Tony Carruthers Tennessee Death Row

Tony Carruthers

Tony Carruthers was sentenced to death by the State of Tennessee for a triple murder. According to court documents Tony Carruthers and James Montgomery would kidnap Delois Anderson, her son Marcellous and friend Frederick Tucker. The two male victims were shot and Delois would be buried alive. Tony Carruthers and James Montgomery were arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. James Montgomery would be resentenced to 27 years and be released from prison.

Tennessee Death Row Inmate List

Tony Carruthers 2021 Information

Name:TONY VON CARRUTHERS
Birth Date:07/01/1967
TDOC ID:00139604
State ID Number (SID):414687

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WREG investigates how a former inmate went from death row to freedom.

In 1996, a mother, her son and his friend were kidnapped, robbed and buried alive in a cemetery.

Two men were convicted and sentenced to death, but WREG Investigator Stephanie Scurlock found out the victim’s family had no idea one of them is a free man and the other is hoping for his freedom.

Relatives of the three victims thought Tony Carruthers and James Montgomery would die behind bars.

They never thought these two would see anything beyond prison walls again.

They weren’t happy when they found out one of these killers is free and the other is knocking on freedom’s door.

“They can’t live at all. They didn’t get a second chance. They don’t have a second chance so why should he? He actually took their life,” said Randy Harris, a relative.

The Tennessee Department of Corrections opened the doors and let Montgomery walk out of prison three days before Christmas last year.

He escaped death row when an appeals court ruled he should have been given a separate trial from co-defendant Carruthers. Montgomery plead guilty to a lighter sentence of three counts of second-degree murder.

He was released this past December with time served.

The family of Delois and Marcellos Anderson believe they should have been notified immediately.

“In my eyes, that’s negligence,” said Harris.

Montgomery and Carruthers killed drug dealer Marcellos Anderson, Anderson’s mother, Delois, and his teenage friend Fred Tucker in 1994.

They were kidnapped,tortured and buried alive in a pit beneath a grave dug for someone else.

Harris said, “They smothered. You can imagine the psychological torment they went through knowing they were actually being buried alive, how horrible that was.”

Montgomery filed a motion saying new DNA evidence points the finger at two new suspects.

Carruthers then called WREG from death row. He accused the courts of intentionally delaying his hearing.

Carruthers said, “All of my appeals are over and I really need to try to reopen my post and re-litigate some claims that I was denied on my first post.”

The judge denied Carruther’s a hearing, but those who process court documents don’t expect him to stop trying especially since the man who accompanied him in those brutal crimes found his way out of prison.

“I didn’t have any idea that he was going to be free. How many people during our time do we know that actually be facing 3, possibly 4 murder charges and get released,” said Harris.

Harris said he wants to know why no one was notified about Montgomery’s release.

District Attorney Amy Weirich’s office told WREG it’s not its responsibility to notify families.

We then turned to the Department of Corrections for answers.

A spokesperson emailed us, “Victim parties must be registered with TDOC in order to receive notifications. This is to ensure only those who wish to receive information about an offender are contacted.”

T-DOC said one victim registered and a notification letter about Montgomery’s pending release was sent on October 13, 2015.

“For security reasons. This is a man that is supposedly a threat to our family and anybody that comes in association with him is a threat to our family,” said Harris.

Harris said the person notified about the release was not from his family.

“As a family, we’re in limbo. We don’t know whether to open the door and who is going to be outside the door, you understand what I mean,” said Harris.

He added, “That’s negligence on the state’s behalf not to contact the family.”

WREG tried to find out Montgomery’s whereabouts and we were told by the Department of Corrections it doesn’t know. Montgomery is free to go anywhere because he was released with no parole and no probation.

WREG talked to the chief prosecutor who tried the case against Carruthers and Montgomery.

He has since retired and said he is not surprised at their release since they had nothing but time to sit behind bars and figure out a way to get released.

