Dionne Eatmon Alabama Death Row

dionne eatmon

Dionne Eatmon was sentenced to death and remains on Alabama Death Row for the kidnapping and murders of two people. Dionne Eatmon along with Aundra Marshall would kidnap, beat and later set on fire Clarence and Allison Kile. Dionne Eatmon would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Dionne Eatmon 2021 Information

Inmate: EATMON, DIONNE
AIS: 0000Z714
  
Institution: HOLMAN PRISON

Dionne Eatmon More News

A jury voted 11-1 for the death penalty for a Bessemer man convicted in the fiery deaths of a couple for failure to pay a crack cocaine debt.

Jefferson County Circuit Judge Teresa Petelos will sentence Aundra Marshall, 31, on April 22. The judge could accept the jury’s recommended penalty or sentence him to life in prison without parole.

Marshall was convicted late Thursday of capital murder in the February 2004 deaths of Clarence R. Kile, 48, and his wife, Allison Kile, 39.

Prosecutors said the victims were burned alive in the trunk of their car after Clarence Kile failed to pay a drug debt. Defense lawyer Erskine Mathis said he will appeal the conviction. Co-defendant Dionne Eatmon’s trial is scheduled for April.

Assistant District Attorney Lane Tolbert said the Kiles were beaten and bound before being forced into their trunk and driven to a dead- end Brighton street. Gasoline and kerosene were splashed on the car and the Kiles before it was set afire.

Tolbert said the killing was a message to crack addicts in Brighton that if they didn’t pay, the same thing could happen to them.

https://www.gadsdentimes.com/article/DA/20050306/News/603216082/GT

Aundra Marshall Alabama Death Row

aundra marshall

Aundra Marshall was sentenced to death and remains on Alabama Death Row for burning two people alive. According to court documents Aundra Marshall would kidnap  Clarence “Rick” Kile and Allison Kile and would force them into a trunk of a car before setting the vehicle on fire. Aundra Marshall would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Aundra Marshall 2021 Information

Inmate: MARSHALL, AUNDRA
AIS: 0000Z713
  
Institution: HOLMAN PRISON

Aundra Marshall More News

A judge on Friday sentenced a 31-year-old man to death for kidnapping a Bessemer married couple and burning them alive after the husband failed to pay a drug debt.

Aundra Marshall was convicted in March of capital murder in the February 2004 deaths of Clarence R. Kile, 48, and his wife Allison, 38. The victims were beaten, bound and forced into a car trunk before Marshall doused them in gasoline and set the car on fire, according to trial testimony. Jurors recommended the death penalty on an 11-1 vote.

Circuit Judge Teresa Petelos denied a motion by Marshall Thursday to delay sentencing. Marshall had argued that his new lawyer, John Tindle, did not have enough time to prepare.

Petelos on Friday sentenced Marshall to death three times — once for murdering each Kile during a kidnapping and once for killing two people at the same time.

Assistant District Attorney Lane Tolbert, who helped prosecute the case, said Marshall’s death would be more humane than the one he imposed upon his victims.

“His death at the hands of the Department of Corrections will be less painful than what he put them through,” Tolbert said.

http://legacy.decaturdaily.com/decaturdaily/news/050625/burn.shtml

Westley Harris Alabama Death Row

westley harris

Westley Harris was sentenced to death and remains on Alabama Death Row for the murders of his girlfriends grandmother, parents and three teenage brothers. According to court documents Westley Harris would terrorize and murder his girlfriends family before murdering her grandmother, parents and three teenage brothers. Westley Harris would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Westley Harris 2021 Information

Inmate: HARRIS, WESTLEY DEVON
AIS: 0000Z715
  
Institution: HOLMAN PRISON

Westley Harris More News

Westly Devone Harris 1 was convicted of two counts of murder made capital for the killings of Mila Ruth Ball and John Ball because the killings occurred during the course of a burglary, a violation of § 13A-5-40(4), Ala.Code 1975;  two additional counts of murder made capital for the deaths of Joanne Ball and Tony Ball because the killings occurred during the course of a burglary;  and one count of murder made capital because the six victims in this case-Mila Ruth Ball, Willie Haslip, Joanne Ball, Jerry Ball, Tony Ball and John Ball-were killed pursuant to one scheme or course of conduct, a violation of § 13A-5-40(10), Ala.Code 1975.

