Benjamin Ritchie Indiana Death Row

Benjamin Ritchie Indiana Death Row

Benjamin Ritchie was sentenced to death by the State of Indiana for the murder of a police officer. According to court documents Officers noticed a stolen van and a chase began. Benjamin Ritchie would crash the vehicle and take off running followed by Officer William Toney. Benjamin Ritchie would turn around and fire striking the Officer and killing him. Benjamin Ritchie would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Indiana Death Row Inmate List

Benjamin Ritchie 2021 Information

DOC Number967072
First NameBENJAMIN
Middle Name
Last NameRITCHIE
Suffix
Date of Birth05/03/1980
GenderMale
RaceWhite
Facility/LocationIndiana State Prison
Earliest Possible Release Date *
*Offenders scheduled for release on a Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday are released on Monday. Offenders scheduled for release on a Thursday, Friday, Saturday or Sunday are released on Thursday. Offenders whose release date falls on a Holiday are released on the first working day prior to the Holiday.
00/00/0000

Benjamin Ritchie More News

Indiana has ten men on death row at the Indiana State Prison in Michigan City. Some of those convicted killers are featured in a documentary about Indiana’s death row that airs on ITV in the United Kingdom February 1.

Repeated television exposure upsets the widow of fallen Beech Grove police officer Bill Toney

Dee Dee Horen was recently informed that her late husband’s killer is going to be on TV again. She wants people to see the other side of death row, the side of the victim’s family that has survived and thrived despite tragedy.

“It angers me, because he’s still sitting there, and I know that his case is still sitting on a judge’s desk somewhere,” said Horen. “He doesn’t have a date that I’m aware of. I don’t sit around and think about, ‘I can’t wait until the day when Benjamin Ritchie is put to death.’ I don’t give him my time for that.”

Horen is upset that ITV will air a follow-up program Thursday in the United Kingdom to a documentary that aired five years ago and featured the man who killed her husband.

“Gosh, there’s so much more to this story. Why does this story have to keep going back to him? There’s a family that survived this tragedy,” she said.

Over 17 years have passed since Officer Toney was shot and killed during a foot pursuit of Ritchie. The officer was shot in the neck.

His daughters were just four and 18 months old when he died. Now both in college, Jess and Emily Toney have limited memories of their father.

“I thought by the time that the girls were old enough to start asking questions, I could say, ‘The man that killed your dad was executed 10 years ago, five years ago.’ Now I have to explain it to my 12-year-old son,” said Horen.

Dee Dee married a family friend, Ryan Horen, who knew Bill. Dee Dee and Ryan have been married 15 years with a 12-year-old son together, Rylan.

“Somebody stepped up when Benjamin Ritchie took my girls’ dad and my husband,” said Dee Dee. “Somebody else stood up and took on the responsibility of us.”

Dee Dee remains close to Bill’s family and they honor his memory with an annual cornhole tournament.

Meanwhile, his killer has exhausted his appeals while living on death row over 15 years.

“As a Christian, I have forgiven him,” Dee Dee said. “It’s not going to do me any good whatsoever to go and watch a man die. But I do want justice for him. I do believe in the death penalty. I do believe he deserves the death penalty.”

Ritchie’s eventual execution will bring Dee Dee no joy.

“I’m going to get a…” Dee took a deep sigh. “It’s over. It’s done. There’s justice for Bill and my daughters. Bill’s mom, little sister and brothers don’t have to see his face again or hear about him again.”

Dee Dee admits she will probably watch the new documentary eventually, but she does not believe inmates on death row should be allowed to give media interviews.

Indiana last carried out the death penalty by lethal injection in 2009. The execution of Matthew Eric Wrinkles came 14 years after his sentencing.

