North Carolina's Death Row a waiting game with high stakes EDITORS NOTE. Ob Afrf 17, 1979 th* lili%> Nm and 0>iw MMh Isei at ItaR CmRm'i <nR rum mMnB, bcWki RBrlm whh CbM SH^I ?< SSTcwwr!*fan/rwsTilnl^W^prhT By CINNY CARROLL The rate scurry at eight behind a low-slung barrier of wire while a raw of men aeee rubber bands to catapult It's a game, owe of the makeshift diversions to pass the time ea North Carolina's Death Raw. said Stephen Karr SUhaa is the latoot among five men and two women seataaeed to die la North CaraUaa under the capital punish ment law that took effect June 1.1977. It ie a far cry from the days two years ago when 112 men and woman crowded Death Row, sealant ed under a law that demanded death for conviction of murder, rape, arson and burglary. The new law, which allows Juries discretion to keepering the capital penalty, has kept the tally low. ?at (he aaeaacoef Death Row has not chafed It is still a ptoee of Bttle hope, when convicted killers wait with dritwaat thoaghli to meet their doom, three prisoners said to interviews with The News and Observer last week Most of the man oa Death Row are boused, one to a cell, to one ef the oldest sections of Central Prison in Raleigh, wham roaches and rats defy extermination. The women am held in maximum security at the N.C. Correctional Institution for Women across town. The exception is CardeU Spaaldtng, a powerfully built man with much-tattooed arms whs has bean convicted of murder three times, the last two of fellow inmates Speuld iag is boaeed in a separate section of the prison, away from Death Row. Ipaaldtog, Bill, has bean on Death Row batons, one of the 111. Because of a technical error in paperwork ? a failure to seek a stay of hie sentence from the N?. gnprsme Court ? be came within hours of esecu tton to Ifll. A reprieve was granted when tte error came to Bat this time, he believes he may die. "I feel like, you know, it (the death penalty) is going to he Imposed down the road. I fori like it's going to be Imppaad on mo." Spa aiding said in an interview Inst week to wraom near his ceQ. It is the tightest security eras, deep within the state s maxiipum-eecuiity prison. Sfrmldtng was convicted last year of slashing a fellow tanfrte to death In the recreation yard. He testified at his trhg that the man had threatened to kill him earlier. "J don't kave too much book learning, but I've got a lot of conunon atnee," Spaulding said, "la this place here, when yow're in a jangle like this, when somebody tells yon to get ^?(M the day^ialRoocoe Simmons died, he said, "I went to my'jtashahdgotmy Maakout."Speuldiagsaidhehidtbe abSto'trial that the halfa was passed to Mm hp a He went iato the recreation yard, he said. "I didn't eren let Mm get all the way ep on me. I took my shank out and started doing whet 1 thought he sras going to do to me." *T?nt-t had been convicted previously, in 1174, of MBb# a prisoner at Caledonia prison in Halifax County, where he had bean confined on a M- to 30-year sentence for killing a Robeson County man In IMP. He first came to Central Prison ia 1IM. Prtesa officials believe Spaaldiap is sdaapsrous man. "I am thsoaliset person ia Central Prison who has to recreate alone," he said. He has asked to be shifted to the cell block wMh other Death Row inmates, ladadiag his cousin James Celvia Jonas, who was convicted of murder sad assigned to Death Row bat given a new trial by the N.C. Supreme Court this year. Officials have denied Spauiding's request ?f?1Ltti takes medication ? red and white capsules ? four times a day "for my nerves, to kesp me calm." he said. He writes plaintive letters to friends on the outside. He reads, "not too much fiction' bdt Tim# Playboy aad Penthouse '?*? he said. At 4P, he wouid rather die, he said, than spend the rest of his life in sach a fashion. "Like, if 1 fo up and sit ia the chair (ia the gas chamber) aad they kill me, they would be just as guilty as I am." 8peuldtag said. "Any way you look at it, murder's murder. They're doing that to get revenge. "I'd rather kill myself than let them kill me, rather than have this warden have the pleasure of wstchlng me die. 1 would never let him have the pleasure " Buck Junior Goodman, convicted of the shooting and tlatMwg death of a farm worker in 1177, feels differently about dying. "There's some crimes that's been worse than others, but death is ao punishment to a person," he said. Given a choice between death and life in prison. "I'd a heap rather be here." he said. "I like me, and I want to live as long as possible." Goodman, a thin, squat man called "Shorty." at 49 has spent 17 or IA years of his adult life in prison, mostly for armed robbery, he said. He was charged ia the death of