Holsey to be put to death for murder of sheriff’s deputy
Hannah Marney and Scott Teague
The Union-Recorder
The Georgia State Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty for Robert Wayne Holsey who was convicted of the 1995 murder of a Baldwin County Sheriff’s deputy.
Ocmulgee Judicial Circuit District Attorney Fred Bright, who prosecuted Holsey in 1999, said he was ecstatic when he heard the news.
“I felt it was justice,” Bright said. “I felt that Holsey deserved the death penalty for the murder of sheriff’s deputy Will Robinson.”
The state was prepared to try the case again if the supreme court upheld Superior Court Judge Neal W. Dickert’s ruling in May that overturned Holsey’s death penalty.
For the complete story, see the Feb. 27 edition.
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By Tim Sturrock
TELEGRAPH STAFF WRITER
The Georgia Supreme Court reinstated Monday the death penalty against a man convicted in 1997 of killing a Baldwin County sheriff’s deputy.
Robert Wayne Holsey, now 41, is back on death row for the 1995 killing of 26-year-old deputy William Robinson IV.
Sheriff Bill Massee said he is pleased with the decision and that Robinson’s murder had a huge impact on the community.
“It was a very personal case with everyone involved,” Massee said. “Everyone in the community has watched this case closely.”
Robinson was killed in December 1995 while trying to arrest Holsey in connection with an armed robbery. Holsey was found guilty and sentenced to death in 1997.
Last May, Superior Court Judge Neal Dickert of the Augusta Judicial Circuit overturned the death sentence, citing ineffective defense counsel. The judge ruled that Holsey’s defense did not go far enough in detailing his troubled family background or mental health issues before the jury.
In the appeal, evidence was submitted about the defendant’s “limited intelligence, his troubled and abusive home life, his positive contributions at home and elsewhere, and his mother’s and sister’s mental health issues.”
But in a unanimous decision released Monday, the state’s high court ruled that the additional information wouldn’t have made a significant difference in the case.
Frank Robinson, William Robinson’s brother, said he was ecstatic about the reinstatement of the death penalty for Holsey. He said waiting for a resolution in the case has been difficult, but not as difficult as not having his brother around.
“He was an all-American guy, I guess, smart, fun to be around. He was a good friend and a good brother,” Frank Robinson said.
Massee said William Robinson’s death was like the unexpected loss of a family member.
“The loss is not only immediate, but it is a continuing loss,” he said.
Fred Bright, the Ocmulgee Judicial Circuit district attorney, said if the Georgia Supreme Court had not reinstated the death penalty, his office would have retried the case.
Holsey can file several other appeals, which could take years to resolve, said Russ Willard, spokesman for the state Attorney General’s Office.
The Associated Press
contributed to this report.
To contact Tim Sturrock, call 744-4347 or e-mail tsturrock@macontel.com.
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Associated Press
ATLANTA - The Georgia Supreme Court has reinstated the death penalty against a man convicted in 1995 of murdering a Baldwin County sheriff’s deputy.
Robert Wayne Holsey, now 41, had been on death row for the 1995 killing of deputy William Robinson IV.
In May, Superior Court Judge Neal Dickert overturned the death sentence, citing ineffective defense counsel. The judge ruled that Holsey’s defense did not go far enough in detailing his troubled family background or mental health issues before the jury.
But in a unanimous decision released Monday, the state’s high court ruled that Holsey’s claims regarding ineffective counsel “must fail given the lack of resulting actual prejudice.”
In his appeal, Holsey submitted evidence about the defendant’s “limited intelligence, his troubled and abusive home life, his positive contributions at home and elsewhere, and his mother’s and sister’s mental health issues.”
Justice P. Harris Hines wrote in the decision that “introduction of Holsey’s new evidence at his trial would not have had an impact on the jury’s sentencing deliberations sufficient to help sustain a successful ineffective assistance of counsel claim regarding the sentencing phase.”
