Aaron Gunches Arizona Death Row

aaron gunches arizona death row

Aaron Gunches was sentenced to death by the State of Arizona for the murder of a man. According to court documents an argument broke out between the victim, Ted Price, and Aaron Gunches. The two would get in a vehicle together and would drive to a reservation where Aaron Gunches shot the victim twice in the head. Aaron Gunches was later involved in a high speed police pursuit and when the Officer approached his vehicle afterwards Gunches would fire two bullets at him. Thankfully the Officer bulletproof vest stopped on of the shots and the second shot deflected off of his watch. When Aaron Gunches was later pulled over bullets found in his vehicle matched those that killed Ted Price. Aaron Gunches was arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Arizona Death Row Inmate List

Aaron Gunches 2021 Information

ASPC Florence, Central Unit
PO Box 8200
AARON B. GUNCHES 145371
Florence, AZ 85132
United States

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In December of 2002, the body of Ted Price was found shot to death on the Salt River Reservation near Mesa. In January of 2003 Gunches was pulled over by Arizona DPS Officer Robert Flannery near the California border. Gunches shot Flannery twice – luckily, one of the bullets was stopped by a bulletproof vest and the other deflected off Flannery’s wristwatch and he suffered minor injuries. Gunches fled and ultimately was arrested after a manhunt that included more than 50 officers. Bullet casings found near Price’s body matched the gun Gunches used to shoot Officer Flannery. Gunches pled guilty to the execution-style murder of Ted Price. At the penalty phase, Jennifer Garcia testified that she and Gunches were staying with Gunches’ girlfriend in Mesa when Price, who was the girlfriend’s ex-husband, came to visit. Gunches grew angry at Price and ordered Garcia to drive him and Price out to the reservation, where Gunches shot Price three times in the chest and once in the back of the head.

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In November 2002, Ted Price visited his ex-wife, Katherine Lecher, in Mesa, Arizona. Price planned to stay at Lecher’s apartment while waiting for a school grant. After about ten days, the two began fighting and Lecher told Price to leave. The argument became increasingly heated and Lecher hit Price in the face with a telephone. Price remained conscious but appeared dazed and unresponsive.

¶ 3 Gunches came to the apartment that evening. After talking with Lecher, he asked her two roommates, Michelle Beck and Jennifer Garcia, to put Price and his belongings into Lecher’s car so Gunches could take him to the bus station. Gunches told Garcia to drive. Once at the station, Gunches said he did not have enough money for a bus ticket. He ordered Garcia to drive out of Mesa. Soon thereafter, he told her to turn onto a dirt path and to drive toward a dark, isolated desert area.

¶ 4 Garcia stopped the car. While Gunches was looking in the trunk, Price got out. Garcia then heard three popping sounds and saw Price fall to the ground; after hearing another popping sound, she saw Gunches standing by Price’s body with a gun at his side. Gunches got into the car, and Garcia drove back to Mesa, stopping once to dispose of Price’s belongings in a dumpster.

¶ 5 Price’s body was discovered several days later. After Price was identified, detectives interviewed Lecher, Beck, and Garcia. Beck said that Gunches told her that he had killed Price. While the investigation continued, Gunches was arrested in La Paz County for shooting at a law enforcement officer. He later pleaded guilty to attempted murder for that incident. The authorities matched the weapon used in the La Paz County shooting with projectiles recovered from Price’s body and projectiles and a shell casing recovered from the murder scene.

