Ralph Baze Kentucky Death Row

ralph baze

Ralph Baze was sentenced to death by the State of Kentucky for the murders of two police officers. According to court documents the two police officers were serving a warrant when they were shot and killed by Ralph Baze who was armed with an assault rifle. Ralph Baze would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Kentucky Death Row Inmate List

Ralph Baze 2021 Information

ralph baze 2021
Name:BAZE, RALPH STEVENS JR
Active Inmate
DEATH ROW
PID # / DOC #:218175 / 032863
Institution Start Date:2/05/1994
Expected Time To Serve (TTS):DEATH SENTENCE
Classification:Maximum
Minimum Expiration of Sentence Date (Good Time Release Date): ?DEATH SENTENCE
Parole Eligibility Date:DEATH SENTENCE
Maximum Expiration of Sentence Date:DEATH SENTENCE
Location:Kentucky State Penitentiary
Age:65
Race:White
Gender:M
Eye Color:Blue
Hair Color:Blond or Strawberry
Height:6′ 01″
Weight:220

Ralph Baze More News

Ralph Baze was sentenced to death on February 4, 1994, in Rowan County for the murder of two police officers. On January 30, 1992, a Powell County Deputy, Arthur Briscoe, went to Baze’s home regarding warrants from Ohio. He returned with Sheriff Steve Bennett. Ralph Baze, using an assault rifle, killed the two police officers. Ralph Baze was arrested the same day in Estill County

Ralph Baze Other News

Baze shot each of the officers three times in the back with an SKS assault rifle at a time when the officers were attempting to serve five felony fugitive warrants from Ohio on him.   Sheriff Bennett was killed first when Baze shot him three times in the back from the cover of a large stump and brush pile near his secluded cabin.   Baze then turned his attention toward Deputy Briscoe.   Briscoe was pinned down by the semi-automatic rifle fire from Baze, and the officer crouched down and returned fire from across the hood of the police cruiser.   Briscoe fired two full clips from his 9 mm. pistol as Baze was walking towards him firing from his 35 round banana clip as he proceeded.   With his weapon empty, Deputy Briscoe turned and tried to run away.   Before he could run ten feet, he was shot in the back twice.   Baze pursued the officer, stood over him and fired his rifle into the back of the Deputy Sheriff’s head.

Baze told police after his arrest, “I shot him in the back of the head.   I understand I was killing the man.   There was no doubt in my mind.”   Later, he voluntarily admitted, “You tell them that you have got the right man.   I’m the one that killed them son of a bitches.”

Sheriff Bennett and Deputy Briscoe were seeking Baze in order to serve fugitive warrants from Ohio on the twice convicted felon.   The Ohio warrants were for felonious assault of a police officer with a deadly weapon, bail jumping, receiving stolen property and flagrant nonsupport.

Baze knew that Kentucky police were looking for him on the Ohio charges because the Sheriff and other officers went to his rural cabin and spoke to his wife in an effort to locate him.   Baze went to Ohio for two weeks in the beginning of mid-January 1992.   His wife had telephoned him in Ohio to warn him that “they had been looking for him, and, that Steve Bennett read me the warrants.”   Baze purchased an assault rifle and ammunition while in Ohio and returned to Kentucky on January 28 with the rifle.   Baze testified that he was intending to leave to go to Florida.   About mid-day on January 30, 1992, Deputy Briscoe drove to the Baze cabin.   Baze was hiding inside the cabin and his wife told the Deputy that he was not home.   A number of relatives were both inside and outside the cabin.   Although he tried to escape through a trap door in the bedroom floor, Baze was ultimately confronted by the Deputy who showed him a list of the Ohio charges.   Baze refused to be taken into custody because he said he did not want the inconvenience of having to wait eight months for his case to go to court.   Briscoe left to get help.   Baze then crossed the road and positioned himself behind the cover of a large stump and brush pile behind where the officers would park their cruisers if they returned.   When they did return, Baze’s wife walked out in front of the cabin and hollered at the officers, drawing their attention.   Baze was behind them on the high ground with cover and the sun at his back and his SKS assault rifle.   Baze fired at the officers while Sheriff Bennett was looking away in the opposite direction.

After he killed both officers, Baze picked up the empty pistol from the Deputy and removed the Sheriff’s unfired revolver and put both of the side arms into his own blue bag.   He then went into the woods and headed towards Estill County.   Shortly after 8 p.m., Baze surrendered without incident at the home of former Estill County Sheriff Monty Parks.   Sgt. Miller of the Irvine police arrested Baze and read the Miranda rights to him.   Baze, without being questioned, told one of the arresting officers, “You tell them that you got the right man.   I’m the one that killed them son of a bitches.”   Later, Baze confessed to Detective Patterson, Trooper Blevins and Richard Wilson of the Courier-Journal in a series of statements on January 30 and in February, 1992.

