Courtney Lockhart Alabama Death Row

courtney lockhart

Courtney Lockhart was sentenced to death and remains on Alabama Death Row for the murder of Lauren Burk. According to court documents Courtney Lockhart was in the middle of a crime spree where he attacked several women that would end with the murder of Lauren Burk. Courtney Lockhart would force her into a vehicle, where she robbed and told to strip naked. Lockhart would drive around with the Auburn University Student for some time until Lauren attempted to escape and she would be shot by Lockhart and would later die from her injuries. Courtney Lockhart would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Alabama Death Row Inmate List

Courtney Lockhart 2021 Information

Inmate: LOCKHART, COURTNEY LARRELL
AIS: 0000z776
  
Institution: HOLMAN DEATH ROW

Courtney Lockhart More News

ee County Circuit Court Judge Jacob Walker denied Courtney Lockhart’s post-conviction challenge to his conviction for the capital murder of an Auburn University student Friday, Attorney General Steve Marshall announced.

Lockhart, 35, was convicted in November 2010 for the kidnapping and murder of Auburn University freshman Lauren Burk in 2008. He was sentenced to death.

“Courtney Lockhart viciously and senselessly struck down an innocent young woman. Even as he was terrorizing Lauren Burk, she responded with kindness which was met with brutality,” Marshall said. “We later learned that several other women came close to the same fate at his hands in the days before and after he killed Ms. Burk.

“Her murder shocked and saddened the people of Lee County and of Alabama, and we are determined that this defendant will not escape justice for his horrendous crime.”

The Lee County District Attorney’s Office prosecuted the case and obtained the guilty verdict. Walker overrode the jury’s recommendation to sentence Lockhart to life without parole in 2011, and he ultimately sentenced him to death by lethal injection.

Lockhart filed a Rule 32 petition in September 2015, challenging his death sentence.

Lockhart’s Rule 32 petition hearing first began in December 2018 in Walker’s courtroom at the Lee County Justice Center in Opelika, but was continued in February 2019.

Lockhart is represented by attorneys through the Equal Justice Initiative at no charge. The Attorney General’s Capital Litigation Division handled the case at a post-conviction evidentiary hearing.

The replies to the hearing from Lockhart’s attorneys, as well as state prosecutors, were all submitted to the court by August 2019.

Burk was found by a young Auburn couple traveling on Alabama Highway 147 at about 9 p.m. on March 4, 2008, according to previous reports. She was naked, except for a pair of socks.

Burk was shot in the left shoulder, the bullet passing through both of her lungs and exiting through her upper right arm.

She left her boyfriend’s Auburn University dorm earlier that night to go to the campus library to study with a friend. Burk was supposed to meet her boyfriend there at 8:30 p.m.

While walking to her vehicle, Lockhart accosted her, pointed a gun at her and ordered her into her car. He then forced her to undress so she wouldn’t “do anything or make any crazy moves,” Lockhart said in a previous report.

He then drove for about 30 minutes. Burk listened to him talk about how bad he felt his life was, and she offered to help him find a job, according to Lockhart

After the shooting, Lockhart bought gas with Burk’s debit card. He returned Burk’s car to the university parking lot where he doused it with gas, set it on fire and left in his own vehicle.

Lockhart left with her iPod, $46, her credit card and his gun. He left her clothes, the remaining cash and her digital camera to burn.

He then went on to use her debit card in Georgia to purchase more fuel and buy other things. Lockhart later threw the debit card out the window on his return to Alabama.

Along the way, Lockhart robbed a woman at gunpoint on March 5, 2008 in a LaGrange, Ga., nursing home parking lot. He then robbed a woman who was with her young son at a Sam’s Club parking lot on March 6, 2008, in Columbus, Ga., according to a news release from Marshall.

The next day, in a Walmart parking lot in Newnan, Ga., Lockhart is believed to have hit a 72-year-old woman in the head and forced her into her car, but abandoned her car and fled the area in his vehicle, reports said.

Later on March 7, 2008, sped through a construction zone in Alabama and was pulled over by Phenix City police. The officer wrote Lockhart two tickets but dispatch told the officers that investigators wanted to speak to Lockhart, reports said.

Lockhart sped way within the transaction of event. Four police officers followed him. The chase later ended in a foot pursuit. Lockhart was taken into custody in a wooded area.

Officers recovered Burk’s stolen iPhone, spent shell casing, Gatorade bottles and green T-shirt with flecks of blood in Lockhart’s car, said reports.

