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James Neil
TUCKER
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Rape
Number of victims: 2
Date of murders:
June-July
1992
Date
of arrest:
July 12,
1992
Date of birth: January 12,
1957
Victims profile: Rosa
Lee "Dolly" Oakley, 54
/ Shannon
Mellon, 21
Method of murder:
Shooting
Location: Calhoun County, South Carolina, USA
Status:
Executed by
electrocution in South Carolina
on May 28, 2004
Summary:
On June 25, 1992, Rosa Lee Dolly Oakley was in her yard when Appellant
pulled his car into her driveway.
He talked to her long enough to make
sure she was alone, then pulled out a gun and forced her into the house
and her bedroom.
Joe Black and James Howard then drove up looking for
her husband and rang the doorbell. Tucker followed Oakley out into the
the driveway and Oakley began screaming.
Tucker pulled Oakley away from
the retreating car, dragged her back into the house, took fourteen
dollars from her purse, and shot her twice in the head at close range.
He testified he shot her the first time when she tried to grab the gun.
As he was leaving, he shot her again to "put her out of her misery."
On the run from police, Appellant broke into the
Christian Fellowship Church on June 26-27, 1992, and into Kenneth
Parker's mobile home between June 27-29, 1992.
Appellant then hitched rides under trucks until he
got to Calhoun County, where he broke into Shannon Mellon's house. Armed
with a gun, he taped her wrists and ankles behind her back and left her
on her bed while he searched for things to steal.
Tucker then reentered
the bedroom and shot her once in the head, then twice more when she
continued to struggle.
He then wrapped her body in a sheet and dragged it
into the woods behind the house, where it was discovered a week later.
Tucker stole Shannon's car and was finally apprehended in Maggie Valley
a week later, giving a detailed confession to police.
Tucker was convicted and sentenced to death for each
murder. Tucker's big defense was that "She tried to grab the gun and I
shot her. I don't know--I can't say at this time whether I intentionally
shot her or if it just happened. I don't know." The defense was
unsuccessful.
Tucker had been sent to an adult prison at 17 for
raping an 8-year-old girl and an 83-year-old woman in Utah. He escaped
three times from prison while serving that sentence from 1974 to 1991.
Last month Tucker tried to escape from death row by threatening a guard
with a safety razor blade melted into a toothbrush. He was recaptured
minutes later.
Citations:
State v. Tucker, 478 S.E.2d 260 (S.C. 1996) (Oakley Murder Direct
Appeal). State v. Tucker, 464 S.E.2d 105 (S.C. 1995) (Mellon Murder Direct
Appeal). State v. Tucker, 512 S.E.2d 99 (S.C. 1999) (Mellon Murder Direct
Appeal after Resentencing).
Final Meal:
Pizza, Mountain Dew and two bacon, lettuce and tomato sandwiches.
Final Words:
Tucker's attorney, Teresa Norris of Columbia, read his final statement.
"To everyone, I have thought of a million things to say, but they can
all be summed up like this. To those I have harmed, my abject apologies
and regrets. I am ashamed. To those who must remain and deal with this
insane world, my condolences. But be of good cheer. Christ has overcome
the world! I know that my redeemer lives. I am leaving this world with a
cheerful attitude. Hallelujah."
ClarkProsecutor.org
South Carolina Department of Corrections
Inmate: TUCKER, JAMES NEIL
Inmate #: 00004875
SID#: SC00469256
DOB: 01/12/1957
Height: 5' 10"
Weight: 180 lbs.
Build: MEDIUM
Hair: BROWN
Eyes: BLUE
Complexion: FAIR
County of Conviction: CALHOUN
Date of Sentencing: 12/08/1993
Race: Caucasian
S.C. Man Electrocuted for 1992 Murders
By Jeffrey
Collins -
Myrtle Beach Online
Associated Press - May 28, 2004
COLUMBIA, S.C. - A man convicted of killing two women
while looking for money 12 years ago was executed Friday in South
Carolina's electric chair. James Neil Tucker, 47, was pronounced dead at
6:11 p.m. He was the first person to die by electrocution in more than a
year.
Tucker was remorseful in a final statement read to
witnesses by his attorney: "To those I have harmed: my abject apologies
and regrets. I am ashamed," the statement said.
Tucker was convicted of killing 54-year-old Rosa Lee
"Dolly" Oakley in her home in June 1992. He stole $14 from Oakley, then
shot her twice in the head. He said he needed money to help his pregnant
wife. Tucker was convicted of killing 21-year-old Shannon Mellon six
days after killing Oakley. Her hands and legs had been bound and she was
shot three times in the head. Tucker took her car and $20.
Tucker was the first person on death row to be
executed by electrocution since Eric Bramblett on April 9, 2003, in
Virginia, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. He was the
first to die in the electric chair in South Carolina since 1996.
Condemned inmates in South Carolina currently receive lethal injection,
but those sentenced before June 1995 are electrocuted unless they choose
injection. Tucker's lawyer said he felt if he made a choice, he would be
condoning his own death.
Oakley's husband and Mellon's father witnessed
Tucker's execution, but declined to talk to reporters.
S.C. executes inmate in electric chair
By Jeffrey
Collins -
TheState.com
May 28, 2004
COLUMBIA, S.C. - James Neil Tucker, who killed two
women while looking for money 12 years ago, has been put to death in
South Carolina's electric chair.
Moments before his death, Tucker expressed remorse in
a statement read by his lawyer Teresa Norris. "To those I have harmed:
my abject apologies and regrets. I am ashamed," the statement read. Then
a brown hood was placed over Tucker's head and an electrician checked
the long, black cord that ran from the ceiling of the death chamber to
the wooden chair.
The electrician nodded at the warden and about 30
seconds later, a breaker fell with a thump. Tucker's body jerked upward,
then the breaker was shut off and he slumped forward in the restraints.
A few seconds later, the breaker thumped again and more current was sent
for about two minutes. Tucker's body had no reaction. He was officially
pronounced dead at 6:11 p.m.
Tucker was executed for killing 54-year-old Rosa Lee
"Dolly" Oakley in her Sumter County home in June 1992. He stole $14 from
Oakley, then shot her twice in the head. Tucker said he needed money to
help his pregnant wife. He also was sentenced to death for killing 21-year-old
Shannon Mellon in Calhoun County six days later. Mellon's hands and legs
were bound and she was shot three times in the head. Tucker took her car
and $20.