Lester Collins in Cumber land County, along with two other persons who received Isuliury for testifying against him, and he doesn't think he has been treated with justice He also Is serving two life sentences far armed robbery and kidnapping in the inci dent His attorney is expected to argue the disparities in the case as part of Goodman's appeal. "I wouldn't have the least idea." he uid when asked if he believed he wuuld be executed eventually "I think about it. I'd hate te have to go through death and not deserve It. "They might kill me. and they might not." he said Sieve lilhaa tries not to dwell on that topic. "That's what gets you In a bad mood It's why people commit suicide, why they hang themselves in here." he said. "I don't believe in that. It's the ultimate sin against the Lord It's the painful way out." Silhan. 25, is a native of Texas who came to North Carolina as an Army enlisted man and married a girl from Sanford His religion is "Roman Catholic but not holier* than-thou." he said with a crooked smile Silhan, father of a young child, was convicted of raping and stabbing one teen-ager in Cumberland County and slashing the throat of a second, who survived In a separate prosecution, he was found guilty of kidnapping a Wake County couple and forcing the woman to engage in oral sex with him. He is unsure whether the death penalty ever will be imposed. "From reading newspapers and the stuff I've been told. I think it's discriminatory." he mused "There are more persons in there for killing whites than blacks " Convicted killer*: WW tkey new ke killed them*etve*? ... Stephen Korr Silhon SMI pMM by Jim StrktM and Cordell "Bill" Spoulding I ? ? 1 710 BOUTIQUE Located on Hwy 710 Approximately 2 miles from Pembroke May 13, 1979 ORDER NOW All Kinds of Gifts Flowers For All Occasions Proprietor Lillian Jacobs Locklear Phone: 521-3400 or 521-9404 ffl " S' ^ DOD'5 JEWEL SHOP, INC. "Hia ?1>i <i ' A" unmona wtrcnini pay fh# h?gh#y possible pric# for your diomonds or diamond Jtwwry depending on our n?#di ond rh# diomond wm Mtfn ttTMt Uurtntourg, N.C. ?? i ? Indian Voice PRINT SHOP Call 521-2826 a k Under new law, fewer people line Death Row By GINNY CARROLL , , UK) mntw Like the mercury in a summertime thermometer, the count of prisoners on North Carolina's Death Row rose quickly to 112 during the three years before the U.S. Supreme Court told the state in 1977 it must alter its method of imposing the capital penalty. | With the largest Death Row in the nation, the state was < on the sharp end of the critical spear aimed by capital punishment foes during those years. Bloodbath predictions abounded. But since July 1976. when a high court ruling commuted the sentences of the 112 to life imprisonment, the tally of criminals sentenced to die in the state has plunged. Nine persons ? seven men and two women ? have been consigned to Death Row since a discretionary law took effect nearly two years ago, on June 1.1977. The discretion ary law replaced a statute in which the death sentence was mandatory in capital crimes. Legal authorities agreed in recent interviews that the new law ? placing the burden of death sentence on the jury and requiring jurors to weigh aggravating and mitigating factors ? has played a large part in the small population of Death Row. Those who work in the court system also agreed that while some executions in the state are likely, they are years away. One of the nine sentenced to die ? Daniel R. Webster ? administered his own sentence on Nov. C. 1977. by slashing himself to death with a razor blade in his Central Prison cell. A second of the nine ? James Calvin Jones ? has been granted a new trial by the state Supreme Court. For the remaining seven, the wait may be a long one, "two or three years at least," Jack Cozort, legal aide to Gov. James B. Hunt Jr., said during an interview last week. The five men ? Johnny "Raeford" Cherry, Norman Dale Johnson, Car-del 1 Spaulding, Buck Junior Goodman and Stephen Karr Silhan ? will wait at Central Prison. Rebecca Case Detter and Margie Bollard Barfield will pass their time at the N.C. Correctional Center for Women. There are indications, however, that the long-delayed death mechanism will be triggered soon in other Southern states. Apparently the only barrier to the execution in Florida of John Spenkelink is a clemency board hearing later this month. If that fails to stop the death order, Spenkelink could be executed in about three months, making him the first person executed against his will in the United States since 1967. The last prisoner executed in North Carolina was Theo dore Boy kin in 1961. The NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund, which has coordinated anti-death