Nov. 20




OHIO:

Victim's mother reacts to death sentence in Warrensville barbershop slayings


A jury sentenced convicted murder Douglas Shine Jr. to death for killing 3 men at a Warrensville Heights barbershop in February of 2015.

All 6 counts were unanimous, death for the 21-year-old. Who did not flinch as he learned his fate. Shine killed William Gonzalez, Walter Barfield and Brandon White at Chalk Linez barbershop last year. White's mother Angela Ladson was in the courtroom.

"I'm satisfied," said Ladson. "It's hard not to have emotions when someone says death. It's been 3 months it's been hard."

Shine's family members stormed out of the courtroom before the judge finished reading the verdict on all 6 counts. Prosecutors say Shine was a member of the Heartless Felons gang and that an argument with a rival gang led to the shooting that killed 3 men and wounded 3 others.

Ladson says moving on will be difficult. She lost 2 sons to Shine's violence.

"Now we can get a little closure but I have to start all over next year for my second son," said Ladson. "It's hard emotion right now it really is, it really is.

Aaron Ladson was a witness who prosecutors say identified Shine as the shooter. Aaron was shot and killed four months after his brother Brandon, in the driveway of his grandmother's home. Jurors convicted Shine of organizing the murder from his cell.

Fox 8 asked Ladson if death for Shine was the punishment she wanted to hear in the case.

"It didn't matter if it was life or death but I am shocked," said Ladson. "I'm okay, It doesn't bring my sons back but I'm okay."

A source inside the courtroom says the enormity of the situation weighed heavily on jurors who all wanted to make sure they did the right thing.

(source: Fox News)

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19-year-old sentenced to death in student's murder; 3 co-defendents testified


An Akron man convicted of shooting and killing a Kent State University student during the robbery of a Kent apartment on Super Bowl Sunday is headed to Ohio's death row.

Citing the "lack of regard for human life this man has," Portage County Common Pleas Judge Laurie Pittman on Nov. 16 sentenced Damantae D. Graham, 19, to death for the Feb. 7 murder of Nicholas W. Massa, 18, of Westlake.

"This was a senseless, senseless act," Pittman told Graham. She said she sought humanity in his eyes during the trial, but found none.

"I have a clear conscience about what I did," Pittman added.

Graham is believed to be the youngest defendant ever to be sentenced to death in Portage County history.

Jurors convicted Graham Nov. 3 on 6 felony charges, including aggravated murder, aggravated burglary, aggravated robbery and 3 counts of kidnapping. On Nov. 8, they recommended Pittman sentence him to death.

Pittman found that the aggravating factors of the case -- that Graham committed the murder in the process of burglarizing a Ryan Place apartment while armed, and kidnapped and robbed the residents -- outweighed the mitigating factors that could have spared his life.

Those included Graham's youth and early life of poverty under "harsh parenting," a diagnosis of oppositional defiant disorder and his voluntary abuse of illegal and prescription drugs.

Defense attorney Anthony Koukoutas moved for an acquittal on all charges, which Pittman denied. Barring that, he asked the judge to sentence Graham to life in prison. She also declined that request.

Twice during the hearing, Pittman offered Graham a chance to speak.

"You don't want to talk to me, Damantae?" she asked him at one point.

"No," Graham replied, with the same lack of emotion he showed throughout his week-long trial.

Graham gets an automatic appeal of his death sentence. In the event the death penalty sentence is reversed, Graham still must serve 61 years on the robbery, burglary, kidnapping and firearms charges, Pittman ruled, agreeing to a request by Portage County Prosecutor Victor Vigluicci to make sure Graham never leaves prison.

Graham's co-defendants -- 18-year-olds Ty A. Kremling, Marquis C.T. Grier and Anton "AJ" Planicka -- all testified at trial that Graham shot Massa during the robbery, which had targeted small-time marijuana dealer Connor Haithcock, a former classmate of Kremling at Stow-Munroe Falls High School.

The 3 remaining co-defendants face identical charges of aggravated murder, aggravated burglary, aggravated robbery and kidnapping.

VICTIM IMPACT

A friend and 3 of Massa's family members delivered emotional victim impact statements to the court. They remembered his smile and his laughter, his love of fishing and his wish to one day own his own fishing charter.

Massa's KSU roommate, Alex Mangels, called his lost friend "a beautiful person" of character, compassion and a willingness to help others. He said he is now left to "pick up the pieces of a friendship we will have no more."

Massa's family spoke of their love for their lost brother, son and nephew, calling out Graham for his "callousness" and cowardice.

"Not one time, not even in a half-hearted attempt to save his own life," did Graham show regret or remorse for the "senseless, cowardly act" of murder, Nick Massa's uncle Scott Massa told Pittman. "It was disgusting."

Kelly Massa, Nick's older sister, and his mother, Jackie, both cried as they spoke of never getting to see their brother and son get married and have children of his own.

"Nick embodied everything I aspired to be," Kelly Massa said. "What this man took from us is irreplaceable If I want to hang out with my brother, I have to go to the cemetery. At his wake, I held his hand and I promised justice would be served."

"The outcome of this trial will not bring back my son," Jackie Massa said, "but it will allow my son to finally rest in peace."

(source: Stow Sentry)






IOWA:

It's time to reconsider death penalty in Iowa


It was only a matter of time before the death penalty in Iowa would be addressed as a result of the numerous killings of police officers nationwide [Will Iowa seek stiffer penalties to protect its police? Nov. 13]. I am a retired public defender investigator, but have always thought that the harshest of penalties should be available for those who intentionally murder our public service employees, firemen, police, parole and probation officers, and any other public servant who exposes themselves to danger inherent in the performance of their duties.