Tucker, 47, is the first inmate in the nation to go
to the electric chair since Earl Bramblett was executed in Virginia in
April 2003, and the first to be electrocuted in South Carolina since
1996. The state allows inmates to choose lethal injection, but Tucker's
lawyer said he felt if he made a choice, he would be condoning his own
death.
Oakley's husband and Mellon's father watched Tucker's
execution. Neither showed emotion as Tucker died, and they didn't talk
to reporters after the execution. Witnesses were taken to the death
chamber about five minutes before Tucker was scheduled to die. Behind a
black curtain, prison officials took him the short distance from his
cell to the chair.
Muffled voices could be heard as they strapped Tucker
in. Then his minister began praying with him and they both sang a hymn
about how Jesus is always with someone no matter what happens. Then
pastor Eddie Norris said, "Glory, hallelujah, amen?" "Glory, hallelujah,"
Tucker said.
Friday's execution ended a life of crime for Tucker.
He was sent to an adult prison at 17 for raping an 8-year-old girl and
an 83-year-old woman in Utah. He escaped three times from prison while
serving that sentence from 1974 to 1991. Last month Tucker tried to
escape from death row by threatening a guard with a safety razor blade
melted into a toothbrush. He was recaptured minutes later.
Tucker said his stepfather abused him and he was
raped by an older prisoner while he was in a psychiatric ward as a young
teen, according to Orangeburg lawyer Jay Jackson, who defended Tucker in
the Mellon case. "Everything was about him and about his needs. And if
his needs were averse to yours, then tough," Jackson said earlier this
week. "He just had no sympathy for how his behavior would affect you."
Tucker is the 247th inmate to die in South Carolina's
electric chair, which was built in 1912. But he is only the second to be
electrocuted since the state first offered lethal injection in 1995.
Friday's execution was the fourth in South Carolina this year and the
32nd since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976.
ProDeathPenalty.com
James Neil Tucker will be the first state inmate
since 1996 to die by electrocution, one of the oldest yet rarest forms
of execution in the nation. Tucker will be put to death for the killing
of Rosa Lee "Dolly" Oakley in her Sumter County Home, but he also faces
a second death sentence in Calhoun County for the murder of 21-year-old
Shannon Mellon.
The death penalty is implemented in the state against
those who commit murder with one of 10 aggravating circumstances. The
minimum age to receive the death penalty is 16. Prior to June 1995, all
persons receiving the death penalty were to be executed by electrocution
under state law. Legislation signed into law on June 8, 1995, provided
the option of lethal injection.
A death row inmate, however, has to
choose the option in writing 14 days before the execution date, or it is
waived. If the person waives the right of election and the sentence was
imposed prior to June 8, 1995, the penalty will be administered by
electrocution. If the inmate waives the right of election and the
penalty was imposed on or after that date, lethal injection will be
administered.
"He chose not to choose," said Mark Plowden,
spokesman for the S.C. Attorney General's office. Since Tucker was
originally sentenced to death in December 1992, under state law he will
die in the electric chair. He had until midnight May 15 to choose
otherwise.
Tucker appears more at peace as date with electric
chair nears
Charleston Post and Courier
AP - May 28, 2004
COLUMBIA--As the hours left in his life tick away,
James Neil Tucker grows more at peace, while the families of his victims
anxiously await the end of an ordeal that began more than a decade ago.
Tucker's execution is scheduled for 6 p.m. Friday in the electric chair.
His death is near certainty because a month ago Tucker decided to drop
an appeal claiming dying by electrocution is cruel and unusual
punishment, said his lawyer, Teresa Norris.
The state is putting him to death for shooting Rosa
Lee "Dolly" Oakley in the head twice and taking $14 from her purse at
her Sumter County home in June 1992. Tucker said he robbed Oakley
because his wife was pregnant and he needed money. Tucker also faces a
death sentence for killing Shannon Mellon and taking $20 from her while
running from police in Calhoun County less than a week later.
The 47-year-old prisoner will be the first inmate to
die in the electric chair in the United States in more than a year. He
will be the first electrocuted in South Carolina since Larry Gene Bell
chose the method in 1996. The electric chair used to be the standard for
executions in the U.S.
More than 4,200 inmates have been electrocuted
since its invention, and state prison statistics show Tucker will be the
247th inmate sent to the chair in South Carolina since it was built in
1912. But in recent years, the less dramatic lethal injection has become
the norm because it looks like a much more serene way to die. Nebraska
is the only state that still requires electrocution, and South Carolina
and five other states give inmates some kind of choice between
electrocution or lethal injection.
Tucker didn't actually choose the electric chair.
Under South Carolina law, any inmate sent to death row before June 1995
can ask to die by lethal injection. But if no decision is made, the
condemned go to the chair by default. "He does not want to be or appear
to be in any way a willing participant in this process," Norris said. "To
him, when faced with a piece of paper that says we can kill you this way
or this way, he refused to participate."
When his execution seemed
imminent, Tucker and his lawyer talked about filing a final appeal
saying electrocution is cruel and unusual punishment. But Norris said
Tucker asked her to withdraw the appeal "to allow closure for himself
and the victim's families." The state issued its death warrant days
later, and Tucker has spent his final weeks preparing for his death, his
lawyer said. "Mr. Tucker gets more at peace with the world and himself
as his execution draws near," Norris said.
Sometime Thursday or early Friday, prison officials
will drive Tucker two hours from death row near Ridgeville to the
Capital Punishment Facility in Columbia. The time isn't released for
security reasons.
Once there, he'll be put in a cell a short distance
away from the room where electricians will be preparing South Carolina's
92-year-old electric chair. About an hour before he's scheduled to die,
Tucker's head and right leg will be shaved. He'll be given a clean,
green jumpsuit with one leg cut out so the electrodes can easily be
placed. Prison officials will offer him a shot of Valium -- the modern
version of the old slug or two of whisky offered to condemned inmates in
the decades ago.
Just moments before he is strapped in the chair,
witnesses will file into a small room. They will watch as Tucker is
given one extremely powerful jolt for several seconds, a pause and
another, weaker jolt that continues at a lower rate for about two
minutes. Among the witnesses will be Mellon's father and Oakley's
husband. Both have said they hope Friday's execution will help them deal
better with 12 years of grief.
