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Thread: Kevin Andre Towles - Alabama Death Row

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    Kevin Andre Towles - Alabama Death Row


    Five-year-old Geontae Glass



    Facts of the Crime:

    Etowah County Judge Allen Millican sentenced Kevin Andre Towles to death on December 18, 2009 after a jury had recommended the death penalty, 11-1, for the murder of five-year-old Geontae Glass.

    The crime took place in December 2006 when Geontae’s body was found in the trunk of a car one day after Towles and Geontae's mother had reported him missing. The mother claimed her car had been stolen from an Albertville convenience store with the child sleeping inside.

    http://sandmountainreporter.com/stor...6769070cc926c5

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    Etowah County mother pleads guilty in death of her 5-year-old son

    A mother has pleaded guilty in the death of her 5-year-old son in Etowah County.

    The Etowah County District Attorney's Office reports Shalinda Kalika Glass, 31, formerly of Shady Grove Road, Boaz, appeared before Judge Allen Millican Tuesday, and entered a plea of guilty to felony-murder in the 2006 death of her son, 5-year-old Geontae Glass.

    Glass was originally charged with capital murder in the case, along with Kevin Andre Towles, who was her boyfriend at the time.

    Investigation of the case was started on December 4, 2006 after Glass called 911 from a gas station in Albertville, and reported that her car had been stolen with her 5-year-old son, Geontae, inside.

    Officers from the Etowah County Sheriff’s Office obtained a search warrant for Towles’ residence on Shady Grove Road in Boaz.

    Geontae’s body was discovered in the trunk of the car that was previously reported stolen, parked inside the garage at that residence.

    An autopsy revealed that Geontae died due to injuries that resulted from a horrific beating that caused severe internal injuries to the child’s body.

    Kevin Andre Towles’ case went to trial before Judge Millican in October 2009, with the jury returning a verdict of guilty on the charge of capital murder.

    Following the trial, the jury unanimously recommended the death penalty for Kevin Andre Towles, and at a sentencing hearing on December 18, 2009, Judge Millican sentenced Towles to death for the murder of Geontae Glass.

    According to District Attorney Jimmie Harp, he and his prosecution team originally felt that both Towles and Glass were appropriately charged with the offense of capital murder.

    However, during the course of Towles’ trial, the victim’s 9-year-old sister, a key witness for the State, testified that Shalinda Glass was asleep and wouldn’t have known that Towles took Geontae outside and beat him with a stick.

    The sister testified that she never saw her brother walk or talk again after being taken outside by Towles.

    This piece of evidence was significant, according to Harp, in the prosecution’s decision to allow Glass to enter a plea to felony murder, as opposed to capital murder.

    Harp stated, “In order to prove the crime of capital murder, the State has to be able to prove that a person had the specific intent to cause the death of another. Here, although there was evidence that Glass failed to provide appropriate care for the victim, failed to seek the medical attention that could have saved his life, and helped to cover up the crime after the fact, there is no evidence that she was even aware that the crime was committed until after it was discovered that Geontae had died. The sister’s testimony was the only piece of evidence showing exactly when the beating took place, and that testimony indicated that Shalinda Glass was asleep at the time. She is guilty of aggravated child abuse by failing to protect her child, and that abuse ultimately resulted in the death of Geontae Glass at the hands of Towles. This makes her guilty of felony murder, but not capital murder.”

    Glass, who has remained in jail without bond pending trial in this case, was sentenced to a life sentence in an Alabama penitentiary.

    She waived all of her rights to appeal the conviction in the case as part of the plea agreement.

    http://www2.alabamas13.com/news/2012...ea-ar-3369163/

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    Conviction, sentence overturned in Etowah County murder

    ETOWAH COUNTY, Ala. (WAAY) - The Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals has overturned the conviction and death sentence of an Etowah County man accused of beating his girlfriend's son to death.

    In the opinion, the court stated testimony against Kevin Towles that was used should have been ruled inadmissible.

    Towles was convicted in October 2009 of killing Geontae Glass, 5, and was sentenced to die by lethal injection three months later. His mother, Shalinda Glass, pleaded guilty to capital murder.

