Jerry Lard Arkansas Death Row

jerry lard arkansas death row

Jerry Lard was sentenced to death by the State of Arkansas for the murder of a police officer. According to court documents Jerry Lard was pulled over by Police Officer Jonathan Schmidt. When the Officer approached the car Jerry Lard would shoot him in the head, Lard would get out of his car shooting the officer twice more before grabbing the Officers gun to fire the last shot. Jerry Lard would be convicted and sentenced to death.

Arkansas Death Row Inmate List

Jerry Lard 2021 Information

ADC Number 000976

Name: Lard, Jerry D

Race CAUCASIAN Sex MALE Hair Color BROWN Eye Color BLUE

Height 64 inches Weight 234 lbs.

Birth Date 03/13/1974

Initial Receipt Date 07/30/2012

Facility Varner Supermax

Jerry Lard More News

A convicted cop killer has been sentenced to death.

A jury has sentenced Jerry Lard to death in the shooting death of Trumann Police Officer Jonathan Schmidt.  Three hours into their deliberations, jurors agreed on the death penalty for Jerry Lard.

The father of fallen Trumann officer Jonathan Schmidt says the last two weeks have been difficult.

“It’s been extremely difficult for both families to endure such pain that we’d endured,” said Donald Schmidt, Sr. “It’s closure.  It’s been a long time coming.  We can start healing now,” he added.

Minutes after Jerry Lard was sentenced to death, Schmidt said the jury sent a message.

“If anybody out there ever wants to assassinate or murder an innocent officer, the great people of this state will stand up to them,” Schmidt said.

Andrea Schmidt, wife of officer Jonathan Schmidt said she was glad the trial is over, adding, “I still miss Jonathan every day.  He’s never going to come back.”

During the trial, the Schmidt family tearfully told the jury about what life has been like without Jonathan, a man the community of Trumann hails a hero.

Jonathan died April 13, 2011.

Prosecutors presented evidence that he was shot four times.  The fourth, fatal shot, fired with his own gun at close range.

Saturday, the family says justice was served.

“We’ve all lost in this situation.  There’s not a winner,” said Andrea Schmidt.

Shortly after the sentence was handed down, both families consoled each other. Expressing sympathy for what had happened.

“I understand that they lost a son,” said Ricky Lard.  “I think and pray for that family every day since this happened.”

https://www.wmcactionnews5.com/story/19139197/lard-sentenced-to-death/

Brandon Lacy Arkansas Death Row

brandon lacy 1

Brandon Lacy was sentenced to death by the State of Arkansas for the murder of a man. According to court documents Brandon Lacy and Broderick Laswell would rob the victim Randall Walker in 2007. Walker would be stabbed to death by a fire poker and set on fire. Broderick Laswell would receive a life sentence and Brandon Lacy would be sentenced to death.

Arkansas Death Row Inmate List

Brandon Lacy 2021 Information

ADC Number 000973

Name:Lacy, Brandon E

Race CAUCASIAN Sex MALE Hair Color BROWN Eye Color BLUE

Height 71 inches Weight 192 lbs.

Birth Date 01/01/1979

Initial Receipt Date 05/14/2009

Facility Varner Supermax

Brandon Lacy More News

Death row inmate Brandon Lacy on Thursday lost his appeal to the Arkansas Supreme Court, which considered his case for the fourth time.

The high court ruled 6-1 to not set aside precedent and consider the cumulative effect of all the alleged errors in Lacy’s trial. Instead, the justices found that no single error did enough harm to require overturning his death sentence.

Lacy, a 37-year-old from Rogers, was convicted of robbing and killing 47-year-old Randall Walker in 2007. Police found Walker’s body burned and determined that the victim had been beaten and stabbed with a fire poker.

Lacy and another man convicted in the killing, Broderick Laswell, made off with $20 and a handgun from Walker’s home, according to court records.

Laswell is serving a sentence of life without parole at the East Arkansas Regional Unit in Brickeys. Lacy is incarcerated on death row at the Varner Supermax prison near Grady.

In prior appeals to the court, Lacy had argued that he should be permitted to present evidence of his brain damage and mental defect, and that he should get a new sentencing hearing after his original attorney claimed that closing arguments were “one of the worst” that attorney had ever delivered.

Lacy’s latest attorney, Michael Kaiser, said Thursday he was preparing an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. Meanwhile, officials in Attorney General Leslie Rutledge’s office said they would not seek to immediately begin the process of scheduling an execution.

“This moves us one step closer to justice for Randy Walker and his family,” a spokesman for Rutledge said in an email. “We are confident that the federal courts will likewise reject any challenge Lacy may try to bring in that forum.”

Kaiser said he plans on appealing to the U.S. justices before the Arkansas court issues its mandate. This action would delay any setting of an execution date.

