Terrick Nooner Arkansas Death Row

terrick nooner arkansas death row

Terrick Nooner was sentenced to death by the State of Arkansas for the murder of a man in Little Rock. According to court reports the victim, Scot Stobaugh, entered a laundromat where he was ambushed. The man was shot several times and died from his injuries. Police would later learn from a friend of Terrick Nooner that he was responsible for the brutal murder. Terrick Nooner would be convicted and sentenced to death.

Arkansas Death Row Inmate List

Terrick Nooner 2021 Information

ADC Number 000926

Name: Nooner, Terrick

Race BLACK Sex MALE Hair Color BLACK Eye Color BROWN

Height 69 inches Weight 252 lbs.

Birth Date 03/17/1971

Initial Receipt Date 09/02/1987

Facility Varner Supermax

Terrick Nooner More News

On March 16, 1993, at approximately 1:30 a.m. Scot Stobaugh entered the FunWash laundromat on West Markham Street in Little Rock to do laundry. While there, he was shot seven times and died of multiple gunshot wounds. He was found lying face down on the laundromat floor in a pool of blood. Subsequent examination showed that he was shot twice in the upper right arm and five times in the back in what later were described as contact wounds. Seven .22 caliber shell casings were found on the floor close to the body together with a tan hat, keys, and a jar of Carmex lip salve. His Chevrolet Beretta was parked in the laundromat’s parking area unlocked, with its parking lights on, and with keys in the ignition. A ring and a neck band remained on the victim’s body.

The FunWash laundromat had three surveillance cameras in operation at the time of the shooting which recorded on one VHS videotape. The general manager of the business, Janie White, helped investigating police *681 officers from the Little Rock Police Department retrieve the videotape. The videotape depicted Stobaugh and a second person accosting him in the laundromat. It did not show the actual murder.

Detective Joe Oberle, a homicide detective with the Little Rock Police Department, took possession of the videotape and had still photographs made from the frames that included the victim and the suspect. Detective Oberle used several private firms in Little Rock to enhance the tape in order to obtain the clearest still picture possibleColor Masters, Camera Mart, and Jones Productions. In four of the enhanced photographs, the victim’s face was “mosaicked out” at the request of his family and one of those photographs was given to the news media to assist in the investigation. Rick Adcock with the Little Rock Police Department Crime Scene Search Unit also made still photographs from the videotape.

Ron Andrejack, the firearms examiner for the State Crime Laboratory, examined the bullets and shell casings found at the crime scene and determined that five of the seven bullets were fired by the same firearm. The other two bullets were too damaged for any conclusion to be reached. He further determined that all seven shell casings were fired from the same gun. By examining the various marks on the bullets and shell casings, he ultimately concluded that the characteristics on the bullets and shell casings were consistent with a .22 long rifle Ruger semi-automatic pistol.

In a matter of days, the police investigation centered on Nooner due in large part to statements given to Detective Oberle by Antonia “Toni” Kennedy, a friend of Nooner’s. Antonia Kennedy is the sister of Jazmar Kennedy, who identified Nooner in the surveillance photographs at trial, and the sister of Terri Kennedy, who was Nooner’s girlfriend at the time of the trial and who testified as a defense witness. Antonia Kennedy implicated Nooner in the FunWash shooting and subsequently testified at trial that on the morning after the shooting Nooner told her that he had murdered Scot Stobaugh after demanding money from him. She added that she had seen Nooner with a .22 Ruger pistol that day and had kept the gun for Nooner for a brief period of time. Nooner was arrested on April 23, 1993, and charged with capital murder, aggravated robbery, and theft of property.

On September 20, 1993, a seven-day trial commenced. Nooner was convicted of capital felony murder with aggravated robbery and theft of property as the underlying felonies. After the penalty phase of the trial, the jury found two aggravating circumstances: (1) that Nooner had previously committed another felony, an element of which was the use or threat of violence; and (2) that the murder was committed for pecuniary gain. The jury found no mitigating circumstances and returned a verdict of death by lethal injection

https://law.justia.com/cases/arkansas/supreme-court/2005/cr94-358-361.html

Ray Dansby Arkansas Death Row

ray dansby arkansas death row

Ray Dansby was sentenced to death by the State of Arkansas for the murders of his ex wife and her boyfriend. According to court documents Ray Dansby went over to his ex wives home and waited for her to return from the store. When she pulled in the driveway she was confronted by Ray Dansby who would shoot her in the neck and in the head. Ray Dansby then went into her home and shot her boyfriend who was asleep on the couch. Ray Dansby would be convicted and sentenced to death for the two murders

