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Adremy DENNIS
Robbery
A written application with documentation
outlining the reasons Adremy Dennis should receive Executive
Clemency was filed with the Parole Board. On September 21, 2004,
Public Defender, Stephen A. Ferrell presented oral testimony in
support of his application. Their focused question before the Board
and the Governor is not one of guilt, but the question is one of
mercy. Reasons expressed in favor of the granting of Executive
Clemency are as follows:
Mercy is appropriate in this case. Dennis was not
even five months past his eighteenth birthday at the time of this
offense. Although he was statutorily and constitutionally eligible
for the death penalty, his youth and lack of maturity call for mercy.
He was raised in the worst of circumstances and was completely
neglected until the age of fifteen. Had Dennis committed this
offense five months earlier, his age would have completely precluded
imposition of the death penalty.
However, maturity does not occur
suddenly, upon the passing of a birthday. His level of maturity at
the time of this offense was not very different from what it had
been five months earlier. Therefore, his youth must carry enormous
weight in determining what sentence is ultimately appropriate for
him for this crime. His age is particularly significant because his
background of incredible neglect left him almost incapable of
exercising good judgment and responsible behavior. His youth and
background do not excuse his offense, but they do argue strongly for
mercy.
Dennis had a neglectful family upbringing. His
lack of parenting and inadequate education left him immature and
vulnerable to the worst influences. He was born to an extremely
unstable 19 year old mother who demonstrated her inability to
effectively parent Dennis from the beginning. She had no prenatal
care. When he was only one week old, he became sick when his mother
gave him concentrated infant formula without any liquid added. His
father was abusive towards his mother and prevented her from
purchasing food, diapers and other necessities.
They frequently
fought and argued until he left them when Dennis was five years old.
He was never able to progress in school. In his first year of
kindergarten, he missed 31 days out of 60 days and was withdrawn in
February. Similar absences were noted the next year when he was
again placed in kindergarten. He later repeated the first grade, and
after that was placed in third grade but the absences continued. He
missed 34 days and failed third grade.
The next year he missed 71
days. His absences became worse as time went on. As a seventh grader,
prior to his placement in foster care, he had missed 122 days. His
mother nor school officials took substantial action to correct the
problem. During these crucial years, Dennis was simply absent from
his education through no fault of his own. He was frequently left
alone with no one to take responsibility for him.
Dennis was finally removed from his neglectful
home by the Children Services Board when he was 15 years old. He was
placed in foster care for the next three years. He developed a
loving relationship with his foster mother. Within her home he met
her expectations, but the damage of his past could not be undone
according to two psychologists. It was too little too late.
Psychologist James Brown testified at Dennis’ trial as to the lack
of parenting in his life. Patterns of behavior were set and it was
too late. His problems needed to be addressed by the age of five or
six and they were not. Psychologist, Sandra McPherson, in her
evaluation of Dennis for his post-conviction proceedings, suggested
that Dennis most likely suffers from Attention Deficit with
Hyperactivity Disorder.
The condition was never treated which would
account for his deteriorating functioning in his adolescent and
young adult years. This made him vulnerable to the substance abuse
he encountered during his youth. Numerous warning signs of disaster
were ignored at an early age and he was not placed in foster care
until he was fifteen years old. Dr. McPherson concluded it was
indeed too little too late.
Dennis was a young man whose judgment was poor
and further impaired by alcohol and drug abuse on the night of the
offense. The facts of the offense tend to show that the shooting was
an impulsive act that would never have occurred but for the lethal
combination of extreme immaturity coupled with extreme intoxication.
He now admits his guilt and accepts full moral
responsibility. In his unsworn statement at the penalty phase,
Dennis expressed remorse for the killing of Mr. Kyle. He
acknowledged that maybe no one would believe him, but he never meant
for this to happen. It is something that he lives with and thinks
about every day of his life. He can never undo what has happened,
but Dennis does take responsibility for this tragedy and expresses
his remorse.