The trial lasted three weeks, from November 29, 1993 until December 20, 1993.   Baze admitted that he had shot the officers but said it was done in self-defense and under the influence of extreme emotional disturbance.   At the conclusion of the guilt phase, the jury deliberated three days.   Following the guilt phase, the jury deliberated two days in the penalty phase to fix a sentence of death.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/ky-supreme-court/1322852.html

Kentucky Death Row Inmate List

kentucky death row

Kentucky Death Row Men Inmates are kept at the Kentucky State Penitentiary. The Kentucky Death Row Women Inmates are kept at the Kentucky Correctional Institute for Women. Kentucky primary method of execution is lethal injection

Kentucky Death Row Inmate List – Women

Virginia Caudill

Kentucky Death Row Inmate List – Men

Ralph Baze

Ronnie Lee Bowling

Kevin Wayne Dunlap

Samuel Steven Fields

Robert Foley

Fred Furnish

Johnathan Wayne Goforth

Randy Haight

Benny Lee Hodge

James Hunt

Donald Johnson

David Eugene Matthews

William Harry Meece

Brian Moore

David Lee Sanders

Vincent Stopher

Victor Taylor

William Eugene Thompson

Roger Wheeler

Karu Gene White

Larry Lamont White

Mitchell Willoughby

Shawn Windsor

Robert Keith Woodall

Brandon Basham Federal Death Row

Brandon Basham Federal Death Row

Brandon Basham was sentenced to death by the Federal Government for the murder of a woman following a prison escape. According to court documents Brandon Basham and Chadrick Fulks became cellmates at the Hopkins County Detention Center in Kentucky. The two would make a prison escape in November 2002. While on the run the pair would commit a series of crimes that cultivated with the kidnapping and murder of a woman. The pair would be arrested and sent to Federal Death Row.

Federal Death Row Inmate List

Brandon Basham 2021 Information

Register Number: 98940-071
Age: 39
Race: White
Sex: Male
Located at: Terre Haute USP
Release Date: DEATH SENT

Chadrick Fulks 2021 Information

Register Number: 16617-074
Age: 43
Race: White
Sex: Male
Located at: Terre Haute USP
Release Date: DEATH SENT

Brandon Basham More News

In 2002, Basham, a lifelong Kentucky resident, was serving the final years of a felony forgery conviction sentence at the Hopkins County Detention Center in Kentucky. In October of that year, Chadrick Evan Fulks became Basham’s new cellmate. In early November, Fulks was charged with an additional (and serious) state offense, first degree abuse of a child aged twelve years or younger. On November 4, 2002, Basham and Fulks escaped the detention center together by scaling a wall in the recreation area and leaving the area on foot.

By the evening of November 5, Basham and Fulks reached the home of James Hawkins in nearby Hanson, Kentucky. Basham approached the dwelling, knocked on the door, and asked to use the telephone. Basham told Hawkins that his car had broken down and, after Basham made two calls, Hawkins agreed to drive him to a nearby convenience store. When Basham and Hawkins left the residence, Fulks joined them and the three men left in Hawkins’s truck. The two men then told Hawkins that their vehicle was disabled in Robards, Kentucky, and they asked for a ride. During the drive, Fulks told Hawkins that the disabled vehicle was actually in Indiana and directed Hawkins to drive there. Fulks later changed the directions again; by this point, Basham was pointing a knife at Hawkins to keep him driving to their preferred destination. At some point, Fulks took the wheel, drove the truck into a field, and ordered Basham to tie Hawkins to a tree. Fulks became dissatisfied with Basham’s speed in tying and eventually completed the job himself. They left Hawkins clothed in shorts, flip-flops, and a short-sleeved vest. Fifteen hours later, Hawkins freed himself and flagged a passing motorist. When interviewed by police officers later that day, Hawkins identified Basham and Fulks as the individuals who kidnapped him.

After abandoning Hawkins, Fulks and Basham drove to Portage, Indiana, to visit one of Fulks’s former girlfriends, Tina Severance. They abandoned Hawkins’s vehicle at a hotel and walked to a trailer shared by Severance and her friend Andrea Roddy. The four then drove to a hotel in northern Indiana and stayed there for the next few days. At some point, Basham and Roddy began a consensual sexual relationship.