The Indiana Supreme Court denied Ritchie’s appeal in 2014. The U.S. Supreme Court denied his appeal in April 2017. The Indiana Department of Correction says Ritchie has exhausted his appeals. The Indiana Supreme Court must issue the execution order.

https://www.wthr.com/article/news/crime/widow-of-beech-grove-police-officer-upset-killer-on-death-row-gets-tv-exposure/531-7959ac12-0187-4f19-9084-a0bcf6550116

Jerry Lard Arkansas Death Row

jerry lard arkansas death row

Jerry Lard was sentenced to death by the State of Arkansas for the murder of a police officer. According to court documents Jerry Lard was pulled over by Police Officer Jonathan Schmidt. When the Officer approached the car Jerry Lard would shoot him in the head, Lard would get out of his car shooting the officer twice more before grabbing the Officers gun to fire the last shot. Jerry Lard would be convicted and sentenced to death.

Arkansas Death Row Inmate List

Jerry Lard 2021 Information

ADC Number 000976

Name: Lard, Jerry D

Race CAUCASIAN Sex MALE Hair Color BROWN Eye Color BLUE

Height 64 inches Weight 234 lbs.

Birth Date 03/13/1974

Initial Receipt Date 07/30/2012

Facility Varner Supermax

Jerry Lard More News

A convicted cop killer has been sentenced to death.

A jury has sentenced Jerry Lard to death in the shooting death of Trumann Police Officer Jonathan Schmidt.  Three hours into their deliberations, jurors agreed on the death penalty for Jerry Lard.

The father of fallen Trumann officer Jonathan Schmidt says the last two weeks have been difficult.

“It’s been extremely difficult for both families to endure such pain that we’d endured,” said Donald Schmidt, Sr. “It’s closure.  It’s been a long time coming.  We can start healing now,” he added.

Minutes after Jerry Lard was sentenced to death, Schmidt said the jury sent a message.

“If anybody out there ever wants to assassinate or murder an innocent officer, the great people of this state will stand up to them,” Schmidt said.

Andrea Schmidt, wife of officer Jonathan Schmidt said she was glad the trial is over, adding, “I still miss Jonathan every day.  He’s never going to come back.”

During the trial, the Schmidt family tearfully told the jury about what life has been like without Jonathan, a man the community of Trumann hails a hero.

Jonathan died April 13, 2011.

Prosecutors presented evidence that he was shot four times.  The fourth, fatal shot, fired with his own gun at close range.

Saturday, the family says justice was served.

“We’ve all lost in this situation.  There’s not a winner,” said Andrea Schmidt.

Shortly after the sentence was handed down, both families consoled each other. Expressing sympathy for what had happened.

“I understand that they lost a son,” said Ricky Lard.  “I think and pray for that family every day since this happened.”

https://www.wmcactionnews5.com/story/19139197/lard-sentenced-to-death/

Daryl Lawrence Federal Death Row

Federal Death Row

Daryl Lawrence was sentenced to death by the Federal Government for the murder of a police officer in Columbus Ohio. According to court documents Daryl Lawrence would enter a bank in Columbus where Officer Bryan Hurst was working special duty. A gunfight would ensue and the police officer was fatally shot. Daryl Lawrence was sentenced to death and as of 2021 he remains on Federal Death Row

Federal Death Row Inmate List

Daryl Lawrence 2021 Information

Register Number: 66476-061
Age: 45
Race: Black
Sex: Male
Located at: Terre Haute USP
Release Date: DEATH SENT

Daryl Lawrence More News

The charges against Lawrence arose from four bank robberies committed in central Ohio during January, August, and September 2004, and January 2005. During the last of these robberies, an attempted robbery on January 6, 2005, Lawrence shot and killed Columbus Police Officer Bryan Hurst. Officer Hurst had returned fire, however, and Lawrence was injured. Lawrence aborted the robbery and fled. He was arrested within days, whereupon he confessed to having committed all four robberies. An eight-count indictment was returned and filed in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio on January 20, 2005.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/us-6th-circuit/1647630.html

Daryl Lawrence Other News

The attorney for Daryl Lawrence, who fatally shot a Columbus police officer eight years ago, said he’ll appeal yesterday’s federal court decision upholding the death penalty for his client.

