Chancey Luna Teen Killer Murders Chris Lane

chancey luna teen killer

Chancey Luna was a seventeen year old teen killer from Oklahoma who would shoot and kill Chris Lane because he was bored. According to court documents Chancey Luna was driving around with Michael Jones and James Edwards Jr when he saw Chris Lane jogging along the side of the road. Chancey Luna would fire a gun at him which would strike and kill the promising baseball player. Chancey Luna was initially sentenced to life in prison however is currently going through the resentencing process.

Chancey Luna 2023 Information

chancey luna 2021 photos
Offender: Chancey A. Luna
OK DOC#: 717249

Gender: Male

Race: Black

Height: 5 ft 11 in

Weight: 196 lbs

Hair Color: Black

Eye Color: Brown


Alias: Chancey Luna


OK DOC#: 717249Birth Date: 4/30/1997


Current Facility: R.B. DICK CONNER CORRECTIONAL CENTER, HOMIN

Reception Date: 6/18/2015

Chancey Luna More News

An Oklahoma teenager convicted of murdering a college baseball player in 2013 was sentenced Tuesday to life in prison without parole.

Chancey Luna, 18, was found guilty in April of first-degree murder in the shooting death of Christopher Lane, a 22-year-old Australian on a baseball scholarship at East Central University.

Luna and two other friends were accused of shooting Lane in the back while he jogged — later telling investigators that they did it because they were bored, Duncan police said.

One of the co-defendants struck a deal to testify against Luna, while the third teen, Michael Jones, was sentenced to life in prison in March.

Luna was tried as an adult in the case, although his defense team argued he should have been in juvenile court because he was 16 at the time. They also claimed the teens wanted to scare Lane, not kill him

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/bored-teen-chancey-luna-sentenced-life-slaying-australian-student-n376746

Chancey Luna Other News

In an unexpected revelation, the convicted murderer who fatally shot an Australian college student has admitted that he was part of a gang and sold drugs for a living after dropping out of high school.

A judge sentenced Chancey Allen Luna, 18, on Tuesday to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Stephens County District Judge Ken Graham said he found no reason to depart from the jury’s recommendation.

Jurors in April found Luna guilty of first-degree murder, dismissing his attorney’s claim that he had been trying only to scare the student as he jogged along Country Club Road in north Duncan just before 3 p.m. Aug. 16, 2013.

https://tulsaworld.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/duncan-teen-gets-life-without-parole-for-fatal-shooting-of-australian-college-student/article_33ba0ea6-914c-57ba-9225-17755cddb65b.html

Chancey Luna Videos

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Chauncey Luna is currently incarcerated at the R.B Dick Conner Correctional Facility

Chauncey Luna Release Date

Chauncey Luna is currently sentenced to life without parole however is currently going through a resentencing process

Abel Elias Acosta Teen Killer Wanted In Triple Murder

Abel Elias Acosta 2021

Abel Elias Acosta, a suspected teen killer, is being searched for by police in Garland Texas for a shooting that would leave three teenagers dead. According to reports Abel Elias Acosta allegedly walking into the gas station convienene store and would open fire killing three teenagers.  Richard Acosta, who was waiting outside of the store in a white pickup truck in which Abel Elias Acosta would jump into following the triple murder has been arrested however his fourteen year old son Abel is considered to be armed and dangerous by Garland Texas police.

Abel Elias Acosta More News

Dallas-area police have charged a 14-year-old with capital murder in a triple killing at a gas station, and are warning that the boy is at large, armed and dangerous.

Detectives in Garland are seeking Abel Elias Acosta, and said Wednesday that they have evidence showing he was the gunman who left three teens dead and wounded a fourth at the suburban gas station’s convenience store Sunday.

Police say Acosta is the son of 33-year-old Richard Acosta, who turned himself into police Monday evening, and is also charged with capital murder for allegedly acting as a get-away driver in the shooter.

https://www.myhighplains.com/news/texas/police-teen-charged-in-garland-killing-is-loose-dangerous/

Abel Elias Acosta Other News

Police have named an alleged shooter in the killing of three teenagers at a convenience store in Garland, and authorities are still searching for the suspect, officials announced in a news release Wednesday.

