Leonard Drane Georgia Death Row

leonard drane

Leonard Drane was sentenced to death by the State of Georgia for the sexual assault and murder of a woman. According to court documents Leonard Drane and his roommate David Robert Willis met the victim outside of a liquor store and she asked the men for crack cocaine. The three of them would travel to a nearby lake where the woman was sexually assaulted, shot in the head and had her throat slit. Leonard Drane would blame David Robert Willis for the murder however it would be Drane who was sentenced to death and David Willis would receive a life sentence

Georgia Death Row Inmate List

Leonard Drane 2021 Information

YOB: 1959
RACE: WHITE
GENDER: MALE
HEIGHT: 5’09”
WEIGHT: 160
EYE COLOR: BLUE
HAIR COLOR: BROWN

MAJOR OFFENSE: MURDER
MOST RECENT INSTITUTION: GA DIAG CLASS PRISON
MAX POSSIBLE RELEASE DATE: DEATH

Leonard Drane More News

A jury convicted Leonard Drane of malice murder, felony murder, and aggravated battery, and imposed a death sentence for the malice murder.   The evidence adduced at trial showed that Leonard Drane and co-indictee David Willis picked up Renee Blackmon on June 13, 1990, and drove her to a secluded road.   Ms. Blackmon’s body was found in a lake on July 1, 1990.   She had been shot point-blank in the head with a shotgun and her throat had been cut at least six times.   She was tied to a brake drum with a rope.   After his arrest, Drane claimed that Willis had sex with the victim and shot her with a shotgun, and then cut her throat because she was still breathing.   Leonard Drane said he did not know Willis was going to kill the victim and he did not participate in her killing.   However, he admitted helping Willis dispose of the body, hide the gun, wash Willis’s truck, and burn their clothes;  and that he continued to live with Willis for three weeks until their arrest.   He claimed he did so because he was afraid of Willis.

At trial, a witness testified that Leonard Drane told her prior to his arrest that he and Willis “picked this [black] girl up at the Huddle House in Elberton, Georgia, and that it would be the last ride she’d ever take.” 1  He further said he “[had sex with] her so bad that she’d never have any more babies” and that he and Willis threw her in the lake.   He said the only mistake he made was to put one block on her instead of two (the body had just been discovered).   Another witness testified that Drane told him he cut the victim’s throat because she was still alive after Willis shot her.   On the night of the murder, after Willis and Leonard Drane had disposed of the victim’s body, they went to a bar and met some women.   They went with the women to a trailer, where they drank beer and made comments about hating blacks.   One of the women noticed that the men, who were not wearing shirts, had scratches on their chests.   In the penalty phase, one of the women testified that Drane forced her to orally sodomize him at knife point that same night.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/ga-supreme-court/1140545.html

Cleveland Clark Georgia Death Row

cleveland clark

Cleveland Clark was sentenced to death by the State of Georgia for a contract killing. According to court documents Cleveland Clark was paid ten thousand dollars to murder Sparkle Rai. Police reports Chiman Rai paid Cleveland to kill his daughter in law for he did not want his son married to an African American woman. Shorty after her marriage Sparkle Rai would be murdered by strangulation with a vacuum cord in front of her daughter. Chiman Rai would receive a life without parole prison sentence. Cleveland Clark was sentenced to death

Georgia Death Row Inmate List

Cleveland Clark 2021 Information

YOB: 1957
RACE: BLACK
GENDER: MALE
HEIGHT: 6’01”
WEIGHT: 297
EYE COLOR: BROWN
HAIR COLOR: BLACK

MAJOR OFFENSE: MURDER
MOST RECENT INSTITUTION: GA DIAG CLASS PRISON
MAX POSSIBLE RELEASE DATE: DEATH

Cleveland Clark More News

Sparkle Rai’s father Bennet Reid wiped away a tear Thursday evening when he heard the sentence.

“Death,” the forewoman read from a Fulton County jury box, condemning Cleveland Clark, the man convicted of murdering Reid’s daughter.

Donna Lowery, Rai’s stepmother, let out a tremendous sigh.

Then, it was Clark’s turn to hear his fate. Cleveland, who had made several outbursts during the two-week trial and sentencing hearings, was led into the courtroom in shackles.

Judge T. Jackson Bedford then repeated the sentence with Cleveland present. This time, Clark showed little emotion until he was led out of the courtroom. He glared at the jury.

The same Fulton County jury that last Friday convicted Clark of murdering Rai, decided Thursday he should die by legal injection. Cleveland, 52, stabbed and strangled Rai with a vacuum cleaner chord in front of her crying 6-month-old daughter for $10,000.

“I feel like a big burden has been lifted from my shoulders,” Bennet said after the sentencing. “I really believe that Sparkle has seen this happen, and she’s smiling down.”

He and Lowery exchanged hugs with other loved ones in the courtroom.

“I think they truly saw what type of an evil man he really is,” Lowery said of the jury’s death sentence.

Rai’s father-in-law, Chiman Rai, a native of India, wanted Rai dead because he opposed his son marrying an African-American woman. Sparkle, then 22, and Rajeeve “Ricky” Rai had been married a month when she was murdered.

