Byron Ellison Gets Life For Killing 2 Month Old Baby

Byron Ellison

Byron Ellison has been sentenced to life in prison for the murder of his 2 month old son. According to court documents ambulance attendants arrived at the Mississippi home to find a two month old boy unresponsive. The little boy was rushed to hospital but do to his severe injuries he would be flown out of state to a trauma center in New Orleans. Unfortunately the injuries were horrific and the 2 month old would pass away. The coroner would remark that the 2 month old child died from severe blunt force trauma to the back of his head. The child’s father Byron Ellison would be arrested and charged with murder. Byron Ellison would be convicted of the murder and sentenced to life in prison

Byron Ellison More News

A Gulfport man charged with capital murder for the 2018 death of his baby boy will spend the rest of his life in prison. Byron Ellison, 32, stood trial this week in Harrison County.

The investigation began on October 15, 2018, when first responders arrived at a home on Calcutta Drive in Gulfport. They found an unresponsive 2-month-old baby and immediately took him to Garden Park Hospital. Because of the child’s significant injuries, he was then sent to Oschner Medical Center in New Orleans.

Three days later the baby died from what doctors described as a devastating, catastrophic neurological injury. An autopsy found the injury was a result of blunt force trauma to the back of the head, and the death was ruled a homicide.

Investigators from the Harrison County Sheriff’s Office first interviewed the parents at Garden Park Hospital.

“The baby’s mother stated that the baby woke up at approximately 3:30 a.m. when the baby was fed and went back to sleep. The baby woke up again at approximately 6:30 a.m., when she changed the baby. She stated that she left the baby in the care of his father and went to the kitchen to make the baby a bottle.

She stated that a couple of minutes later, Byron Ellison came to the kitchen with the baby, who was limp. They called 911 and she performed CPR on the baby until first responders arrived,” stated Assistant District Attorney Patti Simpson, who prosecuted the case with Billy Stage.

When Crime Scene Technicians went to the home they found evidence that backed up the mother’s story about changing the baby and preparing a bottle in the kitchen.

The father’s statement to investigators recounted the same sequence of events, but he gave different explanations for the baby’s injuries. He said he was bouncing the baby on his knee, then that the baby hit his collarbone, and then that the baby fell off of the bed. The father said he was sleep-deprived and ultimately that he was afraid to tell the mother what he did.

“The prosecution of this case could not have happened without the tireless work of the Investigators and Crime Scene Technicians of the Harrison County’s Sheriff Department. That, coupled with the medical professionals who testified, helped to show the jury what happened and who was responsible. I am proud of how they all worked together. In the end, this case was tragic and involved the loss of life of a two-month old child. We pray that that this conviction assists in healing process,” stated District Attorney W. Crosby Parker.

https://www.wlbt.com/2022/04/01/gulfport-man-gets-life-prison-killing-2-month-old-son/

Byron Ellison Other News

When 2-month-old Colton Wyatt Ellison arrived at a New Orleans hospital in 2018, the pediatric neurosurgeon who evaluated him said the baby had already been placed on life support, had IV fluids and medication and had no signs of brain activity. In an evaluation of the child at Ochsner’s Children’s Hospital, Dr. Cuong Bui said, baby “Colt” had multiple brain bleeds or hemorrhaging in various areas in his brain and an abrasion on the back of his head. “In this particular case,” Bui said, “all the information we had pointed to an injury that could not have happened accidentally like (from) a fall or falling out of bed or playing with the baby too hard or dropping the baby.”

The doctor also documented early signs of bruising around the baby’s eyes and noted the soft spot on the baby’s head had hardened due to a lack of oxygen and “severe, widespread and catastrophic” injuries to the brain. “The (baby’s) head must have hit something with a quite a bit of force,” he said. “There were clear injuries around the eyes based on the bleeding and bruising around them.”

Because of the injuries coupled with extensive swelling in Colton’s brain, Bui said, “unfortunately, there was no surgical intervention I could do.” Bui is among others who testified on Wednesday in the capital murder trial of Byron Ellison, the baby’s father. The jury instructions issued Friday afternoon gave the jury the option to consider other charges during deliberations to include manslaughter.

Assistant district attorneys Patricia “Patti” Simpson and Billy Stage rested the state’s case Wednesday afternoon after forensic pathologist Dr. Mark LeVaughn testified, confirming the baby died of blunt impact injuries to the head. LeVaughn performed the Oct. 22, 2018, autopsy on Colton and said it showed the baby had hemorrhages in the eyes, multiple hemorrhages in the brain, and an abrasion to the back of the head from a blunt impact injury. He ruled the manner of death a homicide, though defense attorney Jim Davis questioned whether the baby’s medical issues at birth with his esophagus could have restricted the oxygen to the baby’s brain, ultimately leading to the child’s death. The baby spent four-to-six weeks in the hospital after his birth. The baby had been home from the hospital for about three weeks at the time he suffered the fatal injuries. LeVaughn said there was no sign of any issues with the baby’s esophagus at the time of the autopsy to suggest that the condition contributed to the child’s death.

