On this day (January 7, 2007), a
couple from Knoxville, Tennessee, by the names of Channon Christian and
Christopher Newsom were murdered. I will post information from them from
Wikipedia before giving my comments and condolences.
Channon Gail Christian, 21, and Hugh Christopher Newsom, Jr., 23. |
Channon Gail Christian, 21, and Hugh
Christopher Newsom, Jr., 23, were a couple from Knoxville, Tennessee. They
were raped, tortured and murdered after being kidnapped early on the morning of
January 7, 2007. Their vehicle had been carjacked. Five suspects were arrested
and charged in the case. The grand jury indicted four of the suspects on counts
of capital murder, robbery, kidnapping, rape and theft, while a fifth was indicted
on the federal level.
Of the four charged at the state
level, three (Letalvis D. Cobbins, Lemaricus Davidson and George Thomas) had
multiple prior felony convictions. After a jury trial, Lemaricus Davidson was
sentenced to death by lethal injection and Letalvis Cobbins and George Thomas
were sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Vanessa
Coleman has been convicted of facilitating the crimes and sentenced to 53 years
in prison, and Eric Dewayne Boyd has been convicted of federal charges as
accessory after the fact to carjacking and sentenced to 18 years in prison. The
state convictions were aside because of misconduct by the presiding judge, who
has since been disbarred; retrials (pending appeals in all except the Coleman
case, whose retrial is not being contested) had been tentatively slated for the
summer and fall of 2012, but in May 2012 the Tennessee Supreme Court vacated
the motion for new trials. All of the state convictions were permitted to stand
and the defendants remain incarcerated pending appeals.
Victims:
Christian moved from Louisiana to
Tennessee with her family in 1997. She was a graduate of Farragut High School
and a senior majoring in sociology at the University of Tennessee. In 2008, a
Golf Tournament and Memorial Foundation were established in Channon Christian's
memory to provide a scholarship for a Farragut High School Senior to attend the
University of Tennessee.
Newsom, a former baseball player for
the Halls High School Red Devils, graduated in 2002. He was interred at
Woodhaven Memorial Gardens. A little-league baseball tournament in Newsom's
honor was held at the Halls Community Park in 2008 and 2009. A memorial
scholarship is given annually to a graduating Halls High School baseball
player.
Crime:
Christian and Newsom were leaving an
apartment together to go to a friend's party when they were abducted from the
apartment complex parking lot.
Christian's parents found her
abandoned Toyota 4-Runner two blocks away from the Chipman Street house the
following Monday with the help of her mobile phone provider. An envelope
recovered from the vehicle yielded fingerprint evidence that led police to
Lemaricus Davidson and 2316 Chipman Street. When police went to the address on
Tuesday, January 9, they found the house unoccupied and Christian's body in a
bin in the kitchen.
According to the testimony of the Knox
County Acting Medical Examiner Dr. Darinka Mileusnic-Polchan at the subsequent
trial of Eric Boyd, Newsom was repeatedly sodomized with an object and then
blindfolded, gagged, arms and feet bound and his head covered. Barefoot, he was
dragged outside the house to a set of nearby railroad tracks. He was shot in
the back of his head, neck and back and his body was then set on fire.
According to the testimony of the
medical examiner, Channon's death came after hours of torture, having suffered
injuries to her vagina, anus and mouth. She was raped with an unidentified
object and beaten in the head. It was also reported that her body was scrubbed
with bleach which was also poured down her throat, in an attempt by her
attackers to remove DNA evidence, while Channon was still alive. She was then
bound with curtains and strips of bedding, her face covered with a bin liner
and her body stashed within five large bin bags, before being placed inside a
residential waste disposal unit and covered with sheets. The medical examiner
said there was evidence that Channon slowly suffocated to death.
Suspects and indictments
The four indicted were:- George Geovonni "Detroit" Thomas (b. January 23, 1983), 24, who faced a total of 46 charges. Thomas was indicted on 16 counts of felony murder growing out of the rape, robbery, kidnapping, and theft of Christian and Newsom, 2 counts of premeditated murder, 2 counts of especially aggravated robbery, 4 counts of especially aggravated kidnapping, 20 counts of aggravated rape, and 2 counts of theft.
