Melvin Bonnell Ohio Death Row

Melvin Bonnell

Melvin Bonnell was sentenced to death by the State of Ohio for a robbery murder. According to court documents Melvin Bonnell would force his way into the victims home where he would fatally shoot the victim. Melvin Bonnell would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Ohio Death Row Inmate List

Melvin Bonnell 2021 Information

Number A204019

DOB 09/23/1957

Gender Male Race White

Admission Date 06/29/1988

Institution Chillicothe Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

Melvin Bonnell More News

Shirley Hatch, Edward Birmingham and Robert Eugene Bunner shared an apartment on Bridge Avenue in Cleveland, Ohio. On November 28, 1987, at approximately 3:00 a.m., Hatch heard someone knock at the kitchen door of the apartment. Hatch asked who was at the door and a voice replied, “Charles.” Bunner opened the door and appellant, Melvin Bonnell, entered the apartment and closed the door behind him. Appellant uttered an expletive directed at Bunner and then proceeded to fire two gunshots at Bunner at close range. Bunner fell to the floor and Hatch, who had witnessed the shooting, ran to a bedroom where Birmingham was sleeping. Hatch heard two more gunshots, awoke Birmingham to tell him that Bunner had been shot, and then fled from the apartment to call paramedics. Birmingham went to the kitchen.

Upon entering the kitchen, Birmingham observed appellant who was on top of Bunner “* * * pounding him in the face.” Birmingham also observed bullet holes in Bunner’s body. Birmingham grabbed appellant and ejected him from the apartment.

At approximately 3:40 a.m., two Cleveland police officers were patrolling Bridge Avenue in a police cruiser when they observed a blue vehicle being driven backwards on Bridge Avenue with its headlights off. The officers attempted to stop the vehicle, and a high-speed chase ensued when the driver of the vehicle failed to stop. During the chase, the officers never lost sight of the vehicle except, perhaps, for a few seconds. The officers never saw anyone in the vehicle except the driver. No one exited the vehicle during the chase. The chase ended when the driver of the blue vehicle crashed into the side of a funeral chapel. The officers removed the driver from the vehicle and placed him on the ground. Both officers identified appellant as the driver of the vehicle.

Shortly after the accident, Cleveland police Officers Stansic and Kukula arrived at the crash site and saw a man lying on the ground with police officers standing over him. However, Officers Stansic and Kukula left the accident scene almost immediately thereafter in response to a radio call regarding the shooting at the Bridge Avenue apartment.

Upon arriving at the apartment, officers Stansic and Kukula interviewed Hatch *704 and Birmingham who provided the officers with a description of Bunner’s assailant. The officers recognized the witnesses’ description as meeting the description of the man they had observed at the accident scene. The officers asked Birmingham to accompany them to the hospital where the man had been transported following the accident. At the hospital, Birmingham identified appellant as Bunner’s assailant.

Bunner died as a result of a gunshot wound to the chest. An autopsy revealed that Bunner was shot twice, once in the chest and once in the pubic region. Both bullets were recovered from the body.

Police officers retraced the chase scene and found a .25 caliber automatic pistol which was later identified as appellant’s. The weapon was test-fired and the test bullets were compared to the bullets found in Bunner’s body. The test bullets and the bullets retrieved from Bunner’s body had the same characteristics, and test casings matched spent bullet casings found at the murder scene.

Appellant was tried before a jury for the aggravated murder of Robert Bunner and for the commission of an aggravated burglary. The jury found appellant guilty on one count of aggravated burglary, one count of aggravated (felony) murder, and one count of aggravated murder … with prior calculation and design, causing Bunner’s death. In addition, appellant was found guilty of a death penalty specification in connection with each count of aggravated murder. For each count of aggravated murder, the trial judge, following the jury’s recommendation, imposed a sentence of death. The court of appeals affirmed the convictions and death penalty.

https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/FSupp2/301/698/2511412/

Robert Bethel Ohio Death Row

Robert Bethel

Robert Bethel was sentenced to death by the State of Ohio for a double murder. According to court documents Robert Bethel and a fellow gang member Jeremy Chavis would murder James Reynolds and Shannon Hawk. Bethel believed that Reynolds was going to testify against another gang member. Robert Bethel and Jeremy Chavis would be arrested and convicted. Robert Bethel was sentenced to death and Jeremy Chavis received two thirty year sentences.