The state of Tennessee does allow for notification of releases but you must request it.  You can do so here.

https://wreg.com/news/memphis-man-convicted-of-triple-murder-goes-from-death-row-to-freedom/

Kevin Burns Tennessee Death Row

kevin burns

Kevin Burns was sentenced to death by the State of Tennessee for the murders of two people. According to court documents the two victims, Damond Dawson and Tracey Johnson, were sitting in a car with two others when Kevin Burns and another man approached them. Kevin Burns would demand the group hand over money and jewelry. Other men came out from behind the bushes and the car was surrounded. Kevin Burns would open fire killing the two victims. Kevin Burns was arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Tennessee Death Row Inmate List

Kevin Burns 2021 Information

Name:KEVIN BURNS
Birth Date:04/20/1969
TDOC ID:00254315
State ID Number (SID):433217

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On April 20, 1992, four young men, Damond Dawson, Tracey Johnson, Eric Thomas, and Tommie Blackman, were sitting in a car in Dawson’s driveway in Memphis.   Dawson was in the driver’s seat, Johnson was in the front passenger seat, Thomas was in the back seat behind Dawson, and Blackman was in the back seat behind Johnson.

The defendant, Kevin Burns, and Carlito Adams, who knew Blackman, walked up to the passenger side of the car.   Adams pulled out a handgun and told Blackman to get out of the car.   When Blackman refused, Burns pulled out a handgun and went around to the driver’s side of the car.   Blackman got out of the car and fled.   Adams said “get him,” and three or four more men appeared from behind hedges and fired at Blackman.

Eric Jones, age fourteen, was playing basketball at Dawson’s house with three friends.   Jones saw the men in the car removing jewelry and pulling money from their pockets.   Seconds later, Jones saw Blackman running toward him.   Amidst gunshots, Jones and Blackman escaped to the back of the house;  Jones’ three friends ran to an adjacent yard.   Once inside the house, Jones heard seven or eight more gunshots.

Mary Jones, Eric Jones’ mother, lived across the street from the Dawsons.   She saw Adams shoot Johnson once in the chest.   She saw Kevin Burns shoot Dawson several times, walk to the front of the car, and then shoot Dawson again.   Ms. Jones unequivocally identified Burns and stated that she got “a real good look in his face” as he ran toward her after the shootings.

Tracey Johnson died at the scene.   Damond Dawson, who suffered five gunshots to his arm, buttocks, chest, and hip was alive when police arrived but died after being transported to the hospital.   Eric Thomas, who sustained gunshots to his chest and stomach, survived and made a photo identification of Kevin Burns two days after the incident.   Thomas testified that Burns and the others had “opened fire” after robbing him and his friends of their jewelry and money.   Thomas said that he initially told police he had been shot by Adams, but explained that he believed he was going to die and gave police the only name he knew, which was Adams.

On June 23, 1992, Burns was found in Chicago and arrested.   After being advised of his rights and signing a waiver, the defendant gave a statement in which he admitted his role in the killings.   He said that he had received a telephone call from Kevin Shaw, who told him that four men had “jumped” Shaw’s cousin.   Burns, Shaw, and four others intended to fight the four men, and Shaw gave Burns a .32 caliber handgun.   As the others approached a car with four men sitting in it, Burns stayed behind.   He heard a shot, saw a man running across the yard, and fired three shots.   He then left the scene with the other men.

After the guilt phase of the trial, the jury deliberated and returned verdicts of guilty for two counts of felony murder and two counts of attempted felony murder.   The trial moved into the penalty phase of the proceedings for the jury to determine the punishment for each of the felony murder convictions.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/tn-supreme-court/1021537.html

Andre Bland Tennessee Death Row

andre bland

Andre Bland was sentenced to death by the State of Tennessee for the murder of a man. According to court documents Andre Bland was among a group of men who attempted to rob a pair of men. When the victim attempted to intervene he was shot and killed by Andre Bland. Andre Bland was arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Tennessee Death Row Inmate List

