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Lamont
D. REESE
A.K.A.: "Mont"
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics: Gang-related shooting
Number of victims: 3
Date of murder:
March 1,
1999
Date of arrest:
2 days after
Date of birth:
October 16,
1977
Victims profile: Riki Jackson,
17, Alonzo Stewart, 25, and Anthony Roney, 26
Method of murder:
Shooting
Location: Tarrant County, Texas, USA
Status:
Executed
by lethal injection in Texas on June 20,
2006
United States Court of
Appeals For the Fifth Circuit
Reese's 18-year-old girlfriend, Kareema Kimbrough, walked out of the
convenience store about four miles southeast of downtown Fort Worth
and drew the attention of several men who were drinking and playing
dice outside the place.
Reese became angry with the men flirting with
Kimbrough. The couple left, met up with three others, including a
pair of juveniles, and armed themselves with handguns and assault
rifles.
With Kimbrough driving and accompanied also by
her 2-year-old son, she dropped off the four near the store. The
gunmen then sprayed the scene with bullets. Kimbrough drove back
around, retrieved her friends and they all sped off. A witness told
police that Reese was bragging about the killings. That led to the
arrests of Reese, Kimbrough and their companions.
Detectives found ammunition in Reese's car that
matched bullets found at the shooting scene. Kimbrough is serving a
life prison term on a capital murder conviction.
The three others, including the two juveniles who
were charged as adults, agreed to plea bargains and are serving
sentences ranging from 35 to 50 years.
Citations:
Reese v. Dretke, 99 Fed.Appx. 503 (5th Cir. 2004) (Habeas) Reese v. Livingston, 453 F.3d 289 (5th Cir. 2006) (1983)
Final Meal:
Fajitas, enchiladas, a bacon cheeseburger, pizza, chicken salad,
tacos and fried chicken.
Final Words:
Reese had to be carried into the death chamber. "I want everyone to
know I did not walk to this because this is straight-up murder. I am
not going to play a part in my own murder. No one should have to do
that." He expressed love to his mother and to relatives of the
murder victims as they watched from separate windows nearby. "I do
not know all of your names and I don't know how you feel about me.
And whether you believe it or not, I did not kill them." He said
that he was at peace and he wanted them to be at peace. "You have to
move past it. It is time to move on." He said he was glad that the
execution was occurring and that his time on death row was not "10
or 20 years." As the drugs began taking effect, he said, "This is
some nasty." Then he gasped.
ClarkProsecutor.org
Texas Department of Criminal
Justice
Inmate: Reese, Lamont
Date of Birth: 10/16/77
TDCJ#: 999374
Date Received: 01/18/01
Education: 10 years
Occupation: laborer
Date of Offense: 03/01/99
County of Conviction: Tarrant
Race: Black
Gender: Male
Hair Color: Black
Eye Color: Brown
Height: 5 ft 10 in
Weight: 207
Texas Attorney General
MEDIA ADVISORY
Tuesday, June 13, 2006
Lamont
Reese Scheduled For Execution
AUSTIN – Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott
offers the following information about Lamont Reese, who is
scheduled to be executed after 6 p.m Tuesday, June 20, 2004. On
March 1, 1999, Reese participated in a gang-related shooting that
resulted in the deaths of three men.
FACTS OF THE CRIME
After members of a gang made fun of his
girlfriend outside a Fort Worth convenience store on March 1, 1999,
Lamont Reese and three of his friends returned to the store to shoot
the gang members.
At the store, Reese shot and fatally wounded 17-year-old
Riki Jackson, 25-year-old Alonzo Stewart and 26-year-old Anthony
Roney.
Following the shooting, Reese and his friends
returned to his girlfriend’s home, where they bragged about their
crime.
One of the men told another man who had not
participated in the shooting that Reese had shot three people with
an assault rifle. Reese did not dispute this statement. Reese
boasted that he got the men who were at the pay phone at the store.
On the heels of his arrest, police impounded
Reese's vehicle and found five live cartridges in the glove
compartment. The cartridges were identical to several live rounds of
ammunition discovered at the crime scene.
While in jail after his arrest, Reese approached
the jailer and asked if he was classified as a “celebrity inmate.”
The jailer responded that Tarrant County had no such classification,
but instead classified appropriate inmates as “high profile.”
When he assured Reese that he would check on his
classification, Reese announced, “Hell, I killed three people.”