Holsey was found guilty and sentenced to death in 1997.
Robinson was killed in December 1995 while trying to arrest Holsey in connection with an armed robbery.
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Arguments heard
Georgia Supreme Court hears Holsey case
Hannah Marney
The Union-Recorder
ATLANTA —
Old wounds reopened Monday as the Georgia Supreme Court heard oral arguments on reinstating Robert Wayne Holsey’s death sentence.
Holsey’s appellant attorney argued that the justices should uphold a superior court judge’s ruling earlier this year throwing out Holsey’s death sentence. And the Georgia Attorney General’s Office asked the justices to disregard the judge’s earlier ruling and reinstate Holsey’s death sentence.
Holsey shot and killed Baldwin County Sheriff Deputy Will Robinson in 1995 after robbing a convenience store. A jury convicted Holsey in 1997 and sentenced him to death for the deputy’s slaying.
The supreme court chambers were packed Monday with Baldwin County residents.
For full story, please see the Oct. 17, 2006 edition of The Union-Recorder
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By Greg Bluestein
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ATLANTA -
Convicted murderer Robert Wayne Holsey either has a sophisticated
vocabulary and an adequate IQ or a record of school failure and a drunk lawyer
who failed to point out his client’s deficiencies when Holsey was on trial for
his life.
Armed with school records and trial documents, Holsey’s lawyers and state
prosecutors clashed again Monday before the Georgia Supreme Court to debate
whether he deserves the death penalty for the 1995 killing of a Baldwin County
sheriff’s deputy.
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Arguments heard
Georgia Supreme Court hears Holsey case
Hannah Marney
The Union-Recorder
ATLANTA —
Old wounds reopened Monday as the Georgia Supreme Court heard oral arguments on reinstating Robert Wayne Holsey’s death sentence.
Holsey’s appellant attorney argued that the justices should uphold a superior court judge’s ruling earlier this year throwing out Holsey’s death sentence. And the Georgia Attorney General’s Office asked the justices to disregard the judge’s earlier ruling and reinstate Holsey’s death sentence.
Holsey shot and killed Baldwin County Sheriff Deputy Will Robinson in 1995 after robbing a convenience store. A jury convicted Holsey in 1997 and sentenced him to death for the deputy’s slaying.
The supreme court chambers were packed Monday with Baldwin County residents.
For full story, please see the Oct. 17, 2006 edition of The Union-Recorder
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By Tim Sturrock
Macon Telegraph Staff Writer
BALDWIN COUNTY – The death sentence of a man who killed a Baldwin County deputy was overturned this week by an Augusta Superior Court judge, Ocmulgee Judicial Circuit District Attorney Fred Bright said.
Robert Wayne Holsey was on death row for killing William Robinson IV on Dec. 17, 1995. He was convicted and sentenced to death in February 1997.
Bright said that Judge Neal Dickert overturned the sentence Tuesday because of ineffectiveness of counsel. The judge ruled that Holsey’s defense did not go far enough in detailing Holsey’s troubled family background or mental health issues before the jury.
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Adam Folk
The Union-Recorder
It took a 12-person jury less than two hours to return a death sentence for Robert Wayne Holsey. Now, almost 10 years later, a Butts County superior court judge has reversed that ruling and re-ignited a case that struck at the heart of Baldwin County citizens.
Holsey shot and killed Baldwin County Sheriff’s deputy Will Robinson in 1995. Robinson stopped Holsey’s red Ford Probe at the Royal Inn on Irwinton Road after Holsey robbed a nearby Jet Food Store.
In an 84-page decision released to the media Wednesday, Judge Neal W. Dickert stated that upon hearing arguments from both sides in Holsey’s habeus appeal, he has overturned the death sentence and ordered a new sentencing trial. Dickert stated that Holsey did not receive adequate counsel during the mitigation phase of the trial. He cited attorney Andy Prince’s admitted alcoholism, legal troubles and failure to provide a “clear strategy” in presenting evidence supporting mental retardation, as reasons to overturn.
