Pearcy murders | |
---|---|
Location | Pearcy, Arkansas, United States |
Date | November 11 or 12, 2009 (CST UTC−06:00) |
Attack type | Mass murder, robbery, mass shooting, arson |
Weapons | .22- and .25-caliber handguns |
Deaths | 5 |
Injured | 0 |
Perpetrators | Samuel Conway Jeremy Pickney Marvin Stringer† |
The Pearcy murders took place on November 11 or 12, 2009, in Pearcy, Arkansas, a small town in the center of the state right outside of Hot Springs. A total of four related people and the girlfriend of one victim were shot to death during two burglaries; four bodies were found in a mobile home belonging to victims Edward Gentry Jr. and his wife Pam. The mobile home had been burned to destroy evidence. The fifth victim, Edward Gentry Sr., was found in another structure on the property. Jeremy Pickney, Marvin Stringer and Samuel Conway, all in their early twenties, were quickly identified as suspects due to their possessing stolen goods from the Gentry trailer. Stringer was killed during a shootout in a police raid when authorities attempted to arrest him at the Red Roof Inn on East Grand Ave.
Conway was convicted at trial in June 2011 on multiple counts of capital murder and burglary, and sentenced to life in prison without parole. The Arkansas Supreme Court ordered a retrial of his case due to judicial error. He pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 40 years in prison. Pickney made a plea bargain, pleading guilty in 2011 to conspiracy to commit aggravated residential burglary, and was sentenced to 50 years in prison.
In the early morning hours of November 12, 2009, firefighters were alerted to a burning mobile home in Pearcy, Arkansas, approximately 55 miles southwest of Little Rock. Upon investigation, they discovered four bodies. These were later identified as 56-year-old Edward Gentry Jr., his 52-year-old wife Pam, their 24-year-old son Jeremy, and Jeremy's 19-year-old girlfriend Kristyn Warneke. They had all been shot to death. The trailer home had been set on fire and burned so fiercely that the floor collapsed in one area. A few hours later the body of 80-year-old Edward Gentry Sr. was found in another building on the property. He had been bound and shot to death execution style, with two bullets to the head. Police determined that the victims had been burglarized: flat-screen televisions, guns, and two sets of rims and tires had been stolen. [1]
Later reports made by Balistic experts and medical examiners revealed more details. A state medical examiner named Daniel Dye testified during the trial that Edward Gentry Jr. had been shot once in the head, Pamela Gentry had been shot at least three times, including at least once to the head, Jeremy Gentry had been shot once in the head, Kristyn Warneke had been shot twice in the head, and Edward Gentry Sr. had also been shot twice in the head. [2]
A few hours after the bodies were discovered, the truck of one of the victims was found about thirteen miles away; it had also been burned. [3] Three suspects, Samuel Conway, Jeremy Pickney and Marvin Stringer, were quickly identified after Conway's former girlfriend saw him with the stolen goods and contacted police. [1] A police informant attempted to buy the televisions and rims from Conway the day after the murders and said that Conway indicated they had come from a "lick", or robbery. The informant said that Conway brandished two handguns that were later determined to have been used in the murders. The informant also purchased a .40-caliber pistol from Stringer; it was positively identified as having belonged to Edward Gentry Sr.
On November 19, police raided an inn in Hot Springs, Arkansas where they had learned the suspects were staying. Conway and Pickney, both 23 years old, were taken into custody, and Stringer, 22, was killed in a shootout with police. During the shootout Garland County Sheriff's Deputy Jason Lawrence was shot and wounded and another Deputy, Felix Hunter, had an undisclosed medical issue. Lawrence was treated at a hospital. [4]
When the case went to trial, the prosecution said that the motive for the murders was revenge over stolen property. Elder Conway brother [Ernest] had asked Samuel Conway and Pickney for help burglarizing the Gentry home. [1]
In June 2011, Conway was found guilty of the burglary and murders and sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. [5] In October of the same year, Pickney reached a plea agreement with prosecutors, pleading guilty to lesser charges to avoid trial on capital murder. He was sentenced to a total of 50 years in prison after pleading guilty to conspiracy to commit aggravated residential burglary and theft by receiving, sentenced to 30 years for the first charge and 20 for the second. [5]
Conway's defense attorney appealed his conviction and sentence. In November 2012, the Arkansas Supreme Court, ruled that Conway was entitled to a retrial because the judge presiding over his original trial did not dismiss a juror who said he could not be fair to Conway. [6] In June 2016 Conway pleaded guilty to five counts of first-degree murder in return for capital charges being dropped and was sentenced to 40 years in prison. [7]
While awaiting trial in 2010, Conway, his brother Detric Conway, age 35, and a woman, 23-year-old Dominic N. Hobson, were charged in the 2005 robbery and murder of 50-year-old Mary Anderson in Hot Springs. Samuel Conway was then awaiting a mental evaluation in relation to charges against him in the Pearcy murders committed in 2009. [8] Samuel Conway was convicted of the murder of his Mary Anderson. The Gentry's and Warneke's are still awaiting the retrial for their family as of November 3, 2015. The trial was moved to January 2016, awaiting the appeal verdict of Samuel Conway for the Mary Anderson murder. If he does not win the appeal on the Anderson case he will enter a plea deal with the state on the Gentry/Warneke murders.