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
May 25, 1999 -- Reese was indicted for capital
murder for the three killings.
November 30, 2000 -- A jury found Reese guilty of
capital murder, and he was sentenced to death by the trial court.
November 6, 2002 -- The Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals affirmed Reese’s conviction and sentence.
June 16, 2003 -- The U. S. Supreme Court denied
Reese’s petition for writ of certiorari.
January 13, 2003 -- Reese filed an application
for writ of habeas corpus in the state trial court.
April 30, 2003 -- The Court of Criminal Appeals
denied Reese’s application for writ of habeas corpus.
June 26, 2003 -- Reese filed a federal petition
for writ of habeas corpus in a Fort Worth federal district court.
August 14, 2003 The federal district court
dismissed Reese’s federal habeas petition and denied a certificate
of appealibility.
May 9, 2005 -- Reese requested permission to
appeal from the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
May 10, 2004 -- The 5th Circuit Court denied
Reese’ request to appeal the district court’s denial of his federal
habeas petition.
August 6, 2004 -- Reese petitioned the U.S.
Supreme Court for a writ of certiorari.
October 18, 2004 -- The Supreme Court denied
Reese’s petition for writ of certiorari.
May 17, 2006 --Reese filed a 1983 claim in the
Southern District of Texas asking for a permanent injunction against
his execution by lethal injection.
May 26, 2006 -- The Southern District Court
dismissed Reese’s 1983 claim.
May 25, 2006 -- Reese filed a 1983 claim in a
federal district court, asking for a permanent injunction against
his execution by lethal injection.
May 30, 2006 -- The federal court dismissed
Reese’s 1983 claim.
June 2, 2006 -- Reese filed a notice of appeal in
the Fifth Circuit Court on his 1983 claim.
Lamont D. "Mont" Reese, a
28-year-old black male, was executed by lethal
injection at the Texas State Penitentiary in
Huntsville, Texas on June 20, 2006. Reese was found
guilty of the 1999 murder of three black males: Riki
Jackson, 17, Alonzo Stewart, 25, and Anthony Roney,
26. Reese, who was 21-years old when he committed
the capital crime, was sentenced to death on January
18, 2001.
On March 1, 1999, Riki Jackson,
Alonzo Stewart, and Anthoney Roney flirted with
Reese’s 18-year-old black girlfriend, Kareema S.
Kimbrough, outside a Fort Worth, Texas convenience
store. After an exchange of words, Kimbrough, Reese,
and three black males, Brian Kenson Johnson, 19,
Steven Lamont Kindred, 16, and Jason Montel Leadley,
14, left the store. Kimbrough drove them back to the
store armed where Reese shot and fatally wounded
Jackson, Stewart, and Roney injuring an unidentified
13 and 24 year-old.
After the murders Reese and his
friends returned to Kimbrough’s home where they
bragged about their crime. One of the men told
another man who had not participated in the shooting
that Reese had shot three people with an assault
rifle, and Reese did not dispute this statement.
Reese boasted that he got the men who were at the
pay phone at the store.
On the heels of his arrest police
impounded Reese's vehicle and found five live
cartridges in the glove compartment that were
identical to several live rounds of ammunition
discovered at the crime scene. After his arrest
Reese approached the jailer and asked if he was
classified as a “celebrity inmate.” The jailer
responded that Tarrant County had no such
classification but instead classified appropriate
inmates as “high profile.” When he assured Reese
that he would check on his classification Reese
announced, “Hell, I killed three people.”
On May 25, 1999, Reese was
indicted in Tarrant County. On November 30, 2000, he
was convicted of capital murder. On November 6,
2002, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed
his conviction and sentence. Reese had to be carried
to the death chamber, refusing to walk there. In his
final statement, he explained, "I am not going to
play a part in my own murder. No one should have to
do that." Accomplices, Kimbrough, Johnson, Kindred,
and Leadley, were also convicted of capital murder,
and sentenced to life, 50 years, 45 years, and 30
years, respectively.
Admitted drug dealer executed for triple slaying
in Fort Worth
By Michael Graczyk -
Houston Chronicle
June 20, 2006
HUNTSVILLE — Proclaiming his innocence, an
admitted drug dealer was executed Tuesday evening for a shooting
spree that left three men dead and two others wounded outside a Fort
Worth convenience store more than seven years ago. Lamont Reese, 28,
had to be carried into the death chamber.
