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Taiana L.
MATHENY
Robbery
Taiana Matheny acknowledged that Feb. 23, 2005, was
all about her.
That day, she went to the mall with her new
boyfriend, Terry Sellers. Got a manicure and a tanning session. Bought
some fuzzy boots.
And that night, at her boyfriend's urging, she
lured Kevin Pierce to some apartments, pressed a revolver to his head,
pulled the trigger and killed him.
But during a trial this week and last, Matheny
testified that she has shed her selfish, sick ways.
"Today, she said on the witness stand, "is all
about the truth.
Matheny went on to testify to what she says is the
truth. That she, Sellers and Sellers' best friend, Terrell Thorpe, set
out to rob Kevin Pierce Sr. and Victor Ford Jr. on consecutive nights
in February 2005. That she would bat her eyes at the victims, flirt
with them, exchange phone numbers and lure them to their deaths.
That she and Sellers killed both.
That their murder spree was thwarted when a third
intended victim, Dawayne Kearney, fought back and survived.
The question is, will jurors believe Matheny and
convict Thorpe of first-degree murder?
In closing arguments Wednesday, prosecutors Jim
Masteller and Leigh Ann Retelsdorf acknowledged that Terrell Thorpe
didn't pull the trigger, didn't fire the shots that killed Pierce and
Ford. However, they urged jurors to find Thorpe guilty of murder under
a state law that holds accomplices responsible if someone dies during
the commission of a felony, such as robbery.
Jurors got the case Wednesday afternoon and will
return today to deliberate Thorpe's fate.
"During this trial, you heard about one week in the
life of two best friends Terry Sellers and Terrell Thorpe,
Masteller said. "A week in which these two best friends used Terry
Sellers' new girlfriend as bait to lure two young men for the purpose
of robbing them of their possessions and robbing them of their very
lives.
Thorpe's attorney, Andrew Wilson, pounced on
Matheny's testimony. He pointed out that she lied through two initial
police interviews about her involvement in the spree. She later
admitted killing Pierce and luring both to their deaths.
He asked jurors if they really could trust Matheny.
"She's a notorious liar, he said. "She's a
coldblooded killer. She shot someone, a stranger, point-blank,
execution-style. That's who she is.
Matheny pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and
two counts of conspiracy to commit murder and is awaiting sentencing.
She faces up to life in prison.
Matheny gave a crisp description of the first
killing, of luring Pierce, of going with Sellers and Thorpe to an
apartment complex near 65th Street and Grand Avenue, of firing the
shot that killed Pierce.
Matheny was able to give only a foggy description
of Ford's murder. "She was completely wasted, Masteller said.
Prosecutors said Thorpe provided the revolver used
in both killings. He acted as a lookout and getaway driver. He helped
remove car rims from Pierce's vehicle and hide them. He handed Matheny
Clorox wipes and had her wipe down the dashboard and inside of Ford's
vehicle.
That makes Thorpe guilty of murder just as guilty
as Sellers and Matheny, Masteller said. Sellers is serving a life
sentence the same term Thorpe faces.
Masteller said Thorpe provided further proof of his
involvement when he ran into Matheny in a holding cell in August.
Matheny was waiting to be transferred; Thorpe was heading to court.
Matheny testified that Thorpe tried to intimidate
her. Another inmate confirmed the confrontation.
"He doesn't say to her, 'Tell the truth.' Doesn't
say 'Lie in court for me,' Masteller said. "He says, 'Don't come to
court.'
"Why doesn't he want her to come to court? Because
he knows she will testify about his involvement.
Key Witness Takes Stand In Sellers Trial
By Gary Smollen - Wowt.com
December 4, 2007
The prosecution's star witness in the murder trial
of Terry Sellers entered a guilty plea for her role in the case
Tuesday. Taiana Matheny then described the murder-robbery scheme that
took the lives of two Omaha men.
Matheny listened as the prosecutor recounted how
she would lure men with the promise of sex to secluded places where
they would be robbed and murdered.
Once her guilty plea was accepted, the jury
returned to the courtroom to listen to how Matheny says the scheme
unfolded.
"I understand that they need her testimony to
convict the others, but she first still took someone's life, says
Erika Wilson, friend of murder victim Kevin Pierce.
Wilson was unimpressed with Matheny and her
testimony. Matheny admitted to murdering Pierce. "He was my boyfriend
at the time and we had a daughter together," says Wilson.
