Andrew Cook Georgia Execution

andrew cook execution

Andrew Cook was executed by the State of Georgia for a double murder that took place in 1995. According to court documents Andrew Cook would shoot and kill two people Grant Patrick Hendrickson, age 22, and Michele Cartagena, age 19 who he picked at random. Andrew Cook would ultimately confess to his father, who was an FBI agent. Andrew Cook would be convicted and sentenced to death. Andrew Cook would be executed on February 21, 2013 by lethal injection

Andrew Cook More News

Andrew Cook apologized to his family and the families of the two people he murdered 18 years ago, but he didn’t ask for their forgiveness.

“I’m not going to ask you to forgive me,” Cook said a few moments before he was executed by lethal injection late Thursday for killing two Mercer University students on Jan. 2, 1995. “I can’t even do it myself.”

He said it was senseless to kill Grant Patrick Hendrickson and Michele Cartagena. Cook, then 20 years old, picked the couple at random when he came up on them parked at “the Point,” a small peninsula that juts into Lake Juliette. He fired 14 shots from an AR-15 and another five from a 9 mm Ruger at them and then dragged Cartagena about 40 feet from the car, partially undressed her, knelt between her legs and spit tobacco juice on her in an attempt to make it look like a robbery and sex crime, prosecutors said.

He thanked his family for “their support, for being with me, and I’m sorry I took so much from you all.”

At 11:22 p.m. Thursday, the 38-year-old Cook became the first person to be executed in Georgia using only one drug, a massive dose of pentobarbital. The state abandoned the three-drug combination it had used on 29 other men because two of the drugs were becoming impossible to secure.

His death came almost 5 1/2 hours after his final appeal was filed with the U.S. Supreme Court just before 6 p.m. He had been scheduled to die at 7 p.m. Thursday, but the state put his lethal injection on hold until the Supreme Court denied his appeal just before 11 p.m.

His lawyers asked for mercy by claiming Cook had changed during his time in prison and was a good man, that he had become spiritual while on death row and he wanted to help the families of his victims.

Hendrickson’s mother, Mary, told a Macon television station that the 18-year wait has been hard.

“I think that’s what it was: the devil’s work,” she told WMAZ-TV. “When all that is going on, I was just thinking to myself: ‘Well, the devil is not going to win. He’s not going to win over my heart. He is not going to win.’”

Two days earlier, Warren Hill won a stay of his execution set for Tuesday evening with a claim that that he had new evidence proving beyond a reasonable doubt that he is mentally ill. Hill was serving a life sentence in 1990 for killing his 18-year-old girlfriend four years earlier when he beat to death his cellmate, Joseph Handspike, with a nail-studded board, saying “you ain’t bad now.”

In Cook’s case, it was harder to connect him to his victims than it was to connect Hill to Handspike because Cook had no connection to Hendrickson or Cartagena. Investigators had a report of a Honda CRX seen driving off. They knew the types of weapons used. And they had recovered DNA in the tobacco juice spit on Cartagena’s leg.

Investigators contacted Cook two years after the crime as they were seeking DNA samples from area people who owned weapons like those used to kill Hendrickson and Cartagena.

To get a reluctant Cook to cooperate, an investigator asked Cook’s father, then an FBI agent, for help. Andrew Cook confessed to his father, and then John Cook relayed the details to investigators. The father also testified at his son’s trial.

According to pleadings filed in the final days before the execution, John Cook “did what he thought was right” and he never expected his son to get the death penalty.

But instead of Cook “harboring bitterness toward his father,” his attorneys wrote, “Andy has embraced him … Andy has never wavered in his support for his father.

https://www.ajc.com/news/breaking-news/andrew-cook-apologized-before-his-execution/0OIWh7AT7IQSlmOqdOgfSO/

Anna Schroeder Teen Killer Murders Mom

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Anna Schroeder was fifteen years old when she shot and killed her mother in Illinois. According to court documents Anna Schroeder and her girlfriend Rachel Helm planned the murder of Peggy Schroeder so the two could be together. Anna Schroeder would fatally shoot her mother in the head. This teen killer would plead guilty to second degree murder and would be sentenced to twenty years in prison. Rachel Helm is waiting to go on trial for helping to clean up the murder scene

Anna Schroeder 2023 Information

Anna Schroeder 2022
Parent Institution:LOGAN CORRECTIONAL CENTER
Offender Status:IN CUSTODY
Location:LOGAN

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Nineteen-year-old Anna Schroeder was sentenced Friday to 20 years in prison more than four years after she fatally shot her mother in the head in their Morrison home.