- Letalvis "Rome" Cobbins (b. December 20, 1982), 28, who faced the same 46 charges as Thomas. He has also been charged with assaulting a correctional officer while incarcerated pending trial. In 2003, Cobbins was convicted of third-degree attempted robbery in New York state. He and Davidson are brothers. Cobbins was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
- Lemaricus Devall "Slim" Davidson (b. June 13, 1981), 30, who faced the same 46 charges as Thomas. Previously Davidson had just completed a five-year sentence in Tennessee on a previous felony conviction for carjacking and aggravated robbery on August 5, 2006. Davidson, Tennessee Department of Corrections inmate#328954, is incarcerated at the Riverbend Maximum Security Institution in Nashville.
- Vanessa Coleman (b. June 29, 1988), 18, who was arrested by the Lebanon Police Department in Lebanon, Kentucky. She faced 40 Tennessee state charges. Coleman was indicted on 12 counts of felony murder growing out of the rape, robbery, kidnapping, and theft of Christian and Newsom, 1 count of premeditated murder (of Christian only), 1 count of especially aggravated robbery (of Newsom only), 4 counts of especially aggravated kidnapping, 20 counts of aggravated rape, and 2 counts of theft. She was convicted and sentenced to 53 years in prison on July 30, 2010. She described her time in Knoxville as "an adventure."
In
each indictment, the large number of rape counts were included to provide a
range of options for prosecutors, not to reflect the number of rapes which
actually occurred.
- Eric DeWayne "E" Boyd, 34, was arrested in connection with the fatal carjacking, though not indicted by the Knox County grand jury. Boyd faced federal charges in United States district court as an accessory after the fact for helping the suspects evade the police. Later, Boyd was also accused by Thomas and Cobbins of rape and murder, and a search warrant was obtained for his DNA. The accusations by Thomas and Cobbins did not result in state charges against Boyd, but he is serving 18 years in federal prison on his conviction as an accessory to the carjacking.
First trials
The four suspects indicted in Knox County
were originally scheduled to be tried separately, at trials scheduled between
May and August 2008. In February 2008, the trial date for the subjects indicted
in Knox County was moved to 2009. Judge Richard Baumgartner allowed Thomas and
Cobbins to be tried by juries from Nashville, Davidson County. In an apparent
attempt to force the prosecution to try the case with the least forensic
evidence first, the attorneys for Thomas filed a motion for a speedy trial,
arguing there was no forensic link between their client and the crime scene.
Thomas was granted the motion and was scheduled to go on trial on August 11,
2008. Judge Baumgartner ruled that Thomas' phone calls made from the jailhouse
to his acquaintances were admissible as evidence.
District Attorney Randy Nichols
announced that the state would seek the death penalty for both Cobbins (the
first to go to trial) and Coleman if convicted. Davidson was also indicted for
a second robbery which was committed after the murders. The publicity against
the accused led the defense to argue that a change of venue was required in
order to ensure a fair trial. The state argued that an impartial jury could be
found during voir dire, and the presiding judge subsequently denied the
motion as "premature". Judge Baumgartner threatened to ban the Newsom
family from the courtroom after Davidson's attorney, Doug Trant, was called a
"jerk" after interrupting a discussion among the family.
Verdicts
On April 16, 2008, Eric Boyd was found
guilty in Federal court of being an accessory to a fatal carjacking and for
failing to report the location of a known fugitive. Boyd's was the first case
to go to trial, and he was the only suspect not charged with murder. He was
sentenced to the maximum of 18 years in Federal prison. He is currently
incarcerated at Beckley FCI.
On August 25, 2009, Letalvis D.
Cobbins was found guilty of the murders of Channon Christian and Christopher
Newsom. Cobbins faced the possibility of the death penalty because he was
convicted of first degree felony murder in the case of Christian. He was found
guilty of facilitation of murder for Newsom but he was acquitted of Newsom's
rape. The jurors worked about 10 hours Monday and on Tuesday morning before
reaching a verdict. On August 26, Cobbins was sentenced to life without parole.
On October 28, 2009, Lemaricus Devall
Davidson was found guilty on all counts. He was found not guilty on three
counts of the aggravated rape of Christopher Newsom but was found guilty of the
lesser included charges of facilitation of rape. The jury sentenced Lemaricus
Davidson to death on 4 of the conviction counts.
On December 8, 2009, George Thomas was
found guilty on all counts, including the ones the other defendants were
acquitted of despite his case being based solely on circumstantial evidence and
testimony. The jury returned a sentence of life in prison without the
possibility of parole on each of the 4 capital convictions.