Clark was the last of those implicated in Rai’s death.

Chiman Rai, 68, was sentenced in 2008 to life in prison without the possibility of parole for hiring Clark to kill Sparkle Rai.

Two other men — the links between Chiman Rai and Clark — each were sentenced to 10 months’ probation because they helped prosecutors bring cases against the father-in-law and Clark.

The 6-3, nearly 300-pound Clark’s volatile personality showed Thursday in an obscenity-filled rant that led Bedford to clear the jury and the prisoner from the courtroom.

“I said I didn’t kill no … woman,” Cleveland said, pounding a table with his fist. “What’s wrong with you? I’m sick of this … telling lies on me.”

Asked after the hearing to compare Clark’s death penalty to the life without parole outcome of convicted multiple killer Brian Nichols, Fulton County prosecutor Kellie Hill said Clark “sealed his own fate” with his outbursts.

“The jury got to see the killer that Sparkle got to face,” Hill said.

https://www.ajc.com/news/local/tears-relief-sparkle-rai-killer-gets-death-sentence/Ql0GjR49DkzRVHe6M75NmI/

Brian Brookins Georgia Death Row

brian brookins

Brian Brookins was sentenced to death by the State of Georgia for the murders of his wife and stepdaughter. According to court documents Brian Brookins would fatally shoot 44-year-old Suzanne Brookins, and her 15-year-old daughter, Samantha Giles, on Oct. 14, 2005. Brian Brookins would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Georgia Death Row Inmate List

Brian Brookins 2021 Information

YOB: 1971
RACE: WHITE
GENDER: MALE
HEIGHT: 5’10”
WEIGHT: 255
EYE COLOR: BROWN
HAIR COLOR: BROWN

MAJOR OFFENSE: MURDER
MOST RECENT INSTITUTION: GA DIAG CLASS PRISON
MAX POSSIBLE RELEASE DATE: DEATH

Brian Brookins More News

A jury returned a death sentence Tuesday morning for Brian Duane Brookins for the murders of his wife Suzanne McDade Brookins and her 15-year-old daughter Samantha Giles.

The sequestered Morgan County jury returned the sentence after deliberating eight hours during two days.

Sheriff’s Deputy Lt. Scott Deason escorted 36-year-old Brookins from the Baldwin County courtroom immediately following Superior Court Judge Hugh V. Wingfield sentence to death for the double murder and the maximum sentences for the other charges of cruelty to children in the third degree, aggravated stalking, and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.

Baldwin County Sheriff Bill Massee and deputies took Brookins to Georgia Diagnostics and Classification Prison in Jackson that houses death row inmates Tuesday afternoon.

Brookins’ execution by lethal injection is set for between noon Nov. 14 and noon Nov. 21 this year.

The number of appeals, including an automatic appeal, will take years, delaying the execution date.

Steve McDade, older brother of Suzanne and a sergeant with the Baldwin County Sheriff’s Office, felt justice was served in the sentence.

“There is a weight off my shoulders. They honored her memory by getting the only logical conclusion to the case — a death sentence,” McDade said. “The jury looked at the evidence and came to the only logical conclusion they could come to. I am very pleased. That is the only way justice could have been served.”

McDade feels Brookins got equal justice to what he showed Suzanne and Sam.

“He didn’t just murder them. He executed them. He got what he deserved,” McDade said.

Sitting in the court every day of the nine-day trial was a struggle, McDade said.

“Being in law enforcement helped me do the right thing,” McDade said.

This is a tragedy that should have never happened to both the McDade and Brookins family, Mcdade said.

“Both sides have lost,” McDade said.

McDade expressed respect for the defense team’s professionalism and compassion for both families.

“They did the best with what they had, but there was no other conclusion the jurors could come to,” McDade said.

Deason told the jury a story that reassured them that they had done what the victim’s family wished.

“At the time of the murder, Steve McDade was a sergeant on my shift. Steve told me that a few days after the murders, he returned to the crime scene, and he couldn’t bring himself to go in Suzanne’s house. He said it was nighttime when he was standing outside the residence, and he saw something on the ground. He didn’t know what it was, and he picked it up. It was a hair bow that had been in Suzanne’s hair. He said the hair bow had a bullet hole in it and had blood on it. Steve said for two years he has been attempting to try to wipe this blood off his hands. He said today when the jury rendered their verdict, he could finally get the blood off him, and getting some cleansing, getting some closure from this,” Deason said.

Ocmulgee Judicial Circuit District Attorney Fred Bright believes justice has been served.

“This case rocked the community. I believe the jury has spoken clearly by giving the ultimate penalty,” Bright said. “It was the community condemning Duane Brookins for his absolutely heinous killing of not just his wife but also the child, the 15-year-old girl who was running from him. The way he shot her in the back and a final execution shot in her head, I think it is the ultimate condemnation by the community to the defendant saying you crossed that line.”

This is the beginning of the process, Bright said.

“He will be on death row for awhile. I always tell the victim’s family that there will be endless appeals. Even though the judge set the execution date for a month from now, that is a formality,” Bright said.

