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Sonntag, 11. Mai 2014

JANELL SHELTON
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Receiving Life Sentence in Prison
for the 2001 slaying of her longtime
Friend and Supporter Emelie Rainbolt and her beloved Dog Rusty

JANELL SHELTON
ALABAMA OFFENDER INFORMATION:
Source: http://www.doc.state.al.us/



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State authorities have arrested a woman and her son in the murder and kidnapping of a Georgia woman
FROM: newsok.com (August 28th 2001)
Direct Source Link

Janell Shelton, 36, and her son Charles Ingram, 17, were wanted by Georgia authorities for their suspected role in the kidnapping and slaying of Emelie Rainbolt, 58. Georgia officials asked the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation to check an Oklahoma City home to see if Shelton's car was there, said Kym Koch, OSBI spokeswoman.

Murdered by her "Friend": Emelie Rainbolt
The two were arrested Friday after a fugitive task force officer found the car at the house. A third suspect, Darra Glover, 29, was arrested earlier this month in Georgia on assault, kidnapping and theft complaints in Rainbolt's death. Rainbolt's body was found burned in the trunk of her car. She was last seen alive on August 9th. Alabama officials said Rainbolt was still alive when her car was set on fire. She died from burns and smoke inhalation.

Shelton and Rainbolt had a dispute between their competing massage parlor businesses, Koch said.

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Charles Ingram

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Darra Glover

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A fatal friendship?
Emelie Rainbolt's generous nature may have set the stage for her brutal slaying along with her beloved dog

FROM: The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (August 18th 2003)
This story about Rainbolt and Shelton  was developed with information from court documents and interviews with Rainbolt's husband, family and friends.
Direct Source Link

Emelie Rainbolt was always helping people. Friends. Family. Even People she didn't know very well. Once she bought a suit and teeth for a homeless man, said Diane Withers, a friend for 52 years. When the Atlanta businesswoman met Janell(e) Shelton, it was only natural that she would offer help, said her husband, Jim Rainbolt.

Shelton, 38, was raising three children alone, with little money. Over the years, Emelie Rainbolt, 58, gave Shelton often cash, found her jobs, bought food for her children and provided a place for the family to live. When Shelton went to jail on charges of forgery and car theft, Rainbolt bailed her out. When Shelton was in jail, Rainbolt took her children to school.

But after 13 years of friendship and frequent requests for help, Rainbolt wanted to sever ties, her husband said. Police say that when Rainbolt stopped giving and ended the friendship, Shelton ended her life.

Mugshot of Darra Adwana Glover
Today Shelton will be tried in Cleburne County, Alabama, in the kidnapping and slaying of Emelie Rainbolt. Police reports allege that Shelton, in August 2001, along with her eldest child, Charles Ingram, 20, and new acquaintance, Darra A. Glover, a 30-year-old former amateur boxer from Wisconsin, used a stun gun to disable Rainbolt and her dog, "Rusty". The bodies were then thrown into the back of Rainbolt's Cadillac and driven to the Talledega National Forest, just into Alabama on I-20, where the car was set on fire, the reports say.

All three have pleaded not guilty. Shelton's lawyer, William Broome, declined to comment further on the case. Repeated efforts to reach Ingram's lawyer, Debrah Jones, were as well unsuccessful. Glover's lawyer, Randy Brooks, said his client is not guilty and never met Emelie Rainbolt.
Glover used a Stun Gun to disable Emelie

The Background Story


Rainbolt met Shelton when the younger woman answered a help-wanted ad and began working for her massage parlor in DeKalb County, according to police reports.

At first, the women were best friends. But notes scribbled in a notebook Rainbolt kept, to chronicle day-to-day events describe, toward the end of her life, violent encounters between the two women. Pages from the notebook will be used during the trial.

The Talledega National Forest, where the Trio finally murdered Emelie, by setting her car on fire as she lay in the Trunk
Rainbolt was someone people turned to when they needed money fast. She trusted first and questioned later, if ever, her family and friends say.

When business was good, Rainbolt brought home a half-million dollars a year, Withers said. But she was always looking for ways to make more money and investing in schemes proposed by people she barely knew. Too often, Rainbolt was left with bills or merchandise, Withers said, adding that her friend once loaned a man 125.000 Dollars and never got a cent back. "Her money was always for other people," Withers said.

