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December 16, 2020

The Whitaker Family Murders of Sugar Land, Texas

 

Kevin, Patricia, Bart and Kent Whitaker (photo source: malkecrimenotes)

December 10, 2003 was to be a day of joy and celebration for the Whitaker family of Sugar Land, Texas.   Kent, 54 years old, the comptroller of a family-owned construction business, and his wife Patricia, 51 years old, a former elementary school teacher, were thrilled to hear that their oldest son, 23-year-old Bart, was graduating from Sam Houston State University with honors.  The trio, along with 19-year-old Kevin, drove 10 minutes or so from their home in the Sugar Lake subdivision to nearby Stafford to dine at the popular Pappadeaux seafood restaurant.  During the festivities, Kent and Patricia gifted Bart with a $4,000 Rolex watch.  

The young Whitaker family (source: Forensic Files)

Upon returning back to the family home, Bart went to his Yukon to collect his cell phone and check his messages.  Kevin, who had driven, was the first to enter the home after unlocking the front door and as he entered the dining room was shot once through the chest, falling to the floor, the car keys in his hand landing beside him.   The bullet penetrated his heart.  Patricia, behind Kevin, was shot in the chest as she entered the home.   Kent heard the shots that struck his wife and his son as he himself was struck.  As he was on the front porch and at an angle from the shooter, the bullet passed through his chest and into his shoulder, shattering his humerus.  Its pathway had been less than six inches from his heart.  Bart rushed in behind his father and, in a struggle with the masked gunman, was shot in his upper left arm.  He then chased the gunman out the back door. 

The Whitfields' neighbor, Cliff Stanley, rushed to the scene and used his own shirt to staunch Kent's wound.   Stanley also called 911 and was on the phone with the operator while Bart called 911 from his own phone, explaining that he had been shot in the arm and had chased the shooter out the back door.  When asked to describe the assailant, he said he didn't know but possibly black.  Interestingly, his father would tell authorities that he was white skin around the eyeholes of the mask.  

Patricia, Kevin and Kent 
(photo source:  CBS News)

Kevin died within minutes of being shot, before help could arrive.  Patricia was airlifted by a Life Flight service but died en route to Memorial Hermann Hospital.  Kent and Bart would survive.

One of the first detectives on the scene, Marshall Slot, thought the operator was joking when he heard the shooting of four people had taken place in Sugar Land, a community known for a nearly nonexistent homicide rate.  Kent Whitaker said that given the low crime rate, when he saw the masked gunman his first thought was it was a prank by one of his sons' friends.  It was Slot that found the murder weapon at the scene, a 9mm Glock handgun that was registered to Kevin Whitaker.   

Slot also found a black leather men's glove lying on the curb next to Bart's Chevrolet Yukon.  

Although all the dresser drawers in the first floor master bedroom had been left open about two inches, none of the contents had been disturbed.  Jewelry and expensive audio and video equipment was left out in plain sight and the only fingerprints found in the home belonged to the Whitaker family.  The killer apparently entered the home through a built-out crawlspace in Kevin's room on the second floor and then pried his gun safe open to take the Glock, which had been a gift from Bart.

The Fort Bend County Sheriff's Department arrived with three bloodhounds, who tracked from the back door to Bart's Yukon.  Scent swabs were obtained from the black glove Slot found, the dresser drawers in the master bedroom, Kevin's gun safe and the murder weapon. 

Investigators began probing into the Whitakers' backgrounds, to see who would want to execute them.  An armed robbery at a house not far from the Whitakers' gated community and soon after the murders led nowhere, as bloodhounds did not pick up his scent at the Whitaker home.   

Investigators found that Bart had left Clements High School after being busted for a string of robberies he committed with other students and sent to a Christian academy.  He was evaluated by a psychologist, who diagnosed him with delusional paranoid disorder.  Despite this, his parents bought him several luxury vehicles, a lakeside townhouse in Willis, about 70 miles north of Sugar Land and the Houston metro area, and paid his tuition at first, Baylor University and then Sam Houston State.   

On December 12, 2003, the Sugar Land Police Department received a tip from a newspaper reporter that Bart was not enrolled in Sam Houston University and had not been for some time.  With the help of grand jury subpoenas, police obtained Bart's school transcripts.  Confronted with the information, Bart told the detectives and his father that he had informed his mother he was not graduating.  Whatever Bart had used the tuition money on that his parents provided him with was unknown. 

Kevin, Patricia and Bart, December 10, 2003
(photo source: ABC News)

Three days later, on December 15, a Dallas bank teller by the name of Adam Hipp entered the Sugar Land Police Department wanting to speak to Detective Slot.  A former classmate of Bart's at Clements High School, Hipp told Slot that two years earlier, in 2001, Bart had recruited him to kill his parents in order to inherit his parents' share of the construction business.  Hipp provided a diagram of the Whitaker house and indicated where Bart had instructed him, as the gunman, to lie in wait while Bart took his family to dinner.  The murder weapon was to have been provided by Bart's Baylor roommate, who would drive the pistol down from Waco to provide to Hipp.  Hipp was to have shot Kent, Patricia, and Kevin Whitaker in the front entry of the home and then shoot Bart in the arm so as to deflect suspicion from him.  Astonishingly, Kent and Patricia got wind of the murder plot after an acquaintance of Bart's called the police but they didn't take it seriously, thinking it was "too far out."  Bart told his parents it was all a misunderstanding and they trusted him.

The diagram Hipp drew for police
(photo source: CBS News)

Hipp was checked out, as the police thought he might be a suspect, but he had a solid alibi for the night of the murders as he was working late into the evening of December 10. 

Investigators located Bart's former Baylor roommate, Justin Peters in San Antonio.  Peters admitted his participation in the plot Hipp described and said it had been planned for April of 2001.  He also said that Bart had recruited another student, Will Anthony, to kill his family back in December of 2000 but that plan fell through.  He verified that Bart Whitaker's motive for murder was financial gain.

In investigating Bart, Detective Slot looked into Bart's Willis roommate, 21-year-old Chris Brashear, who had worked with Bart at the Bentwater Yacht & Country Club in Lake Conroe, less than 10 miles from the Whitaker townhome in Willis.  A few doors down from Bart and Brashear lived Steven Champagne, whom Bart had gotten a bartending job at Bentwater.  Both men denied involvement in the Whitaker murders but agreed to be interviewed, provide DNA samples and submit scent specimens for the bloodhounds.  The dogs got a hit on Chris Brashear's scent on the glove, drawers in the master bedroom, Kevin's gun safe and the murder weapon.

Adam Hipp, meanwhile, got himself an attorney and negotiated an agreement in which he would not be prosecuted for his part in the April 2001 murder plot provided he assist the authorities with their continued investigation into Bart Whitaker.  He contacted Bart and recorded the conversations.  In one of the conversations, Bart agreed to pay Hipp $20,000 to lie to the police about his (Bart's) involvement in the April 2001 conspiracy and in April of 2004 went so far as to mail $240 to a Dallas post office box set up specifically to receive the payment.  Bart's fingerprints were found all over the mailer.

Two months later, on June 28, 2004, Bart's Chevy Yukon was found abandoned at a Southwest Houston apartment complex, the engine still running.  He appeared to have disappeared.  

The case appeared to stall until August of 2005.  Detectives had wiretapped Chris Brashear and Steven Champagne's phones, hoping to get a lead on Bart.  Although Brashear and Champagne never spoke to each other, or to Bart, grand jury subpoenas were served on friends and family members.  On August 28, Steven Champagne decided he had had enough; het met Detective Slot at a coffee shop in Conroe to confess his part in the Whitaker murders.  He said he had not known about the murders in advance but had driven Chris Brashear away from the Whitaker home on December 10, 2003 and helped to dispose of evidence after the murders in Lake Conroe.  Champagne took a polygraph which he failed, pulling his desired immunity off the table.  The following day Champagne gave a videotaped confession, implicating himself, Chris Brashear and Bart Whitaker in the murders of Patricia and Kevin Whitaker and the attempted murder of Kent Whitaker.  After showing detectives where he and Brashear discarded a bag of evidence off a bridge in Lake Conroe, he was arrested, to be followed by the arrest of Chris Brashear.   Divers located the bag, which contained a glove that matched the one found at the crime scene, a water bottle with Brashear's DNA sealed on the inside of the cap, and a chisel with paint matching that on Kevin Whitaker's gun safe.

Bart, at his celebratory dinner on December 10, 2003
(photo source: ABC News)

On September 14, 2005 Detective Slot got a tip from a man later identified as a former coworker of Bart's who said that Bart Whitaker was in Mexico, using his name -- Rudy Rios.  Rios had sold Bart his identification and driven him to Mexico for $3,000.   Bart, as Rudy Rios, had settled in the town of Cerralvo, gotten a job at a furniture store and gotten a girlfriend (her family owned the furniture store.)  He told his new friends that he received the gunshot to his arm while fighting in Afghanistan, that he was an orphan and his mother was a prostitute.  The real Rudy Rios picked up a $10,000 reward for his tip. 

