Harry Nicks Murders Charles Back In Alabama

Harry Nicks was sentenced to death by the State of Alabama for the murder of Charles Pack

According to court documents Harry Nicks would rob a pawn store and force two employees to lie on the floor. Both of the employees would be shot in the head, Charles Back would die from his injuries and the other employee would survive

Harry Nicks would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

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Where Is Harry Nicks Now

Harry Nicks is incarcerated at Holman Prison

Harry Nicks Case

This case arises out of an incident which occurred on March 5, 1983, in the Bessemer Pawn Shop at 315 N. 19th Street, Bessemer, Alabama.   The pawn shop was owned and operated by Robert and Isadore Back. At approximately 2:30 p.m., a black male entered the shop.   He was wearing a red vinyl jacket, blue jeans, and a clear plastic shower cap on his head.   He had acne scars on the right side of his face.   He was carrying a red canvas tote bag which had a white shoulder strap.   Robert Back and an employee, Debra Lynn Love, were in the shop at the time.   The man approached Back and said, ‘Man, I need some money.   I got to get out of town quick.’   He then pulled a pistol from the tote bag, pointed it at Back, and told Love not to move.   Back took money from a cash drawer and put it in the tote bag.   The robber demanded more money.   He demanded ‘big bucks,’ and continuously called Back a ‘god damned old man’ and ‘mother fucking old man.’   He threatened to kill Back and pulled a second pistol from the bag.   Back took money from a second cash drawer and put it in the bag.   The robber demanded more money.   He wanted ‘big bucks’ and ‘big bills.’   He ordered Love to lie on the floor and she complied.   Back opened the cash drawer in the safe and handed more money to the robber and told him, ‘This is all I have.’   The robber ordered Back to lie next to Love on the floor.   As Back and Love lay face down on the floor, the robber fired three shots.   One shot entered the back of Love’s head;  one entered the back of Back’s head, penetrating his brain;  and one went into a rubber mat on the floor.   Back either died instantly or in a matter of minutes from the bullet wound to his head;  however, the bullet fired into Love’s head lodged in her skull and she survived.   As soon as Love heard the robber leave the shop, she telephone the police, giving them a detailed description of the robber.

“Subsequently, Love identified appellant, in two lineups conducted by the police, as the person who robbed the pawn shop and shot Back and her.   She also made a positive in-court identification of appellant.

“Venita Bishop was working as a cashier in a nearby store on the date of the incident.   She observed a black male, fitting the description of the robber, in her store around 12:30 to 12:45 p.m. Subsequently, she identified appellant, in a lineup, as the person she observed in the store where she worked on the day of the incident.   She also made a positive in-court identification of appellant.

“A firearms expert determined that two of the bullets fired by the robber were .22 caliber and fired from the same gun.   The two pistols displayed by the robber were never found.   The autopsy performed on Back’s body disclosed stippling, or powder burns, around the wound to the back of his head, indicating that the pistol from which the shot was fired was very close to his head, probably within two inches.

“Appellant did not testify in his own behalf during the guilt phase of the trial.   He called only two witnesses:  Dr. Clifford B. Hardin, a psychiatrist, and Gordon Burkhead, his landlord, in support of his insanity plea.”

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/court/al-court-of-criminal-appeals/1474344.html

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