Dwandarrius Robinson Arizona Death Row

Dwandarrius Robinson Arizona Death Row

Dwandarrius Robinson was sentenced to death by the State of Arizona for the murder of a woman and her unborn child. According to court documents Dwandarrius Robinson called 911 saying his girlfriends apartment was on fire. When firefighters arrived they found a woman inside who was bound with duct tape and a rag stuck in her mouth also that the fire was intentionally set. The woman and her unborn child would die from her injuries. Dwandarrius Robinson would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Arizona Death Row Inmate List

Dwandarrius Robinson 2021 Information

ASPC Eyman, Browning Unit
PO Box 3400
DWANDARRIUS J. ROBINSON 327420
Florence, AZ 85132
United States

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A Valley man has been sentenced to death for the 2012 murder of his pregnant girlfriend, officials said Monday.

Dwandarrius Robinson, 27, was found guilty of two counts of first-degree murder, one count of arson of an occupied structure, and one count of kidnapping.

According to officials, Robinson called 911 on July 18, 2012 reporting that he’d arrived at his north Phoenix apartment to find it on fire, and was unsure if his girlfriend was still inside.

Firefighters entered the home and found 21-year-old Shaniqua Hall, who was 9 months pregnant at the time, bound with duct tape, a rag shoved down her throat, and handcuffed inside a bedroom.

Investigators found evidence that the fire had been intentionally set and an accelerant used.

During the trial’s penalty phase, jurors found seven aggravating factors, leaving Robinson eligible for the death penalty.

“The callous and inhumane killing of his girlfriend and their unborn child is the worst example of a man utterly failing those who counted on him for love and support,” said Maricopa County Attorney Bill Montgomery. “The jury’s verdict accurately and properly imposes the death penalty as a just and proportionate punishment for these despicable crimes.”

https://www.abc15.com/news/region-phoenix-metro/north-phoenix/valley-man-sentenced-to-death-for-murder-of-pregnant-girlfriend

Thomas Riley Arizona Death Row

thomas riley

Thomas Riley was sentenced to death by the State of Arizona for a prison murder. According to court documents Thomas Riley would murder another inmate in order to enter the Aryan Brotherhood. According to prison officials the victim was killed because he refused an order from the Aryan Brotherhood to commit an act of violence. Thomas Riley was convicted and sentenced to death.

Arizona Death Row Inmate List

Thomas Riley 2021 Information

ASPC Eyman, Browning Unit
PO Box 3400
THOMAS M. RILEY 135692
Florence, AZ 85132
United States

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In June 2008, Riley and the victim Sean Kelly were inmates at the prison complex in Buckeye.
The prison unit in which they were housed is divided into four pods. Inmates are not permitted to
enter a pod in which they do not live. Riley was housed in Pod A, and Kelly was housed in Pod
C. On the evening of June 29, Riley and his cellmate entered Pod C and attacked Kelly in his cell,
stabbing him 114 times with prison-made shanks. After the attack, Riley changed clothes in
Kelly’s cell, leaving behind a bloody pair of pants with his inmate card inside its pocket and a
bloody shirt imprinted with his inmate number.
The corrections officer in the Pod C control room observed Riley and his cellmate standing at the
outer doors of Pod C and directed them to leave the pod. She testified at trial that Riley looked
happy and had his hand on his cellmate’s shoulder in a congratulatory manner. Shortly thereafter,
corrections officers discovered Kelly’s body and quickly identified Riley and his cellmate as
suspects. When the officers arrived at Riley’s cell, they found blood on both Riley and his
cellmate, a pair of socks with blood and Riley’s inmate number on them, and more blood on the
sink, toilet, and the inmates’ personal items. Later DNA testing confirmed the blood was Kelly’s.
Nearly two years after Kelly’s murder, another inmate gave investigators a letter he had received
from Riley. A document examiner confirmed through handwriting analysis that Riley had written
the letter, and a fingerprint examiner found Riley’s fingerprints on it. In the letter, Riley chronicled
his journey to full Aryan Brotherhood membership and his involvement in Kelly’s murder,
including numerous graphic details of the crime.