Ohio Death Row Inmate List

Robert Bethel 2021 Information

Number A455970

DOB 03/23/1970

Gender Male Race White

Admission Date 08/29/2003

Institution Chillicothe Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

Robert Bethel More News

On June 25, 1996, James Reynolds and his girlfriend, Shannon Hawks, were shot to death in an isolated field in Columbus.   Appellant, Robert W. Bethel, was convicted of the aggravated murders of Reynolds and Hawks and was sentenced to death.

{¶ 2} Bethel was a member of the Crips street gang, as was Bethel’s friend Jeremy Chavis.   Tyrone Green and Donald Langbein were also members of the Crips gang.   Jeremy’s brother, Cheveldes Chavis, although a member of a different gang, “hung with” Jeremy, Langbein, Green, and Bethel.   In the latter part of 1996, Bethel, Langbein, and the Chavis brothers lived together in a trailer on West Run Street in Columbus.

{¶ 3} Langbein is a cousin of the Chavis brothers;  they have a grandfather in common.   Their grandfather kept a garden in a field located behind 562 Stambaugh Road in Columbus (“the Stambaugh field”).   Langbein and Jeremy Chavis sometimes went to that field to shoot guns.

{¶ 4} In 1995, Tyrone Green shot Rodney Cain to death during a burglary.   James Reynolds and Donald Pryor were also involved in the burglary.   Reynolds later told Pryor that he had seen Green shoot Cain. Pryor repeated Reynolds’s story to the police.

{¶ 5} Green was subsequently indicted for aggravated murder with death specifications.   During the discovery process in Green’s case, the state gave Green’s attorney supplemental discovery materials that included a copy of a search warrant with its supporting affidavit.   The affidavit stated that Reynolds had told Pryor that Green had shot the victim.   The state sent the supplemental discovery materials to Green’s attorney on May 29, 1996, about four weeks before Reynolds and Hawks were murdered.

{¶ 6} Langbein testified that he and Bethel had been concerned about the witnesses against Green and that they had discussed “tak[ing] steps to get rid of them.”   On June 13, 1996, about two weeks before Reynolds and Hawks were murdered, Bethel and Cheveldes Chavis each bought a Maverick Model 88 12-gauge shotgun from Hamilton’s Gun Shop in Obetz.

{¶ 7} According to Langbein, the day before the bodies of Reynolds and Hawks were discovered, a group of people “from the neighborhood,” including Reynolds,  gathered on the corner of 4th and Morrill to hang out.   Langbein, Bethel, and the Chavises arrived around 2:00 p.m. in Bethel’s car.

{¶ 8} When Langbein was ready to leave, he offered Reynolds a ride home, because Reynolds lived near him.   But Bethel and Jeremy Chavis said they would drive Reynolds home, even though Reynolds did not live near Jeremy.   Langbein saw Reynolds and Hawks with Bethel and Jeremy in Bethel’s car.

{¶ 9} Traci Queen, f.k.a. Traci Jordan, was a friend of Shannon Hawks.   Queen recalled Hawks’s and Reynolds’s visiting her sometime between 3:00 and 5:00 p.m. the day before their deaths were reported on a news broadcast.   When they entered Queen’s home, Reynolds looked at his pager and went into the kitchen to use the phone.   Hawks told Queen that she and Reynolds were “going to go out and shoot guns.”   She invited Queen to come along, but Queen declined.

{¶ 10} When Reynolds emerged from the kitchen, he and Hawks left the house and got into a car waiting in front of the house next door.   Queen saw two other persons, who appeared to be male, in the front seat of that car.   She never saw Hawks or Reynolds alive again.

{¶ 11} Ron Bass, who lived near the Stambaugh field, told police that sometime between 10:00 and 11:00 p.m., June 25, 1996, he heard five or six gunshots while lying in bed.   Then he heard one louder gunshot, and after that another series of shots.

{¶ 12} On June 26, 1996, the bodies of Reynolds and Hawks were found lying in the Stambaugh field.   They had been shot to death.

{¶ 13} Reynolds had been shot ten times, four times in the head.   Reynolds also had one neck wound.   One of the gunshots fired into Reynolds’s head, from a distance of six inches to three feet, would have killed him at once.   Five bullets were recovered from Reynolds’s body, all of which could have been fired from a 9 mm firearm.   Reynolds also had one wound caused by a shotgun slug fired into his back.

