Darrick Gerlaugh Executed For Scott Schwartz Murder

Darrick Gerlaugh was executed by the State of Arizona for the murder of Scott Schwartz

According to court documents Scott Schwartz would pick up Darrick Gerlaugh and two others who were hitchhiking. Somewhere along the ride Schwartz would be forced to pulled over where he would be stabbed between thirty and forty times

Darrick Gerlaugh would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Darrick Gerlaugh Photos

darrick gerlaugh execution

Darrick Gerlaugh Case

On January 24, 1980, Gerlaugh and two others were hitchhiking from Chandler to Phoenix when they came across a man named Scott Schwartz. Schwartz was a man who needed a leg brace and used crutches, due to a leg injury. Around 11:30 p.m. Schwartz offered them a ride. A short while later the three men forced the victim at gunpoint to drive them to the outskirts of Mesa. All four of them exited the car when Gerlaugh pointed the gun at the victim demanding money. Schwartz actually was able to disarm Gerlaugh while escaping and pointed the gun at them, but when he pulled the trigger, the gun did not fire.

Gerlaugh yelled at Schwartz, “There’s no bullets in the gun.

Finally, Gerlaugh succeeded in running over the victim with the Lincoln Continental; however the victim was still alive. Gerlaugh and the others made sure he didn’t stay that way by stabbing him several times with a screwdriver. They later hid the body in an alfalfa field.

When Gerlaugh was later asked by investigators about how he felt when he killed the victim, Gerlaugh said, “How do you feel when you kill game?”

Several days after the killing one of the other suspects confided in a friend what they had done and this friend relayed the information to police.

The three were arrested and confessed to their crimes with one of the other suspects serving 21 years for his part in the murder. He was released in 2002.

The Trial:

The four day trial started December 15, 1980 with Gerlaugh getting convicted.

During the 18 year appeals process, ten of the fifty claims advanced to the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit but were found to have no merit.

In the days preceding his execution on February 3, 1999, Gerlaugh became the first Native American death row inmate allowed to use a sweat lodge on prison grounds for purification ceremonies. Gerlaugh spent two hours praying and singing ancient Native American songs to prepare for his death. A few days later he also took part in a “pipe ceremony.”

According to experts, the purification ceremony is commonly referred to as the sweat lodge, but this is a misnomer, says William J. Walk Sacred, a Cree medicine man: “When you come out of a purification lodge, you don’t feel the same as when you come out of a sauna. The ceremony is a rebirthing process. There’s something that happens in a spiritual sense that is powerful and uplifting.”

The pipe ceremony is a sacred ritual for connecting physical and spiritual worlds. “The pipe is a link between the earth and the sky,” explains White Deer of Autumn. “Nothing is more sacred. The pipe is our prayers in physical form. Smoke becomes our words; it goes out, touches everything, and becomes a part of all there is. The fire in the pipe is the same fire in the sun, which is the source of life.” The reason why tobacco is used to connect the worlds is that the plant’s roots go deep into the earth, and its smoke rises high into the heavens.

https://www.abc15.com/news/crime/death-row-diaries-native-american-man-performs-rituals-before-1999-execution

Martin Vega Executed For Texas Murder For Hire

Martin Vega was executed by the State of Texas for the murder for hire of James Mims

According to court documents Martin Vega and James Mims wife Linda Mims would plan his murder in order to collect the insurance money. James Mims would be beaten and shot multiple times

The murder went unsolved until Martin Vega would confess to police his role in the murder

Linda Mims was not charged as it was Martin Vega word against hers

Martin Vega would be convicted and sentenced to death

Martin Vega would be executed by lethal injection on January 26 1999

Martin Vega Photos

martin vega texas

Martin Vega Case

n July 1985, after receiving a report of a homicide, Sheriff Mike Bading discovered the body of James Mims lying alongside a road.   Bading and other officers arriving at the same time recovered several items belonging to Mims, including a comb, a screwdriver-type key chain, a pocket knife, and some change.   They also found three spent .22 caliber cartridges.

Mims’s skull had been hit with a blunt object, possibly a handgun, and he had been shot eight times;  his shirt was saturated with blood, and the rest of his clothes were wet from a source other than blood.   One of the bullets had passed through his lung, aorta, and heart, probably causing his death.   Two .22 caliber bullets were removed from his body and analyzed.

Vega confessed to the murder in January 1988.   He stated that Linda Mims had encouraged him to murder her husband, promising to marry him afterward and to give him $30,000 of the $150,000 life insurance proceeds.   Vega did in fact marry her and enjoyed substantial sums of money obtained from insurance proceeds.