https://www.azcourts.gov/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=sz47dQ9MCis%3D&portalid=45

Charles Reinhardt Arizona Death Row

Charles Reinhardt

Charles Reinhardt was sentenced to death by the State of Arizona for a brutal murder. According to court documents Charles Reinhardt would murder a man in a drug deal gone wrong. Charles Reinhardt would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Arizona Death Row Inmate List

Charles Reinhardt 2021 Information

ASPC Florence, Central Unit
PO Box 8200
CHARLES B. RIENHARDT 084033
Florence, AZ 85132
United States

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One of Reinhardt’s friends introduced the victim, Michael Ellis, to Reinhardt for the purpose of helping Reinhardt purchase methamphetamine. On September 4, 1995, Charles Reinhardt, a female friend, Ellis, and his male contact person met at Charles Nadeau’s apartment to negotiate the deal. Reinhardt gave the male $1,180 cash so he could get the methamphetamine, and Ellis stayed behind as “collateral”. After several hours when the drugs did not arrive, Reinhardt and Nadeau threatened Ellis with physical injury and demanded either the money or the drugs. Early the next morning, Nadeau and Charles Reinhardt drove Ellis in a Buick to the Reddington Pass area of Pima County, where they beat him in the face, shot him in the shoulder with a shotgun, and beat his head with heavy rocks, which resulted in blood spatters on their clothes. Reinhardt and Nadeau then drove the Buick to a shopping center, where Nadeau tried to start a fire inside the Buick. When a patrol car drove into the area, Charles Reinhardt and Nadeau fled in a friend’s car, which resulted in a high speed chase until the friend’s car was wrecked. After officers apprehended the two, they noticed blood on their clothing. In the Buick at the shopping center, officers found a bloody towel, a shotgun, the victim’s wallet, and charred newspapers. At Nadeau’s apartment, officers saw blood smears near the entry of the apartment and spatters of blood leading out to the parking lot. Nadeau’s friends admitted seeing blood near the entrance and on the interior of the apartment, and on the chair where the victim was last seen sitting.

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On the evening of September 4, 1995, Charles Reinhardt sought to purchase a large quantity of methamphetamines in Tucson. He arranged to meet two men—Michael[669 F.Supp.2d 1045]Ellis, the victim in this case, and James Breedlove—at the apartment of co-defendant Charles Nadeau. Once the deal was made, Petitioner gave Breedlove $1,180 with the understanding that Breedlove would return to the apartment with the drugs. In order to secure Breedlove’s return, the parties agreed that Michael Ellis would remain in the apartment with Petitioner.

Breedlove never returned. As the evening progressed, Charles Reinhardt became increasingly agitated. He threatened Ellis and insisted that Ellis locate Breedlove by telephone. At one point, Petitioner called Breedlove’s girlfriend, Micki Rowlan, and told her that if Breedlove did not return, he would take Ellis on a hike in the desert, blindfold him, hang him over the edge of a cliff, remove the blindfold, and drop him. After midnight, Nadeau arrived at the apartment. For reasons that are unclear, Nadeau struck Ellis across the face hard enough to make him bleed. Eventually, Breedlove phoned the apartment with news that the deal was taking longer than expected. Petitioner told Breedlove that for every 10 minutes that Breedlove did not return, Petitioner would hurt Ellis further.

Charles Reinhardt and Nadeau eventually left the apartment with Ellis. When two witnesses returned to the apartment, they discovered a trail of blood leading from the apartment, blood on the living room carpet and on a chair where Ellis had been seated, and pieces of teeth on the floor. They also discovered a shotgun on a couch near Ellis’s chair.

Later that evening, Petitioner contacted Christina George, his girlfriend, and told her to meet him at a Circle K market near Reddington Pass because there was an emergency and he needed a ride. George drove to the appointed spot in a stolen Toyota MR-2, waited for some time, and then decided to drive up Reddington Pass to a place where she and Petitioner had recently been jumping off of rocks. Less than a mile up the dirt road, she encountered Petitioner and Nadeau on foot. Petitioner told her that their vehicle had gotten stuck on a rock. He also told her that Ellis had not died from his shotgun wounds, that they had dropped a rock on his head, and that, “I have brains all over my pants.”

