Oregon Shuts Down Death Row

Angela McAnulty Oregon Death Row

The Governor of Oregon, Kate Brown, has used her power and shut down the death row in Oregon. So basically all of the death row inmates are now serving life without the possibility of parole including Angela McAnulty, pictured above, who would murder her teenage daughter. Oregon Governor Kate Brown gave a number of reasons for this decision including the death penalty does not reduce crime rates and she called it immoral. Now the death penalty across the United States has been used less and less plus the amount of executions has gone down drastically over the last few years so her decision is not surprising especially considering a number of States have issued moratoriums regarding executions. I would imagine in the next decade the death penalty is going to disappear across the USA

Oregon Governor Kate Brown Death Row Decision

Gov. Kate Brown announced Tuesday that she will use her executive clemency powers to commute the sentences of the 17 individuals on Oregon’s death row to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.

“I have long believed that justice is not advanced by taking a life, and the state should not be in the business of executing people — even if a terrible crime placed them in prison,” the governor said in her announcement, which continues in full below.

“Since taking office in 2015, I have continued Oregon’s moratorium on executions because the death penalty is both dysfunctional and immoral,” Brown continued. “Today, I am commuting Oregon’s death row, so that we will no longer have anyone serving a sentence of death and facing execution in this state. This is a value that many Oregonians share.

“Unlike previous commutations I’ve granted to individuals who have demonstrated extraordinary growth and rehabilitation, this commutation is not based on any rehabilitative efforts by the individuals on death row. Instead, it reflects the recognition that the death penalty is immoral.

“It is an irreversible punishment that does not allow for correction; is wasteful of taxpayer dollars; does not make communities safer; and cannot be and never has been administered fairly and equitably. My action today is consistent with the near abolition of the death penalty that has been achieved through SB 1013.

“I also recognize the pain and uncertainty victims experience as they wait for decades while individuals sit on death row — especially in states with moratoriums on executions—without resolution. My hope is that this commutation will bring us a significant step closer to finality in these cases.”

The Governor’s order takes effect Wednesday, Dec. 14.

Brown’s list, attached to her order, of the 17 death row inmates whose sentences are being commuted includes notorious killer Randy Lee Guzek, now 53, who was sentenced to death his role in the brutal 1987 shooting deaths of Rod and Lois Houser at the couple’s Terrebonne home.

Guzek, who was 18 at the time of the robbery with two accomplices, shot Lois Houser three times with a handgun, chased her up a staircase and shot her once more as she huddled in a closet, then ripped the rings off her fingers.

Guzek was first sentenced to death in March of 1988, but the Oregon Supreme Court overturned the death sentence three times on procedural grounds, leading to a new trial each time over the years, at a cost to the state of millions of dollars.

After the governor’s announcement, Senate Republican Leader Tim Knopp (R-Bend) released the following statement:

“Did the people of Oregon vote to end the death penalty? I don’t recall that happening. This is another example of the Governor and the Democrats not abiding by the wishes of Oregonians. Even in the final days of her term, Brown continues to disrespect victims of the most violent crimes,” said Knopp.

Knopp said that Brown has used her executive authority to pardon or commute more sentences than any other governor in the state’s history and more than all of Oregon’s governors from the last 50 years combined.

 Knopp’s House counterpart, House Republican Leader Vikki Breese-Iverson (R-Prineville) also criticized Brown’s action, taken just 27 days before the end of her term.

“Yet as has been her objective throughout her governorship, Governor Brown continues to, with the stroke of a pen, exercise a lack of responsible judgment,” the statement began. 

“Governor Brown has once again taken executive action with zero input from Oregonians and the legislature. Oregon has not executed an individual since 1997 and has only executed two criminals since voters adopted the death penalty in 1984,” said Breese-Iverson. “Her decisions do not consider the impact the victims and families will suffer in the months and years to come. Democrats have consistently chosen criminals over victims.”

Breese-Iverson’s news release added, “Oregonians have been clear for decades that the death penalty is a constitutional punishment for our state’s most violent offenders. Time and again, the people of Oregon have supported this punishment as a deterrence and protection from those who have no regard for the lives of others.”