Andre Bland 2021 Information

Name:ANDRE S. BLAND
Birth Date:09/15/1973
TDOC ID:00232838
State ID Number (SID):

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The evidence presented at the guilt phase of the trial established that on the evening of October 9, 1992, the defendant, then nineteen years old, along with Darryl Bailey, Martell Pollard, Carlos Sanders, and two men known only as Steve and Yogi, attended a crap game at the apartment of Charles Sanders in the Southbrook Apartment Complex in Memphis.   When the crap game ended around 10:00 p.m., these young men wandered outside and, at some point between 10:30 and 11:30 p.m., decided to rob two strangers, Earnest Norman and Marcel Nugent, whom they had seen arriving at the complex earlier.   Nugent had come along to the complex with Norman to visit a friend.   Norman and Nugent both testified that when they arrived, four to six men were standing around in the parking lot, and as they were nearing Norman’s car to leave about thirty minutes later, the group of men approached them, asked who they were, where they were from, and whether they had any money.   When Norman and Nugent ignored the group of men, one of the defendant’s party struck Norman in the back of the head as he was about to get into his car.   Norman fled.   As he ran, Norman realized he was being pursued by one of the men, and he heard someone urging another person to shoot, and then heard a gun fire.   Norman escaped unhurt to a nearby service station and called 911.

In the meantime, Nugent, who had locked himself inside Norman’s car, found himself trapped and surrounded by the group of men as they tried to force him out of the car.   About this time, the victim of the murder, twenty-year-old Ontrain (Terry) Sanders,4 drove into the parking lot, got out of his car, and approached the men surrounding Nugent.   According to Nugent, the men said something to Sanders, who turned and headed back to his car without replying.   The defendant then fired a gun, hitting Sanders in his right leg.   Bleeding profusely, Sanders fled some 273 feet, almost 100 yards, through the apartment complex.   The defendant and Darryl Bailey jogged after Sanders who was limping from the leg injury.   When, during the chase, the defendant shot Sanders in the leg again, Sanders attempted to hide under a pickup truck.   However, Sanders was discovered and the defendant shot him at least two or three more times while he lay underneath the truck.   The defendant and Darryl Bailey then left Sanders, under the truck, pleading for help, and ran back around the apartment complex to the car where Nugent was trapped.

Upon hearing gunfire, Henry Adams, who lived in an upstairs apartment, looked out his back door and saw a man with a large shiny gun kneeling down as if shooting under the truck.   Adams heard three shots fired, then saw the man with the gun turn and run.   Hearing a man screaming, “Oh God, please help me,” Adams called 911 just after midnight.   When Adams returned to his back door to look out into the parking lot, he saw someone trying to crawl out from underneath the pickup truck, and heard the person yelling and pleading for help for a short while longer.

Floyd P. Johnson owned the green pickup truck under which Sanders had taken refuge, and Johnson’s upstairs apartment also overlooked the area in which the shooting occurred.   Johnson testified that after hearing three gunshots, he looked out his window and saw a man lying partially under his truck with his upper body exposed and covered in blood.   Johnson testified that the man was calling out, “Oh God, help me!”   Because he feared for his own safety, Johnson stayed on his balcony, but attempted to calm Sanders down by talking to him and encouraging him to remain still.   Johnson said he talked with Sanders for ten or fifteen minutes until the ambulance arrived.

While Sanders fought for his life under the truck, the defendant and Darryl Bailey returned to Norman’s car.   Bailey helped the group of men break through the passenger window and pull Nugent from the automobile.   Nugent scuffled with the men before breaking free.   As Nugent fled, his jacket was pulled off his back.   According to Martell Pollard when someone shouted, “he has a gun,” the defendant shot Nugent in the leg.   The men then took his watch and his money, kicked him, beat him, and finally, the defendant again shot Nugent in the leg.   The group of men then disbanded, leaving Nugent lying in the parking lot.   Nugent made it upstairs to the apartment of Norman’s friend, where he waited until an ambulance arrived.