Instead of going to college, Rainbolt helped a friend run a franchise studio of Merle Norman, a family-owned Los Angeles-based cosmetics company with over 2.000 stores in the United States and Canada. At 26, Rainbolt opened her own Merle Norman salon on Memorial Drive in Atlanta. She later moved the store to Northlake Mall. But she wanted more.

North Lake Mall, Atlanta
Through various companies, she sold jewelry, custom-made bras, diet drinks, attic insulation and even motor oil. Some products flew off the shelves. Others flopped. But her cosmetics store was thriving, so she opened another store in Shannon Mall in south Fulton County (which today does not exist anymore).

In the mid-1980s, she suffered a devastating loss due to a bad investment, said her brother, Bill Carroll. Then Rainbolt found during an audit that she owed Merle Norman 44.118  $ according to court papers. The company took back its credit, and soon landlord, contractors, utilities and tax collectors lined up. Unable to pay her bills, she closed the cosmetics studios in the late 1980s.

After years of helping other people get a new start, she needed one herself. Rainbolt decided to attend a local school to become a masseuse. "We were somewhat apprehensive about her getting in a business that seems somewhat seedy," Carroll said. His wife, Flow, added, "In her mind it was the best way to make an income the quickest." Rainbolt opened Stress Reduction Clinic in a strip mall on Lawrenceville Highway. The shop had two rooms and a hot tub.

Customers received a massage in the tub by masseuses in bathing suits. They paid 65 $ an hour, and 125 an hour if the masseuse went to them. The masseuses split half of what they earned with Rainbolt. But one rule governed: No sex. Rainbolt feared that her business would be labeled a brothel and she'd be forced out of business by DeKalb County.

Fortunes rebound


DeKalb County designated Stress Reduction Clinic a training center for novice masseuses. Anyone without a criminal background who wanted a career in massage could learn the basics there. Rainbolt's personal life was looking up too. She met a divorcé from Tampa, James "Jim" Rainbolt, now 73, and they were married within a week in Ringgold. In the early 1990s, as she started her second career, Rainbolt met Shelton, a friendly woman originally from Oklahoma. Like Rainbolt, she was a professional masseuse trying to make ends meet.

Rainbolt hired her and they quickly became good friends.

When Rainbolt was hospitalized for 30 days in 1995 for infected ovaries, Shelton was there to talk and massage Rainbolt's feet. Shelton's three children were attached to Rainbolt, especially her oldest, Charles, said Diane Garrison, the sister of a man Shelton was married to for a short while. In emergencies, especially when her family needed help, Shelton often turned to her friend Rainbolt. Shelton asked Rainbolt to help pay a phone bill and to help the family when they faced eviction, according to Rainbolt's notebook.

Assistance adds up


At some point, Rainbolt began jotting down things she did for Shelton and money she spent on her family. In the notebook, Rainbolt noted: 31 $ for pork chops, 38 for Popeye's Chicken and 222 to rent a van to help the Sheltons to move. Shelton and her children moved a lot, usually staying no longer than three months in one place, Jim Rainbolt said. According to Rainbolt's notebook, they lived in a house in Alpharetta, an apartment in Tucker, then Roswell, Fayetteville and Douglasville. The Sheltons would stay rent-free until evicted. Janelle Shelton still owes the Roswell landlord 2.129 Dollars, according to Fulton County Magistrate Court.

Dodge Durango
In January 2000, Shelton was arrested on car theft charges. She rented a green Dodge Durango and did not return it, according to Fulton court documents. When Shelton was stopped in Cobb County, she provided a false name, according to court documents. Shelton also was wanted in Doraville on motor vehicle violations, where she was fined 515 Dollars.

While in jail, she again turned to Rainbolt, who bailed her out, using her Tucker home as collateral, Jim Rainbolt said. Then Emelie took the family into the home. But Rainbolt was starting to get problems on her own. She lost her business license in DeKalb County when officials cracked down on massage parlors. DeKalb officials said the business was no longer used for training in therapeutic massage and ruled all massage parlors illegal.

Roswell Road in Sandy Springs
By April 2000, Stress Reduction Clinic was closed. Rainbolt rented a two-bedroom apartment on Roswell Road in Sandy Springs and operated a business there illegally.

