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Thread: John William Campbell - Florida

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    John William Campbell - Florida




    Death recommended for Citrus man guilty of killing his father

    A jury recommended the death penalty for a Citrus County man found guilty of using a hatchet to kill his father.

    The jury came back with the recommendation Tuesday against John William Campbell, who was found guilty last week in an Inverness courtroom.

    Campbell, 39, was found guilty of first-degree murder in the death of John Henry Campbell, 68.

    According to Bay News 9's partner newspaper the Citrus County Chronicle, it took jurors less than an hour to return with the recommendation to Circuit Court Judge Ric Howard. The vote was 8-4 in favor of death.

    Past stories on this case

    Howard could impose death or choose life without parole for John William Campbell.

    Campbell admitted he killed his father in August 2010, but his attorneys argued that he did not scheme to kill him and cover it up. They blamed the act on the younger Campbell's depression and use of crack cocaine.

    Campbell’s attorneys called it a "pressure-cooker" situation brought on by a controlling and distant father and said the younger Campbell simply snapped. Father and son shared a double-wide home in Inverness.

    A series of hearings will be scheduled to allow the defense to present opportunities as to why Campbell’s life should be spared.

    http://www.baynews9.com/content/news...mended_fo.html
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    Campbell gets death

    INVERNESS — John William Campbell, the man convicted of hacking his father to death, is now facing death by execution.

    Campbell, 39, was sentenced to death Tuesday by Circuit Judge Ric Howard for the August 2010 killing of his father, John Henry Campbell, 68.

    Campbell also was sentenced 70 years for robbery crimes he committed during the time of his father’s death. That sentence is to run consecutive with the 25 years he was handed in Hernando County for attempted murder for ramming his vehicle into a parked deputy’s vehicle during a police pursuit following the killing of his father. Campbell also was tagged a habitual violent felony offender, which caused the maximum sentences for his robbery charges to double. He is a seven-time felon including a conviction in which he hid in his former sister-in-law’s closet and attacked her with a hammer when she got home in a quarrel over custody of his infant son.

    Howard read a detailed sentencing order that ascribed “weight,” “slight or little weight” or “no weight” to both the prosecution’s aggravating factors and the defense’s mitigating factors.

    In the end, Howard said the prosecution team of Rich Buxman and Pete Magrino proved four out of six aggravating factors.

    After his conviction in January, it took the same jurors less than an hour to return with a death penalty recommendation to Howard. The vote was 8-4 in favor of death.

    While the 12-person panel had to be unanimous in deciding a guilty verdict, a simple majority vote was needed to recommend to Howard whether Campbell should head to death row or be handed life without parole. The ultimate decision of life or death was Howard’s, but he is required by law to give “great weight” to the jury recommendation.

    “The aggravating factors outweigh the mitigating factors,” Howard said to Campbell before imposing the death sentence.

    Campbell had no reaction to the verdict, but could be seen thanking his attorneys, assistant public defenders Devon Sharkey and Michael Lamberti.

    The elder Campbell’s body was discovered Aug. 10 by sheriff’s deputies conducting a well-being check on him in the living room of the doublewide mobile home the father and son shared on East Nugget Lane.

    The younger Campbell reportedly grabbed what Howard called a “medieval looking, oaken-handled” cutting implement with a blade “more suited for crushing than cutting” and chopped his father three times in the head with it while he sat in a recliner.

    He then rifled through his father’s pockets and went through the house looking for money and credit cards. He then took off and used the credit card to buy gift cards, which he gave to a drug dealer in Ocala in exchange for crack cocaine. After getting high and then being tracked by police, he led them in a chase on U.S. 19 before ramming his vehicle into a deputy’s vehicle. Campbell and his attorneys said it was a bid to commit suicide after killing his father and not an attempt to kill the deputy who was standing by the vehicle. The deputy fled as the car barreled toward him, but still sustained injuries. Campbell was hospitalized with serious injuries.

    http://www.chronicleonline.com/conte...ell-gets-death

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    JOHN WILLIAM CAMPBELL v STATE OF FLORIDA

    In an opinion dated March 5, 2015, the Florida Supreme Court AFFIRMED Campbell's conviction and sentence of death on direct appeal.
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    In today's orders, the United States Supreme Court declined to review Campbell's petition for certiorari.