Photo source: Facebook

On September 22, 2005, Bart Whitaker was taken into custody when he showed up for what he thought was a job interview in Monterey, Mexico and returned to Texas.

In December, the District Attorney announced that the state would be seeking the death penalty against Bart but not against the alleged triggerman, Chris Brashear, or Steven Champagne as the DA believed neither of them would have committed a violent crime were it not for Bart Whitaker.   Bart was offered a  plea bargain from the DA in exchange for an admission of guilt, which he rejected.  

A year later, the Assistant District Attorney received a Christmas card from Bart Whitaker.  Bart wrote that the ADA should keep his family in mind during the holiday season, making the ADA worry that Bart was thinly threatening his family. 

The trial began in March of 2007.  Bart refused to enter a plea, forcing Judge Clifford Vacek to enter a plea of not guilty on his behalf.  The first witness was Kent Whitaker, who recounted the night his wife and youngest son were shot to death.  A recording of a phone conversation was played while Kent was on the stand; the call took place between Kent and Bart.  Bart complained that his attorney had the nerve to send an associate to speak to him and that he wanted the best attorney money could buy. 

Steven Champagne took the stand on the third day of trial, recounting for the jury how he had met Bart in the spring of 2003.  According to Champagne, Bart frequently told him he was an orphan and that Champagne was the brother he never had.  By late summer, Bart was joking with Champagne and Chris Brashear about killing his family, to gauge their reactions.  In September, Bart asked Champagne if he would be willing to kill his family, if Bart got them out of the house on a pretext.  Shortly after this, Bart invited Chris Brashear to move into his townhome. 

After being told by Bart that he was already guilty of conspiracy to commit murder, Champagne agreed to be the getaway driver.  Bart informed his parents that he would be graduating from Sam Houston State in December and arranged for a celebratory dinner.  Per Champagne, the day before the murders, Bart and Kent got into a disagreement when Kent informed Bart he could not make it to the celebration dinner, which would foil the murder plans.

On the day of the murders, Bart and Brashear left Willis in Bart's Yukon, with Champagne following.  Told that the Whitakers would be dining at the Pappadeaux restaurant in Stafford, Champagne parked in the back, where he could watch the family arrive and depart.  Shortly after Bart enjoyed a bread pudding with "Congratulations" spelled out in chocolate sauce, he called Chris Brashear to inform him they would be leaving shortly.  Champagne followed their vehicle back to their home and parked in front of the house behind the Whitakers', as Bart had instructed him. 

Not long after parking, Champagne was joined by Brashear, who jumped in the backseat.  Brashear told Champagne that when Kevin Whitaker saw him, he smiled -- before Brashear pointed the Glock at his chest and pulled the trigger.  Brashear had mistakenly taken Bart's cell phone from the Yukon, had left the murder weapon behind on the kitchen floor, and had a roll of bills he had taken from Kent's closet.   Champagne and Brashear changed clothes and dumped the evidence in Lake Conroe before heading to a bar, using Kent's money to pay their tab.

Before leaving the stand, Champagne recalled a February 2004 conversation he had with Bart as the two were in a restaurant.  Bart was curious to know what Champagne had told the police and stated that "the job wasn't finished" and began to detail a plot to kill his father, Kent.  

Following Steven Champagne were Will Anthony, Justin Peters, and Adam Hipp who each detailed their participation in the earlier, discarded plots to kill Kent, Patricia, and Kevin Whitaker.  All of them recounted that they were going through personal crises and tragedies when Bart Whitaker approached them about a murder for hire plot; Hipp and Anthony were struggling with their grades and would eventually both be expelled and Peters's girlfriend had been killed in a car accident.

The jury took only an hour and a half to find Bart guilty of capital murder on March 8, 2007.

Both Kent Whitaker and Bo Bartlett, Patricia Whitaker's brother, pleaded for Bart's life to be spared.  They each believed that family expectations had placed too much pressure on him and he cracked.  They also believed that he had been given too much too soon.  Neither explanation sat well with the mostly working class jury.

Bart on trial
(photo source:  CBS News)

Bart, who had not taken the stand during his trial, took the stand during the penalty phase in a last ditch effort to save his skin.  Rather than the murders being financially motivated, as the prosecution contended, he claimed the murders had been borne from his irrational hatred of his family because he could never fulfill their high expectations of him.  Bart also claimed to have found God while he was hiding out in Mexico and was actively participating in the jail's Bible study.

When confronted with his own behavior during the investigation and in police interviews, Bart blamed his attorneys and his co-conspirators and reiterated that he had found God and was now a different person.  He did admit to the ADA, however, that he had no reason to hate his family but arranged to have them killed anyway.

The jury took 10 hours and with many of them in tears, sentenced Bart to death for the murders of Kevin and Patricia Whitaker.  Kent Whitaker flinched when hearing the verdict but told the press that while the verdict was not what he wished, it was God's will.  His son was emotionless.   

Steven Champagne (left) and Chris Brashear
(photo source: CBS News)

Chris Brashear took a plea bargain and received life with the possibility of parole after 30 years.  He is incarcerated at the Eastham Unit in Lovelady, Texas.  He will be eligible for parole in 2035, when he's 53 years old.

Steve Champagne got 15 years in exchange for testifying against Bart and Brashear and is currently out of prison.  

Bart appealed his death sentence, citing ineffectiveness of trial counsel, prosecutorial misconduct, and the cruelty of the death penalty.  

Patricia and Kevin 
(photo source: cncpunishment.com)

In 2008, Kent Whitaker published a book called "Murder by Family," in which he detailed the murders as well as his choice to forgive not only his son but Chris Brashear.   He was introduced to a woman by the name of Tanya by friends and the two married.  They spend their life together traveling the country and speaking on the power of forgiveness.  

Kent and Tanya Whitaker (photo source: outreach.com)


Bart Whitaker's appeal on prosecutorial misconduct was dismissed by the Court of Appeals in April of 2017.  Six months later, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear his appeal on the insufficiency of counsel.  On November 1, 2017, a warrant was signed for his execution, setting the date for February 22, 2018 at 6 p.m.

On February 20, 2018, after impassioned pleas by Kent Whitaker, the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles recommended clemency.   

On February 22, 2018 at 5:15 p.m., after Bart Whitaker ate his final meal and was preparing to be strapped to the gurney, and just 45 minutes before his scheduled execution, Bart's sentence was commuted to life imprisonment by Governor Greg Abbott.  It was the first time Abbott had ever done so.  In exchange for his sentence being commuted, Bart agreed to forfeit any right to parole.   He released a statement saying that he was grateful not for himself but for his father.

Bart remains incarcerated at the William G. McConnell Unit in Beeville, Texas in solitary confinement.

 
Kent during a visit with Bart, 2016
(photo source: ABC News)


October 3, 2020

The Alday Family Murders of Georgia

 

Six coffins, six victims
(photo source: riverroadccs.org)

May 14, 1973

Donalsonville, Georgia is a tiny hamlet in the southwestern corner of the state, 20 minutes north of Lake Seminole, 62 miles south of Albany and 36 miles east of Dothan, Alabama.  Named for John Ernest Donalson, who built the first lumber mill in the area, kicking off the city's growth, its economy was mostly agriculture, and home to 13 churches in the city's roughly four square miles of land and the immediate surrounding area.  The city has two schools (an elementary plus a middle/high school) and one public library.  Two NFL players called Donalsonville home at one time and the two Anglin brothers who escaped from Alcatraz in 1962 came from a Donalsonville family.  In all, it was an unlikely scene for what would become the second worst mass murder in Georgia history.

On May 5, 1973, the events which would culminate in the massacre of the Alday family began to form at the Poplar Hill Correctional Institute outside of Baltimore, Maryland.  

Nineteen-year-old Carl Isaacs had been a truant and runaway that was diagnosed with depression, poor self-image and an inability to handle his angry emotions, with particular hostility toward women.  He had prostituted himself out to a pedophile in exchange for room and board during one of his escapes from foster homes and the juvenile system and periods on the street.  By 1970, when he was sixteen, he was regularly stealing cars and burglarizing homes, the same year he was arrested for the first time.  A second arrest, for car theft and breaking and entering in Maryland quickly followed, and he was sentenced to the Maryland State Penitentiary, arriving there on March 27, 1973.  Two days later, a riot broke out and the young and small Carl was raped by fellow inmates for over eight hours.  Ten days later he was transferred to the Maryland Correction Camp and then on April 25, he was transferred to the minimum-security Poplar Hill.

