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Bennie
ADAMS
By Jhn W. Goodwin Jr. - Vindy.com
October 15, 2011
The 7th District Court of Appeals affirmed the
conviction and death sentence of the man convicted of the 1985
murder of a Youngstown State University student.
Bennie Adams appealed to the court after having
been found guilty and sentenced to death in Mahoning County Common
Pleas Court in 2008 for the murder of Gina Tenney.
The appellate court heard oral arguments in the
case in August and issued a ruling Friday.
Tenney, a 19-year-old YSU student who was
Adams’ upstairs neighbor in an Ohio Avenue duplex, was strangled
Dec. 29, 1985. Her frozen body was found in the Mahoning River
near West Avenue the next day.
Adams was indicted for the murder in 2007 after
a DNA match was found in evidence that police had preserved for 22
years. Adams, 54, is on death row.
Undue delay in prosecution is one of the 21
allegations of legal and procedural error presented by Attys. John
B. Juhasz and Lynn A. Maro, who are representing Adams. The court
filing included 528 pages.
Juhasz said he had not seen the court’s opinion
as of Friday afternoon and would not comment on what Adams would
do next. He did say the case could be appealed to the Ohio Supreme
Court.
The attorneys, in arguing undue delay in
prosecution, pointed out that Adams was not indicted for the
murder until 22 years after the crime even though he was arrested
for receiving the woman’s stolen property. They also claim Adams’
right to a speedy trial was denied.
The court rejected the claims, however, saying
that Adams’ due-process rights were not violated if the reasons
for the delay are taken into account. The court’s answer says the
Ohio Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation did not
get accreditation for the needed DNA test until 2000 and began
accepting more requests for cold-case analyses in 2004 when grant
money was available.
Other allegations of error pertain to jury
selection and instructions, admissibility of trial testimony and
evidence, trial location and the constitutionality of the death
penalty.
The defense attorneys claimed Adams’ trial
should have been moved to a different location because of pretrial
publicity, but the appeals court said changing venue, or electing
not to do so, for the trial attorneys was a matter of strategy.
Adams’ attorneys also claimed the death penalty
to be cruel and unusual punishment. The appeals court, however,
ruled that the claim is lacking in merit.
Members of the Tenney family did not wish to
comment on the court’s decision Friday.
Man sentenced for '85 murder
By Joe Gorman - TribToday.com
YOUNGSTOWN - Lawyers for Bennie Adams claimed
throughout his trial their client was a changed man.
Mahoning County Common Pleas Judge Timothy
Franken disagreed, sentencing Adams to death in the 1985 murder of
19-year-old Gina Tenney.
''A rehabilitated man shows remorse and accepts
responsibility,'' Franken told Adams Thursday. ''Mr. Adams, you
have no remorse and you accepted no responsibility for your
wrongdoing. Mr. Adams, you are not rehabilitated. You are no
different from the Bennie Adams of 1985.''
After 11 hours of deliberating, a jury
recommended on Wednesday that Adams be sentenced to death and
Franken followed that recommendation. He set an execution date of
March 2, 2009, which will almost certainly be pushed back because
of Adams' automatic appeal.
Adams said ''no'' when asked if he had anything
to say before Franken announced the sentence. As he was led away
by deputies, one of his lawyers, Anthony Meranto, shook Adams'
hand and said, ''I'm sorry, man.''
His mother, Lula Adams, met briefly with
reporters and said her son is innocent.
''I do believe that before he's put to death
the truth will come out,'' Lula Adams said.
Tenney's parents were not permitted to address
the court. Franken said victim-impact statements are not allowed
in capital cases.
Adams was arrested last October and charged
with Tenney's death after police were able to link him to the
crime through DNA evidence collected in 1985. He was convicted of
aggravated murder last week for the death of Tenney, who was found
floating in the Mahoning River Dec. 30, 1985.
Prosecutors say Tenney, of Ashtabula, was tied
up, raped and strangled by Adams and then dumped in the river. She
lived in the same Ohio Avenue duplex as Adams and witnesses
testified during the trial that she was afraid of Adams because he
would call her and stare at her and her friends.
The day Tenney's body was found, detectives
questioned Adams and found Tenney's bank card in his coat. They
also found her television in his apartment and a pot holder in his
trash can that had Tenney's hair and blood on it. The matching pot
holder was found in Tenney's apartment.
Assistant Prosecutor Dawn Cantalamessa, who was
helped by Assistant Prosecutor Martin Desmond, said she was
pleased with the sentence.
Gina's body was found floating in the Mahoning
River on December 30, 1985 by a muskrat trapper checking his traps
in the freezing water.
Gina had graduated from Edgewood Senior High
School in Ashtabula and was attending Youngstown State University
at the time of her murder. Gina's father Lucian said, "I'll never
forget that day. We had to sit there in the coroner's officer
until midnight...she had been out of the water since early morning
but they had to warm her up. When we saw her, she was pretty as a
picture, like she was asleep."
Gina's mother Avalon had last spoken with her
daughter at 6:30 pm on December 29. Gina had told them she was on
the way to meet a friend.
Two weeks after Gina's body was discovered, the
coroner ruled that her death was caused by asphyxiation. She had
ligature marks on her neck and around her wrists. She had
contusions all over her torso and her ankle was broken after she
died.
Authorities suspected Bennie Adams, who dated a
girl who lived in the apartment below Gina's. However, forensic
testing was not adequate at the time. Adams, then 28, was found in
possession of Gina's bank card and her car keys were found in his
trash can.
However, Adams could not be definitively
connected with the actual rape and murder. Additionally, the mate
to a potholder from the downstairs apartment was found in Gina's
apartment. Adams also had a television believed to be from Gina's
apartment. He was charged with possession of stolen property but
never went to trial. Gina's friends knew that Adams had been
harassing her prior to the murder and said that Gina had changed
her phone number to stop the calls.
With the improvements in crime science, the
Ohio Attorney General's office began a program allowing law
enforcement agencies to resubmit cold cases for DNA testing. The
detectives from Gina's murder had kept tabs on Adams over the
years and jumped at the opportunity to check on his possible
involvement in the case.
Adams was a registered sex offender after being
released in 2004 after spending 18 years in prison for the rape,
kidnapping and robbery of a school principal in 1985. D-N-A
samples taken from Adams, 50 years old on the day he was arrested,
tested positive as a match to the DNA found on Gina's body and
clothing. The rape kit had been preserved for over two decades.
After Adams was convicted in October 2008,
Gina's sister Gliva said, “I always wanted a brother or sister, so
when Gina was born, I was thrilled. I will always miss her.
There’s not a day that goes by I don’t think of her. And I want
everyone to know what a wonderful, wonderful person Gina was. She
was vivacious, bubbly, the most loving, gracious, giving, caring
person, and I will miss her until the day I die.”
The detectives who investigated the case were
happy to finally find justice for Gina's family. “It’s a day that
we’ve thought about for many years. We’ve never lost sight of who
Gina Tenney is and who Gina Tenney could have been. We reflect
today that she would have been 42 years old today,” said Capt.
Kenneth Centorame, chief of detectives. “As we remember Gina, this
will be something that we can fall back on,” Gina’s father Lucian
said of the verdict. “We visit her grave just about every day. And
a lot of people say that’s odd. But it’s a place to go and reflect
on our life and on Gina’s life, and we loved her very much,” he
said, adding that she worked and studied hard. “We know she’s at
home now. ... She was — and deserved to be — happy today,” he
added.