Welcome Guest | Register for Email Newsletter | Member Benefits

Local Weather Forecast
Today:
Current:74
Wednesday:
93/73
Thursday:
91/73
Complete Forecast for  Jul 09 2008

Top Jobs

Top Homes

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

East Texas

Posted on Tuesday, October 30, 2007
Email This   Print This   
KFC Trial: 'It Seems Like A Dream'
(Staff Photo by Tom Turner)
Romeo Pinkerton's defense team, Jeff Haas (left) and David Griffith sit in the Rusk County Courthouse in Henderson, Texas on Monday, October 29, 2007, after Romeo Pinkerton pled guilty to five counts of murder.
By KENNETH DEAN
Staff Writer

HENDERSON — “May God be with him.”

Those were the words of State District Judge Clay Gossett as Romeo Pinkerton, wearing an orange Rusk County inmate jumpsuit and chains, was led out of the Rusk County courtroom after pleading guilty to five counts of murder.

Pinkerton, 49, received five life sentences Monday for his admitted role in the slayings of five people abducted from a Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant in Kilgore Sept. 23, 1983.

Related Links:
TylerPaper.com's KFC Murder Trial Section

OCT. 29
KFC Update: 'Stoic' Pinkerton Hears Testimonies

KFC Victim's Families: 'We're Glad We're Finally Moving On

KFC Trial: 'It Seems Like A Dream'

Muse, Mankins Cleared In Murders

Loved Ones Spoke Of KFC Victims In 1983

KFC Timeline: How It All Happened

Kilgore Residents Hope Confession Brings Closure

AG's Office Gets Involved In KFC Case

Families Face Killer In Court

KFC Capital Murder Trial Continues

OCT. 27
Friday Testimony Ends Early in KFC Trial

OCT. 26
KFC UPDATE: Case Recessed Until Tuesday

OCT. 25
Witness: Gesture Indicated Guilt

KFC UPDATE: Witness Says Pinkerton Made Gun Gesture

OCT. 24
Retired FBI Agent, Scientist Break Case

KFC UPDATE: Fingernail Belonged to Victim

OCT. 23
Fingernail Belonged to Victim

OCT. 22
DNA Lab Supervisor Testifies in KFC Trial

OCT. 21
Rants, Raves & Roses: Thanks for Coverage

OCT. 20
Evidence Held Focus of KFC Trial

OCT. 19
Retired Ranger Questioned in KFC Trial

OCT. 18
KFC UPDATE: Autopsy Doctor Questioned

Testimony Describes Chaotic Crime Scene

OCT. 17
KFC UPDATE: Elliott Next to Testify

Detective Describes KFC Murder Scene

OCT. 16
KFC UPDATE: Families React

KFC Murder Trial Reveals Victim Sexually Assaulted

OCT. 15
KFC UPDATE: Trial Recesses at 4:20 p.m.

KFC Murder Trial Begins Today

OCT. 14
Pinkerton KFC Trial Begins Monday

SEPT. 27
KFC Jury Selection Complete

SEPT. 23
Blood Proof

Judge Expects Jury Selection to End Soon

AUG. 15
Attorneys Begin Questioning Potential Jurors

AUG. 14
Potential Jurors Questioned About Beliefs

AUG. 9
KFC Jury No-shows Sought

AUG. 8
Potential Jurors Pack Courtroom

AUG. 7
5 Dismissed in KFC Jury Selection

List of Potential Witnesses

Copy of Jury Questionnaire

AUG. 6
Prosecution May Call 120 Witnesses

Jury Selection Under Way in KFC Trial

AUG. 5
23 Years Later, Kilgore Crime Going to Trial

KFC Case: Who is Romeo Pinkerton?

JULY 14
Mankins Admitted Violating His Release

JULY 13
Drug Offender Jailed For Violating Supervised Release
Pinkerton along with his cousin, Darnell Hartsfield, was charged in 2005 with the abductions and slayings of Mary Tyler, 37; Opie Ann Hughes, 39; Joey Johnson, 20; David Maxwell, 20; and Monte Landers, 19. Hartsfield is scheduled to stand trial some time next year.

Monday ended years of Pinkerton denying his involvement in what had become one of Texas’ most infamous unsolved mass murders. A case which has haunted investigators and left entire families with questions about who was responsible for the deaths of their loved ones.

As the sun set across the Rusk County Courthouse lawn, some family members talked with various members of the media.

“I can’t believe this has happened,” one family member said. “It seems like a dream.”

(Staff Photo by Tom Turner)
(From left to right) Fred Hamilton, Carrie Milligan, David Maxwell II, and Lana Maxwell-Dunkerley listen to State District Judge J. Clay Gossett as he talks to the media and family and friends of the victims about the Romeo Pinkerton murder trial.
CLOSURE

For two decades the families have waited for justice, and during the past two weeks of trial held in New Boston, they have listened to testimony that at times had them in tears — some even leaving the courtroom.

Monday was no exception as victim impact statements were read, most in the audience had tears in their eyes as family members told Pinkerton how his acts had changed their lives.

“You’re not only a murder, you are a coward to let this continue all of these years,” Maxwell’s sister Kathy Hamilton said during the statements.