{¶ 14} Hawks was shot four times, twice in the head.   One of the head wounds was a back-to-front wound through her brain.   This wound would have incapacitated Hawks almost immediately.   The other head wound entered Hawks’s right cheek and exited through her left ear.   Stippling indicated that this shot was fired from a distance of two to four feet.

{¶ 15} At the crime scene, police recovered twenty 9 mm shell casings and ten 12-gauge shotgun shell casings.   The murder weapons were never found.

{¶ 16} Reynolds was the sole eyewitness known to the prosecuting attorney in Tyrone Green’s aggravated-murder case.   After Reynolds was murdered, Green was offered a plea bargain to a reduced charge of manslaughter.

 {¶ 17} A couple of weeks after the murders, Bethel told Langbein that Bethel, Jeremy Chavis, “Doughboy” (Reynolds), and Hawks had been “partying” in the field where Langbein’s grandfather kept a garden.   Bethel told Langbein that he drew a 9 mm pistol and began firing at Reynolds and Hawks.   After emptying his clip, Bethel reloaded and continued to shoot Reynolds and Hawks.   Bethel told Langbein that Jeremy Chavis shot Reynolds in the back with a shotgun.   Langbein stated that in later conversations, Bethel expressed concern about being caught.

{¶ 18} Some time before January 1997, Bethel told his girlfriend Theresa Campbell, f.k.a. Theresa Cobb, about the murders.   He told her that on the night of the murders, he, Jeremy Chavis, Reynolds, and Hawks went to “practice shooting guns.”   He said he “had a feeling to shoot” and shot Reynolds and Hawks “because he felt like it.”   Bethel told her that he had laughed and then called Jeremy over to “see what he had done.”   According to Campbell, when Jeremy Chavis saw what Bethel had done, Chavis began to cry and went back to the car.   Bethel then reloaded his gun and continued to shoot.   Bethel told Campbell that he “couldn’t stop shooting,” and that when Chavis wanted to leave, Bethel “just stood there looking.”

{¶ 19} In January 1997, police executed a search warrant at the trailer on West Run Street.   There they found a Maverick Model 88 12-gauge shotgun belonging to Cheveldes Chavis.   Bethel’s identical shotgun was never found.   This type of shotgun could have fired the type of shells found at the crime scene.

{¶ 20} Also found at the trailer was a gun box with a “Ruger” logo on the lid.   Although the box contained no gun, it did contain an instruction manual for a 9 mm Ruger P95 semiautomatic pistol.   According to Langbein, after the trailer was searched, Bethel became nervous about being caught and “started acting real weird.”

{¶ 21} In 2000, Langbein was charged with an unrelated federal firearms violation.   He told police and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (“ATF”) agents what he knew about the Reynolds-Hawks murders and agreed to wear a concealed tape recorder during conversations with Bethel.

{¶ 22} On October 19, 2000, Langbein and Bethel had a conversation at the Subway restaurant where Bethel worked.   Langbein wore a recorder, and the Subway was under ATF surveillance.   During this conversation, Bethel talked about the investigation.   He told Langbein, “I wanted to talk to Jeremy * * * ‘cause I knew the [police] were going to go down and * * * try and tell him some shit.”   Bethel believed that detectives had “been havin’ phones tapped,” and he was hesitant to talk anywhere “they got anything.”

{¶ 23} On November 1, 2000, police executed a search warrant at 656 East Jenkins Street, Columbus.   Although the record does not show who lived at this  address, some of the property seized pursuant to the warrant was later returned to Cheveldes Chavis.   In a wastebasket at that site, police found papers with a cover sheet captioned “Supplemental Discovery” from the case of State v. Tyrone Green.   Jeremy Chavis’s fingerprints were found on that paper.   In the same wastebasket, police found a copy of a search warrant given to Green during discovery in his case, along with its attached affidavit-the affidavit that named Reynolds as the source of Pryor’s information.

