Eugene Williams North Carolina Death Row

eugene williams

Eugene Williams was sentenced to death by the State of North Carolina for a double murder. According to court documents Eugene Williams was involved in an argument over a motorcycle that ended with WIlliams shooting dead Nicholas Gillard and Cedric Leavy. Eugene Williams would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

North Carolina Death Row Inmate List

Eugene Williams 2021 Information

Offender Number:0441044                                          
Inmate Status:ACTIVE
Probation/Parole/Post Release Status:INACTIVE
Gender:MALE
Race:BLACK/AFRICAN AMERICAN
Ethnic Group:AFRICAN
Birth Date:01/05/1975
Age:46
Current Location:CENTRAL PRISON

Eugene Williams More News

On Tuesday morning, 9 October 2001, Gillard telephoned his friend Cedric Leavy and drove to Leavy’s residence to pick him up.   Gillard honked the horn and Leavy went out to meet him, leaving his mobile telephone on the table.   Sharon Cogdell, Leavy’s fiancée, attempted to contact Leavy by calling Gillard’s mobile telephone.   Gillard informed her that they were busy and Leavy would call her back.   Telephone records indicate that Cogdell’s call to Gillard was placed at 10:13 a.m., and that Gillard’s mobile phone was within a three-mile radius of the cellular tower closest to defendant’s residence.   The signal from the tower to Gillard’s telephone traveled through the southwest panel of the tower, the quadrant in which defendant’s residence was located.   Cogdell attempted many other calls late into the night, but they were not answered.   On 10 October 2001, she informed the police that Leavy and Gillard were missing.

Also on 10 October 2001, Esther Locklear noticed an unfamiliar vehicle in her neighborhood in rural Cumberland County.   After her son observed a body covered with a blanket in the backseat of the vehicle, Ms. Locklear contacted law enforcement.   The vehicle was a burgundy Chevrolet Malibu four-door sedan with a plate registered to Gillard.   Law enforcement secured the area and began an investigation.   There were no prints on the ground or tire tracks that were thought to be of any evidentiary value;  however, a white crystalline substance on the exterior of the vehicle appeared to be dried soap suds.

The body in the backseat was an African-American male who was six feet, two inches tall and weighed 430 pounds.   It appeared from ropes tied around his wrists and then tightly secured around the front seat that his body had been winched in the vehicle.   The body was determined to be that of Leavy.   Law enforcement found Gillard’s body in the trunk.   The autopsies showed that both men had suffered contact and near-contact bullet wounds to the head.   Gillard sustained three gunshot wounds, and Leavy received six.   Three projectiles recovered from the bodies were determined to have been fired from the same weapon, a nine millimeter caliber firearm with a barrel containing nine lands and grooves with a left-hand twist.   Only one manufacturer made such a firearm, and the murder weapon was either a Hi-Point nine millimeter Model C pistol or a Model 995 carbine rifle.

A search of defendant’s residence revealed five spent nine millimeter shell casings in the dirt driveway and yard.   In the backyard, near the patio, law enforcement observed two areas of roughly twenty to thirty square feet each where fresh soil had been spread over burned grass.   The ground smelled of gasoline and putrid blood.   Two blood-stained pieces of concrete were found buried several inches in the ground at the burn sites.   Testing revealed the blood to be human.

Investigators also found two spent nine millimeter projectiles in the burned ground.   It was determined that the two projectiles had been fired through a barrel with a left-hand twist and with nine lands and grooves;  that is, they had been fired from a Hi-Point nine millimeter Model C pistol or Model 995 carbine rifle, as had the projectiles found in the victims’ bodies.   Luminol spraying revealed two tracks of blood coming from the burned areas to the right and running through the yard, where they abruptly stopped.