Arkansas Death Row Inmate List

Ray Dansby 2021 Information

ADC Number 000925

Name: Dansby, Ray

Race BLACKSex MALE Hair Color BALD Eye Color BROWN

Height 74 inches Weight 322 lbs.Birth Date 03/03/1960

Initial Receipt Date 06/17/1993

Facility Varner Supermax

Ray Dansby More News

The facts as related by the various witnesses are these. On the morning of August 24, 1992, Brenda Dansby left her residence at 1402 North Roselawn in El Dorado to go to the store to get her eight-year-old son, Justin, some orange juice, as he was sick with a cold. Brenda’s boyfriend, Ronnie Kimble, was sleeping on a couch in the living room, while Justin was seated in a red chair in the same room watching television. According to Justin, his father, Appellant Ray Dansby, came around the side of the house to the front yard as his mother was pulling up into their driveway in her car. Ray ordered her to get out of the car twice before she complied. Justin looked out the screen door and watched as his father “had my mother *334 like a shield” then “shot [her] in the arm and then in the neck.” Ray then came in the house, and, according to Justin, it was after Ray shot Ronnie in the chest that Ronnie got his gun, which was located underneath the couch, and positioned himself behind it. Justin had returned to his seat on the red chair, and “was afraid I was going to get shot so I lifted my feet up.” Justin further testified that he heard “clicking noises” and that Ronnie shot his gun, but that, to his knowledge, the weapon never did fire. Ray then chased Ronnie through a straight hallway to Justin’s room in the back of the house, and thereafter, Justin heard about five more shots. It was Justin’s testimony that he retreated to his mother’s room to see what had happened, and saw his father standing by Ronnie, observed him kick Ronnie twice, and heard Ray say something to him, though he could not remember what it was. As Justin exited the house, he saw his mother, who “had blood all over her neck” and “wasn’t moving.” He then left with his father, and the two walked down the road, and when they separated, Justin called the police from another residence.

Greg Riggins, Brenda’s neighbor who lived across the street, testified that he was in bed when he heard shots, at which time he jumped up and went to his front door, where he witnessed Brenda and Ray struggling with a revolver. He watched as Ray, who was standing directly behind Brenda, hit her in the back with his fist, knocking her down into the corner of the house. According to Mr. Riggins, Ray got the gun away from Brenda, stood two or three feet away from her, and shot two rounds consecutively, knocking her flat on the ground. As Brenda tried to sit up, Ray discharged another shot, which Mr. Riggins believed missed Brenda. It was Mr. Riggins testimony that “then after maybe five or six seconds he paused and the next shot went off. I assume he hit her in the head and her head launched and she went flat.” Mr. Riggins stated that Justin was standing by the second post at the front of the house and witnessed his mother’s murder. He further testified that, while he did not see any shots coming from the house, Ray ducked and hesitated before firing a shot, then went into the house after someone inside.

Several El Dorado police officers were dispatched to the residence at approximately 8:28 a.m., one of whom was Officer Larry Weaver. He arrived at the scene to find Brenda’s body outside, and Ronnie injured on the floor in the back bedroom, who was attempting to crawl and had a .38 automatic pistol laying under him which was jammed and opened where it would not work. Ronnie died several days later at an area hospital, after telling Detective Carolyn Dykes that Ray had shot him.

Shortly thereafter, Officer Mike Stegall located Ray walking on a nearby street, at which point Ray flagged him down, stating that “I’m Ray Dansby, ya’ll are looking for me.” When Officer Stegall inquired as to whether he had any guns on him, Ray replied that he had thrown them away. After being transported to the police station, Ray was verbally advised of his rights by Lieutenant Mike Hill, then stated that he left the scene with a .32 revolver and a .38 revolver, which he threw away where officers would never find them. Ray further stated to the officers that he took the weapons to Brenda’s residence because he knew that she had a .38 and that Ronnie had a handgun of some type. According to Ray, upon his arrival at the residence, he walked in the front door, where he was met by Ronnie, who was holding a handgun in his right hand “pointed down.” After an argument or discussion erupted, Ray said, “I just pulled my gun and started shooting.” After making these statements and submitting to a gunshot residue test, Ray signed a written rights waiver form, but refused to give a taped statement.