Investigators also discovered that Lockhart had robbed at least two women at gunpoint in Smiths Station and Phenix City in the days prior to the murder of Burk, the release said.​

https://oanow.com/news/crime_courts/decision-made-in-lockharts-fight-against-death-penalty/article_f970e2fa-791b-11ea-a08b-87d3f2fe4ca5.html

Bart Johnson Alabama Death Row

bart johnson

Bart Johnson was sentenced to death and remains on Alabama Death Row for the murder of a police officer. According to court documents Bart Johnson would fatally shoot Officer Phillip Davis when he was pulled over on a traffic violation. Bart Johnson would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Alabama Death Row Inmate List

Bart Johnson 2021 Information

Inmate: JOHNSON, BART WAYNE
AIS: 0000Z778
  
Institution: HOLMAN DEATH ROW

Bart Johnson More News

A Shelby County judge today sentenced a pharmacist to death for the 2009 slaying of a Pelham police officer.

Retired Shelby County Circuit Judge D. Al Crowson handed down the death sentence to Bart Wayne Johnson following a sentencing hearing.

Crowson said the sentence was a difficult decision but that everything he heard made death appropriate. Johnson’s actions displayed a callous disregard for human life and a total disregard for authority, especially since it seemed the officer was trying to accommodate Johnson.

Johnson apologized, saying simply that he was sorry and uncertain why he acted as he did. Responding to a comment earlier by the judge who said the confrontation seemed out of character, Johnson told Crowson “it was.”

Johnson was found guilty last month on two counts of capital murder for the December 2009 shooting death of Officer Philip Davis.

A jury that convicted Johnson last month recommended that he receive a death sentence. The jury voted 10-2 for a death sentence instead of life without parole.

Evidence at Johnson’s trial showed that he shot Davis in the face after Davis pulled him over and wrote him a speeding ticket on I-65 in Pelham at around midnight.

Johnson contended he was not guilty by reason of mental disease or defect. A psychologist hired by the defense testified at Johnson’s trial that Johnson had a brief psychotic episode when he shot Davis.

https://www.al.com/spotnews/2011/06/hold_bart_wayne_johnson_senten.html

Aubrey Shaw Alabama Death Row

aubrey shaw

Aubrey Shaw was sentenced to death and remains on Alabama Death Row for the murders of his Great Aunt and Uncle. According to court documents Aubrey Shaw would murder Bob and Doris Gilbert who were stabbed over fifty times. Aubrey Shaw would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Alabama Death Row Inmate List

Aubrey Shaw 2021 Information

Inmate: SHAW, AUBREY LYNN
AIS: 0000z780
  
Institution: HOLMAN DEATH ROW

Aubrey Shaw More News

A Mobile County jury convicted Aubrey Lynn Shaw of capital murder today in the stabbing deaths of his great uncle and great aunt on their St. Elmo farm in 2007.

The jury deliberated less than an hour before finding Shaw, 36, guilty of 4 counts of capital murder in the August 2007 slayings.

Bob and Doris Gilbert, 79 and 83, lived together on Gilbert Stables farm off Argyle Road in south Mobile County since the early 1970s. They were found stabbed 50 times in their bedroom.

“They weren’t strong and young, like the defendant,” said Mobile County District Attorney Ashley Rich in closing arguments. “They were living out the remainder of their years on their farm … when they were brutally stabbed … They were in the sanctity of their home and he took their lives.”

Shaw lived in a trailer home on the farmland, and he was arrested there after he told a neighbor that he’d killed two people. Investigators found a wooden-handled knife coated in blood in the grass outside the trailer.

The defense said he was high on crack cocaine at the time.

The jury must now decide whether to recommend the death penalty or life in prison without parole for Shaw. The jury is expected to begin hearing testimony in the penalty phase Tuesday.

Today, two experts from the Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences testified.

Investigators found Bob Gilbert’s blood on the handle and blade of the knife, according to testimony, and on Shaw’s shoes and socks. A shirt with Gilbert’s blood was found lying on Argyle Road.

No blood was found on Shaw’s hands or underneath his fingernails, according to testimony.

After confessing to a neighbor, Shaw told a Mobile County Sheriff’s deputy that he wanted the death penalty — something an innocent person wouldn’t do, Rich told the jury.