Carl's half brother, Wayne Coleman, was 26 years old and had been in and out of institutions his entire life.  Like Carl, he had been arrested for car theft and burglary and had already been at Poplar Hill for several months when Carl arrived.  He did not crave control and admiration as his half-brother did but was reportedly a shy and awkward follower.  Carl sought him out as soon as he settled in at Poplar Hill and with his fast talk and giant ego, easily swayed Coleman into the idea of an escape.  Coleman only had one provision: he must be able to bring a friend with him.

That friend was George Dungee.  Dungee was 36 years old, wore thick black-rimmed glasses and appeared innocuous.  He had been incarcerated at Poplar Hill on a contempt of court citation for not paying child support.  While at Poplar Hill, he had reportedly begun a homosexual relationship with Wayne Coleman.  Despite the fact that he was to be released from Poplar Hill, Dungee, gullible and trusting, consented to go along with the escape scheme if only because Coleman wanted him to.  For Carl Isaacs' part, he had nothing but contempt for Dungee as Dungee was a black man.

At three in the morning of May 5, 1973, the trio of Isaacs, Coleman, and Dungee climbed through a bathroom window and hid in the surrounding woods.  After several hours, they then made their way into Baltimore, where they stole a blue Thunderbird with the same ease in which they had left Poplar Hill.

Authorities at Poplar Hill had, by that time, become aware that the three men had escaped but as nothing in their criminal history indicated grave public danger, they did not alert authorities that the capture of the escapees was of the utmost importance.  

Isaacs, Coleman, and Dungee remained in Baltimore for two days following their escape, aimlessly enjoying their newfound freedom before Isaacs decided he wanted to pick up his 15-year-old brother, Billy.  Billy was living in the Towson area of Baltimore County with a female friend but did not hesitate to immediately join Carl, as he idolized and worshipped his older brother.

The now-quartet spent the next nearly week driving around Maryland and into Pennsylvania, committing a multitude of home break-ins, scoring some cash, clothing, and guns.  The plan, according to Carl, was to head south to  either Florida or Mexico and live the good life, full of drinking, drugs, and crime.

On Thursday, May 10, 1973, they were near McConnellsburg, Pennsylvania stealing a pickup truck.  Nineteen-year-old Richard Wayne Miller, an upstanding young man who was a member of the Future Farmers of America, spotted the theft of his neighbor's vehicle and gave chase in his dark green 1968 Chevy Super Sport.  He then disappeared.

By Monday, May 14, 1973, the quartet, now in  Richard Miller's car, arrived in Donalsonville, the tiny county seat of Seminole County, Georgia.

May 14, 1973 was a pleasant day in South Georgia, with temperatures that peaked at 73 degrees, seven degrees below normal.  Partly cloudy first thing in the morning, most of the clouds had burned off by 9 a.m., leaving the area just slightly overcast.  The Alday family had started a routine day, with no idea that evil was heading straight for their farm.

To Seminole County residents, the Aldays represented the decency and neighborliness that embodied southern virtues.  Ned and Ernestine Alday had eloped in 1935, eventually become parents to nine children, and had scrimped and saved until they could afford a small house in Donalsonville, before saving enough to purchase the farm, with a large farmhouse, on River Road.

Ned Alday on the porch of the family home with youngest child Faye
(photo source: The Lineup)

By 1973, the Aldays' River Road property was a working farm with animals and crops.  Ned and Ernestine lived in the big farmhouse with their youngest children, Fay and Jimmy.  Their son Jerry, who had married Mary Campbell in 1970, had moved into a trailer a few miles down River Road from the farmhouse.  Son Chester, known as Sugie, lived with his wife, Barbara, whom he had married in 1969, in a trailer that was parked only a few yards from the farmhouse.  The Aldays were considered hard workers, who put backbreaking, exhausting work into their farm, and religious churchgoers.  There had never been a police or court officer to enter the Alday home in an official capacity.  No Alday had ever disturbed the peace, been on welfare, or been any type of blight to the community in any way.

Ernestine Alday spent the morning of May 14 as she usually did, preparing the midday meal and doing household chores.  At noon, the Alday men arrived for lunch, bowed their heads for the traditional blessing, and then talked about the farm as they ate.  Ned and Jerry were plowing a field, although at a slower pace than usual due to muddy patches from recent rains.  Jimmy planned to finish plowing a flat field he had started and then plow the fields behind Jerry's trailer after lunch, while Sugie would join his Uncle Aubrey on equipment borrowed from a neighbor to work a field in the west.  Their meal finished by 1 p.m., they all left the house, leaving Ernestine behind to clean up.

Ned Alday
(photo source: riverroadccs.org) 

At roughly the same time, the Isaacs brothers, Coleman and Dungee were driving in Seminole County, after going so far as Jacksonville, Florida and then turning around and heading north again.  Carl Isaacs had noticed rural Seminole County on the way into Florida and felt the area, with its remote locations and small police department, would be perfect for what he had in mind.  Despite their burglaries, the party was out of money (the majority being spent on beer) and soon to run out of gas.  Carl hoped to find either new targets to rob or gas to syphon - or both.

It was around 4 p.m. when he spotted a tank sitting alone in a field about 50 feet from the road.  The tank, however, proved to be diesel and so they agreed to continue on.  Fifteen minutes later, they appeared to find a perfect mark on River Road.  It was the trailer belonging to Jerry and Mary Alday and it had a gas pump on the property.

Carl Isaacs and Wayne Coleman began ransacking the trailer, while George Dungee and Billy Isaacs waited in the car.  Seeing two men in a blue jeep approaching, Billy warned his brother Carl.

Mary and Jerry Alday on Easter Sunday, one month before their murders
(photo source:  The Lineup)

Jerry Alday and his father Ned pulled in behind the trailer in Jerry's jeep, unaware that the home was being burgled.  They typically would return to Jerry's home after a day of hard work, to meet with the other men to plan the next day's farming while Mary would work in her flower garden in the front yard.  Instead, they were met by Carl who, at gunpoint, ordered them inside to sit at the kitchen table and to empty their pockets.  From the father and son, the quartet scored a penknife, a cigarette lighter, a wallet and some change.  35-year-old Jerry was taken to the south bedroom of the trailer and 66-year-old Ned was taken to the north bedroom.  Carl then shot and killed Jerry, and had to assist Coleman in killing Ned as, after having been shot once in the head, Ned had risen from the bed he fell on to fight back.  It had required multiple bullets from both Isaacs' and Coleman's guns to restrain and permanently silence him.  The later autopsies showed that Ned had been shot six times with two different pistols, a .22 caliber and a .32 caliber, and Jerry had been shot four times with a .22 caliber pistol.  

Shortly thereafter, Jimmy Alday, son of Ned and brother of Jerry, drove up on a green John Deere tractor, walked to the back door of the mobile home and knocked politely.  He was greeted by a pistol held by Coleman, who robbed him of a hat, a pair of sunglasses, and a nearly empty wallet.  Carl confronted Jimmy, accusing him of coming to the trailer because he had heard gunshots, to which Jimmy truthfully denied but likely realized at that moment that someone, probably his brother, had been shot.  Carl took him to the living room, where Jimmy was forced to lie on the sofa.  Carl then shot the 25-year-old in the back of the head.  His autopsy later revealed that Jimmy had been shot twice with a .22 caliber pistol.

The lost Aldays
(photo source: Macon Telegraph) 

After murdering Jimmy, Carl went outside to move the tractor, which had been parked in front of their car.  Mary Alday, Jerry's wife, drove up in her car to the now-crowded driveway.  Seeing her, Carl jumped off the tractor and came up behind the unsuspecting woman, who had pulled a paper bag of groceries from the car.  Pulling a pistol on her, he ordered her into the trailer, where his first act to demean her was to knock the bag of groceries from her hands.  As had been done to her husband, father-in-law, and brother-in-law, she was robbed of the few possessions she had, including a Timex watch, when Carl dumped her handbag, containing her car keys, perfume, and her wallet with one dollar inside, out in front of her.

That was when two men in a pickup truck pulled up -- Sugie and Aubrey Alday, the son and brother of Ned Alday.  They were laughing and made no effort to get out of their vehicle so Carl, taking Billy with him, decided to go and get them.  Each taking a truck door, the two ordered the men out and into the trailer at gunpoint, where Carl accused the men of laughing at him.  Sugie and Aubrey spotted Mary, crying uncontrolloably, as they were ordered to sit on the kitchen floor.  Wayne Coleman collected towels from the kitchen table and headed to the north bedroom, while Carl and George Dungee took Mary to the bathroom, where Dungee was tasked with guarding her.

Aubrey Alday, one year before his murder
(photo source: The Lineup) 

Sugie, who had turned 30 years old exactly a week earlier, was taken by Coleman to the bloody north bedroom where his father lay dead.  He was then shot and killed.   Aubrey, 57 years old, was taken by Carl to the south bedroom where Jerry's body lay and killed there.  Their autopsies revealed that Aubrey had been shot once with a .38 caliber pistol and Sugie had been shot once with a .380 caliber pistol.  When he was found, Aubrey's fingers lay folded over Jerry's, as if in the last moment of his life, he reached out to hold his nephew's hand.