    Lower Ct: Supreme Court of Florida
    Case Nos.: (SC13-716)
    Decision Date: March 5, 2015

    http://www.supremecourt.gov/search.a...s/14-10121.htm

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    JOHN WILLIAM CAMPBELL vs STATE OF FLORIDA & JOHN WILLIAM CAMPBELL vs JULIE L. JONES, etc.,

    In today's opinions, the Florida Supreme Court AFFIRMED the order of the postconviction court denying Campbell's motion to vacate his conviction of first-degree murder and sentence of death filed under Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.851 and DENIED his habeas petition.
    An uninformed opponent is a dangerous opponent.

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    Man facing death for father's premeditated murder in line for resentencing

    John William Campbell, who was once Citrus County’s only felon on Florida’s death row, is again on track to getting either life in prison or executed for his father’s murder.

    Campbell appeared Monday afternoon in front of Circuit Court Judge Richard “Ric” Howard for an update on his resentencing.

    Howard asked 45-year-old Campbell, who has been incarcerated for roughly eight and a half years — pre-and-post conviction — how he was doing.

    “You’re looking well, sir,” the judge said to the Inverness man. “It’s been a while, hasn’t it?”

    “Yes, sir, it has,” replied Campbell, who was dressed in a red inmate uniform, had short, salt-and-pepper hair and was wearing Coke-bottle glasses.

    Howard had ordered Campbell’s death by lethal injection in March 2013 for hacking his 68-year-old father, John Henry Campbell, to death with a hatchet in August 2010 at his Inverness home.

    Citrus County Circuit Court Judge Richard “Ric” Howard reads convicted murderer John Campbell’s sentencing order at a March 2013 hearing while holding the murder weapon Campbell used to attack and kill his father in August 2010. Campbell received the death penalty for bludgeoning his father with the hatchet, killing him in his Inverness home.

    Howard was also the judge that later vacated Campbell’s death sentence on an appeal in June 2017, court records show.

    Howard’s ruling to drop Campbell’s execution and repeat his sentencing, a mandate upheld last December by the Florida Supreme Court, was based on the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Hurst v. Florida.

    High court justices ruled in their January 2016 opinion that Florida’s death-sentencing procedure was unconstitutional because a state judge could impose a felon’s execution even though a majority of jurors voted against it at sentencing.

    Following Campbell’s January 2013 trial conviction for premeditated murder, 8 of 12 jurors voted that his crime warranted death, which Howard affirmed later that March, according to court records.

    “We knew it would be coming back,” Assistant State Attorney Pete Magrino said Monday after Campbell’s hearing about the case reopening due to Hurst.

    At Campbell’s eventual sentencing hearing, attorneys will present case evidence to a jury panel of at least 12 people who will re-decide Campbell’s fate.

    If there’s unanimous vote for it, Campbell will go back to death row.

    If not, Howard must sentence Campbell to life in prison, said Magrino, who’s been prosecuting the case since a Citrus County grand jury indicted Campbell for murder in September 2010.

    Campbell was arrested in August 2010 following a high-speed chase with sheriff’s deputies from Citrus and Hernando counties, who were pursuing him as a suspect in his father’s murder and an armed robbery, prior reports show.

    Campbell was driving at speeds over 120 mph when police deployed stop sticks on U.S. 19 at the Citrus-Hernando County line, causing him to travel off-road and strike an empty Citrus County Sheriff’s Office patrol car.

    He was taken into custody and airlifted to a St. Petersburg hospital.

    Julie Morley, who was challenging Campbell’s death sentence as an attorney with the state’s office of the Capital Collateral Regional Counsel, said Monday she’ll transfer Campbell’s “more than 12 crates” of case files to the Public Defender’s Office in Inverness.