Lt. Hill stated that he was present when a.38 Interarms blue steel revolver was recovered under a manhole cover in the bottom of a drainage ditch on a street approximately three to four blocks from Brenda’s residence. At the time of recovery, the weapon, which was registered to Brenda, had five expended cartridge cases in the cylinder.

Sergeant Ricky Roberts testified that, along with a set of car keys, a purse, and a gun carrying case, four .32 caliber live rounds of ammunition were found under *335 Brenda’s body. Additionally, seven rounds of .38 caliber ammunition were laying around her body, and another .38 round was found on the porch. Inside, Sgt. Roberts stated that there was blood behind and on the back of the couch in the living room, as well as on a dress on an ironing board and on some houseshoes which were both located behind the couch. A silver-tipped round .38 bullet was also recovered from behind the couch, similar to two rounds found in the clip and the one jammed inside the .38 Colt automatic which was recovered near Ronnie, but different from the other .38 rounds recovered.

https://law.justia.com/cases/arkansas/supreme-court/1995/cr-94-30-1.html

Jack Greene Arkansas Death Row

jack greene arkansas death row

Jack Greene was sentenced to death by the State of Arkansas for the murder of a retired pastor. According to court documents Jack Greene was confronted by the retired pastor regarding an arson in the preceding days. Jack Greene would respond to the allegations by bashing his head with the can of hominy, cut him from mouth to ear, and fired a .25 caliber pistol into his chest. Jack Greene would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Arkansas Death Row Inmate List

Jack Greene 2021 Information

ADC Number 000922

Name: Greene, Jack

Race CAUCASIAN Sex MALE Hair Color BROWN Eye Color HAZEL

Height 71 inches Weight 155 lbs.

Birth Date 03/13/1955

Initial Receipt Date 10/15/1992

Facility Varner Supermax

Jack Greene More News

Four months after Arkansas officials sparked outrage by trying to kill eight inmates in 11 days, the state has set another execution date — this time for a murderer who stabbed, shot and beat a retired minister with a can of hominy but who is, according to his lawyers, too delusional to be put to death.

Jack Greene, 62, is scheduled for a lethal injection on Nov. 9. He has no pending appeals, and the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear his case last year.

His attorney said Greene should be exempt from execution under court rulings that hold condemned inmates must be competent enough to understand their punishment.

“The state has taken the next step toward executing a man who suffers from severe mental illness,” Greene’s federal defender, Scott Braden, said Friday after Gov. Asa Hutchinson set the execution date.

“Mr. Greene has long held a fixed delusion that the Arkansas Department of Correction is conspiring with his attorneys to cover up injuries that he believes corrections officers have inflicted upon him. He complains that his spinal cord has been removed and his central nervous system has been destroyed. He believes he will be executed to cover up what he calls these ‘crimes against humanity.'”

Greene was sentenced to death for the 1991 murder of retired pastor Sidney Burnett — who had accused him of arson — days after he killed his own brother.

According to court documents, he tied up and gagged the 69-year-old clergyman, bashed his head with the can of hominy, cut him from mouth to ear, and fired a .25 caliber pistol into his chest and head. One judge referred to it as “horrible torture.”

The state argues that Greene was found competent before his trial and sentencing, but the defense says he hasn’t had a proper hearing on his current mental state.

“Mr. Greene’s severe somatic delusions cause him to constantly twist his body and stuff his ear and nose with toilet paper to cope with the pain,” another federal defender, John Williams, said. “By doing so, Mr. Greene frequently causes himself to bleed.”

In 2009, Greene told an Arkansas judge that his “frontal lobe hurts so bad I have to stick my finger in the corner of my eye,” his lawyers said in a brief. Defense experts said he was brain damaged and “psychotic,” while a state doctor has testified that he is not mentally ill or incompetent.

Arkansas set Greene’s execution date soon after obtaining a new batch of execution drugs, paying $250 in cash to an undisclosed supplier. When its previous stockpile was about to expire in the spring, the state tried to stage eight executions at an unprecedented pace.

Ultimately, four inmates were put to death. One of the prisoners who received a temporary reprieve, Jason McGehee, was granted clemency by Hutchinson on Friday. His death sentence for the murder of a 15-year-old boy will be commuted to life in prison.