Police identified the suspect as 14-year-old Abel Elias Acosta and said Acosta should be considered armed and dangerous. Police said detectives believe Acosta is “actively evading capture” and asked for the public’s help, according to the news release.

Police said his father, Richard Acosta Jr., 33, who was arrested Tuesday, was the getaway driver in the shooting.

The shooting happened the day after Christmas. Police on Wednesday said the shooting was spurred by a previous disturbance between Abel Acosta and one of the victims inside the convenience store, though more information was not released.

“This is a heinous crime. The mind behind this type of offense…it’s so hard to comprehend,” Garland police PIO Pedro Barineau told WFAA. “At age 14, if he’s willing to do this, we don’t know what the future holds. But we know that he’s willing to kill.”

One day later, police said a 14-year-old – a different teen, not Abel Acosta – was in custody and believed to have pulled the trigger. 

But about 24 hours after announcing the teen’s arrest, police reversed course saying new information revealed the teen had direct knowledge of the crime, but they no longer believed him to be the shooter.

Detectives obtained a directive to apprehend Abel Acosta, which is ordered by a juvenile court judge to take a child into custody on the request of law enforcement.

Garland police said they do not typically release juvenile information but that “due to the nature of the offense and potential risk to the public, the court has authorized the release of his information.”

WFAA also does not typically release the name of juveniles, or post their picture, but is doing so because police are looking for Acosta and say he is armed and dangerous.

Anyone who sees Acosta or knows his whereabouts is asked to call 911 immediately. 

Garland Crime Stoppers is offering up to $5,000 for information that leads to an arrest. Crime Stoppers tips can be submitted by phone at 972-272-8477 or on the Garland Crime Stoppers website.

Acosta is not the 14-year-old who was taken into custody on Monday, though that teen, whose name has not been released, “remains a person of interest in the investigation,” the news release from Garland police said. The teen was released to his family and is cooperating with the investigation, police said.

Police said detectives discovered evidence that identified Acosta as the shooter who killed three other teenagers Sunday evening at a Texaco store in the 700 block of Walnut Street. Police did not provide more information about the evidence they found.

The victims were identified as 14-year-old Xavier Gonzalez, 16-year-old Ivan Noyala and 17-year-old Rafael Garcia. 

The fourth victim, a 15-year-old boy who worked at the taco stand inside the gas station, was said to be in stable condition in a local hospital, per police.

The shooter could be seen shirtless on surveillance video, getting out of a white pickup truck and going to the front door of the store, where he fired his weapon.

Police said 33-year-old Richard Acosta Jr., Abel Acosta’s father, was driving the pickup truck. Richard Acosta Jr. was arrested Tuesday, but police said he was not the shooter.

“The fact that we’re putting it all together now and realizing the driver, who voluntarily turned himself in, is the father of the shooter, Abel Acosta, it blows us away,” Barineau told WFAA. “As a father, you look at the youth, the future of society, those that are going to be leading us…and the fact that there are some…and this is a very few some, that are willing to do this type of violence, it blows me away. It’s so hard to comprehend.”

Richard Acosta is being held at the Garland Detention Center with his bond set at $1 million.

https://www.wfaa.com/article/news/crime/police-name-different-14-year-old-as-suspect-in-garland-texaco-convenience-store-shooting-say-hes-armed-and-dangerous/287-17f9895f-210d-4c7e-a12c-d4371c8b5ac7

Abel Elias Acosta Video

Garland Texas Shooting

Abel Acosta Other News

A $10,000 reward has been offered for any information leading to the apprehension of 14-year-old Abel Elias Acosta, who is the shooter responsible for killing three and wounding a fourth at a convenience store on December 26, 2021.

In addition to the Garland Crimestoppers reward of $5,000, Jerry Reynolds, talk show host on WBAP Radio, has offered an additional $5,000, making the total reward of $10,000.
Abel Acosta is described as a light-skinned Hispanic male with dark hair, brown eyes, approximately 5’ 05” in height, and weighing around 125 pounds.

Abel Acosta is considered armed and dangerous. Anyone who knows the whereabouts of Abel is encouraged to call 911 immediately.