Former Deschutes County prosecutor and retired Clatsop County DA Josh Marquis said the governor misspoke in her announcement, when it came to Guzek’s case, which he personally retried each time.

“I wish she could give him ‘true life’ (without parole), as the (exhibit attached to her executive order) claims, but she cannot,” he told NewsChannel 21.

Marquis said Senate Bill 1013, passed in 2019, narrowed what crimes qualify as aggravated murder — and said that law change “already took Guzek off death row, and the only question is when his parole hearing will be.”

He pointed to last year’s Oregon Supreme Court ruling that struck down one inmate’s death sentence and which experts said could eliminate the death sentence for all inmates facing the penalty.

In Brown’s first news conference after becoming governor in 2015, she announced she would continue the death penalty moratorium imposed by her predecessor, former Gov. John Kitzhaber.

So far, 17 people have been executed in the U.S. in 2022, all by lethal injection and all in Texas, Oklahoma, Arizona, Missouri and Alabama, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

Like Oregon, some other states are moving away from the death penalty.

In California, Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom imposed a moratorium on executions in 2019 and shut down the state’s execution chamber at San Quentin. A year ago, he moved to dismantle America’s largest death row by moving all condemned inmates to other prisons within two years.

In Oregon, Brown is known for exercising her authority to grant clemency.

During the coronavirus pandemic, Brown granted clemency to nearly 1,000 people convicted of crimes. Two district attorneys, along with family members of crime victims, sued the governor and other state officials to stop the clemency actions. But the Oregon Court of Appeals ruled in August that she acted within her authority.

The prosecutors, in particular, objected to Brown’s decision to allow 73 people convicted of murder, assault, rape and manslaughter while they were younger than 18 to apply for early release.

The Oregon Department of Corrections announced in May 2020 it was phasing out its death row and reassigning those inmates to other special housing units or general population units at the state penitentiary in Salem and other state prisons.

Oregon voters reinstated the death penalty by popular vote in 1978, 14 years after they abolished it. The Oregon Supreme Court declared it unconstitutional in 1981 and Oregon voters reinstated it in 1984, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

A list of inmates with death sentences provided by the governor’s office had 17 names.

But the state Department of Corrections’ website lists 21 names. One of those prisoners, however, had his death sentence overturned by the Oregon Supreme Court in 2021 because the crime he committed was no longer eligible for the death penalty under a 2019 law.

Officials in the governor’s office and the corrections department did not immediately respond to an attempt to reconcile the lists.

David Bartol Oregon Death Row

david bartol

David Bartol was sentenced to death by the State of Oregon for a prison murder. According to court documents David Bartol was arraigned on attempted murder charges the day before he would stab to death the victim, Gavin Siscel, at the Marion County Jail. David Bartol would be convicted and sentenced to death.

Oregon Death Row Inmate List

David Bartol 2021 Information

david bartol 2021
Offender Name:Bartol, David Ray
Age:50dot clearDOB:01/1971dot clearLocation:Oregon State Penitentiary
Gender:Maledot clearRace:Amer Indian Or Alaska Nativedot clearStatus:AIC
Height:6′ 02”dot clearHair:Blackdot clearField Admission Date:05/10/2012
Weight:200 lbsdot clearEyes:Browndot clearEarliest Release Date:Death

David Bartol More News

Bartol was convicted of aggravated murder for the 2013 killing of Gavin Siscel with a homemade knife in the Marion County jail. Bartol had been arraigned on attempted murder charges the day before the killing. Siscel was serving a 30-day sentence for contempt of court, according to the Statesmen Journal.

David Bartol Other News

A white supremacist gang member was sentenced to death Thursday for the fatal stabbing of an inmate at the Marion County Jail.

The Statesman Journal reports it took the jury less than an hour to make the decision.

David Bartol, 45, was convicted last month of aggravated murder in the 2013 death of Gavin Siscel. Authorities said Bartol made a shank and used it to repeatedly stab Siscel in the eye while Siscel was watching TV in a dayroom. They said it was a random attack. Prosecutor Matthew Kemmy said Bartol was mad at a former co-conspirator for talking to investigators. Because that man was in protective custody, Bartol lashed out at Siscel.