The first ambulance on the scene transported Sanders to the hospital.   One of the paramedics testified that the unit arrived nine minutes after receiving the call, but Sanders’ condition was very grave at the time of their arrival.   Sanders died in the ambulance on the way to the hospital.

Two days later, at the urging of his mother and grandmother and after learning that the police were looking for him, the defendant turned himself into the Memphis Police Department on the afternoon of October 12, 1992, approximately two days after the killing.   At that time, the defendant gave a statement in which he confessed to shooting Nugent and Sanders with a chrome 9-millimeter pistol.   The following is the defendant’s account of the crime:

Me, Little Darryl, Carlos’ daddy, Carlos, and a guy named Pat were shooting dice.   We were inside Carlos Sanders’ house inside the Southbrook Apartments.   Little Steve knocked on the door and he came out and got the 9-millimeter pistol that I had.   By that time I got up and came outdoors and got the gun from Little Steve.   And Yogi approached me saying he was fixing to rob dude that was up in the house.   Carlos, Martell, Yogi, Darryl, Steve and me were standing out there, and Yogi was telling us he was going to rob the dude.   I gave him the gun, the 9-millimeter.   By that time the dudes had come out the apartment.   Yogi approached him saying something to him, and then they got into physical contact.   Then he hit the dude and the dude broke loose and ran.   The other dude got in the car and locked himself in.   Steve and Darryl grabbed objects from the ground and started hitting the car window.   Darryl pulled the dude up out of the car.   Steve, Yogi, Darryl, Carlos, Martell, they was hitting the dude with objects they picked up.   I got the gun back from Yogi, and the dude in the Cadillac [the victim] drove up and jumped out and started towards us.   And then I shot him in his leg.   Then he went around the building and I went around the building and shot him in his leg again.   And then he had tried crawl up under a truck and I shot him again.   Then he continued up under the truck.   I went back around the corner, and they was continuing to beat the dude that got out of the car.   Then I walked up and shot in both his legs.   I wasn’t shooting to kill, that’s why I shot them in their leg.   I turned around, threw the gun and ran to the Kings Gate Apartments over to my girlfriend house, Teresa Wiggs ․ and then we went to sleep.

When asked by the police why he shot Sanders the first time, the defendant replied, “Because when they was beating on the dude, he jumped out and approached us and said, ‘What’s up?’   And I turned around and I shot him in his leg.”   The defendant said that he shot Nugent “so he couldn’t get away.”   The defendant denied getting any money or valuables from either Sanders or Nugent or being involved in the robbery.   He knew the other men “went in the dude pockets” but did not know if they got anything.   Nugent, however, testified that he was robbed.   In addition, police found an unemployment check, a bloody dollar bill and assorted change, keys, and a black cap near the pickup truck where Sanders was killed.   Sanders’ wallet was also missing and never found.

Dr. Sandra Elkins, a forensic pathologist who had performed the autopsy on Sanders, testified that the cause of his death was multiple gunshot wounds, one of which lacerated his femoral artery and caused him to bleed to death.   Dr. Elkins found nine separate gunshot wounds to the victim’s right leg, extending from the groin area of the upper thigh to just above the knee, which included both entrance and exit wounds.   From the combination of entrance and exit wounds, Dr. Elkins deduced that the victim had actually been shot four or five times.   A person with the victim’s injuries, Dr. Elkins testified, could live from two to fifteen minutes and be conscious four to five minutes after suffering such a wound.

Based upon the proof summarized above, the jury found the defendant guilty of first degree premeditated murder, especially aggravated robbery, attempted first degree murder, and attempted aggravated robbery.

The trial proceeded to the sentencing phase on the conviction for first degree murder.   The State presented two witnesses.   Dr. Elkins again testified that someone with the victim’s injury could live from two to fifteen minutes and be conscious up to four to five minutes.   Since the victim’s femoral nerve had only been bruised and not severed, and because the muscles and nerves of his right thigh had been completely destroyed, Dr. Elkins testified that the victim would have experienced pain from the wounds in his leg during the time he remained conscious.

