Richard Emery Sentenced To Death In Missouri

Richard Emery

Richard Emery was sentenced to death in Missouri for a quadruple murder. According to court documents Richard Emery would murder his girlfriend, Kate Kasten, her two children from a previous relationship, 10-year-old Jonathan and 8-year-old Zoe, and Kate’s mother Jane Moeckel. Richard Emery attorneys would not even try to deny that Emery was responsible for the murders but tried to argue diminished capacity however the jury did not go for it and sentenced him to death.

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A St. Charles man has been sentenced to death for the 2018 murders of his girlfriend and her family.

A jury that consisted of two men and 10 women in their mid-20s to mid-60s found Richard Darren Emery guilty on four counts of first-degree murder on Friday, Sept. 30. The defense did not dispute the fact that Emery killed his girlfriend, Kate Kasten, her two children from a previous relationship, 10-year-old Jonathan and 8-year-old Zoe, and Kate’s mother Jane Moeckel.

Prosecutors sought the death penalty, showing traumatic police body camera footage to the jury of the aftermath.

Emery’s public defense attorneys presented a diminished capacity case to the jury, claiming he’d previously been diagnosed with borderline personality disorder and was not in control of himself at the time of the murders. They had pushed for conviction on second-degree murder in the hope of sparing Emery’s life. Emery’s family, friends, and coworkers testified to try and convince the jury to change their mind about giving him the death sentence.

The jury deliberated for a little over two hours on Tuesday, Oct. 4. The jury convicted Emery in a unanimous decision of depravity of mind, vile, callousness, and disregard for the sanctity of all life.

As Judge Michael James Fagras read each sentence aloud to the court—death on each count—Emery hung his head after learning his fate. Emery hugged his attorneys and sobbed for a few minutes after the jurors left the court

The St. Charles County Prosecuting Attorney Tim Lohmar said the jury made the right decision.

“To my left are some of the gentlemen whose body cameras captured the footage at the crime scene in the initial moments,” Lohmar said. “It was appalling for me to have to watch it the first time. It was appalling for our team to watch it dozens of times. It was even worse for these guys to have to live through it.”

That body camera footage is most likely what helped convince the jury to sentence Emery to death on all four counts of first-degree murder.

The courtroom was packed with family and friends on both sides, all filled with sorrow, shoulders shaking, and quiet sobbing.

The defense is expected to file an appeal.

At the start of the trial on Sept. 20, prosecutors said Emery wiped out three generations of one family just before midnight on Dec. 28, 2018.

Prosecutors described Emery’s actions that night as “deliberate, intentional and purposeful.” 

All four victims were shot in the face or head at close range, the prosecutor said. The murder weapon, a 9mm pistol, was so close to the victims that their skin had gunpowder burns.

Attorneys for the prosecution and defense agreed that Emery had gone out drinking and played poker earlier that evening. Emery returned home and got into an argument with Kate. At some point, Emery retrieved a handgun, and he and Kate struggled for the weapon.

Emery fired nine shots in all. Kate was the first person shot, but was the last to die. She died hours later at a local hospital.

Moeckel, Kate’s mother, barricaded herself and two grandchildren in another room in the house. After shooting Kate, Emery broke down the door to that room and shot Moeckel while she was on the phone with 911 dispatchers. Before being shot and killed, Moeckel provided dispatchers with the home address and said her daughter had been murdered. She never got a chance to identify the shooter.

The two children, Jonathan and Zoe, were the final victims to be shot.

After the shooting, Emery left the home with the pistol and an AR-15 rifle, including 500 rounds of ammunition, and a knife.

Emery drove away from the home as police arrived at the scene. That officer radioed colleagues to stop Emery’s truck.

Emery was pulled over and exchanged gunfire with police. He fired seven shots and fled. Emery suffered two gunshot wounds during the shootout. He did not take the AR-15 with him.