The group dislodged the vehicle, a white Buick, and drove both cars to a nearby shopping plaza. They decided to burn the Buick. As George and Nadeau prepared to burn the car, a sheriff’s deputy approached the group. The three jumped into the stolen Toyota, a chase ensued, and the three were arrested. The Buick, left at the shopping plaza, had blood smeared on the driver’s side, a bloody towel inside, and a large blood stain in the back seat. Police found Michael Ellis’s wallet in the Buick, and a shotgun with a missing stock.

The next night, Nadeau led police to Ellis’s body near the dirt road leading to Reddington Pass. Ellis had been severely beaten about the head and torso. He had shotgun wounds. One or two large rocks had been dropped on his head. Pieces of a wood shotgun stock were found around a pool of blood near the body. The pieces matched the make and model of the shotgun found in the abandoned Buick.

Nadeau’s trial on the above charges was severed from Petitioner’s. Christina George was charged with attempted arson and hindering prosecution. She also faced unrelated felony charges. George entered into a plea agreement in return for her testimony against Petitioner.

Pima County Superior Court Judge Michael D. Alfred sentenced Petitioner to death for the first degree murder and to a term of imprisonment for the other counts. With respect to the murder count, the judge found three aggravating circumstances:

https://www.leagle.com/decision/infdco20091106624

Stephen Reeves Arizona Death Row

stephen reeves

Stephen Reeves was sentenced to death by the State of Arizona for the murder of a teenager. According to court documents Stephen Reeves would enter an insurance business where the victim, eighteen year old Norma Contreras, was working alone. Stephen Reeves would hit the victim in the head with a brick before slitting her throat. Stephen Reeves would steal her phone, wallet and car. Stephen Reeves would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Arizona Death Row Inmate List

Stephen Reeves 2021 Information

ASPC Florence, Central Unit
PO Box 8200
STEPHEN D. REEVES 263041
Florence, AZ 85132
United States

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A 57-year-old California man convicted of brutally murdering a Phoenix woman was sentenced to death today by Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Arthur Anderson.

In addition to the death sentence, Anderson added 42 years in prison to Stephen Douglas Reeves’ term for armed robbery, assault, kidnapping, and theft charges stemming from the murder of Norma Contreras,18.

In June 2007, Contreras was working alone on a Saturday morning at an insurance company in the 7300 block of West Indian School Road in Phoenix when Reeves, an Ojai Valley, California, resident with prior convictions for domestic violence and DUI, entered the business.

Reeves beat Contreras with a brick and dragged her through the office before slitting her throat with a boxcutter and stealing her car, wallet, and cell phone.

A person in an office in the same complex as the insurance company heard screaming and called police. The witness saw Reeves leave the business and described Contreras’ car to investigators.

Reeves was stopped by police in the victim’s auto and arrested shortly after the attack.

https://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/news/stephen-reeves-california-man-convicted-of-murdering-phoenix-teen-sentenced-to-death-6657511

David Ramirez Arizona Death Row

david ramirez

David Ramirez was sentenced to death by the State of Arizona for a double murder. According to court documents David Ramirez who was on parole would sexually assault and murder fifteen year old Candie Gortarez and would murder her mother Mary Gortarez. David Ramirez would be arrested at the crime scene, convicted and sentenced to death.

David Ramirez 2021 Information

ASPC Eyman, Browning Unit
PO Box 3400
DAVID M. RAMIREZ 039656
Florence, AZ 85132
United States

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During the early morning hours of May 25, 1989, David Ramirez, a parolee, murdered Mary Gortarez and her 15-year-old daughter, Candie Gortarez, in their Phoenix apartment. He stabbed Mary 18 times in the neck, in the back, in the stomach, and in the left eye. He stabbed Candie 15 times in the neck area. Neither Mary nor Candie died instantaneously. Neighbors heard sounds of a violent struggle for about half an hour coming from the apartment and when police entered it they found blood smeared and spattered throughout. David Ramirez also sexually assaulted Candie Gortarez while she was close to death. David Ramirez, the only person alive in the apartment, was arrested at the scene. Ramirez was convicted of both murders.