The second State witness was the victim’s mother, Vivian Lewis, a deaf mute who testified through an interpreter.   She testified that her son was sweet and good and had never been in any trouble.   She said that the victim’s two small daughters, two-years-old and four-years-old at the time of trial, were “very, very worried” and wanted to see their father.   Lewis also testified that her son’s murder had left his family “very, very hurt.”

The defense presented three witnesses:  the defendant’s mother, Marilyn Boyd;  his maternal grandmother, Virginia Bland;  and the defendant himself.   The defendant had never known his father and was raised by his mother and grandmother, who both testified that he had turned himself into the police at their urging.   The defendant had dropped out of high school in the eleventh grade, when he was suspended for being “disrespectful to a teacher.”   He had a juvenile record beginning at the age of eleven, consisting of multiple assaults and batteries, car thefts, and at least one drug conviction.   The defendant testified that he shot the victim because the victim ran back to his car as if he was “fixing to get his gun or something;” that he did not know why he and Darryl had followed the victim;  that he had been drinking and the crime was a spur of the moment decision;  and that the victim was shot several times because the automatic gun “kept on repeating shots.”   He expressed remorse and repeated that he was not trying to kill the victim:  “[t]hat’s why I shot him in the leg.”   The defendant also admitted that he carried a gun because he sold drugs and that he had been selling drugs on the night of the killing.   During closing argument, counsel for the defendant stressed his youth, lack of education, and single parent upbringing.

 Based on the proof, the jury determined that the State had proven the existence of one aggravating circumstance beyond a reasonable doubt:  “[t]he murder was especially heinous, atrocious or cruel in that it involved torture or serious physical abuse beyond that necessary to produce death.”   Tenn.Code Ann. § 39-13-204(i)(5) (1991 Repl. & 1996 Supp.).   In addition, the jury found that the aggravating circumstance outweighed the mitigating circumstances beyond a reasonable doubt, and as a result, sentenced the defendant to death by electrocution.   The trial court entered a judgment in accordance with the jury’s verdict and the Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed.5  After reviewing the record and considering the errors assigned by the defendant, we affirm the judgment of the trial court and Court of Criminal Appeals.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/tn-supreme-court/1448819.html

Byron Black Tennessee Death Row

byron black

Byron Black was sentenced to death by the State of Tennessee for a triple murder. According to court documents Byron Black would murder his girlfriend, Angela Clay, and her two daughters, Latoya, 9, and Lakeisha Clay, 6. Byron Black would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Tennessee Death Row Inmate List

Byron Black 2021 Information

Name:BYRON LEWIS BLACK
Birth Date:03/23/1956
TDOC ID:00126220
State ID Number (SID):

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The Defendant was the boyfriend of Angela Clay, who had separated from her husband, Bennie Clay, about a year before her death. Bennie Clay was the father of Latoya and Lakeisha. Bennie Clay testified that at the time of Angela Clay’s death, he and Angela were attempting to reconcile, but the Defendant was an obstacle to the reconciliation. He further testified that Angela began a relationship with the Defendant after their separation and that at times she was seeing both the Defendant and himself. In December, 1986, the Defendant and Bennie Clay had an altercation during a dispute over Angela. As Bennie Clay was returning to his car, the Defendant shot at him. One shot hit the car, another hit Clay in the right foot, and another shot hit him in the back of his left arm. The bullet that went through his left arm lodged under his collar bone. Clay testified that he started running up the street and the Defendant chased him, continuing to shoot. Clay was finally unable *171 to run any farther. He fell down, and the Defendant stood over him and had cocked the gun when Angela Clay ran up to the Defendant and pushed him away. Angela then took Bennie Clay to the hospital, where he remained for seven days. The Defendant pled guilty to the shooting and received the workhouse sentence, which included weekend furloughs.

