Alfredo Prieto Virginia Execution

Alfredo Prieto - Virginia photos

Alfredo Prieto, a convicted serial killer, was executed by the State of Virginia for the rape and murder of a woman and her boyfriend. According to court documents Alfredo Prieto would rape and murder 22-year-old Rachael Raver and murder her boyfriend Warren Fulton in 1990. It would take twenty years for Prieto to be convicted of the crimes. When DNA matched him to the 1990 murders he was already on California’s death row for the sexual assault and murder of a fifteen year old girl. Alfredo Prieto would be executed on October 1, 2015 by lethal injection

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Virginia has executed a convicted serial who claimed he was intellectually disabled.

Alfredo Prieto was pronounced dead at 9:17 p.m. on Thursday at the Greensville Correctional Center in Jarrat.

The 49-year-old had fought to prove that he’s intellectually disabled to bar the state from putting him to death. But a federal appeals court in Virginia upheld his death sentence in June and the U.S. Supreme Court refused Thursday to block his execution.

Prieto was sentenced to death in Virginia in 2010 for the rape and murder of 22-year-old Rachael Raver and the slaying of her boyfriend Warren Fulton III more than two decades earlier.

The El Salvador native had already been on death row in California for the rape and murder of a 15-year-old girl at the time.

Prieto thanked his lawyers, supporters and family members before mumbling, “Get this over with.”Virginia has executed a convicted serial who claimed he was intellectually disabled.

Alfredo Prieto was pronounced dead at 9:17 p.m. on Thursday at the Greensville Correctional Center in Jarrat.

The 49-year-old had fought to prove that he’s intellectually disabled to bar the state from putting him to death. But a federal appeals court in Virginia upheld his death sentence in June and the U.S. Supreme Court refused Thursday to block his execution.

Prieto was sentenced to death in Virginia in 2010 for the rape and murder of 22-year-old Rachael Raver and the slaying of her boyfriend Warren Fulton III more than two decades earlier.

The El Salvador native had already been on death row in California for the rape and murder of a 15-year-old girl at the time.

Prieto thanked his lawyers, supporters and family members before mumbling, “Get this over with.”

https://wjla.com/news/local/federal-judge-clears-way-for-virginia-execution

William Morva Virginia Execution

william morva virginia photos

William Morva was executed by the State of Virginia for the murder of a police officer and a security guard following a prison escape. According to court documents William Morva was being held awaiting trial on armed robbery when he attempted to escape from a hospital and in the process would murder Sheriff’s Deputy Corporal Eric Sutphin and hospital security guard Derrick McFarland in 2006. William Morva who had severe mental health issues would be executed by lethal injection on July 6, 2017. This would be the last execution in the State of Virginia who abolished Capital Punishment in 2021

William Morva More News

Virginia man who killed a hospital security guard and a sheriff’s deputy after escaping from custody in 2006 has been executed after an unsuccessful campaign to spare the inmate’s life over concerns about his mental health.

William Morva, 35, was pronounced dead at 9.15pm on Thursday after a lethal injection at Greensville correctional center in Jarratt. It was the first execution in Virginia under a new protocol that makes more of the lethal injection procedure secret.

Morva, who was wearing jeans and a blue shirt, said “no” after he was asked whether he had any last words. A few minutes later, he could be heard speaking, but it was not clear what he was saying.

The lethal injection began about 9pm after the warden read him the court order of his execution. Shortly after the drugs began flowing, his stomach moved up and down quickly several times before he became motionless.

Morva’s execution came hours after Virginia’s Democratic governor announced he would not spare Morva’s life despite pressure from mental health advocates, state lawmakers and attorneys who said the man’s crimes were the result of a severe mental illness that made it impossible for him to distinguish between delusions and reality.

In denying a clemency petition, Governor Terry McAuliffe concluded Morva received a fair trial. He noted that experts who evaluated the man at the time found he didn’t suffer from any illness that would have prevented him from understanding the consequences of his crimes. He also said prison staff members who monitored Morva for the past nine years never reported any evidence of a severe mental illness or delusional disorder

I personally oppose the death penalty; however, I took an oath to uphold the laws of this Commonwealth regardless of my personal views of those laws, as long as they are being fairly and justly applied,” McAuliffe said in a statement.

