Richard Odom Tennessee Death Row

richard odom

Richard Odom was sentenced to death by the State of Tennessee for the sexual assault and murder of an elderly woman. According to court documents Richard Odom who was on the run from a murder conviction in Mississippi would grab the elderly woman while she was getting out of her car, the victim would be sexually assaulted and murdered. Richard Odom would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Tennessee Death Row Inmate List

Richard Odom 2021 Information

Name:RICHARD ODOM
Birth Date:07/13/1961
TDOC ID:00215639
State ID Number (SID): 

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On May 10, 1991, Mina Ethel Johnson’s body was found on the back seat floorboard of her car in a parking garage in Memphis, Tennessee. The victim’s lower body had been left exposed, and she was bleeding from her anus and vagina.   There were multiple stab wounds in the victim’s back and two bloody hand prints on her hips.

Sergeant Ronnie McWilliams of the Memphis Police Department testified that fingerprints found in the victim’s car led to Odom’s arrest on May 13, 1991.   A search revealed that Odom was in possession of a “large knife,” which he kept under his shirt.   Odom initially told officers that his name was “Otis Smith” and that he had been imprisoned in Mississippi for a murder that occurred in 1978.   Richard Odom confessed that he intended to steal the victim’s purse and forced her into the back seat of her vehicle.   When the victim said, “What are you doing, son,” Odom replied, “I’ll give you your damn son.”   Odom admitted that he raped the victim and that the victim told him that she “never had sex with a man before.”   Richard Odom admitted that the knife officers found in his possession was the knife he used to stab the victim.   He did not recall how many times he stabbed the victim.   Odom said that he found no money in the victim’s wallet or purse, and that he left the victim in her car and fled.   McWilliams testified that the defendant was “open” and “kind of bragging a little bit about the situation.”

Dr. Jerry Francisco, who performed an autopsy on the victim, testified that the victim bled to death from a stab wound to the right ventricle of her heart.   The victim also had stab wounds to her liver and right lung and two defensive wounds to her right hand.   The victim suffered tears to the posterior part of her vagina, which were caused by a traumatic event such as attempted penetration, and sperm was found in her vagina.   Dr. Francisco testified that the injuries were inflicted while the victim was alive, that the wounds would not have caused instant death, and that the wounds would have caused immediate pain.

John Sullivan, a family friend, testified that Mina Ethel Johnson was a “shy, genteel” woman who had never married or had children and who was capable of managing her own affairs.   Louise Long, the victim’s sister, testified that the victim was retired from her job as secretary at an insurance company and was active in her church.   She testified that the victim had broken her foot and was going to the doctor when she was killed.   Long also stated that she missed the victim because she no longer had “any family at all to go to.”

In addition to the evidence regarding this offense, the prosecution presented evidence regarding the facts of the defendant’s two prior violent felony convictions to support the aggravating circumstance it relied upon to seek the death penalty.   See Tenn.Code Ann. § 39-13-204(i)(2) (prior convictions for felony offenses whose statutory elements involved violence to a person).   The prior felony convictions included a 1992 robbery conviction in Shelby County, Tennessee, and a 1998 first degree murder conviction based on events that occurred in 1978 in Rankin County, Mississippi, when the defendant was seventeen years old.

With regard to the 1992 robbery conviction, the prosecution presented the testimony of the victim, Lillian Hammond.   Hammond testified that on May 8, 1991, she was approached by the defendant outside of her office at Shelby State Community College in Memphis, Tennessee.   The defendant demanded Hammond’s purse and threatened to kill or harm Hammond if she made any noise.   Hammond testified that the defendant made vulgar sexual comments and said, “I want you.”   The defendant grabbed Hammond’s arm and caused her to fall to the ground.   He took Hammond’s purse and ran away.