"I want everyone to know I did not walk to this
because this is straight-up murder," he said. "I am not going to
play a part in my own murder. No one should have to do that."
He expressed love to his mother and to relatives
of the murder victims as they watched from separate windows nearby.
"I do not know all of your names and I don't know how you feel about
me," he said addressing the victims' relatives. "And whether you
believe it or not, I did not kill them."
He said that he was at peace and he wanted them
to be at peace. "You have to move past it. It is time to move on,"
he said. He said he was glad that the execution was occurring and
that his time on death row was not "10 or 20 years."
As the drugs began taking effect, he said, "This
is some nasty." Then he gasped. At that moment, his mother, Brenda
Reese, began pounding with her fists on the chamber window and began
screaming repeatedly, "They killed my baby."
She kicked two holes in the death chamber wall
and eventually was removed from the chamber. She sobbed loudly as
she walked from the prison and nearly collapsed as she reached the
prison administration building across the street.
Reese was pronounced dead at 6:27 p.m., eight
minutes after the drugs began to flow. He was the 12th inmate
executed this year in the nation's busiest capital punishment state.
Reese, who described himself as "no angel" and
acknowledged dealing crack cocaine for years, contended in an
earlier interview he wasn't involved in the gunfire outside the
convenience store the evening of March 1, 1999.
Anthony Roney, 26, Riki Jackson, 17, and Alonzo
Stewart, 25, were killed. A 24-year-old man and 13-year-old boy were
wounded. "I was not at the crime," Reese insisted.
Reese's lawyers went to the federal courts to try
to block the punishment, citing among their claims a U.S. Supreme
Court ruling a week ago that condemned prisoners can file special
appeals challenging the lethal injection method under a federal
civil rights law after exhausting regular appeals.
The high court, however, said inmates would not
always be entitled to delays in their executions. In Reese's case,
the justices rejected his appeals about 20 minutes before he was
scheduled to be taken to the death chamber.
Evidence at Reese's trial showed his 18-year-old
girlfriend, Kareema Kimbrough, walked out of the convenience store
about four miles southeast of downtown Fort Worth and drew the
attention of several men who were drinking and playing dice outside
the place.
Reese became angry with the men flirting with
Kimbrough. The couple left, met up with three others, including a
pair of juveniles, and armed themselves with handguns and assault
rifles.
With Kimbrough driving and accompanied also by
her 2-year-old son, she dropped off the four near the store. The
gunmen then sprayed the scene with bullets. Kimbrough drove back
around, retrieved her friends and they all sped off.
Police were told by the victim of another
shooting of people bragging about the convenience store gunfire.
That led to the arrests of Reese, Kimbrough and their companions.
Detectives found ammunition in Reese's car that matched bullets
found at the shooting scene.
Sean Colston, one of the Tarrant County district
attorneys who prosecuted Reese, said evidence was clear that Reese
was responsible for the slayings. "When you're dealing with capital
punishment, it's not that you get a sense of satisfaction," he said.
"I feel it's a just punishment."
Reese grew up in Louisiana where he said he spent
much of his childhood in state custody after his mother was sent to
prison,
Kimbrough, now 26, is serving a life prison term
on a capital murder conviction. The three others, including the two
juveniles who were charged as adults, agreed to plea bargains and
are serving sentences ranging from 35 to 50 years.
Scheduled to die next in Texas is serial killer
Angel Maturino Resendiz, a former FBI Ten Most Wanted fugitive, set
for lethal injection June 27 for the fatal stabbing of Houston-area
physician Claudia Benton in December 1998.
Benton is among at least 15 victims police in
Texas, California, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky and Illinois have
linked to Resendiz, who became known as the "Railroad Killer"
because many of the attacks were near railroad tracks and because he
was known to hop on freight trains to travel around the United
States.
Admitted drug dealer executed for FW triple
slaying
Dallas Morning News
Associated Press - Tuesday, June 20, 2006
HUNTSVILLE, Texas – Proclaiming his innocence, an
admitted drug dealer was executed Tuesday evening for a shooting
spree that left three men dead and two others wounded outside a Fort
Worth convenience store more than seven years ago.
Lamont Reese, 28, had to be carried into the
death chamber. "I want everyone to know I did not walk to this
because this is straight-up murder," he said. "I am not going to
play a part in my own murder. No one should have to do that."