Jerard Vinson testified that in October 2001 defendant asked him to pawn a ring because defendant did not have identification.   Vinson pawned the ring, which was gold and had a black onyx stone, on 17 October 2001.   Law enforcement later recovered the ring from the pawnshop.   Gillard’s ex-girlfriend testified the ring looked like the one Gillard wore and was wearing on the morning of his disappearance.   The pawnshop manager testified that the retail portion of the store was the area’s sole distributor of this brand of ring, and that Gillard had originally bought a gold and onyx ring there on 10 February 2001 for three hundred dollars.

Defendant presented no evidence at the guilt phase of his trial.   The jury returned verdicts of guilty of first-degree murder of both Gillard and Leavy, but returned a verdict of not guilty as to defendant’s alleged robbery of Gillard.   The trial court dismissed the robbery charge as to Leavy.

Following the verdicts, both of defendant’s attorneys, Carl Ivarsson and George Franks, were allowed to withdraw as counsel following defendant’s physical attack on Franks.   The trial court then declared a mistrial as to the penalty proceeding.

In 2007 a new jury was empaneled for the sentencing proceeding of defendant’s trial.   The State offered substantially the same evidence as it had presented in the guilt phase.   In addition, the State offered victim impact evidence from Pamela Leavy, who was Leavy’s older sister, and Sharon Cogdell, Leavy’s girlfriend.   Victim impact evidence as to Gillard’s death was presented through testimony of Toni Washington, Gillard’s former girlfriend, and Gillard’s friends Michael and Vanessa Burden.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/nc-supreme-court/1503409.html

Byron Waring North Carolina Death Row

byron waring

Byron Waring was sentenced to death by the State of North Carolina for the sexual assault and murder of a woman. According to court documents Byron Waring would sexually assault, torture and murder Lauren Redman. Byron Waring would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

North Carolina Death Row Inmate List

Byron Waring 2021 Information

Offender Number:1025501                                          
Inmate Status:ACTIVE
Gender:MALE
Race:BLACK/AFRICAN AMERICAN
Ethnic Group:AFRICAN
Birth Date:08/31/1986
Age:34
Current Location:CENTRAL PRISON

Byron Waring More News

The state Supreme Court on Friday denied the appeal of a Raleigh man facing a death sentence for a 2005 murder.

Byron Waring was convicted in June 2007 of the Nov. 8, 2005, stabbing death of Lauren Redman.

Investigators said Redman was stabbed more than 20 times as she begged for her life inside her Raleigh apartment. She managed to crawl outside and ask for help before she died.

In a taped confession, Waring said he and another man, Joseph Sanderlin, went to Redman’s apartment to collect a debt owed to her former roommate, George Sasser. He told investigators that Sanderlin raped Redman and that they both stabbed her.

Sanderlin received a life sentence in the case.

Waring argued in his appeal that his trial was unfair, saying that jury selection was racially biased and the punishment was too harsh.

Mario Phillips North Carolina Death Row

mario phillips

Mario Phillips was sentenced to death by the State of North Carolina for a quadruple murder. According to court documents Mario Phillips and a codefendent would shoot and stab Eddie Ryals, 21, Carl Garrison Justice, 18, and Harvey Darrell Hobson, 20, and Joseph Allen Harden, 19, causing their deaths. A surviving witness would name Mario Phillips as the gunman. Mario Phillips would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

North Carolina Death Row Inmate List

Mario Phillips 2021 Information

Offender Number:0604251                                          
Inmate Status:ACTIVE
Probation/Parole/Post Release Status:INACTIVE
Gender:MALE
Race:BLACK/AFRICAN AMERICAN
Ethnic Group:AFRICAN
Birth Date:04/05/1968
Age:53
Current Location:CENTRAL PRISON

Mario Phillips More News

 A Moore County jury handed up four death sentences Wednesday in the trial of a man found guilty of killing four people in a December 2003 robbery.

The jury took about four hours to decide the punishment of Mario Lynn Phillips, 35, who was the first of three people to go to trial for the quadruple homicide.