¶ 6 In October 2003, Gunches was indicted for the first degree murder and kidnapping of Price. Gunches was found competent to stand trial in November 2005 and competent to waive his right to counsel in November 2007. He subsequently pleaded guilty to both counts. Based on the La Paz County conviction, Gunches stipulated during the aggravation phase that he had previously been convicted of a serious offense under A.R.S. § 13-751(F)(2) (2010). The jury also found that Price’s murder was committed in an especially heinous or depraved manner, see id. § 13-751(F)(6). Gunches presented virtually no mitigation evidence during the penalty phase (an objection was sustained to the only question he asked his one mitigation witness), but requested leniency in allocution. The jury determined that he should be sentenced to death.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/az-supreme-court/1527411.html

David Gulbrandson Arizona Death Row

david gulbrandson arizona death row

David Gulbrandson was sentenced to death by the State of Arizona for the murder of a woman. According to court documents David Gulbrandson and the victim were in a relationship that ended in January 1991. On Valentines day the woman would be assaulted by Gulbrandson and filed a restraining order. Gulbrandson would defy the order and force his way into the woman’s home where she was tied up, tortured and finally murdered. David Gulbrandson would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Arizona Death Row Inmate List

David Gulbrandson 2021 Information

ASPC Florence, Central Unit
PO Box 8200
DAVID GULBRANDSON 096426
Florence, AZ 85132
United States

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David Gulbrandson and the 45-year-old female victim operated a photography business, and also were involved in an intimate personal relationship. The victim ended their personal relationship in January of 1991, and Gulbrandson physically assaulted her on February 14, 1991. The victim sought and obtained a protective order against Gulbrandson as a result of this assault.

On March 9, 1991, David Gulbrandson threatened to kill the victim during a telephone conversation. Sometime late in the evening of March 10, 1991, or early in the morning of March 11, 1991, Gulbrandson entered the victim’s home, and brutally tortured and murdered her while her two children were sleeping. Despite the victim’s intense struggle, Gulbrandson inflicted 33 incision-type injuries all over her body, a puncture wound to her liver, and at least ten blunt force injuries. In addition, he cracked the victim’s teeth, fractured her nose and seven of her ribs, embedded part of a wooden salad fork in her leg, and attempted to burn her by lighting her hair on fire. Gulbrandson killed her by either strangling her or by inflicting a blow to her neck which caused her to suffocate. Gulbrandson left the victim in the master bedroom clad only in her panties, with her ankles and one wrist bound with electrical cords, and he left three knives, one razor knife, and one pair of scissors, all of which were bloodstained, in the kitchen sink.

David Gulbrandson left the scene in the victim’s car. Gulbrandson’s fingerprints were found at the scene, and bloody clothing was found at his residence. The victim’s car was located in Montana on April 1, 1991, and Gulbrandson was arrested there 2 days later.

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In 1990, David Gulbrandson and the victim, Irene, became partners in a photography business known as Memory Makers, which they operated out of Irene’s home. For about one year, during 1990, Irene and defendant were also romantically involved. Defendant lived with Irene and her two children until January 1991 when Irene asked him to move out. He leased his own apartment on February 1, 1991.

After the romantic relationship ended, the business relationship continued, but defendant suspected that Irene was trying to steal the business from him. Irene did in fact wish to sever the business relationship and wanted to “buy out” defendant by paying him for his proportionate share of the business. From about January to March 1991, Irene resumed dating Evan Shark, with whom she had been involved before her relationship with defendant.

On February 14, 1991 (Valentine’s Day), David Gulbrandson became intoxicated and argued with Irene about the business in the presence of two friends, Sally and Charles Maio. Defendant tried to strangle Irene, and Charles Maio had to pull defendant off of her. Later, when the Maios drove defendant home, defendant said, “I’m going to kill her [Irene]. I’m going to kill the business. I’m going to kill everything.” Irene filed a petition complaining about the incident and obtained an injunction prohibiting harassment, which was an order from the court prohibiting defendant from having any contact with Irene and from going to her residence. A police assistant testified at trial that when she served defendant the injunction on February 27, 1991, defendant “called [Irene] a bitch.”

Irene traveled to New Mexico on business the weekend of March 8, 1991, accompanied by Evan Shark, to sell photographs by Memory Makers. She returned on Sunday, March 10, about 7:00 p.m. with cash and checks from the business trip. Mr. Shark returned to his home in Las Vegas, Nevada.