During their time in Indiana, Fulks asked Severance if she knew anyone from whom he could obtain firearms. Severance informed Fulks that a friend of hers, Robert Talsma, kept several firearms at his home; Severance and Roddy thereafter agreed to lure Talsma out of his house by offering to buy him breakfast. While Talsma was at breakfast with the women, Basham and Fulks entered Talsma’s home and stole four firearms, a ring, and several blank checks. They then reunited with Severance and Roddy, and the four traveled in Severance’s van to Sturgis, Michigan. That night, November 8, Basham and Roddy stayed at a hotel in Sturgis while Fulks and Severance drove to Goshen, Indiana, to smoke marijuana and methamphetamines with Fulks’s brother, Ronnie Fulks.

That evening, two police officers began knocking on doors at the hotel where Basham and Roddy were staying in Sturgis. Basham opened his room door, saw the officers, closed the door, and cocked a .22 caliber revolver that he had stolen from Talsma. The officers ended up leaving before reaching Basham’s door. Basham told Roddy, however, “I was about to shoot me a mother-f* * *er cop right. I was going to blow the f* * *ing cop away.” The next morning, November 9, Basham and Roddy drove to a local Kmart to purchase sundries. Basham met a group of teenagers in the parking lot, and he reported to Roddy that they had some money and he wanted to kill them for it. After purchasing sundries with some of Talsma’s stolen checks, Basham invited the teenagers back to the hotel room. Severance and Fulks arrived back at the hotel shortly thereafter, and the teenagers left. Fulks, Basham, Severance, and Roddy then drove Severance’s van to the home of Fulks’s brother, Ronnie Fulks, in Goshen, Indiana.

On November 10, 2002, the group of four drove to Piketon, Ohio, in Severance’s van. Basham again used Talsma’s checks to buy sundries, which Roddy later returned for cash. Basham and Fulks also bought two sets of camouflage clothing and Fulks stole a purse and cell phone from a Wal–Mart parking lot. On November 11, they drove to Kenova, West Virginia, near Huntington, and rented a hotel room. Fulks and Basham, wearing their sets of camouflage clothing, left the hotel room by themselves and did not return until the morning hours of November 12.

Samantha Burns, a nineteen-year-old Marshall University student, worked at the J.C. Penney’s store in the Huntington Mall. In addition, Burns also participated in a school fundraiser by selling candy boxes, which she kept in her car. On November 11, Burns met her aunt at Penney’s to purchase clothing for one of Burns’s nieces; they parked in separate locations at the mall. At 9:46 p.m. that evening, Burns called her mother to say she was staying at a friend’s house that night. Burns has never been seen since.

During the early morning hours of November 12, 2002, a local fire department responded to a reported explosion and fire at a rural area three miles outside of Huntington. The responding firemen found a car later identified as belonging to Burns burned out at a cemetery.

Meanwhile, Fulks and Basham returned to the hotel carrying muddy clothing, and Fulks indicated that they had stolen some money. Later that morning, the group of four checked out of the motel and drove to South Carolina, where Fulks had lived for several years in the 1990s. Several facts emerged linking Basham and Fulks to Burns’s disappearance. Roddy and Severance reported seeing mud, as well as one of Burns’s candy boxes, in the van. In addition, Basham began wearing a heart-shaped ring around his neck that belonged to Samantha Burns. Basham told the women that he had stolen the candy from a girl selling it and that he had stolen the ring from a car. Roddy also found Burns’s photo ID discarded with other items linking Burns to Fulks and Basham. Moreover, it was later revealed that Fulks used Burns’s ATM card twice on the evening of November 11 at local banks.

The evening of November 12, Fulks, Basham, Severance and Roddy arrived at a motel in Little River, South Carolina. The next day was a day of relative rest; Fulks and Basham stole several purses and wallets from unattended vehicles, went shopping, and then returned to the motel room to smoke marijuana, drink, and play cards. On November 14, the four moved to a motel in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. Fulks and Basham left the women and drove to nearby Conway, South Carolina. Hoping to steal firearms, Fulks and Basham burglarized the Conway home of Sam Jordan. Carl Jordan, Sam’s father, drove up to the home as Fulks and Basham were leaving. Fulks attempted to ram Jordan’s car with Severance’s van but stopped short; Basham exited the house and fired a shot at a nearby greenhouse. Fulks then fired a shot that shattered the back-window of Jordan’s car. Jordan fled the area, with Fulks and Basham in pursuit, still firing. At some point, Fulks and Basham ceased their chase, abandoned Severance’s van, and stole a truck, which they drove to the Wal–Mart in Conway.