Mary was taken from the bathroom and to her kitchen table where she was raped, first by Carl and then by Coleman.

The prison escapees, plus Billy Isaacs and a blindfolded, gagged, and terrified Mary Alday, then drove to a heavily wooded area several miles away where Mary was dragged out of the car by her hair and raped twice more by Carl and once by George Dungee.  Photographs were taken of her with an Instamatic camera stolen from the trailer (one photo was later found of a frightened and nude Mary, only moments prior to her death) before Dungee made her lie on her stomach and shot the 25-year-old once in the back and once near the back of her head.  Her autopsy would reveal that not only had she been repeatedly raped but she had been shot with a .22 caliber pistol.

The killing quartet abandoned Richard Miller's car, nearly out of gas, in the woods close to where they left Mary's body and took her car, a blue and white Chevy Impala, which they would later abandon in Alabama.

Outside the home of Jerry and Mary Alday, now a crime scene
(photo source: Dead Man Coming)

The murders shocked and terrified the peaceful, close-knit community of Donalsonville but it also drew the already devoted community closer together.  The Aldays' neighbors, many of them eking out a living as the Aldays had, stopped by the farmhouse on River Road to bring with them what they could - food and small sums of cash - and offer whatever help they could extend.   

In Colquitt, Georgia, the hometown of Mary Campbell Alday and eighteen miles from where her body had been found, her death had been agonizing for the community.  The terrifying details of Mary's last hours of life were kept from her mother, who had been in declining health.  Mrs. Campbell was told only that her daughter had been shot and died instantly from her wound.  Unfortunately, a neighbor unintentionally revealed to Mrs. Campbell all the facts then known about Mary's last moments, including that she had been the last to die, after having witnessed at least two murders herself, and that she had been found nude and probably raped.  It was too much for Mrs. Campbell, who sank into a diabetic coma shortly after learning the details and died a few hours later.  For many of the authorities, her death made her the seventh victim; the murdering trio, in their opinion, had put a gun to her head as much as they did the six Alday victims.  

Remembering the victims
(photo source: riverroadccs.org)

On May 17, 1973, social and commercial activities came to a halt in Donalsonville and Seminole County as the Alday funerals began.  The mayor called for a day of mourning and the community responded by closing all the stores downtown, leaving the streets deserted.  By the time the funeral services began for Ned, Aubrey, Sugie, Jerry, Mary, and Jimmy, nearly all the townspeople, joined by hundreds of others from surrounding counties, had gathered at the Spring Creek Baptist Church - the church that Ned had helped to build, where the Alday men and Mary had been officers and teachers in its Sunday School and where Sugie and Barbara Alday and Jerry and Mary Alday had married.  As the church itself was not equipped to handle six full-sized coffins and the expected large number of people in attendance, the decision was made to have the services on the cemetery grounds, to accomodate all who wanted to attend.  So many floral arrangements were delivered that flowers were stacked on flowers around the coffins and the graves.  Various state dignitaries attended, including Governor Jimmy Carter's mother, Lillian (or Miss Lillian, as she was affectionately known) and his special assistant.  

The freshly dug grave for the Aldays
(photo source: Dead Man Coming)

Eulogies were given for the victims.  Ned was remembered for being lively and for his sense of humor.  Aubrey, who left behind a wife and six children, was remembered for his skills as a farmer and his love of hunting and fishing.  Sugie was remembered for his strength and comedic nature.  Jerry, the most reserved of the Alday men, was remembered for his quiet dignity.  Mary was remembered for her work in social service and her devotion as a wife.  Jimmy was remembered for his youthful energy and pranks and his love of looking up facts in the family encyclopedias.  All of them were praised for their hard work and service to their church and community.

Caught and Convicted

The guilty
(photo source: My Life of Crime)

George Dungee, the first of the killers captured, was taken into custody, somewhat karmically, on May 17 - the day of the Alday funerals.  For over two hours, he told a disquieting tale of assault, rape, and murder.  He confessed that he had been unable to sleep since "what we had done to that woman" and that only Billy Isaacs was innocent of rape and murder.  Ballistics showed, however, that the Aldays had been killed with four different types of guns, one of which Billy Isaacs had been carrying.

Wayne Coleman's story differed somewhat from George Dungee's, as well as his demeanor.  Whereas Dungee told his story with a certain level of remose and sorrow, Coleman appeared to have a good time recounting the sorrowful last moments of the Alday family.  He boasted that he had personally killed every victim, proud of any level of cruelty and brutality, smiling as he told law enforcement of the tragic end of six lives.  Also unlike Dungee, who had a clearer remembrance of details and timing, Coleman was fuzzy; so much so that he asked officers if Alabama was part of Georgia and if Louisiana was a county in Mississippi.

Billy Isaacs' account was very similar to that of George Dungee, insofar as which Alday family members arrived at the trailer and when, and in which order they were killed.  He claimed that he had not murdered anyone.

Only Carl Isaacs of the four refused to say anything about May 14, 1973, other than it was "a pretty May day."  

Carl Isaacs under arrest
(photo source: Dead Man Coming)

The four escaped inmates were returned to Seminole County on May 24, 1973 - just 10 days after the murders - to be arraigned at the courthouse in Donalsonville.  They each faced six counts of murder, as well as the felony charges of rape, kidnapping, armed robbery, and the theft of Mary Alday's car.

Whereas the community had been shocked and saddened by the murders, they were now outraged and demanding that if the defendants were indeed guilty, justice be served.  "Fry 'em," was often heard, and it was alleged there were suggestions to form a lynch mob and execute a swift form of street justice.  The four defendants being placed in four separate jails miles apart only seemed to bolster the rumors.

With the Issacs brothers, Coleman, and Dungee under arrest, the long wait for the family of Richard Miller, the missing Pennsylvania teen, was finally about to come to an end.  With the discovery of his car at the Mary Alday body site, and eyewitnesses in Pennsylvania who gave accounts of the men that Richard was chasing, authorities suspected that the boy was likely dead but wanted to locate his body to return to his family.  Following several hours of negotiation in which he was assured that nothing he said or did could be used against him, Wayne Coleman agreed to return to Pennsylvania to aid in recovering Richard's body.  Shortly after his arraignment on May 24, he was taken by plane to Maryland, where he laughingly told authorities that he had pulled the trigger himself ("I didn't want the others to have all the fun.")  For three days, he led heavily armed officers in circling routes around the Pennsylvania-Maryland border, eventually convincing them that while he knew plenty about the homicide, he had no geographical sense.  Coleman was then returned to Georgia.

With Coleman's failure at locating Richard Miller's body, authorities were surprised to find Carl Isaacs willing to aid.  Like Coleman, he was transported to Pennsylvania and also like Coleman, he was utterly devoid of any sign of remorse.  Unlike Coleman, Isaacs had a nearly photographic memory of landmarks and where they had traveled.  He easily directed the police on the exact route they had taken, from when Richard Miller had taken pursuit to when they had kidnapped him.  The group was taken to the small town of Flintstone, Maryland, where Isaacs gave the police detailed instructions on where to find Richard's body; the unrepentant killer did not want to accompany them on their grim discovery.

The body of Richard Wayne Miller was found exactly where Carl Isaacs said it would be, up a logging road and to the left of a debris-strewn trash dump.  His killers had tied his hands behind his back, forced him to his knees and then argued over who would be the one to kill him, over his pleas to spare his life.  He was then shot in the back of the head, his body left among the trash.  Isaacs was flippant about the death of the teenager.  From the moment Richard Miller had approached them, he said, he was a dead man.  

Before the first trial started, that of Carl Isaacs, Billy Isaacs made a deal with prosecutors, who felt that Billy, being illegible for the death penalty due to his age and less culpable than the other defendants, was the best eyewitness.  Rather than going to trial, Billy would be sentenced to two twenty-year terms for burglary and car theft, the maximum sentence he could receive, and would testify against the three defendants.  

The State of Georgia vs. Carl Isaacs commenced at 9:30 in the morning of December 31, 1974 before Judge Walter Geer with voir dire.  Special prosecutor Peter Geer, the nephew of Judge Geer, had known Ned Alday, as well as other family members.  He had fished with them and been a guest in their homes.  He was more than eager to prosecute the men accused of killing them and to institute Georgia's then new capital punishment statute.  He managed to seat a jury on that first day, following a relatively speedy voir dire, and began the presentation of his case on New Year's Day, January 1, 1974, at 9 a.m.  He proved to be as speedy with his presentation as he was in voir dire, as he called Bud Alday, the brother of Ned and Aubrey, as his first witness, to be rapidly followed by the sheriff, eyewitnesses to the defendants being in the vicinity of the Alday property on May 14, 1973, to one of Mary Alday's coworkers (who identified her Timex watch that was found in the possession of the defendants) and Sugie Alday's wife Barbara (who identified a briefcase belonging to her husband containing his driver's license, fishing license and a dental appointment card that found in the defendants' possession) to police officers, crime lab technicians and the doctor who performed the autopsies before he arrived at his eleventh witness.  That was his star witness, the one the anxious courtroom was waiting to hear, the  now sixteen-year-old Billy Isaacs.  