penalty efforts from its New York headquarters, fears that the execution of Spenkelink could achieve the same effect as the little Dutch boy removing his finger from the dike, loosing a flood of deaths. In North Carolina, the legal barriers to execution have not gone beyond initial stages. The state Supreme Court, I Buck Junior Goodman '1 like me, and I want to live as long as possible. collecting cases (or comparison, has not yet affirmed a death sentence. The court, by law, is sllowed to measure one death sentence decided by a jury against others to ensure the sanction is not discriminatory. Prosecutors are comparing, too, said District Attorney Dan K. Edwards Jr. of Durham. In forums, they have discussed the necessity to restrict death prosecutions to the most heinous cases, he said. "If we don't reserve capital treatment for the worst cases, the Supreme Court won't have a good basis to compare," he said in an interview last week. "District attorneys generally are seeking the death penalty only in aggravated cases. That's one very positive result of the new law." I It Is also a (actor us holding down the Death Row coont. he There are others Under the law atrickea by the U%. Supreme Court, the death penalty was impound automatically (or all persons convicted of a capital crime. Now. a jury must weigh aggravating and mitigating (acton of the crime and crimi nal before deciding death In a hearing separate from the conviction phase of the trial. "We're pretty much bach to where we were before the mandatory law," said Raleigh lawyer WadeM Smith, who defended CardeU Spooling during his Wake Superior Court murder trial. Before the mandatory law. juries were al lowed to recommend mercy in appropriate cases The mandatory death law alao applied to four crimes ? first-degree murder, rape, burglary and anon. Conrt recalled. Murder is the only crime now punishable by death in North Carolina. Death row has taken on a new look in another respect Under the mandatory law. a majority of its prisoners were blacks or Indians. Five of the current seven under death sentence are white. While the number may be too small (or a racial compari son. the same pattern has developed in Florida, after whose law North Carolina patterned its present death statute. Sixty percent of the ISO Death Row prisoners there are white. "The only reason the death penalty Was discriminatory before 1972 was probably because of black-raping-white cases." said Raymond Marfcy. Warriors Win Darrle Lose War by LD MaJcaim Lmbcrton- Host Lumberton Sr. High exploded for three runs in the top of the fourth inning to defeat the Pembroke Warriors 5-2 in the champion ship game of the Lumberton Easter Invitation here last Friday night. Going the distance for the Pirates was Ricky Ivey who fanned 13 and walked only 4. Glenn Thomas took the loss for Pembroke. It was a game marred by questionable officiating and a brief fight in the second inning between Warrior fist baseman Bobby Taylor and Pirate Mike Parnell. Pembroke picked. up their two runs in the bottom ot the first inning. David Leek walked on four pitches and subsequently advanced to second base and onto third on a passed ball before scoring on a Mike Sampson single. Mike likewise stole second and gained third on an errant Ricky Ivey pitch. Kelvin Sampson hit a sharp single up the middle to drive in the Warrior's second run. A strikeout ended the inning. The Pirates managed one run in each of the next two innings before scoring three in the highly controversial fourth inn ing. With one out in the top of the fourth and a runner on base. Mike Parnell hit a sharp grounder to Warrior shortstop Mike Sampson. Sampson's throw to first was just wide and as Bobby Taylor stretched for it, Parnell crashed into him jarring the ball loose. A Taylor right sent Parnell to the ground and brought both teams out of their dugouts. A lengthy argument ensued & when the dust had cleared things were even more con fused than before. Neither player was ejected from the ? game although Warrior coach Ronnie Chavis did pull Taylor from the game. The final three innings saw the two teams battle to a scoreless draw. I In old CMno, it ww boliwd powdtrtd }ado would itfMftbw th? hoart. Iun?t Mid loict. _____ A stocking lesson hi economics. in the last ten years. the cost* of building material* and construction have more than doubled Which could mean big trouble tor you if your house burns down Let Nationwide insure your house tor its full replacement value now Then add inflation protection for the future As building costs go up or down, your coverage goes up or down Automatically Call a Nationwide agent lor complete information WILUE V. LOWfVY W. 3RD sm, PEMBROKE 521-4310 ?