Luzenski Cottrell South Carolina Death Row

Luzenski Cottrell

Luzenski Cottrell was sentenced to death by the State of South Carolina for the murder of a police officer. According to court documents Luzenski Cottrell would shoot and kill Myrtle Beach police officer Joe McGarry during an arrest. Luzenski Cottrell would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

South Carolina Death Row Inmate List

Luzenski Cottrell 2021 Information

Admission Date: 04/27/2005

Location: Broad River

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hortly after midnight on December 29, 2002, McGarry and fellow police officer Mike Guthinger entered a Dunkin Donuts in the city of Myrtle Beach. Both officers were in uniform and on duty, completing a traffic stop a short time earlier before deciding to get coffee. Upon entering Dunkin Donuts, McGarry immediately recognized Cottrell, who was ordering coffee at the register with two companions, Diane Lawson and Fred Halcomb. McGarry was familiar with Cottrell, having had several previous encounters with him, including arresting Cottrell for possession with intent to distribute marijuana earlier that year. More significantly, Lt. Amy Prock of the Myrtle Beach Police Department had recently notified McGarry that Cottrell had been identified as a possible suspect 1 in the shooting death of Rick Hartman, whose body had been found in a rural part of Horry County roughly a month earlier.

Upon recognizing Cottrell, McGarry informed Guthinger that Cottrell was identified as a suspect in a shooting and that he was possibly carrying a gun. Rather than proceed in line to get coffee, McGarry and Guthinger exited the Dunkin Donuts and approached Cottrell on the sidewalk as he stepped out the door. McGarry asked Cottrell whether he remembered him, and then inquired as to whether he had taken care of the previous charges for which McGarry had arrested him. Cottrell indicated they were all taken care of. At that point, McGarry asked Cottrell for his identification and informed him he was going to run an NCIC check to see if Cottrell had any outstanding warrants.

While waiting for a response from the dispatcher after calling in Cottrell’s information, McGarry indicated to Cottrell that he was going to perform a pat-down for weapons. Cottrell told McGarry “no” before turning and walking away toward another vehicle driven by Donnie Morgan, who was part of Cottrell’s group but unknown to the officers at the time. Cottrell’s right hand was somewhere near the front of his waistband as he turned and walked away.2 McGarry then immediately began yelling for Cottrell to stop and show his hands. When Cottrell did not comply, McGarry unholstered his weapon and again commanded Cottrell to show his hands. With Cottrell’s back still turned to him, McGarry reholstered his weapon and rushed towards Cottrell from behind, struggling to grab Cottrell’s right hand which was near the front of his waistband, while McGarry’s left hand was somewhere on Cottrell’s upper back or shoulder, attempting to gain control of him.

The pair stumbled and separated as they slid toward the rear of the Morgan vehicle. As they regained their balance and squared up, Cottrell raised a .45 caliber handgun and fired a shot, striking McGarry in the face from eight to twelve inches away. The shot incapacitated McGarry, who fell backwards and struck his head on the pavement.3

Immediately upon seeing Cottrell shoot McGarry, Guthinger drew his weapon and fired several shots at Cottrell, striking him in the leg as Cottrell sought cover behind Morgan’s car.4 Guthinger and Cottrell continued to exchange gunfire, and numerous vehicles and nearby buildings were struck by bullets. At some point during the shootout, Cottrell told Guthinger he was surrendering, prompting Guthinger to leave his protected position to place him under arrest. However, as he approached, Cottrell reloaded his firearm and resumed shooting at Guthinger, who retreated to cover and called for backup.

Cottrell fled the scene and responding officers engaged in a high speed chase through Myrtle Beach until his getaway vehicle was brought to a halt using stop sticks to disable the tires, and he was placed under arrest. Police recovered the .45 caliber weapon that was forensically matched to the bullet which killed McGarry, along with another loaded .357 revolver in the backseat. Officers attempted to perform CPR on McGarry, but he passed away in the Dunkin Donuts parking lot.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/sc-supreme-court/1883473.html

James Bryant South Carolina Death Row

james bryant

James Bryant was sentenced to death by the State of South Carolina for the murder of a police officer. According to court documents James Bryant would get into a physical altercation with Horry County police Cpl. Dennis Lyden that would end with the Officer being fatally shot. James Bryant would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

South Carolina Death Row Inmate List

James Bryant 2021 Information

Admission Date: 10/09/2004

Location: Broad River

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In June 2000, Cpl. Dennis Lyden of the Horry County Police Department (“Cpl. Lyden”) was placing Bryant under arrest for driving with a suspended license when Bryant suddenly turned and wrestled Cpl. Lyden to the ground.  During the course of the struggle, Bryant managed to obtain Cpl. Lyden’s flashlight and pistol magazine from the officer’s duty belt and used them to severely beat Cpl. Lyden about the head.  After beating the officer unconscious, Bryant took Cpl. Lyden’s pistol from his holster and shot him in the head at close range.  Bryant drove off, taking the pistol and the pistol magazine with him and leaving Cpl. Lyden’s body where it had fallen.  After an extensive manhunt, Horry County law enforcement apprehended Bryant the next day. 