Shaw went to a nearby resident’s house and asked whether the man knew anyone who wanted to buy a .357 Magnum handgun, according to the prosecution. After the Gilberts were found dead, investigators discovered that guns — including a .357 — were missing from the house.

Shaw was found guilty of 2 counts of capital murder for each victim. For each victim, he was convicted under two definitions of capital murder: killing more than one person in the same incident and killing someone in the midst of a burglary.

The trial will continue Tuesday in Mobile County Circuit Judge Michael Youngpeter’s courtroom at Mobile Government Plaza

https://www.al.com/live/2011/03/aubrey_shaw_convited_of_capita.html

Corey Wimbley Alabama Death Row

corey wimbley

Corey Wimbley was sentenced to death and remains on Alabama Death Row for a robbery murder. According to court documents Corey Wimbley would shoot and kill a grocery store owner, Connie Ray Wheat, during a robbery. Corey Wimbley would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Alabama Death Row Inmate List

Corey Wimbley 2021 Information

Inmate: WIMBLEY, COREY ALLEN
AIS: 0000Z781
  
Institution: HOLMAN DEATH ROW

Corey Wimbley More News

On the morning of December 19, 2008, Wheat was working alone at the Harris Grocery store, which he owned, in Wagarville. Two women, one of whom was a longtime friend of Wimbley’s, were driving by Harris Grocery when they saw Wimbley run out of the store and get into an automobile driven by Juan Crayton, III. A short time later, a customer walked into Harris Grocery to make a purchase. She smelled gasoline and saw liquid on the floor but was unable to locate Wheat. Other customers came into the store, and one of them, T.J. Smith, walked behind the counter of the store, where he found Wheat dead on the floor. Smith went outside and telephoned emergency 911.

Alabama State Trooper Robert Knapp was driving by Harris Grocery and saw several people in the parking lot gesturing at him. Trooper Knapp pulled into the parking lot of Harris Grocery and entered the store. He smelled gasoline and saw liquid on the floor and the counter. After looking at Wheat’s body, Trooper Knapp secured the store and contacted his dispatcher, asking for additional law-enforcement officers to be sent to Harris Grocery.

Crayton drove himself and Wimbley to the home of Earnest Lee Barnes in Mobile. After speaking outside to the two men, Barnes went alone into his house. When Barnes came out, he noticed that Crayton had moved Crayton’s car from a concrete slab to a muddy area on the side of Barnes’s house. The three men then got into Barnes’s car and drove to a mall. Barnes stopped at a service station and, while pumping gasoline into his car, received a telephone call from his cousin, who told him that Wimbley and Crayton had “just done something bad up there in Courtelyou.”1 (R. 731.) Barnes took the two men back to his house, where Crayton and Wimbley argued about who would drive Crayton’s car. Crayton decided that he would drive the car, and Wimbley asked Barnes to drive him to the Greyhound bus station. Barnes drove Wimbley to the bus station, where Wimbley got his suitcase out of Barnes’s car, went inside the station, and bought a bus ticket to Tampa, Florida.

Barnes telephoned his cousin, with whom he had spoken at the service station, and his cousin told him that Wimbley and Crayton had killed someone. Barnes then went to the McIntosh Police Department to report his contact with Wimbley and Crayton.

Wimbley went into a bathroom at the bus station and changed his clothes. Later that day, he was arrested at the bus station and transported to the Washington County jail.

Crayton abandoned his car at a service station in Mobile. Inside the car, officers conducting a search pursuant to a search warrant found a box of matches and a pair of work gloves.

Inside Harris Grocery, law-enforcement officers found the bullets that had passed through Wheat’s body. Officers also noticed a red liquid on the counter and saw that the liquid had been “slung across the floor.” (R. 683.) Officers found struck matches and noticed that one area of the floor was charred and that there was a “small amount of charring on the counter by the register.” (R. 811 .) Outside the store, officers found a plastic bottle containing residue.

Barnes gave officers permission to search his property. In Barnes’s backyard, officers found Wheat’s driver’s license, Social Security card, and bank cards.

Officers recovered Wimbley’s suitcase from the bus station and searched it pursuant to a search warrant. The officers found $325 in assorted United States currency inside the pocket of a pair of shorts in the suitcase.