With regard to the 1998 first degree murder conviction, the prosecution presented evidence that the defendant killed the victim, Mary Rebecca Roberts, on May 4, 1978.3  Terri Roberts, the victim’s daughter, testified that her parents owned a drive-in theater in Pearl, Mississippi, and lived in a trailer next to the theater.

A police officer, Ernest Simmons, testified that he was called to the Roberts’ trailer and discovered the body of Mary Rebecca Roberts slumped in a recliner.   The victim was covered in blood and had gunshot wounds to her face.   The recliner apparently had been moved some nine feet from the wall and placed directly in front of the door.   Two knives and bullet casings were found in the trailer.   A bloody hand towel and a “stainless steel Army mess-kit knife” also were found in the trailer;  the knife blade was bent at “a 90 degree angle.”   There were bloodstains in the trailer and at the drive-in where a safe was kept.   Simmons testified that the murder weapon was a .22 caliber bolt action rifle that required reloading between shots.

According to Simmons, the police later questioned the defendant, then seventeen, who told officers that he went to the trailer because he was owed money.   When Roberts tried to hit him with a flower pot, the defendant hit her and chased her to a bedroom.   The defendant then stabbed the victim with a knife and forced her to leave her trailer and open a safe at the drive-in from which he took $255 and two guns.   The defendant told police officers that he and the victim returned to the trailer and that he “sat her down” in a recliner.   When Roberts pleaded for her life, the defendant told her, “Shut up.   I’m trying to think.”   The defendant claimed that the victim was shot when she grabbed the barrel of the gun he was holding.   The defendant admitted, however, that he shot the victim a second time because he “was scared” and “wanted to make sure she was dead.”   The defendant also admitted that he threw one of the guns into a swamp and hid the other gun and some of the money.   Simmons testified that the defendant “showed no remorse” and had been “extraordinarily calm” when he gave his statement to police.

Dr. George Sturgis, who performed the autopsy, testified that Roberts had a fatal gunshot wound to her left eye, a fatal gunshot wound to the right side of her forehead, and a critical stab wound in her chest that had penetrated her left lung.   The gunshot to the victim’s forehead had been fired from close range.   Dr. Sturgis also testified that the victim suffered lacerations and puncture wounds to her neck and chest, as well as bruises to her neck that suggested strangulation.

An assistant attorney general testified that the defendant had shown no remorse during the trial in 1998, and that the defendant exhibited an attitude as if it “was somewhat of a game.”   The prosecutor also testified that she saw no indication that the defendant was suffering from any mental illness.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/tn-supreme-court/1334014.html

Harold Nichols Tennessee Death Row

harold nichols

Harold Nichols was sentenced to death by the State of Tennessee for a sexual assault and murder. According to court documents Harold Nichols who is a serial rapist would sexually assault the victim, Karen Pulley, before striking her over the head several times causing her death. Harold Nichols was arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Tennessee Death Row Inmate List

Harold Nichols 2021 Information

Name:HAROLD WAYNE NICHOLS
Birth Date:12/31/1960
TDOC ID:00146457
State ID Number (SID):389806

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The proof showed that on the night of September 30, 1988, Harold Nichols broke into the house where the 21-year-old-victim, Karen Pulley, lived with two roommates in the Brainerd area of Chattanooga, Tennessee. After finding Pulley home alone in her upstairs bedroom, the defendant tore her undergarments from her and violently raped her. Because of her resistance during the rape, he forcibly struck her at least twice in the head with a two-by-four he had picked up after entering the house. After the rape, the defendant, while still struggling with the victim, struck her again several times with great force in the head with the two-by-four. The next morning, one of Karen Pulley’s roommates discovered her alive and lying in a pool of blood on the floor next to her bed. Pulley died the next day. Three months after the rape and murder, a Chattanooga police detective questioned the defendant about Pulley’s murder while he was in the custody of the East Ridge police department on unrelated charges. It was at this point that the defendant confessed to the crime. This videotaped confession provided the only link between Harold Nichols and the Pulley rape and murder.