Rusty
A joy in her life during this time was her dog, Rusty, a weak 13-year-old Cocker Spaniel, who went to work with her every day. When Rusty fell ill, Rainbolt paid 600 $ to have fluid drained from his heart.

Friction grows


Due to Rainbolt's mounting financial problems, Rainbolt asked Shelton to pay weekly rent of 300 $. And rather than providing use of a car, Rainbolt sold her 1987 Mazda to Shelton's son's girlfriend for 1.000 USD. Neither arrangement sat well with Shelton, Jim Rainbolt said, but what drove a wedge between the women was when Rainbolt heard Shelton was planning to leave town. Rainbolt revoked her bond and Shelton was arrested and put back to jail.

Meanwhile Rainbolt continued to be involved with Shelton's family. With Shelton in jail, Rainbolt drove Charles and his girlfriend Antoinette to Ringgold, where they were married without Shelton's approval. "She thought it was the right thing to do," said Bill Carroll, Rainbolt's brother. "When you have a family, you've got to get married. It was values, morals and ethics. Emelie dove into all aspects of her life (Sheltons), personal and financial."

Shelton was released after two weeks in jail. No payments were made on rent or the car, Jim Rainbolt said. Emelie Rainbolt wanted the family off her property, and the couple asked that the Sheltons return a pool table they had loaned the kids. The Rainbolts also took back the Mazda.

Waffle House in Tucker, GA
Shelton showed up at a Waffle House in Tucker, where Jim Rainbolt works part time, he said. "We're not leaving that damn place," he said Shelton told him. "Yes, you are," he said he replied. "That's when she told me she was going to kill us," Jim said.

On April 8th, 2001, Jim Rainbolt, escorted by police, evicted the family from the couple's house. Emelie wrote in her notebook that an argument followed. "She (Shelton) grabbed my stomach and then my shirt around the neck. She said she would kill me within a year then she ran her finger across her neck while saying she would kill me several times."

After his evening shift on August 8th, 2001, James "Jim" Rainbolt phoned the Sandy Springs apartment his wife used as a business. There was no answer. He went to the apartment and found the lights and Television on, but still could not find his wife.

The next day, he called Fulton County Police to file a missing person report, but he was told to wait 24 hours. He called again the next day and told them the couple's Cadillac was gone. Around 7 a.m. on August 10th, 2001, a Park Ranger in the Talledega National Forest, about an hour west of Atlanta, noticed smoke coming from a wooded embankment. It was a badly burned car.


When fire officials popped open the trunk, they found two badly burned skeletons, one of an adult human, the other one that of a dog. In late August 2001, the bodies were identified as those of Emelie Rainbolt and her dog, Rusty.

Police arrested Shelton and her son Charles Ingram in Oklahoma City. Glover was arrested in Atlanta. All pleaded not guilty. Shelton pleaded not guilty by "reason of mental disease or defect." Shelton reported hallucinations and visions and said she was "taunted" by "nameless demons," according to documents filed in Cleburne County Court by a psychologist at Taylor Hardin Secure Medical Facility in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. She said she has suffered from paranoid schizophrenia and manic depressive disorder for 25 years.

Shelton, although, was found competent to stand trial.

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Woman pleads guilty in killing of friend

FROM: The Tuscaloosa News (August 17th 2003)
Direct Source Link

A Georgia woman has pleaded guilty to helping kidnap and kill a woman who had been a friend and benefactor for a decade. Despite Monday's plea by Janell(e) Shelton, 38, she is still on trial in the death of Emelie Rainbolt, 58, of Norcross, Georgia. Shelton's trial will continue because it is a capital murder case. Prosecutors and Shelton's attorneys agreed to seek a life sentence, but the jury must convict her before she can be sentenced.

Rainbolt's skeleton, along with her dog's (Rusty), was found in the trunk of a burned car two years ago. Shelton, a former (Wannebe) masseuse, said she pleaded guilty to help her eldest son, Charles Ingram, to get a lighter punishment if he (she) is found guilty. Charles Ingram is facing murder charges along with an acquaintance, Darra Glover. They have pleaded innocent and will be tried separately later.