On Friday afternoon around 5:30 p.m., March 25, 1988, the Defendant was released from the workhouse on a weekend furlough. He returned to the workhouse on the evening of Monday, March 28, at approximately 5:15 p.m. after the murders were committed, but before the bodies were discovered.

Angela and her two daughters were last seen Sunday evening around 11 p.m. Angela’s sister, Lenette Bell, had borrowed Angela’s car on Sunday. Angela was employed at Vanderbilt Hospital, where she worked from 1:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. daily. Lenette Bell arranged to pick up Angela at the hospital at 10 p.m. When Lenette Bell arrived at the hospital, the Defendant was also waiting there for Angela. Angela’s children, who were with Lenette Bell while their mother was working, chose to ride with the Defendant and their mother from the hospital. The Defendant drove Angela and her two daughters to the home of Amelia Bell, the mother and grandmother of the victims. Ms. Bell testified that the Defendant left her house in his car, and that her daughter and granddaughters left her house in her daughter’s car about 10:20 p.m. Angela returned about 11 p.m. to pick up an iron she had forgotten. That was the last time Ms. Bell saw her daughter alive. Lenette Bell testified that Angela telephoned her at approximately 11:20 p.m. that evening. That was the last time any of the witnesses spoke to the deceased before her untimely death.

When Ms. Bell’s daughter failed to return the iron the next morning, she telephoned her daughter but got no answer. She continued to call Angela throughout the day but received no answer. She became concerned and asked another daughter to drive to Angela’s apartment. No one answered her knocks at the door. Ms. Bell made other telephone calls to try to locate her daughter and then went to her daughter’s apartment with Lenette Bell, but no one responded to their knocks on the door. All the shades were drawn and Angela’s car was parked outside of her apartment. It was then they decided to call the police.

The police arrived at approximately 9:30 p.m. on Monday evening, March 28, 1988, and found no signs of forced entry into the apartment; the door was locked. Officer James was able to open a window after prying off a bedroom window screen. All the lights were off. He shined a flashlight into a child’s room and saw a pool of blood on the bed and the body of a small child on the floor. He exited the room, and officers secured the scene.

Investigation revealed the bodies of Angela and her nine year old daughter, Latoya, in the master bedroom. Angela, who was lying in the bed, had apparently been shot once in the top of the head as she slept and was rendered unconscious immediately and died within minutes. Dr. Charles Harlan, Chief Medical Examiner for Davidson County, testified that she was probably shot from a distance of six to twelve inches and that her gunshot wound was the type usually caused by a large caliber bullet.

Latoya’s body was found partially on the bed and partially off the bed, wedged between the bed and a chest of drawers. She had been shot once through the neck and chest. Blood on her pillow and a bullet hole in the bedding indicated she had been lying on the bed when shot. Dr. Harlan testified that she was shot from a distance of greater than twenty-four inches from the skin surface. The bullet path and type of shot indicated that death was not instantaneous but likely occurred within three to ten minutes after her being shot. Bullet fragments were recovered from her left lung. Both victims were under the bedcovers when they were shot.

The body of Lakeisha, age six, was found in the second bedroom lying facedown on the floor next to her bed. She had been shot twice, once in the chest, once in the *172 pelvic area. Dr. Harlan testified that she had died from bleeding as a result of a gunshot wound to the chest. She was shot from a distance of six to twelve inches and died within five to thirty minutes after being shot. Abrasions on her arm indicated a bullet had grazed her as she sought to protect herself from the attacker. Bullet holes and blood stains on the bed indicated that she was lying in bed when shot and had moved from the bed to the floor after being shot. There were bloody finger marks down the rail running from the head of the bed to the foot of the bed. The size of the wounds and the absence of bullet casings indicated that a large caliber revolver had been used to kill the victims.

One projectile was collected from the pillow where Latoya was apparently lying at the time she was shot. Fragments of projectiles were collected from the wall above Angela’s head; others were collected from the mattress where Lakeisha was found.