    Assistant Public Defender Edward Spaight, who will represent Campbell in his resentencing alongside Michael Lamberti, asked Howard to set June 18 as Campbell’s next status date, which the judge agreed to.

    Campbell also said he was fine with having Lamberti continue to represent him even though Campbell claimed in his appeals the Brooksville lawyer was ineffective counsel during his trial a little over 6 years ago.

    “I waive all conflicts with the P.D.’s office,” Campbell said to Howard.

    Campbell will return back to the state prison in Starke until he’s needed back in court, Howard allowed.

    “If it’s just procedural, I would ask to waive his appearance,” Spaight said. “If it’s something substantive we would transport him back him.”

    (source: Citrus County Chronicle)
    "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

  7. #7
    Senior Member CnCP Legend Neil's Avatar
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    Resentencing hearing starts for man who murdered his father

    Attorneys began — again — to deliberate the fate of John William Campbell for killing his father almost 11 years ago inside their Inverness home.

    Campbell’s resentencing for the August 2010 premeditated murder of 68-year-old John Henry “Jack” Campbell started Monday, June 7, and is scheduled to last most of the week.

    Campbell, 47, had been Citrus County’s sole resident on Florida’s death row since Circuit Court Richard “Ric” Howard sentenced him there in March 2013. That was until rulings from the U.S. and state supreme courts vacated Campbell’s punishment, but not his conviction, because a dozen jurors from his January 2013 trial weren’t unanimous in their recommendation for Howard to order the ultimate penalty.

    After considering testimony and evidence on Campbell’s upbringing and criminal background, Howard will decide alone whether to order a sentence of either life in prison or death for Campbell, who waived his right for a jury to preside over his resentencing. Campbell appeared to court Monday dressed in red inmate garb, and sat among his team of assistant public defenders, Jessica Roberts, John Spivey and Edward Spaight.

    Assistant state attorneys Pete Magrino and Richard Buxman, Campbell’s original prosecutors, asked Howard in opening statements to remember the facts from Campbell’s trial to reinstate his sentence.

    “I anticipate, at the conclusion of the entire hearing,” Magrino said, “I’ll be back before the court ... to once again argue for the court to sentence the defendant to death.” Spivey said his client’s criminal actions and suicide attempts stem back to a fetal alcohol disorder stunting developments of his brain and body, including blindness in one eye and a back deformity.

    Spivey said Campbell’s hostile upbringing in Texas with abusive parents also contributed to his poor decisions.

    “Poisoned in the womb, plunged in a lifetime of disfunction, predestined to fail,” Spivey said. “The true origin of this life-gone-astray doesn’t involved John’s choices, but the cards he was dealt by no choice of his own.” Along with residing at the Union Correctional Institution in Raiford for murdering his father, Campbell has been serving consecutive 25- and 70-year prison sentences from December 2011 and March 2013.

    Campbell was convicted of robbing the Walgreens, Dollar General and Lowe’s in Inverness between Aug. 5 and 10 before he crashed into a Citrus County Sheriff’s Office (CCSO) cruiser during a high-speed chase Aug. 11 near the Hernando-Citrus county line.

    At the time of his sentencings, Campbell was a seven-time felon, including a conviction out of Texas, where he hid in Angela Thatcher’s closet in May 1998 and attacked his ex-sister-in-law with a hammer because he lost custody over his infant son.

    “I was terrified, I wasn’t think anything except I might die,” Thatcher testified Monday as a witness to help prosecutors prove more aggravating circumstances of Campbell’s crime.

    CCSO deputies discovered the body of Campbell’s father Aug. 10, 2010, in a doublewide home he shared with his son off of East Nugget Lane in Inverness.

    Gary Atchison, a retried CCSO detective, testified Monday to questioning Campbell about the robberies while Campbell was recovering from the crash at a hospital.

    Magrino played the recorded interview for Howard. Campbell confessed to the robberies and to striking his father twice with a hammer-hatchet.