Morva was the first inmate executed in Virginia since officials made changes to the state’s protocol that have drawn fire from attorneys and transparency advocates. Those changes came after attorneys raised concerns in January about how long it took to place an IV line during the execution of convicted killer Ricky Gray.

Execution witnesses used to be able to watch inmates walk in and be strapped down. A curtain would then be drawn during the placement of the IV and heart monitors. After the curtain was reopened, inmates would be asked whether they had any final words before the chemicals started to flow.

In Morva’s execution, the curtain was closed when the witnesses entered the chamber and was not opened until he was strapped to the gurney and the IV lines were in place. Virginia used a three-drug mixture, including midazolam and potassium chloride that it obtained from a compounding pharmacy whose identity remains secret under state law.

Morva is the third inmate to be executed since McAuliffe took office in 2014. In April, McAuliffe granted clemency to Ivan Teleguz, saying jurors in the murder-for-hire case were given false information that may have swayed sentencing.

Among those who had urged McAuliffe to spare Morva’s life were the daughter of the slain sheriff’s deputy, two United Nations human rights experts, and representatives from the Hungarian embassy. Morva’s father was born in Hungary and Morva was a Hungarian-American dual national.

“Our message and William’s story and his family’s story were resonating with a lot of people, and I don’t know why it didn’t resonate with the governor,” Morva’s attorney Dawn Davison said after the execution.

Morva was awaiting trial on attempted robbery charges in 2005 when he was taken to the hospital to treat an injury. There, he attacked a sheriff’s deputy with a metal toilet roll holder, stole the deputy’s firearm, and shot an unarmed security guard, Derrick McFarland, in the face before fleeing. A day later, Morva killed another sheriff’s deputy Eric Sutphin with a bullet to the back of the head as Sutphin searched for him near Virginia Tech’s Blacksburg campus.

Experts who examined Morva for his trial said he suffered from personality disorders that resulted in “odd beliefs”.

After his trial, a psychiatrist diagnosed him with delusional disorder, a more severe mental illness akin to schizophrenia that made him falsely believe, among other things, that he has life-threatening gastrointestinal issues and that a former presidential administration conspired with police to imprison him, his attorneys said.

His lawyers argued Morva escaped and killed the men because he was under the delusion that he was going to die in jail.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/jul/07/virginia-executes-william-morva-using-controversial-three-drug-mixture

Ricky Gray Virginia Execution

ricky gray virginia execution photos

Ricky Gray was executed by the State of Virginia for the murders of eight people. According to court documents Ricky Gray and Ray Dandridge would shoot and kill eight people over a seven day period. Both Ricky Gray and Ray Dandridge would be convicted and sentenced to death. Ricky Gray would be executed by lethal injection on January 17, 2018. Ray Dandridge would later be resentenced to life in prison

Ricky Gray More News

Convicted killer Ricky Gray, who confessed to killing a family of four in 2006, was executed Wednesday in Virginia after the US Supreme Court denied a stay of execution where his lawyers argued a lethal drug cocktail violated his constitutional rights.

Gray, 39, was pronounced dead at 9:42 p.m. ET on Wednesday, said Lisa Kinney, communications director for the Virginia Department of Corrections.

When asked whether he had any last words, Gray said, “Nope.”

Ahead of Gray’s execution, his lawyers appealed to the US Supreme Court for a stay of the execution – criticizing the use of a controversial drug combination – calling it an “experimental and unconstitutional method of execution.”

The state of Virginia used a lethal injection composed of a three-drug cocktail of midazolam, potassium chloride and the paralytic drug, rocuronium bromide. Gray’s attorneys argued that midazolam had already failed to render prisoners unconscious during executions in Alabama, Arizona, Ohio and Oklahoma.

Gov. Terry McAuliffe issued a statement saying he would not intervene.

