Gregory Esparza Death Sentence Overturned

Gregory Esparza

Gregory Esparza has been on Ohio Death Row for nearly forty years and now he is not only off of death row he may be eligible for parole. The Supreme Court ruled that his original death sentence was unconstitutional and he would be resentenced to thirty years to life. Gregory Esparza who was orginaly sentenced to death for murdering a store clerk during a robbery

Gregory Esparza More News

An Ohio prison inmate who has spent nearly four decades on death row in the murder of a convenience store clerk has been resentenced to a term that could allow his release on parole.

Lucas County Judge Stacy Cook vacated Gregory Esparza’s death sentence and imposed a new term of 30 years to life with credit for time served, The (Toledo) Blade reported. Two months ago, Cook had declared capital punishment unconstitutional in the case because prosecutors had failed to disclose evidence in his original trial.

“God is good for everyone,” Esparza said to relatives Friday as he was escorted from the courtroom back to the county jail.

Esparza, now 60, was convicted in 1984 of aggravated murder and aggravated robbery with gun specifications in the February 1983 death of Melanie Gerschutz. The 38-year-old wife and mother was working the cash register at Island Variety in East Toledo when she was shot during a robbery of $110 from the register,

Esparza’s initial appeals were denied but a public records request in 1991 turned up a large number of police reports, interviews, and other documents never given to his defense attorneys. A federal appeals court in 1995 overturned the death sentence citing a “defective indictment,” but the U.S. Supreme Court reversed the decision. A 2016 appeal was denied on the grounds that federal courts had assessed the 1991 evidence, but a state appellate court later said no court had yet addressed the 1991 evidence in the context of capital punishment.

Cook wrote that although prosecutors may have been unaware of the 1991 evidence, the defense should have had it. More importantly, she said, some of the evidence indicated that Esparza didn’t act alone and therefore “may not have been the principal offender,” so the death penalty could not be imposed.

In Friday’s hearing, Esparza said he had been just 21 and a “confused, lost soul” at the time of the crime but the rigors of life on death row for so long had helped him mature.

“God knows I am not a killer,” he said. “Even when offered life without parole if I gave up my appeals, I chose execution.”

Marsha Raymond, Gerschutz’s daughter, a teenager at the time of her mother’s slaying, told the court that the defendant “committed murder in cold blood.”

“I am so grateful that I had such an amazing mom, but unfortunately because of his actions my family fell apart,” she said. “My dad couldn’t speak about my mom, and he (Esparza) talks about a young child being abused? My younger brother was six years old. He has no memories of my mother.”

Julia Esparza, Esparza’s sister, said the family was happy to see this day come.

“It has been very emotional,” she told the newspaper. “We appreciate the justice system.”

https://www.foxnews.com/us/ohio-inmate-spent-decades-death-row-may-released-parole-following-resentencing

Gregory Esparza Ohio Death Row

gregory esparza

Gregory Esparza was sentenced to death by the State of Ohio for a robbery murder. According to court documents Gregory Esparza would enter the Island Variety Outlet and would shoot and kill the clerk,  Melanie Gerschultz, during the robbery. Gregory Esparza was arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Ohio Death Row Inmate List

Gregory Esparza 2023 Information

gregory esparza 2023

Number A179450

DOB 02/04/1963

Gender Male Race White

Admission Date 05/23/1984

Institution Chillicothe Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

Gregory Esparza More News

At approximately 9:30 p.m. on February 12, 1983, a man entered the Island Variety Carryout in Toledo, Ohio, wearing a green ski mask and a dark blue jacket. The victim, Melanie Gerschultz, and James Barrailloux, both store employees, were the only other persons present and were standing in the back of the store as the man entered.

The man approached the pair, pointed a small black handgun at them and ordered one of them to open the cash register at the front of the store. Gerschultz complied and walked towards the cash register. As she opened the register, Barrailloux crouched down and left the store through the rear door, entering the attached home of the store owner, Evelyn Krieger. While he was alerting Krieger of the robbery, they heard a gunshot. Barrailloux and Krieger re-entered the store to find Gerschultz lying on the floor with a fatal gunshot wound in her neck. The cash register was open and approximately $110 was missing. A small round hole was found in the sheet of clear Plexiglas located to the side of the cash register, through which the bullet had apparently passed.

https://casetext.com/case/state-v-esparza-10