The receiver from the kitchen telephone was found in the master bedroom. The telephone from the master bedroom was lying in the hallway between the two bedrooms. The Defendant’s fingerprints were the only prints recovered from the telephones. Two of his fingerprints were found on the phone in the hallway, and one was on the kitchen telephone receiver found in the master bedroom.

Angela Clay’s upstairs neighbors, Patricia Meacham and her nineteen-year-old daughter, Donzaloe Gardner, reported that between 1:00 and 1:30 a.m. on March 28 they had been awakened by four loud noises, two in quick succession followed by a pause of 30 seconds, then two more noises which “sounded like somebody had a hammer hitting on a countertop real hard.” The noises were so loud they both arose from bed and looked out the window but saw nothing. The noises seemed to come from the apartment below.

The evidence connecting the Defendant to the killings was circumstantial. There was evidence that the relationship between Angela and the Defendant had not been tranquil. For example, in October 1987, the Defendant had kicked in the front door of Angela’s apartment when she did not let him in. Sometime later he told Angela, “If I can’t have you, won’t nobody have you.” Three weeks before the murders, Angela’s neighbor, Patricia Meacham, had heard the Defendant knocking on the door and the window of Angela’s apartment and threatening to kick the door in. The Friday before the killings, Angela and the Defendant were seen arguing.

Around midnight the night the bodies were discovered, police went to the Metropolitan Workhouse to interview the Defendant. When informed by a detective that his girlfriend had been found murdered in her apartment, the Defendant looked shocked, distraught, was visibly upset, and began crying. When two other detectives entered the room, Defendant’s whole demeanor changed, the tears ceased, and he became “dull.” He stated that the last time he had seen Angela was Sunday, March 27, at about 10 p.m., when he dropped her off at her mother’s house after picking her up at work. He then went to Charlotte Waldon’s residence, where he had a late supper with her and other friends. He stated he left Ms. Waldon’s house about 11:30 p.m., drove to his mother’s apartment where he slept until 6:30 a.m. Monday. Defendant was cooperative and willingly turned over to the police what he claimed was his “only gun,” a nine shot .22 caliber Ruger he said he had used to shoot Bennie Clay.

Charlotte Waldon and several other witnesses testified that the Defendant came to Ms. Waldon’s at approximately 8:30 p.m., ate dinner, and left at approximately 9:30 p.m. He did not come back again that evening.

After further investigation, two formal taped statements were taken from the Defendant. The first interview was conducted at approximately 6:30 Tuesday morning, March 29. In the first statement the Defendant claimed that, after leaving Angela and the girls at Angela’s mother’s house, he had gone straight to his mother’s house, where he remained the rest of the night.

The second interview was conducted at approximately ten o’clock the same morning *173 with Defendant’s attorney present. In his second statement, the Defendant said that he dropped off Angela and her two children at her mother’s house. He then stated that he went to Angela’s apartment later Sunday night, he did not recall the exact time, and she wasn’t there. He sat out in front of the apartment in his car for a short period of time and then left. He returned a second time, saw Angela’s car and, finding the door open, went inside the apartment. The Defendant stated, “I went inside and I saw all of them in there and I panicked.” He described seeing Angela, Latoya and Lakeisha lying dead in their beds with the covers over them. He said he “may have” touched the telephone while he was in the apartment. He noticed that the telephones had been thrown on the floor and remembered that he was afraid to touch them because he might get his fingerprints on them. He said he had not sought assistance for the victims because “I didn’t want to get involved.” Locking the door, he then left the apartment and drove back to his mother’s house. There, although he had just discovered his girlfriend and her children dead, in his own words, “I got me at least seven or eight hours of sleep on my mother’s couch.” The Defendant did not report the deaths or tell anyone what he had seen that night until the interview Tuesday morning.