Byron Ellison, and his now ex-girlfriend and mother of the child, Jessica Smith, had moved in with Ellison’s parents at their then home on Calcutta Drive, south of Robinson Road in Gulfport, after the baby got out of the hospital following surgery and treatment for esophageal problems. Harrison County sheriff’s deputies initially arrested Ellison on Oct. 15, 2018, on a felony child abuse charge after paramedics found the baby unresponsive at the couple’s home. Investigators upgraded the charge to second-degree murder after the baby was taken off of life support and died. The baby was an organ donor, according to the testimony. If convicted of capital murder, Ellison could face a sentence of life in prison or death.

In defense testimony, jurors listened as an assistant from the defense attorney’s office and prosecutor Simpson read a transcript from Ellison’s sister, Kimberly Ellison. Kimberly Ellison could not be in court to testify because she is currently serving time in a jail out of state for probation violations related to charges of felony fleeing, grand larceny and a drug paraphernalia charge. In the testimony, Kimberly Ellison said she never heard her brother and the mother of the child arguing, and both she and Ellisons’ parents said the couple seemed to get along well. In addition, Ellison’s family said, the couple had set up a schedule so Jessica Smith could take care of the baby during the day, and Ellison could take care of him at night.

Kimberly Ellison said she didn’t see either parent mistreat the child but did have concerns a few days before the alleged attack on the baby when she saw the child’s mother had just taken a shower with the baby. “I said that was very alarming, that I was unaware she did not have a baby bath,” Kimberly Ellison said.

In other testimony, Byron Ellison’s parents confirmed the couple seemed to get along and had set up a schedule to ensure someone was watching baby “Colt” at all times. Byron Ellison’s parents said they moved out of the Gulfport home they had been living in after Colton’s death because it was too hard to stay there.

After Byron Ellison’s father testified, he wheeled himself out of the courtroom without making eye contact with his son. His father is in wheelchair because he suffers from multiple sclerosis.

Earlier in the murder trial, investigators testified that Byron Ellison told three different stories about what could have led to the baby’s fatal injuries. Initially, Byron Ellison said he was bouncing the baby on his knee and may have hurt him then. In another account, Byron Ellison said the baby’s head may have been hurt when his father pulled him to his chest and the baby’s head hit his collarbone. In a third scenario, Bryon Ellison suggested the baby may have fallen off a bed.

But early on in the investigation, Harrison County Sheriff Troy Peterson told the Sun Herald in 2018 that Byron Ellison had admitted abusing the child because he was tired and mad when the baby wouldn’t stop crying. Jessica Smith also told jurors that Ellison often got mad and called the baby “a little shit” when he wouldn’t stop crying. Simpson recalled the events leading up to finding her baby limp and unresponsive the day of the alleged attack in earlier testimony. Defense testimony resumes Thursday in Harrison County Circuit Court before Judge Christoper Schmidt.

https://www.sunherald.com/news/local/crime/article259955895.html

Takoda Miller and Kendra Beck Starved Infant To Death

Takoda Miller and Kendra Beck

Takoda Miller and Kendra Beck are a couple from Mississippi who have just been charged with capital murder after allegedly starving their five month old child to death. According to police reports Takoda Miller and Kendra Beck intentionally, knowingly or recklessly starved 5-month-old Kairi Beck of the nourishments needed to sustain life or growth. Takoda Miller and Kendra Beck were also charged with felony child abuse relating to the abuse of a nineteen month old child who was also in their care.

Takoda Miller and Kendra Beck More News

A Mississippi couple are now facing capital murder charges in the death of their 5-month-old daughter.

Kendra Beck, 20, and Takoda Miller, 23, were arrested March 22 and booked into the Pearl River County Jail after being indicted for the death of the child, which occurred in early October 2021, according to WLOX.

According to the indictment, the couple intentionally, knowingly or recklessly starved 5-month-old Kairi Beck of the nourishments needed to sustain life or growth.

The couple were also charged with felony child neglect after authorities say a second child who was 19 months old at the time was found to be neglected and abused.