He expressed love to his mother and to relatives
of the murder victims as they watched from separate windows nearby.
"I do not know all of your names and I don't know how you feel about
me," he said addressing the victims' relatives. "And whether you
believe it or not, I did not kill them."
He said that he was at peace and he wanted them
to be at peace. "You have to move past it. It is time to move on,"
he said.
He said he was glad that the execution was
occurring and that his time on death row was not "10 or 20 years."
As the drugs began taking effect, he said, "This is some nasty."
Then he gasped.
At that moment, his mother, Brenda Reese, began
pounding with her fists on the chamber window and began screaming
repeatedly, "They killed my baby." She kicked two holes in the death
chamber wall and eventually was removed from the chamber.
She sobbed loudly as she walked from the prison
and nearly collapsed as she reached the prison administration
building across the street. Reese was pronounced dead at 6:27 p.m.,
eight minutes after the drugs began to flow.
He was the 12th inmate executed this year in the
nation's busiest capital punishment state.
Reese, who described himself as "no angel" and
acknowledged dealing crack cocaine for years, contended in an
earlier interview he wasn't involved in the gunfire outside the
convenience store the evening of March 1, 1999.
Anthony Roney, 26, Riki Jackson, 17, and Alonzo
Stewart, 25, were killed. A 24-year-old man and 13-year-old boy were
wounded. "I was not at the crime," Reese insisted.
Reese's lawyers went to the federal courts to try
to block the punishment, citing among their claims a U.S. Supreme
Court ruling a week ago that condemned prisoners can file special
appeals challenging the lethal injection method under a federal
civil rights law after exhausting regular appeals.
The high court, however, said inmates would not
always be entitled to delays in their executions. In Reese's case,
the justices rejected his appeals about 20 minutes before he was
scheduled to be taken to the death chamber.
Evidence at Reese's trial showed his 18-year-old
girlfriend, Kareema Kimbrough, walked out of the convenience store
about four miles southeast of downtown Fort Worth and drew the
attention of several men who were drinking and playing dice outside
the place. Reese became angry with the men flirting with Kimbrough.
The couple left, met up with three others,
including a pair of juveniles, and armed themselves with handguns
and assault rifles.
With Kimbrough driving and accompanied also by
her 2-year-old son, she dropped off the four near the store.
The gunmen then sprayed the scene with bullets.
Kimbrough drove back around, retrieved her friends and they all sped
off.
Police were told by the victim of another
shooting of people bragging about the convenience store gunfire.
That led to the arrests of Reese, Kimbrough and their companions.
Detectives found ammunition in Reese's car that matched bullets
found at the shooting scene.
Sean Colston, one of the Tarrant County district
attorneys who prosecuted Reese, said evidence was clear that Reese
was responsible for the slayings. "When you're dealing with capital
punishment, it's not that you get a sense of satisfaction," he said.
"I feel it's a just punishment."
Reese grew up in Louisiana where he said he spent
much of his childhood in state custody after his mother was sent to
prison,
Kimbrough, now 26, is serving a life prison term
on a capital murder conviction. The three others, including the two
juveniles who were charged as adults, agreed to plea bargains and
are serving sentences ranging from 35 to 50 years.
Scheduled to die next in Texas is serial killer
Angel Maturino Resendiz, a former FBI Ten Most Wanted fugitive, set
for lethal injection June 27 for the fatal stabbing of Houston-area
physician Claudia Benton in December 1998.
Benton is among at least 15 victims police in
Texas, California, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky and Illinois have
linked to Resendiz, who became known as the "Railroad Killer"
because many of the attacks were near railroad tracks and because he
was known to hop on freight trains to travel around the United
States.
Texas man executed for 1999 triple murder
Reuters News
Jun 20, 2006
HUNTSVILLE, Texas (Reuters) - A 28-year-old Texas
man was put to death by lethal injection on Tuesday for killing
three men in 1999 outside a Fort Worth convenience store.
Lamont Reese was condemned for shooting the three
men on March 1, 1999, with an assault rifle after they talked to his
girlfriend, Kareema Kimbrough, who was sentenced to life in prison
for her part in the shootings. Two other people were wounded in the
attack.
Reese claimed he had no part in the murders and
again protested his innocence in a final statement while strapped to
a gurney in the death chamber. "Whether you believe it or not, I did
not kill them," he said. "The people that did this -- they know. I
am ready, warden. Love you all."