The West Memphis Three are three freed men convicted as teenagers in 1994 of the 1993 murders of three boys in West Memphis, Arkansas, United States. Damien Echols was sentenced to death, Jessie Misskelley Jr. to life imprisonment plus two 20-year sentences, and Jason Baldwin to life imprisonment. During the trial, the prosecution asserted that the juveniles killed the children as part of a Satanic ritual.
The New York State Police Troop C scandal involved the fabrication of evidence by members of the New York State Police, which was used to convict suspects in Central New York.
The Franciscan University murders is an American criminal case involving the kidnapping of two young men from Steubenville, Ohio, and their murder in Washington County, Pennsylvania, on May 31, 1999.
Channon Gail Christian, aged 21, and Hugh Christopher Newsom Jr., aged 23, were from Knoxville, Tennessee, United States. They were kidnapped on the evening of January 6, 2007, when Christian's vehicle was carjacked. The couple were taken to a rental house. Both of them were raped, tortured, and murdered. Four males and one female were arrested, charged, and convicted in the case. In 2007, a grand jury indicted Letalvis Darnell Cobbins, Lemaricus Devall Davidson, George Geovonni Thomas, and Vanessa Lynn Coleman on counts of kidnapping, robbery, rape, and murder. Also in 2007, Eric DeWayne Boyd was indicted by a federal grand jury of being an accessory to a carjacking, resulting in serious bodily injury to another person and misprision of a felony. In 2018, Boyd was indicted on state-level charges of kidnapping, robbery, rape, and murder.
Bruce Alfred Johnston Sr. was the leader of one of the most notorious gangs in the history of Pennsylvania, U.S. The gang started in the 1960s and was rounded up in 1978 after his son, Bruce Jr., testified against him. The 1986 film At Close Range is based loosely on Johnston's gang.
Iwao Hakamada is a Japanese former professional boxer who was sentenced to death on September 11, 1968, for a 1966 mass murder that became known as the Hakamada Incident. On March 10, 2011, Guinness World Records certified Hakamada as the world's longest-held death row inmate. In March 2014, he was granted a retrial and an immediate release when the Shizuoka district court found there was reason to believe evidence against him had been falsified.
The Nighttime Killers is the media epithet for the killers responsible for a string of brutal murders in Kyiv, Ukraine, between 1991 and 1996. Two men, Vladyslav Volkovich and Volodymyr Kondratenko were arrested and charged with 16 murders. Most victims were shot with a .22 sporting rifle and stabbed or bludgeoned with a wide variety of weapons ranging from stitching awls to bricks and iron bars. The killers claimed that they began the murder spree in order to prepare themselves for an eventual career as contract killers, practicing on the homeless, and continued killing for profit and for fun. Kondratenko killed himself in prison during the trial. Volkovich was found guilty and sentenced to life in prison.
The Westside Middle School shooting was a mass shooting that occurred on March 24, 1998, at Westside Middle School in unincorporated Craighead County, Arkansas near the city of Jonesboro. 13-year-old Mitchell Johnson and 11-year-old Andrew Golden opened fire on the school, shooting and killing five people with multiple weapons, and both were arrested when they attempted to flee the scene. Ten others were wounded. Golden and Johnson were convicted of five murders and ten assaults, and were imprisoned until each turned 21 years of age. After the 1992 Lindhurst High School shooting that killed four people in Olivehurst, California, the massacre was the deadliest non-college school shooting in contemporary U.S. history until the April 1999 Columbine High School massacre. As of 2024, the incident is the deadliest mass shooting at a middle school in U.S. history.