After the penalty phase of the trial, the jury recommended by a vote of seven to five that Harris be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.   Subsequent to the jury’s recommendation, the trial court ordered a presentence report.   A sentencing hearing was held, after which the trial court overrode the jury’s recommendation and sentenced Harris to death.

The evidence adduced at trial tended to show the following.   Mila Ruth Ball, 65, was the matriarch of a family that lived on a farm in Moody’s Crossroads in Crenshaw County.   Her daughter, Joanne, 35, was married to Willie Haslip, 40;  they lived in a trailer on the farm with their three sons, Jerry Ball, 19, Tony Ball, 17, and John Ball, 14.   Joanne and Willie also had a daughter, Janice Ball, 16, who lived with her grandmother Mila Ruth in the house at the farm.

Janice was 14 years old when she met then-19-year-old Harris.   Three months after the two met, Janice became pregnant, and the two had a daughter, Neshay, whom they called “Shay.” Janice testified that when she told Harris she was pregnant, she did not see him much until Shay was born.   Then, Janice said, she and Harris lived together in a trailer in Luverne.   Harris became “violent,” Janice said, so she moved back home to the farm and lived with her grandmother in the house.  (R. 7421-22.)

Her father, Willie, then bought a trailer and put it on the farm because, Janice said, he wanted her and Harris “to stay together for he wanted him to kind of take care of his own baby and just have a family together.”  (R. 7422.)   Janice testified that she and Harris lived together in the trailer her father had bought “off and on” because Harris was “still violent and controlling.”  (R. 7423.)

On Friday, August 23, 2002, Janice said, she and Harris were in the trailer Willie had bought for them.   Janice asked Harris to pay her back some money he had borrowed from her so that she could buy Shay some diapers.   Janice said Harris refused to give her any money and slapped her.   She threw a telephone at him and told him to pack his belongings and leave.

Their argument took them outside, where Janice’s brother Jerry saw them.   He got a shotgun for Janice, and she admitted that she held the gun on Harris, but then gave it back to Jerry.   Harris left the farm that night.   Janice stayed in Mila Ruth’s house.

The next day, Saturday, Harris called Janice at the McDonald’s restaurant where she worked and asked her whether her family planned to press charges against him.   Janice did not answer his question.   On the following day, Harris again called Janice to see whether she or her family were planning to press charges against him.   Again, Janice did not answer his question.

That evening, Harris came back to Mila Ruth’s house at the Ball farm to speak with Janice.   Janice said that Harris sat on the porch while she stayed inside the house and talked with Harris through the screen door.   Janice said she then went to the bedroom to tell Mila Ruth that Harris was there.   Mila Ruth went to the door and told Harris she was going to have him arrested and that she was going to call Janice’s father over.   Harris started backing up, Janice said, and told Mila Ruth “that he didn’t want any trouble.”  (R. 7444.)   Mila Ruth called Willie, and he, Joanne, and Janice’s brothers Jerry and John came over to Mila Ruth’s house from their trailer.   Janice said Willie and Jerry had shotguns with them.   Harris had already left the porch, but Willie shouted out for him to leave the farm before he got hurt.  (R. 7444.)   Harris left the farm, and Janice and her family went back inside their respective homes and went to bed.   Janice shared a bedroom with Mila Ruth.

The next morning, Monday, Janice awoke about 8:30 when her bed was shaking.   Shay was in bed with her.   Janice said she heard the lock on the kitchen door, then heard some mumbling that she could not make out.   Then, she said, she saw her grandmother, Mila Ruth, “walking back into the bedroom and Westly [Harris] had a shotgun pointed to her stomach.”  (R. 7449.)

Harris made Janice and Mila Ruth move into the kitchen and made Mila Ruth get on the floor.   He handed Janice a roll of tape and told her to use it to tie Mila Ruth’s hands.   Janice said after she finished, Harris snatched the tape away from her and, while resting the gun between his legs, he tied Mila Ruth’s hands tightly with the tape.   Harris told Mila Ruth that “it was going to be a lot better without her now.”  (R. 7451.)   Harris then taped Janice’s hands together.