If the U.S. Supreme Court declines Lacy’s petition, Kaiser said federal appeals will begin, but the state could begin scheduling an execution.

“At that point, the book is kind of closed on the state round of appeals,” Kaiser said.

Kaiser said the case was ripe for appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court because of a split in how courts around the country consider “cumulative” errors in the trial and sentencing phases. Arkansas does not recognize cumulative-error arguments.

“That little difference in opinions has massive implications for defendants,” Kaiser said.

A dissent by Justice Josephine Hart did not mention the cumulative-error principle but determined that Lacy’s representation at trial had been defective.

Lacy is one of 29 men on Arkansas’ death row. One other inmate, Don Davis, has completed his state appeals and his lawyers are preparing an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

https://www.arkansasonline.com/news/2018/may/18/high-court-rejects-death-row-appeal-201/

Zachariah Marcyniuk Arkansas Death Row

Zachariah Marcyniuk arkansas death row

Zachariah Marcyniuk was sentenced to death by the State of Arkansas for the murder of a woman. According to court documents Zachariah Marcyniuk was upset with the victim Katie Wood for ending their relationship. Zachariah Marcyniuk would break into the woman’s apartment where he would brutally stab the woman to death before leaving her body in the bathtub. Zachariah Marcyniuk was soon arrested, convicted and stabbed to death

Arkansas Death Row Inmate List

Zachariah Marcyniuk 2021 Information

ADC Number 000972

Name: Marcyniuk, Zachariah S

Race CAUCASIAN Sex MALE Hair Color BROWN Eye Color BROWN

Height 68 inches Weight 150 lbs.

Birth Date 05/21/1979

Initial Receipt Date 12/12/2008

Facility Varner Supermax

Zachariah Marcyniuk More News

Convicted murderer Zachariah Scott Marcyniuk got an appointed attorney for his post-conviction appeal Friday, but not before deputies dragged him out of the courtroom as he tried to speak with his victim’s father and mother.

Marcyniuk, 31, was sentenced to die by lethal injection for the murder of Katie Wood. Marcyniuk attacked Wood, beating and stabbing her to death in 2007.

“I didn’t kill her on purpose. I know you know that,” a seated and shackled Marcyniuk turned and told Wood’s parents, who were in the courtroom waiting for the hearing to begin. “I never got a chance to tell you that in person.”

Two Washington County Sheriff’s Office deputies grabbed Marcyniuk, who was wearing prison whites, and quickly escorted him out of the courtroom to a holding cell. Wood’s parents, who had driven from Greenbriar, left the courtroom and listened to the hearing from another location.

Marcyniuk was in Washington County Circuit Court for a mandatory hearing to explain his rights and make sure he has an attorney.

As Circuit Judge William Storey tried to explain the reason for the hearing, Marcyniuk argued he needed an attorney first.

“I don’t think I should be in here until I have an attorney to tell me what’s going on,” Marcyniuk told Storey.

Storey patiently explained he was going to appoint Marcyniuk an attorney if he did not have one. Storey asked if he had an attorney or assets to hire one.

“I’ve been in a room for the last year and a half. I’ve been in a concrete room 23-hours-a-day,” Marcyniuk said. “I have no assets whatsoever.”

Storey then appointed the Arkansas Public Defender’s Commission to represent Marcyniuk during his appeal.

“How many people have you sentenced to death?” Marcyniuk asked Storey. “I’m just curious, more than 10?”

As Marcyniuk began explaining again he didn’t kill Wood with premeditation or deliberation, Storey adjourned the hearing and Marcyniuk was again taken out of the courtroom to be returned to death row at the Arkansas Department of Correction.

Wood was a 24-year-old University of Arkansas student. She and Marcyniuk dated for a time and she wanted to move on.

Marcyniuk broke into Wood’s Fayetteville apartment in the early hours of March 9, 2007, and laid in wait for her to come home. Wood was attacked when she opened her front door. The key was broken off in the lock, her purse and one of her shoes were outside when police arrived.

Marcyniuk dragged Wood inside her apartment and killed her. Then he dragged Wood’s body to the bathtub and fled.

Wood had more than 40 wounds on her arms, head and body from the attack and bled to death. Stab wounds in her abdomen were from 4 to 7 inches deep, after cutting through her thick coat. Her aorta was sliced in two.

Before he left, Marcyniuk pulled the shower curtain closed, locked all the doors, took the knife and crawled back out the window before police arrived minutes later. He fled the state after dropping off his dog at his parents house near Winslow. He was in western Oklahoma when a trooper stopped him for speeding and discovered Marcyniuk was wanted for murder.