James Oakley said he is glad Tucker will die in the
electric chair, according to an interview scheduled to air Thursday on
Columbia television station WLTX. "I think I feel more relieved that
he's going that way because of the things he put her through," James
Oakley said. "I walked in the house and seen her and seen what he had
done to her."
National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty
James Neil Tucker (SC) - May 28, 6 PM EST
The state of South Carolina is scheduled to execute
James Neil Tucker, a white man, May 28 for the murder of Rosa Lee Oakley
in Sumter County. Calhoun County also holds a death warrant against Mr.
Tucker for the murder of Shannon Mellon.
Mr. Tucker is not asking the governor for clemency,
nor will he participate in selecting the manner of his execution.
Because he refuses to “choose” lethal injection, he will be executed in
South Carolina’s default procedure of electrocution.
Like many men on death row, Mr. Tucker experienced
childhood physical and sexual abuse at the hands of close family members.
Psychiatric experts testified that because of this abuse, Mr. Tucker
developed an anti-social personality disorder and entered into the
corrections system at age 13.
He was incarcerated in adult prison at age
16. Mr. Tucker was failed by the people charged with protecting and
nurturing him as a child, failed by Utah’s child-protective services,
and will be subsequently put to death at the hands of the state with
2,000 volts of electricity.
Please send a message to Gov. Mark Sanford and tell
him that you oppose the execution of James Tucker.
S.C. executes inmate in electric chair
By Jeffrey
Collins -
The Sumpter Item
AP - May 28, 2004
James Neil Tucker, who killed two women while looking
for money 12 years ago, has been put to death in South Carolina's
electric chair. In his final statement, Tucker expressed remorse. "To
those I hurt, I offer my deepest apologies and regrets. I am ashamed,"
Tucker's attorney, Teresa Norris, read to assembled witnesses.
Then a brown hood was placed over Tucker's head and
an electrician checked the long, black cord that ran from the ceiling of
the death chamber to the wooden chair. The electrician nodded at the
warden and less than a minute later, a breaker fell with a thump.
Tucker's body jerked upwards, then the breaker was shut off. More
current was sent through Tucker's body for about two minutes before he
was pronounced dead at 6:11 p.m.
Tucker was executed for killing 54-year-old Rosa Lee
"Dolly" Oakley in her Sumter County home in June 1992. He stole $14 from
Oakley, then shot her twice in the head. Tucker said he needed money to
help his pregnant wife. He also was sentenced to death for killing 21-year-old
Shannon Mellon in Calhoun County six days later. Mellon's hands and legs
were bound and she was shot three times in the head. Tucker took her car
and $20.
Tucker, 47, is the first inmate in the nation to go
to the electric chair in more than a year, and the first to be
electrocuted in South Carolina since 1996. The state allows inmates to
choose lethal injection, but Tucker's lawyer said he felt if he made a
choice, he would be condoning his own death.
Killer facing execution called 'cold'
Charlestown Post and Courier
May 27, 2004
COLUMBIA--The prosecutor in one of James Neil
Tucker's death penalty trials calls the inmate scheduled to die Friday
in the electric chair a cold and calculated killer. One of the lawyers
who defended Tucker in that case says that's not far off the mark.
Tucker, 47, was sentenced to death in the murders of
two Midlands women in the summer of 1992. He will be executed for
shooting a Sumter County woman twice in the head at her home and taking
$14 from her purse. He also killed a Calhoun County woman with three
shots to the head while running from police and took $20 from her purse.
Even to his death, Tucker is defiant. He could have
chosen lethal injection, but he decided not to choose and therefore will
be electrocuted. "If he makes a choice as to how it is they are going to
execute him, then he in effect is sort of submitting himself to the
system. And he's just not going to do that," said Orangeburg lawyer Jay
Jackson, who defended Tucker in the Calhoun County case.
The man who prosecuted Tucker in that case, Walter
Bailey, said reading Tucker's confession to the murders was chilling
because he described the crimes "just like any other day in his life." "He's
got an IQ of something like 129. He's got a bright mind," Bailey said.
"He just had no conscience whatsoever. He was cold." Tucker's problems
began in his childhood in Utah when his stepfather would beat him so
severely that Tucker would run away. He would commit petty crimes to
survive, get arrested and be taken back to his stepfather and beaten
again, Jackson said.
As a young teen, Tucker was raped by an older
inmate in a psychiatric facility, Jackson said. He was sent to an adult
jail when he was 16 for raping an 8-year-old girl. "Other than when he
escaped from prison, he was in jail for the rest of his life except that
time he was out in Sumter," Jackson said.
In his confession, Tucker said he decided to rob his
first victim, Dolly Oakley, because he needed money after marrying his
pregnant girlfriend. She took their son and left Tucker after his arrest.
"Everything was about him and his needs. And if his needs were averse to
yours, then tough," Jackson said. "He just had no sympathy for how his
behavior would affect you."
Tucker one of 13 Death Row inmates from T&D region
Other killers await appeals on their death sentences
By Richard Walker -
The Times and Democrat
On Friday, a Utah man will be the fourth person
executed in South Carolina this year and the 32nd since the death
penalty was reinstated in 1976. Facing two death sentences, James Neil
Tucker, 47, is expected to die in South Carolina's electric chair from
murders committed in Sumter and Calhoun County.
Of the 69 inmates currently on South Carolina's Death
Row, 12 inmates (excluding Tucker) await their fate for crimes committed
in The T&D Region in the past 12 years. Most are awaiting a hearing for
post-conviction relief. PCR hearings are a standard civil matter where
the petitioners, or the people convicted and sentenced, seek to overturn
their convictions by questioning their own defense attorneys. The
outcome could affect either the conviction or the sentence.
"What the defendant is saying by filing a PCR is that
his attorney did not present an adequate defense," 1st Circuit Deputy
Solicitor of Orangeburg County Angela G. Avinger said. "What he's saying
is that he would have been found innocent if he'd have had a better
defense." At that point, the years of waiting for the murderer to be
executed begin.