The evidence showed that, until his arrest in January 1989, Harold Nichols roamed the city at night and, when “energized,” relentlessly searched for vulnerable female victims. At the time of trial, the defendant had been convicted on five charges of aggravated rape involving four other Chattanooga women.[2] These rapes had occurred in December 1988 and January 1989, within three months after Pulley’s rape and murder. The convictions presented to the jury were as follows:The defendant was indicted for feloniously engaging in sexual penetration of T.R. on December 27, 1988, by the use of force or coercion while the defendant was armed with a weapon a cord. The defendant pled guilty to the offense of aggravated rape. The defendant was indicted for feloniously engaging in sexual penetration anal intercourse with S.T. on the 3rd day of January, 1989, by the use of force or coercion while he, the defendant, was armed with a weapon a pistol. The defendant pled guilty to aggravated rape. The defendant was indicted for feloniously engaging in sexual penetration fellatio with P.A.R. on January 3, 1989, thereby causing personal injury to her. The defendant was also indicted for feloniously engaging in sexual penetration vaginal intercourse with P.A.R., on January 3, 1989. The defendant pled not guilty and the jury found the defendant guilty of aggravated rape in each case. The defendant was indicted for feloniously engaging in sexual penetration, vaginal intercourse, with P.A.G. on December 21, 1988, by the use of force or coercion while he, the defendant, was armed with a weapon a knife. The defendant pled not guilty and a jury convicted the defendant of aggravated rape.

https://law.justia.com/cases/tennessee/supreme-court/1994/877-s-w-2d-722-2.html

Clarence Nesbitt Tennessee Death Row

clarence nesbitt

Clarence Nesbitt was sentenced to death by the State of Tennessee for the torture and murder of a woman. According to court documents Clarence Nesbit would torture the victim, Miriam Cannon, in front of her children before fatally shooting her. Clarence Nesbitt would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Tennessee Death Row Inmate List

Clarence Nesbitt 2021 Information

Name:CLARENCE NESBITT
Birth Date:01/15/1974
TDOC ID:00250488
State ID Number (SID):

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he Tennessee Supreme Court has denied a new murder trial to Clarence Nesbit, who has been on death row since 1995. The Court was unanimous in its finding that Nesbit failed to prove the performance of his lawyer affected the outcome of his murder case.

On May 20, 1993, Nesbit shot and killed 20-year-old Miriam Cannon in her apartment in Memphis. At trial, the jury found Nesbit guilty of first-degree murder and sentenced him to death. Nesbit’s conviction and sentence both were upheld on appeal.

In 1999, Nesbit filed a petition for post-conviction relief, asserting that his trial counsel did not provide effective assistance by failing to investigate, prepare, and present certain evidence at trial and by not communicating a plea offer to him in a timely manner. In 2009, the post-conviction court ruled that Nesbit was not entitled to post-conviction relief as to his murder conviction, but awarded him a new sentencing hearing based on his attorney’s performance. The Court of Criminal Appeals agreed with the post-conviction court’s decision.

On appeal from the Court of Criminal Appeals, the Supreme Court held that Nesbit did not prove that he was prejudiced in the guilt phase of his trial by any deficiency on the part of his attorney. Chief Justice Sharon G. Lee authored the opinion for the Court, which determined that Nesbit did not offer clear and convincing proof that different actions on the part of his trial counsel would have changed the verdict reached by the jury.

Further, though his trial counsel delayed conveying to Nesbit the terms of plea offer, Nesbit failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence that there was a reasonable probability that he would have taken the plea offer had it been presented to him earlier.