Reese was the 12th person executed in Texas this
year and the 367th put to death since the state resumed capital
punishment in 1982, six years after the U.S. Supreme Court lifted a
national death penalty ban, a total that leads the nation.
For his final meal, Reese requested fajitas,
enchiladas, a bacon cheeseburger, pizza, chicken salad, tacos and
fried chicken.
Texas has 13 more executions scheduled through
October 2006.
Prodeathpenalty.com
Lamont Reese was convicted by a jury and
sentenced to death for murdering Anthony Roney, Riki Jackson, and
Alonzo Stewart during the same criminal transaction. Also injured
were a 13-year-old black male and a 24 year old black male.
Just before the shooting, Lamont Reese, his
girlfriend Kareema Kimbrough and several friends went to a
convenience store in Fort Worth, Texas.
According to testimony at trial, while Reese was
inside, Kimbrough got into an argument with several men hanging out
at the store getting high, getting drunk and playing dice.
Some of those men belonged to a gang faction that
often feuded with Reese's friends, who belonged to a rival faction.
After Reese and his friends left, and the men at the store resumed
their party.
A while later, Reese and his friends returned.
Within minutes, the 3 men were dead, and a 24-year-old and a 13-year-old
were wounded. After the shooting, Reese and his friends bragged
about the killing, witnesses said.
Some of the men outside the convenience store
were gang members, but they were unarmed that night, prosecutors
conceded during their closing arguments. "They were not posing a
threat to anyone."
Txexecutions.org
Lamont Reese, 28, was executed by lethal
injection on 20 June 2006 in Huntsville, Texas for the murder of
three men.
On 1 March 1999, Reese, then 21, went to a
convenience store in Fort Worth with his girlfriend, Kareema
Kimbrough, and several of his friends.
Several young men, who were reportedly gang
members, were standing outside the store, drinking and shooting
dice.
Kimbrough went outside and exchanged words with
the men, and then they got into an argument with Reese and his
friends, because they were flirting with Kimbrough.
Reese's group left and gathered up some firearms,
then Kimbrough drove them back to the store, bringing her 2-year-old
son with her. Reese shot and killed Anthony Roney, 26, Alonzo
Stewart, 25, and Riki Jackson, 17. Two other unidentified people,
ages 24 and 13, were also injured.
A jury convicted Reese of capital murder in
November 2000 and sentenced him to death. The Texas Court of
Criminal Appeals affirmed the conviction and sentence in November
2002.
All of his subsequent appeals in state and
federal court were denied. Kareema S.S. Kimbrough was convicted of
capital murder and sentenced to life in prison.
She remains in custody as of this writing. Jason
Leadley, Brian Johnson, and Steven Kindred pleaded guilty to murder
and received sentences ranging from 35 to 50 years in prison. At
this writing, no information was available on their status.
When the time came for his execution, Reese
refused to walk into the death chamber, and was carried in by guards.
"I want everyone to know that I did not walk to this, because this
is straight-up murder," he said after he was strapped to the gurney.
"I am not going to play a part in my own murder. No one should have
to do that."
Reese also addressed the victims' relatives who
were in attendance. "I do not know all of your names, and I don't
know how you feel about me," Reese said, "and whether you believe it
or not, I did not kill them."
Despite his proclamation of innocence, Reese said
that he was glad he was being executed now, rather than spending ten
or twenty years on death row.
Reese's lengthy last statement was cut short
after the warden signaled for the lethal dose to be started.
Starting to feel the effects of the drugs, Reese said, "This is some
nasty," then he gasped and lost consciousness.
Reese's mother, Brenda Reese, watched the
execution from a viewing room. At the moment Reese gasped, she
screamed, "They killed my baby!" and sobbed loudly, and pounded on
the reinforced glass window that separated her from her son. She
also kicked two holes in a wall and was eventually removed from the
chamber.
Reese was pronounced dead at 6:27 p.m.
Lamont Reese, TX - June 20
Democracyinaction.org
Do Not Execute Lamont Reese!
Lamont Reese, a black man, awaits execution on
Texas’ death row for the shooting deaths of Alonzo Stewart, 25, Riki
Jackon, 17, and Anthony Roney, 26 outside of a convenience store in
March 1999.