Harris told Mila Ruth that she needed to say her prayers.   As Mila Ruth began saying the Lord’s prayer, Harris shot her in the face with a shotgun.

Harris made Janice go back to the bedroom, and he bound her to one of the beds with a telephone line and an extension cord.   He placed some toys on the bed for Shay and put Shay up on the bed with Janice.   He then asked Janice what time her brother Tony usually got up and came over to Mila Ruth’s house.   Janice told him that Tony usually came over about noon or 12:30 p.m. Tony was the only other person at the farm at that time.

Harris left Mila Ruth’s house.   Janice said she heard the shotgun go off again, then she heard the front door to the house open.   Harris came into the bedroom, cocked the shotgun so that a shell came out, then threw it on Janice, saying, “That was your brother.”  (R. 7466.)   Evidence showed that Tony died of a gunshot wound to the back of his head while he was still in bed.

After shooting Tony and coming back into Mila Ruth’s house, Harris took Shay into the living room of Mila Ruth’s house and watched television.   Janice was still tied to the bed.   She said Harris would come check on her periodically and told her he would not hurt her if she “didn’t try nothing stupid.”  (R. 7467.)

At about 3:30 that afternoon, Janice said, she heard her brother Jerry’s car pull up in the yard.   As usual, Jerry had brought John home from Luverne Middle School, then went back to work.   Janice was still tied up on the bed and, by this time, Harris had gagged her with a towel.   Harris left Mila Ruth’s house, but then Janice heard the door open again and she heard Harris say, “Get over there.”  (R. 7472.)   The shotgun went off again, and Janice heard something fall.

The evidence indicated that, when Jerry pulled away after dropping off John, Harris went over to the trailer where John lived.   The State posited that John put up a fight with Harris because his autopsy showed that he had suffered two gunshot wounds from the pistol, one of which lodged in his spine and would have caused paralysis.   After shooting John twice, Harris somehow got John back to Mila Ruth’s house, where John was shot once in the eye with a shotgun.   John’s body was discovered next to Mila Ruth’s in the kitchen at Mila Ruth’s house.

About 4:00 p.m., a half-hour after John was killed, Janice said, she heard her father’s pickup truck pull up in the yard.   She said she watched through the window as Willie drove to the back of the yard.   Harris was in the room with her.   He had told Janice he would kill her if she tried to warn Willie.   When the truck went by, Janice said, Harris took a shotgun and a pistol and left the house.   She said she did not hear a gunshot, but she did hear the truck start again.   It pulled up next to her grandmother’s house and stopped, then Harris came back inside holding a shotgun.

Haslip’s body was discovered under a piece of metal in the hog pen.   He, too, had been shot in the face with a shotgun.

After shooting Haslip, Harris came back into Mila Ruth’s house and cut the bonds holding Janice to the bed.   He told Janice to get Shay a bottle and a pacifier, then had them climb out the bedroom window.   Harris was still carrying a shotgun, and he told Janice he would shoot her if she tried to run.   Janice said she did not try to get away when Harris climbed out the window because she was holding Shay. Harris led Shay to the trailer where her parents and brothers lived.

At about 5:30 or 5:45 that evening, Janice said, her mother, Joanne, came home.   Harris told Janice that if she tried to warn her mother, he would shoot Janice.   Harris, armed with a shotgun, sat down in a chair that would be behind the front door when the door was opened.   When Joanne came into the trailer, Janice said, she saw Harris, looked at Janice, then walked into the living room.   She asked Janice where Tony was, and Harris told her to get on her knees. Joanne looked at Harris and said, “Fuck you.”  (R. 7482.)   Joanne took a step toward Janice, again asked where Tony was, and Harris shot her.   The shot hit Joanne in the back of the neck.   She turned and tried to run for the door but Harris got up and shot her again from behind.   He then propped the shotgun on the inside wall of Joanne and Willie’s bedroom and dragged Joanne into the room.

Harris spent some time trying to clean the blood from the living room floor before Jerry came home.   He also began taking items like a radio, speakers and an amplifier from Janice’s parents’ closet.   He also took Willie’s wallet and telephone from Willie’s body as it lay in the hog pen.   Janice said Harris packed the belongings into her mother’s car, a red Grand Am. She was with him as he walked around the yard and packed the car.

