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Winchester Police Officer Ricky Lee Timbrook was assisting probation
officers in making home visits to individuals on probation or parole.
They approached two men, Daniel Charles Spitler and Bell. Bell ran and
was pursued by Timbrook. As Sergeant Timbrook started to climb a fence,
he was shot once in the head with a .38 caliber handgun.
The area was
secured and bell was discovered uninvited in the basement of a
neighbor's home. A .38 caliber handgun was found under her porch the
next day. Although Bell claimed not to have a weapon, another man
testified that Bell tried to sell him a handgun on the night of the
shooting. Timbrook had arrested Bell twice before. Bell had told others
that he would like to see Timbrook dead.
Citations:
Bell v. Commonwealth, 264 Va. 172, 563 S.E.2d 695 (Va. 2002) (Direct
Appeal). Bell v. Kelly, 260 Fed.Appx. 599 (4th Cir. 2008) (Habeas).
Final/Special Meal:
Bell did not request a last meal and was served the same food as the
rest of the inmates.
Final Words:
"To the Timbrook family, you definitely have the wrong person. The truth
will come out one day. This here, killing me, there’s no justice about
it.”
Edward Nathaniel
Bell
Date
of Birth: September 12, 1964
Sex: Male
Race: Black
Entered
the Row:May 30, 2001
District: Winchester
Conviction: Capital Murder
VirginiaDOC Inmate Number: 294604
Edward Nathaniel Bell was charged
in the
shooting death of
Sgt. Ricky L. Timbrook, 32, from the Winchester police Department during a late
evening police chase on
Oct. 29, 1999.
Police found Bell in
the basement of a house near
the shooting and was initially charged with
burglary. Evidence against Bell included the tight police perimeter around
the crime scene on the night of the shooting.
Extensive media coverage,
including flyers with pictures of the victim’s family outside
the courthouse during trial did not restrain Judge
Dennis L. Hupp from holding the
criminal proceedings in Winchester
Circuit Court in January 2001.
During trial, prosecutors testified that Bell
shot Timbrook because he had arrested him in 1997 for carrying a
concealed weapon and Bell has feared that
Timbrook would find a gun or drugs. Bell is a Jamaican national.
The prosecution introduced a witness who testified that
Bell told him if he ever
encountered Timbrook again, he would shoot him in
the head since he knew police wore bullet-proof vests.
A single shot to the head killed Timbrook.
Defense introduced evidence that
showed a second individual was in the vicinity of the shooting at the same time and could have easily been
the actual shooter. DNA
from
the gun came from at least three
individuals and could not conclusively link Bell to the gun. Nonetheless, after deliberating for only three hours, an
all-white jury of nine women and three men convicted
Bell of capital murder and recommended that
Bell be sentenced to death.
At the
formal sentencing hearing on
May 30, 2001,
Circuit Judge Dennis L. Hupp confirmed the jury's sentence. On
June 7, 2002, the
Virginia Supreme Court upheld Bell’s conviction.
Bell was to be executed on
Jan. 7, 2005,
but U.S.
District Judge James Jones of Abingdon issued a stay of execution—pending
Bell’s full
appeals process in federal court. Since then,
WinchesterCommonwealth Attorney Alexander R. Iden
sent a letter to trial court jurors informing
them that they did not have to cooperate with investigators for
the defense.
Man who killed police officer 10 years ago is
executed
PilotOnline.com
Associated Press - February 19, 2009
JARRATT - Virginia has executed a purported drug
dealer who gunned down a police officer during a foot chase a decade
ago. Corrections department spokesman Larry Traylor said Edward
Nathaniel Bell was pronounced dead at 9:11 p.m. Thursday at the
Greensville Correctional Center in Jarratt. The 43-year-old was put to
death by lethal injection for shooting Winchester police Sgt. Ricky
Timbrook on Oct. 29, 1999.
Bell maintained that he did not shoot Timbrook.