    Prosecutors said Towles beat Glass to death over a bad report card from school in 2006 and then tried to stage a kidnapping with Shalinda Glass to cover up the crime.

    According to court documents, judges on the court of appeals ruled that testimony from Towles' son about being beaten by his father should not have been used in court.

    In a news release, Etowah County District Attorney Jimmie Harp said he was disappointed in the ruling and that the case would go back to trial.

    "I think it’s important to consider that as the case was tried before the jury, that the testimony that was the subject of the reversal was relevant and admissible under Alabama case law as it existed at that time," Harp said.

    http://www.waaytv.com/news/local/con...9bb30f31a.html

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    Parties discuss trying 2009 capital murder case second time

    Kevin Andre Towles was back in an Etowah County courtroom Thursday for a hearing in preparation for a second trial in the beating death of a 5-year-old Gadsden child.

    Towles was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to die in 2009 for the 2006 slaying of Geontae Glass. His case was remanded back to Etowah County for a retrial last year.

    The focus of Thursday’s status conference before Circuit Judge Allen Millican was the handling of issues that were raised and ruled on in the previous trial.

    Etowah County District Attorney Jimmie Harp said he and defense attorney Dani Bone met a short time after Bone was appointed to represent Towles in the retrial, as he did in the prior trial. Harp said at the time, they decided to start the trial from scratch.

    Bone’s law firm began by filing some standard motions, such as a motion for discovery, as he did in the initial trial.

    Millican said the orders that were issued in the previous trial were still in effect; there was no need to file the same motions that he had already ruled on.

    Harp said his office was concerned with the issue because if the state gets a conviction for capital murder in the retrial, the case will be subject to the same scrutiny on appeal. He said he did not want a failure to file these standard motions to be used on appeal as evidence of inadequate defense.

    Bone said he could not predict what motions might be needed in the future. He said he had not developed a theory of defense and did not know what motions he might need to bring for due diligence in defending Towles.

    Millican said he did not intend to preclude any motions; he said it was not necessary to file every motion filed in the same case again. He said if there were new issues or evidence, attorneys should file the motions they deemed necessary.

    However, he said, if there was a motion to suppress from the first trial, for example, there was no need to file it again. “I tend to be pretty consistent,” he said.

    The case was not remanded because of issues related to the motions filed so far in the case, Millican said.

    The case came back for a retrial because the Court of Criminal Appeals ruled that jurors should not have heard testimony from Towles’ teenage son about Towles’ beating him for a conduct problem. The state contended in the first trial that Towles beat Glass because the child’s conduct grade dropped. The boy died from the resulting internal injuries.

    Regarding discovery — the sharing of the state’s evidence in the case — Bone said what he received in the previous trial had been forwarded to the lawyers who handled the case on appeal.

    Deputy District Attorney Marcus Reid suggested that defense attorneys retrieve that material and recreate their files from the previous case. They could compare it to the district attorney’s files on the case and any material that was missing could be copied again for the defense, he said.

    The case has been set for trial in May, but Millican told attorneys the case will go to trial when both the state and defense are ready. He said he set the date for trial so that issues, such as those considered in Thursday’s hearing, could be addressed.

    http://www.gadsdentimes.com/article/...9848?p=2&tc=pg
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    Judge denies motion asking prosecutors to recuse from Towles case

    Etowah County Circuit Judge David Kimberley heard discussion Wednesday and denied a defense request that county prosecutors step down in the second capital murder trial of Kevin Andre Towles.

    Defense attorneys contended there’s an appearance of impropriety in the district attorney’s office prosecuting the case, because Jody Willoughby — appointed DA in August — shared office space in Dani Bone’s building during the time Bone was preparing to defend Towles in the first trial.

    Towles was convicted and sentenced to death in December 2009 in the beating death of Geontae Glass, the 5-year-old son of his girlfriend, Shalinda Glass. She pleaded guilty to a charge of murder in the case and was sentenced to life in prison.