Kort W. Gatterdam said he’ll ask all the active judges on the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to rehear the case. Yesterday’s decision was made by a three-judge panel from the court.

In a 75-page decision, the appeals panel rejected 24 claims of error that Gatterdam argued were committed during Lawrence’s 2006 federal trial and sentencing, when a jury found him guilty of armed robbery and using a firearm to kill Columbus Police Officer Bryan Hurst.

The jury sentenced Lawrence to death for killing Hurst with malice and life in prison for shooting Hurst during a robbery.

Hurst, 33, was working special duty at the Fifth Third Bank at 6265 E. Broad St. on Jan. 6, 2005, when Lawrence entered with a drawn handgun and killed the officer during an exchange of gunfire.

Gatterdam said the inconsistency of the two sentences is a matter that the full court of 15 judges should review.

“The way the jury decided the penalty phase of the case was inappropriate for a number of reasons,” he said. “The penalty phase was supposed to be about Lawrence’s sentence, but it was more about Bryan Hurst’s life.”

Gatterdam said that if the appeals court won’t rehear the case, he will ask the U.S. Supreme Court to consider it.

This is the second time the appeals court has ruled in favor of the death sentence for Lawrence.

The first was after U.S. District Judge Gregory Frost ruled that the sentences imposed by the jury were inconsistent and asked that a new jury decide whether Lawrence should get death or life in prison.

The U.S. attorney’s office appealed Frost’s ruling. The appeals court threw it out in 2009.

The same three-judge appeals-court panel has ruled in both appeals.

https://www.dispatch.com/article/20131022/NEWS/310229633

Len Davis Federal Death Row

len davis 1

Len Davis was a former New Orleans police officer who was sentenced to death for arranging the murder of a witness set to testify against him. According to court documents Len Davis was under investigation by the Internal Affairs for the murder of a young man who he thought was a witness to an officer involved shooting. When Len Davis learned that someone had witnessed the murder he conspired with another man to murder the witness, Kim Groves. Len Dias was convicted on both murders and sentenced to death. The death sentence became Federal due to being found guilty of two Federal Civil Rights charges. Len Davis remains on Federal Death Row

Federal Death Row Inmate List

Len Davis 2021 Information

Register Number: 24325-034
Age: 56
Race: Black
Sex: Male
Located at: Terre Haute USP
Release Date: DEATH SENT

Len Davis More News

A federal appeals court on Friday turned down a request for a new hearing from a former New Orleans police officer facing execution after orchestrating the 1994 murder of a woman who filed a brutality case against him.

In theory, Len Davis finds himself one step closer to receiving the federal death penalty which was handed to him following his conviction in the killing of Kim Groves. But he can appeal Friday’s decision from a three-judge panel to the full federal 5th Circuit and then to the U.S. Supreme Court, meaning it could be years before his case concludes.

U.S. Circuit Judges Priscilla Owen, Don Willett and Andrew Oldham rejected arguments that the question of Davis’ guilt deserved to be revisited because the government withheld key exculpatory evidence, jurors were biased, and he did not have competent legal representation at his trial.

An attorney for Davis, Sarah Ottinger, said Saturday that she and her client are exploring their legal options going forward. 

Groves’ slaying marked the nadir for the reputation of the New Orleans Police Department, which that year stood watch over a city that registered its all-time in high in killings: 424.

Federal agents at the time were investigating Davis because they suspected he and other officers had been paid to protect drug dealers. Amid that probe, Groves went to NOPD’s internal affairs division and reported having seen Davis pistol-whip a teenager.

Within a day, Davis had been tipped off about the complaint and arranged for drug dealer Paul Hardy to execute Groves roughly a block away from her home in the Lower 9th Ward. The plot to murder Groves was captured on FBI phone taps meant to expose the protection racket to which Davis had been linked, but agents were unable to prevent Hardy from killing the mother of three.

Davis and Hardy each received death sentences after they were convicted in 1996 of violating Groves’ civil rights. A third man linked to the killing, Damon Causey, received a life sentence after being convicted of hiding the handgun used to murder Groves.