Upon arriving at the Wal–Mart, Basham approached a blue BMW sedan driven by forty-four year old Alice Donovan. Basham entered the car and forced Donovan to drive to the back of the parking lot, where Fulks waited. There, Fulks entered the driver’s side of the car and drove away; at 4:03 p.m., Fulks used Donovan’s ATM card to purchase gas from a service station in Shallote, North Carolina. At 4:30 p.m., Donovan called her daughter to say she was shopping and would be home late. Later that day, several men at the Bee Tree Farms Hunt Club in Winnabow, North Carolina, saw two men and a woman in a blue BMW drive to the end of a road by the lodge, turn around, and leave the area. Donovan, like Burns, was never seen again.

Brandon Basham and Fulks returned to their Myrtle Beach motel later that day and told Severance and Roddy they had to leave town because Basham shot at some police officers and Severance’s van had been seized. Basham and Fulks took Donovan’s BMW and began driving to West Virginia, leaving Severance and Roddy behind in Myrtle Beach. Donovan’s ATM card was used in Little River, Myrtle Beach, and Raleigh, North Carolina. Meanwhile, Severance filed a (false) police report alleging that her van had been stolen.

On November 15, 2002, Fulks and Basham arrived at the home of Beth McGuffin near Huntington, West Virginia. McGuffin, a childhood friend of Fulks, agreed to let Fulks and Basham stay at her home. Fulks introduced Basham to her as “Tommy Blake.” Later on November 15, Fulks and Basham purchased crack cocaine to share. Basham and McGuffin also began a sexual relationship and had sexual intercourse three times over the next several days. Basham also gave McGuffin Burns’s heart-shaped ring. On November 16, the three watched a news story about the disappearance of Samantha Burns. When McGuffin remarked that Burns was likely dead, Fulks stated, “[s]he is dead.”

At the same time, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) was investigating the kidnapping of James Hawkins, which it believed Brandon Basham and Fulks had committed after escaping from prison. The FBI learned that the two men might be in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, and that Severance had reported her van stolen. On November 16, the FBI and local authorities interviewed Severance and learned that Basham and Fulks had left the area. The FBI also became aware of the disappearance of Alice Donovan and suspected that Fulks and Basham might be involved.

On Sunday, November 17, Fulks, Basham, and McGuffin smoked marijuana before Fulks and Basham left McGuffin’s house, telling her they were headed to Arizona. Instead, they stopped at the Ashland Mall in Ashland, Kentucky, about 20 minutes from Huntington. Sometime that evening, in a Wal–Mart parking lot, Basham approached Deanna Francis’s fifteen-year-old daughter as she entered the passenger side of their vehicle. Basham pointed a gun into the teenager’s side, attempted to enter the car, and asked for directions to Greenville, Kentucky. When Basham realized Deanna’s daughter was talking on her cell phone, he said “[M]y bad, I didn’t mean to scare you” and walked away. Deanna immediately called the police.

Ashland Police Officer Matt Davis was approximately four blocks from the Ashland Mall when he heard the dispatch about the attempted carjacking. Davis drove to the mall, where he saw Brandon Basham, who met the description of the suspected carjacker. Davis exited his patrol vehicle and approached Basham; Basham immediately began to flee. As Davis chased Basham through the mall area, Basham drew his weapon and fired a shot in the air. As the chase continued, Basham drew his weapon a second time, turned, and fired at Davis, who fired three shots of his own in return. Basham eventually made his way to a rail yard on the banks of the Ohio River where he hid. Davis radioed reinforcements, which surrounded the area. More than an hour later, at approximately 9:00 p.m., Basham surrendered to police, identifying himself as “Josh Rittman.” Police recovered a knife—later identified as belonging to Alice Donovan—and a crack cocaine pipe on Basham’s person. Basham’s pistol was recovered from a rail car several days later.

Fulks returned to McGuffin’s home that evening and watched a news report on Basham’s arrest. The morning of November 18, Fulks left McGuffin’s residence to drive Donovan’s BMW to his brother’s house in Goshen, Indiana. Fulks stopped at a rest area, where an Ohio state trooper, who had ascertained that the BMW was stolen, approached him; a high-speed chase then ensued at speeds in excess of 130 miles per hour. During this chase, Fulks nearly struck another trooper before managing to evade capture. Fulks eventually arrived at his brother’s home in the early morning hours of November 20. Police officers were staking out Ronnie’s home, however, and when Fulks, his brother Ronnie, and Ronnie’s girlfriend drove to a barn to hide the BMW, Fulks was arrested. Fulks’s semen and the bodily fluids from an unidentified female were later found in the back seat of the BMW.