Garland Police Lt. Pedro Barineau said, “He could be here in town, he could be in a surrounding city, we don’t have his exact known whereabouts but somebody does and we need their help”

Detectives obtained a Directive to Apprehend Abel Elias Acosta, age fourteen (14). Abel is facing the charge of Capital Murder for the shooting death of the three teenagers.
A Directive to Apprehend is defined by Texas Family Code, 52.015 as:

a) On the request of a law enforcement or probation officer, a juvenile court may issue a directive to apprehend a child if the court finds there is probable cause to take the child into custody under the provisions of this title.

Information detectives discovered shows that the driver of the truck, Richard Acosta, who previously turned himself in, is the father of the shooter, Abel Acosta.

Detectives have discovered the shooting was in retaliation to a disagreement between Acosta and one of the victims. The three victims who died were identified Monday as Xavier Gonzalez, 14, Ivan Noyola, 15, and Rafael Garcia, 17.

https://www.focusdailynews.com/10000-reward-offered-for-the-apprehension-of-abel-acosta/

Abel Acosta Wanted Poster

abel acosta wanted

Jeremy Everett Goodale and Willard Noble Chaiden Miller Charged With Teachers Murder

jeremy goodale and willard chaiden miller photos

Jeremy Everett Goodale and Willard Noble Chaiden Miller are two teen killers who have been charged in the murder of their spanish teacher Nohema Graber. According to early reports the two teen stalked the women and learned all of her behaviors before the day of the murder. The murder which took place in November 2021 when Jeremy Everett Goodale and Willard Noble Chaiden Miller would grab Nohema Graber and drag her into the woods where she was beaten to death. Graber body would be found the same day she was reported missing,

Right now the argument is whether or not Jeremy Everett Goodale and Williard Noble Chaiden Miller should be tried as juveniles or as adults. The difference if convicted in sentencing is drastic.

Jeremy Everett Goodale and Willard Noble Chaiden Miller More News

The county attorney prosecuting the case of two southeast Iowa teens who were charged with murdering their high school Spanish teacher said in court documents that the students surveilled the pattern of her life, ambushed her along her daily walk and dragged her into the woods.

The teens murdered Nohema Graber, 66, and later returned to hide her lifeless body. The chilling new details were revealed in a December 23 filing in the case of Jeremy Everett Goodale, 16, of Fairfield. Goodale was charged with murder and conspiracy to commit murder with classmate Willard Miller, 16.

Graber originally hailed from Xalapa, Mexico. She had been teaching Spanish at Fairfield High School since 2012, although it’s unclear whether she had been the suspects’ teacher at some point. The 66-year-old previously taught in the Ottumwa Community School District. The two 16-year-old students have been charged with the death of the high school teacher after her body was found concealed in a park in Iowa. Authorities revealed on Thursday, November 4, that Nohema Graber was reported missing on Tuesday, November 2.

Her remains were found later that day at the Chautauqua Park in Fairfield, about 100 miles southeast of Des Moines. The Jefferson County Sheriff’s Department said Willard Noble Chaiden Miller and Jeremy Everett Goodale, both students at the school, were charged as adults with first-degree homicide and conspiracy to commit first-degree homicide.

Authorities confirmed later that Graber suffered ‘inflicted trauma to the head’. Her body was found concealed under a tarp, wheelbarrow and railroad ties at the Chautauqua Park in Fairfield. Authorities are yet to release a motive behind the murder. Jefferson County Attorney Chauncy Moulding said that Jeremy Everett Goodale must be tried as an adult because if he is tried and convicted in the juvenile court system, he would have to be released in less than 24 months, at the age of 18. 

“This prosecuting attorney cannot fathom any combination of programming at any Iowa juvenile facility which could appropriately treat or rehabilitate the defendant if adjudicated as a juvenile,” he said. Both the teens have pleaded not guilty.

Following the murder, Iowa State Education Association President Mike Beranek said in a statement, “an act like this is unspeakable, and we are torn that one of our education family is a victim to such a senseless act. Every day, educators work tirelessly to protect the students in their care. With full hearts and deep commitment, educators have been the backbone of our state and our nation during this unprecedented time. We cannot understand this, or any violence aimed at such guardians,” he had added.

https://meaww.com/nohema-graber-murder-iowa-teens-surveilled-teacher-for-days-ambushed-her-during-walk

Willard Miller and Jeremy Everett Goodale Other News

Two Iowa teenagers have been charged with first-degree murder after authorities say they brutally beat to death a 66-year-old Spanish teacher.