Authorities allege that in August 2001, Shelton, Ingram and Glover used a stun gun to disable Rainbolt and her dog, Rusty. Prosecutors say the bodies were then thrown into the back of Rainbolt's Cadillac and driven to the Talladega National Forest, just inside the Alabama-Georgia line on Interstate 20, where the car was set on fire.

Rainbolt and Shelton had worked together at massage parlor that Rainbolt owned. Authorities said Rainbolt had helped Shelton and her family by providing money, jobs, food and other assistance. Prosecutors said Shelton took her friend's life when that help ended.

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Georgia woman receives life sentence for slaying

FROM: The Tuscaloosa News (August 26th 2003)
Direct Source Link

A Georgia woman has received a life sentence in prison for the 2001 slaying of a longtime friend. Janelle Shelton was sentenced Friday to life in prison without the possibility of parole, said Barbara Jordan, Clerk of the Cleburne County, Alabama Circuit Court. Last week, a jury found Shelton guilty of murdering Emelie Rainbolt 58, of Norcross. Authorities alleged Shelton had disabled Rainbolt with a stun gun, locked her in the trunk of her Cadillac and burned her and her Dog "Rusty" alive.


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Additional Information Links:

2002
  • https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/deathpenaltynews/conversations/messages/5013
2003
  • http://old.chronicle.augusta.com/stories/2003/08/20/met_385249.shtml 

Samstag, 10. Mai 2014

VENECIA NICHOLS from Florida
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A young woman at the time
who murdered in Collaboration with
JESSIE MAE GRAHAM
her own adoptive-mother, Ernestine Nichols, in Cold Blood


VENECIA NICHOLS
FLORIDA OFFENDER INFORMATION (as of May 4th, 2014):
Source & Picture from: http://www.dc.state.fl.us/





'A hard-hearted woman'
10 months later, woman, friend charged in mom's death

FROM: The Lakeland Ledger (July 11th 1994)
Direct Source Link

Venecia Nichols walked into the Lakeland Police Department one day in May with a story to tell detectives — how her boyfriend killed her mother 10 months before. But when she left later that day it was in handcuffs. And she and an accomplice had been charged with the murder.

Police say Nichols, 24, smothered her adoptive mother with a pillow while she slept, in order to inherit the woman's two modest houses, car and 9.700 USD in savings and life insurance. "She's a hard-hearted woman," said Lakeland police Sgt. Randy Harrison. "She was a suspect in the thing from the very beginning, but we just didn't have enough evidence to do anything with it," he said. "We tried to talk with her before and she wouldn't cooperate with us." Venecia Nichols' mother, Ernestine, was a healthy, friendly and active 68-year-old, neighbors said. She mowed her own lawn, tended the garden at her periwinkle and peach home on Valencia Street 116 W in north-central Lakeland, cared for her invalid Graham brother and of ten entertained friends from the Beulah Baptist Church.

Valencia Street 116 W in north-central Lakeland, the place where Ernestine lived and died
But in the morning of July 24th, her dead body was found lying on her bed, with a pillow over her head. Venecia told police she'd been out all night with her boyfriend, Sherman Lattimore. When they returned about 7:50 in the morning, they discovered the back door open, with her mothers wallet, papers and cable television converter strewn across the lawn. It looked like the place had been burglarized. A television was missing.

Then they discovered the body of Ernestine. Judge Douglas Alexander (Ernestine's 76-year-old invalid brother) was asleep in another room and heard nothing. But earlier in the evening he overheard his sister and niece arguing. "They were fussing," he said, and Ernestine told her daughter not to go out. "Instead Venecia said, 'Well, I'm going,' and I heard her slam the door."

 Alexander Melamud, M.D., M.A.
Sometime during the night Ernestine Nichols died of cardiac arrhythmia, an autopsy showed. But the manner of death was classified as undetermined. Associate Medical Examiner Alexander Melamud told police, that Nichols could have been smothered, but died of a heart attack before she suffocated.

Seeds of trouble


Venecia's uncle, Nick Alexander of Brooksville, said, "I suspected her right away. When she came to the funeral she sort of dropped her head and looked away." Alexander's sister and her late husband, Lonzer, adopted Venecia when she was a little girl, and the small family got along well until Venecia got to be about 11 years old, he said. "I tried to tell her how she should've never done something like that (adopting), because she didn't know the background of the child," Nick Alexander said. "I was thinking something like this might happen."