Nationwide, executions hit a 25-year low last year, suppressed in part by states’ inability to obtain drugs for lethal injections. According to a Pew Research survey, public support for the death penalty has dropped to its lowest level in four decades, although slightly more Americans favor it than oppose it

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/arkansas-sets-execution-date-delusional-killer-jack-greene-n796076

Don Davis Arkansas Death Row

don davis arkansas death row

Don Davis was sentenced to death by the State of Arkansas for the murder of a woman during a robbery. According to court documents Don Davis broke into the victims home and in the process of robbing her would shoot the woman dead. Don Davis would be convicted and sentenced to death.

Arkansas Death Row Inmate List

Don Davis 2021 Information

ADC Number 000920

Name: Davis, Don W

Race CAUCASIAN

Sex MALE Hair Color BROWN Eye Color GREEN

Height 75 inches Weight 250 lbs.

Birth Date 11/23/1962

Initial Receipt Date 03/10/1992

Facility Varner Supermax

Don Davis More News

Arkansas police said Friday a death row inmate whose execution was halted last year was taken to the hospital after prison officials told investigators he had attempted suicide.

An Arkansas State Police spokesman said investigators responded Thursday afternoon to a report of an attempted suicide by convicted murderer Don Davis. State Police spokesman Bill Sadler said Davis, 55, had been taken to an area hospital with unspecified injuries.

“There had been a conversation between Davis and a correctional officer that led to other personnel being summoned to the cell area. As these individuals began to communicate with Davis, he produced what was reported to be a razor blade and he put it to his throat,” Sadler said.

Investigators found a note that was believed to be written by Davis in the inmate’s cell, Sadler said. Sadler said the incident is not being investigated by State Police because the agency doesn’t investigate attempted suicides.

Sadler said Davis had been stabilized at the hospital, but his condition Friday wasn’t immediately clear. The Department of Correction would only confirm that security and medical staff responded to an incident involving Davis. Correction Department spokesman Solomon Graves said Davis was in the custody of the Varner unit, but did not say whether that meant the inmate remained hospitalized. Graves cited state law and department policy limiting what information can be released about inmates.

Davis was convicted in 1992 of killing Jane Daniel after breaking into her Rogers home in 1990 and shooting her with a .44-caliber revolver he found there.

He was one of eight inmates Arkansas planned to execute over an 11-day period last year. His execution and three others were halted by court rulings. Arkansas ultimately put four inmates to death. Arkansas scheduled the executions before its supply of midazolam , a sedative used in the lethal injection process, expired. Arkansas has since found a new supply of midazolam, but is lacking another of the three drugs it uses for executions.

https://www.nwaonline.com/news/2018/jul/13/don-davis-who-murdered-rogers-woman-attempts-suici/

Don Davis Other News

The facts before us are these: Sharon Haley, who with her husband Mike were also victims of a burglary and neighbors of the murder victim, testified that at about 4:15 p.m. on October 12, 1990, she returned home and found that her screen door was taped open and the wooden door between the garage and the kitchen standing open. When she entered the house, she noticed that a hand gun that had previously been on the bed table was gone and that a console television was pulled away from the wall and the wires disconnected. Fearful, she called the 911 emergency number from the garage phone and went to a neighbor’s house.

Once the police arrived, they asked her to take an inventory of her property. She noted the following items missing:several guns and appliances, a videocassette recorder, a large Sharp convection/microwave, a thirteen inch Sharp television set, both of her jewelry boxes, an Amish quilt, an older model Realistic brand stereo component set, her wedding ring, antique locket, a small gold chain, a couple of ladies watches, a Mickey Mouse watch, diamond earrings, a set of sapphire earrings, pearls, pearl earrings, and a couple of costume black onyx earrings; her husband’s two high school class rings and one college rings; a cluster ring with pearls and rubies missing, a couple of silver rings with turquoise stones and a matching silver bracelet; silver herringbone chain; while gold ring with a pink zircon; costume choker; tools from the garage; a crossbow; her husband’s collection of Harley-Davidson t-shirts & leather jacket; Yankee and Penn State t-shirts; special run bottle of Wild Turkey liquor wrapped in a wooden box; and a bottle of Crown Royal.

Mike Haley testified concerning the many firearms and weapons stolen from their home during the burglary. His list included: a 410 shotgun, a .22 rifle, Marlin Model 39-A, with a banner scope, a Ruger M-77 6 mm deer rifle, a Stevens double barrel shotgun, a .44 magnum pistol with a scope and a Winchester Model 50, 20 gauge shotgun. Also missing were a crossbow and crossbow arrows as well as numerous types of ammunition for the firearms.