In one of his statements, Vega revealed the location of the alleged murder weapon, a .22 caliber handgun.   This weapon, along with the cartridges allegedly fired by the handgun but not found at the murder scene, were at the specified location and presented at trial.   Vega also explained that the victim was wet because of a failed attempt to drown him.   Vega insisted that Linda Mims be arrested immediately upon his confession.

Vega made one statement in his handwriting and signed it in the presence of two officers;  subsequently he made other statements containing details of the events relating to the murder.   He received Miranda warnings before confessing

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/court/us-5th-circuit/1397141.html

Joseph Atkins Executed For 2 South Carolina Murders

Joseph Atkins was sentenced to death by the State of South Carolina for a double murder

According to court documents Joseph Atkins was released early from prison where he was serving time for the murder of his brother. Atkins was mad at the people next door to his fathers home and would rush in and murder a thirteen year old girl Karen Patterson. Atkins would return to his home and fatally shoot his father Benjamin Atkins

Joseph Atkins would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Joseph Atkins would be executed by lethal injection on January 23 1999

Joseph Atkins Photos

Joseph Atkins - South Carolina execution

Joseph Atkins Case

Petitioner (Joseph Atkins) was paroled from the 1970 conviction on March 14, 1980. After his release from prison, Petitioner returned to North Charleston to live, where he occupied one-half of a duplex owned by his father, Benjamin Atkins. Petitioner worked odd jobs and had a habit of drinking regularly. His girlfriend, Linda Walters, lived with him.

Petitioner’s father lived in the other half of the duplex. A rental house owned by the father was located behind the duplex. In the spring of 1985, Mr. Aaron Polite, his wife, Fatha Patterson, and their thirteen-year old daughter, Karen Patterson, moved into the rental home. Petitioner was barely acquainted with Mr. Polite and his family. Petitioner’s dealings with them were limited to casual greetings.

Petitioner and a neighbor, Arthur Henderson, were drinking heavily on the night of Saturday, October 26, 1985. They bought and consumed two and one-half pints of Smirnoff Vodka. Petitioner returned home early the next morning. At about 6:30 a.m., while the Polite family was asleep, Mr. Polite awakened to see Petitioner, carrying a machete and a sawed-off shotgun, walking from the back of the rental house to his side of the duplex. Mr. Polite awakened Fatha, and related what he had seen. She began to call Petitioner’s father, Benjamin Atkins, but found that the phone lines were dead. Upon inspection of the outside telephone wires, Aaron and Fatha discovered that their phone lines had been cut. Aaron returned to the bedroom, and Fatha left to alert Petitioner’s father.

Shortly thereafter, Aaron heard a gunshot from within his house. He spotted Petitioner, armed with a sawed-off single-shot shotgun, standing at the doorway of Karen’s bedroom. Petitioner began shooting in Aaron’s direction, but Aaron jumped out of the line of fire, running into the yard. Petitioner pursued Aaron, and continued discharging the weapon. After Aaron ran into the street, Petitioner retreated and headed for his father’s home.

Petitioner’s father and Fatha heard the gunshots and summoned the police. Fatha opened the screen door of the father’s duplex and spotted Petitioner aiming the shotgun at her. As she backed away screaming, Petitioner’s father stepped out onto the porch. Petitioner shot his father in the right shoulder area. The father staggered back into his kitchen, where he collapsed and died.

Fatha shut the door and ran to the bedroom to get a telephone. Petitioner began shooting randomly at the side of the duplex, where gunshots came through the wall. Petitioner also shot out a window in his father’s car. Petitioner mounted his motorcycle and began pulling out of the driveway. Aaron and Fatha ran to their house to check on Karen. They found her in her bed lying in a pool of blood caused by a massive gunshot wound to the head. She also suffered a wound to her right hand. Karen was taken to the hospital, where she died a few hours later.

In the meantime, a neighbor, Detective Schuster of the Charleston police, had just gone off-duty and was returning home at the time of the shooting. He saw the flash of gunfire and Petitioner pulling out of the driveway, with a revolver in his back pocket. Schuster called for backup, and pursued Petitioner for four miles. Schuster and other officers then subdued Petitioner as he fell off his motorcycle and arrested him. Police retrieved the shotgun a few blocks from Petitioner’s house, along the escape route. The machete and shotgun shells were retrieved from the backyard.

https://casetext.com/case/atkins-v-moore-2

Mark Sheppard Executed For 2 Virginia Murders

Mark Sheppard and Andre Graham were executed by the State of Virginia for a double murder