During the interview he suggested that Bennie Clay was the murderer. Later, when police officers informed the Defendant that they could determine the caliber of the weapon used to shoot Bennie Clay, the Defendant said that he had shot Clay with a .357 Magnum, not a .22 caliber, and had thrown the weapon into the Cumberland River. He had previously told an acquaintance he had sold the gun used to shoot Bennie Clay. The same acquaintance also testified that he had seen the Defendant with a large caliber pistol in his possession four or five years before.

Bennie Clay agreed to have the bullet surgically removed from his shoulder. Clay testified that the gun used by the Defendant to shoot him had looked like a “big caliber pistol” or revolver. The slug removed from Clay was a .44 caliber bullet. Significantly, a firearms expert from the TBI testified that the.44 caliber bullet recovered from Latoya’s pillow, the .44 caliber bullet removed from Lakeisha’s body, a bullet fragment from the automobile driven by Bennie Clay the day the Defendant shot him, and the .44 caliber bullet removed from Bennie Clay’s body had all been fired from the same weapon.

The Defendant’s defense was that of alibi. His mother and nephew testified to the effect that the night the victims were murdered, the Defendant had come to his mother’s home around 11 p.m. and had remained there all night.

At the sentencing hearing the Defendant presented the testimony of a former teacher, friends, his mother, former wife, aunt and siblings that he had been a good student, a good father, a good provider, a responsible, polite, friendly, helpful, and nonviolent person whom they would support if he was given a life sentence. His brother-in-law, a minister, testified about the Defendant’s religious conversion. The psychological co-ordinator at the Metro Sheriff’s Department testified that Defendant was a “model inmate.”

https://law.justia.com/cases/tennessee/supreme-court/1991/815-s-w-2d-166-2.html

Rickey Bell Tennessee Death Row

rickey bell

Rickey Bell was sentenced to death by the State of Tennessee for the sexual assault and murder of a woman. According to court documents Rickey Bell would kidnap the victim, Starr Harris, who would be sexually assaulted and murdered. Rickey Bell was arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Tennessee Death Row Inmate List

Rickey Bell 2021 Information

Name:RICKEY ALVIS BELL
Birth Date:09/02/1979
TDOC ID:00503500
State ID Number (SID): 

Rickey Bell More News

A crime victim’s family hopes a sentencing Friday will close another chapter in their long ordeal.

Rickey Bell, who’s already sentenced to death for the 2010 murder of a Drummonds, Tennessee woman, was back in Tipton County Court.

Friday he was sentenced for kidnapping and raping of Starr Harris, the woman he murdered in 2010.

Rickey Bell was wearing a maximum-security jumpsuit from the Tennessee Department of Corrections when he entered a Tipton County courtroom Friday.

Family and friends of Starr Harris watched silently.

Bell was sentenced to death for the woman’s murder  but was brought from

Riverbend Prison in Nashville for sentencing on two non-capitol counts…especially aggravated kidnapping and aggravated sexual battery.

District Attorney General Mike Dunavant says the sentences are part of the criminal proceedings against Bell.

“We want to make sure that we get the full measure of justice against Mr. Bell that we received from the jury verdict. which includes those two counts.”

Circuit Court Judge Joe Walker considered Bell’s lengthy criminal history in sentencing him to two twenty year sentences for the non-capitol counts, time added to his death sentence.

DNA evidence connected Bell to Starr Harris’ rape and murder.

Her badly beaten body was found in the rear of her home and business in Drummonds.

Judge Walker said of Bell’s criminal history, “That he’s a dangerous offender, whose behavior indicates little or no regard for human life.”

During Friday’s sentencing Circuit Judge Joe Walker allowed an emotional video tribute to Starr Harris to be played.

The video shows the mother of three surrounded by some of the people who loved her and miss her nearly two years after her death.

People like her husband, Thomas Harris, Junior.

“That’s all we have now is pictures and videotapes and stuff like that. and I still carry her cell phone where I hear her voice, you know.”

Rickey Bell’s defense attorneys are expected to file an automatic appeal to their client’s death sentence.

https://wreg.com/news/man-on-death-row-gets-additional-sentence/