Billy took the stand on the afternoon of January 4, only feet away from four of the surviving Alday children and his brother Carl, who glared at him from the defense table.  Over the next two hours, he recounted meeting up with Carl, Coleman, and Dungee following their escape and their tortuous path to River Road.  He spoke, as George Dungee had, of the Aldays' last painful moments of life, of the prolonged torture inflicted on Mary Alday, and the death and destruction wreaked in the small trailer of Jerry and Mary Alday.  Particularly painful to the Alday family in attendance and to those who had known and cared for the Alday victims, was Billy's testimony that Carl Isaacs, after robbing him, had asked Jerry Alday if he were married, to which Jerry had responded truthfully, but told Isaacs that there was no need to wait for his wife as she never had more than a dollar or two with her.  Only after seeing a look in Carl's eye did Jerry realize he had made a grave mistake and begged Isaacs not to hurt her.  According to Billy, the reason the four didn't depart the trailer immediately after killing Ned and Jerry Alday was solely to wait for Mary, whom Carl Isaacs, in addition to raping, had also hit multiple times, once hard enough to cause her to lose consciousness.

Billy also testified that when Carl had gone to kill Aubrey Alday, as Wayne Coleman was killing Sugie Alday, his gun had only clicked in the empty chamber; Carl had shot it so many times that it ran out of bullets.  He had run to Billy, grabbed his pistol and then gone back into the bedroom, after which Billy testified he heard one or two shots.  Carl, Billy said, was laughing when he came out of the bedroom, saying that "that damned bastard begged for mercy."

Both the prosecution and the defense made their closing arguments on January 5 and the case then went to the jury.  Sixty-eight minutes later, the jury reached its verdict, finding Carl Isaacs guilty on all counts.

The jury in Carl Isaacs' 1974 trial
(photo source: Ebay)

The penalty phase of Carl's trial began on January 7, with Peter Geer stressing that it was the jury's duty to protect the citizens of Seminole County from the likes of Carl Isaacs and the only way to be absolutely certain that he could never commit such a crime again was to impose death upon him.  Carl yawned and appeared bored by the entire proceeding.  Thirty-eight minutes after Isaacs' lawyer gave a plea for his client's life, the jury voted for death.

The trial against George Dungee began nine days later and followed the same format as that of Carl Isaacs.  Fifty-eight minutes after the jury got the case, they returned with their verdict of guilty on all counts.  Although Dungee's attorney offered an eloquent plea for his client's life and against the death penalty in general, the jury deliberated less than two hours before voting for death. Dungee reportedly received his sentence without emotion.

Wayne Coleman's trial was the last but like the two previous, it was a three-day affair that ended with a guilty verdict on all counts after a jury deliberation of fifty minutes.  Coleman, who had wrung his hands nervously and fidgeted during his trial, was sentenced to death fifty minutes after his attorney pleaded for his life.  After Judge Geer pronounced his sentence, he smiled broadly and said, "Thanks, Judge!" before being led away.

The Waiting Game

Although the trials and convictions were quick, carrying out the sentences themselves would not be.  Judge Geer had set the execution dates initially as February 15, 1974, feeling that as the Aldays had died together, so too should their killers, but it was a mere formality as mandatory and automatic appeals were made to the Georgia Supreme Court.

Over the next decade, multitudes of appeals and filings were made by the three defendants, with new execution dates set and then postponed due to those filings.  All appeals and motions were denied - until a discovery motion in 1979 was granted, putting into gear what would lead to retrials in 1988.

In 1975, Billy Isaacs, being the only one of the four defendants not under a death sentence, was returned to Maryland to stand trial for the kidnap and murder of Richard Wayne Miller, being charged as an accomplice.  He was found guilty and sentenced to 60 years, which would run concurrent to his 40-year sentence in Georgia, meaning he could potentially serve 50 years before being eligible for parole.  

In the spring of 1974, Carl Isaacs agreed to an interview with a writer from the Albany Herald, sparking off multiple interviews and a passion by Isaacs for fame.  He claimed, among other things, that on the first anniversary of the Alday murders he would send a note to Wayne Coleman, whose own Death Row cell was down the hall, a note wishing him a happy anniversary.  His life's ambition, he said, was to murder a thousand people.  His backup plan was even more laughable: to be a practicing attorney.  His did concede, in possibly the most wildly understated remark in history, the bar would never accept him.  He threatened his younger brother Billy, saying that he would "never live to hit the streets again" and if both of them were free, Billy would be the first person he would kill.  He claimed not to think about the Alday murders themselves but in the same breath, gave a respect of sorts to Mary Alday for being the only one who put up a fight, as "the rest just lay down and got shot."  He admitted he'd like to get out and "kill more of the Aldays," as they represented the type of society he didn't like: churchgoing folks, humble, and hard workers.  

For all the vitriol Isaacs had for the Aldays (even going so far as to claim that nobody gave a damn about them until he killed them, the "only thing the Aldays ever did that stood out was getting killed by me," and they were "just farmers"), he had a great deal of sympathy for himself.  He found prison an affront to his humanity.  Being locked up, it prevented him from being out in the world, doing something to ease the hate he had within him.  He said prison was full of peril for him and two groups within the prison wanted him dead, one of whom had allegedly put a $5,000 bounty on his head.  So deep was his self-pity and utter lack of self-awareness that he believed the surviving Alday family should feel sorry for him, as he was on Death Row.  Prisons, he felt, shouldn't make people suffer so much before they were put to death and the public should have more compassion.

Maybe surprisingly, maybe not, Isaacs' own mother called for his execution, stating that she didn't want her sons (Isaacs and Wayne Coleman) around if they were going to be killing people.

On the morning of July 28, 1980, four inmates on Georgia State Prison's Death Row escaped, simply walking out of the prison during the early morning shift change.  While three were caught by July 30 and the fourth was discovered murdered, it came out that the mastermind behind the escape was none other than Carl Isaacs.  Isaacs had been planning such an escape since 1974, had gotten a guard involved in helping, had arranged for five men to be transferred to his cell block to more easily facilitate the escape (the fifth man got cold feet at the last minute) and had not participated in the actual escape only as he had been transferred from Reidsville to the Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Center in Jackson a few hours before the men broke free.  Isaacs' only message to the three escapees who were duly returned to Reidsville was that he would "like to kick their asses for being out that long and not getting a piece and wasting somebody."  

In 1983, two books and one movie about the Alday murders were released.  In the film, it was the character of Billy who provided the narration and was the main voice.  It was a wholly sympathetic portrayal of him, erroneously showing him as an innocent boy who had never gotten into any trouble prior to the murders.  The film also takes creative license with how the defendants were eventually caught, choosing to have Billy's character pull a gun on Carl to prevent him from taking a young girl hostage, rather than surrendering under threat of gunfire by police, rather than surrendering under threat of gunfire by police.

On November 26, 1985, a guard at the Georgia Classification and Diagnostic Center in Jackson, Georgia discovered the entire front portion of a ventilation system in Carl Isaacs' cell had been cut through.  So close had Isaacs been to a potential escape that layer after layer of screens, louvers, and metal backings had been penetrated through to the plumbing chase behind the cell, leaving only a single set of thin, steel bars in the skylight above the chase.  Isaacs' planned escape, with three other inmates, had been due to take place only hours later.  

Retrials

Carl Isaacs escorted from court in 1988
(photo source: The Macon Telegraph)

On December 9, 1985, a three-judge panel of the Eleventh Circuit of the United States Court of Appeals concluded that due to the "inflammatory and prejudicial pretrial publicity," Isaacs, Coleman, and Dungee could not have received fair trials, that each of the defendants should have been granted a change of venue and the error in not doing so was an unconstitutional judicial one.  Thus, the convictions and death sentences of Carl Isaacs, Wayne Coleman, and George Dungee were set aside, despite the "overwhelming evidence" of their guilt.  All three were granted new trials.  

On August 18, 1986, Isaacs, Coleman, and Dungee were transferred from Death Row to the Chatham County jail in Savannah to await new trials.  Only a few days later, Judge Walter C. MacMillan, Jr. of Sandersville was appointed to preside over all three trials.  On August 30, he appointed six new lawyers to defend Isaacs, Coleman, and Dungee.  Lawyers for Coleman and Dungee filed a motion challenging MacMillan, charging that he was prejudiced against both poor and black defendants.  Despite the motion being denied, after a hearing, the defense lawyers appealed to the Georgia Supreme Court, adding an additional seven-month delay to the entire process.