According to court documents Mark Sheppard and Andre Graham would go over to the home of Richard and Rebecca Rosenbluth who he would fatally shoot and rob the home

Mark Sheppard and Andre Graham would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Mark Sheppard would be executed by lethal injection on January 20 1999

Andre Graham would be executed by lethal injection on December 9 1999

Mark Sheppard Photos

Mark Sheppard - Virginia execution

Andre Graham Photos

Andre Graham Virginia

Mark Sheppard Case

Mark Arlo Sheppard, convicted of murdering a suburban Richmond couple, was executed by injection tonight hours after his last appeals failed. Sheppard, who insisted that he was not the triggerman in the Nov. 28, 1993, shootings of Richard and Rebecca Rosenbluth at the couple’s Chesterfield County home, was pronounced dead at 9:07 p.m. at the Greensville Correctional Center. When asked for a final statement by Warden David Garraghty, Sheppard mumbled four dates and, after each one, said, “I love you.” Sheppard’s attorney, Chris Collins, said he believes the dates were birthdays of family members or close friends. “He seemed very much at peace and accepted what was going to happen,” said Collins, who met with Sheppard just before the execution and walked with the inmate into the death chamber. “His concern was with his family.”

Virginia Gov. James S. Gilmore III rejected Sheppard’s last appeal this afternoon, saying he saw no reason to intervene in the execution, the first one scheduled in the state this year. “After reviewing all of the evidence, the judge imposed the death sentences. The convictions and death sentences were upheld on multiple appeals,” he said. Earlier in the day, the U.S. Supreme Court rejected a stay of execution 7 to 2 without comment. Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and John Paul Stevens were in the minority. Sheppard, 27, said in a telephone interview that prosecutors framed him for the killings even though they knew another man committed the crime. “Basically, I’m mad because of what’s going on,” Sheppard told the Richmond Times-Dispatch on Tuesday. “I’m a peaceful guy. . . . I’m trying to stay strong for my family.” Prosecutors said Sheppard and an accomplice, Andre Graham, were cocaine dealers who killed the Rosenbluths when their finances began to dwindle.

Autopsies detected cocaine in the Rosenbluths’ bodies, and drug paraphernalia was found in their home. Richard Rosenbluth, 40, was shot twice in the head, and his wife, 35, was shot four times in the head and neck. Graham received a life term in the Rosenbluths’ slayings and is on death row for another murder, in October 1993. Sheppard testified at his own trial that Graham and a third man, Benji Vaughan, were the triggermen in the Rosenbluths’ deaths. The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected a claim from Sheppard that Virginia’s “fast track” appeals law had unconstitutionally denied him the due process people convicted of other crimes receive.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/1999/01/21/man-who-killed-va-couple-is-put-to-death/c0cc95d8-9998-4bfa-9f5f-d0d4b3154f23/

Troy Farris Execute For Texas Officers Murder

Troy Farris was executed by the State of Texas for the murder of Tarrant County Sheriff’s Deputy Clark Rosenbalm.

According to court documents Troy Farris was involved in a drug deal with two accomplices when Tarrant County Sheriff’s Deputy Clark Rosenbalm would pull up. As the Deputy was reaching for his radio he would be fatally shot by Farris

Troy Farris would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Troy Farris Photos

troy farris texas

Troy Farris Case

Texas has executed a man convicted of killing a North Texas sheriff’s deputy who interrupted a drug deal near Fort Worth. Prison officials say 36-year-old Troy Dale Farris was declared dead at 7:16 p.m. CST today after receiving a lethal injection for the slaying of Tarrant County Sheriff’s Deputy Clark Rosenbalm.

Farris told Rosenbalm family members who witnessed the execution: ‘I have nothing but love for you. This comes from the deepest part of me. I hope this doesn’t offend you but Clark did not die in vain. Through his death he led this man to God.’ Rosenbalm was killed when he interrupted a drug deal at Saginaw, just north of Fort Worth, in 1984. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals refused this week to hear another appeal from Farris, and The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles rejected his clemency request on Tuesday. Farris’s appeals focused on the rejection of a potential juror who opposed the death penalty. The Court of Criminal Appeals rejected the argument in 1990 and refused this week to address the issue again. As recently as last week, Farris told a reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram that he is innocent. Farris was convicted largely on the testimony of a friend who was at the shooting and fingered Farris in a plea bargain. No murder weapon was ever recovered, and appeals courts have criticized the lack of material evidence in the case

https://www.upi.com/Archives/1999/01/13/UPI-Focus-Killer-of-Texas-deputy-executed/1653916203600/