The indictment alleges that Beck and Miller deprived the toddler of food, clothing, shelter, healthcare or supervision, resulting in substantial harm to the child’s physical, mental or emotional health. In addition, court documents say the abuse caused the child to become infested with lice, covered in feces and have severe diaper rash.

Beck and Miller are being held in the Pearl River County Jail without bond

https://www.kmvt.com/2022/03/29/mississippi-couple-accused-starving-infant-death-charged-with-capital-murder/

Takoda Miller and Kendra Beck Other News

A Pearl River County couple are now facing capital murder charges in the death of their five-month-old daughter.

Kendra Beck, 20, and Takoda Miller, 23, were arrested on March 22 and booked into the Pearl River County Jail after being indicted for the death of the child, which occurred in early October 2021.

According to the indictment, the couple intentionally, knowingly or recklessly starved five-month-old Kairi Beck of the nourishments needed to sustain life or growth.

The couple were also charged with felony child neglect after authorities say a second child who was 19-months-old at the time was found to be neglected and abused.

The indictment alleges that Beck and Miller deprived the toddler of food, clothing, shelter, healthcare or supervision, resulting in substantial harm to the child’s physical, mental or emotional health. In addition, court documents say the abuse caused the child to become infested with lice, covered in feces, and have severe diaper rash.

Both Beck and Miller are being held in the Pearl River County Jail without bond. They are set to be arraigned in circuit court on Tuesday morning.

https://www.wlox.com/2022/03/29/couple-accused-starving-infant-death-now-facing-capital-murder-charges/

Kemond Jones Teen Killer 40 Years In Prison

Kemond Jones

Kemond Jones was fifteen years old when this convicted teen killer would shoot and kill another teenager. According to court documents Kemond Jones and the victim Ethan Powell were involved in an argument when Kemond Jones would shoot Powell multiple times. Kemond Jones would claim he felt that his life was endanger and the murder was in self defense however the medical investigator would testify four of the gunshots were in the victims back. Kemond Jones would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to forty years in prison in which thirty will be spent in prison. There is a Change.org petition saying that Kemond Jones had been bullied by the victim for sometime before the murder took place, you can see it here

Kemond Jones More News

Monday, Judge James Chaney heard impact statements from those affected by the direct design murder of Ethan Powell in the early hours of Labor Day, Sep. 7, 2020. After hearing the statements, Judge Chaney sentenced Kemond Jones to 40 years. 30 to serve and 10 suspended.

The initial call arrived just three minutes after midnight on Sep. 7, 2020, reporting shots fired on Abraham Drive. Within minutes, Warren County deputies were on scene to find 18-year-old Powell laying on the street suffering from multiple gunshot wounds.

Powell was transported to Merit Health River Region by Vicksburg Fire Department paramedics for treatment, but eventually died as a result of those injuries. Warren County Coroner Doug Huskey pronounced Powell deceased about an hour after he was transported.

Later that day, Jones turned himself in to Warren County authorities, accompanied by family members. Though the investigation was ongoing,  Warren County Sheriff Martin Pace told the Vicksburg Daily News that authorities were confident that Jones was responsible for Powell’s death and under Mississippi statute, Jones would be tried as an adult.

Jones was found guilty by a Warren County jury on Feb. 25 of direct design murder. The Vicksburg Daily News recorded the reading of the verdict.

According to testimony, about a week before the shooting Jones and Powell had a disagreement that included Jones slapping the larger Powell.

The early morning shooting of Powell had Jones stating that he feared for his life after Powell came towards him. However, medical examiner Dr. Mark Levaughn testified that Powell was shot 8 times with 4 of those shots going into his back. Dr. Levaughn also spoke about the “devastating shot” to Powell’s back that caused the most damage

The prosecution attempted to have the medical examiner state that the “devastating shot” was taken after Powell had fallen to the ground, but the examiner could not state with certainty that was the case.

Jones testified he was scared and just kept firing

Bridgett Forehand Charged With Brutal Murder

Bridgett Forehand mugshot photos

Bridgett Forehand is a fourteen year old alleged teen killer who has been charged in a brutal murder. According to police documents Bridgett Forehand had just met the victim who she met through mutual friends however very quickly Bridgett would pull out a gun, put it to his forehead and pulled the trigger. The body of Mickell Gordon, 19, was found on the side of the road and soon after Bridgett Forehand was in custody. Now the alleged teen killer is facing murder charges inside of a Mississippi courtroom. According to her Grandfather Bridgett Forehand was struggling with her mental health and it is believed she stole the gun the day before. Bridgett Forehand is now scheduled to go on trial this week where she is facing a second degree murder charge

Bridgett Forehand More News

14-year-old girl is behind bars after being charged in the shooting death of a 19-year-old man.