While there is a time limit that an inmate has to file
for a PCR hearing, it is left up to a circuit judge to work the hearing
into his or her schedule. "Once you've filed it, it's sort of an open-ended
thing from that point," former 1st Circuit Solicitor Walter Bailey Jr.
said. "There's no statute that orders it to take place."
Failing in their PCR hearings, defendants can appeal
directly to the South Carolina Supreme Court. If that effort fails, a
request can be made for the U.S. Supreme Court to hear the case. The U.S.
Supreme Court can decide to rule on the case or it can send the appeal
to be heard by the U.S. District Court. If those efforts are
unsuccessful, the appeal can be taken to the 4th Circuit U.S. Court of
Appeals. If the appeal is denied at that level, it can then be taken
before the U.S. Supreme Court one final time.
Here's a look at other Death Row inmates from the
region, listed in chronological order, according to the date the crimes
took place. A brief synopsis is given for the Orangeburg, Calhoun and
Dorchester County cases. Bamberg County currently has no one on death
row, according to statistics released from the S.C. Department of
Corrections on May 11.
Thomas Ivey
Convicted of killing Orangeburg Sgt. Tommy Harrison
and Columbia businessman Robert Montgomery
Two years after a murderous crime spree, Thomas Ivey
was found guilty of the 1993 shooting deaths of a popular Orangeburg
police officer and a Columbia businessman. In January 1995, the Union
Springs, Ala., man was convicted of murdering Orangeburg Department of
Public Safety Sgt. Tommy Harrison, 38. He was sentenced to death for the
Jan. 15, 1993 shooting.
According to testimony from the death-penalty phase
in the Harrison case, Ivey and Vincent L. Neumon Sr., then 24, of
Columbia, kidnapped Robert Montgomery and stole his truck two days
before Harrison was killed. After taking the vehicle, they drove
Montgomery to North, where Ivey took him out of the vehicle and shot him
twice at close range -- once in the back of the head and once in the
chest. Along with a Columbia woman, the two men then drove to
Orangeburg's Prince of Orange Mall.
Harrison arrived at the mall about 5:30 p.m. and
found the trio. Harrison was attempting to question Ivey concerning a
bad check being passed at Belk when the Alabama prison escapee pulled a
.357-caliber Smith and Wesson Magnum and began firing. Harrison was shot
point-blank six times. Montgomery's body was found outside of North on
Jan. 16, 1993; his vehicle was located abandoned in Fairfield County.
In addition to Ivey, Circuit Court Judge David F.
McInnis sentenced Neumon to the maximum sentences on both charges, life
in prison for the murder and 30 years for the armed robbery. The woman,
Patricia A. Perkins, 30, of Columbia, was charged with forgery in the
case. Ivey, who turns 30 tomorrow, has two PCR hearings currently
pending, one for each of the murders.
Herman Hughes
Convicted of killing Kenneth Presley and attempting
to kill teenager Kelly Hoffman in St. Matthews
"You will suffer death by electrocution or lethal
injection and may God have mercy on your soul," Circuit Court Judge
Edward Cottingham told Herman Hughes after a Calhoun County jury found
him guilty of murder in September 1995. Hughes, who was 16 at the time
of the killing on March 18, 1994, was convicted of murdering Kenneth
Presley, 20, and attempting to murder 18-year-old Kelly Hoffman of St.
Matthews while holding up the Blue Diamond video poker establishment
just outside of St. Matthews. Presley was shot three times in the head
and Hoffman was shot once in the head and once in the chest.
Hughes has a PCR hearing pending before Circuit Judge
Paula H. Thomas. In addition, Hughes' case is one of seven being taken
before the state Supreme Court in order to set guidelines to determine
whether someone is mentally retarded and can't face the death penalty.
Defense lawyers say Hughes was put in learning-disabled classes in
second grade and failed two grades. He was taking eighth-grade classes
at the time of the shooting.
Roger Dale Johnson Jr.
Convicted of killing Kimberly Sue Edwards with a
machete
In February 1996, a Calhoun County jury spent less
than a hour before finding Roger Dale Johnson Jr. of Greenville guilty
of murder. Four days later, Johnson, now 42, was sentenced to death for
kidnapping and murder in the slaying of 30-year-old Kimberly Sue Edwards
of Taylors. Edwards' body was discovered by passing motorists on June
17, 1994, off Interstate 26 about a mile west of S.C. Highway 6 in
Calhoun County. She bled to death after being hacked multiple times with
a machete.
Johnson's accomplice, his girlfriend Jackie Lee
Henderson King, 39, of Greer, testified at Johnson's trial, saying
Edwards was abducted from Chars Restaurant in Greenville before being
driven to Calhoun County. "The next thing I heard was Kimberly Sue
Edwards saying, 'I see what you've got in your hands,'" King testified.
"I saw the machete come up and go down. I heard her bones crunch ...
like dogs eating chicken bones. I saw it once, but I heard her bones
crunch twice." When Johnson re-entered the vehicle in which the pair
were traveling, "He left the bloody machete next to me." "He said, 'You
and I are bonded for life now that you've seen me kill somebody,'" King
testified. Johnson has a PCR hearing scheduled for Nov. 1 before Judge
Diane Goodstein.
Bayan Aleksey
Convicted of killing Highway Patrol 1st Sgt. Frankie
Lingard
Bayan Aleksey of Philadelphia was found guilty in
August 1998 for shooting Highway Patrol 1st Sgt. Frankie Lingard. On
Dec. 31, 1997, Lingard was patrolling Interstate 95 near Santee with
narcotics officer Deputy Lin Shirer from Calhoun County. It was around
11:30 p.m. when Lingard pulled over a white Mustang GT with Delaware
license plates. At Aleksey's trial, prosecutors entered into evidence
radio transmissions that recorded Lingard's last moments alive. "G8
Orangeburg ... I-95, 97-mile marker southbound ... white Ford Mustang
... 982722..." Lingard's words trailed off to static and finally
silence.
Seconds later, a terror-stricken Deputy Shirer
screamed into his handset. "Orangeburg! Orangeburg 1033! Officer down,
he's hit!" Torn by four 9-mm bullets, Lingard bled to death in the
roadway after the routine traffic stop turned deadly just minutes before
the new year. Aleksey is awaiting a post-hearing briefing before Circuit
Judge Diane Goodstein.