    Towles’ case was remanded to the Etowah County courts for retrial last year after the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals ruled that Towles’ older son should not have been allowed to testify during the trial. The older child told jurors of being removed from Towles’ home because of harsh discipline meted out by the defendant.

    Towles is scheduled to come to trial again in November.

    Chief Deputy District Attorney Marcus Reid said, “The DA’s office has no intention of voluntarily recusing from this case unless ordered to.” He also confirmed that just as it did when Towles was prosecuted in 2009, the office intends to seek the death penalty.

    Bone argued that because Willoughby was working in his office building, although he was not a member of the firm or working for Bone, he was privy to the preparation of the case.

    http://www.gadsdentimes.com/article/...NEWS/150919840
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    Retrial begins of man accused in beating death of 5-year-old

    By William Thornton
    AL.com

    Prosecutors told an Etowah County jury this morning that a man on trial for capital murder told authorities he was responsible for the child's death.

    That came after the five-year-old boy's body was discovered wrapped in a blanket in the trunk of a car after an elaborate ruse involving a faked kidnapping.

    But lawyers for Kevin Andre Towles argued that it was the boy's mother, already in prison, who was responsible for the death of Geontae Glass.

    Opening statements began today in the retrial of Towles, who was convicted in 2009 of Glass' death and sentenced to die. The Alabama Supreme Court last year threw out the Towles' conviction because of improper testimony.

    In his opening statement, Etowah County Chief Deputy District Attorney Marcus Reid recounted the story of how Geontae's mother, Shalinda Glass, told authorities he had been asleep in the back seat of her car when the car was stolen from an Albertville service station.

    The boy was found later in the car, dead in the trunk, at another home owned by Towles, Reid said. Authorities were able to discover the address when they found a utility bill bearing the address of the home when they conducted a search of another home where Towles said the boy spent the night.

    Reid said prosecutors will use forensic evidence to show that Geontae was beaten over the course of several days. However, the injuries were survivable if he had been given proper medical treatment, Reid said.

    "He was whipped," Reid said. "You'll see marks on his body, bruises on his legs, flesh ripped from his buttocks, and the imprint of a piece of wood on his body."

    When Glass died, Reid said, Towles bathed the child's body and strapped him into a car seat next to his seven-year-old sister, as part of a story that would explain his disappearance. However, an Amber alert and the rapid response of law enforcement prevented him from disposing of the child's body.

    Reid said Shalinda Glass, currently serving time in prison for murder, "went along with the story."

    Towles' lawyers, though, argued that Shalinda Glass was responsible for the child's murder. Attorney Paul Roberts said Towles was not with her while she was in the gas station as part of staging the kidnapping, and she did nothing to alert authorities to the truth.

    "She wasn't thinking about (Geontae)," Roberts said. "She was thinking about herself. Our client helped her. She is the culprit in this case."

    Attorney Dani Bone said the state would be unable to produce a eyewitness to any beatings of Geontae Glass, and no direct evidence would tie Towles to the child's death. While the case would undoubtedly be emotional, Bone said, the jury had to look objectively at the evidence.

    http://www.al.com/news/anniston-gads...rt_river_index
    "I realize this may sound harsh, but as a father and former lawman, I really don't care if it's by lethal injection, by the electric chair, firing squad, hanging, the guillotine or being fed to the lions."
    - Oklahoma Rep. Mike Christian

    "There are some people who just do not deserve to live,"
    - Rev. Richard Hawke

    “There are lots of extremely smug and self-satisfied people in what would be deemed lower down in society, who also deserve to be pulled up. In a proper free society, you should be allowed to make jokes about absolutely anything.”
    - Rowan Atkinson

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    Teacher: Boy beaten to death cried after conduct report

    A 5-year-old boy whose beaten body was later discovered in the trunk of a car wrapped in a blanket cried when his teacher gave him a conduct grade, she testified today in court.

    Kelly Page, the teacher of Geontae Glass, told jurors in an Etowah County court that the boy received a conduct grade in the form of a face with a straight mouth - not a smiley face, nor a frown. This grade meant satisfactory borderline behavior, basically a warning.