“Mr. Gray was convicted in a fair and impartial trial, and a jury sentenced him to death in accordance with Virginia law,” the governor said.

Executions are typically done with three drugs given in stages: The first (sodium thiopental or pentobarbital) puts the prisoner to sleep, the second (pancuronium bromide) brings on paralysis and the final agent (potassium chloride) stops the heart.

States that have capital punishment have been forced to find new drugs to use since European-based manufacturers began to ban exports of the cocktail ingredients to the United States over concerns the drugs were being used for capital punishment.

Denmark-based Lundbeck banned US prisons from using its pentobarbital.

So, death penalty states began looking for alternatives.

In some executions, controversial drugs as midazolam or propofol have used instead, which has raised much concern.

In January 2014, Ohio used the sedative midazolam and the painkiller hydromorphone in the execution of convicted murderer and rapist Dennis McGuire. McGuire appeared to gasp and convulse for at least 10 minutes before dying from the drug cocktail used in his execution, witnesses described.

When Oklahoma inmate Clayton Lockett was sentenced to death by lethal injection he was administered the drug cocktail: midazolam; vecuronium bromide to stop respiration; and potassium chloride to stop the heart. Witnesses described the man convulsing and writhing on the gurney, as well as struggling to speak, before officials blocked the witnesses’ view.

Lockett appeared to have a heart attack and died.

Gray and his nephew Ray Dandridge went on a killing spree in January 2006, murdering seven people in six days, court documents reveal.

In Dandridge’s affidavit, he said that before they went to the the Harvey’s home, Gray “smoked marijuana laced with something.” Gray’s attorneys unsuccessfully argued that the jurors who sentenced him to death did not get a clear explanation of the severe abuse that shaped Gray’s life and his subsequent use of PCP, a drug which can cause psychosis.

Gray was convicted of killing Kathryn and Bryan Harvey and their two young daughters, Stella and Ruby, during a home invasion on New Year’s Day.

The Harveys were found brutally beaten, bound and repeatedly stabbed in the basement of their Richmond home. The home was also set on fire.

Five days later, Gray was also involved, though not convicted, in the murders of three other Richmond residents: Percyell Tucker, his wife, Mary Tucker and Mary’s daughter, Ashley Baskerville.

A Virginia jury convicted Gray of five counts of capital murder and sentenced him to death on two of the counts, the murders of Stella and Ruby, according to the court documents.

Dandridge was convicted in the killings of the Baskerville-Tucker family and sentenced to life in prison.

After Gray’s arrest for the Harvey family murders, he also confessed to killing his wife. With the help of Dandridge he bludgeoned her to death with a lead pipe in November 2005, according to the court documents. Gray was questioned at the time but was not arrested for her murder.

“There’s no excuse for what he did, but it’s a tragedy from beginning to end for the Harvey family and for Ricky Gray,” Virginia’s Attorney General told CNN about the case.

website was set up seeking Gray’s clemency ahead of his execution.

In a video posted on the site, family members and doctors who testified in his case, detail the sexual and physical abuse Gray suffered as a child.

Gray turned to drugs as a child – using marijuana, cocaine and PCP – as he “desperately tried to numb the haunting traumas,” according to the site.

Days before his execution, Gray issued a public apology.

“I’m sorry they had to be a victim of my despair,” Gray said in part in an audio recording posted on the clemency site.

“Remorse is not a deep enough word for how I feel. I know my words can’t bring anything back, but I continuously feel horrible for the circumstances that I put them through. I robbed them from a lifelong supply of joy.”

Gray is the second inmate to be executed in 2017. Death row inmate Christopher Wilkins, 48, was put to death in Texas on January 11.