Marcyniuk’s December 2008 capital murder conviction and resulting death sentence was upheld by the Arkansas Supreme Court in May. Judges said there was ample evidence for a jury to believe Marcyniuk acted deliberately and with premeditation.

The high court earlier this month refused Marcyniuk’s request for a rehearing on that finding. A mandate was then issued. After a mandate has been issued, a convicted murderer can begin challenging the way his attorneys handled his case.

After state appeals are exhausted, there are appeals to the federal courts. In the federal appeals process, claims must be based on constitutional issues or violations.

The appeals process in Arkansas has averaged more than a decade, according to prison officials.

https://www.nwaonline.com/news/2010/aug/21/murderer-tries-talk-victims-parents/

Gregory Decay Arkansas Death Row

gregory decay arkansas death row

Gregory Decay was sentenced to death by the State of Arkansas for two counts of murder. According to court documents Gregory Decay would force himself into an apartment where he shot and killed two men, Kevin Barkley Jones and Kendall Rachell Rice, in their Fayetteville apartment April 3, 2007.  Decay would tell police that he believed that the two victims had stolen marijuana and guns from him. Gregory Decay was sentenced to death on both counts of murder

Arkansas Death Row Inmate List

Gregory Decay 2021 Information

ADC Number 000971

Name: Decay, Gregory C

Race BLACK Sex MALE Hair Color BLACK Eye Color BLACK

Height 72 inches Weight 155 lbs.

Birth Date 07/11/1985

Initial Receipt Date 04/28/2008

Facility Varner Supermax

Gregory Decay More News

Attorneys for condemned double-murderer Gregory Decay are taking one more crack at getting his convictions overturned by the Arkansas Supreme Court, arguing jury selection in the death penalty case was flawed.

Decay, 29, gunned down Kevin Barkley Jones and Kendall Rachell Rice in their Fayetteville apartment April 3, 2007. Both were 24. Decay was convicted and given two death sentences in April 2008. Decay must exhaust all state court remedies before beginning the federal appeals process

Death penalty convictions in Arkansas automatically are appealed to the Arkansas Supreme Court for mandatory review. The court upheld the capital convictions in November 2009. A subsequent appeal that claimed ineffective counsel was rejected.

The high court has agreed to at least listen to the latest argument. Decay’s attorneys at the Federal Public Defender’s Office in Little Rock this week filed motions that ask the court to recall its mandate in the case, vacate the convictions and remand the case to settle the record or, if the record in the case cannot be reconstructed, a new trial.

They contend the record was not sufficient for the court to fully review the case. They argue the high court did not receive a full record of the proceedings on appeal, specifically information about juror questionnaires and the striking of some potential jurors before trial.

The motion, by Assistant Federal Public Defender Scott Braden, contends critical parts of the jury selection were done off the record, outside the courtroom and out of Decay’s presence.

“Thirty jurors were excluded before trial began with no record of these exclusions or strikes. At least one of the jurors stricken by the prosecution prior to trial was African American,” according to the motion, “Mr. Decay, a black man charged with killing two white victims, was tried, convicted and sentenced to death by an all-white jury.”

The other African American in the jury pool was never called during jury selection process.

The motion says extensive questionnaires sent to potential jurors before trial were destroyed, preventing them from being made part of the appeal record, and there was no record from the lower court about how they were used in the jury selection process.

“What this court did not know, because the trial court abused its discretion in not making the necessary record, was how this ‘lengthy questionnaire’ was created,” according to the motion. “On April 17, 2008, thirty jurors were peremptorily stricken before trial based solely on this questionnaire and at least one African American juror was excluded in this process. Conducting or allowing this off-the-record proceeding was an abuse of the trial court’s discretion in jury selection.”

The abuse of discretion directly prevented the Supreme Court’s mandatory review, causing a breakdown in the appellate procedure and deprived Decay of his fundamental constitutional rights, according to the motion.

Lawyers from the Arkansas Attorney General’s Office have filed a response saying there are no grounds to recall the mandate because Decay did not ask for the jury selection process to be made a part of the appeal record and his trial attorneys agreed to the jury selection format.

“There is no affidavit indicating that these materials were not available in defense counsel’s files for inclusion on direct review via a motion to settle the record or to supplement the record,” according to the response. “Accordingly, the appellant does not demonstrate that the record was incomplete or that the trial court improperly destroyed the juror’s questionnaires.”

The response, by Assistant Attorney General Karen Wallace, also contends Decay has not demonstrated how the court’s review of the material would have changed the result of his appeal.

Decay walked into the apartment on Sycamore Street and shot Jones in the face with a .40-caliber pistol from less than two feet away. Then he turned and shot Rice in the face. During an interview with police, Decay said he killed Jones and Rice because he believed they had broken into his apartment and stolen marijuana and a gun.