Hardy’s capital punishment was vacated after U.S. District Judge Ginger Berrigan deemed him intellectually disabled. Davis’ initial death sentence had also been vacated at one point. But he received a second death sentence in 2005.

Davis, now 56, has since exhausted his appeals and is now undergoing the complex post-conviction appellate process.

The latest twist in Davis’ case comes a little more than a month after the federal Bureau of Prisons executed three federal prisoners. The carrying out of those death sentences followed a decision from President Donald Trump’s administration to end a 17-year hiatus of federal executions.

Ottinger said she was concerned that prosecutors’ insistence on carrying out the death penalty on Davis meant her client, who is Black, stood to become “the only person ever killed by the government under Reconstruction era civil rights statutes enacted to protect Black people from brutality perpetrated by White police.”

Ottinger added, “It is in the case involving the Black police officer that the government persists in seeking the ultimate punishment of death.”

The city of New Orleans in 2018 agreed to pay Groves’ children $1.5 million to settle a civil lawsuit her family filed following the killing. Groves’ family at one point had asked President George W. Bush’s administration to halt its efforts to execute Davis so that the criminal case wouldn’t drag out any longer.

https://www.nola.com/news/crime_police/article_24407022-e4b0-11ea-9a55-5b447b6b68ec.html

Texas Seven Prison Escape – The Murder Of Aubrey Hawkins

texas seven

The Texas Seven was a prison escape which would became a sensation as the seven men from the Texas Department Of Corrections would basically disappeared. However with the murder of police officer Aubrey Hawkins and the help of America’s Most Wanted this prison escape would come to a sudden end in Colorado. In this article on My Crime Library we are going to take a closer look at the Texas Seven and the murder of Officer Hawkins.

Texas Seven Members

george rivas texas 7

George Rivas was serving a sentence of eighteen consecutive fifteen years to life for a series of armed robberies

michael rodriguez texas seven

Michael Rodriguez was serving a sentence of ninety nine years to life for the contract killing of his wife

joseph garcia texas 7

Joseph Garcia was serving a sentence of fifty years for murder

larry harper texas 7

Larry Harper was serving a fifty year sentence for sexual assault

patrick murphy texas seven

Donald Newbury was serving a ninety nine year sentence for armed robbery

patrick murphy texas 7

Patrick Murphy was serving a fifty year sentence for sexual assault

randy halprin texas 7

Randy Halprin was serving a thirty year sentence for injury to a child

Texas Seven Prison Break

The Texas Seven prison break took place on December 13, 2000. The seven members had been planning the prison break for months. On the day of the escape the seven members would overpower a series of Texas Department Of Correction employees including four prison guards, nine maintenance supervisors and three fellow inmates. The group had waited for lunchtime as it was notoriously slow and with less staff present. All of the hostages were stripped and their personal possessions were taken.

Three of the members of the Texas Seven dressed in stolen civilian clothing made their way to the back gate where they were able to enter the gatehouse under the guise of installing video cameras. Once inside they were able to overpower the guards and take control of the gatehouse. The four who had remained inside of the prison called other gatehouses to keep them distracted while the original three stole weapons and tied up their hostages. The remaining four would steal a truck, drive to the gatehouse, pick up the other three and drive out of the prison. It was later learned that Michael Rodriguez father had left them a vehicle near by and the Texas seven would switch vehicles and basically disappear.

The Murder Of Officer Aubrey Hawkins

audrey hawkins texas seven

The prison truck would be found in Kennedy Texas at a Walmart. The Texas Seven were short on cash so they robbed a Radio Shack in the Houston Texas area the next day.

On December 19, 2000 the Texas Seven members would check into a Econo Lodge in the Dallas Fort Worth area and planned their next robbery which was to take place on Christmas Eve

The target was Oshman’s Sporting Goods in Irving Texas. The Texas Seven would enter the store and quickly take over the store by tying up the employees. What they did not know is that an off duty employee was outside of the store and would call 911. While they were inside of the store the Texas Seven would steal forty different types of firearms plus a ton of ammunition.