Prosecutors said Emery eventually came across a woman who was leaving a Christmas party. Emery, who still had his knife, carjacked the woman and attacked her. He stabbed the woman seven times, five in her chest, but ran off when the car alarm went off. The woman survived.

Emery was captured the morning after the shootings at a St. Charles QuikTrip, where police found him in a bathroom, covered in blood

After his arrest, Emery asked if the police he shot at were okay. He also asked if the woman he stabbed was okay. At no point did he ask about Kate Kasten and her family, prosecutors said.

On the final day of testimony, Emery took the stand to say he was not in control of his actions but acknowledged he had killed Kate and her family, and accepted responsibility for their deaths.

The start of the trial was delayed several months after Emery’s public defender died in January 2022. Public defenders from Jefferson City represented Emery during the trial.

https://fox2now.com/news/missouri/richard-emery-sentenced-to-death-in-st-charles-quadruple-murder/

Ernest Johnson Missouri Execution

ernest johnson missouri

Ernest Johnson was executed by the State of Missouri for the murders of three people during a robbery. According to court documents Ernest Johnson would rob a convenience store in which he would shoot and kill three people. Ernest Johnson would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Ernest Johnson who was born with fetal alcohol syndrome would appeal against his death sentence due to an intellectual disability. Ernest would be executed by lethal injection on October 5, 2021

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A Missouri man has been executed for murder despite pleas for clemency by advocates who said he had an intellectual disability.

Ernest Johnson received a lethal injection on Tuesday after the US Supreme Court refused to consider a stay of execution earlier in the day.

The 61-year-old’s pleas for leniency had received support from Pope Francis and two members of Congress.

Johnson killed three convenience store workers in a 1994 robbery.

Attorneys for Johnson argued he was ineligible for the death penalty because multiple IQ tests had shown he had the mental capacity of a child and read at a primary school level.

Johnson, a black man, had been born with foetal alcohol syndrome after his mother drank heavily during her pregnancy.

He had also been missing a fifth of his brain tissue since 2008 after undergoing surgery to remove a brain tumour.

Attorneys pointed to a 2002 Supreme Court ruling that asserts that using the death penalty against Americans with intellectual disabilities violates the Eighth Amendment of the US Constitution, which prohibits “cruel and unusual punishments”.

However, the US state’s top court denied Johnson a stay of execution last year and refused to take up his case again. The state’s Republican governor had also refused to block the sentence from being carried out.

Elected officials, racial justice activists and faith leaders joined the efforts to spare Johnson’s life.

A representative of Pope Francis – who in 2018 changed the teachings of the Catholic faith to officially oppose the death penalty in all circumstances – wrote last week to Missouri’s governor that the pope “wishes to place before you the simple fact of Mr Johnson’s humanity and the sacredness of all human life”.

But on Monday, Governor Mike Parson announced the state would “deliver justice and carry out the lawful sentence Mr Johnson received in accordance with the Missouri Supreme Court’s order”.

Writing in support of the execution, Attorney General Eric Schmitt said that the facts of Johnson’s actions “plainly reflect the offender’s ability to plan, strategise, calculate, and scheme effectively”.

Johnson had asked to be executed by firing squad but his request was denied by the Missouri Supreme Court, and he was instead executed by lethal injection.

In a handwritten statement before his death, Johnson apologised for his crimes and thanked his family, friends and lawyer for their support.

He is the first inmate to be put to death in the state since May 2020 and the seventh to be executed in the US this year, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-58811241

Ernest Johnson Execution Videos

Paul Goodwin Missouri Execution

Paul Goodwin - Missouri

Paul Goodwin was executed by the State of Missouri for the murder of a woman. According to court documents Paul Goodwin would beat to death the victim, Joan Crotts, after the woman was sexually assaulted. Paul Goodwin would be convicted and sentenced to death. Paul Goodwin would be executed by lethal injection on December 10 2014

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A Missouri inmate was put to death early Wednesday for fatally beating a 63-year-old woman with a hammer in 1998, the state’s record 10th lethal injection of 2014 to match Texas for the most executions in the country this year.