After pleading guilty to murder, Matheny began to
cry, but regained her composure before testifying. Then, in a strong
voice, she took the jury back to the crime scenes, how they set up the
victims and how they robbed and murdered them.
"What she did was certainly cold-blooded," says
Mathenys attorney James Martin Davis.
On the stand, Matheny told the jury about her
guilty plea and what she believes the consequences will be. Matheny
said, "I'm almost positive Im going to spend the rest of my life in
prison.
Matheny also testified that she was intimidated by
Sellers and said at the time, "I did what people wanted me to, whether
I wanted to or not," and, "I never questioned anything."
"She's the one that puts him at the scene of all
three crimes and she's the individual who worked with him to lure
these people to their deaths, says Davis.
Sellers family was also not impressed with Matheny
and her testimony.
Sellers father says much of it is a lie. "Don't
nobody tell me what to do, I ain't going to go and shoot nobody
because somebody tell me to do this and that, says Terry Fisher. You
can't force nobody to do nothing."
Prosecutors can cut a deal for the testimony of an
alleged co-conspirator and make their case much stronger.
Matheny's deal was to plead guilty to second-degree
murder and two conspiracy counts. Prosecutors dropped two counts of
first-degree murder, three weapons charges and a drug charge.
Matheny still faces a maximum of life plus 100
years in prison.
Attorney Says Client Not Guilty
Wowt.com
March 10, 2005
The attorney for a 21-year-old woman facing two
murder charges says his client didn't kill anyone. Authorities say she
murdered two men and tried to murder a third.
Taiana Matheny, of Tucson, Arizona, is accused of
killing Kevin Pierce and Victor Ford. Both men were shot in the head
about two weeks ago. The shootings happened a few blocks and less than
24 hours apart.
Matheny's attorney, James Martin Davis says, "It's
the classic case of falling in with the wrong crowd. She came to Omaha
despite numerous warnings from her family."
Davis says Matheny met Terry Sellers at a party and
came to Omaha with him on February 21st. Three days later Kevin
Pierce's body was found behind an apartment complex across from 4725
N. 65th Street. Less than 24 hours later, Ford's body was found just
blocks away, at 4403 North 62nd Street.
Pierce and Ford had both been shot in the head with
a .38 but Davis say it was not Matheny's gun.
"She didn't kill anybody," he says.
Davis says that Matheny claims the weapon belongs
to Sellers.
Sellers came into the picture two days after the
Ford murder. Police say Matheny tried to kill a third man with a .38.
He is identified as Dwayne Kearney of Omaha. Investigators say that
Kearney put up a struggle, shots were fired and Kearney then wound up
being stabbed by a third party later identified as Sellers. The
22-year-old Sellers was arrested along with Matheny in connection with
the felony assault and stabbing.
A witness who called 911 about the Kearney assault
claims to have heard a gunshot and witnessed the attack.
Davis says his client tried to pull Sellers off
Dwayne Kearney after a drug deal went bad. It was that incident that
attack allowed police to tie the gun to the two murders.
Davis says, "These people did not deserve to die.
What happened in these two instances was cold, calculating, brutal and
as sadistic as I've ever seen in my 30 years in the justice system."
Davis says he has shared information with Omaha
police and plans to meet with Douglas County attorney Stu Dornan.
Terry Sellers is currently charged with Attempted
Murder and Use of a Weapon to Commit a Felony in the attack against
Dwayne Kearney.
Witness Details Altercation
The witness who called 911 about the February 27
incident in which Dwayne Kearney was stabbed was sleeping at the time
the confrontation began but was awakened by a gunshot.
"I just had a real bad feeling right when I heard
it," he tells us. "Seen two guys fighting in parking lot, noticed a
woman standing on side watching them."
Police say that the woman was Taiana Matheny.
Officers say that she and her friend, Terry
Sellers, had planned to meet Kearney in the Maple View Apartment
parking lot, at 104th Ave. and Maple, to buy drugs from Kearney.
Kearney told police that one person shot at him but
missed. That's when he tripped and fell.
"They had him down on the ground," the witness
tells us. "The other guys jumped on 'em, just started pounding on 'em.
Girl got on top of them also. That's when I said, hurry up call the
cops, they're pounding on this guy."
Police found Dwayne Kearney with stab wounds.
Both Sellers and Matheny were charged with
attempted murder in his stabbing and booked in jail.
At this point, Terry Sellers has not been charged
with the two murders.
Sellers has spent time in jail in the past for
carrying a concealed weapon. He grew up in Omaha and attended three
different high schools in Omaha but never graduated.