In November, following an alleged nine-day hunger strike, Carl Isaacs filed suit against Chatham County for "inhumane treatment" he alleged he had suffered while in custody.  On March 12, 1987, he filed another suit charging that he had been illegally transported from Chatham County, making subsequent movements across the state illegal.  Arguments were heard on April 2 and dismissed a few days later.

The first week of May 1987, the Georgia Supreme Court at last ruled judgment on the matter of Judge McMillan and disqualified him.  It would take a nearly two-month search to replace him, this time with Judge Hugh Lawson, Jr. of the Oconee Judicial Circuit.  On August 13, Judge Lawson selected Perry, Georgia, a small town in Houston County, to be the site of the retrials.  The first case would be that of Carl Isaacs.

Jury selection began in the first days of January 1988, nearly fourteen years to the day of Isaacs' first trial.  It would prove to be an almost duplicate of the first trial, with the notable exception of Ernestine Alday deciding to testify.  Billy Isaacs, now in his thirties and alone out of the four defendants to have been charged and convicted with the kidnap and murder of Richard Wayne Miller, was disappointed and dismayed that it was entirely possible that Carl Isaacs, Wayne Coleman, and George Dungee could walk on the Alday murders, while he was facing serving fifty years before being eligible for parole.  He was hesitant over testifying against them yet again until prosecutor Charles Ferguson showed him a photograph of Ernestine, the woman who had lost her husband, brother-in-law, three sons and a daughter-in-law back in 1973.  Ernestine had never spoken out in vengeance against Billy Isaacs, nor called for the death penalty for him.  Upon seeing her picture and hearing that, Billy agreed to testify.  

Unlike the first trial, which had moved along with unbelievable rapidity, this second trial did not start until nine volumes of defense motions and voir dire examination had been completed.  It was January 3, 1988 before Ferguson stood before the court to begin his case.  Worried that the presence of the crying Alday family members in the courtroom might "prejudice" their client's rights, Carl Isaacs' attorneys made a motion for a mistrial and once it was denied, requested that the court order the spectators to be quiet or be removed.  Judge Lawson acted in an abundance of caution and so issued the warning that displays of emotion would not be tolerated and that anyone who could not control their emotions would need to leave the courtroom until they could resume control.  This stung for the Aldays, who noted that while they were taken to task for crying, the Isaacs family was free not only to cry in the courtroom but on the stand as well.  Ernestine Alday, the matron of the devastated family, managed to hold her composure while on the stand until shown a picture of the trailer taken the day after the murders.  When she saw her late husband's pipe in the ashtray on the kitchen table, she wept.  

It was nearly 1:30 in the afternoon of January 23, 1988 when Billy Isaacs took the stand.  He repeated the events of May 14, 1973, without a single substantive alteration in detail from what he had testified to fourteen years earlier.  His brother's attorneys attempted to shake him but to no avail.

The state called a writer-filmmaker by the name of Fleming Fuller to the stand.  Fuller had interviewed Carl Isaacs in Reidsville in 1976 and Isaacs agreed to tell his story on film.  In a world of the weirdly ironic, Carl Isaacs became a witness against himself during his second trial.  

He was shown on camera, his voice emotionless and monotone, as he recounted the Alday murders.  Besides getting the sequence of the shootings incorrect, he mentioned that while leaving Aubrey Alday in the bedroom to take Billy's gun from him, Aubrey had managed to get ahold of a 12-gauge shotgun that had been standing in the corner and only be sheer bad luck for Aubrey had Carl managed to shoot him first.  He also blamed Mary Alday for her own death by claiming that he had told her if she gave them no hassle, it would save her life.

Isaacs' attorneys called no witnesses on their client's behalf. 

On January 25, 1988 at 6:45 p.m., after deliberating for just over two hours, the jury reached a verdict.  They found Carl Isaacs guilty on all six counts of murder.

The penalty phase in Carl Isaacs' trial began on January 26.  Ferguson argued for the death penalty, citing not only the heinous nature of the crimes but Isaacs' two nearly successful escapes from prison and his boastful accounts of them.  Ferguson also brought up Isaacs' evil nature, calling to the stand as a witness a WSB-TV reporter who had interviewed Isaacs several years after the murders.  The reporter recalled that he had asked Isaacs if he had it to do all over again, would he have committed the murders?  Isaacs had replied that he would.

Isaacs' attorneys called one witness on their client's behalf, a woman whom he had been corresponding with since 1974.  She testified that Isaacs addressed her as "Mom," that they talked about the Bible and participated in Bible study courses together.  According to her, in 1979, Isaacs had been baptized in her church and later graduated from the Baptist Christian College in Louisiana, where he had taken correspondence courses, and received a Master of Bible Theology from the International Bible Institute.  She was convinced that Carl Isaacs was the kind of person who could reach out and help anyone.

In his closing, Isaacs' attorney claimed that the rape of Mary Alday had not really been a rape at all but rather Carl Isaacs' way of assaulting his own mother, for whom he had a virulent hatred.

The jury deliberated for one hour and 52 minutes before finding that Carl Isaacs should be put to death.

Wayne Coleman's retrial took place in Decatur, Georgia, outside of Atlanta, in April.  Coleman was only 41 but he had lost all his teeth, hair hair was nearly white and his body haggard and emaciated.  His attorney blamed Carl Isaacs ("one of the most manipulative persons you will ever meet") and Billy Isaacs, whom he described as exactly like Carl, "a killer, a manipulator, who cut a deal with the state."  He also called two clinical psychologists to the stand; one to testify to Carl Isaacs' psychological makeup and one to testify as to Coleman's.

Prosecutor Ferguson once again presented much the same case that had been presented back in 1974, relying upon the physical evidence and Billy Isaacs' eyewitness testimony to prove Coleman's guilt.

On April 29, the case went to the jury, who enjoyed a hamburger dinner before finding Wayne Coleman guilty of six counts of murder.

As with Carl Isaacs, the penalty phase for Wayne Coleman began the next day.  Unlike Isaacs, Coleman's attorneys put the clinical psychologist who had interviewed and administered tests to Coleman on the stand.  The doctor testified to Coleman's passive, follower-type personality, his overall depression as a human being, and his character being ripe for picking by someone like Carl Isaacs.  He also claimed that Wayne Coleman not only felt guilt over the murders but that he had prayed to God for forgiveness.

Coleman's attorneys had also gotten his mother - and also Carl Issacs' mother - to relent and testify on Coleman's behalf.  She testified that as a boy, Coleman was good, worked on farms and had never gotten into any kind of trouble.  She said that while she believed Carl and Billy, her other two sons, could pull the trigger of a gun and kill somebody, Wayne could not.  This viewpoint was confirmed by Coleman's sister Ruth, who followed her mother to the stand.  Ruth burst into tears when she admitted she loved Wayne and despite the court's admonition during Carl Isaacs' trial that emotional outbursts would not be allowed, no step was taken to get Ruth Isaacs under control.

Unlike the penalty decision in Carl Isaacs' case, this one was not quick in coming.  From the moment the jury retired to deliberate, there was a stalemate.  One juror, a 22-year-old woman, had stated flatly that she would not vote for the death sentence.  Despite her apparently inflexibility, deliberations had continued, complete with bursts of arguments, screams, and crying for the next six days.  At 10:20 a.m. on May 11, following a reported 25-hour straight deliberations, the jury foreman sent word to the judge that there wad a deadlock and the jurors were unable to agree on a sentence.  Judge Lawson was forced to declare a mistrial and under Georgia law, this meant that Wayne Coleman would receive a life sentence and be eligible for parole in 15 years.

Satisfied that the jury spared his life, Coleman opted not to appeal.

George Dungee had been the next, and last, in line for retrial but in 1988, the Georgia General Assembly had decreed that mentally retarded individuals could not be executed in Georgia.  Dungee, who had repeatedly been given IQ tests and had never scored higher than 68, met the requirements as the state judged people whose IQs were lower than 70 to be mentally retarded.  And son on July 14, 1988, George Dungee pleaded guilty by reason of mental retardation to six counts of murder and was sentenced to six consecutive life terms.

The Clock Ticks On

The years continued to roll by, while Coleman, Dungee and Billy Isaacs served their sentences and Carl Isaacs continued to appeal his death sentence, the appeals of which were basically reset on his reconviction.

For the Alday family, the years brought new tragedies.  With the deaths of five Alday men, all farmers, the family business simply couldn't be sustained.  Following their murders in 1973, neighbors in Donalsonville pitched in to help tend the crops and bring them in but it wasn't feasible to continue through that first year and the farming equipment was sold off.  Worse, prior to his death, Ned Alday, advancing in years, had deeded his property to three of his sons:  Jerry, Sugie, and Jimmy.  He knew they would never take advantage of him and felt it was the safest way to protect the land should anything happen to him.  None of them could have guessed that the Isaacs/Coleman brothers and George Dungee would destroy their family.  With Ned's death, the property passed to Jerry, Sugie, and Jimmy, all of whom died shortly after he did.  As Mary officially outlived them, she inherited the entire lot, save for a small acreage that went to Sugie's wife Barbara.  With her death, it meant her heirs inherited the Alday land.  The 500-plus acres that the Aldays had sweated and toiled over for many decades, that Ernestine Alday had lived on for 40 years, was now now longer hers.  The land was eventually sold off in plots, with  Ernestine keeping a small parcel of land, where she built a modest home for herself.