    “This has been going on for years ... him just never talking to me; I tried,” a sobbing Campbell told detectives about his motives. “He didn’t care about anybody else, he didn’t care about me; he wanted peace, so I gave it to him ... I don’t want nothing, I want to die.”

    Campbell rifled through his father’s belongings, stealing a credit card to buy gift cards he exchanged for crack cocaine before leading authorities on the vehicle chase.

    ‘To pursue or not to pursue’

    “It made an intentional turn towards my vehicle,” Ruby said. “I began to run toward the to be honest, I have no idea how I got out from in front of that vehicle.”

    Ruby said he was hospitalized for three bruised ribs.

    “That was the closest I’ve ever come to dying,” the U.S. Army veteran testified.

    “I wasn’t trying to hurt no officer,” Campbell said in his police interview.

    After putting on half-a-day’s worth of witnesses on Monday, Magrino and Buxman rested their case.

    Spaight and Spivey ended the day with testimony from Campbell’s family, childhood friends and doctors to speak on behalf of Campbell’s character.

    Dr. Mark Cunningham, a psychologist, testifying to finding 30 adverse factors in Campbell’s background that undermined his development and decision-making, including his brain damage, drug abuse, academic failures and neglectful parents and tragic deaths of friends.

    Cunningham said Campbell has 16 of 22 risk factors for violence and delinquency cited by the U.S. Department of Justice.

    https://www.chronicleonline.com/news...9fafbd46a.html
    Last edited by Neil; 06-07-2021 at 04:40 PM.

  8. #8
    Senior Member CnCP Legend Neil's Avatar
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    Campbell's resentencing ends for father's murder; judge to order new punishment

    Lawyers wrapped up their arguments for a judge to decide the revised fate of John William Campbell for the August 2010 first-degree murder of his father inside their Inverness home.

    Prosecutors and public defenders presented closing statements to Circuit Court Judge Richard “Ric” Howard, Friday, June 11, ending Campbell’s weeklong resentencing hearing.

    After reviewing evidence attorneys showed him since Monday and during Campbell’s trial from January 2013, Howard will order the 47-year-old on June 23 to either serve life in prison or return to death row. Campbell waived his right for a jury to preside over his resentencing, and opted Friday not to testify himself.

    For murdering 68-year-old John Henry “Jack” Campbell with a hatchet, Howard originally sentenced Campbell to death by lethal injection in March 2013.

    However, Campbell became due for a new punishment in 2017 after the U.S. and Florida supreme courts ruled it unconstitutional because Campbell’s 12 jurors weren’t unanimous (8-4) in recommending the sentence to Howard. Campbell has also been serving a 95-year prison term for a string of robberies in Inverness he committed leading up to his father’s murder on Aug. 10, and for his Aug. 11 pursuit with police that ended with him crashing into a Citrus County Sheriff’s Office cruiser, missing a deputy.

    Throughout Campbell’s resentencing, his team of legal defenders called on doctors to testify on Campbell’s fetal-alcohol syndrome, brain damage, congenital defects, hostile upbringing, and post-traumatic stress. Those expert witnesses opined those factors culminated into “an extreme mental and emotional disturbance” that influenced Campbell to murder his father, but lessened his immoral intent and ability to appreciate the criminality.

    In her closing statements, which included a timeline of Campbell’s life, Assistant Public Defender Jessica Roberts cited troves of records and outlined the opinions of seven defense witnesses to help show Howard Campbell doesn’t deserve death.

    “The mitigation greatly outweighs the aggravation,” she said. “Mr. Campbell is not among the worst of the worst, he’s among the most damaged.”

    Roberts said Campbell tried to recover from his childhood abuses, but his depression dragged him back into despair, which resulted in numerous suicide attempts and psychiatric treatments.

    “Poisoned in the womb, predestined to fail, plunged into a lifetime of disfunction — that is the life of John William Campbell…” she said. “He was born into a life of so many deficits, he never had a shot.”