At about 10:00 p.m., the same day as the Haley burglary, the Haleys’ neighbor, Richard Daniel, returned home from a business *261 trip and noticed the door of his garage into the kitchen hallway was open. As he entered the house, he saw a rice pan and bowl out in the kitchen, and it startled him when he noticed a Kool cigarette butt in the rice bowl (especially since neither he nor his wife smoked). Noting that the storeroom door was ajar, he entered to find his wife, Jane, lying on the floor in a pool of blood. She was lying with her head face down in a cardboard box towards the wall, obviously, dead. Like Mrs. Haley, Mr. Daniel called 911 for help.

Police attempted to trace Mrs. Daniel’s activities during the day. An employee of the Rogers Diagnostic Clinic testified that the victim came into the clinic around lunchtime to get a flu shot. Mrs. Daniel’s beautician, Gaye Tarron, testified that Mrs. Daniel had a standing appointment every Friday at 2:30 p.m. and had never skipped an appointment without calling first. On October 12, 1990, for the first time in ten years, Mrs. Daniel missed her appointment and did not call.

About two weeks after his wife’s death, Daniel and his daughter searched the house for missing items. They found that an expensive Lucien Piccard watch was gone as well as a couple of pearl necklaces, a gold rope necklace, and a matching gold necklace and bracelet. Also missing were a jewelry bag and a Nikon camera.

At the time of the murder, the appellant, Don Davis, was living with three roommates in a house in Bentonville. One of the roommates, Renee Davis, testified that during the time they were living together, Don Davis had been bringing stolen merchandise home. On the day of the murder, the appellant had come home sometime between 1:00 and 2:00 p.m. acting frightened, according to his roommates, telling his girlfriend and roommate, Susan Ferguson, that “somebody got hurt.” Property seen in his possession that day included a Realistic stereo, a number of guns, a black motorcycle jacket, a videocassette recorder, a television, a microwave, numerous t-shirts, and tools. Later that day the appellant allegedly admitted to Renee and Susan that “somebody had gotten killed” but emphasized that he did not do it claiming that he had been next door when the murder occurred. He said that he “didn’t know why he shot her, she was cooperating.” Among the many items of property Davis had in the car was a gun covered by a white towel. He told Renee that if she touched the “towel it would be her death sentence.”

According to Susan, Renee told appellant to get rid of the stolen property because she did not want it in her house; Davis left and returned about thirty minutes later explaining that he had dumped the property in the woods in a remote area. Four days after the murder a number of the items taken in the Haley burglary, as well as Mrs. Daniel’s house and car keys, were found in a remote area of Benton County. Renee told her other roommate, Dwayne, about Davis’s suspicious behavior and the stolen property. He urged her to go to the police.

Ultimately, the police arrived at Davis’s home to question Renee, and she and the other two roommates agreed to let them search the house. Among the many items discovered in the house was a .44 magnum Redhawk revolver, which the State later alleged was the murder weapon that killed Jane Daniel. Also discovered was the Amish quilt taken from the Haley residence. Inquiries at pawn shops in the area revealed that Davis had pawned many items taken from both the Haley and Davis residences.

By this time, Davis had fled the state by taking a bus to Las Vegas, Nevada and ultimately arriving in California. Witnesses from several pawn shops in Las Vegas testified that they had loaned the appellant money on goods he had pawned. These goods matched the description of goods stolen from the Davis and Haley households. Agents with the Federal Bureau of Investigation found the appellant in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and arrested him. While being arrested, Davis asked the agents for the cigarettes that had been in his car; he described them as Kool filter kings, the same brand of cigarette found at Mrs. Daniel’s house. Investigators also found Davis in possession of the black leather jacket stolen from the Haley house. Detective Steven Mark Russell testified that he travelled to Albuquerque to transport Davis back to Rogers, Arkansas, *262 and once they arrived in Rogers, Davis specifically asked for some Kool cigarettes.

Violette Hnilica, forensic pathologist with the Little Rock Medical Examiners Office, also testified at the trial. After conducting an autopsy she concluded that Jane Daniel had died from a contact wound resulting from an execution-style murder by a large caliber weapon to the back of her head.

Jeff Beck, a latent prints examiner with the State Crime Laboratory, testified he had tested fingerprints found on the masking tape holding the inner garage door open at the Haley residence and concluded that the prints belonged to Davis.