On the morning of the stabbing, he wrote: “It’s a good day for a (expletive) to die.” Later, Bartol wrote that the death was a “free kill for my trophy room.”

Kemmy said Bartol’s attack on Siscel was just one example of his violent and dangerous behavior. The prosecution brought in 160 witnesses and 330 exhibits to illustrate his three-decade history of threats, assaults and intimidation.

Earlier this year, he was sentenced to 55 years in prison after a Portland jury found him guilty of attempted murder in a torture attack on two fellow Krude Rude Brood gang members.

Bartol was accused of sanding off gang members’ tattoos, injecting them with heroin and shooting them.

“David Bartol is a frightening, dangerous person…. that will not change,” Kemmy said.

Defense attorney Steven Gorham said he plans to appeal the death sentence. He said the prolonged trial cost more than $1 million.

“That money should’ve been spent on something more positive that trying to kill David Bartol,” Gorham said.

Bartol will join more than 30 other inmate on Oregon’s death row. The state has had a moratorium on executions in place since 2011. It’s been nearly 20 years since an inmate was executed.

Dayton Rogers Oregon Death Row

dayton rogers

Dayton Rogers was sentenced to death by the State of Oregon for the murders of six women. According to court documents Dayton Rogers, who is a serial killer, is responsible for the murders of at least six women in 1987. Dayton Rogers would confess to a seventh murder while incarcerated. Dayton Rogers would be sentenced to death.

Oregon Death Row Inmate List

Dayton Rogers 2021 Information

dayton rogers 2021
Offender Name:Rogers, Dayton Leroy
Age:67dot clearDOB:09/1953dot clearLocation:Two Rivers Correctional Institution
Gender:Maledot clearRace:White Or European Origindot clearStatus:AIC
Height:5′ 09”dot clearHair:Browndot clearField Admission Date:03/04/1988
Weight:200 lbsdot clearEyes:Browndot clearEarliest Release Date:Death

Dayton Rogers More News

Rogers is known as Oregon’s most prolific serial killer. He tortured and stabbed six women in 1987, leaving their bodies in a remote wooded area outside Molalla. Rogers, a foot and bondage fetishist, targeted young women who were heroin addicts. He sawed off some of their feet. One woman was gutted from her sternum to her pelvis. Jurors sentenced Rogers to death in 1989, 1994 and 2006, but the Oregon Supreme Court overturned the verdicts when laws changed or on legal technicalities. Another jury sentenced him a fourth time in 2015.

Dayton Rogers Other News

Dayton Leroy Rogers, Oregon’s most prolific serial killer, was sentenced the death for the fourth time after another resentencing trial Clackamas County Circuit Court Monday.

Rogers was convicted in 1989 of killing six women two years earlier. Since then, the court has three times struck down death sentences imposed on him.

On Friday, his attorneys in closing statements asked for the jury to grant him life in prison, saying Rogers is “humiliated and full of shame” and that he is not a danger to people in prison.

The prosecution had asked for the death penalty, saying Rogers is a danger to people both inside and outside of prison, and that his victims and their families deserve justice.

Prosecutors pointed out that the former Canby lawnmower repairman tortured, stabbed and mutilated his victims, dumping them in a forest near Molalla in Clackamas County. Seven victims were found at that site. One of them was finally identified in 2013.

Before that murder case, he was also found guilty of murdering a woman whose body was found in 1987 in parking lot behind an Oak Grove Denny’s restaurant. 

The Oregon Supreme Court struck down Rogers’ death sentences in 1992, 2000 and 2012. The first time was to comply with a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that invalidated Oregon’s death penalty law.

In 2000, the Oregon high court ruled that the jury incorrectly considered only the options of death and life in prison with the possibility of parole. There should have been a third choice: life without the chance of parole.

In 2012, the justices said jury selection was done improperly and the judge incorrectly allowed evidence of Rogers’ gay experiences as a teenager.