    Assistant State Attorney Pete Magrino said in his closing Campbell’s murder was “cold, calculated and premeditated,” and that Campbell was levelheaded before, during and after it.

    “The bottom line is simple,” the prosecutor said before pointing at Campbell in the courtroom. “That defendant has earned ... to stay on death row until the governor of this state signs his death warrant.”

    Magrino showed Howard photos of Jack Campbell from when he was alive and when his bludgeoned body was found in a chair inside his home off of East Nugget Lane, where his son moved to in December 2009 from Texas, where Campbell grew up since he was 8.

    To help prove the “horrendous” nature of Campbell’s actions, Magrino played video footage of Campbell’s interview with forensic psychiatrist Dr. Emily Lazarou from February 2020.

    Lazarou testified Thursday to diagnosing Campbell with anti-social personality disorder, substance-use disorder, mood disorder and borderline personality disorder. She also said Campbell meets the criteria for psychopathy.

    Roberts said Lazarou’s testimony should be excluded because of her inconsistent diagnoses and prescriptions for Campbell since she was his psychiatrist in 2010 and 2011 after his arrest.

    Roberts added Lazarou also shouldn’t be testifying against her former patient.

    Campbell told Lazarou he struck his father’s head twice with a hammer-hatchet he got from a carport.

    He then answered a phone call from the sheriff’s office asking about his father’s wellbeing. Campbell was able to divert authorities by pretending to be his father.

    After Campbell hung up the phone, he struck his father with the hatchet a third time before the sheriff’s office called again. Campbell, again impersonating his father, told the agency to call back in the morning because “he was old and tired.”

    “The defendant said,” Magrino said, reciting an interview Campbell’s gave with detectives, “‘I wanted to put him to death for a few days…I’ve been meditating on it and I didn’t know how ... but I figured I was going to do it, and I did it.’”

    Campbell rifled through his father’s wallet, stole his car, drove to a local Walmart and bought gift cards he exchanged for crack cocaine. Campbell then drove to a St. Petersburg beach before he travelled back north via U.S. 19.
    Hernando and Citrus county deputies pursued Campbell in a high-speed chase, which ended at the Hernando-Citrus border with Campbell crashing into a patrol car.

    Magrino also referred Howard to Campbell’s “violent” felony convictions from the late ‘90s out of Texas, where he robbed a bank while armed, and broke into his ex-sister-in-law’s house, hid in her closet and ambushed her with a hammer.

    Roberts argued Campbell committed those offenses, including the murder, soon after he experienced a severe depressive episode or tried to take his life, including the crash into the sheriff's cruiser.

    “(Campbell) was quoted as saying,” Roberts said, “‘I don’t have the will to live, but I don’t the courage to kill myself.’”

    https://www.chronicleonline.com/news...56e976f680.htm
    Last edited by Neil; 06-11-2021 at 03:28 PM.

  9. #9
    Senior Member CnCP Legend Neil's Avatar
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    That’s two life sentences from Hurst in a day

    Campbell sentenced to life, avoids return to death row for father's 2010 murder

    John William Campbell was spared a return to death row for the murder of his father almost 11 years ago inside their Inverness home.

    During Campbell’s resentencing the afternoon of Wednesday, June 23, Citrus County Circuit Court Judge Richard “Ric” Howard ordered the 47-year-old to spend the rest of his life in state prison for the Aug. 10, 2010, premeditated murder of 68-year-old John Henry “Jack” Campbell.

    At the end of his brief hearing, a stoic and shackled Campbell appeared to mouth the word “Amen” before he turned to thank his lawyers — assistant public defenders Jessica Roberts and John Spivey — and bailiffs escorted him away.

    Campbell’s alternative to life in prison was Howard’s original punishment for him from March 2013: death by lethal injection.

    “Great weight was given to that pronouncement,” Howard said Wednesday of his past decision.