At one point, Harris told Janice to go behind the trailer.   She said she was on the side of the trailer when Jerry pulled into the yard in his car.   Harris hid the shotgun behind his back as Jerry got out of the car.   Harris asked Jerry to take him to the store.   Janice said that she heard Jerry say something, then the shotgun went off again.   She came out from behind the trailer and saw Jerry running up the porch toward the door.   Jerry called her name as he was reaching for the door, then Harris shot him again.   Jerry was shot once in the chest and once in the head.

Harris put Jerry’s body in the trunk of Jerry’s car.   Harris then tried to clean up the blood on the porch and had Janice scoop up dirt from the yard and use it to try to cover the blood.

Harris put clothes and other cloths he had used to try to clean the blood from Jerry and Joanne’s wounds into a garbage bag, then put the bag into the trunk of the car with Jerry’s body.   He closed the trunk and moved the car out of the front yard and into the hog pen.   He also moved Willie’s truck and then Joanne’s truck into the pen.   Janice said Harris kept the gun with him while he moved the vehicles.

Afterwards, Janice said, Harris made her hand him the shotguns and pistol as he put them in the trunk of the Grand Am. He also made Janice pack a backpack for her and Shay into the trunk.   He threatened to shoot the family’s white bulldog, which had blood all over it, but Janice told him not to kill it.   Harris put the dog into the trunk as well, then he, Janice and Shay left the Ball farm in the Grand Am.

Harris, Janice and Shay then began a three-day odyssey traveling around Crenshaw County.   Their first stop was at a service station in Luverne, where Harris sent Janice inside to buy snacks while he pumped gas.   Janice said she did not seek help from anyone inside the service station because, she said, since he had just killed her entire family, she was afraid Harris would kill others if she sought help from them.

Harris then drove to the home of his cousin, Andre “A.J.” Robinson in Luverne.   Robinson testified that Harris gave him two shotguns.   He said there was also a white bulldog in the car’s trunk, which Harris left with him.   A few days later, Robinson said, a friend of his told him to get rid of the guns, so he threw them in the woods, where law-enforcement officials recovered them.   Harris also sold three shotguns to an acquaintance, Wendell Edwards.

Harris next went to Dozier, where he met briefly with his friend Jarvis “Jabo” Scanes.   Harris then went to see his closest friend, Greg Daniels.   Harris gave Daniels three guns, which Daniels hid in the woods near his house.   Daniels testified that Harris told him he had “offed” the Ball family.  (R. 6847.)   Janice said she did not seek help from either Scanes or Daniels because they were friends of Harris’s and she was wary of them.

After leaving Daniels, Harris drove to Andalusia to the home of his friend Leon and Leon’s sister, Kiki. Janice said that at about daybreak, she and Shay were able to sleep for a while at Leon’s house, and she and Harris both cleaned up.

After leaving Leon’s house, Harris went back to Luverne, Rutledge, and Dozier, where he stopped at other friends’ houses.   Again, Janice said she never sought help because every place they stopped, they were with Harris’s friends and she believed they would be more inclined to help Harris than to help her.

Harris, still driving the red Grand Am, eventually drove to a club, Cole’s Lounge, near Rutledge.   Harris broke into the club, and he, Janice and Shay stayed there for two days.   During that time, Harris’s aunt persuaded him to turn himself over to law-enforcement officials.   Agents from the Alabama Bureau of Investigation (“ABI”), accompanied by Harris’s aunt, went to Cole’s Lounge and picked up Harris, Janice and Shay. They were then taken to the Lowndes County Sheriff’s Office.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/al-court-of-criminal-appeals/1459659.html

Kerry Spencer Alabama Death Row

kerry spencer

Kerry Spencer was sentenced to death and remains on Alabama Death Row for the murders of three police officers. According to court documents the three police officers were attempting to serve an arrest warrant on Nathaniel Woods when the two men opened fire killing  Carlos Owen, Robert Bennett and Harley Chisholm. Both Nathaniel Woods and Kerry Spencer were arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Nathaniel Wood was executed in 2020.