“I’m the child who shot and killed her own mom,” a tearful Schroeder said from the witness stand in a Whiteside County Courtroom.

“That is how people know me, that is how people will always know me, and that is how I deserve to be known. My mom doesn’t deserve to be known as my victim. She deserved to be known as a great mom.”

Before handing down the sentence, Whiteside County Judge Trish Senneff said the case was one of the most “egregious and despicable” cases she can recall in her almost 37 years in law.

“The callous disregard for the life of Peggy Schroeder, the adoptive mother of the defendant, is disgusting,” she said.

Schroeder will receive credit for 1,581 already served in juvenile detention and the Whiteside County Jail. She also will get day-for-day credit and must serve one year of mandatory supervised release once she completes her sentence, Senneff ordered.

Schroeder, who was charged as an adult, pleaded guilty in January 2020 to second-degree murder in her mother’s death. In exchange for her plea, Whiteside County State’s Attorney Terry Costello dismissed two counts of first-degree murder and one count each of arson and concealment of a homicidal death.

She was 15 when prosecutors say she shot her mother in the head in their Morrison home on July 6, 2017. Leading up to the shooting, Schroeder and her girlfriend, then 15-year-old Rachel Helm, sent multiple text messages about killing Peggy Schroeder so that they could be together.

After killing her mother, Schroeder called Helm and sent her a picture of her mother’s body when the teen said she didn’t believe she had killed her. Later that night, Helm’s mother dropped her off at Schroeder’s house and the two tried cleaning up the crime scene and planned to run away.

Two days later, Helm set fire to linen on Schroeder’s bed and a sheet covering Peggy Schroeder’s body.

Anna Schroeder was later located at her father’s home in Walnut.

Helm, now 19, is awaiting trial on charges of arson and concealment of a homicidal death. The case is still pending.

Peggy Schroeder’s sister, Charlene Wilkinson, spoke in court about the shock she felt when she found out what happened.

“Why would Anna ever intentionally kill Peggy?” she said. “Peggy loved you so much. She gave you all her time when you needed her.”

Costello recommended the maximum sentence, pointing to the brutality of the crime and the need to send a message to the community.

“This case cries out for a 20-year sentence,” he said.

Defense attorney Jim Mertes argued for a 12-year sentence, citing her severe mental health challenges and the influence of Helm.

According to Mertes, she was a “perfectly horrible catalyst for a perfectly horrible storm.”

During her statement, Schroeder apologized to her family and Peggy Schroeder.

“I didn’t think about what I was doing,” she said. “I didn’t think about forever. I want to go back to when I was little, and I wish I could. I wish I could go back to where we were eating ice cream, and watching movies…I wish I could go back to when she was proud of me.”

In handing down the sentence, Senneff acknowledged that Helm “very much encouraged this act.”

“What it boils down to is this: There is no evidence that Anna Schroeder did not know the difference between right and wrong,” she said. No one forced her to commit this act. She thought of a plan to kill her mother and burn down her house to cover it up.

“She chose to act in this evil manner and then tried to get away with it.”

Schroeder will receive credit for 1,581 already served in juvenile detention and the Whiteside County Jail. She also will get day-for-day credit and must serve one year of mandatory supervised release once she completes her sentence, Senneff ordered.

https://www.kwqc.com/2021/11/05/morrison-teen-sentenced-20-years-prison-fatally-shooting-mother/

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Anna Schroeder is currently incarcerated at the Logan Correctional Center

Anna Schroeder Release Date

Anna Schroeder is not eligible for release until 2037

Paul Taylor Pennsylvania Death Row

paul taylor

Paul Taylor was sentenced to death by the State of Pennsylvania for the murders of five family members. According to court documents Paul Taylor would use a knife and a ball peen hammer to kill his wife, two children and two other family members. Paul Taylor would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Paul Taylor 2021 Information

Parole Number: BT2525
Age: 61
Date of Birth: 06/09/1960
Race/Ethnicity: BLACK
Height: 6′ 04″
Gender: MALE
Citizenship: USA
Complexion: DARK
Current Location: PHOENIX

Permanent Location: PHOENIX
Committing County: YORK

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A York man who admitted to killing his wife, children and two other family members 30 years ago is scheduled for execution next month, corrections officials said.

