Vernon Yancey Alabama Death Row

Vernon Yancey alabama

Vernon Yancey was sentenced to death by the State of Alabama for the murder of store clerk. According to court documents Vernon Yancey would shoot and kill a store clerk during a robbery. Vernon Yancey would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Vernon Yancey 2022 Information

Inmate: YANCEY, VERNON LAMAR
AIS: 0000Z618
  
Institution: HOLMAN PRISON

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The State’s evidence tended to show that on March 23, 1995, Mattie “Pee-Wee” Sports was shot and killed with a sawed-off shotgun in Tyler’s Grocery Store where she worked as a cashier. On the night of the murder, at approximately 10:30 p.m., Sports and Lisa Navas, Sport’s daughter-in-law, were working at Tyler’s store when a customer entered. Approximately 10 minutes later, as the customer was leaving the parking lot of the store, he witnessed Yancey walking in the direction of the store and then turn away from the store. He was wearing only blue jeans; he was not wearing a shirt. Approximately five minutes after the customer left the store, a man wearing an orange ski mask and gloves and carrying a sawed-off shotgun, which was concealed by a raincoat entered the store. He walked directly toward Sports, pointed the shotgun at her, and fired it once, shooting her in the face from close range. She was killed instantly. Navas attempted to run to the bathroom and lock the door, but the man chased her and prevented her from doing so. He demanded money from her, and Navas gave him money from one of the cash registers,2 as well as money that was kept inside a Benson and Hedges brand carton of cigarettes. The man appeared to know that there was more money in the store than what was in the cash register. The owner the store later testified that approximately $1,500 was taken during the robbery. As Navas knelt down to obtain the money, she looked up and recognized the man as a frequent customer of the store, because the ski mask was loose and did not completely cover his face. She testified that she recognized his eyes and that she could clearly see his face. She stated that she then averted her eyes because she feared that he would realize that she had recognized him. The man took the money and ran from the store. Navas, who was then lying on the floor by the victim, pushed a silent alarm button and called emergency 911 and waited for the police. She described the robber as wearing blue jeans but no shirt. She further informed the police that the store operated a security video tape, which was located in the owner’s office and which filmed the store at all times from behind the counter. The police telephoned the owner of the store and asked to view the security tape. The owner recognized the robber as a frequent customer and, although he could not recall his name, told the police that he worked for Rusco Plumbing, a business located close to the store. He stated that he knew of this employment because he often cashed payroll checks for the man. The owner stated that the man was easily identifiable because of his walk, which resembled that of a penguin. The police were subsequently able to identify Yancey after speaking with his employer. It was determined that Yancey lived on Rise Road, which was located very near the store and, in the course of searching the area surrounding the store following the crime, officers traveled down a path that lead to Rise Road. In doing so, they recovered an orange ski mask, which was subsequently identified by Yancey’s coworkers as belonging to him; paper straps containing money and loose dollar bills; unspent shotgun shells; a green raincoat; an empty Benson and Hedges brand cigarette carton; and a pair of gloves with the word “Buck” written on them. Yancey’s coworkers also testified that they had seen him with these gloves before the murder, and the owner of the gloves identified them and stated that he had lost them on a job site where Yancey was also working. Under an abandoned house close to Yancey’s home, officers found shotgun shells and a shotgun with a sawed-off barrel which was later determined to have fired the spent shotgun shell through the right barrel. A witness who also had lived on Rise Road close to Yancey’s house testified that the shotgun had belonged to him and that it had been stolen from his house. He testified that, when he heard of the offense, he checked to see if the shotgun was missing and determined that it was gone. Another witness testified that he had recently loaned Yancey his hacksaw, which Yancey had returned to him a few days before the murder.

Yancey was arrested at his house; he had to be subdued with the use of pepper spray. A police officer testified that he noticed a bruise on Yancey’s torso at the level of his bicep; an expert witness for the State testified that such a bruise might be consistent with an injury caused from firing a sawed-off shotgun. A hair sample was taken from Yancey to compare with hairs found inside the ski mask, and they were determined to be consistent with Yancey’s hair.

