South Carolina man who killed his five
children sentenced to death
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[June 14, 2019]
By Harriet McLeod
CHARLESTON, S.C. (Reuters) - A South
Carolina jury sentenced a man to death on Thursday after convicting him
of murdering his five young children at their mobile home in 2014 before
driving their decomposing bodies through several states and dumping them
in Alabama.
The jurors voted unanimously to give Timothy Jones the death penalty.
The same jury last week found him guilty of the murders of Merah, 8;
Elias, 7; Nahtahn, 6; Gabriel, 2; and Abigail, 1.
Jurors considered whether to give Jones the death penalty or life in
prison without possibility of parole. Jones, 37, a divorced former
software engineer, did not testify at the trial in Lexington, South
Carolina.
In closing arguments on Thursday, prosecutor Rick Hubbard said the
murders of children under age 11 warranted the death penalty.
"Let the punishment fit the crime," Hubbard told jurors. "He is a mass
murderer."
Casey Secor, the defense attorney, reminded jurors that Jones' mother
was institutionalized with schizophrenia, a sometimes inherited mental
illness.
"How much more death does the Jones family have to endure?" defense
attorney Casey Secor said. "The death penalty is never required in any
case."
During the week-long penalty phase of the trial, the jury saw graphic
photos of police evidence and heard emotional testimony from the
children's school teachers and relatives.
Jones' father, Timothy Jones Sr., pleaded for his son's life and took
his shirt off in court to show his back covered with tattooed images of
his slain grandchildren.
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Jones' ex-wife Amber Kyzer testified that she hoped for mercy for
Jones even as condemned what he had done.
"He did not show my children mercy by any means. But my kids loved
him," Kyzer said. "Nothing justifies what you've done," she told
Jones.
Jones was arrested in Mississippi in September 2014 and led police
to the children's bodies, wrapped in garbage bags, in Alabama. He
confessed to police that his middle son, Nahtahn, died after Jones
punished him and that he later strangled the other four children.
Jones said in a 2014 phone call from prison played in court that he
"snapped" when he killed Nahtahn, 6, because the child was crying
for his mother. Jones said a "gremlin voice" told him to kill the
rest of the children, a psychiatrist testified during the guilt
phase of the trial.
A prosecutor said Jones was a selfish, evil man who abused his
children and murdered them out of rage and fear of being caught.
(Editing by Frank McGurty, Tom Brown and Susan Thomas)
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