Paul Gamboa Taylor is scheduled to be executed May 14, said Maria Bivens, spokeswoman for the Department of Corrections.

It is, however, unlikely, that this punishment will be carried out on that date, as Gov. Tom Wolf declared a moratorium on capital punishment in 2015. Pennsylvania last carried out an execution in 1999.

Taylor admitted to using a kitchen knife and ball-peen hammer to kill his wife, his children Jasmine, 2, and Paul, 4, his mother-in-law, Donna Barshinger, her son Lance, 2, on May 17, 1991. He did not harm an infant child.

He told authorities he was drinking that night and had used free-based cocaine before voices in his head told him to kill his family and himself.

Afterwards he tried to commit suicide by slashing his wrists, stabbing himself in the abdomen, drinking household chemicals and getting into a bathtub of water in which he placed a running hair dryer.

Taylor pleaded guilty to a first-degree murder charge. His lawyer Matthew C. Lawry later tried to have his death sentence overturned in several appeals by claiming Taylor was severely mentally ill. Lawry said Taylor at one point wanted to be executed.

Before his guilty plea was accepted, a psychologist and psychiatrist evaluated Taylor and found he had some mental illness but was competent.

https://www.pennlive.com/crime/2021/04/execution-date-set-for-york-county-man-who-admitted-to-killing-5-family-members.html

Michael Conforti Pennsylvania Death Row

michael conforti

Michael Conforti was sentenced to death by the State of Pennsylvania for the sexual assault and murder of a woman. According to court documents Michael Conforti and James Bellman would leave a bar with the victim who was later sexually assaulted and murdered. Michael Conforti and James Bellman would be arrested and convicted. James Bellman would commit suicide in prison and Michael Conforti was sentenced to death

Michael Conforti 2021 Information

Parole Number: BQ0537
Age: 66
Date of Birth: 04/10/1955
Race/Ethnicity: WHITE
Height: 5′ 11″
Gender: MALE
Citizenship: USA
Complexion: LIGHT
Current Location: PHOENIX

Permanent Location: PHOENIX
Committing County: WAYNE

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On December 20, 1990, Kathleen Harbison, the victim, was with her friend Sue Fritz at Cousins Restaurant and Bar in Wayne County. While there she was seen in the company of appellant and James Bellman, both of whom she had met for the first time. During the early morning hours of December 21, 1990, Ms. Harbison left the bar to warm up her car while Ms. Fritz said goodbye to some friends. A few minutes later Ms. Fritz found Ms. Harbison’s car in the parking lot with the engine running, the driver door locked, the passenger door unlocked, the heater running, the radio on high volume and Ms. Harbison’s purse on the seat. Ms. Harbison was *534 nowhere to be found. Bellman was seen in his car, parked next to Ms. Harbison’s car, before Ms. Fritz came outside.

A neighbor of appellant’s in Pike County testified that at around 2:30 a.m. on December 21, 1990, she heard a car come down the road and then heard appellant’s voice, Bellman’s voice and also heard a female voice “holler” something. (N.T. 9/16/91, p. 193-194). A friend of appellant’s testified that she went to see appellant at his trailer home at 3:30 a.m. on December 21, 1990 but got no response when she banged on both the door and the window. She stated that appellant’s car was at the trailer but Bellman’s car was not there. (N.T. 9/18/91, p. 182). The following day, this friend was visited by appellant and Bellman. They tried to convince her that she was mistaken and must have seen Bellman’s car there. She would not change her story and they left.