Reese had gone to the convenience store with
several friends and his girlfriend, where the three victims were
hanging out. A verbal altercation ensued between the groups after
Reese’s girlfriend got into an argument with one of the men.
Reese and his friends left, but returned later
and shot Stewart, Jackson, and Roney. Prosecutors fingered Reese as
the triggerman, but Reese’s attorneys maintain that he was not the
shooter.
An argument often used by proponents of the death
penalty is that it is cheap and effective. However, capital cases
are more expensive in every stage of the judicial process than
non-capital cases.
Moreover, while a sentence of life in prison is
costly, the costs are spread out of several decades.
In contrast, the brunt of death penalty costs is
accrued during the trial and the early appeals. County budgets and
taxpayers bear a considerable burden as a result of these costs.
As a result, money that could otherwise be put
towards more effective means of crime control such as education,
rehabilitation, drug treatment programs and mental health treatment
is diverted to supporting an unfair and ineffective policy.
Please write to Gov. Rick Perry on behalf of
Lamont Reese!
Condemned inmate claims he's no killer
Man
convicted in a triple murder is set to die tonight
Houston Chronicle
June 19, 2006
LIVINGSTON - Condemned prisoner Lamont Reese
acknowledges a disreputable past. "I'm no angel," Reese said from a
tiny visiting cage outside Texas death row. "I can tell you that. I
was selling drugs. That's what I did. I sold crack for so many years."
But he said he's not a killer, wasn't the gang
member he was portrayed as at his trial and wasn't involved in one
of Fort Worth's bloodiest shootings in recent times.
Reese, 28, faces lethal injection tonight in
Huntsville for the slayings of three men outside a convenience store
in 1999. Two others were wounded in the gunfire.
In a recent interview at the Polunsky Unit of the
Texas Department of Criminal Justice, home of death row, Reese said
an innocent person was being put to death. "They said I was the
ringleader," he said. "I was not at the crime. ... They're saying I
killed those guys. I had no idea who they were."
Constitutional challenge
Lawyers went to the federal courts, challenging
the constitutionality of the lethal injection drugs, to try to keep
Reese from becoming the 12th Texas inmate executed this year and the
second of three scheduled to die this month.
On the evening of March 1, 1999, Reese's
girlfriend, 18-year-old Kareema Kimbrough, walked out of a
convenience store about four miles southeast of downtown Fort Worth
and drew the attention of several men who were drinking and playing
dice outside the place, according to police. Reese emerged a few
moments later from the store and became angry at the men flirting
with her.
The couple then went to a house where they met up
with three others, including a pair of juveniles, and armed
themselves with handguns and assault rifles.
Kimbrough, whom Reese describes as his wife and
who brought her 2-year-old son with her, was behind the wheel and
dropped off the four near the store.
The gunmen sprayed the scene with bullets.
Kimbrough swung back, retrieved her friends and they sped off.
Anthony Roney, 26, Riki Jackson, 17, and Alonzo Stewart, 25, were
killed. A 24-year-old man and 13-year-old boy were wounded.
A day after the shooting, police caught a break
investigating another shooting. A man told them some of the people
involved in the store shooting were bragging about it, and when he
told them they were crazy, he got shot.
That led to the arrests of Reese, Kimbrough and
the others. Detectives found ammunition in Reese's car that matched
bullets found at the shooting scene.
Evidence pretty clear
"The evidence in court was pretty clear that he
was the triggerman," said Sean Colston, a Tarrant County assistant
district attorney who prosecuted Reese.
From death row, Reese said he wasn't at the
convenience store but was "at a dope house in the same neighborhood."
He also said some 20 minutes after the time of
the shootings, he and Kimbrough were seen on a surveillance tape at
a video store, checking out a movie, suggesting he couldn't have
been involved in the gunfire.
Defense attorneys at his trial produced the tape
and also took issue with some of the prosecution witnesses,
described as drug addicts and felons.
Jurors didn't buy the defense, returning a guilty
verdict, then deliberating for about two hours before deciding Reese
should be put to death.
Reese, who said his lawyers advised him not to
testify at his trial, said he thought jurors were swayed by
testimony indicating the shootings may have been gang-related. "I
wish I had testified," he said.
Kimbrough, now 26, is serving a life prison term
on a capital murder conviction. The three others agreed to plea
bargains and are serving sentences ranging from 35 to 50 years.