The Court denied Nesbit a new trial on the murder conviction, and the case was sent back to the trial court for a new sentencing hearing.

https://www.chattanoogan.com/2014/11/14/288566/Supreme-Court-Denies-New-Trial-For.aspx

Farris Morris Tennessee Death Row

farris morris

Farris Morris was sentenced to death by the State of Tennessee for two murders. According to court documents Farris Morris would force his way into a neighbors home where he would shoot and kill a man and his niece and sexually assault the victim’s wife. Farris Morris would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Tennessee Death Row Inmate List

Farris Morris 2021 Information

Name:FARRIS MORRIS
Birth Date:11/09/1955
TDOC ID:00204071
State ID Number (SID): 

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Charles and Angela Ragland lived in a duplex residence in Jackson, Tennessee.   The defendant, Farris Morris, lived with his wife in the adjoining residence.

In the early morning hours of September 17, 1994, Angela Ragland arrived at her home along with her 15-year-old cousin, Erica Hurd. Charles Ragland was awake in the bedroom with the light on.   Shortly after arriving, Erica went outside to retrieve something from the car.   When Erica came back into the house, Angela heard a scream and saw that Morris was holding a shotgun to Erica’s head.

Farris Morris pushed Erica onto the bed in the Raglands’ bedroom and asked Charles “where the dope was.”   Charles Ragland replied that he “didn’t have any” and asked Morris if he wanted money.4  After Morris responded that he would “find it himself,” Morris fired a shot into the floor and ordered Charles Ragland to get on the floor.   He placed a pillow on Ragland’s head and shot him one time in the head.

Farris Morris ordered Erica to get into a closet by threatening to “blow her head off.”   He forced Angela into another bedroom, tied her wrists and ankles, and covered the window with a mattress so that “nobody could see if they walked by.”   Morris then retrieved Erica from the closet.   Angela Ragland testified that she heard Erica pleading for Morris not to kill her and that she heard Morris say “shut up.”   She testified that she heard Erica screaming and gasping for breath, and then silence.

Farris Morris returned to the bedroom and, still holding the shotgun, forced Angela Ragland to bathe him.   Afterward he ordered Angela to put on a negligee and make him something to eat, which she did.   Morris then forced Angela to have sexual intercourse with him “three or four times” and to perform oral sex upon him.   Morris told her that he had once been “accused of raping someone and ․ if he was going to jail, he was going to go to jail for doing something.”   He told Angela that “society made him the way he was” and “was the reason that he was doing what he did.”

Around 6:30 a.m., Morris heard his wife in the adjoining residence and told Angela that he would let her go.   He instructed her to tell police that she found the bodies of her husband and cousin when she arrived home that morning.   Morris used a cloth to wipe off objects he had touched and he warned Angela not to go to the police.   Angela fled to the house of a nearby friend, who drove her to the police station.   The police found Morris at his home shortly thereafter and arrested him.

The bodies of Charles Ragland and Erica Hurd were later discovered in the Ragland residence.   Charles Ragland had been shot in the head.   Erica Hurd had been beaten and stabbed repeatedly.   A blood-stained steak knife was found behind a couch and a large butcher knife with traces of blood was found in a chair in the living room.   Angela Ragland testified that neither knife belonged to her or her husband.   A 12-gauge pistol grip, pump action shotgun was later found underneath Morris’s dresser drawer.

After being advised of and waiving his constitutional rights, Farris Morris gave a statement to Officers Patrick Willis and James Golden of the Jackson Police Department.5  Morris said that on the day of the offense he had purchased and smoked $250 worth of cocaine.   He admitted that he had an exchange with Charles Ragland at 1:00 a.m., just a few hours prior to the murders, in which he asked Ragland to sell him drugs and, when Ragland declined, told Ragland that “he was going to regret disrespecting me.”   Morris admitted that he went to his house, got his shotgun, loaded two shells into the shotgun, and waited for Ragland’s wife, Angela, to get home.   Morris admitted that he entered the Ragland’s residence with the shotgun and demanded that Charles Ragland sell him drugs.   He admitted that after Ragland said he didn’t have any drugs, he fired a shot into the floor, put a pillow over the barrel of the gun and shot him in the head.   Morris admitted that he put Erica Hurd in a closet and tied up Angela Ragland.   Morris told officers that he intended only to tie up Erica Hurd but that he stabbed her because she acted crazy and they struggled over a knife.   Morris admitted he had sexual intercourse and oral sex with Angela Ragland.