Berwin Monroe, Chief of the Firearms and Tool Marks section and an explosives analyst with the Arkansas State Crime Lab, also testified for the prosecution. He performed tests on the fragments of a metal jacket bullet removed from the victim and determined that this bullet was shot from the .44 magnum revolver discovered at Davis’s place of residence. State Crime Laboratory Firearms Examiner, Ronald Andrejack, corroborated Monroe’s findings.

https://law.justia.com/cases/arkansas/supreme-court/1993/cr-92-1385-1.html

Bruce Ward Arkansas Death Row

bruce ward 1

Bruce Ward was sentenced to death by the State of Arkansas for the murder of a store clerk. According to court documents Bruce Ward would enter a convenience store where he would sexually assault the teenager clerk before killing her by strangulation. Bruce Ward would be arrested at the scene, be convicted and sentenced to death. Bruce Ward is the longest serving death row inmate in Arkansas. His execution has been delayed due to mental health issues as he is a diagnosed schizophrenic.

Arkansas Death Row Inmate List

Bruce Ward 2021 Information

ADC Number 000915

Name: Ward, Bruce E

Race CAUCASIAN

Sex MALE Hair Color BROWNE ye Color HAZEL Height 73 inches Weight 286 lbs.

Birth Date 12/24/1956

Initial Receipt Date 10/18/1990

Facility Varner Supermax

Bruce Ward More News

Guilt has followed a former friend of an Arkansas death row inmate for 30 years.  

The woman claims Bruce Ward nearly killed her in Pennsylvania just months before raping and strangling an Arkansas teenager to death.

She blames herself because she never pressed charges. 

For her safety, she asked that her picture and married name not be used in this story.

“I’ve had to wrestle with a lot of things since then,” Amy said. 

When she was 19, Amy took the bus to and from Pittsburgh Beauty Academy. The stop started her friendship with then 31-year-old Ward in the winter of 1988. 

“He was very attractive looking, very intelligent, very charming,” she said. 

Ward told Amy he was out on parole for a non-violent crime. She gave him a chance.

“I felt very, very safe with him,” she said.

Until one night, about half a year later, when he attacked her.

“My pants were down, he’s strangling me and all of a sudden, he just stops,” she said. 

Amy will never forget how Ward looked, like he was in a trance.

“He was just not him,” she said. “He told me, ‘I wanted to scare you. Why are you not scared?’” 

She told police but didn’t press charges.

“I didn’t want my parents to know,” she said. “I was embarrassed. I didn’t want this to be a big thing. I’m a shy person.”

Amy saw Ward one more time. When he showed up at her school and called after her, two of her friends quickly ushered her away.

“I hadn’t even thought of him in many years,” she said.

She saw him next on the Internet.

“Whatever became of him? Is he doing okay?,” she wondered. “I was hoping that maybe he had gotten some help.”

Amy wasn’t prepared for what she found. Ward was really out on parole for the murder of a 32-year-old Pennsylvania woman, Janet Needham.

“I was thinking, ‘Jesus, if he told me the truth, I don’t think I’d be stupid enough to be hanging out with this guy. This can’t be possible,’” she said. “And I just kept reading more and more.” 

She discovered he was back behind bars, this time on death row for an Arkansas woman’s murder just months after he attacked Amy.

“And then I read about Becky…,” she trailed off as she started to cry.

While 18-year-old Becky Doss was working the overnight shift at a Little Rock gas station in August 1989, Ward raped and strangled her. It was the same way he took Needham’s life and too similar to Amy’s story.

“Did I trigger something? I don’t know,” she said. 

But after seeing our interview with Doss’s mother, Amy knew she had to say something 30 years later.

“It broke my heart,” she said. “My goodness, what my mother would have gone through if that happened to me.”

As Ward continues to sit locked up so does Amy, part of her forever stuck at that bus stop.

“I feel like there’s something I could have done differently,” she said. “An innocent victim whose life was taken by somebody who should not have been there, should not have been there.” 

Ward has been on death row since 1990.

A Supreme Court ruling in 2015 paved the way for the state to resume executions for the first time in nearly ten years. Ward was scheduled to be executed that year.

Since then, different legal situations, including the use of lethal injection drug Midazolam, have put his execution on hold. 

https://www.kark.com/news/local-news/arkansas-death-row-inmate-attacks-friend-months-before-murdering-teen/