In the interest of justice in this tragic offense,
the harsh punishment of a life sentence for an eighteen year old
offender does not diminish the seriousness of the offense; therefore
the applicant pleads for mercy and asks for a commutation of his
death sentence to a life sentence without parole eligibility.
OPPONENTS TO CLEMENCY:
Richard Kasay, Summit County Assistant Prosecutor
and Timothy Prichard and Stephen Maher, Assistant Attorney Generals
of the Ohio Attorney General’s Capital Crimes Unit represented the
State of Ohio at the hearing before the Parole Board on September
21, 2004. Arguments offered in opposition to the granting of
Executive Clemency included: The evidence overwhelmingly establishes
Dennis’s guilt.
The facts of this case clearly indicate that a
jury lawfully imposed the death penalty on Dennis, and that his
convictions and sentences had not been reversed after nearly ten
years of judicial scrutiny by every level of both the state and
federal courts. These courts have also reviewed the actions taken by
Dennis’ trial and appellate counsel and have steadfastly held that
Mr. Dennis received competent representation at every stage of the
proceedings.
Mr. Dennis was the “principal offender” in the
crimes where Aggravated Robbery was the motive and that he shot Mr.
Kyle in the head with a saw-off shotgun at point blank range. The
murder was committed as a course of conduct involving the killing or
attempt to kill two or more persons.
Mr. Dennis has never expressed “genuine” remorse
and has never accepted responsibility for his actions as he has
provided numerous versions of his involvement. His taped interview
with the Board on September 10, 2004 is a validation of his current
mindset which is similar to his criminal way of thinking at the time
of his crimes ten years ago.
Dennis has acknowledged that he was in a
leadership role with the Folks gang. He has tattoos on his chest of
the numbers 187 and 211, which are the California Penal Codes for
Homicide and Aggravated Robbery, which signify his crimes of
conviction.
He has an established prior record of juvenile
criminal conduct resulting in adjudication.
The aggravating and mitigating circumstances
surrounding the crimes were considered at trial, upheld throughout
the appellate process, and affirmed by the Ohio Supreme Court.
The victim’s mother, Doreen Kyle, and the
victim’s brother, Craig Kyle, gave statements describing their
incredible loss since the murder of the victim. Their statements
were silent as to whether the death penalty should be carried out.
Also giving a statement was the Aggravated Robbery victim, Martin
Eberhart, who gave details of the instant offense. He asks the State
to carry out the sentence. Mr. Eberhart is currently a police
officer. Curtis Sabo, a friend of Mr. Kyle, also gave an oral
statement and urged the State to carry out the death sentence.
CONCLUSION:
Adremy Dennis is scheduled to be executed on
October 13, 2004. A taped interview by the Parole Board was held at
the Mansfield Correctional Institution on Sept 10, 2004.
MAJORITY OPINION:
The Board reviewed the documents and deliberated
extensively on the information provided. The Board split in their
decision with five (5) members voting for an unfavorable
recommendation and three (3) members voting for a favorable
recommendation. Majority Opinion: The majority members of the Board
gave considerable focus to the following factors.
The evidence overwhelmingly establishes Dennis’
guilt.
Dennis continues to minimize his participation in
the crimes and lacks sincere remorse as evidenced in his most recent
taped interview with the Board. After hearing his taped interview,
the majority assessed that Dennis is of the same mindset today as
when he committed the instant offenses.
Prosecution proved during trial, the clear course
of violent conduct by Dennis, beginning with the Aggravated Robbery
and Attempted Murder of Mr. Pizer culminating in the Aggravated
Robbery and cold blooded Aggravated Murder of Mr. Kyle.
Dennis made a self-reporting statement indicating
he was a member of the Folks gang and in a leadership role. He also
acknowledged selling drugs, thereby affording him the ability to
purchase new vehicles and other expensive items.
All reviewing courts have agreed that Mr. Dennis
received proper representation at trial and during subsequent
appeals. His convictions and death sentence have been upheld after
nearly 10 years of judicial affirmation.