Dr. O.C. Smith, the Deputy Chief Medical Examiner for West Tennessee, testified that Charles Ragland died from a shotgun wound to the head.   Dr. Smith testified that he found evidence of an “intermediate target” between the weapon and Ragland’s head, but that Ragland’s death was “instantaneous because the brain [was] destroyed.”

Dr. Smith testified that Erica Hurd had died as a result of multiple injuries including, stab wounds, blunt trauma to the head, skull fractures, and damage to the brain.   Dr. Smith found that there were 37 stab wounds, 23 of which were sustained prior to death and 14 of which were post-mortem.   Dr. Smith testified that 25 of the stab wounds were to the victim’s neck and face and that the force of the stabbings was great enough to cause the knife blades to bend upon striking bone.

The defense theory focused on Morris’s use of crack cocaine.   In addition to Morris’s own statement to police, Russell Morris, the defendant’s brother, testified that he saw the defendant smoking crack around 5:15 p.m. on the evening before the murders.

Dr. Robert Parker, a doctor of pharmacology at the University of Tennessee, testified about the effects of crack cocaine use.   Parker testified that smoking crack cocaine produces an intense euphoria and symptoms such as excitability, paranoia, mania, and impaired judgment.   Parker testified that most users of crack cocaine go on a “cocaine run” or “binge.”   When users become unable to duplicate the feeling of euphoria from the initial uses of the drug, judgment is further impaired and there is “an increased risk of violent or homicidal behavior.”   Parker explained that an acute withdrawal or “crash phase” occurs when the drug is not used.   It can be marked by depression, exhaustion, paranoia, anxiety, and suicidal thoughts.   Parker testified that the evidence of Morris’s behavior was “consistent with the ingestion of cocaine.”

Dr. William Bernet, medical director of the Psychiatric Hospital at Vanderbilt University, testified that he evaluated Morris based on an interview and a review of various records and documents.   Dr. Bernet concluded that due to false accusations of rape prior to these offenses, Morris became suicidal and a crack cocaine user.   Dr. Bernet stated that the mental stress and use of crack cocaine “affected [Morris’s] judgment” and “may have prevented him from forming the intent” to commit the murders of Charles Ragland and Erica Hurd.

The jury convicted Farris Morris of two counts of premeditated first degree murder and one count of aggravated rape.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/tn-supreme-court/1407059.html

Urshawn Miller Tennessee Death Row

urshawn miller

Urshawn Miller was sentenced to death by the State of Tennessee for a murder committed during a robbery. According to court documents Urshawn Miller in the process of robbing the Bull Market on Hollywood drive in Jackson would shoot and kill the clerk Ahmad Dhalai. Urshawn Miller would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Tennessee Death Row Inmate List

Urshawn Miller 2021 Information

Name:URSHAWN E. MILLER
Birth Date:01/06/1989
TDOC ID:00455407
State ID Number (SID):1310683

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A convicted gunman previously sentenced to death in the fatal shooting of a Jackson convenience store employee was sentenced Monday on the remaining charges in the case.

Urshawn Miller was sentenced Monday to 12 years on attempted especially aggravated robbery, 12 years on attempted second-degree murder and aggravated assault, six years on a gun charge, six months on resisting arrest, and 11 months and 29 days on evading arrest.

Miller’s total effective sentence is 30 years in the Tennessee Department of Correction concurrent with the death penalty sentence.

Investigators say Miller attempted to rob Bull Market on Hollywood Drive in Jackson in November 2015. They say he shot and killed Ahmad Dhalai, a clerk at the store, and also shot at another employee who was there.

Miller was convicted of first-degree murder in March and sentenced to death.