After Wimbley was arrested, he invoked his right to counsel. Thereafter, on December 23, 2008, Wimbley requested to speak with members of the Washington County Sheriff’s Office. Deputy Ferrell Grimes went to the jail where he reviewed a Miranda2 form with Wimbley before Wimbley signed it. During the interview that followed, Wimbley first told Deputy Grimes that, on the day of the murder, he had asked Crayton to take him to Mobile. Crayton and another man Wimbley knew only as “Peanut” had picked up Wimbley and the three had gone to Creola where Crayton let Peanut out of the car. Crayton and Wimbley then had gone to Barnes’s house. After Deputy Grimes told Wimbley that witnesses had seen him leaving the Harris Grocery after the shooting and that Crayton had talked with law enforcement, Wimbley said that Crayton had picked him up the morning of the robbery and murder and had given Wimbley words of encouragement. Wimbley told Deputy Grimes that before Crayton picked him up that day, Wimbley had mixed gasoline with a Fanta soft drink in a bottle. Wimbley stated that he took the bottle into Harris Grocery, shot Wheat, stole cash, and then poured the mixture in the bottle throughout the store. Wimbley also said that he first shot Wheat in the arm and that he had poured the gasoline mixture on Wheat after he had shot him.

In January 2009, officers again searched Barnes’s house. In a shed in the backyard, officers found a .38 caliber handgun, a compact disc case, and some United States currency.

Dr. John Krolikowski, a senior medical examiner with the Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences, conducted the autopsy on Wheat. Dr. Krolikowski concluded that Wheat had been shot three times. One bullet struck Wheat in his right arm and shoulder before exiting his back. Another bullet entered the right side of Wheat’s chest, traveled through his heart, and exited the left side of his chest. The third bullet entered Wheat’s back and exited his chest. The cause of Wheat’s death was multiple gunshot wounds, and the manner of his death was homicide.

Timothy McSpadden, a firearm and tool-mark examiner with the Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences, determined that the bullets recovered from Harris Grocery had been fired from the .38 caliber handgun found in the shed at Barnes’s house.

Gary Cartee, a Deputy State Fire Marshall with the State Fire Marshall’s Office, determined that the fire inside Harris Grocery was intentionally set and that the cause of the fire was the “introduction of ignitable liquids onto the scene, set by an open flame, a match.” (R. 799.)

Sharee Wells, a forensic scientist with the Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences, analyzed samples of liquids taken from Harris Grocery and the clothes Wheat was wearing when he was shot. Wells detected gasoline on the pair of pants and shirt Wheat was wearing when he was shot. She also determined that liquid found on the counter, floor, and a shelf inside Harris Grocery and liquid taken from the plastic bottle found in the parking lot of Harris Grocery was gasoline.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation determined that one of the shoes Wimbley was wearing at the time of his arrest matched a shoe print officers found on a paper bag behind the counter at Harris Grocery.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/al-court-of-criminal-appeals/1687569.html

Demetrius Frazier Alabama Death Row

demetrius frazier

Demetrius Frazier was sentenced to death and remains on Alabama Death Row for the sexual assault and murder of a woman. According to court documents Demetrius Frazier was serving a life sentence in Michigan when he confessed to the sexual assault and murder of Pauline Brown. Demetrius Frazier was convicted and sentenced to death

Alabama Death Row Inmate List

Demetrius Frazier 2021 Information

Inmate: FRAZIER, DEMETRIUS TERRENC
AIS: 0000Z608
  
Institution: HOLMAN DEATH ROW

Demetrius Frazier More News

After serving more than 18 years of a life sentence in Michigan, Alabama death row inmate Demetrius Terrence Frazier has been transferred back to Alabama where he’s being held at Holman Correctional Facility in Atmore.

Frazier was convicted of capital murder in Jefferson County for the November 26, 1991, death of Pauline Brown.  The jury, by a vote of 10 to 2, recommended the death penalty. The trial judge agreed with the jury’s recommendation and sentenced Frazier to death on August 8, 1996.

Frazier was arrested in Detroit, Michigan in March of 1992, on charges unrelated to the case in Alabama. While in the custody of the Detroit Police Department, Frazier confessed to the rape, robbery, and murder of Ms. Brown.

Frazier spent more than 18 years in the Michigan Department of Corrections, convicted in April, 1993, and sentenced to life imprisonment on charges of Armed Robbery, Criminal Sexual Misconduct, Felony Firearms possession, and Felony Murder.

As of November 1, 2011, there are 199 inmates on Alabama’s death row.

https://www.wsfa.com/story/15937786/death-row-inmate-returned-to-alabama/