Yancey did not testify during the guilt phase at trial. However, the defense presented the testimony of Yancey’s mother, who stated that Yancey was at home at the time of the offense.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/al-court-of-criminal-appeals/1241585.html

Why Is Vernon Yancey On Death Row

Vernon Yancey was sentenced to death for the murder of a store clerk

When Is Vernon Yancey Execution

Vernon Yancey execution has yet to be scheduled

John Ward Alabama Death Row

john ward alabama

John Ward was sentenced to death by the State of Alabama for the murder of his infant. According to court documents the infant mother would call 911 stating that the infant was not breathing. The ambulance attempted to resuscitate the infant to no avail. The doctor examined the infant and had determined the infant had been deceased for sometime. Upon autopsy the doctors detailed a number of injuries to the infant and shortly after John Ward would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

John Ward 2022 Information

Inmate: WARD, JOHN MICHAEL
AIS: 0000Z653
  
Institution: HOLMAN PRISON

John Ward More News

“On April 22, 1997, at 7:28 A.M. an operator at the Baldwin County 911 Center received a call from Michelle Milner Ward, who stated that her baby was not breathing. Ten minutes later paramedics arrived at the Wards’ residence, a 16′ x 7′ travel trailer. After receiving Nicholas Ward’s body from John Michael Ward (hereinafter ‘Ward’) the paramedics attempted resuscitation by intubation while en route to the South Baldwin Regional Medical Center. The emergency room attending physician, Dr. Robert Revel, examined the infant determining that he was not breathing, had no pulse, was cold to the touch and had rigor mortis. The doctor pronounced the child dead on arrival. In addition to the lack of vital signs, Dr. Revel observed abrasions on Nicholas’s scalp, nose and mouth area, pus-like material in his eyes, blood in the ears, bruises on the neck and chest, stool in the diaper, a deformity on his right arm, and crusty material in some nail beds.

“After the examination, Dr. Revel interviewed both parents. The father stated that Nicholas had been struck on the head by a folding chair falling from a shelf and that the baby had had breathing problems later in the day. The mother had wanted to seek medical attention, but that the father did not think it necessary.

“Dr. Harold Reed, a pediatrician, answered the code call in the emergency room. He testified that he also examined the body and found the internal body temperature was 88 degrees.

“Because foul play was suspected, hospital personnel contacted the Baldwin County Sheriff’s office. Officer John Stewart arrived first and was followed by Chief Investigator Huey Mack, Jr. Officer Mack also observed abrasions on Nicholas’s forehead, nose and mouth, bruises on the chest and arm, and missing toenails. He notified the Baldwin County coroner and the Department of Forensic Science of the unnatural death. Mr. Mack testified that the mother appeared to be upset during the administration of the last rites, but Ward was emotionless.

“Investigator Mack left the hospital and met Chuck Machette, a caseworker with the Baldwin County Department of Human Resources at the Ward residence. The crime scene was photographed and videotaped. Ward and his wife participated in the taping. Mack took into his possession a blood-stained pillow from the bed where the parents said Nicholas had been sleeping the night before. Subsequent DNA testing revealed the blood belonged to Nicholas.

“Dr. James Downs, the state medical examiner, performed the autopsy on Nicholas. He photographed and videotaped the body during the course of the autopsy. The pictures recorded the various injuries to the baby’s body. From the autopsy procedure, Dr. Downs concluded that Nicholas had been an infant that failed to thrive. In addition, the child suffered multiple fractures to the arms and ribs and damage to the toenails and fingernails. He opined that Nicholas suffered a spiral fracture of the right arm the day before death. Dr. Downs determined the cause of death to be multiple blun-t force injuries and suffocation.

“Michelle Milner Ward testified that early in her relationship with Ward he placed his hand over her mouth and threatened to suffocate her. Ward continued to physically abuse his wife throughout the marriage.