Charles O. Shuler
Convicted of killing three women -- Linda Williams,
Dorothy Gates and Stacy Williams
Charles O. Shuler, 53, of Elloree, was sentenced to
die in March 2001 for murdering his former girlfriend, her mother and
her daughter on Sept. 8, 1999. Brandishing a 12-gauge shotgun, Shuler
broke into Linda Williams' Myrtle Drive home near Cordova and opened
fire on the women. During Shuler's trial three years ago, Bailey
promised "a voice from the grave" and offered a 911 recording to seal
Shuler's fate. "I've been shot!" 13-year-old Stacy Williams told an
Orangeburg County 911 emergency dispatcher on Sept. 8, 1999. "Who shot
you?" the dispatcher asked. "Charles Shuler," the girl replied.
Orangeburg County Sheriff's Office investigators
charged Shuler in the shooting deaths of Linda Williams, 38; her mother,
Dorothy Gates, 63; and her 13-year-old daughter, Stacy. A jury spent
little more than an hour before finding Shuler guilty. He was later
sentenced to death. Shuler has a PCR hearing scheduled for June 28 at
the Orangeburg Courthouse. Circuit Judge Casey Manning is scheduled to
reside.
Samuel L. Stokes
Convicted of killing and sexually assaulting Connie
Snipes
Samuel L. Stokes was sent to the S.C. Department of
Corrections on Halloween Day 1999 after being found guilty on charges of
murder, kidnapping, criminal conspiracy and first-degree criminal sexual
misconduct. The charges against the 37-year-old Orangeburg man were
levied after the nearly nude body of Connie Snipes, 21, who lived near
Bamberg, was found in Branchville in May 1998. She had been shot twice
in the head and an autopsy showed she had been sexually assaulted.
Stokes and Snipes were acquaintances prior to the mutilation and killing
of Snipes.
Dorchester County cases:
-- After fleeing from law enforcement for a year,
Joseph Gardner was apprehended in Detroit and returned to South Carolina
to answer why he committed a racially motivated murder the previous
year. At his 1995 trial, Gardner stated he killed a North Charleston
woman in retaliation for hundreds of years of white oppression. On Dec.
30, 1992, the woman had an argument with her boyfriend at a bar. As she
attempted to walk home, she was picked up by Gardner and several others,
who raped her.
-- In November 1998, Calvin Shuler stood calmly as
the court clerk announced the jury's verdict to each of the offenses
with which he was charged in connection with the death of a 77-year-old
armored car guard. On Dec. 3, 1997, Shuler initially used a .25-caliber
handgun, purchased by his mother before she died in 1995, to commandeer
an armored car. He later reeled off some 43 rounds from an SKS assault
rifle into the car. However, forensics evidence presented at Shuler's
trial revealed armored car guard James "J.B." Brooks' last act was to
fire his service revolver through a wire mesh separating Shuler and the
cargo area of the vehicle. Shuler was severely wounded as a result.
-- In 1994, Timothy Rogers, 35, was convicted in the
1992 murder of a 9-year-old girl. In December 2000, the state Supreme
Court reaffirmed the death sentence and unanimously upheld Rogers'
sentence.
-- Kenneth Simmons, 43, was sentenced to die for
raping and killing an 87-year-old woman in Dorchester County in
September 1996. A psychologist testified Simmons' IQ was 69 and that he
functions mentally in the lowest 1 percent of the population. Like
Hughes, Simmons' case is being taken before the state Supreme Court for
review.
-- John Edward Weik was convicted in 1999 for the
shotgun slaying of 27-year-old Susan Hutto Krasae at her home in
Knightsville. She was the mother of Weik's son, Daniel. Weik had
confessed that he fired at least four shotgun blasts into Krasae. Weik
later appealed that he was not competent to stand trial, but the state
Supreme Court justices disagreed.
-- Raindrops tapping against windowpanes and the
quiet sobs of family members were the only sounds heard after a man gave
testimony of the last hours of an Orangeburg woman's life. In a plea
agreement with solicitors, James Tawain Gadson gave eyewitness testimony
concerning the Feb. 16, 2001 shooting death of 21-year-old Kandee Louise
Martin. Marion (a.k.a. "J.R.") Bowman Jr., 21, of 220 Lockett St.,
Branchville, was found guilty of murder and arson in connection with
Martin's murder. Bowman was sentenced to death after his May 2002 trial.
Tucker's fate
Barring any intervention from the governor's office,
James Neil Tucker, 47, will be put to death for the murder of two women
in 1992. Tucker is scheduled to be put to death Friday for killing Rosa
Lee Oakley, 54, of Sumter County. His appeal for the killing of 20-year-old
St. Matthews resident Shannon Lynn Mellon becomes a moot point Friday,
the day his execution is scheduled. By not applying to the South
Carolina Department of Corrections by May 14, Tucker chose not to choose
lethal injection, which automatically relegates him to die in the
state's electric chair. He is scheduled to be executed at 6 p.m. Friday.
A tough family life, poor choices and years in
prison shaped James Neil Tucker into a killer
By Richard Walker -
Charlestown Post and Courier
James Neil Tucker is days away from becoming the
first death row inmate to die in the electric chair in South Carolina
since 1996. Tucker, 47, is scheduled to be put to death Friday for
killing a Sumter County woman. His death row appeal for the killing of
20-year-old St. Matthews resident Shannon Lynn Mellon becomes a moot
point Friday, the day his execution is scheduled.
Those who were required to learn the man in-depth -
former 1st Circuit Solicitor Walter Bailey, who prosecuted Tucker's
case, and James "Jay" Jackson, Tucker's lead defense counsel - have
contrasting opinions about who he is: a cold-hearted, calculating serial
killer or a misguided man overcome by the grim circumstances of his life.
And through a confession he wrote for posterity 12 years ago, Tucker
himself gives insight into the man now facing the electric chair and how
he got to this point.
Bailey said the Utah man is nothing short of an
intelligent, yet evil monster with little emotion who deserves his fate
for killing the two women. Jackson says that given different
circumstances, Tucker could have been a positive leader in any given
community.