The teenager, who has since been identified as Bridgett Forehand, was initially charged with manslaughter but those charges were upgraded Thursday to second-degree murder.

During Forehand’s arraignment, the public defender told the judge that the 14-year-old’s grandfather was recently awarded custody of her and that the teenager has mental health issues. The lawyer told County Court Judge Mark Watts that they are trying to see a psychiatrist to get her on medication. Currently, she is not on any medication.

Judge Watts set bail at $100,000 and said he would consider lowering the bond if she sees a psychiatrist.

Few details have been released by authorities about what happened in the early morning hours of Wednesday, but a witness who was there has come forward to tell his side of the story.

The 19-year-old male, who does not wish to be identified publicly, sat down with WLOX on Wednesday afternoon to talk about what happened to his friend Mickell Gordon.

According to the witness, Mickell was staying the night at his house in Jackson County near the St. Andrews community. Text messages exchanged between the two earlier in the night show them talking about playing video games at the witness’ house. After doing that, they invited a 19-year-old female friend of Mikell’s over, said the witness.

She showed up with Bridgett Forehand, who the witness said told them she was 17. It wasn’t until after the shooting and her arrest that the witness said he found out she was actually 14.

“(Mickell and the 19-year-old female) were friends and we invited her over to hang out. I didn’t know either of the girls. (Mickell) just knew (the 19-year-old female)… He didn’t know (the suspect) either,” said the witness.

Video from the home of the witness shows the two girls arriving at the house in Jackson County near St. Andrews at 11:33 p.m.

Subsequent video taken from the home’s doorbell camera shows the four teenagers hanging out on his porch and in the front yard for a few minutes, before all four teens leave the home at 11:40 p.m.

According to the witness, they were just walking around the neighborhood because they couldn’t hang out inside his house since his family was sleeping so they stayed outside.. After walking to a nearby park and a store, the witness said they headed back to his house to get warmer clothing for the girls because they were cold.

It was around this time that things took a downward spiral.

“That’s when she pulled out the gun, and I was just trying to come up with an excuse to get them to leave. They knew somebody down the street so I told them we could walk to his house,” said the witness, adding that he wanted to get the weapon away from his family.

Then, while walking down the street, the suspect began behaving out of the norm and laid on the ground, he said.

“[The 19-year-old female] was trying to calm her down. That’s when (the suspect) got the gun from her backpack and started waving it around, pointing it at us… She said she stole it the day before but she didn’t tell us where she stole it from,” recounted the witness.

According to him, there was no confrontation prior to the shooting between Forehand and anyone else.

“No, none at all,” said the witness when asked if the suspect had a reason to be upset. “We were just trying to get them to go away nicely – or I was – and she was just going crazy. I don’t know why. She started waving (the gun) around. I turned around and started walking away, and I saw the gunshot out of the corner of my eye.”

“She didn’t even know him,” added the witness’ mother. “When she was arrested in the police car, she kept yelling, ‘Is Marcus okay?’ She didn’t even know his name.”

After the gun was fired, the witness said he realized that his friend had been shot in the forehead.

“We were kind of shocked and kind of sat there for a second, and then I pulled out my phone and she ran up to me and begged me not to call the cops. I said ‘okay, okay’ because she was still waving the gun around. Then I was like, ‘get away from me, get away from me’ and I took off running and went and checked on Kell and realized he was dead. That’s when I ran back towards my house and called (my mom) and went back to where Kell was, and we saw (the two girls) running down the street towards my house.”

As soon as she got the call from her son, the witness’ mom said she and her husband rushed a few doors down to the corner of Spruce and Center streets, where the shooting happened. Doorbell video shows the frantic parents running out of the house at 2:08 a.m.

The mother called 911 and she, her husband, and their son – the witness – waited for help to arrive. The first deputy arrived on scene at 2:11 a.m.

During that time, the mother said she realized that the two girls had ran off so she called her 15-year-old daughter, who was alone at the family’s home, and told her to hide in the bathroom and lock the door because the armed suspect was running towards their house.

The 15-year-old sister of the witness told WLOX she was locked in the bathroom when she heard Forehand and the 19-year-old female come in the house through the backdoor.

In the meantime, more law enforcement officers were responding to the shooting and can be heard on the police scanner calling backup to help search the area for the suspect.

At 2:28 a.m., a deputy can be heard telling dispatch that the suspect was in custody. According to the witness and his mother, the 14-year-old girl was arrested in their backyard.