The convictions of Boyd, Cobbins,
Davidson and Thomas left Vanessa Coleman as the last defendant to face trial.
Coleman's case is complicated by the fact that, while she was granted immunity
by federal authorities for testimony in the federal case on the car-jacking,
the state courts have ruled that the federal grant of immunity does not extend
to the state charges on murder and rape. On May 13, 2010, Coleman was acquitted
of first degree murder but found guilty on lesser charges. On July 30, 2010,
she was sentenced to 53 years behind bars.
Appeals and retrials
The defendants in the state cases (excluding
Eric Boyd, who was convicted at the federal level) all appealed their
convictions. During this time, the sentencing judge, Richard Baumgartner, one
of Knox County's three Criminal Court judges, was forced to resign from the
bench in March 2011 after admitting he had a drug addiction and had been having
sex and purchasing pills during breaks in court sessions, thus impairing his
ability to conduct trials during his final two years on the bench and
compromising all trials he held during this time, including the initial trials
reviewed above. Baumgartner has since been disbarred and is under federal
investigation. On December 1, 2011, seven weeks after Baumgartner's disbarment
became final, Judge Jon Kerry Blackwood granted new trials to all four state defendants
after a TBI investigation outlined evidence that Baumgartner was likely
impaired while presiding over those trials (other criminal cases heard during
the time period were also overturned for retrial). Jurors expressed
dissatisfaction with the decision, noting that they, not Baumgartner, who
favored the defense during the trial, convicted the killers.
Blackwood tentatively set retrials for
between June and November 2012, pending state appeals of the decisions, and set
bail at $1 million USD for Coleman, the only defendant who did not receive a
sentence with no chance of parole. Separately, Blackwood denied a change of
venue, but did allow for potential jurors to be brought in from outside of Knox
County. Because of double jeopardy, the defendants will only face the sentences
they already received at maximum; as such, only Davidson can face capital
punishment. The decision to hold retrials for Cobbins, Davidson, and Thomas
(the decision to retry Coleman was not appealed) was affirmed in a split decision
by the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals on April 13. In May of 2012, the
Tennessee Supreme Court overturned Blackwood's ruling ordering new trials for
Cobbins, Davidson, and Thomas, commenting that its "order should not be
construed as condoning or excusing" Baumgartner's misconduct.
In June 2012, prosecutors filed to
have Judge Blackwood recused from the case after he invoked the "13th
juror rule" to reverse himself and decline to grant new trials for Cobbins
and Davidson (the motion for recusal also applies to Thomas' case, although he
is still set to have a retrial). The motion cites Blackwood's emotional
involvement in the case as potentially interfering with a fair trial. Following
Blackwood's recusal, Senior Judge Walter Kurtz was named to oversee the
retrials, which have not yet occurred as of December 2012.
Reaction and accusations of racism
The national news media was criticized
for allegedly ignoring the story because the victims were white and the
suspects black; most news reports came from local media and online news sites.
This criticism was also fueled by erroneous early reports of dismemberment and
mutilations. Most of the original reports with misinformation (reported from a
federal deputy US Marshal after the suspects' arrest in Kentucky) were later
denied by the District Attorney.
The president of Criminal Justice
Journalists, an association of crime, court and prison writers, editors and
producers, said, "I can't say that this one would have had any more
coverage if five whites had been accused of doing these things to two blacks,
absent a blatant racial motive... as bad as this crime is, the apparent absence
of any interest group involvement or any other 'angle' might also explain the
lack of coverage." Police Chief Sterling Owen IV said that there is no
indication the crimes were racially motivated and that the murders and assault
"appears to have been a random violent act." "There is
absolutely no proof of a hate crime," said John Gill, special counsel to Knox
County District Atty. Randy Nichols. "We know from our investigation that
the people charged in this case were friends with white people, socialized with
white people, dated white people. So not only is there no evidence of any
racial animus, there's evidence to the contrary."
Some commentators continued to
disagree, claiming that such a crime would include a motive of racial hatred.
Conservative political commentator Michelle Malkin repeated this accusation on
her blog and on Fox News' O'Reilly Factor program. Prior to the DA's
statement, Newsom's mother sympathized with the "hate crime" position
stating, "It may have started out as a carjacking, but what it developed
into was blacks hating whites." Christian's father (addressing those whom
he believes used his daughter's death to further their own agenda) stated
"[the crime] ain't about you."