Deathrow-usa.us
Lamont Reese #999374
A.B.Polunsky Unit D.R.
3872 FM 350 South
Livingston - Texas 77351 U.S.A.
Lamont received his death warrant. He is
scheduled to be executed June 20, 2006
My name is Lamont Reese, but you can just call me
"Mont." I'm 28 years old. I enjoy reading books and magazines. It's
very lonely here without any family or friends to help me get
through all this madness. I've only been here a short time, but in
that time it's been very lonesome.
So a few words from anyone who really cares would
be welcomed. I like to try and write poems. Not very good yet, but
I'm working on it. Well I hope to hear from someone soon.
Best wishes, Mont
From: MICHAEL TONEY
3872 F.M. 350 S. #999314
Livingston, Texas 77351
Website: www.michaelaim.org
Email: innocentmanintx@yahoo.com
June 15, 2004
URGENT PLEA FOR HELP
On March 1st, 1999 at approximately 9:00 PM as
21-year-old Lamont Reese, his 18- year-old girlfriend, Kareema
Kimbrough and their 2-year-old son were at a Hollywood Video Store
returning some videos and renting others, a gang related shooting
was taking place at a convenience store about three miles away.
5 young men were shot, 3 died. The two survivors
testified that they did not see who shot them. The following day 15-year-old
Steven Kindred shot 18-year-old Curtis Sealy purportedly to silence
him in regard to the previous nights murders.
Steven Kindred, AKA: “Little Hoova,” was
subsequently arrested for the aggravated assault (shooting) of
Curtis Sealy.
During police interviews Kindred began trying to
“deal” his way out of his predicament. When he was questioned about
the convenience store shootings he pointed the finger at someone
other than Lamont Reese and Kareema Kimbrough.
In his efforts to save his own skin, his stories
evolved and he eventually pointed the finger of blame at Lamont and
Kareema.
As time progressed and the lies became more
complex, a total of five people were charged in the shooting,
including Steven Kindred.
Desperate for someone to corroborate his version
of the events, 15-year-old Kindred turned to his 25-year-old
girlfriend. He in turn told her to tell the authorities that Lamont
Reese went to her house minutes after the shooting and allegedly
“confessed” to her and then went to the video store.
When Kindred’s adult girlfriend approached the
police with her story, she was told that she could be charged with
“aggravated sexual assault of a child,” because of her sexual
relationship with the juvenile, Kindred.
To make a long story short, 3 of the 5 who were
charged with this crime (shooting, murders) used lies to bargain
their way out of death or life sentences.
Lamont Reese was sentenced to death, and Kareema,
life in prison. Kindred’s girlfriend was given “transactional
immunity” for the charge of Aggregated Sexual Assault in return for
her testimony. If that wasn’t adequate motive for perjury, I’m sure
it was enhanced by her desire to help her juvenile lover.
No physical evidence was presented to support the
testimony of Kindred’s girlfriend, who admitted she had been smoking
crack all the day of the shooting.
I have no way of verifying any of this and no
investigator has ever attempted to talk to any of the co-defendants
or supposed witnesses, including the “crack smoking child molester.”
However, Lamont has in his possession a receipt
that shows he was in fact at the Hollywood video around 9 PM
returning videos and renting more. He frequented this store often.
The store security video shows Lamont, his
girlfriend and their child in the store around this same time. The
tape has never been properly analyzed to break down the exact times.
The problem is he is about to get an execution
date. His case has moved through the courts at an alarming rate of
speed. The crime happened March 1st, 1999. He was sentenced to death
December 4, 2000.
His direct appeal was affirmed November 6, 2002,
the state writ application; relief was denied April 30th, 2003 and
then by law he had one year to prepare and file his Petition for
writ of Habeas Corpus in Federal Court, but the judge ordered it due
in 45 days.
The state responded 45 days after that and relief
was denied August 14th, 2003. Now the Fifth Circuit has denied COA,
May 10th, 2004. He expects an execution date very soon.
His federal writ attorney (appointed) was none
other than Lisa Mullen, who as an Assistant D.A. in Tarrant Co. sent
a handful of men to death row. Some have been killed.
I’m trying to be as brief as possible, but it
seems if someone would take enough interest and investigate the
case, especially the crack smoking lady who was given “immunity” for
the charge of aggravated sexual assault of a child, enough new
evidence may be found that allows Lamont to file a “Subsequent State
Writ Application.”