On November 29, 2009, four police officers of Lakewood, Washington were fatally shot at the Forza coffee shop, located at 11401 Steele Street #108 South in the Parkland unincorporated area of Pierce County, Washington, near Tacoma. A gunman, later identified as Maurice Clemmons, entered the shop, shot the officers while they worked on laptops, and fled the scene with a single gunshot wound in his torso. After a massive two-day manhunt that spanned several nearby cities, an officer recognized Clemmons near a stalled car in south Seattle. When he refused orders to stop, he was shot and killed by a Seattle Police Department officer.
On the morning of September 4, 2005, six days after Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans, members of the New Orleans Police Department (NOPD), ostensibly responding to a call from an officer under fire, shot and killed two civilians at the Danziger Bridge: 17-year-old James Brissette and 40-year-old Ronald Madison. Four other civilians were wounded. All the victims were African-American. None were armed or had committed any crime. Madison, a mentally disabled man, was shot in the back. The shootings caused public anger and further eroded the community's trust in the NOPD and the federal response to Hurricane Katrina overall.
Anni Ninna Dewani was a Swedish woman of Indian origin who was murdered while on her honeymoon in South Africa after the taxi in which she and her husband Shrien Dewani were traveling was hijacked.
The 2019 Nevada killing spree was a series of murders in January 2019 in which an assailant broke into three homes in Douglas and Washoe Counties in northwestern Nevada, murdered the elderly inhabitants, and made off with valuables. Reports of the crimes terrified area residents for several days until a police manhunt identified and apprehended Wilber Ernesto Martinez-Guzman. The sheriff's report states that Martinez-Guzman later confessed.
On 4 June 2019, a mass shooting occurred in Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia. The Northern Territory Police confirmed that four people were killed in the incident and another one was injured. A 45-year-old man, Benjamin Glenn Hoffmann, was arrested and subsequently convicted for murder and manslaughter.
The killing of Greg Gunn occurred on the morning of February 25, 2016, in Montgomery, Alabama. Gunn, a 58-year-old African-American man, was shot and killed near his home after fleeing from a stop-and-frisk initiated by Aaron Cody Smith, a white police officer. Smith was charged with murder and indicted by a grand jury in 2016. The case came to trial in late 2019 following a change of venue to Ozark, Alabama. Smith was found guilty of manslaughter, and, in January 2020, was sentenced to 14 years in prison.
On October 9, 2015, Steven Edward Jones, an 18-year-old freshman at Northern Arizona University, shot four people, killing Colin Charles Brough and severely injuring three others, in a parking lot outside of Mountain View Hall on the Flagstaff Mountain campus in Flagstaff, Arizona.
On June 2, 2020, David Dorn, a 77-year-old retired police captain, was fatally shot after interrupting the burglary of a pawn shop in The Ville, St. Louis. The incident took place during riots in St. Louis, Missouri following the murder of George Floyd. Stephan Cannon, who was 24 years old at the time of the incident, was convicted of his murder on July 20, 2022.
The murder of Carla Jan Walker is a former cold homicide case that occurred in Fort Worth, Texas. On February 17, 1974, 17-year-old Carla Walker was abducted from a bowling alley parking lot in Fort Worth, Texas. Her body was found three days later in a drainage ditch 30 minutes south of Fort Worth. Walker was beaten, tortured, raped, and strangled to death.
Walter Hill was an American serial killer who killed five people between 1952 and 1977. He was convicted of capital murder, sentenced to death, and executed at Holman Correctional Facility in Alabama in 1997.
James B. Grinder (1945–2010) was an American serial killer and rapist who murdered three teenage girls in Arkansas and a woman in Missouri between 1976 and 1984. Grinder was not apprehended until his confession in March 1998. However, authorities still had little evidence tying Grinder to the murders, so they used a technique known as brain fingerprinting to help prove his guilt. In 1999, Grinder was convicted of the four murders and sentenced to life imprisonment. He remained imprisoned until his death in 2010.
Kevin Bernard Haley is an American murderer, rapist, burglar and suspected serial killer who, together with his older brother Reginald, committed a series of violent crimes in the Los Angeles area from 1982 to 1984, resulting in at least two murders. Suspected in a total of eight murders, Kevin Haley was convicted of two counts of murder in separate trials, receiving death sentences on each count.