https://law.justia.com/cases/south-carolina/supreme-court/2007/26278.html

Stephen Bryant South Carolina Death Row

stephen bryant

Stephen Bryant was sentenced to death by the State of South Carolina for a triple murder. According to court documents Stephen Bryant would murder Willard Tietjen, 62, Clifton Gainey, 26, and Christopher Burgess, 35 over the course of a month. Stephen Bryant would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

South Carolina Death Row Inmate List

Stephen Bryant 2021 Information

Admission Date: 10/31/2005

Location: Broad River

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The killer taunted investigators, scrawling in blood on one dead man’s wall: “Victem .4 in 2 weeks. Catch me if u can.”

Stephen Bryant was on probation for burglary when he killed three people and shot a fourth.

He lit candles around the body and laughed when the man’s daughter called and asked to speak with her father. “You can’t,” he told her. “I killed him three hours ago.”

Investigators said they may never know why Stephen Bryant, who was on probation after 18 months in prison for burglary, started killing in 2004.

He pleaded guilty last month, and a judge will decide Thursday whether he’ll get life in prison or the death penalty for three murders and a nonfatal shooting in a small South Carolina community.

His three victims were found over the course of a week, within 5 miles of each other in the rural western part of Sumter County, where dirt and gravel roads crisscross in the woods between Shaw Air Force Base and a state forest.

One other victim survived. Clinton Brown, then 56, was shot in the back while fishing from a riverbank. He drove himself to the hospital.

“People were very much in an uproar,” said retired sheriff Tommy Mims.

Defense attorney Jack Howle has asked the judge to spare Bryant’s life, saying he never recovered from sexual abuse as a child. Bryant started using drugs again about a month before the killings, including smoking marijuana joints after spraying them with bug spray. Bryant also wrote a long letter apologizing to one victim’s widow.

The most chilling murder was that of Willard Tietjen, 62, who was shot nine times. Bryant confessed he knocked on Tietjen’s door and told him his truck had overheated. The two spoke about religion and the Masons for hours before Bryant started shooting.

He spent a few more hours ransacking the home, dipping the corner of a pot holder made by Tietjen’s daughter in Tietjen’s blood to scrawl messages and using a pen to write other notes taunting investigators.

Tietjen’s widow, Mildred, testified that Bryant answered her husband’s cell phone, identified himself as the prowler and said her husband was dead.

When Tietjen’s daughter, Kimberly Dees, said that when she called a few minutes later, he told her he was having a wonderful day. When she asked to speak to her dad, Bryant told her she couldn’t because he’d killed him, then laughed as he hung up the phone.

Also killed during Bryant’s spree was his pal, 36-year-old Clifton Gainey, who was shot in the back on the side of a dirt road as he relieved himself, then again in the head as he raised his hand to shield his face. Bryant drove off in his truck with the steaks the men had just bought, prosecutors said.

Bryant also left Christopher Burgess, 35, on an isolated dirt road. His body was found the day after deputies questioned Bryant because the license plate on a truck making the strange stops around the county was traced back to him.

Bryant told authorities the men threatened him, but investigators said they have no evidence of that. A psychiatrist testified during the sentencing hearing that Bryant suffers from paranoia.

Debbie DuRant said she figures Bryant is just evil, said she saw it in his eyes when he drove up the half-mile driveway from a gravel road to her house claiming he was a contractor and couldn’t find the house where he was supposed to be working.

DuRant said she couldn’t help him and asked him to please drive away slowly because her dogs were in the yard. It was a cover story to get his license plate number.

Gainey’s body was found about a mile away a few days later. DuRant, her husband and two daughters, then in middle school, all slept in an upstairs bedroom for the next few days with their dogs and loaded guns in easy reach. The family packed up and stayed about 10 miles away in Sumter until Bryant was arrested, DuRant said.

Even today, DuRant’s oldest daughter, now a sophomore in college, won’t stay in their home by herself.

“I’m not scared of very much at all,” DuRant said. “But for that week, we lived in absolute fear.”

https://www.goupstate.com/article/NC/20080911/News/605185831/SJ

Marion Bowman South Carolina Death Row

marion bowman

Marion Bowman would be sentenced to death by the State of South Carolina for the murder of a young mother. According to court documents Marion Bowman would shoot Kandee Martin, put her body into the trunk of a car and set the vehicle on fire. Marion Bowman would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

South Carolina Death Row Inmate List

Marion Bowman 2021 Information

Admission Date: 5/23/2002

Location: Broad River

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On February 17, 2001, Kandee Martin’s (victim’s) body was found in the trunk of her burned car.   She had been shot to death before being placed in the trunk.

