Kimberly Cargill did not want another woman testifying against her in a child protective case so she murdered her. According to court documents Kimberly Cargill would convince the victim to come over so she could be hidden and that way not have to testify against Kimberly Cargill. In the end Kimberly Cargill would murder the woman. Kimberly Cargill would tell authorities that the victim was driving with her when she went into a seizure and died however that did not explain why the victims body was doused in gasoline and set on fire. Kimberly Cargill was convicted and sentenced to death and remains on Texas death row
Kimberly Cargill 2021 Information
Name | Cargill, Kimberly | |
TDCJ Number | 999572 | |
Date of Birth | 11/30/1966 | |
Date Received | 06/07/2012 | |
Age (when Received) | 45 | |
Education Level (Highest Grade Completed) | 12 | |
Date of Offense | 06/18/2010 | |
Age (at the time of Offense) | 43 | |
County | Smith | |
Race | White | |
Gender | Female | |
Hair Color | Gray | |
Height (in Feet and Inches) | 5′ 3″ | |
Weight (in Pounds) | 145 | |
Eye Color | Green | |
Native County | Jones | |
Native State | Mississippi |
SID Number: 05105600
TDCJ Number: 00999572
Name: CARGILL,KIMBERLY
Race: W
Gender: F
Age: 55
Maximum Sentence Date: DEATH ROW
Current Facility: MOUNTAIN VIEW
Projected Release Date: DEATH ROW
Parole Eligibility Date: DEATH ROW
Inmate Visitation Eligible: YES
Kimberly Cargill Other News
The U.S. Supreme Court is refusing to review the appeal of a woman on death row for the 2010 slaying of her developmentally disabled babysitter.
Kimberly Cargill, 50, of Whitehouse in East Texas, was convicted in 2012 in Smith County. The high court refused to review her case Monday.
Cargill was sentenced to death in 2012, after she was found guilty of murdering her mentally-challenged babysitter, Cherry Walker, in 2010.
According to a previous search warrant, affidavits indicate authorities believe Cargill may have killed Walker in order to prevent her from testifying in court. In 2010, Cargill was facing a felony “injury to a child” charge regarding her four-year-old son, who Walker babysat at the time.
When Cargill was arrested for the charge, she posted bond a day following her arrest. Court records showed Cherry was subpoenaed to testify in Cargill’s custody hearing June 23, but Cargill told her not to and that she would “hide her out at her house.”
According to the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Walker suffered a seizure and quit breathing while she and Cargill were driving. Cargill then drove Walker to a county road where she doused Walker with lighter fluid and set her clothes on fire.
Cargill was sentenced to death in May of 2012.
Kimberly Cargill More News
An East Texas mother now awaits her execution date for capital murder.
Thursday night, a jury recommended 45-year old Kimberly Cargill be sentenced to death by lethal injection. On May 18, Cargill was convicted of the 2010 murder of her mentally challenged babysitter, Cherry Walker. Prosecutors say Cargill dumped Walker’s body and set it on fire because Walker was scheduled to testify in Cargill’s child custody hearing.
After two years of preparation, four weeks of jury selection and 18 days of trial, the attorneys for both sides were finally able to comment on the case and the verdict that is intended to cut Cargill’s life short.
Kimberly Cargill knows her fate. The verdict was something Cargill and her attorneys didn’t want to hear, but said they wouldn’t criticize either.
“A lot of decisions she has made for the last two decades have been fueled by her personality disorder. We’re not trying to excuse anything she’s done for the last 20 years, just put it in context,” said one of Cargill’s defense attorneys, Brett Harrison. Kimberly Cargill was also represented by Jeff Haas.
Throughout the trial, jurors heard Cargill’s family testify to heartbreaking stories of abuse. Three of Cargill’s four sons testified that Cargill would frequently choke, kick and hit them. They told jurors they often feared for their lives. Her sons testified that Cargill had the locks changed on their bedroom doors so she could lock them inside.