{¶ 24} Bethel was arrested on November 6, 2000.   He was indicted on two counts of aggravated murder under R.C. 2903.01(A) (prior calculation and design).   Each count had two death specifications.   The specifications for Count One, the murder of Shannon Hawks, alleged that the offense was committed to escape detection, apprehension, trial, or punishment for another offense committed by the offender, in violation of R.C. 2929.04(A)(3), and that it was part of a course of conduct involving the purposeful killing of two or more persons, in violation of R.C. 2929.04(A)(5).   The specifications for Count Two, the murder of James Reynolds, were that Reynolds was killed to prevent his testimony in another criminal proceeding, in violation of R.C. 2929.04(A)(8), and that his murder was part of a course of conduct, in violation of R.C. 2929.04(A)(5).

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/oh-supreme-court/1406788.html

Anthony Belton Ohio Death Row

anthony belton

Anthony Belton was sentenced to death by the State of Ohio for the murder of a store clerk. According to court documents Anthony Belton went into a convenience store and demanded money and phone cards, once the clerk handed it over he was fatally shot in the head. Anthony Belton was arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Ohio Death Row Inmate List

Anthony Belton 2021 Information

Number A659445

DOB 11/23/1985

Gender Male

Race Black

Admission Date 04/26/2012

Institution Chillicothe Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

Anthony Belton More News

He shot and killed a gas station clerk. Late Friday afternoon, convicted murderer Anthony Belton learned his fate.

Belton has been sentenced to the death penalty after the fatal shooting in 2008 of carryout clerk Matthew Dugan.

The crime was all caught on surveillance video. Belton walked into the BP gas station on the corner of Dorr and Secor. He then went to the counter, pulled out a gun and demanded cash. When Dugan turned his back, Belton fatally shot him in the head.

A three-judge panel announced the unanimous decision after more than seven hours of deliberation. The courtroom was emotionally charged as the sentence came down.

Belton showed little remorse, even smiling before and after he learned he was heading to death row. He interrupted court and at one point even stood up saying he wanted the hearing to be over.

That did not stop the victim’s mother from speaking to the court about her loss. After the death penalty sentence was read, Cindy Dugan said the judges made the right choice. She said there are no winners in this situation, but the family does feel some sense of peace.

“Life is precious and when someone takes a loved one in that way, such a cruel, harsh way, they need to think about what they’re doing to everyone,” said Dugan.

Leaving the courtroom, Belton showed no remorse, telling WTOL’s Matt Wright he is not sorry.

The case may enter an appeal process before the Ohio Supreme Court.

On Monday, Belton changed his plea from not guilty to no contest.

On Wednesday, a three-judge panel found Belton guilty of aggravated murder and aggravated robbery.

On Thursday, testimony continued in the sentencing phase.

https://www.wtol.com/article/news/belton-sentenced-to-the-death-penalty/512-9d44d38c-2c1e-4fef-a182-3d8bb6073dbb

Richard Beasley Ohio Death Row

Richard Beasley

Richard Beasley was sentenced to death by the State of Ohio for a series of murders committed through Craiglist. According to court documents Richard Beasley and Brogan Rafferty would lure men through the Craiglist website and when they arrived they would be robbed and murdered . Richard Beasley and Brogan Rafferty would be arrested, convicted and sentenced. Richard Beasley to death and teenager Brogan Rafferty to life in prison without parole

Ohio Death Row Inmate List

Richard Beasley 2021 Information

Number A640970

DOB 06/15/1959

Gender Male Race White

Admission Date 04/05/2013

Institution Chillicothe Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

Richard Beasley More News

Craigslist killer Richard Beasley returned to Summit County Common Pleas Court via video Wednesday to be resentenced because of a procedural error during his first sentencing.

The net result was the same, though, with the Akron man sentenced to death and to multiple consecutive sentences for his other crimes.

Beasley, 61, appeared via video from the Chillicothe Correctional Institution, sitting in a wheelchair next to Don Hicks, one of his attorneys. Both wore masks.

The Ohio Supreme Court ruled in January that Beasley must be resentenced for his convictions on numerous non-capital charges because of a technical issue involving his original sentencing. The court upheld his death sentence.

Beasley was convicted of posting bogus job offers on Craigslist to rob and murder three men in 2011. Beasley and his teenage accomplice, Brogan Rafferty of Stow, were convicted in 2013. Rafferty got life in prison without parole, while Beasley was sentenced to death.

The murders made national news because Beasley used Craigslist to lure the men to a remote spot in southern Ohio. The scheme was only uncovered when a fourth man was shot but escaped.