The previous day, several people gathered at Hank Koger’s house to socialize and drink alcohol.   Appellant, who was wearing black pants, arrived at Koger’s house around 11:00 a.m. that day.   He subsequently left to purchase meat.   When appellant returned, he became upset because his gun had been moved.   He accused James Tywan Gadson (Gadson) 1 of taking the gun out of the trash barrel located on Koger’s property.   Hiram Johnson intervened and told appellant he had moved the gun.   The gun was a .380 caliber pistol that appellant had purchased a few weeks before in the presence of Gadson and Travis Felder.   After retrieving his gun, appellant left Koger’s house.

Later that afternoon, appellant was riding in the car of his sister, Yolanda Bowman, with another woman, Katrina West. Appellant, who had a gun in his back pocket, was sitting in the back seat.   He instructed Yolanda to park beside the victim’s car.   At the time, the victim was speaking to a man.   Appellant tried to get the victim’s attention, but she indicated to him that he should wait a moment.   The man, Yolanda, and Katrina testified as to what appellant said next.   The man stated that appellant said, “Fuck waiting a minute.   I’m about to kill this bitch.”   Yolanda stated that appellant said, “Fuck it, that bitch.   That bitch be dead by dark.”   Katrina stated that appellant said, “Fuck that ride.   That bitch be dead by dark fall.”   After appellant’s comments, Yolanda drove away and appellant informed her the victim owed him money.

Around 7:30 p.m. that evening, Tywan Gadson saw appellant riding with the victim in her car.   They stopped and appellant told Gadson to get in.   Gadson had been drinking alcohol since 1:00 and was “feeling in good shape.”   The victim stopped for gas and they drove off without paying.   Appellant allegedly instructed the victim where to drive and instructed her to stop on Nursery Road. Gadson and appellant then exited the vehicle and walked down the road while the victim remained in the car.   Appellant told Gadson he was going to kill the victim because she had on a wire.   The victim then came down the road, grabbed appellant’s arm and stated she was scared.   At this point, a car drove by and they all jumped into the woods.   Then, the victim started walking to the car with appellant following her.   Appellant allegedly shot his gun three times.   Gadson stated the victim ran toward him and then stopped and faced appellant and told him to please not shoot her anymore because she had a child to take care of.   Gadson stated appellant shot two more times.   The victim fell to the ground and appellant dragged her body into the woods.   Gadson stated he jumped into the car.

Afterwards, appellant and Gadson parked the victim’s car and later retrieved Yolanda’s car.   They then went to a store to purchase beer and went back to Koger’s house around 8:00 p.m. Later, Gadson stayed at Koger’s house and appellant left.   Around 11:30 p.m., appellant and Hiram Johnson approached James Gadson, Gadson’s father.   Appellant gave him money to buy four pairs of gloves.

Appellant, Gadson, Hiram Johnson, and Darian Williams, then drove to Murray’s Club in the victim’s car.   Appellant handed out the gloves for the occupants to wear and stated he had stolen the car.   They reached the club around midnight.   Once at the club, appellant tried to sell the victim’s car.   Appellant, according to Hiram Johnson, said, “I killed Kandee, heh, heh, heh.”   Appellant had a gun with him while at the club.   They left the club an hour or two after arriving there.

Three people, Carolyn Brown, Valorna Smith, and Travis Felder, left the club together.   They stopped by a gas station about 3:00 a.m. before proceeding to Valorna’s home.   Not long after they were there, appellant knocked on the door and asked for Travis.   Travis left and came back after a few minutes.   He seemed normal upon his return.

Travis testified appellant, who was wearing black jeans at the time, stated he needed Travis’ help to park a car which turned out to be the victim’s car.   Travis followed appellant to Nursery Road. Appellant parked the car, went into the woods and pulled the victim’s body out by her feet.   Appellant then put her body in the trunk.   While putting her body in the trunk, Travis saw a gun tucked into appellant’s waist.   Appellant allegedly told Travis, “you didn’t think I did it, did you?”   Travis testified appellant also stated, “I killed Kandee Martin.”   Appellant lit the car on fire.   Travis then took appellant to his home and went back to Valorna’s house.2

A resident of Nursery Road who had previously heard gunshots was awakened late in the night by a loud noise.   He investigated and discovered a car on fire.   The fire was reported at 3:54 a.m. There were .380 Winchester cartridge casings found not far from the scene.   The casings, a blood stain, and a shoe were located with the help of a man who had driven by and seen the victim’s car stopped on the road around 8:00 p.m. the previous evening.