The next morning, Monday, March 11, 1991, Irene’s daughter went to her mother’s bedroom to awaken her and found the bedroom door locked. Her daughter knocked on the door but heard no response; she then noticed a dark stain on the wall leading to her mother’s bedroom. Suspecting that something was wrong, the daughter telephoned her grandmother who called the police. The police found Irene dead in the bathroom adjacent to her bedroom, and her car, a 1987 Saab Turbo, was missing. Two of her three children were home the evening of March 10 but apparently did not hear anything suspicious.

Irene was killed brutally. The police found her face down dressed in only a pair of panties with her legs bent up behind her at the knee and her ankles tied together by an *54 electrical cord attached to a curling iron. Her right wrist was bound with an electrical cord attached to a hair dryer. Her bedroom was covered in what appeared to be blood. From the bedroom to the bathroom were what appeared to be drag marks in blood. Clumps of her hair were in the bedroom; some of the hair had been cut, some burned, and some pulled out by the roots.

Four knives and a pair of scissors were in the kitchen sink and appeared to have blood on them; hair appeared to be on at least one of the knives. There also was what appeared to be blood on a paper towel holder in the kitchen; a burnt paper towel was in Irene’s bedroom. A Coke can with what appeared to be a bloody fingerprint on it was on the kitchen counter; this fingerprint was later identified as defendant’s. At trial, the state’s criminalist testified that the knives, scissors, paper towel holder, and Coke can had human blood on them, although the police did not determine the blood type. Defendant’s fingerprints were found on the paper towel holder and on an arcadia door at Irene’s home, which was open in the family room the morning after the crime. A blood-soaked night shirt with holes in it was in Irene’s bedroom; the blood on the nightshirt was consistent with Irene’s blood type. A banker’s bag was also in her bedroom with what appeared to be blood on it.

The autopsy revealed that Irene suffered at least 34 sharp-force injuries (stab wounds and slicing wounds), puncture wounds, and many blunt force injuries. The most serious stab wound punctured her liver, which alone was a fatal injury. Her nose was broken, as were 2 ribs on the back of the chest and 5 ribs in front on the same side of her trunk. The tine from a wooden salad fork was embedded in her leg; a broken wooden fork was found in the bedroom. On her left buttock was an abrasion that appeared to be from the heel of a shoe. The thyroid cartilage in front of her neck was fractured, which could have been caused by squeezing or by impact with a blunt object. She died from the multiple stab wounds and the blunt neck injury. The neck injury may have resulted in asphyxiation. The pathologist believed that most, if not all, of the injuries were inflicted before death.

The police immediately suspected David Gulbrandson. Police officers set up a surveillance of his apartment. Having observed no one entering or leaving the apartment, police officers conducted a “check-welfare” sweep of the apartment at about 3:00 p.m. on March 11, because they were concerned that defendant might have been injured in the struggle with Irene. The officers knocked on the door, announced their identity, and entered the apartment with a pass key after hearing no response. They searched briefly for defendant, but he was not inside. While making the sweep, an officer saw some apparently blood-splattered papers on the kitchen counter and a jacket apparently stained with blood hanging on the back of a kitchen chair.

Early in the evening of March 11, David Gulbrandson called his mother, Dorothy Riddle, and told her that “he thought he had done a terrible thing. He thought he had killed Irene.” Defendant also said that he was going to kill himself. Ms. Riddle called the police and told them about this conversation.

The police obtained a warrant to search defendant’s apartment and did so at about 8:20 p.m. on March 11. The police found checks from New Mexico, payable to Memory Makers, and other business papers relating to Memory Makers; black clothing (shoes, shirt, pants, and a jacket); and a business card in the back pocket of the black pants. All these items had human blood on them consistent with Irene’s blood type. The police also found a credit card of Irene’s in the pocket of the black jacket.