'Criminal' looks to escape abuse
James Neil Tucker was born Jan. 12, 1957, the oldest
of two children. His divorced mother later married a Mormon man who had
three children of his own. Another child was added to the family after
this union. Jackson said this family arrangement was detrimental to a
young Tucker, which could have played a part in his decisions later in
life - specifically, at the time of the killings. Tucker's stepfather
was abusive to him, Jackson said, sometimes going overboard on
punishment. "He (Tucker) would run away, commit petty crimes so he would
be taken out of the home," Jackson said. "He'd get caught, and they'd
take him right back home."
In some states, legal age is 17. The available public
documents concerning Tucker's criminal record show that as a 17-year-old,
he was incarcerated for rape in 1974. "She was an elderly lady," Bailey
said. "I think she was almost blind, too. All of his victims appear to
be women. He's very calculating." Tucker was sentenced in the Salt Lake
County District Court to a one- to 15-year sentence. Salt Lake County
court records indicate Tucker was incarcerated again in 1978 for escape
and theft. On each charge, he was again sentenced to one to 15 years in
prison.
He was in and out of prison for the next 10 years
except for periods when he would escape. "Other than that, he's been in
jail his whole life," Jackson said. "James is one of those who, if he
has enough time, makes good decisions. On impulse, he's not a good
thinker. I think that's what led to these murders."
Tucker admitted in his confession that one factor
leading to the murder of Shannon Mellon ion 1992 was a connection to
Calhoun County. During one of his brief periods of freedom, he was in
the St. Matthews area after he befriended a South Carolina man who was
also incarcerated in the Utah prison system.
Tucker escaped from that
prison three times, including remaining free for five years in the
1980s. It was contact with the South Carolina inmate that led Tucker to
this state. A business advertising job openings for farm managers
brought Tucker and his companion to Calhoun County. Once here, Webb
Carroll's Training Center, a horse farm east of St. Matthews, employed
the two men in 1984. Through that job, Tucker became familiar with
Calhoun County, a familiarity that years later would turn tragic for the
family of Shannon Mellon.
Back and forth between St. Matthews and Spartanburg,
Tucker was arrested and sent back to prison in Spartanburg County for
housebreaking and larceny and sentenced to 10 years. "He puts himself in
bad positions by robbery, petty theft. I think he truly regrets these
decisions," Jackson said. With a charge of escape against him, the state
of Utah reclaimed Tucker in 1988 after he was released from a South
Carolina prison. He then served another one- to 15-year sentence in Utah.
During Tucker's various prison terms in Utah from
1974 to 1991, he was cited 13 times for violations in the state's prison
system. Those charges range from being out of bounds to escape. While in
Utah's prison system, Tucker learned to drive, and, perhaps more
amazingly, obtained his pilot's license, Bailey said. On Oct. 17, 1978,
he was cited for having two shanks (knives), a file and a piece of
Plexiglas in possession.
On Dec. 16, 1982, he was cited for using drugs
or intoxicants he had somehow obtained while in prison. The last entry
on Tucker's prison record indicates that on June 26, 1991, he was found
in possession of contraband while still incarcerated. Almost to the day
a year later, a Sumter woman was found dead of two close-range gunshot
wounds.
The killing spree starts in S.C.
In March 1992, Tucker returned to South Carolina and
married his pregnant girlfriend, Marcia, in Sumter. With a child on the
way, Tucker said it "seemed like every time I brought home a paycheck, I
was further in debt, and that's why I started this whole thing." It
began at a horse farm in Sumter County.
Tucker had been eyeing it for
several days as a robbery target. Possibly, he was weary of a normal
life or missing excitement from a life of crime. Whatever the reason,
Tucker approached a woman who stood in her yard on Hialeah Parkway in
Sumter.
The woman's name was Rosa Lee "Dolly" Oakley. The
date was June 25, 1992. After pulling out a .25-caliber handgun, Tucker
forced the woman into her home. But a knock at the door gave the 54-year-old
woman one last chance to escape. Oakley answered the door to find a man
asking the whereabouts of one of her acquaintances. When the man began
to drive away, Oakley ran after him screaming, "Don't leave me, he's
going to kill me," according to Tucker's confession statement.
Despite
dragging the woman for a short distance, the man sped away. Tucker
picked the woman up and forced her back into the house. He then took $14
from Oakley's purse. When Oakley lunged for a telephone, Tucker's .25-caliber
handgun barked once. Oakley was struck in the head. Then, "I shot her
again before I left just because, as stupid as it sounds, I thought she
was suffering," Tucker said in his confession. "So I put her out of her
misery."
Within hours after the murder, police were looking
for Tucker. For the next few days, he laid low in the Sumter area. Twice
he slipped through police sweeps through areas where he was hiding. By
hiding out in delivery trucks as they made their rounds, even once
clutching the undercarriage of an 18-wheeler, he made his way to St.
Matthews - and Webb Carroll's Training Center.
He stole a station wagon
from a St. Matthews funeral home, but that vehicle was abandoned after
Tucker got it stuck in a wooded area. He said in his confession that he
began thinking of the training center where he thought he could steal
another car. He made his way to a cottage off Belleville Road owned by
the training center. Two vehicles were in the yard - a Chevrolet Blazer
and a Ford Mustang. That house on the horse farm is where Shannon Lynn
Mellon was living out her dream to become a female horse jockey.
The date was July 1, 1992. It was the day Mellon's
dreams ended. "I listened through the walls, and I determined that there
were two people in this house, a man and a woman," Tucker said afterward.
"I laid up outside this house trying to put a plan together in my head.
My intent was to go in this house and shoot both of these people and to
take one of those vehicles and whatever money they had together. That
was my intent."
Before Tucker could decide an entry plan, the man
inside the home walked out and drove away in the Blazer. A screen door
was the only obstacle that remained between the murderer and Mellon.
Tucker cut his way through the screen and bound a sleeping Mellon with
masking tape. He then helped himself to a glass of milk in her
refrigerator. "At this time, I had decided that I was going to kill this
girl and leave her body in the woods," Tucker stated. "And that would
give me more time until they found that body. She was laying facing the
wall with her back to the door. I shot her in the back of the head."
Rummaging through Mellon's purse, Tucker found a $20 bill. "Then about
that time, she came to and she said, 'I can't see,'" Tucker stated. "And
I shot her again in the head." Using Mellon's own travel bag, Tucker
packed some of the woman's jeans he found in the cottage. He then
prepared to leave. "When I zipped up the bag, I could hear her breathing
- her breathing was real ragged like she couldn't get air," Tucker said.