Kathleen Harbison’s body was found on December 22, 1990 in a secluded wooded area in Wayne County. The cause of death was multiple stab wounds. She had been stabbed twelve times. Four of the wounds were lethal. There was evidence that Ms. Harbison had been bound at both at the wrists and ankles by handcuffs and that the acts were committed by more than one individual.

Analysis of swabbings from the victim’s body revealed the presence of sperm from the same blood type as that of Bellman’s. A foreign pubic hair found within Ms. Harbison’s combings was similar to appellant’s. Soil samples taken from Ms. Harbison’s shoe were similar to soil samples taken from behind appellant’s trailer and not similar to soil samples taken from the scene where her dead body was found. Divers recovered a knife and handcuffs from under the Ledgedale Bridge, eight-tenths of a mile from appellant’s trailer. Another set of handcuffs and Ms. Harbison’s eyeglasses were found across the road from appellant’s residence. A ring found in appellant’s burn barrel outside of his trailer was identified as belonging to Ms. Harbison.

Bellman testified as follows: On December 21, 1990 at approximately 2:00 a.m., he and Ms. Harbison left the bar in *535 Wayne County and went to appellant’s trailer home in Pike County. Appellant forced Ms. Harbison to engage in oral sex after directing Bellman to handcuff Ms. Harbison. Appellant then indicated to Bellman that he wanted to kill Ms. Harbison. The victim was then placed in Bellman’s car and driven to an isolated dirt road in Wayne County where she was pulled from the car by appellant and Bellman. Appellant then repeatedly stabbed Ms. Harbison with a knife he had obtained from his trailer before they had left.

Bellman further testified as follows: that after the killing, he and appellant stopped at the Ledgedale Bridge where appellant threw the knife and handcuffs into the water. They then burned all of their blood-stained clothing and the car mats from Bellman’s car in appellant’s burn barrel and cleaned and vacuumed appellant’s trailer and Bellman’s car. Bellman identified the knife recovered from under the bridge as being the murder weapon.

Based upon the foregoing evidence, a jury convicted appellant on September 20, 1991 of murder of the first degree

https://law.justia.com/cases/pennsylvania/supreme-court/1993/533-pa-530-1.html

Aaron Jones Pennsylvania Death Row

aaron jones

Aaron Jones was sentenced to death by the State of Pennsylvania for a gang related murder. According to court documents Aaron Jones who was the leader of the Junior Black Mafia was responsible for drug trafficking in the Philadelphia area. Aaron Jones would order the murder of Brian Kennedy to protect his drug business. Aaron Jones would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Aaron Jones 2021 Information

Parole Number: 5249O
Age: 59
Date of Birth: 12/07/1961
Race/Ethnicity: BLACK
Height: 6′ 00″
Gender: MALE
Citizenship: USA
Complexion: LIGHT
Current Location: PHOENIX

Permanent Location: PHOENIX
Committing County: PHILADELPHIA

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On January 19, 1993, appellant was convicted of first degree murder and criminal conspiracy to commit murder in connection with the August 18, 1990, shooting death of Brian Kennedy.   Following a penalty hearing, the jury determined that the one aggravating circumstance it unanimously found outweighed the one mitigating circumstance it found and returned a verdict of death on the murder charge.1

The facts underlying appellant’s conviction were set forth at length in this Court’s opinion on direct appeal.   See Commonwealth v. Jones, 542 Pa. 464, 668 A.2d 491 (1995).   In brief, the trial evidence showed that appellant was the leader of the “Junior Black Mafia” (JBM), an organization which distributed drugs within Philadelphia.   Appellant orchestrated the murder of Brian Kennedy in order to avenge the death of Leroy Davis, another high-ranking member of the JBM, who was believed by the organization to have been murdered by Brian Thornton.   However, Thornton was incarcerated when appellant planned his revenge.   Thus, appellant and his co-defendants decided to “hit” Thornton’s cousin, Kennedy, in order to avenge Davis’ death and to send a message to Thornton that killing a fellow JBM member would not go unpunished.   Appellant facilitated Kennedy’s murder by inter alia:  instructing his co-defendants on where and how to murder Kennedy, arranging for the car that was used in the murder, and supplying funds to help his co-defendants abscond after the murder.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/pa-supreme-court/1461783.html