“Nicholas was born in December 1996, as the second child of her marriage to Ward. In January 1997, Mrs. Ward fled to her mother’s home in Mobile, taking Nicholas and his sister, [A.W.]. After remaining there one month, Mrs. Ward and the children moved to Penelope House, a Mobile County Shelter for battered women. After one month there, the mother and children returned to Ward’s trailer in Magnolia Springs. Ward inflicted numerous injuries on his four month old son and murdered him by suffocation in the early morning hours of April 22, 1997.”

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/al-court-of-criminal-appeals/1777470.html

Why Is John Ward On Death Row

John Ward was sentenced to death for the murder of his infant

When Is John Ward Execution

John Ward execution has yet to be scheduled

Anthony Tyson Alabama Death Row

anthony tyson alabama

Anthony Tyson was sentenced to death by the State of Alabama for the murders of two men during a robbery. According to court documents Anthony Tyson would shoot and kill the two men during a robbery. Anthony Tyson would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Anthony Tyson 2022 Information

Inmate: TYSON, ANTHONY
AIS: 0000Z641
  
Institution: HOLMAN PRISON

Anthony Tyson More News

The State’s evidence tended to show that on January 4, 1997, Porter Key, an employee of Henry Trucking Company, was driving on Franklin Road in Macon County when he discovered the body of Derek Cowan in the middle of the road.   Key saw a green Acura automobile roll off the road and strike a fence.   The car then backed up onto the road and sped off in the direction of Tuskegee.   He thought that the driver of this car had been involved in a hit-and-run accident so he followed the car.   He was unable to keep up, and he lost the car somewhere in Tuskegee.   Cowan had not been the victim of an accident, but had been shot twice in the back of the head.   Within minutes after Key discovered Cowan’s body, the body of Damien Thompson was discovered slumped forward in the passenger side of an Acura automobile that was in the bushes at the intersection of Bull Avenue and Anona Street in Tuskegee.   Thompson had been shot twice in the head.

Alphonso Cardwell testified that he and Cowan were scheduled to meet for a drug exchange on a dirt road off County Road 36 on January 4, 1997.   He testified that as he was driving to the designated location he saw Cowan, Thompson, and a third male, whom he identified at trial as Tyson, drive by in a green Acura.   The Acura was being followed by another vehicle driven by Cornelius Drisker.   Cardwell arrived at the location and Cowan and Cardwell made the exchange.   Cardwell testified that he gave Cowan $300 in exchange for cocaine.   Minutes after the drug exchange, Cowan’s body was discovered.   Witnesses testified that one of his pockets was turned inside out.   The $300 was missing.

Police connected Tyson to the murders while investigating a shooting in Union Springs that occurred 10 days after the double murder in Macon County.   Nicholas Martin testified that Tyson and three other people shot at him from a car as he was walking his dog.   He testified that he recognized Tyson and that he went to the police station and signed a warrant for his arrest.1  The gun identified as the gun used in the Union Springs shooting was the murder weapon in the double murder.

Numerous forensic evidence connected Tyson to the double murder.   After executing a search warrant on Tyson’s apartment, based on evidence obtained in the investigation of the Union Springs shooting, police recovered a Lorcin chrome .380 pistol and bloodstained Nike brand sneakers.   A DNA analysis of the blood on the sneakers revealed that the blood matched Thompson’s blood.   Tyson’s fingerprints were also recovered from the green Acura.   Spent shell casings recovered from the Acura, near Cowan’s body, and from the Union Springs shooting were identified as having been fired by the same gun, a Lorcin .380, which was identified as being Tyson’s.

Tyson’s defense at trial was that he did not kill Cowan and Thompson.   He attempted to connect a third person to the killings-the man who had been seen in a car with the victims earlier on the day of the murders.   Tyson attempted to show that this other person could have committed the murders.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/al-court-of-criminal-appeals/1096229.html

Why Is Anthony Tyson On Death Row

Anthony Tyson was sentenced to death for two murders

When Is Anthony Tyson Execution

Anthony Tyson Execution has yet to be scheduled

Jarrod Taylor Alabama Death Row

jarrod taylor alabama

Jarrod Taylor was sentenced to death by the State of Alabama for a triple murder that occurred during a robbery. According to court documents Jarrod Taylor would fatally shoot three people during a robbery at a car dealership. Jarrod Taylor would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Jarrod Taylor 2022 Information

Inmate: TAYLOR, JARROD
AIS: 0000Z638
  
Institution: HOLMAN PRISON

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The state of Alabama’s plans to execute a man convicted in a triple-murder more than two decades ago are on hold after the belated discovery that he had opted for a new method of execution that has not been developed.