Back in West Virginia, investigators determined that “Josh Rittman” was actually Brandon Basham, and that he was a recent prison escapee. At 2:00 a.m. on November 19, Basham was interviewed for the first time. Basham first told investigators that he and Fulks had escaped from prison and committed several crimes along the way. Later, he admitted that they had traveled to South Carolina and kidnapped a woman in Conway, South Carolina. Basham, however, insisted that the woman was alive and with Fulks.

At 9:45 a.m. on November 19, investigators re-interviewed Basham. Basham told investigators that he and Fulks kidnapped a man after escaping from prison, and carried firearms when kidnapping Donovan. He further told investigators that they used her credit cards to obtain cash, that they had driven Donovan to Ashland, Kentucky, and that Fulks was waiting for Basham when Basham was caught. This time, Basham said he thought Donovan was dead because she was not with Basham and Fulks at the Ashland Mall. During this interview, Basham also told investigators that Fulks “got a girl” in West Virginia as well.

On November 20, FBI agents interviewed Brandon Basham for seven hours. On this occasion, Basham told investigators that after they kidnapped Donovan, Fulks dropped Basham off at the hotel, drove Donovan to a resort area, raped her, tied her up, and left her. Basham also claimed that Fulks was the one who actually carjacked Donovan. Basham also clarified that when he said Fulks “got a girl” in West Virginia, that he meant they had stolen a girl’s credit cards, not that they had kidnapped anyone else. At this point, investigators believed Donovan may have been still alive. Basham drew a map of the places Fulks and Basham had been with Donovan. This map roughly corresponded with the Savannah Bluff area of Horry County, South Carolina. A two-day search of the area, however, left investigators no closer to discovering Donovan’s fate.

On November 25, Basham, now represented by counsel, agreed to further aid investigators in finding Donovan’s body. He drew a map, mentioned passing through a cemetery, and informed investigators that Donovan’s body was left covered but unburied in the woods. Basham was unable to identify any specific landmarks to aid investigators.

On November 26, through counsel, Brandon Basham informed investigators that Samantha Burns was dead and that he and Fulks had rolled her body down an embankment and into the Guyandotte River near Huntington.

Two days later, on November 28, FBI and state investigators organized a search team to search Brunswick County, North Carolina, for Donovan’s body. Basham, now represented by Cameron B. Littlejohn, Jr. and William H. Monckton, VI, accompanied the agents. During the ride, Basham saw a deer and said, “I never could kill a deer and here I have,” but was cut off before finishing his sentence. Later that day, Basham told the investigators that he and Fulks had driven past a park, taken Donovan’s body out of the car, dragged it into the woods, and covered it. On two occasions, Basham became emotional as he identified landmarks where he and Fulks had taken Donovan. Later, Basham told the investigators he had thrown out a Liz Claiborne purse strap at the Bee Tree Farms Cemetery. When they arrived, the local sheriff asked, “Is this where it happened?” Basham responded, “This is it. It is.” The cemetery was searched to no avail․

Starting in late November 2002, while in jail awaiting trial, Brandon Basham began writing letters to McGuffin, telling her his real name, claiming that he loved her, that he had not “hurt that girl from South Carolina”, and that Fulks was responsible for their crime spree. On this last point, Basham wrote that Fulks “lied to me” and “told me he had all kinds of money, and a new car, and all of this stuff just waiting on him, and all he needed me to do was to show him the way away from the jail because I was raised in that area.” Basham was not entirely forthright with McGuffin, however, as he also wrote that Burns’s ring, which he had given to McGuffin, was “not stolen or anything like that.” Basham also confided that he “did a lot of bad s* *t with [Fulks].”