"At that time, I shot her again - the third time and I don't know
exactly - I think it was around her temple." He then stole Mellon's Ford
Mustang and made his way to Spartanburg where he stayed with
acquaintances for a few days.
Tucker's plans fall apart
The fugitive was arrested 10 days later in Maggie
Valley, N.C. As a police officer questioned him, Tucker went for the
officer's service weapon. "Most criminals get caught because they're
stupid," Bailey said. "He got caught because of good police work."
The
day following his arrest, while at the Haywood County Sheriff's
Department in Waynesville, N.C., Tucker gave a 48-page confession to
South Carolina Law Enforcement Division agent Perry Herod and Sumter
County Sheriff's Department Detective Glenn Harrell. "He said the first
time I met him that he'd created a difficult job for us with that
confession," Jackson said. "We were there trying to save his life,
trying to get him life in prison without parole. At no time did anyone
deny what he did or minimize it in any way."
Prior to his murder trials, psychiatrists diagnosed
the Utah man as having a strong anti-social disorder, Bailey said. "They
feel the victims are for their own disposal, and they have no remorse
for what they do," Bailey said. "And you add a superior intelligence on
to that and it makes for an evil person." Tucker and his wife Marcia
divorced in the years following his death sentence. The couple's son was
born in November 1992 while he was in prison.
In his December 1993 trial
for Mellon's death, a Calhoun County jury deliberated for less than 30
minutes before finding Tucker guilty of murder. He was then sentenced to
death. A Sumter County jury did the same a year later in Oakley's murder
trial. In that case, a jury spent 45 minutes deciding Tucker should die.
During a retrial of the penalty phase of Tucker's Calhoun County case,
the Utah man was again sentenced to death. "In essence, you have three
trials - two in Calhoun County and one in Sumter - 36 jurors who
sentenced him to death," Bailey said.
It may have been Tucker's knack for escape that gave
jurors second thoughts concerning Jackson's plea for the Utah man's life.
"I think if they (jurors) had given him life in prison, and he had
escaped and killed someone else, they'd have had a hard time living with
that," Jackson said. "That's just what I think, based on no evidence
whatsoever." Only last month, Tucker seemed to address that very
question. The death row inmate had his privileges revoked after pulling
a razor blade on a guard escorting him in from a recreation area. After
taking the guard's keys, however, Tucker was caught and put back in his
cell within a few minutes. "I think his IQ was 129," Bailey said. "Given
his intelligence, coupled with the fact he's a psychopath, makes him one
of the most dangerous people I've ever seen."
Tucker had until May 14 to choose lethal injection as
his form of execution. That deadline passed without a request from him.
Since Tucker was originally sentenced to death prior to a 1995 change in
state law, he will die in the electric chair. Last week, Tucker wrote a
letter to Jackson thanking him and co-counsel Lewis Lanier for their
efforts. Saying he felt it "the right thing to do," Jackson and Lanier
were scheduled to visit Tucker this past Wednesday. "The sad part, in my
view, is if he was raised in a different circumstance, he could have
been a doctor, a lawyer, an engineer," Jackson said. "He's certainly got
the intelligence."
Bailey doesn't agree. Tucker's excuse was that he
needed money. Two women are dead as a result. "So his solution was to go
out to Mellon's home, to Oakley's home, and kill them?" Bailey said. "I
believe that the world is better off if he is not breathing the same air
as the rest of the world." Regardless of their stance on Tucker, Bailey
and Jackson agree that the families of Oakley and Mellon are forever
left with an empty chair at holidays, one less birthday to celebrate,
one less Christmas present to wrap.
The 1996 retrial in Calhoun County placed Mellon's
case behind Oakley's time-wise, technically placing Tucker in the
electric chair for the Sumter woman's murder. "I don't know ... I made
the situation what is was," Tucker said in his confession. "I take the
responsibility for her death." The Utah man who placed a value of less
than $35 on the lives of two women is scheduled to die at 6 p.m. Friday.
Abolish Archives
Just to clarify and I won't say anything beyond this
on the list or elsewhere, but I notice on the CCADP website and some off-list
emails (and there seems to be some taint in the media since we're not
talking) that Tucker is listed as a volunteer. He is not. He went
through all of the normal course of appeals and was facing the imminent
release of a real execution order.
S.C. allows the inmates to choose between the
electric chair and lethal injection. Tucker refuses to choose, however,
because he does not want it to even appear that he is a willing
participant in this process in any way. Since he won't choose, the
fallback for him under state law is the electric chair.
Knowing that, when he was denied by the U.S. Supreme
Court last Monday and facing an imminent execution order, I filed
litigation alleging that the electric chair is cruel and unusual and
filed a stay motion to allow that litigation to go forward. After
further thought and consideration (and Tucker is a very intelligent guy),
he decided to withdraw that litigation. I won't address his reasons, but
that's all he withdrew. He is not now nor has he ever been a "volunteer"
for the death penalty.
So CCADP, please fix your website, and anyone else
with this understanding, please fix that too. He is not a volunteer. He
has simply chosen to avoid fighting and potentially delaying (by a few
weeks or months at best probably) his inevitable death and allowing
closure for himself and for the victim's families.
State v. Tucker, 478 S.E.2d 260 (S.C. 1996)
(Oakley Murder Direct Appeal).
Defendant was convicted in the Circuit Court, Sumter
County, Thomas W. Cooper, Jr., J., of murder, kidnapping, armed robbery,
possession of a weapon during a crime, first-degree burglary, third-degree
burglary, and larceny. Defendant was sentenced to death, and he appealed.
The Supreme Court, Waller, J., held that: (1) burglary charges were
properly joined with murder charges; (2) pretrial publicity did not
require change of venue; (3) photographs of crime scene were admissible;
(4) solicitor's improper closing argument did not require new trial; (5)
defendant was not entitled to jury instruction on included offense of
involuntary manslaughter; (6) solicitor's statements to media during
trial did not require change of venue; (7) defendant's prior convictions
of rape and escape were admissible at sentencing phase; (8) defendant
was not prejudiced by evidence regarding security posted in courtroom
during trial; (9) any error in submitting aggravating circumstance that
two or more persons were murdered by defendant by one act was harmless;
and (10) death sentence was not disproportionate to that imposed in
similar cases. Affirmed.