Prosecutors, however, say Bell was a flashy drug dealer who held a
grudge against Timbrook for arresting the Jamaican man two years earlier.
Bell was the 103rd Virginia inmate executed since
capital punishment was reinstated in 1976. Virginia ranks second only to
Texas in the number of executions since then.
Bell was initially scheduled to be executed last year,
but Kaine pushed that back while the U.S. Supreme Court considered a
Kentucky case challenging the constitutionality of lethal injections.
The court upheld the method in April. The following month, the court
granted Bell a temporary reprieve to consider whether his lawyer did a
poor job representing him. It later dismissed his appeal.
Bell, a father of five, visited with immediate family
members Thursday, but Department of Corrections spokesman Larry Traylor
would not reveal just who met with Bell. The spokesman said Bell did not
request a last meal and will be served the same food as the rest of the
inmates.
With all of Bell's appeals exhausted, his lawyers
filed a last-hope petition to Kaine for clemency. James G. Connell III,
one of Bell's attorneys, said before Kaine had rejected the clemency
petition that Bell was trying to remain hopeful.
Timbrook, 32, had been an officer for eight years and
was a SWAT team member and DARE instructor. His wife, Kelly, was
pregnant with their only child, Ricky Lee Timbrook II, now 9, when
Timbrook was shot. The city has since named a park, a public safety
building, a children's outreach fund and a food-and-toy drive in honor
of the popular officer.
Kelly Timbrook and her father-in-law plan to witness
the execution, friends said. They have been reluctant to talk to the
media, but Kelly Timbrook wrote letters and appeared in a television ad
for Kaine's opponent in the 2005 governor's race. She questioned whether
Kaine, a Roman Catholic who is opposed to the death penalty, would
uphold Bell's sentence.
Before Thursday, Kaine had allowed eight executions
and commuted one sentence since he took office in 2006.
Killer is executed for murder of officer
By Frank Green -
Richmond Times-Dispatch
February 20, 2009
JARRATT -- Maintaining his claim of innocence to the
end, Edward Nathaniel Bell was executed by injection last night for the
Oct. 29, 1999, slaying of Winchester police Sgt. Ricky L. Timbrook.
"To the Timbrook family, you definitely have the
wrong person," the Jamaican national said in his last statement,
according to Larry Traylor, spokesman for the Virginia Department of
Corrections. "The truth will come out one day. This here, killing me,
there's no justice about it." Traylor said it was difficult to
understand Bell because of his accent.
Bell needed assistance coming into the execution
chamber, Traylor said. "He obviously could not come in under his own
power." An execution witness, Northern Virginia Daily reporter Garren
Shipley, said of Bell: "Whether he was unable or unwilling, I don't
know."
Bell, 43, was pronounced dead at 9:11 p.m., Traylor
said. It was the 103rd execution in Virginia since the death penalty was
restored in 1976.
Bell was sentenced to die for killing Timbrook, 32,
who was shot once in the head from close range while chasing Bell on
foot. Bell was on probation, and the two had earlier run-ins.
The killer's last hope was Gov. Timothy M. Kaine, who
personally opposes the death penalty. But in a statement released
yesterday about 4 p.m., Kaine declined to interfere. "Bell's trial,
verdict and sentence have been reviewed by state and federal courts,
including the Supreme Court of Virginia, United States District Court
for the Western District of Virginia, the United States Court of Appeals
for the Fourth Circuit, and the United States Supreme Court," Kaine
noted. He said that "having carefully reviewed the petition for clemency
and judicial opinions regarding this case, I find no compelling reason
to set aside the sentence that was recommended by the jury, and then
imposed and affirmed by the courts."
Timbrook's wife, Kelly, was pregnant with their first
child when Timbrook was slain. In 2005, she appeared in a television
campaign ad on behalf of Kaine's Republican opponent for governor,
former Virginia Attorney General Jerry W. Kilgore. According to news
accounts, family members said Kelly Timbrook was to have been among the
witnesses to Bell's execution. The Department of Corrections does not
disclose the identity of victim family witnesses, but it confirmed that
some witnessed the execution.