There was nothing presented to suggest any
manifest injustice, nor was the mitigation presented regarding his
youthful age and neglectful upbringing sufficient to outweigh the
aggravating circumstances in this case.
As such, a majority of the Ohio Parole Board
recommends that Governor Taft not grant clemency to Adremy Dennis.
DISSENTING OPINION:
The dissenting members of the Board gave
considerable focus to the following mitigating factors.
Dissenting members of the Board gave great weight
to the arguments put forward by Assistant Public Defender, Stephen
A. Ferrell. His assertions have been validated by documented
corroboration. The dissenting members of the Board concurred with
these findings, that in fact, Dennis was subjected to severe and
debilitating child neglect from birth until age fifteen when he was
finally removed from his home by Children Services Board and placed
in foster care.
Dennis’ aunts provided testimony at the Clemency
Hearing detailing the lengthy history of neglect at the hands of his
parents from infancy and throughout his young life.
Dennis’ mother also provided testimony and
offered that she did the best she could do. She gave no apology for
the effects her utter lack of parenting had on her son.
School records indicate a pattern of extreme
absenteeism from kindergarten on through middle school, resulting in
routine failing grades. The school system missed a vital opportunity
to help Dennis when they took no formal action in referring the
matter to juvenile court or to Children Services. Thusly, Ms. Dennis
was not held accountable for her disregard of her son’s academic and
social education.
Reports from two psychologists, Dr. James Brown
and Dr. Sandra McPherson corroborate the serious effects of Dennis’
childhood neglect. Dr. McPherson’s report in particular provides
significant clinical findings that he is not an antisocial or
sociopathic individual; that he can invest himself in positive
relationships and has the potential to accept authority and
structure that is imposed. Test results indicate characteristics of
Attention Deficit with Hyperactivity Syndrome and a predisposition
to drug and alcohol dependency. Dr. McPherson indicated that such
persons are likely to get into trouble with the dominant society
unless they have heroic parenting and clearly, Dennis’ parenting was
not heroic. She concluded that Dennis is capable of conforming his
conduct in the prison setting and is capable of rehabilitation such
that he can contribute positively to that structured setting.
Dennis’ age at the time of the offense presents
strong consideration for mercy. Had he committed this offense 5
months earlier, his age would have completely precluded imposition
of the death penalty. But even with the finite statutory eligibility
for the death penalty to be imposed, we recognize that his level of
maturity at the time of this offense was not very different from
what it had been five months earlier. His youthfulness must
therefore carry enormous weight in determining what sentence is
ultimately appropriate for him for this crime.
In regard to mitigating factors, the court ruled
that Dennis was entitled to appropriate appreciable weight since he
was eighteen years old at the time of the offense. The court also
found relevant in mitigation, that his only prior convictions were
two juvenile adjudications for criminal damaging and receiving
stolen property. Additionally, the court deemed that the lack of
effective guidance for Dennis during most of his life was deserving
of mitigation.
And finally the court determined that Dennis’
apparent remorse over his criminal behavior should be given modest
weight in mitigation. In spite of the court’s recognition of these
critical mitigating factors it ruled they did not outweigh the
aggravating factors. The dissenting members, with all due respect to
the court’s decision, do place considerable weight to the stated
mitigating factors and further suggest that mercy is warranted at
this point in the case.
Under Senate Bill 2, Ohio’s current sentencing
law, a jury has the option to recommend a sentence of Life without
parole. Given all the mitigation presented, one can only speculate
as to whether that may have occurred in this case had that been an
option. Absent of that as an option at sentencing, the Governor has
it within his authority to consider the option at this time.
Manifest injustice cannot be found by having
Dennis serve the rest of his life in prison. Commutation in this
regard will not demean the seriousness or the horrors of the offense.
There is no doubt he should be punished harshly for his disregard
for Mr. Kyle’s life. For an eighteen year old to serve the rest of
his life in prison is clearly harsh, yet deserving. Therefore we
respectfully recommend that the Governor Taft consider mercy and
commute Dennis’s sentence to a Life sentence without parole.