The elderly female teacher is said to have died as a result of head trauma

Police say 16-year-olds Willard Miller and Jeremy Everett Goodale killed 66-year-old Nohema Graber, their Spanish teacher at Fairfield High School in Fairfield, Iowa, in November.

According to reports, Goodale and Miller publicly discussed how they watched Graber, followed her, and killed her with a bat. The two are said to have hidden her body in a local park underneath both a tarp and a wheelbarrow.

Her lifeless body was discovered just one day after she was reported missing.

Authorities said that Jeremy Everett Goodale wrote Snapchat messages — which are ephemeral in nature — describing how the attack unfolded, which prompted an acquaintance to save the messages in order to prove how the two “were involved in the planning, execution, and disposal of evidence” in connection with Graber’s murder.

Miller is said to have admitted to the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation that he provided the wheelbarrow that obscured Graber’s body

Fox News on Thursday reported that Judge Shawn Showers this week denied defense attorneys’ requests that a hearing on whether the two teens will be tried in adult court be kept private. According to the report, the judge said the defense “failed to show how allowing the public at the hearing would be unfair to their clients” and declined the request

Showers has scheduled Goodale’s trial for Aug. 23 and Miller’s trial for Nov. 1.

The Des Moines Register reported that In Iowa, anyone age 16 years or more and who has been charged with a forcible felony is automatically waived to adult court and is “subject to the same criminal procedures and penalties as adults.”

The outlet added that while the adult sentence for murder is life in prison in Iowa, in 2016, the Iowa Supreme Court prohibited judges from handing down sentences of life without parole for offenders under age 18.

https://www.theblaze.com/news/brutal-baseball-bat-killing-of-elderly-teacher-sees-2-teens-facing-murder-charges#toggle-gdpr

Michael Gonzales Texas Death Row

Michael Gonzales texas death row

Michael Gonzales was sentenced to death by the State of Texas for a double murder committed during a robbery. According to court documents Michael Gonzales would break into his neighbors home and when the couple awoke Gonzales would stab both of them to death. Michael Gonzales would be arrested ,convicted and sentenced to death

Michael Gonzales 2021 Information

Michael Gonzales

Inmate Number – 999174

GonzalesMichael09/01/1973MHispanic04/21/1994

Michael Gonzales More News

A man convicted of killing his neighbors decades ago now has a date set for his execution.

Michael ‘Spider’ Gonzales, 50, was in court on Wednesday for a hearing to decide the date. The date has now been set for March 8, 2022.

Gonzales was charged with the murders of Manuel and Merced Aguirre back in 1995.

An investigation found that Gonzales was burglarizing the couple’s home when they woke up. Gonzales then stabbed Manuel and Merced several times.

Gonzales then stole a VCR, a microwave oven, a camera, a .22-caliber revolver and a purse. He was arrested later that day.

He was sentenced to death on December 12, 1995. He has been on death row ever since.

https://www.cbs7.com/2021/09/01/execution-date-set-michael-spider-gonzales/

Michael Gonzales Other News

Michael Dean “Spider” Gonzales sat quietly as his execution orders were read aloud and signed by Ector County Judge John Shrode of the 358th District Courtroom.

Gonzales’ execution by lethal injection is scheduled for sometime after 6 p.m. March 8, 2022, at the Correctional Institutions Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice at Huntsville.

The hearing took place Wednesday afternoon, which also happened to be Gonzales’ 48th birthday.

The occupied gallery in the 358th District Courtroom listened silently to the execution orders.

Gonzales entered the courtroom quietly and left without saying anything to the gallery. The gallery was also asked by the courtroom bailiff to not say anything and make any hand gestures toward Gonzales who was wearing thick-rimmed glasses, his black hair still combed from front to back with a full beard that featured grey hairs poking through his mask.

Gonzales was sentenced to death for the April 22, 1994, stabbing deaths of Manuel and Merced Aguirre, and has been going through appeals since his initial 1995 conviction and 2009 resentencing.

The Aguirres were longtime neighbors of Gonzales.

According to court records, Gonzales was convicted of the offense of capital murder on Dec. 7, 1995. On Dec. 8, 1995, the court sentenced Gonzales to death in accordance with the findings of the jury. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the conviction and sentence and denied the defendant’s initial state habeas application. The defendant was retried on punishment in 2009.