Capital punishment is legal in 32 states.

https://www.cnn.com/2017/01/18/us/ricky-gray-executed-virginia/index.html

Thomas Porter Virginia Death Row

thomas porter virginia death row

Thomas Porter was sentenced to death by the State of Virginia for the murder of a police officer. According to court documents Thomas Porter was involved in a loud argument with his girlfriend and when Officer Reaves came to investigate the two parties would meet in the apartment parking lot. Officer Reaves would be shot three times in the head causing his death. Thomas Porter would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Virginia Death Row Inmate List

Thomas Porter 2021 Information

  • Personal Information Thomas A Porter
  • Alias:  Not Available
  • Age/Race/Sex 45/Black/Male
  • Offender I.D.#1072240
  • Location Sussex I State Prison
  • Release Date Death Sentence

Thomas Porter More News

At approximately 3:30 p.m. on October 28, 2005, Thomas Porter and Reginald Copeland traveled in Porter’s Jeep to the Park Place apartment complex located at 2715 DeBree Avenue in the City of Norfolk to inquire about purchasing marijuana.   Porter was carrying a concealed, nine-millimeter Jennings semi-automatic pistol.   The two men entered the apartment of Valorie Arrington, where several people were present, including Valorie and her daughters, Latoria and Latifa;  Valorie’s cousins, Monica Dickens and April Phillips;  Valorie’s sister, Monique Arrington, also known as Monika;  and Monique’s daughter, Lamia.

Once inside, Thomas Porter began arguing with the women, brandishing his gun, and threatening that he might shoot one of them if provoked.   Copeland left the residence, but Porter remained behind, locking the door so Copeland could not reenter.   After being locked out of Valorie’s apartment, Copeland walked away from the apartment complex and happened upon three uniformed police officers a block away, including Norfolk Police Officer Stanley Reaves.   Copeland reported Porter’s behavior to Officer Reaves and directed him to Valorie’s apartment.

Officer Reaves drove his police cruiser to the front curb of the apartment building, parked the car, and walked across the grass towards the sidewalk leading from the street to the apartment door.   As Officer Reaves approached the apartment, Porter left Valorie’s apartment and began walking away.   Officer Reaves confronted Porter, grabbed Porter’s left arm, and instructed him to take his hands out of his pockets.   Porter then drew his concealed weapon from his pocket and fired three times, killing Officer Reaves.   Porter took Officer Reaves’ service pistol and then fled in his Jeep.

Several eyewitnesses, along with Porter, testified at trial and provided various descriptions of the events leading up to and immediately following Officer Reaves’ death.   Copeland testified that he was standing in a parking lot on the afternoon of Officer Reaves’ death when Porter approached him.   They decided to get into a Jeep Grand Cherokee that Thomas Porter was driving and go to Valorie’s apartment to purchase marijuana.

Copeland testified that he and Porter entered Valorie’s apartment because she was Copeland’s friend and because he had smoked marijuana with her before.   Once inside, they met Valorie and the other women who informed Copeland and Porter that they did not have any marijuana.   The group then talked about various subjects, including a child’s birthday party, but at some point in the conversation Porter began arguing with one of the women.

Copeland “didn’t know what to do” but left the apartment and “ran down [to the next block] and told [Officer Reaves, ‘]Look, there is a man up in the house with some girls, and he shouldn’t be in there.’ ”   Copeland described the apartment building to Officer Reaves, and Officer Reaves drove his patrol car to the building with Copeland “running behind” the vehicle.   Officer Reaves arrived at the building before Copeland, and as Copeland approached he saw “Officer Reaves in the car and Porter was coming out [of] the building.”   Copeland identified Porter to Officer Reaves, and Officer Reaves instructed Copeland to stay back and then approached Porter.   Moments later, Porter and Officer Reaves disappeared from Copeland’s viewpoint behind a parked van, but Copeland “heard gunshots and started running,” and he “ran and told the [other] officers what happened.”

Melvin Spruill, Jr., owner of the apartment complex, testified that he was picking up trash in the yard, when he “noticed a police car sitting on the corner” parked directly behind his van.   Spruill entered his van and was preparing to leave when he noticed Officer Reaves talking with Porter.  “[O]ut of the corner of [his] eye” Spruill saw Porter’s hands drop down, raise up again with a gun, and then he heard a gunshot.   Spruill ducked and “heard another shot ․ [, m]aybe two shots,” and then saw Porter run away.   Spruill testified that he never saw Officer Reaves holding a gun, nor did he hear arguing between the two men before Porter shot Officer Reaves.