Bridgett Forehand was initially charged with manslaughter but those charges were upgraded Thursday when she appeared in court. She is now charged with second degree murder. Her bond is set at $100,000.

https://www.wlox.com/2021/03/11/she-didnt-even-know-him-witness-speaks-out-after-year-old-charged-death-year-old/

Jimmy Gray Mississippi Execution

Jimmy Gray - Mississippi

Jimmy Gray was executed by the State of Mississippi for the kidnapping and murder of a three year old girl. According to court documents Jimmy Gray who was on parole after serving seven years for murder would kidnap, sexually assault and murder a three year old girl. Jimmy Gray would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Jimmy Gray would be executed by the way of the gas chamber on September 2, 1983. The execution was considered to be botched as Jimmy Gray took a long time to die as Gray would bash his head off a steel pole until he lost consciousness.

Jimmy Gray More News

Jimmy Lee Gray died gasping and choking in the cyanide-filled gas chamber at Parchman prison early Friday for the murder of a 3-year-old girl who came to his apartment to play with his kittens.

State Corrections Commissioner Morris Thigpen said doctors reported that Jimmy Gray was dead two minutes after the first smoky wisps of cyanide gas seeped into the gray steel chamber at 12:10 a.m. CDT.

He said the agonized gasps and convulsions that still wracked his body eight minutes later were ‘involuntary type movements that occur in any person who has died. In the doctors’ opinion, it was a prompt and easy death.’

Observers were ordered out of the witness room at 12:18 — eight minutes after executioner T. Berry Bruce released the cyanide pellets — and Jimmy Gray, wracked by convulsions, appeared to still be breathing.

He was not finally pronounced dead until 12:47 a.m., although Thigpen at first announced that doctors — monitoring Gray’s heartbeat via a remote stethoscope — reported the condemned man’s heart stopped at 12:18.

Jimmy Gray, 34, was the eighth man executed in the United States since the Supreme Court lifted the death penalty ban in 1977, and the first to be executed in Mississippi since 1964

He appeared to die as hard as John Louis Evans, whose death required three massive jolts of current in Alabama’s electric chair in April.

Thigpen would not reveal the names of the two doctors who witnessed the execution from a private room, but he said that ‘Within 30 seconds after the fumes began to come up from beneath the chair, Mr. Gray appeared to lose conciousness.

‘At two minutes, the doctors stated there was no heartbeat at all. Over the next five to six minutes, there was irregular breathing and involuntary type movements and reflex actions that commonly occur in any person who has died. In the doctors’ opinion, it was a prompt and easy death,’ Thigpen told reporters.

At 12:01 a.m. CDT, with protestors lighting candles and praying at the prison gates on a hot, muggy night, Warden Eddie Lucas murmured over his hand held radio ‘Let’s go.’

Eight minutes later, Gray was brought into the 4-by-4-foot gray steel gas chamber in the red jump suit of the death row prisoner. He was accompanied by two guards and the huge sheriff of Jackson County, where he was convicted of the murder of 3-year-old Deressa Jean Scales in 1976.

It took two minutes for the guards to strap him into the seat. He kept his head bowed and his eyes closed, whispering occasionally. At 12:10 a.m., the door to the chamber sealed, and Sheriff John Ledbetter signalled Bruce — a school custodian who has been Mississippi’s executioner since the chamber was built in 1955 — to proceed. He threw the lever that dropped a small container of white cyanide crystals into an acid solution under Gray’s seat. A white wisp of gas writhed up between Gray’s legs and he visibly sucked in his breath, breathing deeply. Within a minute his head fell forward and he appeared to be unconscious

But then his head jerked back, he began to choke and strain at the straps holding him to the seat by his arms, legs and chest. His fists :lenched. His face contorted, and prolonged, agonized groans and shuddering gasps could be heard in the witness room.

Three times his head dropped and he appeared dead, but each time it snapped up, striking with an audible clang a steel pole running from floor to ceiling behind his seat. After eight minutes of this, assistant Warden Joe Cook entered the steaming, mosquito-filled witness room and said ‘Gentlemen of the press, let’s go.’ ‘ The chamber was still filled with gas — and mosquitos — and Gray’s head was strained back against the pole, his head turned to the side, his eyes open and rolled back in his head, his mouth open, and his head was moving slightly.

In Dallas, Texas, Richard A. Scales, the father of Gray’s victim, said ‘I’d glad he’s dead. I hate to put it that way. I am glad the he was finally executed, but glad is a bad word. I feel like justice should have been carried out years ago.’

Gray’s seven-year fight for life ended Thursday, when the Supreme Court for the third time turned down his appeals.

https://www.upi.com/Archives/1983/09/02/Jimmy-Lee-Gray-died-gasping-and-choking-in-the/9453431323200/