Though it is rare to have four separate sentencing trials, it’s not unprecedented.

For example, Randy Lee Guzek was sentenced to death three times for killing a central Oregon couple in 1987, and each time the penalty was overturned. A jury imposed it for a fourth time in 2010, and it has stuck.

Rogers’ first known attack was at age 18 in 1972, when he stabbed a 15-year-old Eugene girl after taking her to a wooded area to have sex. In 1973, after striking two girls with a soda bottle, he was sent to the state mental hospital. After his release in 1974, Rogers’ crimes continued for more than a decade.

At his 2006 sentencing trial, Rogers argued that he was changed a man after nearly two decades in prison.

“There is never a day that I don’t struggle from the very core of my heart and soul over the despicable acts I’ve committed,” Rogers said.

After the latest court proceedings, Rogers attorneys said they planned to file a motion for a mistrial based on a violation of jury rules. They claim that the jury foreman posted on social media about the trial.  Blog posts were entered into evidence and a judge will decide on a retrial at a later date once the motion is filed.

That could mean Rogers would go up for his 4th appeal.

Governor Kate Brown announced shortly after taking office early this year that she will continue former Governor John Kitzhaber’s moratorium on the death penalty in Oregon.

On Saturday, spokeswoman Kristen Grainger said, “Governor Brown has asked her general counsel to consult various experts, including those directly involved with the implementation of the death penalty in Oregon, and advise her how to proceed. That process is underway.”

https://www.kgw.com/article/news/local/ore-serial-killer-rogers-sentenced-to-death-for-4th-time/283-156017

David Taylor Oregon Death Row

david taylor

David Taylor was sentenced to death by the State of Oregon for the murder of a man following a bank robbery. According to court documents David Taylor would rob a bank and would flee in a vehicle driven by Celestino “Tino” Gutierrez. Once they reached the safe house David Taylor would murder Celestino “Tino” Gutierrez. David Taylor who already served nearly thirty years for another murder was sentenced to death.

Oregon Death Row Inmate List

David Taylor 2021 Information

david taylor 2021
Offender Name:Taylor, David Ray
Age:65dot clearDOB:12/1955dot clearLocation:Eastern Oregon Correctional Institution
Gender:Maledot clearRace:White Or European Origindot clearStatus:AIC
Height:5′ 09”dot clearHair:Browndot clearField Admission Date:05/21/2014
Weight:200 lbsdot clearEyes:Browndot clearEarliest Release Date:Death

David Taylor More News

Taylor killed Celestino “Tino” Gutierrez, 22, in 2012 to use his car as a getaway in a bank robbery. Gutierrez’s body was dismembered and buried in woods southwest of Eugene. Prosecutors said the killing happened at Taylor’s home and he planned it along with associates, including one who posed as a stranded woman in a bar parking lot and asked Gutierrez for a ride.

David Taylor Other News

Convicted killer David Ray Taylor was formally sentenced to death Tuesday in Eugene for killing a man in 2012 to take his car for a bank robbery.

The 58-year-old Eugene man becomes the 35th person on Oregon’s death row at the Oregon State Penitentiary in Salem.

His case will be automatically reviewed by the state Supreme Court and the appeals process could take decades.

A jury decided last week Taylor should be executed for his part in killing 22-year-old Celestino Gutierrez.

The Register-Guard reports the victim’s family condemned Taylor at his sentencing hearing. The mother, Rose Gutierrez, told Taylor he should do everyone a favor and kill himself.

https://www.kptv.com/news/convicted-killer-sentenced-to-death-in-eugene/article_08c0cbc0-cb6f-57e3-bf11-74e4dc2e644c.html

Joshua And Bruce Turnidge Oregon Death Row

joshua and Bruce Turnidge

Joshua and Bruce Turnidge were sentenced to death by the State of Oregon for a bombing that killed two police officers. According to court documents Joshua and Bruce Turnidge attempted to rob the West Coast Bank in Woodburn and when that failed they set off a bomb that would kill two police officers, Woodburn police Capt. Tom Tennant and Oregon State Police senior trooper William Hakim. Joshua and Bruce Turnidge would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Oregon Death Row Inmate List