Beasley was convicted of aggravated murder — resulting in the death sentence — and numerous other offenses, including attempted murder, aggravated robbery and kidnapping. Judge Lynne Callahan, who is now on the 9th District Court of Appeals bench, imposed sentences for these other charges to run consecutively to Beasley’s death sentence.

The Ohio Supreme Court, though, ruled that Callahan didn’t follow one of the requirements for consecutive sentences. She needed to specify that “consecutive sentences are not disproportionate to the seriousness of the offender’s conduct and the danger the offender poses to the public,” the court said.

Beasley’s resentencing was delayed several times because of procedural issues related to COVID-19 and the requirement that he have an attorney present with him in prison, as well as one in court.

During the resentencing Wednesday, Donald Gallick, Beasley’s attorney who appeared via video, argued that consecutive sentences for someone already facing the death penalty are unnecessary.

“He’s sentenced to death and they give him consecutive sentences — so he won’t be able commit any crimes after he’s executed,” Gallick said. “To me, that seems nonsensical.”

Assistant Summit County Prosecutor Jacquenette Corgan, however, said Beasley’s sentences should stand.

Summit County Common Pleas Judge Kelly McLaughlin sided with prosecutors, imposing the same multiple consecutive sentences as Callahan. McLaughlin read the phrase that was omitted during the original sentencing

Two family members of Beasley’s victims attended the video resentencing but chose not to speak.

Beasley asked if he could back get a Celtic cross taken during the investigation. He said the necklace has been passed down through his family and he’d like to give it to his daughter who was recently married. He said it has nothing to do with the case.

“There’s no reason for you to keep it,” he said. “That’s the only thing my daughter will have of me.”

McLaughlin said she will talk to the attorneys about his request.

Beasley, who has maintained his innocence, still has post-conviction appeals pending. Hicks and Gallick also are representing him in those appeals.Gallick said the consecutive-sentences issue likely will be one of the subjects of the appeals.

https://www.beaconjournal.com/story/news/2020/09/23/craigslist-killer-richard-beasley-receives-same-sentence/5852172002/

Richard Bays Ohio Death Row

richard bays

Richard Bays was sentenced to death by the State of Ohio for the robbery and murder of an elderly man. According to court documents Richard Bays went over to the victims home and asked to borrow money. When the victim replied he had none to give Richard Bays would beat the wheelchair bound elderly man to death. Richard Bays would rob the victim before fleeing. Richard Bays would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Ohio Death Row Inmate List

Richard Bays 2021 Information

Number A325266

DOB 06/09/1965

Gender Male Race White

Admission Date 12/21/1995

Institution Chillicothe Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

Richard Bays More News

On November 15, 1993, appellant, Richard Bays, robbed and murdered Charles Weaver. Bays was convicted of aggravated murder with a death specification and sentenced to death
Seventy-six-year-old Charles Weaver lived in Xenia with his wife Rose. On November 15, 1993, Weaver’s daughter, Betty Reed, went to her parents’ house to see if they needed anything. Betty Reed and Rose Weaver decided to do some shopping and left the house
 together sometime between noon and 12:30 p.m. Between 1:30 and 2:30 that afternoon, Iris Simms (who lived near the Weavers’ house) saw a slim man in his late twenties, with shoulder-length brown hair, walk onto Weaver’s porch and approach the door.—

FN1. Simms did not identify Bays in court; however, her description of the man on the porch is consistent with Bays’s appearance.