    Glass, Page testified, cried a few tears. "My daddy's gonna spank me when I get home," he said. Page never saw the boy alive again.

    Kevin Andre Towles, accused of capital murder in the 2006 death of Geontae, sat a few feet away. Prosecutors say Towles beat the child as punishment, then staged a faked kidnapping with the boy's mother in hopes of disposing of the child's body.

    Towles was sentenced to die for the crime in 2009, but his conviction was overturned by the Alabama Supreme Court because of improper testimony. Towles' retrial began last week.

    Under questioning from Towles' defense team, Page said despite the child's reaction to the conduct grade, she did not believe Geontae was in any danger. The boy always had what he needed in class and was usually dressed nicely.

    "He was a typical little boy," she said. "He was very happy. He was usually singing all day."

    Glass was reported missing Dec. 4, 2006, when his mother Shalinda Glass told Albertville police her car had been stolen from outside of a service station with Geontae in the backseat. She had gone inside the store with Geontae's older sister. Prosecutors say Towles went to the location in a truck, climbed inside Shalinda's Altima and raced from the store.

    Shalinda Glass is currently serving time in prison for murder.

    Testimony from people inside the service station recreated the scene. Ronnie Cook, who was in the store for a soft drink vendor, said he saw the blue Altima circle the parking lot several times before coming to a stop at a pump. He then saw Shalinda Glass and her daughter exit the car.

    A few seconds later, he told the jury, he saw a man jump out of a Ford truck, get into the Altima and drive away. Another man, James Robbins, said he later encountered the Altima on Alabama 205 headed toward Boaz as he was driving into Albertville. The Altima was traveling straight toward him in his lane at a high rate of speed, he said.

    The two vehicles swerved to miss each other, bringing their cars side-by-side and the two drivers face-to-face, Robbins said. He identified Towles as the driver of the Altima, and said Towles gave him a "hard, cold stare."

    "He was like, 'What are you doing?'" Robbins testified. Towles then sped off.

    Back at the service station, its clerk, Gina Keaton, saw Shalinda Glass mill around the store for several minutes with the child, Keaton testified.

    "I felt like she was acting weird," Keaton said. "It was like she was distracting us from what was going on. If my child had been in the car, I would have been looking out the window."

    Keaton said Glass went outside, then went to a payphone and began saying her car was missing with her boy in the backseat. Keaton said she offered to push the store's panic button, but Glass told her police were already on the way. They arrived shortly after.

    Prosecutors played several minutes of surveillance footage from that day, showing Glass and the girl walk into the store, walk about, then outside before returning with police.

    Keaton said she saw Glass crying as she made phone calls. Towles walked into the store thirty minutes to an hour later. Cook testified that when Towles entered the store, he told police the man he had seen jump into the Altima looked like Towles, only with different clothes.

    Testimony stopped briefly during Cook's testimony when he was asked if he had seen the surveillance tape of that morning.

    "Yes, during the first trial," he said, which prompted a conference at the bench with Circuit Judge David Kimberley. After a few minutes, Kimberley told the jury to "disregard the previous statement."

    http://www.al.com/news/anniston-gads...17e5abd98f8444

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    Witnesses recount morning of faked kidnapping in capital murder trial

    By William Thornton
    AL.com

    A friend of a man accused of beating a 5-year-old to death in 2006 testified today he received an early morning phone call from Kevin Andre Towles asking for a ride to an Albertville service station.

    There, prosecutors say, he and a woman faked a kidnapping with designs on disposing of the child's body.

    Bobby Spidell was the first witness of the morning in the capital murder trial of Towles, accused of killing Geontae Glass. The trial began last week.

    The boy's body was later found wrapped in a blanket in the truck of a car after his mother, Shalinda Glass, told police her car had been stolen from a service station with the child in the back seat.

    Shalinda Glass is currently serving time in prison for murder.