The case also attracted the attention
of white supremacists. On May 27, 2007, around 30 white supremacists led by
Alex Linder rallied in downtown Knoxville in protest of the murders. They were
met by counter-protestors, many dressed as clowns (parodying the Ku Klux Klan).
After the protest, syndicated
columnist Leonard Pitts dismissed claims that the crime was underreported,
citing a 2001 report that found "Blacks and Latinos are underrepresented
in news media as victims of crime and significantly overrepresented as
perpetrators." Pitts added that he was "unkindly disposed toward the
crackpots, incendiaries and flat-out racists who have chosen this tragedy upon
which to take an obscene and ludicrous stand" and that they and any other
white Americans who felt victimized by the perceived under reporting could
"cry me a river."
The house at 2316 Chipman Street was
bought by Waste Connections, a national garbage collection company with a depot
next door to the east, in the fall of 2008. Waste Connections subsequently
demolished the house, and replaced it with a simple memorial to Newsom and
Christian.
An October 16, 2009 article in The
Daily Mail stated, "Ironically, the case has now generated more
publicity surrounding the furor over whether or not political correctness was
behind the US media’s decision to largely ignore the story than it did for the
murders themselves." The same article quoted commentator Michelle Malkin
as pointing out, "This case – an attractive white couple murdered by five
black thugs – doesn’t fit any political agenda. It’s not a useful crime.
Reverse the races and just imagine how the national media would cover the story
of a young black couple murdered by five white assailants."
Here
are other websites that have information about their murders:
Channon Christian's
father, Gary Christian, seemed to agree, using his turn on the witness stand
Friday to remind Baumgartner of his own characterization of the crimes as
unspeakably horrific. Gary Christian also on Friday for the first time, in what
has been a series of back-to-back sentencing hearings, projected not his rage,
but his pain.
"For
me personally, you took my baby," he said, his voice soft and thick. "You took my opportunity to say yes to a young man one
day. You took my (wedding) dance away. You took my opportunity to hold her
child, my grandbaby."
His wife, however,
took direct aim at Coleman, reading entries Coleman made in a journal in which
she characterized her time in Knoxville during the crime spree as "an
adventure."
"I
guess you wanted souvenirs from your adventure," Deena Christian
said, referring to her daughter's belongings found in Coleman's possession. "That's sick."
"I think the jury has
let us down," said Mary Newsom, mother of murder
victim Chris Newsom. "I think they've let Channon
and Chris down. We were hoping for the death penalty."
"The Christians and the Newsoms got justice today," said Channon Christian's mother, Deena, as the
families' press conference started.
"I finally get to go see her (my daughter) and tell her, one
down," said Channon's father, Gary,
referring to a promise he made to his daughter to get justice for her
kidnapping, torture and murder.
When
asked what they thought of Davidson's attorneys already seeking a mistrial,
Deena said, "He's been crying since day one. Let
him cry."
The
family of torture-slaying victims Channon Christian and Chris Newsom praised a
jury's sweeping guilty verdict against defendant George Thomas today and said
they want to see him receive the death penalty.
"They took our kids' lives away," Newsom's mother Mary said this
afternoon, referring to Thomas and his co-defendants. "We
feel like they should take his life, too."
Check
out these videos to see the reaction of the victims’ families and Lemaricus Davidson being sentenced to death:
THE LATEST NEWS:
Channon
Christian's family invites public to memorial service
8:55
PM, Jan 2, 2013
An East Tennessee family has spent the
last nearly six years of their lives grieving in the public eye. Now, for the
first time ever, they're inviting the community to be a part of that process.
Next week marks the six-year
anniversary of the day Channon Christian's family learned their daughter was
dead. She was raped and murdered in 2007 alongside her boyfriend, Chris Newsom.
Each year, Christian's family meets at
her graveside to remember their daughter and her life.
Now, as they potentially face more
re-trials for their daughter's accused killers, the family is inviting the
public to be a part of Channon's memorial service.
The memorial is set for Monday at
Highland West Memorial Park in West Knoxville. It's slated to begin at 5:30
p.m., and everyone is invited.
Christian and Chris Newsom's family
have already faced one re-trial in their children's murders. They could face
three more. They should find out about the status of those in the coming weeks.