Kerry Spencer 2021 Information

Inmate: SPENCER, KERRY
AIS: 0000Z716
  
Institution: HOLMAN PRISON

Kerry Spencer More News

June 17, 2004, started out as an unremarkable day for Birmingham Police Sgt. Mike Collins and fellow West Precinct officers Carlos “Curly” Owen, Harley Chisolm III and Charles Robert Bennett.

It would soon become the deadliest day in the department’s history.

Collins, then 37 and not yet a sergeant, had worked in the West Precinct for 10 years after leaving the Army, having served stints in Berlin and Operation Desert Storm.

While on patrol, Collins heard Owen talking on the police radio about a complaint on 18th Street in Ensley. He drove there to help and encountered Nathaniel Woods for the first time. Owen was checking to see if a car used by Woods and parked behind his Ensley apartment was stolen.

Woods was shouting expletives about the police from inside one of the four small, dingy apartments.

The officers argued with Woods through a screen door. At one point, Woods challenged Owen to stop hiding behind his badge and fight. The 58-year-old officer took off his badge, but Woods stayed behind the locked screen door.

A neighbor came over and told them to stop the nonsense and persuaded Owen to put his badge back on. Owen told Collins to check Woods’ name in the criminal database from his patrol car. His search showed Woods was wanted on a misdemeanor charge out of Fairfield, accused of beating up his girlfriend.

The officers, joined by Chisholm, left to double-check that the warrant was valid. Collins said Woods left the officers with one warning: ”Come in here, and we’ll (expletive) you up.”

Later, with a photo of Woods and a copy of the warrant in hand, they set out to arrest Woods. Bennett joined them. Collins and Owen went to the back door; Chisholm and Bennett covered the front.

They told Woods to come out. He did, but it was to curse them and argue he wasn’t a wanted man. They called Chisholm to the back to bring the warrant and photo.

”We didn’t know for sure 100 percent that it was him, so we had to get the picture,” Collins said in a 2005 interview. ”I wasn’t going to stand there and argue. Nathaniel Woods wasn’t going to agree with anything we said that day.”

Woods ran back into the apartment. Chisholm, Owen and Collins followed. Just inside the kitchen, Chisholm got Woods down on the floor as if he was about to handcuff him, and Woods yelled, “I give up. I give up. Just don’t spray me with that mace.”

Bennett, still out in the front of the building, said over the police radio: “They are coming out the front.” Collins wasn’t able to go to the front door through the apartment because Woods, Chisholm and Owen were blocking the doorway.

Instead, he ran out the back door to make his way to Bennett.

Gunfire erupted. Collins said he felt a slap on his side and on his pistol which was holstered. He said he was stunned and that he radioed a “shots fired” call and considered his options. “I can’t say it as fast as I thought it, but I was like ‘Hey dummy, you’re standing in the open and somebody’s shooting at you,” he said.

He took cover behind his police cruiser. He put out a “double aught” call, the most drastic request for backup an officer can make. The radio he was using kept giving him a busy signal as he frantically tried to call for help. “I’ll never forget that sound,” he said. “I called them (the other officers) on the radio but they didn’t answer. I knew then. I didn’t think there was much hope.”

He looked back at the apartment and saw a man, later identified as Kerry Spencer, standing just outside the apartment, firing a gun at him. His holster had been hit, there was a hole in his pants and a wound to his leg. Later he found a metal fragment in his pocket. ”That was the first time I saw him. I knew it wasn’t Nathaniel, and I was like, ‘Who the hell is that?’ ”

Spencer continued to fire. When Collins looked again, he was gone. Officer Hugh Butler was the first to go to Collins. ”When I saw him, I was like, ‘Thank God,’ ” Collins remembers. ”The first thing I said to him was, ‘It was only a misdemeanor.'”

Collins moved toward the apartment, but Butler blocked him. “I’ll never forget that,” Collins said. “It was a good thing. That would be images I would have seen forever.”

Hundreds of officers from Birmingham and other departments descended upon the scene. They found an SKS assault rifle outside the front door of the apartment, and a number of guns inside in plain view. A massive, tense manhunt followed, and Spencer and Woods were arrested later that day. Spencer was found hiding in the attic of a nearby home, still armed.

Spencer later would testify that they sold drugs out of the apartment, making up to $3,000 a day. He said he had bought the SKS the day before, and had even test-fired it the previous night.

