Brian Golsby Murders Reagan Tokes

Brian Golsby is a killer from Ohio who was convicted of the murder of Ohio State University student Reagan Tokes

According to court documents Brian Golsby would abduct twenty one year old Reagan Tokes as she was leaving her part time job downtown Columbus Ohio. The young woman would be sexually assaulted and robbed before she was forced into a vehicle and driven to Scioto Grove Metro Park. Reagan Tokes was forced to strip naked and was marched into a field where she was fatally shot

Brian Golsby who had recently been released from prison for the kidnapping and attempted sexual assault of a woman would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to life in prison without parole

Brian Golsby Now

brian golsby today

Number A743409

DOB 01/26/1988

Gender Male Race Black

Admission Date 04/12/2018

Institution Ohio State Penitentiary

Status INCARCERATED

Brian Golsby Videos

https://youtu.be/0Vd4smyVWyo?si=6KpnWlU3Qyt8ugLN

Brian Golsby Case

The sentencing phase of the Brian Golsby murder trial started Friday morning. He was convicted for the murder of Ohio State senior Reagan Tokes.

The defense asked the jury to understand Golsby, not sympathize with him. They said he came from a father who didn’t want him and a mother who would beat him. They hope understanding from the jury would be enough to spare his life.

They argued he was in and out if foster care from two-years-old into his teens. Golsby had an alcoholic mother who abused him and was raped by a neighbor at age 12, they said.

“She was regularly beating Brian with a plastic jump rope for abuse and humiliation,” said Diane Menashe, Golsby’s defense attorney.

Menashe said Children Services continued to try to keep Golsby with his mother.

Prosecutor Ron O’Brien argued others in similar hard spots don’t commit violent crimes.

“Those other people don’t commit robberies, rapes, kidnapping and shoot poor young girls in the head,” said O’Brien.

A psychologist took the stand who specializes in counseling gay and lesbian individuals. Golsby had stated he believed himself to be gay about 10 years ago.

His attorneys said Golsby does have a history of acting out sexually but never had gotten the help he needed

On Friday afternoon, at the sentencing phase of the trial, Golsby apologized to Tokes’ family.

He also said that the associate named TJ, who forced him to rape the 21-year-old, wasn’t real:

Today I would like to apologize to the Tokes family for the crimes I committed against your daughter. When I first got locked up, I lied about everything. 22 I said there was a TJ. There is no TJ. TJ is not real. 26 I made TJ up. 28 because I was trying to wiggle may way out of the crime. 

Golsby then asked the jury to have mercy on him:

The only other thing I have to say is, um... please have mercy on me. 41 that’s all I’ve got to say.

https://abc6onyourside.com/news/local/defense-claims-golsby-was-beat-by-mother-and-neglected-by-father

Brian Golsby News

The verdicts against Brian Golsby came in rapid fire: guilty on all counts in the kidnapping, robbery, rape and aggravated murder of Ohio State University student Reagan Tokes.

Jurors reached their decision Tuesday on the nine charges and multiple specifications that could lead to the death penalty after about five hours of deliberation on what would have been Tokes’ 23rd birthday.

After members of her family heard the first guilty count, they paused and bowed their heads.

Her mother, Lisa McCrary-Tokes, later burst into tears as she embraced Reagan’s younger sister Makenzie, who graduated last year from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, where 17 students and staff were massacred Feb. 14.

In closing arguments Tuesday morning, prosecutors cast Golsby, 30, as a cold and calculating hunter who stalked the area around Ohio State on Feb. 8, 2017, after leaving a Neil Avenue COTA bus. He came upon the Bodega Cafe on North High Street, where Tokes was leaving her server shift.

“He went out to hunt that night and he found Reagan Tokes,” Jimmy Lowe, a Franklin County assistant prosecutor, told jurors. “There’s no mystery here.”

Critical evidence included Golsby’s DNA, which prosecutors said was found “everywhere.” Golsby also was tracked by his GPS ankle bracelet, which he was required to wear because of a previous conviction.

The kidnapping, robbery, rape and eventual fatal shooting of Tokes at Scioto Grove Metro Park in Grove City was “every woman’s nightmare,” said Jennifer Rausch, another prosecutor. She described Tokes’ willingness — for two hours — to comply with Golsby in a bid to save her life, her pleas that she “just wanted to live,” and Golsby’s attempts to cover his tracks.

“Why are you shooting twice if you don’t have the purpose to kill her? Why are you holding the gun to her head?” asked Rausch.

Defense attorney Diane Menashe, who now will try to spare Golsby from death, told jurors that her client wasn’t smart enough to purposely plan such a crime, or be a “master manipulator.”

“I submit to you that if Mr. Golsby didn’t want to get caught, then perhaps he should not have worn the GPS bracelet,” she said. “Not only that, he charged it … he didn’t want to let the battery die.” Menashe said that Golsby instead likely shot Tokes when he panicked at the park.

The prosecution countered that Golsby knew that she would easily be able to identify him if he let her live.

Menashe also said that DNA found in Tokes, on cigarette butts in her car and elsewhere were matched to an “unreliable” DNA profile of Golsby from a previous crime in 2010.

Jurors were given the case about 12:30 p.m. Tuesday and told that they would be sequestered in a hotel that evening.

But an hour after they left the courtroom, Common Pleas Judge Mark Serrott called them back, admonishing jurors after learning that one of them had discussed the case with someone — information based on a phone tip from a concerned citizen. That juror was then replaced with an alternate.

“I’m sorry that this happened,” Serrott told the jury. “You’ve got to take my orders seriously… I’m sitting up here as a judge, and I’ve lost sleep in this case.”

Golsby, in a white shirt and with dreadlocks that were pulled back, showed no emotion as the verdicts were read. At one point, while alone at the defense table as his attorneys looked over the signed juror verdicts, he placed the tips of his fingers together like a steeple, then turned them inward.

Mrs. Tokes, weeping, nodded in agreement as each jury member was asked on a defense request to confirm the decision.

The sentencing phase of the capital case will begin Friday morning with an expected review of Golsby’s upbringing and reported neglect, which will be part of defense attorneys’ efforts to show mitigating circumstances that might lead the jury to spare Golsby from a death sentence in favor of life in prison without parole.

The Tokes family declined comment after the verdict.

Prosecutor Ron O’Brien said afterward that he wasn’t surprised at the verdict.

“If we only proved half of what (evidence) we had,” he said, “we would have had more than enough” to meet the burden of proof.

https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/courts/2018/03/13/brian-golsby-guilty-on-all/12990816007/

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