On July 29, the attorney general’s office filed a motion asking the Alabama Supreme Court to set an execution date for Jarrod Taylor, who killed three people during a robbery of a car dealership in Mobile in 1997.

Taylor has been on death row since 1998 and had no pending appeals, the motion said. It said Taylor had not opted for nitrogen hypoxia, a method of execution that inmates could choose instead of lethal injection under a bill passed by the Legislature last year.

But Taylor’s lawyer, Joshua Myrick, responded with a motion saying that Taylor had opted for nitrogen hypoxia before the June 30, 2018 deadline and had documentation to back that up..

On Aug. 2, the attorney general’s office asked the Supreme Court to withdraw the request for an execution date.

That motion says Taylor’s lawyer sent a copy of Taylor’s signed form electing nitrogen hypoxia dated June 28, 2018, as well as contemporaneous emails about Taylor’s decision.

The motion says that Taylor indicated he signed two election forms, gave one to his lawyer and the other to an Alabama Department of Corrections employee to give to the warden. The motion says the attorney general’s office never received a copy of the form and that the ADOC did not have the form in its files.

“Nevertheless, the documentation provided by Taylor’s counsel supports the assertion that he made a timely election of nitrogen hypoxia,” the AG’s motion says. “The State intends to honor that election.

“As the ADOC is not yet prepared to proceed with an execution by nitrogen hypoxia, the state requests that it be allowed to withdraw its previous motion.” The Supreme Court granted the request on Aug. 6.

Today, the attorney general’s office declined to comment beyond what was stated in the motion. The ADOC also declined comment.

Fifty-one Alabama death row inmates opted for nitrogen hypoxia before last year’s deadline, the Associated Press reported last year.

No state has done executions by nitrogen hypoxia. Mississippi and Oklahoma have also passed laws for nitrogen executions but have not announced a protocol.

The attorney general’s office has not released any information about the state’s efforts to develop the nitrogen method of execution.

The AG’s office has hired an industrial safety expert under a contract related to nitrogen executions but has declined to explain the purpose and declined AL.com’s request for a copy of the contract under the state’s public records law.

Court records describe Taylor’s crimes as methodical and heartless. He fatally shot Sherry Gaston, a salesperson at the car dealership, her husband Bruce Gaston, and Steve Dyas, the co-owner of the dealership. The victims were begging for their lives when Taylor shot them, according to testimony from Taylor’s accomplice, who entered a plea deal.

https://www.al.com/news/2019/08/mistake-forces-state-to-call-off-plans-to-execute-triple-murderer.html

Why Is Jarrod Taylor On Death Row

Jarrod Taylor was sentenced to death for a triple murder

When Is Jarrod Taylor Execution

Jarrod Taylor execution has yet to be scheduled

Calvin Stallworth Alabama Death Row

calvin stallworth alabama

Calvin Stallworth was sentenced to death by the State of Alabama for the deaths of two store clerks in two incidents. According to court documents Calvin Stallworth would shoot and kill a store clerk at one store and then would shoot and kill a store clerk at another store ten days apart. Calvin Stallworth would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Calvin Stallworth 2022 Information

Inmate: STALLWORTH, CALVIN L
AIS: 0000Z649
  
Institution: HOLMAN PRISON

Calvin Stallworth More News

On December 4, 1997, John Gregory entered the Dukes Parkway Shell gasoline service station in Foley and discovered Nancy Dukes behind the counter on her knees with her arms and face in a chair. She had been stabbed numerous times, but she was still breathing. Gregory called for help, but Dukes died before the paramedics arrived. The coroner testified that Dukes had been stabbed approximately 40 times and that she died as a result of those injuries. There was testimony that between $400 and $600 was missing from the cash register.