On the morning of the shooting, he went to take a nap. He took a Seroquel, which is a short-acting anti-psychotic drug, with a beer to help him sleep. He took the assault rifle with him.

He testified that when he awoke, he saw Chisholm with a gun and “automatically opened fire.” “It was a split-second decision,” he later testified. “It wasn’t like I had time to say, ‘Oh, you fixing to shoot me. No. It was he pulled his gun up and I already had the weapon in my hand so I opened fire.”

Collins went to the hospital to be checked out. There they found, and removed, shrapnel from his leg. He was treated and released.

”That’s when it hit me I should be dead,” he said in 2005. ”I don’t know, and I can never prove it, but I’m not 100 percent sure that Carlos didn’t push me, or give me a shove out the door.”

Devin Thompson Alabama Death Row

devin thompson

Devin Thompson was sentenced to death and remains on Alabama Death Row for the murders of two police officers and a police dispatcher. According to court documents Devin Thompson was brought to a police station and was able to disarm an Officer and open fire killing Fayette Police Officers Arnold Strickland and James Crump and police dispatcher Leslie “Ace” Mealer. Devin Thompson would attempt to blame his actions on Grand Theft Auto would be convicted and sentenced to death

Devin Thompson 2021 Information

Inmate: THOMPSON, DEVIN DARNELL
AIS: 0000Z717
  
Institution: HOLMAN PRISON

Devin Thompson More News

Testimony showed that at around 3:00 a.m. on the morning of June 3, 2003, Officer Crump and Officer Strickland approached a vehicle parked in the lot of a local restaurant and found Thompson asleep in the vehicle. The dispatcher informed them that the vehicle had been stolen, and the officers took Thompson into custody.

While the officers were booking Thompson they discovered that a dry-cleaning business, near where the car had been stolen, had been burglarized and clothing had been taken from that business. A shoe print had been discovered at the scene of that burglary. The officers removed Thompson’s handcuffs in order to take his fingerprints and removed one of his shoes to get a shoe print.

While Thompson was being fingerprinted, he took Strickland’s .40–caliber service pistol and shot Strickland in the head. Thompson then crossed the hall and shot Officer Crump in the head. As Thompson walked toward the exit of the police station he encountered Mealer. He shot Mealer multiple times and left the station.

Thompson attempted to reenter the station when he realized that one of his shoes was still inside, but the door had automatically locked when it closed, and he was unable to reenter. Thompson proceeded to the Fayette Fire Station, which was located in the same building as the Fayette Police Department, and told two firemen that “something bad had happened up front.” Thompson then stole a police cruiser and fled the scene. He was arrested later that day near Columbus, Mississippi. The pistol Thompson had taken from Officer Strickland was found in the police cruiser.

At trial, Thompson did not dispute that he shot and killed the police officers and the dispatcher. His defense was that he was not guilty by reason of mental disease or defect. Thompson presented expert testimony to the effect that he was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (“PTSD”) at the time of the murders and that he was in a dissociative state; therefore, he argued, he was not responsible for his actions. The State countered Thompson’s expert testimony by presenting expert testimony to the effect that Thompson was not in a dissociative state when he committed the murders.

The jury convicted Thompson of six counts of capital murder. A separate sentencing hearing was held, and the jury recommended, by a vote of 10 to 2, that Thompson be sentenced to death. A presentence report was prepared, and a separate sentencing hearing was held before the circuit court. The circuit court found four aggravating circumstances: (1) That the murders were committed during the course of a robbery, § 13A–5–49(4), Ala.Code 1975; (2) that the murders were committed for the purpose of avoiding or preventing an arrest or effecting an escape from custody, § 13A–5–49(5), Ala.Code 1975; (3) that the murders were committed to disrupt or hinder the lawful exercise of a governmental function or the enforcement of laws, § 13A–5–49(7), Ala.Code 1975; and (4) that the multiple murders were committed pursuant to one scheme or course of conduct, § 13A–5–49(9), Ala.Code 1975. After weighing the aggravating circumstances and the mitigating circumstances, the circuit court followed the jury’s recommendation and sentenced Thompson to death. This appeal, which is automatic in a case involving the death penalty, followed. See § 13A–5–53, Ala.Code 1975.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/al-court-of-criminal-appeals/1594962.html