Dennis Eaton
A functional
illiterate, Dennis Eaton has a low level of intelligence, with an I.Q.
ranging between 84 and 94.
During his
arrest, Dennis shot himself in the head in a suicide attempt. After only
three days of treatment for his gunshot wound, he was interrogated by
police for the murders of Walter Custer, Jr., Ripley Marston, State
Trooper Jerry Hines, and Judy McDonald.
During
questioning, Dennis asked about a lawyer on five separate occasions,
stating, "Maybe I ought to talk to a lawyer," "Didn't you say I had a
right to a lawyer," and "I need to talk to someone, a lawyer, a
psychiatrist, someone."
After each
comment about an attorney the questioning officers replied that he had
the right to counsel but never directly asked if he wanted a lawyer.
Justice Lacy, in his dissent, writes, "In my opinion, when equivocal
statements such as these are made, the most obvious and appropriate
response is to ask the suspect, "Do you want a lawyer?". The suspect's
response to this question should resolve the ambiguity and allow the
interrogators to proceed accordingly."
When asked
during questioning if Judy shot the police officer, Dennis replied "Judy
was a good girl. Judy wouldn't hurt anybody."
This evidence
was later used against him in the trial for the murder of the police
officer in which he was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to
death.
Justice Lacy
notes the suspicious behavior of the police officers when he writes, "As
Eaton continued to refer to counsel, albeit at times in an ambiguous
manner, the reactions of the police evidenced their own concern over the
consequences of Eaton's statements. Yet, they took no affirmative action
to remove the ambiguity and find out whether he wanted counsel. Rather,
they orchestrated their actions in a manner which they believed would
avoid the requirement of the presence of an attorney during the
interrogation."
The appellate
court found that Eaton's inquiry about counsel did not translate into a
request for counsel and upheld the conviction.
In addition to
appealing on the grounds that he should have been provided with counsel,
Dennis also appealed on the grounds that the jury was not given
instructions for a second-degree murder charge.
Dennis claims
that Judy was the person who killed Trooper Hines and testified that the
trooper instructed him to wait by the car while he arrested Judy. He
believes that his testimony warrants second-degree murder instructions
and feels they should have been presented to the jury. However, they
were not and he was convicted of capital murder.
During the
sentencing trial the jury was not informed that Dennis' guilty plea to
the other murders automatically made him ineligible for parole. They
were simply told that he had committed other murders within a 24 hour
span and posed a danger to the community. Dennis appealed the judge's
decision to withhold the information about his other life sentences
however this request was denied by the Appeal's Court.
Dennis Eaton was
executed on June 18, 1998.
Dennis Eaton was out on bond on a
burglary charge and was living with Walter Custer, Jr. and
Judy Ann McDonald, who had a 3 year old child together. Knowing that
Walter could testify against him in the burglary charge, Eaton shot him
twice in the face and once in the back before going to the next door to Ripley Marston's house, shooting him twice in the back of his
head and stealing his wallet and his keys.
He stole Ripley's car and took the
willing Ann McDonald with him to flee to Texas. They were routinely
stopped by Jerry Hines who was a Virginia State Trooper, who
suspected the driver was drunk, and they left him dead on the side of
the road. The car was noticed in a fast food restaurant's drive thru and
as police officers surrounded the car, Eaton shot and killed Ann, who
was driving, before making an attempt to kill himself.