Paul Goodwin, 48, sexually assaulted Joan Crotts in St. Louis County, pushed her down a flight of stairs and beat her in the head with a hammer. Goodwin was a former neighbor who felt Crotts played a role in getting him kicked out of a boarding house.

Goodwin’s execution began at 1:17 a.m., more than an hour after it was scheduled, and he was pronounced dead at 1:25 a.m.

Efforts to spare Goodwin’s life centered on his low IQ and claims that executing him would violate a U.S. Supreme Court ruling prohibiting the death penalty for the mentally disabled. Attorney Jennifer Herndon said Goodwin had an IQ of 73, and some tests suggested it was even lower.

But Goodwin’s fate was sealed when Gov. Jay Nixon denied a clemency request and the U.S. Supreme Court turned down two appeals.

Texas, Missouri and Florida have combined for 28 of the 34 executions in the U.S. this year.

Crotts’ daughter, Debbie Decker, told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch that Goodwin deserved no mercy.

“I’ve been sitting back waiting for this to happen,” Decker said of the execution.

https://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/lethal-injection/missouri-sets-state-execution-record-after-putting-paul-goodwin-death-n265271

Leon Taylor Missouri Execution

Leon Taylor - Missouri

Leon Taylor was executed by the State of Missouri for a robbery murder. According to court documents Leon Taylor would rob a convenience store and in the process shoot and kill the clerk. Leon Taylor would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Leon Taylor would be executed by lethal injection on November 19, 2014

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Missouri has carried out the execution of 56-year-old Leon Taylor, who was sentenced to death in 1999 for the murder in April 1994 of Robert Newton, the attendant at an Independence convenience store he had just robbed of $400.

He received a lethal dose of pentobarbital at 12:14 and appeared to stop breathing less than two minutes later, at the Eastern Reception, Diagnostic & Correctional Center in Bonne Terre.  His official time of death was 12:22.

The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday denied appeals for a stay of execution.  Governor Jay Nixon then denied an appeal for clemency for Taylor.

Taylor is the ninth man Missouri has executed this year and the 11th since November, 2013.  Only in 1999 has Missouri carried out that many executions in a year.

Prosecutors sought the death penalty against Taylor for several of what Missouri terms, “aggravating circumstances,” including that the murder was connected to a robbery, and because Taylor committed the murder while Newton was holding the hand of his then 8-year-old stepdaughter, Sarah Yates.

After fatally shooting Newton, Taylor pointed the gun at Yates and pulled the trigger but it jammed. He then locked her in the back room of the convenience store with the body of her stepfather. Taylor later told his half-brother and half-sister, who had been involved in the robbery with him, that he, “should have choked the bitch.”

Taylor was convicted of murder by one jury who was unable to agree on his punishment, so the judge imposed the death sentence. That sentence was reversed on appeal, but at the subsequent trial the jury found Taylor guilty and sentenced him to death. Yates testified against Taylor both times.

Taylor’s attorneys asked the U.S. Supreme Court to halt his execution based on a 2002 federal court ruling that said judges could not impose a death sentence when jurors fail to agree on one. That ruling applied retroactively, and Taylor’s attorneys argued that his was the only case of someone for whom a judge had imposed a death sentence that was not later commuted to life, making his circumstance unusual.

His attorney also argued that the execution should not be carried out because the jury that sentenced him to death was all white. Six blacks were said to have been dismissed from serving as jurors by the prosecutor in the 1999 case, while the jury that was unable to agree on a death sentence had been racially mixed.