With each book and movie, none of which any Alday family member received a penny, and with each new legal action and maneuver made by one of the killers, the Aldays were forced to relieve that terrible day in May of 1973.

In 1993, Billy Isaacs was released from prison following a 1991 agreement that he be paroled.  He had served 20 years.
Ernestine Alday in 1993, holding a photo of her murdered husband and children
(photo source: avoc.info)


In October of 1998, Ernestine Alday died.  She was buried alongside her husband and children in the Spring Creek Baptist Church Cemetery.  Less than a year later, in September of 1999, her sole surviving son and oldest child Norman, who had been serving in the military at the time of the murders and who had risen to the rank of Command Sergeant Major in the Army, died in Colorado at the age of 63.

Carl Isaacs
(photo source: Georgia Department of Corrections)


On May 6, 2003, 30 years and one day after escaping from prison in Maryland, Carl Isaacs' time finally ran out.  Requesting a regular institution tray for his final meal (pork and macaroni, pinto beans, cabbage, carrot salad, dinner roll, chocolate cake and fruit punch), although neglecting to touch it, he was given a lethal injection and pronounced dead at 8:07 p.m.  No one from the Isaacs family was present at his execution; he was supported by his attorney and two ministers, who witnessed the execution.  Isaacs denied making a final statement but did request a final prayer, to which he reportedly mouthed "Amen."  Members of the surviving Alday family were present for the execution, marking the first time in Georgia that members of a victim's family were permitted to watch an execution.  Isaacs became the second condemned inmate to be put to death in Georgia in 2003 and the 32nd in the U.S. that year.  He holds the dubious record of being on Death Row longer than any other inmate in the United States.

In the years since Carl Isaacs' execution, he has been connected with the January 1973 shotgun murder of 58-year-old Anne Elder of York County, Pennsylvania.  Ms. Elder, who had met Isaacs in November of 1972, was killed during a period that Isaacs had escaped from a detention facility.

In 2003, Paige McKeen, the granddaughter of Ned and Ernestine Alday and the niece of Jerry, Mary, Jimmy and Sugie Alday, was instrumental in passing the Alday Family Bill, which makes it mandatory for state officials to contact the families of victims in death penalty cases twice a year.  Prior to the passing of the bill, it was difficult for crime victims to gain information about any developments in their cases.  She shares the Alday story to spread awareness for victims of crimes.  In 2015, she spoke directly with Wayne Coleman about the murders of her family members.

George Dungee in 1987
(photo source: Amazon.de)

On April 4, 2006, George Dungee died of a heart attack in the prison of Reidsville, Georgia.  He was 68 years old.

Billy Isaacs
(photo source: My Life of Crime)

On May 4, 2009, almost 36 years to the day that his brothers escaped from prison, Billy Isaacs died in Florida, where he had relocated.  He was 51 years old.

Wayne Coleman
(photo source: Georgia Department of Corrections)


Wayne Coleman continues to serve his sentence at the Georgia State Prison in Reidsville.  Although eligible for parole, he has been denied.  He is currently 74 years old.

 
The final resting place for Ned, Aubrey, Jerry, Sugie, Jimmy, and Mary Alday
(photo source: riverroadccs.org)

 


September 16, 2020

Rae Carruth and the Murder of Cherica Adams

 

(photo source: atlantablackstar.com) 

The Murder

It was Tuesday, November 16, 1999 in Charlotte, North Carolina.  The 911 call came in shortly before 12:30 a.m.  The operator asked the caller whether police, fire, or a medic was needed.  The caller, a woman, responded with, "Police.  I've been shot.  I've been shot."

The caller was Cherica Adams, 24 years old and eight months pregnant.  She informed the 911 operator that she was at Wessex Square and had been shot in the neck and the back while driving but managed to pull her car into a driveway.  What she said next, though, would be a bombshell.

OPERATOR:  "Okay.  How did this happen?"

CHERICA:    "I was following my baby's daddy, Rae Carruth, the football player."

OPERATOR:    "So you think he did it?"

CHERICA:    "He was in the car in front of me and he slowed down and somebody pulled up beside me and did this."

OPERATOR:    "And then where'd he go?"

CHERICA:    "He just left.  I think he did it.  I don't know what to think."


Emergency services pulled up to the house of Farrell Blalock, who owned the driveway on Rea Road that Cherica managec to pull into, within 12 minutes of her 911 call.  Taken to Carolinas Medical Center, it was determined that Cherica had been shot four times.  Her baby was delivered by emergency caesarean section at 1:42 a.m., just over an hour after his mother was shot.  The baby, named Chancellor Lee Adams, did not have a good prognosis as doctors did not expect him to live.  

Newborn Chancellor (photo source: raecarruthcase.com)


Seven hours after her son was born, Cherica regained consciousness and began communication with detectives and answering their questions by scribbling notes.  She wrote to them Carruth had been driving in front of her and stopped in the road, blocking her, at which point another car pulled up and opened fire on her.  After the shooting, he had taken off, not to return.  When asked if Carruth was involved, she drew a question mark.  She then went to sleep and never awakened.

Rae Carruth was royalty in North Carolina.  A First-Team All American (in 1996) with the Colorado Buffaloes, where he played all four years of his college career, he had wanted to be a professional football player from the time he was young.  He was a first round draft pick to the Carolina Panthers in 1997 and 27th overall pick.  He signed a four-year, $3.7 million contract with the Panthers which included a $1.3 million signing bonus.  In his first professional season, he led all rookie receivers in completed passes and yards (44 and 545, respectively.)  He also caught four touchdown passes, tying him for first among rookie receivers.  He was not a big guy by football standards, only five-foot-eleven and 190 pounds but he gained a reputation for himself due to his speed.  He finished his rookie season by earning a place on the NFL's All-Rookie Team for 1997, joining such future football luminaries as Tony Gonzalez, Walter Jones, and Jason Taylor.

(photo source: USA Today)   

Injuries, however, would plague Carruth after he broke his foot during the 1998 season opener.  He caught four passes during that game but would not catch any others that season.  At the time that Cherica Adams was shot in November of 1999, he had played in six games that season, with 14 catches for 200 yards.


The Investigation

Detectives left Cherica Adams' bedside, not realizing they would not have another opportunity to speak with her.  They began investigating Rae Carruth.

They found that Carruth had met Cherica at a pool party in June of 1998.  The beautiful and bubbly Cherica, who worked in both real estate and as an exotic dancer, had tried her hand at acting, making a brief appearance in House Party 3.  She and Carruth saw each other sporadically throughout the summer but both were seeing other people.  They fell out of touch until November, when he attended a birthday party for a teammate that was held at the strip club where Cherica worked.

According to Carruth, he and Cherica had a no-strings attached sexual relationship only, where they hooked up approximately five times.  He said that there was never any talk of anything serious between them, they never dated, never spoke on the phone for any extended periods or visited at one another's homes.

A radiant Cherica (photo source: raecarruthcase.com) 

Cherica's friends said it was always her plan to have children and that she planned on having a family with Carruth.  An earlier abortion, with an ex-boyfriend, weighed heavily on her conscience and so, when she discovered she was pregnant by Carruth, an abortion was out of the question for her.  

Carruth felt differently.  Very, very differently.  As a sophomore at the University of Colorado, his girlfriend, Michelle Wright, had given birth to their son and he was grudgingly paying child support (although he was paying only half of what he was ordered, on his promise that he would be an involved father to the boy, which he did not do).  Carruth's senior-year girlfriend, Amber Turner, who had moved with him from Colorado to North Carolina, had become pregnant in 1998.  According to Turner, Carruth ordered her to get an abortion, saying that he was not going to have kids with someone he wasn't going to be with and threatened her, saying that he could send someone to kill her.  He also mentioned to Turner that he could arrange to have someone kill Wright, so that he wouldn't have to pay her any more child support.  Turner terminated the pregnancy.

Although Carruth denied requesting that Cherica abort their child, her friends and family say that he did and that he was insistent that his finances, already potentially impacted by his injuries, not be any further diminished by any other children.  Cherica refused any suggestion of ending her pregnancy and prepared to be a single parent.