On May 7, 2009, the court again sentenced the defendant to death in accordance with the findings of the jury, the court records show. The Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the sentence and subsequently dismissed the defendant’s state habeas application.

Matthew Reeves Alabama Death Row

matthew reeves alabama

Matthew Reeves was sentenced to death by the State of Alabama for a murder committed during a robbery. According to court documents Matthew Reeves and his brother Julius would rob the victim and would shoot and kill him during the robbery. Matthew Reeves would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Matthew Reeves 2021 Information

Inmate: REEVES, MATTHEW
AIS: 0000Z636
  
Institution: HOLMAN PRISON

Matthew Reeves More News

On November 27, 1996, Matthew Reeves (who was 18 years old at the time) and his younger brother, Julius, visited Brenda Suttles and Suttles’s 15-year-old cousin, Emanuel, at Suttles’s house on Lavender Street in Selma.   There, according to Suttles, everyone agreed to go out “looking for some robberies.”  (R. 684.)   Shortly after noon that day, the foursome left Suttles’s house on foot and walked to a nearby McDonald’s restaurant, where they saw Jason Powell driving by in his car.   The appellant’s brother, Julius, flagged Powell down, and Powell agreed to give the group a ride.

Brenda Suttles and Emanuel Suttles testified that after the foursome got into Powell’s car, Julius Reeves suggested that they go to White Hall, a town in neighboring Lowndes County, to rob a drug dealer.   According to Brenda Suttles, everyone in the car agreed to the plan.  (Powell, who also testified at trial, denied hearing the discussion about a robbery.)   Before leaving Selma, the group stopped at an apartment on Broad Street.   Julius Reeves went inside the apartment and returned to the car a short time later carrying a shotgun, which he handed to the appellant.   With Powell driving, the group then headed for White Hall.

Before they reached White Hall, however, Powell’s car broke down on a dirt road off Highway 80.   Shortly thereafter, a passing motorist, Duane Smith, stopped and told the group that he was in a hurry to meet some friends to go hunting, but that he would return around sunset and would take them to get help then.   For the next couple of hours, the group sat in Powell’s car and listened to music, until another passing motorist, Willie Johnson, stopped in his pickup truck and offered to tow Powell’s car to Selma.   Using some chains that he kept in his pickup truck, Johnson hooked Powell’s car to the back of his truck.   With Julius Reeves riding in the truck with him and the others in Powell’s car, Johnson towed the car to the Selma residence where the appellant and Julius lived with their mother.

When they arrived at the Reeveses’ house, Julius Reeves got out of Johnson’s truck and told the others that Johnson wanted $25 for towing them.   However, no one had any money to pay Johnson.   Julius Reeves then offered to give Johnson a ring as payment if Johnson would drive him to his girlfriend’s house to get the ring.   Johnson agreed and he unhooked Powell’s car from his truck.   According to Jason Powell and Emanuel Suttles, Julius Reeves at this point told the others that Johnson was going to be their robbery victim.   While Jason Powell and Emanuel Suttles stayed behind with Powell’s car in front of the Reeveses’ house, Julius Reeves got back in the cab of the truck with Johnson, and Brenda Suttles climbed into the rear bed of the truck.   Testimony indicated that when Johnson started the truck, the appellant jumped into the rear bed of the truck with the shotgun, hiding the weapon behind his leg as he did so.

When they arrived at Julius’s girlfriend’s house in Johnson’s truck, Julius went inside and retrieved the ring he had promised to give Johnson as payment.   According to Brenda Suttles, when Julius came out of the house, he walked to the rear of Johnson’s truck and told her and the appellant that he was not going to let Johnson keep the ring.   After Julius got back in the cab of the truck, Johnson drove everyone back to the Reeveses’ house.