The death penalty was not meant to be a deterrent, but the ultimate penalty for heinous crimes such as the murder of a police officer. I believe it is now the time for our Legislature to reconsider such a drastic step in Iowa.

Stiffening the now existing law is not good enough. Officers Tony Beminio and Justin Martin and the many others murdered in the line of duty deserve more.

John Fisher, Des Moines

(source: Letter to the Editor, Des Moines Register)






USA:

Closed Competency Hearing Set For Defendant In Charleston, S.C., Church Shootings


A closed hearing will be held Monday to determine whether Dylann Roof, who faces 33 federal hate crime charges for allegedly murdering 9 people in a Charleston, S.C., church, is mentally competent to stand trial.

Jury selection in the trial has been delayed since the defense filed a motion questioning Roof's mental competency on Nov. 7, which led U.S. District Judge Richard Gergel to request a mental evaluation of the defendant.

The competency evaluation was submitted to the parties in the case earlier this week, reported South Carolina Public Radio, but it has not be released to the public. The Charleston Post and Courier reported that the evaluation "relied heavily on interviews" with Roof.

The judge cited the Sixth Amendment right to a fair trial and impartial jury in his decision to close Monday's hearing, reported Alexandra Olgin of SCPR. If he rules Roof is not competent to stand trial, the defendant could be sent to a state mental institution.

At a public hearing on Thursday the judge said, "It is not a normal examiner's report, I'm telling you that," and called the case "unusual," according the Post and Courier. He defended his choice to keep the competency hearing closed, but pledged to release portions of a hearing transcript that don't need to be kept confidential, the paper reported.

At least seven media organizations, including NPR and the Post and Courier's parent company, have filed legal objections to the closing of the competency hearing.

The First Amendment requires criminal proceedings to be open to the public. To close a hearing, a court must show that there is a compelling interest, such as protecting a defendant's right to a fair trial, that requires the proceeding to be closed.

At Thursday's public hearing, some family members of the victims argued they had a right to observe the proceedings.

"It would be unfair for us not to be there," said Tyrone Sanders, whose 26-year-old son, Tywanza, was killed, and his wife and granddaughter survived the shooting. "We've lost the greatest portion," Sanders said, according to the Post and Courier.

The federal government is seeking the death penalty in its case against Roof, 22, who prosecutors say entered Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in downtown Charleston in June 2015 and sat among people gathered for a Wednesday evening Bible study before he opened fire.

Emanuel AME is a historically black institution. "The Justice Department says he selected the [church] and his victims to win notoriety and to try to ignite a race war," NPR's Carrie Johnson reported.

The federal indictment alleges Roof created a website where he posted a diatribe against people who are not white, as well as photographs of himself "wearing a jacket with flags of 2 former apartheid African nations, displaying his Glock .45 caliber pistol, and holding a confederate flag."

Roof faces separate murder charges brought by the state of South Carolina, which is seeking the death penalty for Roof's alleged crimes. It is not clear what, if any, bearing the mental evaluation conducted for the federal trial could have on the state trial, which is set to begin in January.

(source: npr.org)

*********************

Why CIA Nominee Mike Pompeo Wants to Kill Edward Snowden


Mike Pompeo thinks Edward Snowden should be put to death. When Mike Pompeo was just a hawkish Republican Congressman from Kansas, that was a relatively harmless opinion to have, but in a few short months Pompeo might be getting a promotion. To the director of the Central Intelligence Agency. Which has drones. And spies. And assassins. And pretty much free reign to do whatever it wants in almost every country in the world.

On Friday, President-elect Donald Trump announced that he had chosen Republican Kansas Representative Mike Pompeo as his preferred candidate for CIA director. In 1986, Pompeo graduated 1st in his class at West Point and went on to serve as an officer in the Army for 5 years. In 2016, as a member of the House Intelligence Committee, Pompeo said on C-SPAN that he thought the "traitor" Edward Snowden should be brought back to the United States and executed.

"He should be brought back from Russia and given due process, and I think the proper outcome would be that he would be given a death sentence," Pompeo said in February.

To be fair to Pompeo, he did say "due process" in there - but since 9/11, due process has been proven to have been ignored by the CIA. Under the Bush Jr. and Obama regimes, the CIA has drastically stepped up a battle plan of manhunts, targeted killings, drone strikes, and even cyber attacks.

Fortunately, Pompeo's coworkers say he's a reasonably receptive dude. House Intelligence Committee member Adam Schiff (a Democrat, for what it's worth) told the New York Times that Pompeo was "bright and hard working," and "someone who is willing to listen and engage, both key qualities in a C.I.A. director," which would be reassuring except that hanging out on the House Intelligence Community is not in any way similar to running the CIA.

By historical standards, Pompeo is certainly qualified for the job, unlike Trump's openly Islamophobic national security advisor and his attorney general candidate that was once considered too racist to be a federal judge.

At this point, Snowden's best chance at well, staying alive, is probably to hope that Pompeo remembers the whole "due process" part of his recommendation of the death penalty, and doesn't let the whole "unparalleled access to clandestine operations and methods of extrajudicial murder" thing go to his head while he leads the CIA.

Pompeo still has to be approved by the Senate, but considering Republicans hold a 54-44 majority (with 2 Independents usually chilling on the blue side), that shouldn't be a problem.

Since leaking a massive trove of NSA documents revealing the U.S. Government's mass surveillance of its own citizens to Wikileaks, Snowden has essentially been crashing on Vladimir Putin's couch in the Russian Federation (who is also totally chill with morally questionable intrusions of privacy. He was pretty safe from extradition there during the Obama Administration, but considering Trump's cozy relationship with the Russian President, it's not inconceivable that Putin would sling EddieLeaks back to the U.S. for trial, or just into the hands of Mike Pompeo's CIA.

(source: inverse.com)


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