The detectives' investigation led to a local drug dealer named Michael Kennedy, whom Carruth had met at a car accessory shop, as well as Kennedy's best friend, Stanley Abraham.  Kennedy's statements led to them a strip club security guard by the name of Van Brett Watkins.  Watkins had a criminal record, had served time in prison, and had claimed to have murdered four people, all hits.  Authorities arrested Kennedy, Abraham, and Watkins in connection with the shooting of Cherica Adams.  On Thanksgiving Day, 1999, Rae Carruth was arrested.  Carruth posted a $3 million bail with the provisions that he could not leave Mecklenberg County and should Cherica or Chancellor Adams die, he would turn himself in.


Carruth's accomplices (photo source: raecarruthcase.com) 


On December 14, 1999, after almost a month in a coma, Cherica Adams died at 12:43 p.m.  Knowing he was facing a first-degree murder charge, Carruth convinced beauty salon owner Wendy Cole, who was heading to his native California for cosmetology school, to allow him to accompany her.  On the night of December 14, only hours after Cherica died, he hid in the trunk of her Toyota Camry as she headed west, stopping at a Best Western in Wildersville, Tennessee.  It was Carruth's mother, fearing for his safety, that informed authorities and the bail bondsman where he was.

Apprehended (photo source: The Charlotte Observer) 


While Carruth was being apprehended in Tennessee, the Carolina Panthers organization cut him from the team and the NFL suspended him indefinitely.

Football would be the least of his concerns as one of the most high-profile criminal cases in North Carolina began in November of 2000.


The Trial

Carruth's defense was that Cherica's murder was not premeditated and it was the result of a drug deal he had with Van Brett Watkins that went bad.  He cited a statement that Watkins reportedly told a jailer:  "If he had just given us the money, none of this would have happened.  It was Rae's fault."  The theory put forth by the defense was that Carruth and Watkins had a falling out over a drug deal that Carruth was supposed to finance but backed out of.  The defense called several of Carruth's former NFL teammates to testify on his behalf.  

The prosecution, though, had a solid case.  They had testimony from Michelle Wright, his ex-girlfriend and the mother of his elder son; from Amber Turner, the ex-girlfriend who aborted a pregnancy under his threats; and a stripper he had also been seeing.  The most explosive witnesses, however, were Michael Kennedy and Van Brett Watkins.

Kennedy, the driver that night in November of 1999, testified that Carruth had commissioned Watkins for the hit on Cherica and had threatened to kill Kennedy if he (Kennedy) refused to assist with the murder plot.

Watkins, the triggerman, testified that he had met Carruth in 1999 through a mutual friend and began doing odd jobs for him.  Roughly three weeks after meeting, Carruth asked Watkins how much he would charge to beat up Cherica, causing her to lose her baby.  Watkins responded with a cold, and dark, "I don't beat up a girl.  I kill people."

According to Watkins, the two came to a mutual deal:  Carruth would pay $3,000 up front for the hit on Cherica and then another $3,000 once the task had been accomplished.  Watkins testified that he did not like the idea of harming or killing a woman, especially a pregnant one, but he continued with the murderous plan.

He began stalking Cherica in the months leading up to her murder.  Carruth actively participated in suggestions for how Cherica and his unborn child would be obliterated, including killing her while he was at the Panthers' training camp, giving him a supposedly perfect alibi.  Watkins nixed that idea, as well as Carruth's suggestion that he kill Cherica when Carruth took her to Lamaze class.  By November of 1999, with Cherica eight months pregnant, Carruth was impatient and frustrated.

When the plan finally did come together, it was hasty.  Carruth set up a date with Cherica, arranging to take her to see a movie, The Bone Collector, in the south part of Charlotte.  Cherica very nearly called the movie date off, which would have ruined their plans, but ultimately agreed to go along.

Kennedy, who had acquired the murder weapon, Abraham, and Watkins spent several hours driving around, waiting for Carruth and Cherica to leave the theater and head toward Cherica's house, as Carruth told her he wanted to spend the night at her home.  Carruth, in Kennedy's Nissan Maxima, led the way with Cherica, in her black BMW, following -- and Kennedy following Cherica.  

The three cars traveled along Rea Road in the dark until they reached a section just before MacAndrew Drive, where the road dipped.  Carruth stopped his car in front of Cherica's and Kennedy pulled his car alongside her, effectively boxing her in.  That's when Watkins opened fire with the .38 caliber gun, hitting Cherica four times.  He claimed he couldn't bear the thought of hitting the baby and so aimed at the top of the car and not through the door.  Carruth sped away.

Bullet holes in Cherica's car (photo source: The Charlotte Observer) 


Watkins testified that he had an opportunity then to exit the vehicle to make sure that Cherica was dead but Kennedy had fled the scene quickly after the shooting had stopped.  Watkins also seriously considered the thought of killing both Kennedy and Abraham, so as not to leave any witnesses, but he had already gotten rid of his extra bullets and there were none left in teh gun.

Cherica, unbeknownst to Kennedy, Abraham, Watkins or Carruth, was still alive but bleeding profusely.  The cell phone she called for help on was given to her as a gift by Carruth.

During his testimony, Watkins openly sobbed while recounting his part in Cherica's death.  Through his tears, he directed anger toward the defense table and Carruth.  "Are you happy now?"  he shouted as his former friend as he stood up in the witness box.

The prosecutors played Cherica's 911 call and pointed out that she had to wait 12 agonizing, painful, frightening minutes alone in the car, bleeding and worrying about her baby, until the police and paramedics arrived.  They also called the detectives to the stand who had shared written conversations with Cherica in the hospital shortly before she slipped into a coma.

Carruth in court (photo source: Yahoo Sports) 


Carruth did not take the stand in his own defense.

On Tuesday, January 16, 2001, the jury, composed of seven men and five women, began its deliberations on the four counts that had been set by the judge:  first-degree murder, conspiracy to commit murder, using an instrument with intent to destroy an unborn child, and discharging a firearm into occupied property.  

On Friday, January 19, the jury, after many votes and even sending a note to the judge that they were at an impasse (at which point the judge asked them to continue deliberations), acknowledged they had reached a unanimous verdict.  It was the day before Carruth's twenty-seventh birthday.

Unlike fellow footballer O.J. Simpson, who had managed to avoid being convicted in the brutal 1994 murders of his ex-wife Nicole and Ron Goldman, Carruth did not skate.  The jury found him guilty of all charges but the first-degree murder charge.  As the jury foreperson would later say, they all agreed that Carruth was involved in the murder "up to his eyeballs" but they couldn't in good conscience convict him of first-degree murder as he did not pull the trigger.

On Monday, January 22, the sentence was handed down to Carruth.  He was sentenced to prison for no less than 18 years and 11 months and no more than 24 years and four months.  Carruth was then immediately transported to the Central Prison in Raleigh.  


The Aftermath

Carruth's three other co-defendants, Kennedy, Abraham, and Watkins, had all made plea deals and so the only trial in the case was Carruth's.  Abraham was released in 2001, after serving less than two years.  Kennedy was released in 2011, after serving 11 years.  Watkins took a second-degree murder plea and is eligible for parole in 2046.

Carruth released from prison (photo source: USA Today) 


After being a model inmate and becoming a licensed barber while in prison, Carruth was paroled on October 22, 2018 -- almost 19 years after Cherica's murder.  He reportedly lives in Philadelphia.  Shortly before his release, his attorney claimed that Carruth fled the scene of Cherica's shooting because he felt the shooter was after him, as he had backed out of a drug deal earlier that day.

Saundra Adams, Cherica's mother, chose to forgive the four men who participated in the terrible plan to kill her daughter.  She sent Van Brett Watkins a letter in 2003, one he reportedly has kept all these years, in which Saundra told him that despite the hole in her heart from the loss of her daughter, she was keeping him in her thoughts and prayers and wished him peace.  

Saundra and Chancellor (photo source: The Charlotte Observer) 


Chancellor Lee Adams, the baby boy that survived the shooting that took his mother's life, suffered permanent brain damage as a result of blood and oxygen deprivation he endured before he was delivered by an emergency caesarean section, as well as cerebral palsy.  But Saundra was always quick to say that Chancellor was abled differently, not disabled.  Blessed from birth with the beautiful and contagious smile he shared with his mother, Chancellor has brought joy to his grandmother and exceeded what doctors thought he would accomplish in his life.  He learned to talk and walk, he made straight As in the programs designed for him at school (he was scheduled to graduate high school this past May), he participated in a dance program and he has a fondness for horseback riding.  In 2009, he was gifted with a football by Panthers fullback Brad Hoover before a game after performing pregame activities.  In 2018, the Panthers welcomed him and Saundra on the field before a game.  In 2019, the Panthers' Roaring Riot fan club took Chancellor and Saundra on an all-expenses paid trip to London to watch Carolina play.

Chancellor reportedly wants to meet his father, although Carruth as yet has no relationship with him.  Carruth did send Saundra a check and has apologized for the death of her daughter.

Chancellor will be 21 years old in November of 2020. 

Cherica's final resting place (photo source: Find a Grave)