Howard Hargrave, an acquaintance of Richard Bays, was standing around with two other people on Xenia’s Main Street that afternoon when Bays approached him, out of breath, and asked whether Hargrave “knew anyone that had any drugs.” According to Hargrave, Bays appeared “nervous” and “kept looking around.” Hargrave noticed a red stain on Bays’s T-shirt that looked like blood. Betty Reed drove her mother home at about 5:30 p.m., accompanied by her son Michael. Dusk had fallen, and Betty noticed that no lights were on in the house, not even “a flicker of a television set.” This was unusual enough that she and her son decided to escort Mrs. Weaver inside. Michael Reed went in first. Turning on a light, he saw his grandfather’s wheelchair standing empty. He then entered the kitchen. There he found Mr. Weaver lying on the floor. Michael told his mother to call 911. Paramedics arrived in response to the 911 call, found Mr. Weaver dead, and summoned Xenia police officers to the scene. Officers found a shattered plastic tape recorder and a large, square-shaped battery charger with blood on it. The bedroom was in extreme disarray-a “total shambles,” Betty Reed later testified- with drawers pulled out and their contents dumped on the floor. The bedroom had not been in that condition when Betty Reed and Mrs. Weaver left the house that afternoon. Weaver’s body was taken to the Montgomery County Coroner’s Office. The ensuing autopsy showed that Weaver had suffered two stab wounds to the chest and three incised wounds on the neck. He also had several contusions, abrasions, and lacerations on top of his head, consistent with blows from a square, blunt object. The deputy coroner conducting the autopsy concluded that Weaver died of “a stab wound to the chest and blunt impact injuries to the head.” On November 16, the day after the murder, Xenia police detective Daniel Savage decided to interview Richard Bays.
At first, Bays told Savage that he had not been at Weaver’s house on the day of the murder. However, Savage told Bays that someone had seen him there and that “if his [Bays’s] prints matched the ones on Mr. Weaver’s front door, then I [Savage] would be asking him to explain it.” Bays then admitted that he had been at Weaver’s house around 2:00 p.m. on November 15. He said he had coffee with Weaver, chatted, and left by 2:15.
However, an inconsistency in Bays’s statement aroused Savage’s curiosity. Bays told Savage that Weaver had been sitting in his wheelchair during Bays’s visit and had not taken out his wallet. Yet Bays had also said that Weaver had the wallet in his back pocket during the visit. If Weaver was sitting in the wheelchair, Savage wondered, how could Bays have known that the wallet was in Weaver’s back pocket?
On November 19, an informant told Savage that Weaver’s killer had dropped the wallet, along with some clothing he had worn during the crime, into a storm sewer near Bays’s house. Based on this information, Savage and Detective Daniel Donahue interviewed Bays again on November 19. During this interview, Bays confessed to killing Weaver.
Bays told the detectives that he went to Weaver’s house after smoking some crack. He asked Weaver to lend him $30, but Weaver said he had no money. So Bays picked up the battery charger and hit Weaver on the head with it twice. When the battery charger’s handle broke off, Bays started to run away, but then Weaver shouted that he was going to call the police. Bays then picked up a portable tape recorder and went back to hit Weaver on the head with it. The blow shattered the recorder, so Bays dropped it and attacked Weaver with a sharp kitchen knife. Bays admitted that he cut Weaver’s throat and thought that he stabbed him in the chest.
Weaver fell out of his wheelchair, and Bays took the wallet from Weaver’s back pocket. Weaver’s wallet contained $25 cash and $9 worth of food stamps. Bays then went into the bedroom and dumped out the contents of the drawers. Then he fled. He subsequently bought crack with Weaver’s $25. Bays told the detectives that he threw Weaver’s wallet down the storm sewer at the northwest corner of Second and Monroe Streets, along with the T-shirt and glove he had

worn during the murder. At the end of Bays’s statement, Savage placed him under arrest.
When detectives searched the storm sewer at Second and Monroe, they found the T-shirt, glove, and wallet, just as Bays had said. Betty Reed, who had given that wallet to her father, identified it in court.
While held in the county jail, Bays discussed his crime with another inmate, Larry Adkins. Adkins testified that Bays had told him that he “hit [Weaver] with a battery charger” and when Weaver fell from his chair, Bays “took his wallet and * * * stabbed him in the chest. Then he was almost on his way out and he turned around and cut [Weaver’s] throat * * * to make sure he wasn’t alive.”
The Greene County Grand Jury indicted Bays on one count of aggravated murder under former R.C. 2903.01(A) and one under former R.C. 2903.01(B). Each count carried a felony-murder death specification under R.C. 2929.04(A)(7). The indictment also charged aggravated robbery.
Bays waived a jury and was tried to a three-judge panel. On Bays’s motion, with the state’s acquiescence, the trial court dismissed the count charging aggravated murder under R.C. 2903.01(A). At trial, Bays offered no evidence in the guilt phase. The panel found Bays guilty of aggravated murder, R.C. 2903.01(B), and aggravated robbery. After a penalty hearing, the panel sentenced Bays to death. Bays appealed this judgment to the court of appeals, which affirmed the convictions and sentence.

https://casetext.com/case/bays-v-warden-4?resultsNav=false