The plea agreement came suddenly after two weeks of ups and downs for both the prosecution and the defense.

Even family members said they had their doubts during the trial, saying they just didn’t know how the trial would turn out.

During testimony Friday, Judge Gossett recessed the jury unexpectedly before noon and family members were escorted to another courtroom where they talked to prosecutors.

Gossett said he was made aware late last week that the defense of Jeff Haas and David Griffith and the prosecution team of Texas Attorney General prosecutors Lisa Tanner and Laura Popps and Rusk County District Attorney Michael Jimerson were working on a plea agreement.

“Until he signed the papers we didn’t have a plea agreement,” Gossett said.

When asked why the media was excluded from the actual plea agreement signing, Gossett replied that he did not want to taint the jury in New Boston until he knew the deal was done.

“In case it fell through, I wanted to protect the sanctity of the jury,” he said.

The families sat crying and consoling one another after Pinkerton was led out of the courtroom and Gossett promised each family member that he or the justice system would not dishonor their loved ones.

For the prosecution and defense the outcome of the jury trial was in question and to those in the audience the case seemed to teeter from guilty to a possible acquittal.

(Staff Photo by Tom Turner)
The Prosecution team, comprised of (left to right) of Rusk County District Attorney Michael Jimmerson, Assistant Prosecution for the Attorney General Laura Popps, and Texas Attorney General Special Prosecutor Lisa Tanner, sit in the Rusk County Courthouse after Romeo Pinkerton pled guilty to five counts of murder.
CASE OF UNCERTANITY

Haas would say after Monday’s proceedings that the case had been like a high-stake poker game with both teams having their own difficulties to overcome.

For the defense it was damning testimony and a bloody napkin with Pinkerton’s DNA in possession of forensic scientists for 24 years. For the prosecution it was the lack of a chain of custody on the evidence, including the napkin.

“There are five dead people and it may have been a long time ago, but there are still five dead people,” Haas said. “We pleaded guilty to five offenses of murder with no affirmation of finding use of a deadly weapon.”

Tanner said the guilty plea in the case was huge.

“To have someone stand up and say ‘I was there and I was part of it’ is huge,” she said. “This case has always been about making the right person accountable and this plea does that.”

During the past two weeks, Tanner has cleared former suspect James Earl Mankins Jr., by questioning forensic scientists about DNA. The case against Mankins hinged on a torn fingernail. He was indicted on five counts of capital murder in the 1990s, but was subsequently cleared after DNA testing proved the nail was not his.

Tanner’s boss, Attorney General Gregg Abbott said in a prepared statement that his office will continue moving forward with its case against Hartsfield and that some measure of justice was served with Pinkerton’s plea.

“Romeo Pinkerton’s admission of guilt ends decades of uncertainty for the families of five innocent victims,” he said. “For far too long, justice has eluded these families.”

For one investigator on the scene where the bodies were found in rural Rusk County 24 years ago, Monday’s events were almost unbelievable.

“I just had to keep walking to keep from jumping up and down,” Rusk County District Attorney Investigator William Brown said. “I’m ecstatic. That’s a good word to describe how I am feeling and I am glad there is at least some closure for the families.”

Gossett said he had one more duty to perform.

(Staff Photo by Tom Turner)
State District Judge J. Clay Gossett talks to the media and family and friends of the victims about the Romeo Pinkerton murder trial
RELEASING A JURY

Eight women and seven men were selected to hear the case in Bowie County during a lengthy jury selection process after the case was moved from Henderson. Gossett requested three alternates on the trial that was expected to last between four and six weeks.

The case was moved to the town about 120 miles northeast of Tyler due to extensive media coverage over the past two decades.

Each day during testimony the witnesses have been attentive and with their eyes, followed the conversations between witnesses and the attorneys.

They have heard scientists discuss the latest in DNA testing and how law enforcement admitted it performed poorly in 1983 by not securing a crime scene or the evidence.

They have sat and looked at diagrams of the KFC restaurant in Kilgore and photos of the five victims laying in an oil field and they learned that one victim had not tried to run away during the murders, but how she was sexually assaulted.

Gossett said that he was going to call each juror Monday night and talk with them and would travel to New Boston Tuesday to release them from their duty.

“We express our gratitude to the jurors and everyone in Bowie County for their hospitality,” he said.

Gossett said the plea was not unusual to occur in the middle of a trial.

“It isn’t unusual and we have to be prepared for anything,” he said. “Now we will try to get a grasp on everything. We still have another trial.”

Comment on this article!
Note: You must login or register to post comments. Comments must be approved by Moderator before appearing on the site. Use the links below to login or register.
  FAQFAQ     SearchSearch Forums        Log inLog in      RegisterRegister 
 Topics   Replies  Author  Last Post 
No Comments
New comment »
More East Texas Stories
News |  Sports |  Business |  Opinion |  Features |  Food |  |  Arts & Entertainment |  Religion |  FAQ
Contact Us |  Who We Are |  About Us |  Print Services |  Tyler Paper Jobs | 
Copyright Policy |  Privacy Policy |  Authorized Use Agreement |  Terms & Conditions of Use