Witnesses saw David Gulbrandson gambling in Laughlin, Nevada, in the early morning of Tuesday, March 12, 1991. Defendant told casino employees that his name was David Wood. The casino offered, and defendant accepted, a free room for the day because defendant had played for several hours and lost between $1,100 and $1,200.

David Gulbrandson had attempted to sell Irene’s car to a bar owner in Great Falls, Montana, but the bar owner refused, in part because defendant could not produce a title to the car. Defendant did sell a cellular phone *55 from the car to the bar owner. On April 1, 1991, a police officer in Montana found Irene’s car abandoned with Canadian license plates attached; the officer found an Arizona license plate under the driver’s seat. The police apprehended defendant in Montana on April 3, 1991.

https://law.justia.com/cases/arizona/supreme-court/1995/cr-93-0085-ap-2.html

Vincent Guarino Arizona Death Row

vincent guarino arizona death row

Vincent Guarino was sentenced to death by the State of Arizona for a kidnapping and murder. According to court documents Vincent Guarino was trying to impress the Aryan Brotherhood when he kidnapped and murdered a man. The victim, Chad Rowe was kidnapped from his home, assaulted before being fatally shot. Vincent Guarino was arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

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Vincent Guarino 2021 Information

ASPC Eyman, Browning Unit
PO Box 3400
VINCENT J. GUARINO 201791
Florence, AZ 85132
United States

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The Arizona Supreme Court on Thursday upheld a man’s convictions and death sentence for a killing that prosecutors said was motivated by a desire to become a member of the Aryan Brotherhood, a white supremacist gang.

Vincent Joseph Guarino was convicted of first-degree murder and other crimes in the March 2010 killing in Maricopa County of Chad Rowe, who was kidnapped from his home, then shot and stabbed.

Jurors sentenced Guarino to death for his murder conviction after finding four circumstances that permitted a death sentence.

Those circumstances included that the killing was intended to promote, further or assist the objectives of a criminal street gang or to join one.

Prosecutors have said Guarino’s case apparently was the first in Arizona in which jurors found that circumstance.

https://www.abc15.com/news/region-phoenix-metro/central-phoenix/convictions-death-sentence-upheld-for-vincent-guarino-who-wanted-to-join-gang

Richard Greenway Arizona Death Row

richard greenway arizona death row

Richard Greenway was sentenced to death by the State of Arizona for a double murder. According to court documents Richard Greenway and Christopher Lincoln would rob a home and in the process would shoot and kill the two victims, Lili Champagne and her 17-year-old daughter, Mindy Peters. The two murderers would steal a number of possessions from the home before fleeing. The pair would later be arrested. Christopher Lincoln was a juvenile at the time of the killing and was sentenced to life in prison without parole. Richard Greenway was convicted and sentenced to death.

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On March 27, 1988, Greenway and Christopher Lincoln. burglarized the Tucson home of Lili Champagne. Greenway shot and killed Mrs. Champagne and her 17-year-old daughter, Mindy, with a .22 rifle. He and Lincoln then stole some property, including Mrs. Champagne’s Porsche. The two later abandoned the Porsche after setting it on fire. Greenway later boasted to a jail inmate that he had killed the women because they had seen his face. Lincoln, a juvenile, was tried as an adult and convicted for the murders. He received concurrent life sentences

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A federal appeals court won’t reverse the conviction of Richard Greenway for killing a Tucson mother and her teen daughter in 1988.

Judge Mary Schroeder, writing for the three-judge panel of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, discounted Greenway’s claim that his trial attorney didn’t do enough to keep him from being found guilty.

Police found the bodies of Lili Champagne and daughter Mindy Peters in their home. Each had been shot twice.

Police began looking at Greenway after his sister notified homicide detectives he knew something about the deaths. When police picked up Greenway and co-defendant Chris Lincoln for questioning, Lincoln confessed and implicated Greenway, court records show.

After a three-day trial, Greenway was convicted of murder, burglary, armed robbery, theft and arson and sentenced to death.