In a 41-page clemency petition to Kaine, Bell's
lawyers pointed out that a federal judge found that Bell's trial lawyers
did not perform up to constitutional snuff during the sentencing phase
of Bell's trial. "The case of Eddie Bell is not one which possesses the
certainty and integrity to justify the imposition of the ultimate
penalty. Confidence in the justice system requires that both sides in a
trial advocate for their side, but here the adversary system broke down,"
his lawyers wrote.
They contend that Bell's IQ was measured at 68 and
that he functions at an intellectual level below 95 percent of the
population.
His lawyers also told Kaine that no court ever heard
new evidence that cast doubt on Bell's guilt or that he was mentally
disabled and, therefore, ineligible for the death penalty. The U.S.
Supreme Court has banned the execution of people who are mentally
disabled. Since taking office, Kaine has allowed nine executions to be
carried out and commuted one death sentence. He briefly stayed Bell's
execution last year while the U.S. Supreme Court took up the legality of
lethal injection.
Traylor said Bell spent part of yesterday visiting
with immediate family members. He did not order a special meal, Traylor
said.
Kaine considers fate of condemned killer
By Frank Green -
Richmond Times-Dispatch
Thursday, February 19, 2009
The life of condemned killer Edward Nathaniel Bell is
in the hands of Virginia Gov. Timothy M. Kaine, who has been asked to
stop tonight's scheduled execution.
Bell, 43, a Jamaican national, is set to die by
injection at 9 p.m. for the Oct. 29, 1999, capital murder of Winchester
police Sgt. Ricky L. Timbrook, 32, who was shot once in the head while
pursuing Bell on foot. At the time Timbrook was killed, his wife was
pregnant with their first child. In 2002, Winchester's public-safety
center was named in his honor.
Kaine, who personally opposes capital punishment, has
let eight executions proceed and commuted one death sentence since
taking office. Kaine spokesman Gordon Hickey said yesterday that there
would be no comment on Bell's clemency petition.
J. Tucker Martin, spokesman for Virginia Attorney
General Bob McDonnell, said that, "without exception, every court to
review Bell's claims has rejected his assertions of innocence and mental
retardation." "The jury's decision that Bell should receive the death
penalty for his senseless murder of . . . Timbrook also has been upheld
by all the courts. We continue to offer our thoughts and prayers to the
family and friends of this brave law-enforcement officer who was killed
in the line of duty," Martin said.
In the clemency petition filed with Kaine last month,
Bell's lawyers contend that evidence available now -- and not considered
by jurors or the appeals courts -- shows that his guilt is not
established beyond a reasonable doubt. They point out that a federal
judge ruled that Bell's trial lawyers performed so poorly during the
sentencing part of Bell's trial that their performance did not meet
minimal constitutional standards. The same federal judge, however, ruled
that the Virginia Supreme Court reasonably held that even had Bell's
lawyers performed adequately, it was still probable Bell would have been
sentenced to death.
Lawyers also ask Kaine to spare Bell's life because
he is mentally disabled and point out that no court has given Bell a
hearing to prove his disability. The U.S. Supreme Court has barred the
execution of the mentally disabled.
Beth Panilaitis, executive director of Virginians for
Alternatives to the Death Penalty, says, "There are too many issues
within this case regarding Bell's mental capacity, deficient performance
by his counsel, and doubts about his guilt to carry out the execution."
Others asking that Bell's life be spared include Amnesty International.
The execution is set to be carried out in the death
house at the Greensville Correctional Center in Jarratt. It would be the
103rd in the state since executions resumed in the U.S. in 1977. Only
Texas, with 431, has executed more.
An execution protest has been set for 4 to 6 p.m.
outside the governor's office at Broad and 11th streets in Richmond.
Vigils have been set at various locations across the state and this
evening outside the prison in Jarratt.