    Spidell told the jury that in 2006, he helped Towles in opening an East Gadsden barbecue restaurant. He later got out of the business after he noticed several people hanging around the establishment who were "bad for business," and he said he believed Towles was using cocaine and Lortab.

    A few months later, Spidell said, in December 2006, he received a call from Towles around 2:30 or 3 a.m., asking for a ride. Spidell said Towles had a reputation as a "night owl" and such a request was nothing new. Spidell drove his blue Ford F-150 to a house in Albertville using directions Towles gave him over the phone.

    However, it took several calls to find the place because Spidell got lost, he said. "I didn't know where I was going," he testified.

    When he arrived at the house, Spidell said, he and Towles talked for a few minutes about the business, then drove to an Albertville service station. They sat in the parking lot for about a minute, he said, then Towles hopped out. Towles thanked Spidell, handed him about $200, and told him he would talk to him later.

    But the two haven't spoken since, Spidell said. Towles was arrested for murder later.

    Prosecutors say Towles beat the boy to death over the weekend following a conduct citation at school that was basically a warning. On Monday, Dec. 4, 2006, Shalinda Glass, the child's mother, reported someone took her car from a service station while she was inside with her daughter. Prosecutors said Towles jumped out of a Ford truck and drove away in Shalinda's Altima.

    Spidell also testified that Shalinda Glass called him at some point that fall before the child's death to say that Towles had hit her. He said he told her to go to the police or leave him, but saw her later that day with Towles.

    "She looked at me like 'don't say nothing," he said. "She gave me a 'keep your mouth quiet' kind of look."

    Spidell also said he saw Towles slide across a stainless steel table "Dukes of Hazzard"-style to intervene between Geontae and Shalinda Glass after she raised her voice to the boy. Spidell said he understood that Shalinda was the child's disciplinarian.

    However, under prosecutor's questions, Spidell said Towles was the "dominant" person in the relationship.

    Towles' defense attorneys contend it was Shalinda Glass who killed the boy.

    In other testimony, a husband and wife who owned another Albertville convenience store testified they saw Towles, Shalinda Glass and another man outside a home Towles owned that adjoined their store on the morning of Dec. 4.

    Penny and Kevin Derrick, owners of a store in South Broad Street, said they saw the group when they went in at about 5:30 that morning to open their store. Kevin said there was nothing unusual about the activity they saw, except that the car in the driveway at Towles' home had its engine running for about 45 minutes, as evidenced by the exhaust in the cool morning air.

    Kevin also said he saw a girl with the group, but Penny said she did not.

    Jurors saw surveillance video from the store that showed the moment when the Altima and truck left Towles' home, presumably to go to the service station.

    http://www.al.com/news/anniston-gads...rt_river_index
    "I realize this may sound harsh, but as a father and former lawman, I really don't care if it's by lethal injection, by the electric chair, firing squad, hanging, the guillotine or being fed to the lions."
    - Oklahoma Rep. Mike Christian

    "There are some people who just do not deserve to live,"
    - Rev. Richard Hawke

    “There are lots of extremely smug and self-satisfied people in what would be deemed lower down in society, who also deserve to be pulled up. In a proper free society, you should be allowed to make jokes about absolutely anything.”
    - Rowan Atkinson

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    Sister of murder victim recounts 5-year-old's last day

    The first time Shaliyah Glass heard that her 5-year-old brother Geontae was dead was on a car radio news report as she was being driven to recount her weekend.

    Shaliyah, now 16, testified in court today during the capital murder trial of Kevin Andre Towles, the man accused of beating the child and then faking a kidnapping with the child's mother in December 2006.

    In a flat, soft monotone voice, Shaliyah told the jury the story of Geontae's last weekend after he received a conduct warning at school. Geontae, a student at Rainbow City's John Jones Elementary, on Friday, Dec. 1, received not a smiley face but a face with a straight-lined mouth - meaning satisfactory behavior but needing some improvement.

    The next day, when Shaliyah and Geontae were at Kevin Towles' East Gadsden barbecue restaurant, Geontae was told to stand in the corner all day as punishment.

