AP/ March 20, 2013, 9:25 PM

Death penalty recommended in Ohio Craigslist case

Richard Beasley awaits the jury's sentencing recommendation in the courtroom of Summit County Common Pleas Court Judge Lynne Callahan, Wednesday, March 20, 2013, in Akron, Ohio.

Richard Beasley awaits the jury's sentencing recommendation in the courtroom of Summit County Common Pleas Court Judge Lynne Callahan, Wednesday, March 20, 2013, in Akron, Ohio. / Pool, Michael Chritton,AP Photo/Akron Beacon Journal

AKRON, Ohio A jury on Wednesday recommended the death penalty for a self-styled street preacher convicted of killing three down-and-out men lured by bogus Craigslist job offers.

The same jury that convicted Richard Beasley made its recommendation after hearing from his mother and other witnesses who testified on his behalf in the penalty phase of his trial. The judge set his sentencing for Tuesday.

Victims' relatives hugged as the recommendation was announced. Beasley hung his head without moving, and his mother sobbed.

Beasley, 53, was convicted of teaming up with a teenager in 2011 to lure men with offers of farmhand jobs in southeast Ohio and to rob them. Three men were killed, and a fourth who was wounded testified at Beasley's trial.

Prosecutor Jonathan Baumoel said Beasley deserves to be executed.

"The law in Ohio for the death penalty, it's reserved for the worst of the worst, and it's the state's position that Richard Beasley is the worst of the worst," Baumoel said.

Jack Kern, whose 47-year-old son, Timothy Kern, was killed, alternately cried and smiled over the jury's recommendation.

"They made the right decision," he said outside court. "They knew what they had in their heart and what they had to do. They did it for us."

The jurors left without commenting, as did Beasley's defense team.

Baumoel, freed from a gag order that lasted during the trial and sentencing phase, said Beasley's teenage co-defendant, Brogan Rafferty, wasn't called to testify by the state because he wanted a sentence reduction, which prosecutors rejected.

"We weren't willing to do that," the prosecutor said.

Rafferty, who was 16 at the time of the crimes, was too young to face the death penalty. He was sentenced to life in prison without the chance of parole on his conviction last year.

In closing arguments, both sides highlighted Rafferty's life sentence in contrast to a possible death sentence for Beasley. The defense said that issue should factor into the jury's deliberations, but the prosecution said it wasn't an issue because Rafferty's age, by law, had ruled out death as an option.

The jury received Beasley's case after hearing two hours of testimony from witnesses, including Beasley's tearful mother, who were called to portray him sympathetically and press for leniency.

Carol Beasley testified that her son had a troubled childhood and had suffered physical abuse by his stepfather. She also said she learned within the past year that her son had been sexually abused by neighborhood youngsters.

"I always felt there was much more than he told me," she said.

As she testified, Richard Beasley slumped forward, his chin on his chest and his right hand covering his eyes. He uses a wheelchair because of back pain.

The defense also called a psychologist, John Fabian, who testified that Beasley suffers from depression, alcohol abuse, low self-esteem and a feeling of isolation, all possible results of a troubled, abusive childhood.

One of Beasley's victims was killed near Akron, and the others were shot at a southeast Ohio farm during bogus job interviews.

The slain men were Ralph Geiger, 56, of Akron; David Pauley, 51, of Norfolk, Va.; and Kern, of Massillon. All were down-and-out men looking for a fresh start in life, prosecutors said during trial.

The survivor, Scott Davis, now 49, testified that he heard the click of a gun as he walked in front of Beasley at the reputed job site. Davis, who was shot in an arm, knocked the weapon aside, fled into the woods and tipped police.

Beasley, who returned to Ohio from Texas in 2004 after serving several years in prison on a burglary conviction, testified that he met with Davis and Davis had pulled a gun in retaliation for Beasley serving as a police informant in a motorcycle gang investigation.

© 2013 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
8 Comments Add a Comment
linkicon reporticon emailicon
imagineers says:
You can fight for freedom if you get the death penalty, but life in prison without parole means life in prison without parole. About the age..you can drive, but not drink or join the military. I don't know how the federal government decides who is a child and who is an adult, but I would consider my own son as a child at that age.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
margroks says:
I don't think age should automatically excuse you from the death penalty. 16, 17, that's old enought to know right from wrong. A human being who would do this is nothing more than a rabid animal and they need to be put down. Childhood abuse is no excuse. Others who have endured such abuse have not turned out to be murderers.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Zippy_Doo says:
Boo hoo. He was abused as a child, so that gives him a free pass to murder people? He can rot.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
636anton33 says:
He gets a chance and many years to fight this before it happens. What did his victims get????? Take him out back and put one in his head!
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
nohater says:
if it were my decision, he and his teen cohort would be executed by EOY. fortunately for him and the teen, it's not my decision. anyone who murders is uncivilized and should be executed immediately.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Bush-cheney-R-Terrorists says:
How can we consider ourselves civilized if we impose death sentences on fellow humans? I don't know the answer to that but I would like to volunteer to throw the switch/trigger/button/knife on this fine fellow.
reply
Wingsfan1983 replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
I concur on your question "how can we be a civilized nation if we impose death sentences", however, to answer there should never be an absolute. It is also true for the 2nd Amendment. Also, not all capital cases are as black and white and do we need to take care of another Charles Manson?

This and the Aurora crimes were so heinous this begged the question should society even be humane to them?
linkicon reporticon emailicon
myloridarlin says:
Well, at least he HAD a defense. That can be a fighting chance for the innocent, if you have the almighty dollar to pay for an attorney or court appointed attorneys who care. Look at the Jeff Havard case out of Mississippi...not one witness called by his defense on a Capital Murder charge...and at lot of laughing and back-clapping between the prosecution and defense on the courthouse steps during breaks. If fact, if you read the case file, it wouldn't be hard to see that a defense team never even showed up for Jeffrey Havard. On death row for a crime that never even occurred. FreeJeffreyHavard.org
reply