    “It couldn’t be more well-reasoned, more intellectually-driven — just a spectacular analysis,” Spivey told the Chronicle about Howard’s ruling. “We’re thrilled; it was a hard-won victory.”

    “Obviously, I have to respect the court’s decision,” added Assistant State Attorney Pete Magrino, “but I disagree with it.”

    Campbell’s life sentence will be consecutive to the 95-year prison term he’s been serving for a string of robberies in Inverness he committed leading up to his father’s death, and for leading police the next day on a chase that ended with him crashing into a patrol car, injuring a deputy.

    While Campbell’s conviction of murder from his January 2013 trial still stands, he was guaranteed a new sentence after U.S. and Florida supreme courts ruled it unlawful because his 12 jurors weren’t unanimous (8-4) in recommending death for Campbell.

    Campbell waived his right for another jury to decide his fate, leaving the choice with Howard.

    Howard’s decision on Wednesday was based not only on his recollection of Campbell’s trial, but also from a weeklong presentation earlier in June of evidence and testimony from expert witnesses speaking on Campbell’s character and mentality.

    Campbell's resentencing ends for father's murder; judge to order new punishment

    Reading aloud his reasoning behind Campbell’s revised sentence, Howard said the mitigating factors of Campbell’s crime outweighed its aggravating circumstances.

    “Neither the Florida Supreme Court, nor the Legislature want close death penalty cases,” he said. “They want cases with overwhelming evidence of aggravation. They want no reasonable person to have any doubt about the horrible nature of the crime. ... They want 12-0. That is not this case.”

    Campbell, Howard said, and his siblings were young victims of their parents alcoholism and abuse, with Campbell, the youngest child, suffering the worst from the exposure to alcohol while his mother was pregnant with him.

    “He was doomed in the womb,” the judge said. “She cursed him before he was born.”

    John William Campbell resentence secondary


    Citing the scans doctors showed in court of Campbell’s brain “filled with pockmarks” and “holes showing ... dead brain material,” Howard said Campbell’s fetal alcohol syndrome stunted his growth, deformed him, crippled his capacity for remorse and led to his suicidal actions.

    “There are those who feel that Mr. Campbell is somehow faking the few points that are argued by his lawyers. We can and do believe Mr. Campbell when he tells the sheriff’s deputies in exacting detail ... just how he killed his father,” Howard said. “Why don’t we believe him on his statements when he seeks suicide? A juror would and should listen to everything.”

    However, the judge added, Campbell’s disability doesn’t excuse “the cowardly and brutal murder” of his father, who was killed by multiple strikes to his head from a hammer-hatchet.

    “This is an all too common and a sad domestic relations murder,” Howard said.

    Howard said Campbell’s father was able to escape “a chronically drunken wife” and abandoned his children to “his violent mate” in order to find sanctuary.

    “His children had no such sanctuary,” the judge said.

    Campbell, Howard said, was destined to be “a damaged-at-birth drug addict without any redeeming human values.”

    Howard also noted Campbell’s robbery and home-invasion convictions from the late ‘90s out of Texas, where Campbell spent most of his upbringing until he moved to Citrus County in December 2009, “hardly makes him a criminal mastermind.”

    “Also remember the victim in the more serious case actually disarmed him,” Howard said, referring to when Campbell waited in his ex-sister-in-law’s house and attacked her with a hammer. “This defendant sat silently awaiting arrest.”

    Campbell didn’t speak during his resentencing. Spivey read his written statement to Howard before the judge announced his ruling.

    In his letter Spivey read, Campbell quoted the Bible and the first several verses from the Book of Romans’ chapter 13 — a passage about submitting to the authority of God and to those He gives authority to.

    “We know God gave you this authority, and I‘m willing to submit to that authority,” Campbell wrote, addressing Howard. “I know what it’s like to take a life ... I am guilty in the eyes of the law and God ... I hate myself for what I’ve done ... and I’m willing to accept my fate.”

    https://www.chronicleonline.com/news...0a01f674c.html
    Last edited by Neil; 06-23-2021 at 04:29 PM.

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