In his appeal, Greenway argued his trial attorney should have pursued questions about whether any jurors had been the victim of a violent crime.

The judge did not specifically ask that question. Years later it was learned that one juror had been raped and testified against her attacker at his trial, facts that likely would have led to her being disqualified as a juror.

But Schroeder said there was no way for Greenway’s attorney to know that information, making it “far too speculative” to conclude he didn’t effectively do his job.

https://tucson.com/news/local/crime/federal-appeals-court-upholds-conviction-of-tucson-double-killer/article_9e4e48f1-36e5-58a8-acb1-52e0f712bf0c.html

Mark Goudeau Arizona Death Row

mark goudeau arizona death row

Mark Goudeau was sentenced to death by the State of Arizona for a series of murders. According to court documents Mark Goudeau was responsible for at least eight murders between 2005 and 2006. Mark is also responsible for a series of sexual assaults and robberies. Mark Goudeau would ultimately be sentenced to death

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Mark Goudeau 2021 Information

ASPC Florence, Central Unit
PO Box 8200
MARK GOUDEAU 083195
Florence, AZ 85132
United States

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Phoenix police have linked a 1985 sexual assault to convicted killer Mark Goudeau, the Baseline Killer.

A cold-case detective found evidence still in storage from the assault and sent it out for DNA testing in 2013, police say.

The DNA was linked to Goudeau last year, according to a statement this morning by Sergeant Jonathan Howard, Phoenix police spokesman.

Goudeau rates among the most fearsome serial killers in Arizona history. Investigators proved he killed eight women and a man, and sexually assaulted 15 women and girls in a vicious crime spree in 2005 and 2006

Following a jury trial, he was sentenced in 2007 to 438 years in prison on the rape charges. Another jury panel sentenced him to death in 2011 for the murders.

Police labeled Goudeau the Baseline Rapist in 2005, following a series of abductions and rapes of girls as young as 12. That changed to the Baseline Killer after he was linked to several unsolved homicides.

Goudeau, 51, was 20 years old the night of February 27, 1985, when a 22-year-old woman was abducted at gunpoint near 3600 East Oak Street in Phoenix.

The attacker forced the woman to a nearby location and raped her, police said. He fled on foot after making her drive back to the area of the abduction.

Police examined the evidence using the available technology of the era, but were never able to find the suspect.

DNA analysis was not “readily available” as a police tool until 1998, Howard said.

DNA testing proved invaluable to the investigation of the murder spree in 2005 and 2006.

As New Times reported in 2011, police found evidence of two of Goudeau’s murder victims on his sneakers, despite his attempts to wash them. Goudeau’s DNA was also found in some of the sexual-assault cases.

The killer’s DNA profile had been on file with the state since 2004, when he submitted a DNA sample to authorities after being released from a 13.5-year prison sentence for an earlier series of armed robberies and violent crimes.

The statute of limitations in the case expired in 1990, meaning Goudeau can’t be prosecuted for it now.

But the discovery provided “closure” to the victim after she was notified in October about the DNA match, Howard said. She no longer lives in Arizona.

“While this investigation did not lead to the arrest of the suspect, the identification, notification, and closure we were able to provide to the victim is an example of the tenacity of the Phoenix Police Department, the importance of testing all procedures for sex crime evidence kits, and the value of preserving evidence for evolving technology,” he said.

Howard said he issued a news release about the discovery on Wednesday morning following inquiries about the link by Donna Rossi, a reporter for Channel 5 (KPHO-TV) and Channel 3 (KTVK-TV). Her piece on the 1985 case aired on Tuesday.

In June 2016, a unanimous decision by the Arizona Supreme Court rejected Goudeau’s appeal.

He remains on death row.

The Arizona Legislature ultimately removed the statute of limitations from sexual assault cases, but the new law didn’t affect cases that occurred earlier.

https://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/news/phoenix-police-link-baseline-killer-mark-goudeau-now-on-death-row-to-1985-rape-9184071