Also, Lamont may very well be mentally retarded.
The federal judge stated something to the affect “If he was smart
enough to go to the video store for an alibi, he is not mentally
retarded.” That is not a direct quote, but a synopsis of what was
written in the opinion.
I, too, am without question a victim of a
miscarriage of justice in the same county, so I know how easily it
happens. If I could be wrongfully convicted in my situation, I’m
certain he could be in the scenario I have just described.
Personally, I believe Lamont is telling the truth.
I believe him, because he has not detoured from
his story under my constant scrutiny, because of the video receipt
and tape, but mostly because he is determined to help his girlfriend
obtain justice after he is (God forbid) killed by the State of
Texas. He is more concerned with helping someone he loves than he is
with himself. I perceive that as indicative of an innocent person.
Anyone who is willing and able to help Lamont can
contact him at the following address.
Mr. Lamont Reese #999374
3872 F.M. 350 S.
Livingston, TX 77351
LampofHope.org
“We cannot tell the precise moment when
friendship is formed. As in filling a vessel drop by drop, there is
at last a drop which makes it run over. So in a series of kindness
there is at least one which makes the heart run over…”
It is with this quote that I find it in myself to
reach out to you today. It is my hope that you'd reach out back to
me, and from there we can form a friendship. Greetings to you.
My name is Lamont Reese and I'm 26 years old. It
is very hard to reach out from such a place as Death Row, but I do
feel that not everyone wishes death upon me.
As I am forced to sit here in this sometimes cold
and very unforgiving place, I found that it's nothing like having a
good friend you can count on through the roughest of times, to let
you know you're not alone. Nor are you forgotten. It really is the
greatest effect at times.
I hope that something inspires you to reach out
to me, if not for anything, but to let me know you feel all life has
a purpose. With that, I ask that to all that read my words, please
find it in you to reach out back to me, or even another guy here on
the row.
Believe me, any form of kindness from you to make
me or anyone at his last ends a part of your life, can make a world
of difference to you and me. Just give it a chance. I ask that you
please smile for me, because a smile to me is a form of hope that
better days will soon come (smile!)
Peace and Blessings, Mont.
Lamont Reese
Polunsky Unit/999374
3872 FM 350 South
Livingston, Texas 77351 USA
Abolish Archives
April 23, 2002
Dear Friends:
I am coming to you now that I have broken my
hunger strike to offer my sincere thanks to all who have called or
written to my attorneys or other officials in my behalf. Just to
bring you all up to date: my writ attorney has written to me and
changed course.
Before I began my hunger strike, and before you
all began contacting my attorney he has sent me a letter advising me
that the filing deadline was April 17, 2002 and that he would be
filing my State application for writ of habeas corpus.
Now he has filed for an extension of time to file
my writ in order "to investigate additional issues." Thanks to you
all he realized that he had to do a better job for me and at least
he is doing something.
In the month that I was on a hunger strike I lost
over 30 pounds but am feeling well. I also used that time to file
two motions in the trial court:one asking for a complete copy of my
trial record (so that I can actually do some serious review and
research) and the other motion to obtain a new attorney to file the
additional claims on my State habeas writ. The trial court DENIED
both of my motions.
I still need your help to continue contacting my
lawyer-letting him know of all the issues he should be raising in my
case. Some of those were mentioned in my first letter and here are a
few more of the most important issues:
1. An actual innocence claim: (must obtain
affidavits from: "eye witnesses" and investigate every aspect of the
offense).
2. An ineffective assistance of counsel at trial
and on direct appeal claim: (requires extensive investigation of
facts and careful examination of the trial record).
3. Obtain affidavits supporting my innocence from
others who plead guilty to murders in plea agreements.
4. Obtain records of mental health problems and
affidavits from family and friends regarding childhood to support
ineffective assistance of counsel on punishment.
5. Have evidence tested or examined by
independent experts in support of innocence claim.
6. Raise issues concerning jury selection if they
are properly preserved (which I believe they are)
7. Investigate all of the issues and sub-issues
within each of the above claims and leave no stone unturned.
In closing I again want to express my deepest
appreciation for all of our efforts and I thank you for caring from
the bottom of my heart. If you have any questions or comments please
write and I will do my best to answer.
In Hope & Peace,
Lamont Reese #999374
3872 FM 350 S.
Livingston, TX 77351