Jason Powell and Emanuel Suttles, who had remained at the house with Powell’s car, testified that sometime around 7:00 p.m., they saw Johnson’s truck drive by the house and turn into an alley-known as Crockett’s Alley-behind the house.   According to Brenda Suttles, who was in the rear bed of the truck with the appellant, just as the truck came to a stop in the alley, she heard a loud “pow” sound.  (R. 704.)   Suttles testified that when she looked up, the appellant was withdrawing the barrel of the shotgun from the open rear window of the truck’s cab.   Johnson had been shot in the neck and was slumped over in the driver’s seat.   Suttles testified that Julius Reeves jumped out of the truck’s cab and asked the appellant what he had done, and that the appellant then told Julius and Suttles to go through Johnson’s pockets to “get his money.”  (R. 704.)   Suttles stated that Julius then pulled Johnson out of the truck and went through his pockets, giving the money he found in the pockets to the appellant.   After Julius had gone through Johnson’s pockets, Suttles helped him put Johnson back in the truck’s cab.   According to Suttles, Johnson was bleeding heavily and making “gagging” noises.  (R. 721.)

Jason Powell and Emanuel Suttles testified that they heard the gunshot after Johnson’s truck pulled into Crockett’s Alley and that a short time later they saw the appellant, Julius Reeves, and Brenda Suttles run out of the alley and into the Reeveses’ house.   The appellant was carrying a shotgun, they said.   They followed the appellant, Julius Reeves, and Brenda Suttles into the Reeveses’ house and saw the appellant place the shotgun under a bed in his bedroom.   The appellant told Julius and Brenda Suttles to change out of their bloodstained clothes and shoes, and he took the clothes and shoes and stuffed them under a dresser in his bedroom.   According to Emanuel Suttles, as the appellant, Julius, and Brenda changed their clothes, they were “jumping and hollering” and celebrating about “all the stuff [they] got” from Johnson.  (R. 842.)   Jason Powell testified that he heard the appellant say, “I made the money.”  (R. 786.)

After changing their clothes, Matthew Reeves Julius Reeves, and Brenda Suttles ran to Suttles’s house.   On the way, the appellant stopped to talk to his girlfriend, telling her that if she should be questioned by the police, to tell them that he had been with her all day.   At Suttles’s house, the appellant divided the money taken from Johnson-approximately $360-among himself, Julius Reeves, and Brenda Suttles.   Testimony indicated that throughout the evening, the appellant continued to brag about having shot Johnson.   Several witnesses who were present at Suttles’s house that evening testified that they saw the appellant dancing, “throwing up” gang signs, and pretending to pump a shotgun.   Brenda Suttles testified that as the appellant danced, he would jerk his body around in a manner “mock[ing] the way that Willie Johnson had died.”  (R. 713.)   The appellant was also heard to say that the shooting would earn him a “teardrop,” a gang tatoo acquired for killing someone.  (R. 720.)

Yolanda Blevins, who was present during the post-shooting “celebration” at Suttles’s house, testified that Matthew Reeves called her into the kitchen and told her that he had shot a man in a truck after catching a ride with him.   Blevins noticed that there was what appeared to be dried blood on the appellant’s hands.   LaTosha Rodgers, who was also present at Suttles’s house, testified that the appellant told her that he had “just shot somebody” in the alley.  (R. 924.)

At around 2:00 a.m. on November 28, 1996 (approximately seven hours after the shooting), Selma police received a report of a suspicious vehicle parked in Crockett’s Alley.   When police officers investigated, they found Johnson’s body slumped across the seat of his pickup truck.   There was a pool of blood on the ground on the driver’s side of the truck.   Several coins and a diamond ring were on the ground near the truck.   On the floorboard of the truck, police found wadding from a shotgun shell.   The pockets of Johnson’s pants had been turned inside out and were empty.   Testimony at trial indicated that Johnson was a longtime employee of the Selma Housing Authority and that on the afternoon of November 27, 1996, he had cashed his paycheck, which had been in the amount of $500.

At the shooting scene on the morning of November 28, police also discovered a trail of blood leading from Johnson’s truck to the Reeveses’ house.   Randy Tucker, a canine-patrol officer with the Selma Police Department, testified that his dog tracked the blood trail from the pool of blood next to Johnson’s truck, down Crockett’s Alley, through the yard at 2126 Selma Avenue (the residence next to the alley), and ultimately to the front steps of the Reeveses’ house at 2128 Selma Avenue.