“Counsel was focused so much on the guilt/innocence phase that they appeared to have ‘run out of gas’ before the penalty phase began,” Dickert stated. “As testified by Ms. [Brenda] Trammel, co-counsel, Mr. Prince never thought Mr. Holsey would receive the death penalty since Mr. Holsey was an African-American man and the jury was majority African-American.”
Robinson was the first law enforcement officer to respond when the call came out that a man had robbed Jet Foods at gunpoint. No more than five minutes later, he pulled Holsey’s car over, and within 10, he was dead from a bullet wound behind his right ear.
For full story, please see the May 18, 2006 edition of The Union-Recorder.
Copyright © 1999-2006 cnhi, inc.
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By Tim Sturrock
Macon Telegraph Staff Writer
A statistical snapshot of Georgia’s death row reveals something surprising: Ranked among the metropolitan centers with the highest number of convicted killers awaiting execution are two relatively rural midstate counties.
Combined, nine men who committed murder in Jones and Baldwin counties are waiting to die for their crimes. Five of those inmates killed in Baldwin County, four in Jones.
Those two counties, state statistics show, account for more current death-row inmates than all other midstate counties combined. The numbers from Jones and Baldwin are on par with more populated counties such as Fulton (Atlanta), Chatham (Savannah) and Muscogee (Columbus), each with five death-row inmates, according to the state Department of Corrections. Seven inmates from Cobb County (Marietta) sit on death row, the state said. Chris Adams, director of the Georgia Capital Defender, the state public defender’s office that deals with capital cases, said the number of death-row inmates from Jones and Baldwin counties is striking.
“It seems to be that there is something about (that) place that makes it different from the places all around it,” he said. “If I got a new case from there, that would be a red flag that I need to do some digging and find out why that is.”
While the number of death-penalty cases is high for Baldwin and Jones counties, there are not a disproportionate number of killings there.
For example, in 2004, Fulton County, with a population of more than 800,000, had 76 murder cases. Jones and Baldwin counties, with populations of 26,000 and 45,000, respectively, have had an estimated 70 murder cases combined during the past 25 years, officials said. There are no definitive answers for the apparent disparity.
Some officials say Baldwin’s and Jones’ death-row numbers are high because of a few particularly horrible crimes, while others say prosecutors have wide-ranging discretion on whether to pursue capital cases. Some point to Fred Bright, prosecutor for Jones, Baldwin and six other counties in the Ocmulgee Judicial Circuit, as a prosecutor who aggressively pursues the death penalty.
Bright says he follows the legal guidelines when deciding whether to seek death for a particular crime.
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The 10th Annual Will Robinson Memorial Run will be held on Saturday, November 19, 2005 at the North Baldwin Fire Department in Milledgeville, GA. The race is co-sponsored by Milledgeville Junior Woman’s Club and the Baldwin County Sheriff’s Department, in memory of Deputy Will Robinson, who was killed in the line of duty.
To print an application for participation in the 10th Annual Will Robinson Memorial Race, please click here.
The MJWC is currently soliciting sponsors for this event; if you would like to participate, please contact Jennifer Cope at (478) 457-7592. In an effort to maximize our charitable contributions, and to better showcase our outstanding sponsors, there are now three giving levels:
Gold Badge Sponsor: $800 + (Benefits include- large business logo on race t-shirt, listed on all print advertisement, special recognition at race with plaque, 3 free t-shirts, & 3 free registrations)
Silver Badge Sponsor: $400- $799.99 (Benefits- medium business logo on race t-shirt, listed on all print advertisement, 2 free t-shirts, & 2 free race registrations)
Bronze Badge Sponsor: $200- $399.99 (Benefits- small business logo on race t-shirt, 1 free t-shirt, & 1 free race registration)
Proceeds from the race will benefit the Baldwin County Drug Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) program, the Will Robinson Scholarship Fund, and many other local charities through MJWC.
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