Eddie Ryals, 21, Carl Garrison Justice, 18, and Harvey Darrell Hobson, 20, all of Carthage, and Joseph Allen Harden, 19, of Vass, were killed on Dec. 19, 2003, in a mobile home on Heron Road, east of Carthage. All four had been shot and stabbed in what authorities said was a robbery. They said the three suspects made off with $170.

Amanda Cook Varner, who survived being shot twice and stabbed 22 times that day, identified Phillips as the gunman and said Renee Yvette McLaughlin and Sean Maurice Ray assisted him in the crime.

Defense attorneys tried to convince jurors that Phillips shouldn’t be convicted of first-degree murder in the case because he is mentally ill, was addicted to drugs at the time and somehow thought his friends were responsible for shooting his brother in Fayetteville earlier that same day.

The sentence comes as questions about North Carolina’s death penalty have put executions on hold.

In August, Superior Court Judge Donald Stephens ruled that the North Carolina Medical Board overstepped its authority when it adopted a policy that threatened to punish physicians for participating in executions.

The state Department of Correction sued the board in March, saying no physicians were willing to attend an execution, which state policy requires, for fear of losing his or her medical license.

Last month, attorneys for death-row inmates asked state officials to put off possible changes to North Carolina’s execution protocol in light of the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decision to address the constitutionality of lethal injections

https://www.wral.com/news/local/story/1939815/

James Little North Carolina Death Row

james little

James Little was sentenced to death by the State of North Carolina for a robbery murder. According to court documents James Little would shoot and kill Bira Gueye, 47, during a robbery. James Little would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

North Carolina Death Row Inmate List

James Little 2021 Information

Offender Number:0846840                                          
Inmate Status:ACTIVE
Probation/Parole/Post Release Status:INACTIVE
Gender:MALE
Race:BLACK/AFRICAN AMERICAN
Ethnic Group:AFRICAN
Birth Date:11/01/1986
Age:34
Current Location:CENTRAL PRISON

James Little More News

James Ray Little yesterday became the first person sentenced to death this year in North Carolina.

Judge Stuart Albright sentenced him in Forsyth Superior Court after a unanimous jury decided on the death penalty for Little, 22.

Little robbed and shot Bira Gueye, 47, on Oct. 5, 2006.

After four hours of deliberating, jurors agreed with Little’s attorneys that he had limited intelligence and a poor upbringing, and had not set out early that morning to kill.

They agreed that the plan to rob a cab driver came from two men who were with Little that night.

But all that, jurors decided, was outweighed by three things: Little had a past conviction for a violent felony, he killed for financial gain, and his crime was part of a string of violence that night.

As Albright read “death,” the jury’s binding recommendation, Little’s mother, Susan Bulger, cried out softly from the fifth row of the audience.

“Oh, my God!” she said. “No! No!”

Bulger began rocking back and forth on the bench, crying. She clasped her hands together, covering her eyes.

After the verdict, an ambulance took her to Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center because she told deputies she was having trouble breathing.

After the verdict, Roslyn Ingram, the mother of Little’s 3-year-old daughter, Jamera, said she felt sorry for Gueye’s family.

“I think it’s sad, and I hate that it had to end that way,” Ingram said.

She said she will keep taking Jamera to visit her father as he awaits death, which is likely years away because of post-conviction appeals.

Family and friends who knew Gueye from his job at Willard Cab Co. said they were thankful.

Little’s confession to police and testimony from witnesses showed that Little shot Gueye once in the back, then shot him again after Gueye had given him money.

“He could have run away,” said Amadou Niane, Gueye’s cousin.

Niane said that the death penalty is appropriate — Little killed and clearly meant to, carrying a gun as he robbed people, he said.

“He knows it’s got bullets in it,” he said.

Before robbing Gueye, Little robbed two men in Greenway Park. He pistol-whipped them because they looked scared, he told police.

He had set out that night to get some marijuana, testimony showed. Little used one of the robbery victim’s cell phones to call a cab.