Jesse Westeen, 28, was convicted of being an accomplice. He pleaded guilty to driving Decay to the apartment. He was sentenced to 50 years.

Decay was the first person to be given a death sentence in Washington County since 1981. A convict from Washington County hasn’t been executed since 1920. Several others were sentenced to death in the interim, but their sentences were either commuted to life in prison when the U.S. Supreme Court declared the death penalty unconstitutional in 1972 or their sentences were overturned on appeal. The death penalty was reinstated in 1976.

Benton County last had a murderer executed in August 1996 when Frankie Parker was put to death for killing his former in-laws and holding his ex-wife hostage in 1984 in Rogers.

Death row

Benton County has three men on Arkansas’ death row. Zachary Holly, 30, was sentenced to death earlier this week for the murder, kidnapping and rape of 6-year-old Jersey Bridgeman. Don Davis was sentenced to die in 1992 for the execution-style killing of Jane Daniel of Rogers. Brandon Lacy was sentenced to die in 2009 for the murder of Randy Walker. Circuit Judge Robin Green ruled that Lacy is entitled to another sentencing hearing, which is on appeal. Washington County has two men on death row: Decay and Zachariah Marcyniuk. Both men were sentenced to death in 2008. Marcyniuk, 36, stabbed University of Arkansas student Katie Wood to death after breaking into her apartment and laying in wait for her.

https://www.arkansasonline.com/news/2015/may/31/decay-claims-jury-selection-flawed-seeks-new-trial/

Derek Sales Arkansas Death Row

derek sales arkansas death row

Derek Sales was sentenced to death by the State of Arkansas for the murder of a disabled man. According to court documents Derek Sales was serving a seventy five year prison sentence for rape and kidnapping when he escaped from a Warren jail. On the run Derek Sales would break into the home of the victim, Willie York, who was confined to a wheelchair. The victim would be murdered in his home. Derek Sales would be arrested in the victim’s home the day after the murder. Derek Sales would be convicted and sentenced to death.

Arkansas Death Row Inmate List

Derek Sales 2021 Information

ADC Number 000968

Name: Sales, Derek

Race BLACK Sex MALE Hair Color SALT & PEPPER Eye Color BROWN

Height 71 inches Weight230 lbs.

Birth Date 01/08/1961

Initial Receipt Date 01/29/1986

Facility Varner Supermax

Derek Sales More News

A Warren man convicted in the April 2005 killing of a man in a wheelchair has been sentenced to death.

Bradley County Circuit Court Judge Bynum Gibson on Thursday sentenced Gibson Derek Sales, 46, to death, following a jury’s recommendations. A jury deliberated about two hours before returning with the death sentence, said Prosecutor Thomas Deen.

The jury convicted Sales of stabbing and strangling Willie York, 56. Sales also received a life sentence on an aggravated robbery charge.

Police said they found Sales in York’s home the day after the April 16, 2005, killing.

Sales was already serving 75 years in prison before a Christmas Eve 2005 escape from a Warren jail. He and another prisoner overpowered guards with pepper-spray and a sock loaded with bars of soap. Police captured Sales shortly after his escape.

Deen said Sales had previously been in prison for other convictions, including rape and kidnapping

https://www.arkansasonline.com/news/2007/may/19/warren-man-convicted-murder-sentenced-death/

Derek Sales Other News

Willie York, whom Sales knew and visited, was found murdered in his home on April 16, 2005. York, who suffered from rheumatoid arthritis, had very limited use of his hands and could not walk. For this reason, York was mostly confined to a recliner and a bed that was kept in the living room of his home. It was adduced at trial that Sales was aware that York, who sold beer by the can out of his home, used a cigar box as a cash register and as storage for some personal papers. Sales was also aware of the fact that York kept this cigar box near him at all times.

On the day of the murder, Sales was at the York home several times and purchased several beers from York. When York’s family left his home at approximately 6:30 that evening, Sales was there, and he was still there later in the evening when York’s granddaughters brought him dinner and when York’s daughter stopped by for a short visit. Later that night, two of York’s granddaughters went to the home to help York get into bed. When they arrived at the house, they could not see York sitting in his recliner and then noticed a shadowy figure, whom they recognized as Sales, moving about the house. Concerned, they called 911. One of the officers at the scene confronted Sales on the front porch of the home, and after Sales tried to flee, he was taken into custody. York was then found inside the home lying in a pool of blood on the floor. He was pronounced dead at the scene, and the medical examiner later determined that there were three possible causes of his death: strangulation, blunt-force trauma to the abdomen, head, and chest, and a stab wound of the neck. Sales was subsequently charged with residential burglary, aggravated robbery, and capital murder, although the residential burglary charge was later nol-prossed.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/ar-supreme-court/1679451.html