Pat Grindle, the detective in charge of investigating Johnson’s murder, went to the Reeveses’ house after learning that the blood trail led there.   Det. Grindle testified that he obtained the consent of the appellant’s mother, Marzetta Reeves, to search the house.   In a bedroom shared by the appellant and Julius, Det. Grindle found bloodstained clothes and bloodstained shoes;  under a bed in this bedroom, Det. Grindle found a shotgun.   In searching the kitchen, Det. Grindle found a pair of bloodstained pants.   After making these discoveries, Det. Grindle questioned Marzetta Reeves and several other persons who were in the house at that time.   Det. Grindle stated that he learned that the bloodstained clothes and shoes belonged to Julius Reeves, Brenda Suttles, and Matthew Reeves.   Det. Grindle then went to Suttles’s house in an attempt to locate the three.   At Suttles’s house, Det. Grindle found the appellant lying on a couch in a front room.   The appellant was placed under arrest, and the officers seized a balled-up bloodstained jacket he was using as a headrest on the couch.   Det. Grindle later returned to the Reeveses’ residence, where he seized a 12 gauge shotgun shell from a garbage can in the bathroom.

An autopsy revealed that Johnson had died from a shotgun wound to his neck that severed the carotid artery, causing him to bleed to death over a period of several minutes.   Bloodstain patterns in Johnson’s truck indicated that he was sitting upright in the driver’s seat, facing forward, when he was shot from behind, through the open rear window.   The bloodstain patterns also indicated that the driver’s side door had been opened and closed shortly after Johnson was shot.

Testimony indicated that the Matthew Reeves’s fingerprints were found on the shotgun that Det. Grindle had seized from under the bed in the appellant’s bedroom.   Brenda Suttles’s and Julius Reeves’s fingerprints were found on a fender of Johnson’s truck.   Joseph Saloom, a firearms expert with the Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences, testified that the shotgun shell seized from the bathroom at the Reeveses’ residence was of the type commonly fired from the shotgun seized from the appellant’s bedroom.   Saloom stated that the shotgun-shell wadding found on the floorboard of Johnson’s truck was of the type commonly found in the kind of shotgun shell seized from the bathroom at the Reeveses’ residence.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/al-court-of-criminal-appeals/1095438.html

Matthew Reeves Execution

The Alabama killer who was executed Thursday by lethal injection for a 1996 murder remained silent during the procedure at Holman Prison.

Matthew Reeves, 43, was convicted of capital murder for murdering a driver who gave him a ride in 1996. Willie Johnson, the victim, died from a shotgun blast to the neck during the robbery. He picked up Reeves, 18 at the time, who was on the side of the road. Evidence showed he went to a party afterward and celebrated the killing with blood still on his hands.

He was pronounced dead at 9:35 p.m. local time. The Associated Press reported that he craned his neck to look a few times around the death chamber and grimaced and looked toward his left arm toward the intravenous line. “With his eyes closed and mouth slightly agape, Reeves’ abdomen moved repeatedly before he grew still,” AP reported.

A last-minute fight by his lawyers seeking to stop the execution involved his intellect, his rights under federal disability law and how the state planned to kill him. Reeves claimed he had intellectual disabilities that prevented him from understanding the form offering him the chance to choose nitrogen hypoxia — a method never used in the U.S. — over lethal injection, which the inmate’s lawyers called “torturous.

Reeves also claimed the state failed to help him understand the form. But the state argued he wasn’t so disabled that he couldn’t understand the choice. A poor reader and intellectually disabled, Reeves isn’t capable of making such a decision without assistance that should have been provided under the American With Disabilities Act, his lawyers argued. A prison worker who gave Reeves a form didn’t offer aid to help him understand, they said.

With Reeves contending he would have chosen nitrogen hypoxia over a “torturous” lethal injection had he comprehended the form, the defense filed suit asking a court to halt the lethal injection. U.S. District Judge R. Austin Huffaker Jr. blocked execution plans, ruling that Reeves had a good chance of winning the claim under the disabilities law.

A defense expert concluded Reeves had a first-grade reading level and the language competency of someone as young as 4, but the state disagreed that Reeves had a disability that would prevent him from understanding his options.

An Alabama inmate who was put to death by lethal injection last year, Willie B. Smith, unsuccessfully raised claims about being intellectually unable to make the choice for nitrogen hypoxia.

https://www.foxnews.com/us/alabama-killer-executed-for-brutal-murder-of-driver-in-1996