On December 24, 2002, Brandon Basham called a former middle-school teacher in Madisonville, Kentucky, Clifford Jay. When Jay asked whether Basham had killed Alice Donovan, Basham replied, “Yes, Sir. We killed them.” Jay was surprised by the use of the term “them,” because he had only heard about the Donovan killing.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/us-4th-circuit/1704098.html

Clay Shrout Teen Killer Murders Family

clay shrout teen killer

Clay Shrout was seventeen years old when he would murder his family in Kentucky before taking a high school math class hostage. According to court documents Clay Shrout would shoot and kill his parents and his two younger sisters. Afterwards Clay Shrout would head to Ryle High School where he would hold a math class hostage until a teacher would intervene. This teen killer would take a plea deal and be sentenced to twenty five years to life. Clay Shrout came up for parole in 2019 however it was denied

Clay Shrout 2023 Information

clay shrout 2021
Name:SHROUT, CLAY
Active Inmate

PID # / DOC #:233951 / 119453
Institution Start Date:4/24/1995
Expected Time To Serve (TTS):LIFE WITH PAROLE AFTER 25 YEARS
Classification:Medium
Minimum Expiration of Sentence Date (Good Time Release Date): ?LIFE WITH PAROLE AFTER 25 YEARS
Parole Eligibility Date:5/18/2029
Maximum Expiration of Sentence Date:LIFE WITH PAROLE AFTER 25 YEARS
Location:Kentucky State Penitentiary
Age:44
Race:White
Gender:M
Eye Color:Brown
Hair Color:Brown
Height:5′ 10″
Weight:150

Clay Shrout Videos

Clay Shrout More News

The parole hearing for a man who murdered his entire family 25 years ago has been delayed until Monday. In front of two parole board members Wednesday, he claimed his mother abused him as a child.

“My mother had sexually abused me when I was younger,” Clay Shrout said. “I don’t want you to think that I’m using that as an excuse or a justification, but that is what happened.”

Shrout shot and killed his parents and two younger sisters in their northern Kentucky home in 1994. He then went to his Ryle High School trigonometry class and held the students hostage at gunpoint.

Jeff Martin, the retried northern Kentucky police officer who arrested Shrout, says Shrout has had every opportunity in the past 25 years to inform the authorities of this claim of abuse. Martin is now the Director of Pastoral Care at the First Christian Church in Burlington.

“First thing I said to him was, ‘What’s going on?’ And he said, ‘I’ve had a bad day today.’ I said, ‘Oh yeah?’ He said, ‘I’ve killed my whole family,'” said Martin.

Martin says Shrout’s mother was shot between the eyes, and his father was shot in a “couple places.”

“His older sister was shot in the chest,” said Martin.

The younger sister woke up hearing the noise and confronted Shrout in the hallway. Martin says Shrout calmed her down, got her back in bed, and when she closed her eyes Shrout shot her “in the top of the head.”

“He returned, found his father struggling to get out of bed and he shot him again,” said Martin.

According to Martin, Shrout said he didn’t want his sisters to grow up without parents.

Shrout told the parole board he went to Ryle High School hoping police would shoot and kill him there after taking a classroom hostage.

Martin says Shrout kept the Anarchists’ Cookbook by his bedside and dabbled in the occult.

Since his incarceration, Shrout has not been a model prisoner. Martin says he tried to escape three times.

“It was amazing to me that two parole board members couldn’t come to a conclusion that this individual needs to stay in jail the rest of his life,” said Martin. “There’s evil in the world and there was certainly evil in Clay Shrout that day.”

https://www.fox19.com/2019/03/21/arresting-officer-recalls-grisly-details-clay-shrout-shooting-theres-evil-world/

Clay Shrout FAQ

Clay Shrout Now

Clay Shrout is currently incarcerated at the Kentucky State Prison

Clay Shrout Release Date

Clay Shrout is serving a life sentence however he has been eligible for parole since 2019

Clay Shrout Photos

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Clay Shrout Other News

After nearly an hour of questioning, Clay Shrout cried at his parole board hearing Wednesday.

Parole board member Lee VanHoose asked: “Do you think you deserve to be paroled?”

“I don’t think I deserve to be alive. I don’t mean that in a weird suicidal way. I hate what happened and I hate the way my life has turned out. It started out bad and it got worse, and I made it worse,” he said. “I don’t like the word ‘deserve’ because I still don’t feel ok about what I’ve done.”

When he was 17, Clay Shrout killed his family and took his classmates hostage in 1994. After 24 years and 8 months in prison, he appeared before Kentucky’s parole board.

During most of the hearing, Shrout was collected and matter-of-fact as he was questioned by the two-member panel. They didn’t reach a decision Wednesday. The full nine-member board will meet Monday and decide whether the 42-year-old should be released.

For the first time publicly, Shrout recounted the crime that left Boone County and particularly Ryle High School stunned.

He claimed the “origin” of killings stemmed from sexual abuse he suffered at the hands of his mother. Abuse, he said, he didn’t come to terms with until after he was in prison.