Bruce Turnidge 2021 Information

bruce turnidge 2021
Offender Name:Turnidge, Bruce Aldon
Age:69dot clearDOB:07/1951dot clearLocation:Oregon State Penitentiary
Gender:Maledot clearRace:White Or European Origindot clearStatus:AIC
Height:5′ 07”dot clearHair:Greydot clearField Admission Date:01/24/2011
Weight:215 lbsdot clearEyes:Browndot clearEarliest Release Date:Death

Joshua Turnidge 2021 Information

joshua turnidge 2021
Offender Name:Turnidge, Joshua Abraham
Age:44dot clearDOB:06/1976dot clearLocation:Two Rivers Correctional Institution
Gender:Maledot clearRace:White Or European Origindot clearStatus:AIC
Height:6′ 00”dot clearHair:Browndot clearField Admission Date:01/24/2011
Weight:215 lbsdot clearEyes:Browndot clearEarliest Release Date:Death

Bruce Turnidge More News

Bruce Turnidge and his son Joshua were found guilty of all charges in the Dec. 12, 2008, bombing at West Coast Bank in Woodburn. Killed in the explosion were two police officers, Woodburn police Capt. Tom Tennant and Oregon State Police senior trooper William Hakim. Another officer lost his leg and a bank employee was injured when police tried to dismantle the bomb.

Bruce Turnidge Other News

It was business as usual on a dreary Friday afternoon in Woodburn 10 years ago.

Outside the West Coast Bank on Highway 214, drivers zoomed by on their evening commutes. The Pacific Northwest’s ubiquitous winter rain shrouded the city. 

Inside the bank, signs of the looming holiday dotted the lobby — a Christmas tree, poinsettias and festive decorations. 

Earlier, an ominous phone call led police to a green box tucked into the bushes outside the bank.

Investigators carried it into the bank where, at 5:24 p.m., a bomb inside the box tore the building apart, killing two law enforcement officers, seriously maiming the Woodburn police chief and sending a father and son to Oregon’s death row. 

The aftermath of the bomb also threatened to tear the community apart. People mourned the loss of the officers, their sense of security and safety. The criminal investigation and ensuing trial lasted years.

Anger and hatred could’ve easily filled a community shocked by something of this magnitude, said Woodburn City Administrator Scott Derickson.

Derickson had only been on the job a few weeks when an officer knocked on his door the night of Dec. 12, 2008, about an hour after the bombing.

Everything after that felt like a blur, he said.

He remembers meeting with Mayor Kathy Figley to discuss what the city’s message would be in the wake of the tragedy.

The mayor looked at me and said, ‘We are going to focus on love. We’re going to tell the community that this is the time to stand together’,” Derickson said. 

And, the mayor added, “We’re going to tell the community that Woodburn is better than this.”

That Friday began to turn ugly when a man called a Wells Fargo Bank in Woodburn, telling an employee that everyone in the building would die if they didn’t leave immediately.  

He instructed the employee to retrieve a disposable cell phone, which was discovered outside near a garbage can. A green metal box was also found in the bushes at the nearby West Coast Bank.

Investigators deemed the call and the green box to be a hoax.

Oregon State Police Senior Trooper William Hakim decided to take the box inside the bank for further examination. Accompanied by Woodburn police Capt. Thomas Tennant and Chief Scott Russell, Hakim began dismantling the box. 

Bank employee Laurie Perkett remembers Hakim saying, “Okay, I got it.”

Video footage of the moments before the explosion shows Tennant and Hakim kneeling next to the box amid the computers, desks and Christmas decorations.

Suddenly, the footage goes black. 

The explosion ripped through the bank, killing Hakim and Tennant, seriously injuring Russell and wounding Perkett.

Additional surveillance captured debris blown across the room and plumes of gray and white smoke.  

Detective Sgt. Nick Wilson, who was ordered outside by Russell to do a perimeter check moments before the explosion, heard the blast, saw a flash of light and rushed in the lobby to find a war zone-like scene.