Simone Coleman testified that she was walking on the sidewalk near the apartment complex when she saw Officer Reaves’ patrol car arrive.   Coleman watched as Officer Reaves stepped out of his patrol car, and she saw Porter walking across the grass from the apartment, coming to “within a few feet” of her.   She testified that Porter’s hands were “[i]n his pockets” as Coleman passed by, and she “was looking back” to watch the confrontation between Officer Reaves and Porter.   Coleman heard Officer Reaves instruct Porter to “take his hands out of his pockets,” and then Officer Reaves “ grabbed Mr. Porter’s left arm.”   Coleman testified that Officer Reaves “didn’t have a gun out,” and that Porter, in response to Officer Reaves grabbing his arm, pulled a gun out of his pocket, pointed the gun at Officer Reaves’ head, and pulled the trigger.   Coleman watched Officer Reaves collapse to the ground, and she testified that Porter then shot Officer Reaves two more times.   Coleman identified Porter in court as the man who killed Officer Reaves.

Selethia Anderson, who lived across the street from the apartment complex, was sitting on her front porch when she saw Officer Reaves arrive.   Anderson testified that she watched Officer Reaves exit his vehicle and walk towards Porter as Porter was leaving the apartment complex.   She described how Officer Reaves confronted Porter and “used his right hand to grab [Porter’s] left hand,” and then Porter immediately reached into his hoodie pocket with his right hand, pulled out a gun, and shot Officer Reaves in the head.   Anderson testified that after Officer Reaves fell, Porter shot him twice more “between the back of the head and neck.”   According to Anderson, Porter knelt over Officer Reaves’ body after the shooting, and when Porter left the scene, he was carrying a “bigger gun” than the one he had used to shoot Officer Reaves.   Anderson identified Porter in court as the man who shot Officer Reaves.

Valorie testified that she was in her apartment that afternoon when Copeland arrived with Thomas Porter.   According to Valorie, the two men “came for some marijuana” but the women did not have any, and asked the men to leave.   Copeland agreed to leave, but Porter stayed inside, locked the door and kept Copeland outside.   Valorie testified that she felt scared because Porter had “locked us in our own house.”   Valorie asked Porter why his hands were in his sweatshirt pocket, and Porter responded by pulling out his gun and asking, “[s]o are you going to give me the bag of weed or what?”   Valorie testified that she uttered a prayer, and when Porter realized she was a Muslim, he told the women that they were “lucky” and he put away the gun.   When Porter realized a police car had arrived, he left the apartment and ran “like some horses going down the stairs.”   Moments later, Valorie heard gunshots.

Latoria’s testimony confirmed that Thomas Porter entered Valorie’s apartment along with Copeland, and that Copeland left the apartment but Porter remained inside, locking the door.   Latoria testified that Porter threatened that he would “get to clapping” if any of the women made a sudden move, and she explained that “clapping” was a term for “shooting.”   She testified that she looked out the window, noticed Officer Reaves arrive in his patrol car, and asked, “Why is Reggie [Copeland] talking to the police officer?”   Latoria testified that Porter then immediately exited the apartment, and she watched through the window as Officer Reaves approached Porter, grabbed Porter’s arm, and then Porter “reach[ed] into his right pocket and he pull[ed] out his gun and he shot him.”   Latoria testified that Officer Reaves did not have a weapon drawn when Porter shot him.

Dickens’ testimony confirmed Valorie’s and Latoria’s accounts of the confrontation in Valorie’s apartment between Thomas Porter and the women.   Dickens testified that Porter threatened to “get to clapping” if any of the women began “talking smack.”   Dickens explained that she “was just real afraid right then for my whole family.”   Dickens testified that Porter left the apartment immediately when he learned that a police car had arrived, and she went to the window to watch what was happening.   Dickens watched Officer Reaves approach Porter, grab Porter’s arm, and then Porter “put the gun to his head” and shot Officer Reaves.4