As Venecia grew older she grew more insolent, he said, and the fights with Ernestine grew worse and more frequent. "She tried to get her to stay at home," Judge Alexander said, but Venecia would "leave home and stay three or four weeks away." "My sister was determined to stop her," Nick Alexander said, but "I told my sister to let her go on about her business."



Both of her uncles said that Venecia got "mixed up in a crowd that abused drugs.", though police could not confirm this. Once she was staying at Judge Alexander's home when he was at a veteran's hospital, and she racked up a 700 Dollar phone bill that she never paid, said Nick Alexander, 83, Ernestine's oldest brother.

When Ernestine Nichols died, Venecia inherited her mother's house, at 116 W. Valencia St., and the house across the street, which she had been renting out. Judge Alexander said that Venecia got 4.000 USD from her mother's life insurance policy, another 4.000 from her bank account plus 1.700 Dollar of his money his sister was keeping in her account. There was also a 1985 Cadillac and several things Judge Alexander said Ernestine had bought for her daughter: a 1984 Ford Mustang, a fur coat, and a baby grand piano.

"She kept everything in the house," he said. "She took it all and pawned it." He said his sister also had four television sets, so he asked Venecia for one of them. She refused. "She took them all and got rid of them," he said. "She pawned them. Got money for drugs."

"I believed something had happened to her,(Ernestine)" once Venecia started selling all of Ernestine Nichols' possessions, said Nichols' sister, 71-year-old Annie Ruth Hicks. Nick Alexander said the last time he saw his niece was in August, about 10 days after his sister's funeral.

He found her in the yard at the house. "I asked her what happened," he said. "She dropped her head and she couldn't explain herself." He could never get hold of her again after that, and is sure she was avoiding him.

An unlikely suspect as the months passed, Sgt. Harrison said, the family vented its frustration over the case. Convinced they knew who committed the murder, they felt police weren't doing anything about it, he said. "People don't realize it takes a lot of time," he said. "But that's difficult to explain to a family."

Then on May 11th, three days after Mother's Day, Venecia Nichols walked into the Lakeland police headquarters and asked to talk to Sgt. Harrison. She wanted to implicate her boyfriend in her mother's murder, Harrison said. But detectives had been busy the previous 10 months, talking to sources and Nichols' acquaintances. Each tidbit of information they provided helped form a clearer picture of that what really happened in Ernestine Nichols' bedroom that July night.

Annie Ruth Hicks, Ernestines Sister, died in December 1999
And with that, detectives were able to explain why the murder couldn't have happened the way Venecia said it did. "Apparently, it impressed her," Harrison said. "She was pretty stead-fast there for a few minutes, then I think she realized it was over with."

Earlier in the day she'd met with a real-estate agent, trying to sell some of her mother's property. But the deal was complicated by the fact that the case was still open, Harrison said. "There was a method to her madness. She needed somebody in jail," he said. But once she delivered herself to the police, and they confronted her with the information they had, police say she folded.

According to the arrest report, she gave a taped statement saying, that she and a friend, 23-year-old Jessie Mae Graham, talked about killing her mother for the inheritance, the night of July 23rd. She told police "that after her mother fell asleep they entered her bedroom and Venecia watched as Jessie Mae Graham killed her mother by holding a pillow over her face," the arrest report said. The report said also that Nichols promised Graham a car for her assistance.

837 N. Iowa Avenue in Lakeland, the place where Jessie Graham was living at the time
Police then picked up Graham at the house the women shared at 837 N. Iowa Avenue, and she came back to the station and agreed to talk. Graham told police "she held Ernestine Nichols' legs down, while Venecia smothered her.", the arrest report said. "During their discussion prior to the murder Venecia mentioned stabbing her mother but dismissed this method due to the mess it would make, it was then decided to smother her," the report said.

Ernestine
After Graham gave her statement, Lakeland detective Joe Louden said, that she told him: "I'm glad it's over.".

Under Florida law it doesn't matter who held the pillow; if both women participated in the crime, both could face the death penalty if convicted of first-degree murder.