WALLER, Justice:
Appellant James Neil Tucker appeals his convictions of murder,
kidnapping, armed robbery, possession of a weapon during a crime, first
degree burglary (two counts), third degree burglary, and larceny. He was
sentenced to death for the murder. This appeal consolidates his direct
appeal with the mandatory review provisions of S.C.Code Ann. §
16-3-25(C) (1985). We affirm.
FACTS
On June 25, 1992, Rosa Lee Dolly Oakley ("Victim")
was in her yard when Appellant pulled his car into her driveway. He
talked to Victim long enough to make sure she was alone, then pulled out
a gun and forced her into the house and her bedroom. He was preparing to
tape Victim up when Joe Black rang the doorbell. Black and James Howard
(outside in the car) were looking for Victim's husband.
Both appellant
and Victim went out into the driveway after Black. Victim began
screaming, "Don't leave me, he's going to kill me," holding on to
Black's arm as he sat in Howard's car. Howard panicked and left.
Appellant pulled Victim away from the retreating car, dragged her back
into the house, took fourteen dollars from her purse, and shot her twice
in the head at close range. He testified he shot her the first time when
she tried to grab the gun. As he was leaving, he shot her again to "put
her out of her misery."
On the run from police, Appellant broke into the
Christian Fellowship Church on June 26-27, 1992, and into Kenneth
Parker's mobile home between June 27-29, 1992. Appellant then hitched
rides under trucks until he got to Calhoun County, where he killed
another person while attempting to get a car and money to escape police
looking for him on the Oakley murder.
Appellant was tried, convicted,
and sentenced to death for this subsequent murder ("Mellon murder")
before going on trial for the present offenses. Appellant was caught
July 10, 1992 in Maggie Valley, North Carolina and gave a detailed
confession to police.
At trial, Appellant was found guilty of murder, first
degree burglary, armed robbery, and possession of a weapon during a
violent crime for his actions at the Oakley residence. He was found
guilty of third degree burglary for the break-in at Christian Fellowship
Church. He was found guilty of first degree burglary and larceny for the
break-in at Parker's mobile home. He was sentenced to death at a
separate proceeding upon a jury's recommendation.
* * * *
We find the sentence imposed proportionate to that in
similar cases and is not arbitrary, excessive nor disproportionate to
the crime in this case. We also find the evidence supports the finding
of aggravating circumstances. For the foregoing reasons, Appellant's
convictions and death sentence are AFFIRMED.
State v. Tucker, 464 S.E.2d 105 (S.C. 1995)
(Mellon Murder Direct Appeal).
Defendant was convicted of capital murder and other
offenses following jury trial in the Circuit Court, Calhoun County,
Edward B. Cottingham, J., and he appealed. The Supreme Court, Moore, J.,
held that: (1) shackling of defendant during trial did not violate his
due process and equal protection rights; (2) evidence was sufficient to
sustain disqualification of juror based on his opposition to death
penalty; (3) admission of testimony of police officers regarding
defendant's resistance to arrest, even if erroneously cumulative of
defendant's confession, was harmless error; and (4) defendant was parole
ineligible, and thus trial court's refusal to allow him to bring that
fact to jury's attention violated his rights under Simmons and required
remand for resentencing. Affirmed in part, reversed in part and remanded.
MOORE, Justice:
This is a death penalty case. Appellant James Neil Tucker appeals his
convictions and sentence. We affirm his convictions, reverse his
sentence, and remand for resentencing.
FACTS
Tucker broke into Shannon Mellon's house in the early
morning hours of July 2, 1992. Armed with a gun, he taped her wrists and
ankles behind her back and left her on her bed while he searched for
things to steal. [FN1] Tucker then reentered Shannon's bedroom and shot
her once in the head. While he was packing some of Shannon's clean
clothes to take with him, Shannon regained consciousness, sat up, and
said she could not see. Tucker shot her a second time in the head. He
continued to pack and when he heard Shannon's labored breathing, he shot
her a third time in the head.
He then wrapped Shannon's body in a sheet
and dragged it into the woods behind the house. Her body was discovered
a week later. Tucker stole Shannon's car and drove to Spartanburg where
he stayed with a friend for several days. He was apprehended in Maggie
Valley, N.C., on July 10, 1992.
FN1. Tucker was running from police who were looking
for him for the murder of Rosalee Oakley in Sumter County. He was
convicted and sentenced to death for Rosalee's murder in December 1994.
His trial was held from November 29--December 7,
1993. He was convicted of murder, armed robbery, grand larceny, and
first degree burglary.
* * * *
Here, the trial judge refused to give a parole
ineligibility charge and also precluded appellant from arguing parole
ineligibility to the jury when he ruled parole eligibility should not be
considered by the jury. Appellant was entitled to a charge on parole
ineligibility. Therefore, we reverse his sentence and remand for
resentencing. AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART; AND REMANDED.
State v. Tucker, 512 S.E.2d 99 (S.C. 1999)
(Mellon Murder Direct Appeal after Resentencing).
Following reversal of murder defendant's death
sentence, 320 S.C. 206, 464 S.E.2d 105, the Circuit Court, Calhoun
County, Thomas W. Cooper, J., again imposed death sentence. Defendant
appealed. Upon denial of petition for rehearing, the Supreme Court,
Moore, J., held that: (1) no Batson violation occurred; (2) prospective
juror who was Jehovah's Witness minister was properly excused for cause;
(3) defendant's testimony from his prior trial was not hearsay; and (4)
submission of kidnapping as aggravating circumstance was proper.
Affirmed.
* * * *
We have conducted the proportionality review pursuant
to S.C.Code Ann. § 16-3-25 (1985). We find the sentence was not the
result of passion, prejudice, or other arbitrary factor and the evidence
supports the jury's finding of the aggravating circumstances. Further,
we find the sentence is not excessive or disproportionate to the penalty
imposed in similar cases. State v. Chaffee, 285 S.C. 21, 328 S.E.2d 464
(1984), cert. denied, 471 U.S. 1009, 105 S.Ct. 1878, 85 L.Ed.2d 170
(1985). Accordingly, appellant's sentence is AFFIRMED.