Officer Aubrey Hawkins was the first responding police officer and he was immediately ambushed by the group. After being shot several times Officer Hawkins was run over at the scene. The Texas Seven would fall off the map until a month later in Colorado

Texas Seven Capture

The Texas Seven were featured on an episode of America’s Most Wanted on January 20, 2001. Several people would call in reporting a group that had been staying at the Coachlight Motel and RV Park in Woodland Park, Colorado. A SWAT team from El Paso Texas and local police officers would arrest George Rivas, Joseph Garcia and Michael Rodriguez sitting in a Jeep within the RV Park. Randy Halprin and Larry Harper were inside of a motorhome. Halprin would surrender peacefully however Larry Harper would take his own life.

The two remaining members were hiding at a Holiday Inn in Colorado Springs. The two would agree to turn themselves in after speaking to the media. Donald Newbury and Patrick Murphy would tell the news reporter on what they fell were abuse and corruption in the Texas Department Of Corrections.

Eventually the six remaining members of the Texas Seven would be extradited back to Texas where they were all charged and later convicted of the Capital Murder of Officer Hawkins and sentenced to death.

Texas Seven Executions

Michael Rodriguez was the first member of the Texas Seven to be executed as he said he was tired of prison life and stopped all of his appeals. Rodriguez would be executed on August 14, 2008. George Rivas would be executed on February 29, 2012. Donald Newbury was executed on February 4, 2015. Joseph Garcia was executed on December 4, 2018.

Randy Halprin and Patrick Murphy are still on Texas Death Row as of 2021. The two remaining members have argued that they served as lookouts and were at the back of the store when Officer Hawkins was murdered.

Texas Seven Videos

Texas Seven More News

The Supreme Court on Monday declined to take up the case of a Texas death row inmate who argued he should get a new trial because the judge who presided over his case was biased against Jews.

The justices said they would not hear the case of Randy Halprin, one of the so-called Texas 7, but Halprin’s claims of bias and that he should get a new trial are still under review by a Texas court.

Halprin and six others escaped from prison in 2000. The group later robbed a sporting goods store in Irving, Texas, fatally shooting responding police officer Aubrey Hawkins as they fled.

Lawyers for Halprin, who is Jewish, said an investigation found that Judge Vickers Cunningham, who presided over his trial, was anti-Semitic and frequently used racial slurs.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote that the facts Halprin presented are “deeply disturbing” but she nonetheless agreed with the decision not to hear his case. Sotomayor noted that Halprin’s execution has now been stayed while state courts consider whether “bias infected his trial.”

Sotomayor wrote that the Constitution clearly requires a fair trial before an unbiased judge.

“I trust that the Texas courts considering Halprin’s case are more than capable of guarding this fundamental guarantee,” she wrote. She suggested the Supreme Court could still take the case at a later date.

Tivon Schardl, a lawyer for Halprin, said in a statement that lawyers would “continue to seek a new, fair trial.”

A Dallas Morning News story revealed in 2018, when Cunningham was running for county commissioner, that he had created a trust for his children that withheld money if they chose to marry someone who was not white or not Christian. The story also quoted a former campaign worker who said Cunningham used a racial slur to describe black defendants. In response, Cunningham denied ever using the racial slur and said in a statement that his “views on interracial marriage have evolved” since he set up the trust in 2010.

Halprin’s lawyers followed up with an investigation of their own which found that Cunningham used racial slurs not only to talk about African Americans but also to talk about Jews and Latinos. The investigation also found he allegedly threatened not to pay for his daughter’s law school tuition unless she broke up with a Jewish boyfriend.

Halprin and death row inmate Patrick Murphy are the only members of the Texas 7 that are still alive. One of the men committed suicide as authorities closed in on the group following their escape. Four others were convicted and executed. Murphy’s execution has also been stayed.

https://www.keranews.org/news/2020-04-06/supreme-court-wont-hear-case-of-texas-seven-inmate