“On December 14, 1997, Van Gardener discovered Linda Morton’s body lying face down on the floor behind the counter at the Diamond Gas Station and Convenience Store in Foley. The coroner testified that Morton had been stabbed six times and that she died as a result of those injuries. An audit of the cash register revealed that it was $934.00 short.

“While investigating Morton’s murder, police used a bloodhound at the Diamond store. The bloodhound went to a trail behind the store that went through a small wooded area and led to the Aaronville community. On the trail, police discovered a broken VCR, identified as the VCR from the Diamond store, and a bag of receipts that contained checks and credit card receipts. An eyewitness, Olivia Woodyard, testified that around the time of Morton’s murder she saw Stallworth leaving the trail behind the Diamond store. Woodyard testified that Stallworth was acting strangely and was nervous. She also testified that Stallworth had told her a few days before the robbery/murder that he was under a lot of stress because Christmas was near and he had no job. Another eyewitness testified that he saw a male wearing a dark, hooded jacket run from the Diamond store around the time of Morton’s murder.

“Numerous witnesses testified that Calvin Stallworth was spending a lot of money between December 4 and December 16, although he was not employed. Christina Lorraine Waters, a former employee of Riviera Utilities, testified that on December 4, 1997, just hours after Dukes was robbed and killed, Calvin Stallworth paid a delinquent electric power bill for his fiancée in the amount of $167.12. (Stallworth’s fiancée, Deborah Pickens, told him that the electric power had been cut off on the morning of December 4.) Waters also testified that when she was taking Stallworth’s payment, another employee was on the telephone and you could overhear her talking about Nancy Dukes’s murder. Waters said that when Stallworth heard the statement about Dukes’s murder he reacted by saying ‘Oh, man’ and hanging his head. (R. 268.) Glenn Manning, the owner of Manning Jewelry in Foley, testified that on December 4, 1997, Stallworth paid him $100 for jewelry repairs that he had completed. Calvin Stallworth was also reported to have made several cash purchases at a Wal–Mart discount store.

“On December 16, 1997, the investigation focused on Calvin Stallworth, and police discovered that Stallworth was wanted for a probation violation. Police picked Stallworth up for the probation violation, questioned him about the two murders, and obtained a search warrant to search his fiancée’s home, where he was living. Police seized a hooded jacket that had blood on the inside of one of the sleeves. DNA testing revealed that the blood on the jacket matched Dukes’s DNA. The search of Stallworth’s fiancée’s house also revealed a serrated kitchen knife under the mattress. Experts testified that the knife was the same type of knife used to kill both Dukes and Morton.

“Calvin Stallworth gave several statements to police—each of which varied in some detail. Stallworth admitted that he was at the scene of both robbery/murders, but he denied killing either Dukes or Morton. Stallworth also admitted that he had removed the VCR from the Diamond store because, he said, he knew the videotape would show him in the store. Stallworth said that he took the VCR to a trail behind the Diamond store and he used a hammer to open it and destroy the tape. Stallworth also told police that he found a bag of money on the trail and that he took the money and left.

“Stallworth testified in his own defense at trial. He said that he had not been at either scene and that his statements to police were coerced. He said that he had an alibi for the time of both murders. (Defense witnesses also testified that he had an alibi.) Stallworth also testified that he paid his bills in December 1997 with his ‘cousin’s help, shooting dice, and selling a little marijuana.’ (R. 3950.) He said that police coerced him to confess that he had been present at the Dukes station and the Diamond store after police threatened his daughter, his wife, his mother, and his brother. He further testified that Woodyard lied about seeing him near the Morton murder scene because, he said, he ‘wouldn’t give her no drugs, no free drugs.’ (R. 3989.) He also said that somebody in the police department planted Dukes’s blood on his jacket. (R. 4006.)”

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/al-court-of-criminal-appeals/1649311.html

Why Is Calvin Stallworth On Death Row

Calvin Stallworth was sentenced to death for two murders

When Is Calvin Stallworth Execution

Calvin Stallworth execution has yet to be scheduled