Monika also testified that Thomas Porter entered Valorie’s apartment with Copeland but stayed inside and locked the door after Copeland left.   Monika confirmed that Porter threatened to “get it clapping in here with all y’all” and explained that “ ‘[c]lapping’ means you shoot somebody.”   Monika testified that when Porter learned that a police vehicle had arrived outside, he left the apartment immediately and began walking away.   Monika testified that she watched out the window as “[t]he police officer grabbed Porter’s arm,” and Porter “pulled the gun out of his pocket and put it to [Officer Reaves’] forehead,” and pulled the trigger.   Monika testified that Officer Reaves “never drew his weapon.   He got out of his car and walked over to Porter as if he just wanted to talk to him and that was it.”

Robert Vontoure, a Navy seaman who lived across the street from where the shooting occurred, testified that he arrived home from work and noticed a Jeep which he did not recognize parked outside his home.   Vontoure explained that he was in his home, “sitting there watching TV and ․ heard gunshots.”   Vontoure looked outside the window “and saw a gentleman coming running across our lawn, jump into the Jeep and leave.”   Vontoure identified Porter in court as the man who fled the scene in the Jeep vehicle.

After killing Officer Reaves, Porter traveled to New York City where he was apprehended one month later in White Plains, New York. The murder weapon was found in his possession at the time of his arrest.   Officer Reaves’ gun was eventually located in Yonkers, New York.

The autopsy report revealed that Officer Reaves suffered three close-range wounds to his head:  one to the forehead, one to the left back of the head, and a flesh wound near the right ear.  “The cause of death was two separate close range gunshot wounds to the head.”

Thomas Porter did not dispute that he shot Officer Reaves, but his version of the events differed from that of the eyewitnesses.   Porter testified in his own defense that he drove to Valorie’s apartment with Copeland “[t]o get a bag of marijuana” because Copeland was his “means of getting marijuana.”   Porter parked the vehicle outside the apartment, and he “grabbed the gun out of the glove compartment box” before leaving the vehicle “[b]ecause the area ․ is a bad area.”   Porter testified that he gave Copeland $10 to purchase marijuana, and that he waited outside while Copeland went inside to make the purchase.

Thomas Porter testified that after a few minutes had passed, Copeland emerged from an upstairs apartment and invited him inside.   Porter confirmed that Copeland left the apartment, but Porter denied locking the door and keeping Copeland outside.   Porter also denied brandishing his gun inside the apartment or making a statement about shooting any of the women.   Porter claimed that he left the apartment when he learned from the women that Copeland had not paid them for marijuana, and he denied that any of the women knew about Officer Reaves’ arrival because “[w]asn’t nobody even looking out the window.”

Thomas Porter testified that he left the apartment and was walking to his vehicle “when Officer Reaves stepped in front of me and grabbed me.”   Porter and his counsel then had the following exchange:

Q. Did anything else happen when he did that?

A. Yes. I seen him pulling his gun.

Q. What do you mean, you saw him pulling his gun?

A. Well, when he grabbed me with his left arm on my left arm, we were still standing face to face.   I seen him pulling his gun.   That’s when I put my hands up in the air and backed up, looking at him, like, “What [are] you doing?”

Q. You just described that you put your hands up in the air?

A. Yes.

Q. And at that point, what happened?

A. Well, I got my hands in the air when he finally gets the gun out and point it at me.   I take my hands down and pull my gun and started shooting.

Q. Why did you do that, Mr. Porter?

A. Because I was scared.   I thought he was going to kill me because he looked angry at the time, so I was just worried for my safety.

Thomas Porter testified on direct examination that he could not remember how many times he pulled the trigger, but after he shot Officer Reaves, he bent down, picked up Officer Reaves’ gun and ran.   Porter explained that he left the scene because he “was scared” because he realized he “just killed an officer.”

Thomas Porter testified repeatedly on cross-examination that he “never wanted to kill anybody” but he also admitted that he “pulled out the gun” and “shot [Officer Reaves] in the forehead.”   Porter and opposing counsel had this exchange on cross-examination:

Q. You meant to hit Stanley Reaves with a bullet, didn’t you?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. All right.   And you took aim-therefore, you took aim at him, correct?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. You took aim at a part of his body, correct?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. And the part of his body that you took aim at and then before pulling the trigger from less than six inches away was directly into his forehead, correct?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. And you agree that you knew you were aiming at his head, correct?