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A federal appeals court ruled Wednesday that an Arizona death-row inmate should have another chance to prove his attorney did not fully investigate evidence of his intellectual disabilities in his trial for a 1989 Phoenix double-murder.

A three-judge panel on the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said there is a “reasonable probability” that David Ramirez’s sentencing would have been different if his attorney at the time had presented evidence of the defendant’s low IQ and a history of abuse, sexual assault, neglect and developmental issues.

“The (sentencing) judge did find several mitigating factors, and only three aggravating factors,” Chief Judge Sidney Thomas wrote in his opinion. “Had the evidence of a mental impairment been introduced, as well as the evidence of the level of abuse Ramirez suffered, there is a substantial claim that the judge ‘would have struck a different balance.’”

The U.S. Attorney’s office for Arizona did not respond to request for comment on the case Wednesday. But Tim Gabrielsen, an assistant federal public defender for Arizona, said that while he welcomed the decision, “it’s regrettable that it took this long” to reach this point.

Ramirez has spent nearly 30 years on death row for the stabbing deaths of his girlfriend, Mary Gortarez, and her 15-year-old daughter, Candie, in Gortarez’s Phoenix apartment on May 25, 1989.

Police were called to the apartment that morning by neighbors who reported hearing thuds and sounds of struggle for around half an hour. When they arrived, police found what appeared to be the scene of a violent struggle with Ramirez “apparently intoxicated” and covered in blood, which was splattered throughout the apartment.

Gortarez was found on the living room floor, stabbed 18 times in the neck, back, stomach and left eye. Candie’s naked body was found in a bedroom, stabbed 15 times around her neck. Neither victim died immediately and records say Ramirez sexually assaulted Candie before she died.

A jury convicted Ramirez guilty on two counts of first-degree murder in December 1990.

At sentencing, Ramirez presented a sentencing report that talked about his chaotic childhood, a history of sexual and substance abuse, a poor school record and the fact that his state of mind was muddled at time of the murders by drugs and alcohol. Three family members testified to varying levels of maternal support for Ramirez, and two prison guards said he was a good worker in prison.

The sentencing judge agreed there were several mitigating factors for Ramirez, but also found three aggravating factors: two previous felony convictions, multiple murders and the “especially cruel, heinous or depraved manner” of the killings. He sentenced Ramirez to death.

In his most recent appeals, however, Ramirez has argued that the public defender who represented him at trial – who had never handled a capital case before – failed to investigate and present evidence that would have weighed in his favor.

The attorney agreed, saying in later court filings that she was unprepared to represent “someone as mentally disturbed as David Ramirez, especially in a capital case.” She relied on the psychologist’s finding that Ramirez was “well within the average range of intelligence.”

But they psychologist said he would not have reached the findings he did if the attorney had presented him with fuller records on Ramirez’s background. Those would have led to different tests that showed Ramirez with an IQ in the 70 to 77 range.

The appeals court said the evidence presented at Ramirez’s sentencing painted a “relatively innocuous” picture compared to what later emerged.

Family members who were subsequently contacted said Ramirez had little relationship with his mother, who routinely beat him with “anything she could get her hands on, including electrical cords and shoes.” She reportedly drank while pregnant with Ramirez and told family members she would put beer in Ramirez’s bottle when he was young.

He was often left in charge of younger siblings, one of whom died of exposure after their mother left them at home without heat one night while she went out partying. Family members noted developmental delays in the young Ramirez, who did not know how to comb his hair or use utensils, for example.

The appeals court ordered the case back to district court to more fully investigate Ramirez’s claim of an ineffective attorney. It turned down his other appeals, including a claim that courts improperly rejected his mitigating circumstances, and refused to grant permission for other issues.

In a partial dissent, however, Judge Marsha Berzon wrote that Ramirez should be allowed to pursue his claim that he should not receive the death penalty because he is intellectually disabled.

Gabrielsen agreed, saying Berzon’s dissent could be the basis of a future appeal.

“I think she hit it right on the head,” he said. “I think she was absolutely on the money.”

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