Johnny Watkins was executed by the State of Virginia for two murders that occurred days apart
According to court documents in an eight day period Johnny Watkins would shoot and kill two store clerks in two robberies. In the first robbery Watkins would get cigarettes and shoot the clerk, Betty Barker, twice
Eight days later Johnny Watkins would rob a second store where he would fatally shoot store clerk Carl Buchanan
Johnny Watkins would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death
Johnny Watkins would be executed by way of the electric chair on March 3 1994
Johnny Watkins Photos
Johnny Watkins FAQ
When was Johnny Watkins executed
Johnny Watkins was executed March 3 1994
How was Johnny Watkins executed
Johnny Watkins was executed by way of the electric chair
Johnny Watkins Case
acts. A. Barker Murder.
On November 13, 1983, Betty Jean Barker reported for work as clerk at a Kwik Stop convenience store about 11:00 p.m. At 2:45 a.m. on November 14, a customer departed after paying her for gasoline. About 3:15 a.m. other customers found the clerk, apparently dead, lying on the floor behind the cash register, the drawer of which was open. The life saving crew, when called to the scene, confirmed that Barker was dead. An autopsy established that she had been struck by three bullets, one in the right cheek, one in the upper right chest, and one in the upper left chest. The fatal shot, which perforated the lungs and aorta, was the one in the upper right chest. A fourth bullet, found in the victim’s sweater, had not wounded her.
Quentin Nash was the principal witness for the Commonwealth. As an accomplice of Watkins, he had been convicted of the crimes but had not been sentenced. Nash testified that he and Watkins left a card game about 1:30 a.m. on November 14 in Watkins’s car. Johnny Watkins said he was tired of being “broke” and was going to “rob a place,” and then said he was going to the Kwik Stop market to “rob that place.” Nash agreed to act as a lookout. They arrived at the Kwik Stop about 2:40 a.m., purchased gas, but then drove across the street because there were other customers in the store. At 3:00 a.m., when they saw the clerk was alone, they returned; Watkins entered the store while Nash remained *428 in the car. Nash, reconsidering the proposed robbery, went in to persuade Watkins not to commit the crime. Watkins, however, had purchased cigarettes. When Barker opened the cash register, Watkins shot her twice, causing her to fall to the floor.Johnny Watkins ordered Nash to take the cash register. As Nash ran from the premises with the cash drawer, he saw Watkins leaning over the counter with the firearm in his hand. When Watkins returned to the car, the men left the scene of the crimes. Nash testified that he refused to accept from Watkins any of the money obtained in the robbery. It was established that the amount of $89.89 had been taken by the robbers.
In their investigation of the Buchanan murder, the police found a .22-caliber pistol in a jacket belonging to Johnny Watkins. There was uncontradicted expert testimony that one of the bullets removed from Barker’s body had been fired from this pistol. B. Buchanan Murder.
In the early morning hours of November 22, 1983, Carl Douglas Buchanan was the sole employee working at Fast Fare, a convenience store. It was established that he was alive about 1:30 a.m. A customer who entered the store between 1:45 and 1:50 a.m. observed the cash register open and the money drawer missing. Looking behind the counter, he found Buchanan’s body. The police ascertained that there was missing from the cash register the sum of $34.73, including a $2.00 bill whose serial number had been recorded. Local merchants were notified of the existence of this bill. Later on November 22, Darnell Watkins (Darnell), Watkins’s brother, was identified as the person who had tendered the bill that day in paying a store account.
Obtaining a search warrant for Darnell’s apartment, the police discovered that the brothers shared a bedroom. The officers found in a jacket in their bedroom credit cards, a driver’s license, and other items belonging to Carl Buchanan. In another jacket bearing Watkins’s employee identification badge, they found eight empty cartridges and a .22-caliber pistol loaded with six live bullets.
Darnell was the principal witness for the Commonwealth. He admitted his participation in the crimes, for which he had been convicted but not sentenced.
Darnell testified that about midnight on November 21, his brother offered to drive him to a store for cigarettes. On the way, Watkins said, “I might rob some place.” After finding one store closed, they proceeded to Fast Fare, which Watkins entered while Darnell remained in the car. No other customers were in the store. Darnell saw his brother point a weapon at the clerk, saw the clerk fall backward, and saw Watkins go to the other side of the counter and take the cash drawer from the cash register. Hearing two shots, Darnell observed Watkins bending down behind the counter. When Watkins returned to the car with the cash drawer and a wallet, he drove away with his brother. Darnell asked Watkins if he had shot the clerk; Watkins replied that he had shot him three or four times in the head and chest. Watkins told Darnell the wallet contained about $40. From the proceeds of the robbery he gave Darnell $42 in repayment of a loan.
Darnell also testified that his brother later attempted to persuade him to accept responsibility for the robbery while Watkins accepted responsibility for the murder under the belief that such separation of guilty conduct would enable Watkins to avoid execution. This testimony was corroborated by a relative in whose apartment the brothers lived.
An autopsy established that Carl Buchanan had been struck by four bullets, one near the left temple, one in the left upper chest, one in the left mid-chest, and one in the right lower back. Either of the chest wounds would have been fatal. The uncontradicted expert testimony was that one of the bullets removed from Buchanan’s chest had been fired from the .22-caliber pistol found in Watkins’s jacket.
https://law.justia.com/cases/virginia/supreme-court/1985/841551-1.html