He and Sgt. John Mikkola found Hakim and Tennant, almost unrecognizable and already dead from the explosion, then discovered Chief Russell bleeding profusely from his leg. 

Wilson used his belt as a tourniquet on the chief. 

Perkett, who was walking toward the door as the device exploded, was hit with a piece of shrapnel. 

It wasn’t until later, when she was talking with first responders, that she looked down at her bloodied leg and realized the shrapnel had cut her to the bone. 

The explosion shut down nearby highways and officers filled the area, a cluster of strip malls and residential homes just south of the Interstate 5 interchange. 

News of serious injuries filtered out into the community.

The next day, state police identified the men killed as Hakim, a certified hazardous device technician from Keizer, and Tennant, a Woodburn police captain who joined the department in 1980.  

Hundreds of investigators poured into Marion County to track down those responsible. 

Lead investigator Marion County Sheriff’s Detective Mike Myers told the Statesman Journal in 2013 that 265 investigators from multiple agencies worked on the bank bombing case.

City administrator Derickson said in the hours and days after the bombing, hundreds of agencies, police departments, community members and businesses offered their help.

“The city was stumbling,” he said. “We lost two-thirds of our leadership and half of our police department. They were taken out of action as either witnesses or because they were impacted or they were wounded.”

He recalls getting a random call on his cell phone from Seattle officials, who offered to send an officer and patrol car down to help cover shifts.

The outpouring of support was overwhelming.

“It’s something I’ll never forget,” Derickson said. “They really held the city up when we could have actually fallen down. The wheels could’ve come off, but they didn’t because people rushed in and propped us up until we could stabilize and move forward.”

Back then, current Woodburn Police Chief Jim Ferraris was with the Portland Police Bureau, which provided resources for the law enforcement response and hospitalization of Russell.

He said people in the policing community made a commitment to support Woodburn as much as possible.

Ferraris said he watched as the community strengthened and residents spurred into action, rather than descend into hate and fear. 

The investigation led to the arrest of Joshua Turnidge at his Salem home. His father, Bruce Turnidge, was arrested at his residence in Jefferson, where investigators said they found materials matching metal bomb fragments found at the crime scene.

According to prosecutors, the father and son concocted the bomb threat to fund their failing biodiesel business. They also have argued that the pair shared anti-government beliefs and were fearful that the election of President Barack Obama signaled a trend toward the government clamping down on gun rights.

The Turnidges’ trial lasted almost two months and attracted massive public attention.

Weeks of witness testimony, video footage of the carnage and forensic evidence was presented. 

Both Turnidges maintained their innocence and pointed to each other as the sole culprit. 

The jury deliberated for only four hours before unanimously finding the men guilty on all 18 counts against them, including aggravated murder, attempted murder and unlawful manufacture of a destructive device. 

The Turnidges showed little reaction as the verdict was read before a packed courtroom. 

The men were later sentenced to death and remain on death row due to the state’s ongoing moratorium on executions.

Former Marion County District Attorney Walt Beglau said the bombing was “the most complex criminal investigation and prosecution in the modern history of Marion County.”

He also said the impact of the tragedy on the community was immense.

Ferraris said about one-third of the current police department were employees at the time of the bombing. 

“It stays with them,” he said. “It’s something they never forget. We vowed in the police department to never forget Tom Tennant, to never forget Bill Hakim, and never forget the injuries that Scott Russell and others endured as a result of that event.”

Russell, who lost his right leg in the blast and underwent dozens of surgeries, continued as police chief until his retirement in 2015. 

Derickson remembers the crowded vigil held in downtown Woodburn the weekend of the bombing — people of all different cultures, languages and religions, who gathered to hold candles and pray. 

“The message was that hate did this,” he said. “We are not going to hate anybody. We are going to love each other. We are going to be a community. The community is going to stand up and make sure that the future is better than this and not worse.”

A memorial marking the 10th anniversary of the Woodburn bombing is scheduled for noon on Wednesday at the Woodburn Memorial Transit Center. Members of the public are invited to attend the service honoring the victims.