentence “absolutely appropriate.”

With six years on the police force, 31-year-old Chappell was shot after he stopped Pietri’s truck on Malverne Road just off Dixie Highway in August 1988. As Chappell walked to the driver side window, Pietri, then 25 and nicknamed “Spiderman” for the 3-inch spider tattoo on his neck, fired once with a 9mm semiautomatic pistol.

The bullet tore through Chappell’s chest. He staggered back, grabbed his portable radio and spoke his last four words: “Officer shot. Officer shot.”

Chappell is the last West Palm Beach officer slain in the line of duty.

https://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/crime–law/supreme-court-upholds-death-penalty-1988-murder-west-palm-cop/OGdenF4t64NGfgm1cP9X0N/

Phillip Wilkinson North Carolina Death Row

phillip wilkinson

Phillip Wilkinson was sentenced to death by the State of North Carolina for the murders of Judy Hudsonand her two children, Chrystal Hudson, and her son, Larry Hudson According to court documents Phillip Wilkinson would sexually assault and murder Cassandra Rundle and Chrystal Hudson before murdering Larry Hudson. The three were beaten to death with a bowling pin. Phillip Wilkinson was arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

North Carolina Death Row Inmate List

Phillip Wilkinson 2021 Information

Offender Number:0438643                                          
Inmate Status:ACTIVE
Probation/Parole/Post Release Status:INACTIVE
Gender:MALE
Race:WHITE
Ethnic Group:UNKNOWN
Birth Date:06/19/1967
Age:53
Current Location:CENTRAL PRISON

Phillip Wilkinson More News

On 9 January 1992, defendant turned himself in to the Fayetteville Police Department, waived his rights, and gave a tape-recorded confession to Sergeant Jeff Stafford. During this confession, defendant admitted to being a “peeping Tom”; to breaking and entering the apartment of Judy Hudson on 29 July 1991 in the middle of the night; to beating to death with a bowling pin Ms. Hudson, her nineteen-year-old daughter, Chrystal Hudson, and her eleven-year-old son, Larry Hudson; to attempting to rape Chrystal Hudson; to sexually assaulting and anally and vaginally penetrating Ms. Hudson and Chrystal Hudson; to stealing cigarettes, money, and a cigarette lighter from two pocketbooks in the apartment; and to breaking into the apartment a second time to retrieve the bowling pin and a lightbulb that he had used to sexually assault Ms. Hudson.

Defendant was subsequently indicted for three counts of first-degree murder, two counts of first-degree burglary, one count of attempted first-degree rape, four counts of first-degree sexual offense, and two counts of felonious larceny. On 22 August 1994, defendant pled guilty to all charges. After the presentation of evidence by the State regarding the basis for defendant’s pleas, the court directed that with respect to one of the first-degree burglary counts, it would instead proceed on a charge of second-degree burglary based upon the evidence that at the time defendant entered the Hudsons’ apartment, all victims were deceased.

https://law.justia.com/cases/north-carolina/supreme-court/1996/465a94-0.html

James Thomas North Carolina Death Row

james thomas

James Thomas was sentenced to death by the State of North Carolina for the sexual assault and murder of Teresa Ann West. According to court documents James Thomas would sexually assault and murder Teresa Ann West at the Sir Walter Tourist Home in Raleigh North Carolina. James Thomas would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

North Carolina Death Row Inmate List

James Thomas 2021 Information

Offender Number:0404386                                          
Inmate Status:ACTIVE
Gender:MALE
Race:BLACK/AFRICAN AMERICAN
Ethnic Group:UNKNOWN
Birth Date:01/19/1956
Age:65
Current Location:CENTRAL PRISON

James Thomas More News

 James Thomas assumes that he is going to die. It’s just that now he doesn’t know when.

He states this matter-of-factly as he strains to see the reporter through the thick glass and bars in the visitation room  at Central Prison. His speech is low and measured, that of a man who has had more than two decades to ponder his fate. He pauses frequently between thoughts as if he is weighing the effect everything he says will have on the public.

He was scheduled to make the walk to the Prison’s death chamber this coming Friday, but a court battle over the role of physicians in executions put his lethal injection and two others on hold last Thursday. Marcus Robinson had been scheduled to be put to death this past Friday, James Campbell on Feb. 9.

Wake County Superior Court Judge Donald W. Stephens granted injunctions in all three cases last week. At issue is a conflict between a North Carolina Medical Board Policy that prohibits doctors from taking part in an execution and state law that requires a doctor to be present.

Despite the injunction and assurances from his attorneys, Thomas is not convinced that he will not make the walk to the death chamber at the end of the week.

“I’m keeping my focus narrow right now, that in my mind Friday is still a possibility,” Thomas said.

Thomas was convicted in the 1986 killing of Teresa West in Wake County. She was strangled with a pair of pantyhose and sexually assaulted with a telephone receiver.

In court documents, attorneys said Thomas went to buy heroin from West, a Raleigh boarding house manager. They say his drug problem, along with a history of severe abuse as a child, caused him to act impulsively. Thomas says he thinks about what he did all of the time and makes no excuses.

“I can’t explain it to myself. I can’t explain it to myself,” said Thomas.

Thomas said that at one time he thought he deserved to die, but now, he added, he has changed for the better. He said that in prison, he has studied, taught others and developed a strong faith. He understands why some people, especially victim’s family members, want to see him executed, but he wants to live.

“Somewhere along the line, I realized that I could honor Teresa by being the best person I could be,” Thomas said.

Not everyone agrees with the judge’s decision to halt executions. Wayne Uber’s twin brother was murdered in Florida during an armed robbery. Since the incident, he has become an outspoken supporter of capital punishment.

“I think we’re showing a high amount of regard for the agony and pain that an inmate might feel and a lot of disregard for victims,” Uber said.

West’s uncle met with the governor when Thomas’ execution was still on the calendar. WRAL spoke with him last week after that meeting.

“It’s just a tragedy for both families. We have no malice, but we do want justice to be carried out and justice to be done,” said former Craven County Sheriff C.W. Bland.

Thomas likens death row to a neighborhood where he has gotten to know everyone—167 inmates to be exact— and their stories. He believes capital punishment is unjust and is something whose consequences state leaders should fully consider as they enter this debate.

“How do we punish? That’s what it’s about,” said Thomas.

Thomas knows that he may still have to make that walk to the death chamber at a later date, but hopes against hope that he will be spared.

“Deep down, I am absolutely hopeful that can happen,” said Thomas.

https://www.wral.com/news/local/story/1182895/