Taylor was scheduled to be executed in September but the Supreme Court lifted that execution warrant when his attorneys said they would be unable to work on his case at that time. Instead, Earl Ringo, Junior, was executed September 10 for 1998 the murders of a Columbia restaurant manager and a delivery driver.

https://www.missourinet.com/2014/11/19/missouri-executes-leon-taylor-for-1994-murder-in-independence/

Earl Ringo Missouri Execution

earl ringo missouri

Earl Ringo was executed by the State of Missouri for a double murder committed during a robbery. According to court documents Earl Ringo would shoot and kill two people during a robbery at a restaurant in 1998. Earl Ringo would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Earl Ringo would be executed on September 10 2014

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A Missouri inmate was put to death early Wednesday for killing two people during a restaurant robbery in 1998, the eighth execution in the state this year and the 10th since November.

Earl Ringo Jr. and an accomplice killed delivery driver Dennis Poyser and manager trainee JoAnna Baysinger at a Ruby Tuesday in Columbia in the early hours of July 4, 1998. Poyser and Baysinger were shot to death at point-blank range.Ringo’s last words were a quote from the Quran that expresses belief and wishes for after death. He wiggled his feet as the process began, breathed deeply a few times, then closed his eyes, all in a matter of seconds. The Department of Corrections said Ringo was executed by lethal injection and pronounced dead at 12:31 a.m.

Courts and Gov. Jay Nixon had refused to halt the execution over concerns raised by Ringo’s attorneys, who, among other things, questioned Missouri’s use of a pre-execution sedative, midazolam. Attorneys argued that the drug could dull Ringo’s senses and leave him unable to express any pain or suffering during the process.

Ringo declined to take any sedative, including midazolam, the Corrections Department said.

Midazolam has come under scrutiny after it was used in problematic executions earlier this year in Ohio, Oklahoma and Arizona. In each case, witnesses said the inmates gasped after their executions began and continued to labor for air before being pronounced dead.

A clemency petition to Nixon had also cited concerns about the fact that Ringo was convicted and sentenced to death by an all-white jury.

On July 3, 1998, Earl Ringo shared with Quentin Jones his plan to rob the Ruby Tuesday where he once worked. Jones agreed to join him.

Before sunrise the next day, the two hid behind a grease pit in the back of the restaurant. Poyser and Baysinger arrived and entered the restaurant. Ringo followed them and shot Poyser, 45, killing him instantly.

He ordered Baysinger, 22, to open a safe. She pulled out $1,400 US and gave it to him.

Ringo gave the gun to Jones, who stood with the weapon pointed at Baysinger’s head for a minute and a half before pulling the trigger.

Interviews with restaurant workers and former workers led police to Ringo, according to Kevin Crane, who was the Boone County prosecutor at the time. Detectives found a blue ski mask, gun receipt, bulletproof vest and other evidence at the home of Ringo’s mother.

Earl Ringo admitted to the robbery but claimed the shootings were in self-defence. He was convicted in 1999 and sentenced to death.

Jama Brown, who was married to Poyser for 24 years, asked that people remember the victims.

“I can only tell you there is not a day that goes by that I don’t think of him or wonder what my life would be like today, not only for myself, but for my kids,” she said.

Jones, of Louisville, Kentucky, pleaded guilty to first-degree murder and was sentenced to life in prison, but he was spared the death penalty when he agreed to testify against Earl Ringo.

Ringo’s lawyers had asked a federal appeals court to postpone the execution until a hearing over Missouri’s use of midazolam. Attorney Richard Sindel claimed that Missouri’s use of midazolam essentially violates its own protocol, which provides for pentobarbital as the lone execution drug.

St. Louis Public Radio reported last week that Missouri administered midazolam to all nine inmates put to death since November. Corrections department spokesman David Owen said midazolam “is used to relieve the offender’s level of anxiety” and is not part of the actual execution process.

The execution was one of two scheduled for Wednesday in the U.S.

Texas was scheduled to execute Willie Trottie later in the day for killing his common-law wife and her brother in 1993. Trottie’s execution would be Texas’ eighth this year.

Florida has performed seven executions in 2014, and all other states have a combined six.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/earl-ringo-jr-executed-in-missouri-after-losing-appeal-over-midazolam-1.2761552