The next day, police arrested appellant at his wife’s house and seized his black pants.   His wife testified he had been wearing the pants when he arrived at the house.   They found a wristwatch belonging to the victim in appellant’s pants.

After the police left, appellant’s wife, Dorothy Bowman, found appellant’s gun in a chair in her home.   She allegedly gave the gun to appellant’s father.   The next day, appellant’s father, Yolanda, and appellant’s other sister, Kendra, took the gun and dropped it off a bridge into the Edisto River.   It was later retrieved from the Edisto River and determined to be the gun that was used in the murder.

The arson investigator testified there was the presence of a heavy petroleum product on appellant’s jeans, but the product was not gasoline.   The items found in the car had gasoline on them indicating that was the product used to start the fire.

While the following evidence did not come out during the guilt phase, during the sentencing phase, a video was introduced during Travis Felder’s testimony.   The video showed Travis purchasing gasoline in a gasoline can at about 3:14 a.m. Appellant was not with him on the video.   Travis stated appellant gave him the can for the gas and told him he needed $2-3 worth.   When appellant set fire to the victim’s car, he retrieved the gas can from Travis’ car.

At the conclusion of the guilt phase, the jury found appellant guilty of murder and third-degree arson.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/sc-supreme-court/1165608.html

Ricky Blackwell South Carolina Death Row

ricky blackwell

Ricky Blackwell was sentenced to death by the State of South Carolina for the murder of a child. According to court documents Ricky Blackwell would grab eight year old Heather Brooke Center, shoot the little girl in the head and then proceed to shoot her three more times before shooting himself. Ricky Blackwell would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

South Carolina Death Row Inmate List

Ricky Blackwell 2021 Information

Admission Date: 03/17/2014

Location: Broad River

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An 8-year-old girl who wanted to spend Wednesday afternoon swimming was brutally shot to death by the estranged husband of her father’s girlfriend, authorities say.

The Spartanburg County Sheriff’s Office plans to charge 50-year-old Ricky Lee Blackwell, of 248 Ridings Road, with murder and kidnapping once he recovers from surgery.

Officials said Blackwell grabbed the child, put her in a headlock and shot her once in the head not far from his double-wide mobile home. The man proceeded to shoot her at least three more times as she was falling to the ground, and perhaps while she was on the ground, Spartanburg County Coroner Rusty Clevenger said.

The tragedy occurred about 3 p.m. on 244 Ridings Road — a narrow road in a rural area of Spartanburg County not far south of Highway 11 between Chesnee and New Prospect. A few mobile homes are the only dwellings on the road.

Blackwell and his wife used to live together on Ridings Road, though the two are now separated. Their adult daughter lives in a unit nearby, at 244 Ridings Road — the scene of the crime.

Blackwell’s estranged wife brought her boyfriend’s child, Heather, to 244 Ridings Road Wednesday afternoon to go swimming.

“When she got here, her estranged husband showed up — he lives next door — I don’t know if he saw her pull in, if he knew she was coming or what,” said Master Deputy Tony Ivey with the Sheriff’s Office said. “That’s when everything took place.”

Heather Brooke Center, 8, of 981 Lightwood Knot Road in Woodruff, died from a gunshot wound to the head, Clevenger said. He called the shooting “heinous.”

Deputies were dispatched to the scene just before 3 p.m., a criminal domestic violence call.

They arrived and saw the girl, Heather, lying facedown in a driveway. She had a gunshot wound in one leg, a pool of blood in the center of her back, and blood coming from her right ear, according to an incident report. She did not show any signs of life.

Witnesses said Blackwell fled into the nearby woods. Investigators arrived and began searching for him.

Blackwell emerged and shot himself in the side, Sheriff Chuck Wright said. When asked whether that was an attempt at suicide, Wright said he thought so.

“Once our officers got on the scene, people here, at the home, began to point in the direction of Ricky’s home and said, ‘He’s that way.’ That’s when deputies began sweeping the area,” Ivey said.

Deputies had their guns drawn and ordered the man to drop his weapon. He wouldn’t, Ivey said. They did not fire at Blackwell, Wright said.

Late Wednesday, Blackwell was just out of surgery. Wright said investigators wanted to make sure he was fully coherent before they interviewed him so there would be “no excuses” later on.

How long Blackwell and his estranged wife have been separated wasn’t immediately clear.

“It’s a bad scene,” Wright said. “You have a baby who is deceased who had nothing to do with it. It’s pitiful.”

Neighbors, who asked not to be identified, said they rarely heard any commotion from the residences over on Ridings Road.

“He must have just lost it,” one neighbor said. “I really don’t know why he done what he done. But in my mind, Ricky has always been a fine man.”

http://www.goupstate.com/article/20090709/ARTICLES/907091035/0/BLOGS