Cargill’s ex-husbands also took the stand. A couple of those ex’s told the jury Cargill would have them wrongly arrested by making up stories of assault. One of Cargill’s ex-husbands testified that, though she never admitted to it, Cargill set his apartment on fire.
Cargill’s sister testified that Cargill was clever and manipulative. She told jurors Cargill was, “the devil.” But, when Cargill’s sentence came down, Cargill’s sister closed her eyes.
Cargill’s mother testified that Cargill sometimes lost her temper and liked things to be her way. Cargill’s mother said she once heard that Cargill wanted to kill her. Though, despite their rocky relationship, Cargill’s mother clearly still loved her daughter and wanted to see the best in her.
“I’ve never come across another defendant like Kimberly Cargill,” said Smith County District Attorney Matt Bingham. Bingham says for more than 15 years he has been prosecuting people who have done horrible things to others.
“To have someone so narcissistic, someone that is so manipulative and cunning… she is the first and hopefully the last.”
It’s a case prosecutors say will always be close to their hearts.
“When the issues at hand are something that I have worked my whole life to try to stand up for, people who don’t have a voice, then it’s passionate. It’s the best part of my job to speak for victims who can’t speak for themselves and it has been a real honor, a real pleasure,” said Smith County First Assistant District Attorney April Sikes.
The Smith County District Attorney’s Office says despite everything that has happened, they feel like they’re making a difference.
“She didn’t get away with it. The victim and the family got as much justice as we can give them under the system. She’s not going to get out and hurt any of her children again and Kimberly Cargill will hurt nobody else and that’s what makes it all worth while,” said Bingham.
When Cargill’s verdicts were read, she stood in the courtroom emotionless. For most of the trial, Cargill silently sat next to her attorneys. She cried at least twice; once when one of her sons was on the stand and again when the State showed jurors photos of the crime scene.
Cargill did take the stand once, in the first phase of the trial, when the jury was deciding on her guilt. She testified that Walker died of a seizure, Cargill panicked, dumped her body and set it on fire to destroy evidence.
Cargill wasn’t able to destroy it all. Investigators found a coffee creamer at the crime scene that had a profile matching Cargill’s DNA.
Though a mechanism of death was never determined, the pathologist who conducted Walker’s autopsy told the jury Walker died of homicidal violence. The pathologist said she thought she found evidence of asphyxiation, but couldn’t be positive because Walker’s body had already begun decomposing.
After 241st District Court Judge Jack Skeen accepted the jury’s verdicts, he formally sentenced Cargill to death.
Walker’s step-mother Rueon Walker took the stand and spoke to the courtroom, and then spoke to Cargill directly.
She said, “Mrs. Cargill, this is what I want you to know. Cherry loved you. She did not deserve the terrible thing you did to her.”
Rueon also said she and Cherry’s father, Gethry, did not hate Cargill, but did hate what she did.
“We have to accept what God has allowed. He allowed this to happen for a reason and we accept that. We don’t hate you because we’re not made out of hate. We only have love and pity and compassion for you,” Rueon said.
Smith County District Attorney Matt Bingham says Cargill is one of two Smith County women convicted of capital murder in about the least 15 years. He says the other woman pled guilty, and he believes Cargill may be the only Smith County woman to receive the death penalty. Because Cargill received the death penalty, her case will automatically be submitted to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals.
https://www.kltv.com/story/18680902/i-have-never-come-across-another-defendant-like-kim-cargill/
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Kimberly Cargill 2021
Kimberly Cargill is currently incarcerated on Texas Death Row for Women
Why Is Kimberly Cargill On Death Row
Kimberly Cargill was convicted of the murder of a woman who was going to testify against her
This one leaves me shaking my head! Worst of the worst, truly evil.
This woman is a true PSYCHOPATH. She has zero empathy for any other person and is the personification of evil. The TX justice system failed so many times with this psychotic woman. She should have been locked up far longer than she was in the beginning. The world is a much safer place with her on death row. There is no doubt a special place in hell for people like this.