^[?NATIONWIDE B 1 INSURANCE Neuonimae ?? on your OKM Sil. -?? .lr I V r ? James Small Added To Death Row Ranks Ralelgb-Robeson County owns ? lot of nefarious records. The county has the most school systems in North Carolina and now holds the record for being the birth place for more people on death row than any of the state's 100 counties. Until the death penalty was meted out to James Small Tuesday in Robeson County's Superior Court. Indians from Robeson County made up 25% of the populance on Death Row in Central Prison. Small, a white, was given the death penally for the contract killing of his estranged wife. The man. Paul Lowery. an Indian, accused of carrying out Small's death directive, received a life sentence. Small will add to the population of death row in Raleigh which includes two women and five men besides himself. Already on death row are: Car da I Spa aid lug. an Indian native of Robeson County: Back Junior Goodman, another Indian native of Robeson County; Vclmo Idlnd Borfleld, a white woman from Robeson County; Steven Carl SHhae. from nearby Cumberland County; Rebecca Taca Defter, convicted of poisioning her husband with arsenic two years ago; Johnny Cherry, found guilty of murdering a convenience store clerk; and Norman Dale Jikaaan. convicted in separate trials of murdering a ten year old boy and an elderly woman. Jatties Small received the death penalty for ordering the "contract" killing of his estranged wife. Evelyn Hamilton Small, on the fateful night of November 14. 1978 when Paul Lowery carried out her strangulation murder, according to the jury's verdict. Lowery was given life in prison for his conviction in the murder of Mrs. Small. The prosecution had contended that Small, who had filed for divorce from his wife, hired Lowery and an accomplice. Vincent Johnson, to kill his wife because he was afraid he would lose his house, his convenience store in Red Springs, and the custody of his two young children. Johnson testified during the trial that he accompanied Lowery to the Small residence at the behest of Small and that Lowery strangled Evelyn Small in her bed while he kept watch on the children across the hall. Seemingly entry to the Small residence was gained via a key obtained from James Small. Small claimed that the murder was a conspiracy between Lowery and Shirley Scott, his former girl friend, whom he had recently broken up with. Ms. Scott, charged with conspiracy, and Johnson, charged with first degree murder, have not been tried yet. Lowery. following a question from his attorney. Donald Bullard of Pembroke, swore on his mother and father's graves that he did not kill Evelyn Small earlier in the trial. Judge Donald Smith and D.A. Joe Freeman Britt both noted that this was the first time someone contracting a murder was charged and convicted of first degree murder. Indians probably make up less than one percent of North Carolina's populace but 25%?of the death row population is made up of Indians born in Robeson County where some .10.000 Indians live. As noted earlier both Spaulding and Goodman are Indians born in Robeson County. Until granted a new trial for errors made by b.A. Joe Freeman Britt. James Calvin Jones, another Indian from Robeson County, also was on death row. He is awaiting a new trail. That means that out of 8 people on death row-(until Jone's new trial) three of them were Indian males from Robeson County. Another one on death row. Velma Bullard Barfled. a white woman accused of the arsenic poisoning of the man she intended to marry, was also convicted from Robeson County. Thus far the N.C. Supreme Court has ruled on only one case, after hearing testimony, and that was In the case of Jones who was ordered a new trail. Decisions are pending on the caee of Spaulding and Cherry. The court has also heard testimony in the case of Norman Dale Johnson but has not rendered a decision. Until the U.S. Supreme Court overturned North Carolina's death penalty In 1978 there were more than 100 on Central Prison s Death Row awaiting the gas chamber The last man to die in the gat chamber In North Carolina waa Theoderc Boykin In IMl, ? ? ?? - T-r ? I (*L ft I "NO HIDDEN CHARGES OR HANDLINO FEE" SPECIAL BONUS OFFER Fr? S?t Of ) Color Charm* On Singlo Sub|*cf* With Por chato Of Thti Packago. Chalet of 4 Scontc Background* You (,vt All 'I'lii* 2 - 11 x 14's 2 - 8 x 10's 2 ? 5 x 7's 12 ? Giant Wallets 8 - Wallets CwlMMr Only WRW* 1 g95 ?V II M WHM ?<* Only A %#NO?KTNA IH.H ????? iH UcpI Tn WlMN VM CMANOi 10 ? Alcli Up VP* Pp?b??p OOOUM NO LIMIT Ml I AMI IV- VANIITV 0# Mill- ALL AOft I rfmDroiif i/rug utniif Pembfoke, N.C. Friday, May 4,1*79 12410 noon w 4:00

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