He didn’t offer specifics, but told the parole board member via video conference, that the abuse started when he was baby and would sometimes occur in the bath. He said it stopped while he was still a child.

“My father did find out about it at one point, but chose to ignore it, chose not to do anything about it,” Shrout said.

Shrout said he had only told this information to other people in prison. He didn’t mention it during any of the investigations in 1994.

“I had blocked that out of my head for a long time,” Shrout said.

He said beyond that there was no other abuse in his home, but said he and his parents were arguing frequently in the time leading up to the killings over school issues. He said he was drinking and taking LSD on a regular basis.

Shrout said he never sought any mental health, behavioral or substance abuse counseling in prison beyond one visit with a psychologist.

Shrout said he visited a therapist when he was a child and it didn’t do any good.

“The experience in my life has been that any time there’s a problem, if it needs to be fixed, I’ve got to figure out a way to fix it on my own,” Shrout said.

‘They would be happier dead’

The parole board members asked him to recount what happened the day he killed his family.

“What I did was I killed four human beings,” he said. “I murdered my mother and I murdered my father and I murdered my two sisters. After that, I went to school with the intention of drawing the police out to have the police shoot me and kill me.”

The parole board pressed him on why he would kill his innocent sisters.

“What was going through my head, though it is not really rational, was that they would be happier being dead…considering everything that was getting ready to happen, considering both their parents would be dead, considering their brother did it.

“That doesn’t make a lot sense now, but what I did doesn’t make a lot of sense,” Shrout said. “I don’t feel particularly good about that happening.”

As for his parents, Shrout said: “I do honestly still have some issues with them.”

Shrout became Christian and has had a clean record ever since

Shrout repeatedly said he was sorry for what he did, but said the things he did could not be undone.

They’re dead and they’re not going to be undead. They’re not going to stop being dead,” he said. “It doesn’t matter how bad I feel about it now…there’s nothing you can do to make it better.”

During his imprisonment, Shrout has learned carpentry and car repair. The parole board also praised him for helping other inmates complete their GEDs. He hasn’t had any disciplinary issues in prison since 2002, he said that was after he became a Christian.

If released, Shrout said members of church in Tennessee who run an inmate program were willing to help him.

As part of a plea deal to avoid the death penalty, Shrout pleaded guilty to gunning down his family.

A judge declared he was “guilty, but mentally ill,” and he was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison.

The two parole board members who spoke to Shrout Wednesday deliberated privately for about 15 minutes. They either didn’t agree on whether to grant parole or couldn’t agree on how long Shrout should have to wait for another opportunity at parole.

Monday morning, the full parole board will meet and make a final decision.

https://www.cincinnati.com/story/news/crime/crime-and-courts/2019/03/19/clay-shrout-parole-hearing-wednesday-appear-before-board/3214995002/

Gabe Parker Teen Killer Kentucky School Shooter

gabe parker teen killer

Gabe Parker was fifteen years old when he brought a gun to school in Kentucky that would leave two fellow students dead. According to prosecutors Gabe Parker entered Marshall County High School shortly before 8 a.m. on Jan. 23 opening fire with a handgun leaving two students dead and fourteen others injured.

This teen killer would be arrested shortly after the shooting and would confess to police he was responsible. At trial Gabe Parker would plead guilty to two counts of murder and eight counts of first degree assault and six counts of second degree assault. Gabe Parker would be sentenced to life in prison with the chance of parole after twenty years

Gabe Parker 2023 Information

gabriel parker 2022
Name:PARKER, GABRIEL
Active Inmate

PID # / DOC #:511795 / 313745
Institution Start Date:6/12/2020
Expected Time To Serve (TTS):LIFE SENTENCE
Classification:Unassigned
Minimum Expiration of Sentence Date (Good Time Release Date): ?LIFE SENTENCE
Parole Eligibility Date:1/13/2038
Maximum Expiration of Sentence Date:LIFE SENTENCE
Location:Southeast State Corr. Complex
Age:18
Race:White
Gender:M
Eye Color:Green
Hair Color:Red or Auburn
Height:6′ 00″
Weight:275

Gabe Parker Other News

Gabe Parker, the teenager who opened fire inside a Kentucky school in 2018, killing two students, pleaded guilty Tuesday to two counts of murder and multiple counts of assault.

As part of the plea deal, a judge is expected to sentence him June 12 to life in prison with the possibility of parole after 20 years. 