The automatic direct appeal to Georgia Supreme Court will take one to two years, Bright said.

“It is a long appellant process. If you wanted a ballpark figure, it is at least 20 years of appeals,” Bright said.

The most recent death penalty sentence from Baldwin County carried out in July was for John Washington Hightower, who murdered his wife and two stepdaughters in July 1987.

Bright found it fascinating that Brookins never truly admitted to the murders even when he took the stand.

“He admitted the gun was in his hand, he admitted he was pulling the trigger, but he could never bring himself to admitting what he and everybody else involved in this case knows, that he is the true killer,” Bright said. “He never said, ‘I killed Suzanne, I killed Samantha’. He never really said that.”

Lead defense attorney Dennis Francis of the state Office of the Georgia Capital Defender expressed his disappointment in the sentence.

“I think we should end the killing. We don’t need any more victims,” Francis said.

Brookins was at peace because he was able to testify, Francis said.

“All he wanted was a chance to tell his side. That’s it. After he got that he was at peace,” Francis said.

The Brookins’ family is disappointed, Francis said.

“I think they understand it is in the next step of the process,” Francis said. “There is still so much evidence of mental illness and sub-average intelligence that we may never see an actual execution.”

Francis admitted it was a tough case.

“There was nothing I could do to minimize the fact that he put a gun six inches away from Samantha’s head,” Francis said.

https://www.unionrecorder.com/news/local_news/brookins-sentenced-to-death/article_bbb0934c-dd4a-5be7-b5b0-b8a69267bf02.html

Georgia Death Row Inmate List

georgia death row

Georgia Men Death Row Inmates are housed at the Georgia Diagnostic & Classification Prison. The Georgia Women Death Row Inmates are housed at the Arrendale State Prison. In Georgia there are three crimes that can earn someone the death penalty: Murder, Sexual Assault and Kidnapping.

Georgia Death Row Inmate List – Women

Tiffany Moss

Georgia Death Row Inmate List – Men

Brian Wayne Brookins

Cleveland Clark

Leonard Drane

Ricky Dubose

David Homer Edenfield

John Esposito

David Scott Franks

Adrian Hargrove

Jerry Heidler

Dallas Holiday

Stacey Ian Humphreys

Ashley Lyndol Jones

Jerry William Jones

Warren King

James Allyson Lee

Pablo Maldonado

Dekelvin Martin

Michael Miller

Jeremy Moody

Michael Wayne Nance

Dorian O’kelley

Lyndon Fitzgerald Pace

Willie Palmer

Virgil Presnell

Willie James Pye

Mustafa Raheem

Billy Daniel Raulerson

Lawrence Rice

Reinaldo Rivera

James Rogers

Richard Sealey

DeMarcus Sears

Darryl Scott Stinski

Nicholas Tate

Leon Tollette

Frederick Whatley

Joseph Williams

Demetrius Willis

Rodney Young

Meier Brown Federal Death Row

meier brown 1

Meier Brown was sentenced to death for the murder of a United States postal worker. According to court documents Meier Brown walked into a postal office and demanded money orders, when the worker hesitated Brown would fatally stabbed the worker. Meier Brown as of 2021 is currently on Federal Death Row

Federal Death Row Inmate List

Meier Brown 2021 Information

Register Number: 11364-021
Age: 50
Race: Black
Sex: Male
Located at: Terre Haute USP
Release Date: DEATH SENT

Meier Brown More News

On direct appeal, we offered a detailed description of the facts of this tragic case based on the trial testimony and the last of Brown’s three confessions, which was presented to the jury by audiotape. See Brown, 441 F.3d at 1337–38. The murder occurred during the course of a robbery of $1,175 in money orders at a Fleming, Georgia post office. As the robbery unfolded, Brown stabbed postmistress Sallie Gaglia ten times, while she tried to defend herself, and left her to die, alone and lying face down, on the floor.

Eyewitness and physical evidence led police to suspect Brown, who finally confessed to Sallie Gaglia’s murder. In an interview conducted by Postal Inspector James Rushwin and Liberty County Sheriff’s Department Detective Charles Woodall, Brown admitted that he had gone to the Fleming post office on the morning of November 30, 2002 to retrieve his family’s mail from a post office box. Brown went home to distribute the mail. After telling police several different versions of what happened, Brown confessed that he then returned to the post office with a knife to rob Gaglia. At the post office, Brown asked for three money orders. When Gaglia turned to use an adding machine, Brown put socks on his hands, jumped over the counter, and—according to Brown—tripped, fell into her, and cut her with his knife. He told police that at this point he decided he had to kill Sallie Gaglia because she knew him. Thereafter, Brown grabbed Gaglia’s wallet, crawled through the counter window, discarded the knife and the socks on his hands as he biked home, and threw his clothes into the washing machine. Brown then called his girlfriend, Diane Brown, to pick him up, and he gave her the money orders the next day. Brown was convicted of all three charges: 18 U.S.C. § 1111 (murder within the territorial jurisdiction of the United States); id. § 1114 (murder of a federal employee); and id. § 2114 (robbery of federal property).

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/us-11th-circuit/1638201.html