In spite of Venecia's apparent admission, her boyfriend, Sherman Lattimore, said, he still believes she's innocent. She told police they were together the night of the murder, and he reiterated that story last week. "I don't believe that she did" kill her mother, he said. "We were out for that night."

Now Nichols and Graham (who is Lattimore's cousin) are sitting in the Polk County Jail charged with first degree murder. Nichols wouldn't comment for this article without the consent of her attorney, Dan Brawley of Lakeland, who refused to allow it. He also refused to comment.

Nick Alexander said a woman, who visited Nichols in jail recently told him she asked for a 5 Dollar loan from her uncle.

"Hell, I won't give her a damn thing," Nick Alexander said. "I hope they burn her. They can throw her in the fire and burn her up, she done my sister like that."

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Woman sentenced to life in jail for killing 68-year-old adoptive mother for inheritance
FROM: The Lakeland Ledger (April 28th 1995)
Direct Source Link

Venecia Nichols, 25, will spend the next half of her life in prison for killing her adoptive mother, Ernestine Nichols, for a 10.000 US-Dollar inheritance. A jury found Venecia Nichols guilty of first-degree murder in the July 24th, 1994, suffocation death of her adoptive mother in their North Lakeland home.


Circuit Judge Daniel True Andrews immediately sentenced her to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years. Prosecutor Cass Castillo told a jury that the Nichols' case was about "a mother's love and a daughter's greed." Ernestine Nichols loved her daughter, but Venecia Nichols "rebelled and chose the streets," Castillo said. Nichols went on an immediate spending spree after the murder because "she had no emotion for her mother.", Castillo said. "It was like killing any-body," he said.

Nichols showed no emotion after the jury announced its verdict. Jurors deliberated for four hours. The woman that prosecutors said helped Nichols commit the murder, Jessie Mae Graham, 24, pleaded guilty to second-degree in March 1995 and testified against Nichols.


Graham reached an agreement with prosecutors that calls for her to receive between 10 and 20 years in prison. The exact length of the sentence will be up to Andrews. Nichols' defense attorney, Dan Brawley told the jury Thursday that Graham's plea agreement "was the deal of a lifetime.'

Brawley told the jury that Graham was the dominant woman in the relationship between her and Venecia Nichols. When it comes to manipulation, Brawley said, "Jessie Mae Graham takes the cake". The defendant is a big woman, Brawley said. "but no match for Jessie Mae Graham." Castillo said.

Both women were guilty because "They were soul-mates, in murder." Castillo said.

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Plea bargain gets murderer 20 years

FROM: The Lakeland Ledger (June 22nd 1995)
Direct Source Link

After testifying against her friend in the murder of the friend's mother, Jessie Mae Graham of Lakeland was sentenced to 20 years in prison. Graham and Venecia Michelle Nichols had been charged in the July 1993 murder of Ernestine Nichols, 68, of Lakeland, Florida. The two women decided to kill Nichols' mother to get her money and valuables, according to court documents.


The murder went unsolved for almost a year, until Venecia Nichols went to the Lakeland police to say that she and Graham discussed killing Ernestine . She said it was Graham who held a pillow over her mother's face to kill her. Under a plea agreement signed in March 1993, Graham, 24 at the time, was allowed to plead to second-degree murder if she testified against her friend. If convicted at trial on the first-degree murder charge. Graham faced life in prison without the possibility of release for 25 years.

Sentencing guidelines suggested between 10 and 20 years in prison for Graham. Circuit Court Judge Daniel True Andrews sentenced her to the maximum, followed by 10 years of probation. If she qualifies for early release, Graham will serve about half of the sentence. Venecia Nichols, 25, was convicted in April of first-degree murder and is serving a 25-year minimum sentence. Judge Andrews requested that the two women not be sent to the same prison.

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Jessie Grahams Mugshot 2004
Seems she did not learn from the 1st Case. 2nd Degree Murder ? See following Links:
  • http://www.florida-mugshot-locator.com/Counties/Polk-County/Jessie-Mae-Graham.23865333.html
  • http://www.justmugshots.com/florida/polk-county/15077652
Sherman Lattimore`s Mugshot(s):



For Details about Lettimore see following Links (Polk County):
  • http://florida.arrests.org/Arrests/Sherman_Lattimore_3622548/
  • http://florida.arrests.org/Arrests/Sherman_Lattimore_3616219/