    Shaliyah and Geontae spent that night sleeping on couches in the living room of Towles' home. Shaliyah was awakened Sunday when Geontae went outside with Towles, who told her, "G has to pay for something," she said.

    The boy's mother, Shalinda Glass, was still asleep, she said. Towles' attorneys argued during their opening statements that Shalinda killed Geontae. She pleaded guilty to murder and is currently in prison.

    Towles and the boy stayed outside for awhile, Shaliyah said, while she watched "SpongeBob Squarepants." Then, when Towles reentered the home, he was carrying Geontae in his arms.

    "He was just laying there," she said. "He didn't say anything."

    Shaliyah said Towles laid Geontae in a room in the back of the home on the floor, saying he was sleeping. Towles later came and sat beside Shaliyah, she said, and started crying.

    For the rest of the day, Geontae stayed in the room and did not move, she said, while she went riding a four-wheeler with Towles and her mother ran errands.

    On Monday, she said, she was awakened to "get ready for school." When she was loaded into her mother's Altima in a sleepy stupor, Geontae was already in the car, dressed. However, his head was shifted to the side "like when you sleep."

    "I never saw him move," she said, after Towles took the boy outside the previous day.

    Shaliyah said her mother, Shalinda Glass, drove them to a service station in Albertville before sunrise that morning. Shalinda and Shaliyah then went into the station, leaving Geontae in the car. Shaliyah had to use the restroom, and her mother told her to grab some juice and snacks for her and her brother. When they went back outside, the car was gone.

    Then her mother tried to call Towles, and unable to reach him, called police, Shaliyah said. Shalinda Glass told investigators the car had been stolen and the boy kidnapped.

    Prosecutors, though, say Towles ran from a nearby truck and got into the Altima, driving it away to another home he owned. Later, Geontae's body was found in the trunk of the car, wrapped in a blanket. Testimony earlier today dealt with Towles' actions that day.

    Shaliyah said she didn't remember ever seeing Towles whip Geontae, but the last time she ever saw her brother moving and speaking was when he walked outside with Towles that Sunday morning.

    Attorneys for Towles did not cross-examine Shaliyah Glass, but said they reserved the right to call her during their case. The jury will resume hearing testimony Monday after the Thanksgiving holiday.

    http://www.al.com/news/anniston-gads...rt_river_index

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    Towles testifies he did not beat Geontae Glass to death

    Kevin Andre Towles told an Etowah County jury Tuesday that Shalinda Glass was responsible for the 2006 beating death of five-year-old Geontae Glass, The Gadsden Times reported.

    However, he said he never saw the child being beaten by her.

    Testifying in his capital murder trial, Towles said the story he told investigators in December 2006 - that hooded men came to his house and beat the boy - was concocted to protect Shalinda, who threatened to expose Towles' drug trafficking unless he went along with the lie.

    Prosecutors say Towles beat the child as punishment after Geontae received a conduct report at school, then staged a faked kidnapping with the boy's mother in hopes of disposing of the child's body.

    Towles was sentenced to die for the crime in 2009, but his conviction was overturned by the Alabama Supreme Court because of improper testimony. Towles' retrial began last month.

    Chief Deputy District Attorney Marcus Reid brought up testimony from last week, where Geontae's teacher said the child was afraid his daddy would spank him. However, Towles said Geontae would have been worried because he had been promised a phone if he got good conduct marks.

    Instead, Towles said Shalinda was mad because her son had told Towles that his mother had been "talking to her man friend at school."

    For more details, read The Times' story here.

    http://www.al.com/news/anniston-gads...rt_river_index
    "I realize this may sound harsh, but as a father and former lawman, I really don't care if it's by lethal injection, by the electric chair, firing squad, hanging, the guillotine or being fed to the lions."
    - Oklahoma Rep. Mike Christian

    "There are some people who just do not deserve to live,"
    - Rev. Richard Hawke

    “There are lots of extremely smug and self-satisfied people in what would be deemed lower down in society, who also deserve to be pulled up. In a proper free society, you should be allowed to make jokes about absolutely anything.”
    - Rowan Atkinson

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