In the death-penalty phase of the trial, prosecutors Jim O’Neill and Jennifer Martin showed that Little has past convictions for larceny from a person, felony larceny and motor-vehicle theft.

When Little was 18, he knocked down a 9-year-old boy and took his lunch money. He pleaded guilty to larceny from a person.

He had discipline problems at the Forsyth County Jail while awaiting trial and tried to fight a courtroom deputy after his conviction Monday on the murder charge.

Little’s attorneys, Chris Beechler and Clark Fischer, had proposed 21 factors that they had hoped would lead jurors to choose life in prison.

“We had hoped that when you look at all of those things and you look at his age, even balanced against his crimes, it would have gone the other way,” Fischer said. “I always respect a jury’s verdict, even if I disagree with it.”

Little was a month shy of his 20th birthday when he killed Gueye.

Little will be the 163rd person on the state’s death row and the youngest on death row, although others prisoners were younger than him when they killed.

North Carolina has not executed anyone in two years because of court disputes over the death penalty. The N.C. Supreme Court heard arguments this week to resolve one of the disputes, over what role doctors can have in executions. It’s not clear when the court will rule on that case.

Forsyth County has more inmates on death row than any other county — Little is the 13th. Wake County has the second-most people awaiting death, with 11; Cumberland and Buncombe counties both have nine.

Fischer said that it’s hard to know in which cases juries will recommend the death penalty.

Three years ago, Fischer defended Randy Ridgeway, a Davie County man who used a hammer to kill his girlfriend’s 14-year-old daughter. Ridgeway raped and sodomized the girl, either as she was dying or after she died. Jurors decided on life in prison.

“This does not seem as deserving as some other cases I’ve had,” Fischer said.

“It’s just sometimes hard to figure.

https://journalnow.com/news/local/little-given-death-in-killing-of-cab-driver/article_b5476d73-9f7a-5c61-abad-4381d16198c3.html

Michael Sherrill North Carolina Death Row

michael sherrill

Michael Sherrill would be sentenced to death by the State of North Carolina for the murder of Cynthia Gayle Dotson Wilson. According to court documents Michael Sherrill would stab Cynthia Gayle Dotson Wilson repeatedly before slitting her throat and setting her house on fire. The murder took place in 1984 and Michael Sherrill was sentenced to death in 2009

North Carolina Death Row Inmate List

Michael Sherrill 2021 Information

Offender Number:0366770                                          
Inmate Status:ACTIVE
Probation/Parole/Post Release Status:INACTIVE
Gender:MALE
Race:WHITE
Ethnic Group:EUROPEAN/N.AM./AUSTR
Birth Date:01/07/1956
Age:65
Current Location:CENTRAL PRISON

Michael Sherrill More News

A former boyfriend choked up as he talked about being with Cynthia Dotson just hours before she was found dead in her west Charlotte mobile home, which was 25 years ago on Sunday.

The man accused of killing her, Michael Sherrill, sat motionless and showed no emotion in a Mecklenburg County courtroom Monday. He faces the death penalty if convicted.

Fire investigators testified they found Dotson’s body in her trailer with stab wounds in her chest. She was badly burned from a pile of clothing still on fire beside her.

Her former boyfriend, Rick Bond, told jurors he’d been with Dotson the night before, but he knew nothing about the murder until police questioned him later.

Police said they believe Sherrill knew Dotson from her job as a topless dancer, and that he killed her before setting fire to her trailer in an effort to cover up the crime.

In fact, prosecutors revealed in court they plan to tell jurors about a similar fire set on Greenhill Avenue about eight months after Dotson’s slaying. Prosecutors believe it too was set to hide a slaying scene. Inside were the bodies of Linda Taylor, Jackson Bostic and his 14-year-old daughter, Amy.

Sherrill is charged in those cases as well.

All of the killings went unsolved for more than 20 years until the police department’s cold case squad linked them to Sherrill. Investigators have never talked about a motive, but that’s likely to change soon as testimony continues.