A. Yes, sir.

Porter also had this exchange on cross-examination:

Q. You admit that you ․ pulled your gun out?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. And that you shot him in the head?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. You admit that you stole his gun?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. So according to your version of events, you claim that Officer Reaves pulled his gun, correct?

A. Yes.

Q. And the only thing about the crime that’s alleged you committed, the capital murder of Officer Stanley Reaves, using a gun to commit that murder and stealing Officer Reaves’ gun, the only part of the crime that we’re here that you’re on trial for that you dispute, really, is the reason why you shot Officer Reaves;  is that correct?

A. Yes.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/va-supreme-court/1365512.html

Anthony Juniper Virginia Death Row

anthony juniper virginia death row

Anthony Juniper was sentenced to death by the State of Virginia for a quadruple murder. According to court documents Anthony Juniper was upset that his girlfriend broke up with him so he proceeded to murder her, Keshia Stephens; her brother Rueben Harrison III; and two of her daughters, Nykia Stephens, 4; and Shearyia Stephens, 2. Anthony Juniper would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Virginia Death Row Inmate List

Anthony Juniper 2021 Information

  • Anthony Bernard Juniper
  • Alias:  Not Available
  • Age/Race/Sex 49/Black/Male
  • Offender I.D.#1126832
  • Location Sussex I State Prison
  • Release Date Death Sentence

Anthony Juniper More News

an. 16, 2004 was a nightmare in broad daylight at a Kingston Avenue apartment, prosecutor Karen Burrell told jurors Wednesday.

Inside, four people lay dead – Keshia Stephens, 27; her brother, Ruben Harrison III, 19; and her daughters, Nykia, 4, and Shearyia, 2.

They had been executed, Burrell said, by Anthony Bernard Juniper.

Juniper, 33, could face the death penalty if convicted of capital murder. He has pleaded not guilty.

During her opening statement, Burrell said Juniper and Stephens had had a stormy relationship for about a year.

“He was jealous, controlling, he constantly accused Keshia of cheating on him,” Burrell said.

In January they were no longer together, Burrell said, and Stephens had moved into the apartment with four of her six children. She sent the two older girls to school with a friend that morning, hugging them before sending them down the stairs.

“That was the last touch they ever felt from their mother,” Burrell said.

Juniper got a ride to the apartment to collect some of his belongings, Burrell said. He found Stephens at home with Nykia and Shearyia, who were naked because they were about to get in the bath. Nykia had written on her little sister with a marker. Harrison slept on the couch.

Juniper and Stephens began to argue, Burrell said. Juniper refused to leave with the woman who had driven him to the apartment. As the woman left, she heard gunshots.

Later that afternoon, police responding to a call of a burglary in progress found the door broken in and the television blaring. Inside, officers found the bodies of Stephens, her daughters and Harrison in a bedroom. The children lay on top of the adults.

Stephens had been shot three times and stabbed with such force that a knife blade sank nearly 5 inches into her stomach. Harrison had been shot three times from behind.

“Nykia, 4, had her brains blown out,” Burrell said. “Shearyia was shot four times. One was a shot to the head.”

Juniper left behind evidence including a fingerprint on a knife blade found next to Stephens’ body, DNA on a knife handle found in the same place and DNA on a cigarette butt found on the broken pieces of the door, Burrell said.

One of Juniper’s attorneys, B. Thomas Reed, said Juniper had been to Stephens’ house many times and could have left a fingerprint or DNA behind on another visit.

Juniper loved Stephens’ children, Reed said. He cooked and cleaned for them, bought them toys and registered the older girls for school using his mother’s address.

“The evidence will prove Anthony Juniper is the last person you would expect to harm these children,” Reed said.

Lawyers began calling witnesses Wednesday, including the police officers who found the bodies and the paramedic who pronounced them dead.