Parker had been indicted on two counts of murder and 14 counts of assault after he opened fire with a handgun at Marshall County High School shortly before 8 a.m. on Jan. 23. Bailey Holt and Preston Ryan Cope — both 15-year-old students — died in the attack. He pleaded guilty to eight counts of 1st degree assault and six counts of 2nd degree assault. 

Parker, now 18, confessed to police less than an hour after the shooting.

Defense attorney Tom Griffiths said Parker pleaded guilty “not because it was the easy thing to do, but because it was the right thing to do, not just for him but for the victims and the community. He has a lot to atone for and he had to move forward and start to do that.”

Marshall Commonwealth’s Attorney Dennis Foust said Parker was not eligible for life without parole or the death penalty because of his age, 15, at the time of the shooting, so “we got the maximum sentence.”

If convicted at trial, Parker could have been sentenced at most to life in prison without the possibility of parole for 25 years. 

Foust said the families of the Bailey and Preston were in agreement with the plea bargain.

In part, the prosecution chose not to go to trial because the COVID-19 pandemic would have delayed it until at least 2021 and there were no guarantees it would happen then, Foust said. 

“The trade off is in terms of not having to worry about appeals” or when the trial could be held, he said.

In fact, the prosecution could not even work with medical witnesses from Vanderbilt University because of the current pandemic. 

Griffiths agreed that avoiding trial was best for everyone involved. 

“I don’t think anyone would have been served by this case going to trial when you had someone admitting responsibility and accepting life in prison,” he said. 

And Foust said of the victims, “everybody’s going to get a chance to speak at the sentencing and hopefully this will be the first chapter in the beginning of the healing process.”

Griffiths said Parker may or may not speak at his sentencing. 

Asked if Parker every told him his reasoning for the shooting, Griffiths said “not that makes any sense to adults. There may be a better answer to that at sentencing, but I can’t promise you that either.”

Parker’s mother, Mary Minyard, released a statement:

“I’ve had more than two years to think about what I want to say at this moment. Two devastatingly long, cruel years to come up with the words, and I find I still don’t have them. Words are inadequate to express how deeply sorry I am for everything that has happened. To every child in the school that day, to every parent and loved one of those children; to the school system and entire community, I’m so sorry. Most especially, my most heartfelt apologies go to those children hurt that day and their families. To the Holt and Cope families, I know there will never be words that I can say to make up for the precious lives you’ve lost, but I hope know how deeply I feel that loss and how truly sorry I am. I can only hope you all find some comfort and light in the days and years ahead.”

https://www.wdrb.com/news/kentucky-teen-pleads-guilty-to-murder-charges-in-connection-with-2018-school-shooting-that-killed/article_59430718-8983-11ea-a88e-d3ef775d70bd.html

Gabe Parker More News

In a victory for the prosecution, a Marshall Circuit Court judge has held that alleged teen shooter Gabriel Parker voluntarily confessed to the January 2018 fatal shootings and assaults at Marshall County High School.

Judge Jamie Jameson denied a motion to suppress Parker’s statements, including one in which the county sheriff asked him immediately after the shootings if anyone else was involved and Parker replied, “No, it was me.”

Parker’s public defenders had maintained his Miranda rights were violated and the investigators also violated a law requiring the immediate notification of a juvenile’s parents that they have been arrested.

Jameson noted in his Nov. 10 ruling that sheriff’s investigators did not specifically ask if he wanted to waive his right to maintain his silence, but he said he understood his rights.

He fully confessed to the crimes within five minutes, Jameson said.

The judge said that while Parker’s mother and stepfather were not notified of his arrest for about an hour on Jan. 23, 2018, “Given the chaotic nature of that day, the time frame in which notification occurred was not only legally sufficient, but commendable.”

He said the parents were contacted before Parker was formally charged, and even if the notification law was violated, suppression of his statement is not required unless it was given involuntarily, which Jameson ruled it was not.

Parker was 16 when he allegedly shot and killed students Preston Cope and Bailey Holt and injured 14 others at the school.

His trial on charges of murder and assault will begin June 1 in Christian County, where it was moved on a change of venue. Parker, now 17, has pleaded not guilty.

At a status conference Friday,  Jameson set an additional conference for Feb. 14, according to Commonwealth’s Attorney Dennis Foust.

https://www.courier-journal.com/story/news/2019/11/15/gabegabe-parkers-confession-ruled-voluntary-parkers-confession-ruled-voluntary/4204789002/

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Gabriel Parker Now

Gabe Parker is currently incarcerated at the Southeast State Corr. Complex

Gabriel Parker Release Date

Gabe Parker is serving a life sentence however is eligible for parole in 2038