Chris
Newsom's family invites public to memorial service
5:17
PM, Jan 3, 2013
Next week marks six years since the
deaths of murdered Knox County couple Channon Christian and Chris Newsom.
The couple was carjacked, raped and
tortured on January 6, 2007. They were killed separately the next day.
We told you previously the family
of Channon Christian is inviting the public to join them
for a memorial service at Highland West Memorial Park.
Now the family of Chris Newsom is extending
the same invitation.
The Newsoms will hold a memorial
service Sunday afternoon at 3 at Woodhaven Memorial Gardens in Claxton. The
family is encouraging everyone who comes to bring a balloon to release in his
memory.
Channon Christian's memorial service
will be at 5:30 Monday night at Highland West Memorial Park in West Knoxville.
http://www.wbir.com/news/article/248042/2/Chris-Newsoms-family-invites-public-to-memorial-service
Public memorials planned for Channon Christian, Chris Newsom
Posted: Jan 05, 2013 7:08 AM
By
JOSH AULT
6
News Reporter
KNOXVILLE
(WATE) - Monday will mark six years since the brutal murders of a young
Knoxville couple and the start of a traumatic chapter for their families and
the community.
Family
and friends will hold a memorial services for victims Channon Christian and
Chris Newsom on Sunday and Monday.
The
events have been private in previous years, but this time Chris and Channon's
parents are opening them up to the public.
"We
don't want to forget Chris," said Newsom's mother, Mary Newsom.
"Chris was a good kid. He was a great person."
"After
six years we still don't have justice for those kids," said Newsom's
father, Hugh Newsom. "We haven't had a life in six years."
Gary
Christian, the father of Channon, says there are many things he misses about
his daughter.
"I
miss her coming down and sitting in my chair, in my lap," said Christian.
Both
families say with the pending retrials they need the community's support.
"Until
this year that memorial service has been contained to family and real close
friends," said Christian. "This year they had a couple of phone calls
and they were wanting to open it up to the public with what's all going on with
the court cases and everything."
The
first memorial service will be held Sunday at 3 p.m. at Chris Newsom's grave at
Woodhaven Memorial Garden on Edgemoor
Road in Claxton.
The
next memorial will be held Monday at 5:30 p.m. at Highland West Memorial Park in
West Knoxville where Channon is buried.
"We
just need the communities support, continuing support," said Hugh Newsom.
"We've have it, but we still need it. Undoubtedly we are not through with
the process yet."
If
you do decide to come to either memorial the families ask that you please come
early so parking can be accommodated before the memorials start.
COMMENTS AND CONDOLENCES:
To the parents of
Channon Christian and Christopher Newsom,
After hearing your victim impact
statements, it did move me to tears. I am terribly sorry for your losses. I
walk in the shoes of any murder victim and their loved ones regardless of their
race and nationality. If this was before 1960’s in the USA or in the UK, the
five gang members who killed the couple would have all been hanged due to the
Joint Enterprise Law.
When I
heard that the Abolitionists in Tennessee are trying hard to abolish the death
penalty, I often remind people of the loss of your children to tell them to
care for murder victims and not forget them. I will not and never forget
Channon Christian and Christopher Newsom. May they both Rest In Peace.
Here is an article from Ashley Herzog that will cheer the family up.
You won't ever find a way to have a normal life, I know my entire family has been destroyed my sister was killed by some evil person sum twenty years ago I'm in my 30's but still it kills me to watch everyone else be able to get married have children ect,she was robbed my family was robbed your entire family both sides robbed of that because if it were a black couple it be all over the news why Obama al sharp ton jess Jackson white lives matter justice for families of horrific violence may none of the monster involved in this case be allowed to walk the streets I pray they remain in prison in cages like the vile disgusting dirty fucking cotton picking cowardly shameless N........ deserve nothing more then to rott in prison
ReplyDeleteIt doesn’t matter what color they come in... they are monsters, abominations of their own thinking, their own choices. I don’t know why we sentence them to life, it would be more merciful for all involved the put them out of their misery. Their actions derive from deep, diseased pain that can’t be cured - what is the purpose of locking them in a cage to decay? This is one of the most horrific cases I’ve heard about in a very long time. If there is any justice to be had, it would be finding the true cause of their actions and trying to heal it in others.
ReplyDelete