RECOMMENDATION:
Following consideration of available information, the Ohio Parole
Board, with eight (8) members participating, recommends to The
Honorable Bob Taft, Governor of the State of Ohio, by a majority
vote of five (5) to three (3) that Executive Clemency be denied in
the case of Adremy Dennis.
Akron Beacon-Journal
MANSFIELD (AP) -- The way Adremy Dennis sees it,
he is being executed over a mere $15, and the robbery victim is
partially to blame for his own death. "I told this man 'Don't move,'
" Dennis said during a pool interview Oct. 4 from death row at
Mansfield Correctional Institution. "I ain't saying it's all his
fault, but why did he move? Every day I think about that. It ain't 'Why
did you kill that man?' It's 'Why did you move?' "
Dennis is scheduled to be executed by injection
Wednesday for killing Kurt Kyle, 29, of Akron during a robbery 10
years ago. Dennis, 28, would be the youngest inmate put to death in
Ohio since 1962. During a Sept. 10 interview with a member of the
Ohio Parole Board, Dennis said he regretted the robbery netted so
little cash. "I'm about to get (profanity) killed over $15," he said.
Dennis, of Akron insists the killing with a
20-gauge sawed off shotgun was not planned and he couldn't think
straight because he was under the influence of drugs and alcohol.
"(Kyle) had to know I was drunk. I know he could smell it on my
breath, smell the weed lingering on my clothes. If I come up to you
and tell you don't move, you're like this (still)," he said at the
Mansfield prison.
He told the parole board member he had expected
to be found guilty of involuntary manslaughter. Instead a Summit
County Common Pleas jury convicted him of aggravated murder,
attempted aggravated murder, aggravated robbery and unlawful
possession of a gun. "If my intent was to kill this man, like if
they say we was out looking for any old Joe to rob, well that's (profanity),"
Dennis said.
The board voted 5-3 that Gov. Bob Taft deny
clemency for Dennis. The dissenting members said Taft should
consider clemency, citing Dennis' age at the time of the killing --
18-- and a troubled childhood. The majority said no evidence of
injustice or his age and upbringing warranted clemency. Taft has not
made a clemency decision yet. He can allow the execution to proceed
or reduce Dennis' sentence. He has commuted the sentence of one
inmate since Ohio resumed carrying out the death penalty in 1999.
Dennis would be the 15th inmate to be executed during that period.
Dennis has exhausted his procedural appeals. But
he has a lawsuit pending against the state that claims the
lethal-injection process in Ohio is unconstitutional.
Prosecutors said during the early morning of June
5, 1994, Dennis and Leroy Lamar Anderson tried to rob a man on an
Akron inner-city street, but the man ran away. A short time later,
Dennis and Anderson approached Kyle and Martin Eberhart in front of
Kyle's home. Kyle, a stock race car driver, was celebrating a
victory at Barberton Speedway.
Prosecutors said Anderson demanded money while
pointing a gun at Eberhart's neck. Eberhart handed over $15, and
while Kyle searched his pockets, Dennis shot him in the head.
Anderson, who was 17 at the time, is serving a life sentence. Ohio
prohibits the death penalty for defendants younger than 18.
"He ratted and he got the better deal," Dennis
said of Anderson's sentence. Dennis also spoke about allowing
witnesses to survive. "If my mind would have been right at the time,
and if I would've made my mind up, then c'mon man, it wouldn't have
been no eyewitness to that," he told parole board member James Bedra,
who voted to grant clemency. "Everybody where I'm from know that you
don't leave no eyewitness."
Marquita Dennis, 49, said she visited her son in
prison recently and he expressed remorse for Kyle's death. "He told
me it was an accident, and I believe it," she said.
But attorneys for the state and members of Kyle's
family have said evidence showed the shooting was not an accident
and he has shown no remorse for his crime.
Dennis' aunt, Querida St. Andre, 54, of
Charleston, S.C., said her nephew had a difficult life from the time
he was an infant, including a near drowning as a teenager. Dennis
told authorities he was never married but has four children.