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Post Info TOPIC: What do you think?


Hermes

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I'm kind of on the fence with this.  He has no criminal record, but I can totally see some one's heart racing to the point of a heart attack in this situation (that he created.)  I think life without parole at the very least is kind of harsh.

thoughts?

NC police: Fleeing robber scared woman to death

An undated photo provided by the Gaston County Jail shows Larry Whitfield. Whitfield is ch...


Thu Jan 29, 10:12 AM EST

Larry Whitfield was on foot, his getaway car wrecked, his rookie attempt at robbing a bank thwarted by a set of locked doors, according to detectives. Looking for a place to hide, police say, he found himself inside the home of a frightened old woman.

There's no evidence Whitfield ever touched 79-year-old Mary Parnell. Authorities say he even told the grandmother of five he didn't want to hurt her, directing her to sit in a chair in her bedroom. But investigators have no doubt he terrified her so much that she died of a heart attack.

Now Whitfield, a 20-year-old with no prior criminal record, is charged with first-degree murder, a rare defendant accused of literally scaring a person to death.

"He could've avoided all this by turning himself in, and life would've went on for Mrs. Parnell," said Capt. Calvin Shaw of the Gaston County Police Department, which handled the investigation into her death last fall.

Under a legal concept known as the felony murder rule, it's not uncommon for prosecutors to bring a murder charge against a defendant who doesn't intentionally harm a victim. The rule exists in some form in every state and lets authorities bring murder charges whenever someone dies during a crime such as burglary, rape, or kidnapping.

"If you're committing any of those offenses and a person dies, that's first-degree murder," said Locke Bell, Gaston County's district attorney and the prosecutor in Whitfield's case.

Prosecutors typically use the rule to charge all of the suspects with murder when, say, one of them shoots a teller during a bank robbery. But cases of prosecutors using the felony murder rule to charge a defendant with scaring someone to death are isolated.

Jurors convicted Willie Ingram in 1982 after 64-year-old Melvin Cooper died from a heart attack in his New York home, caused by what medical experts said was the "emotional upset" of a robbery attempt. Likewise, a Pittsburgh jury convicted Mark Fisher last year in the 2003 murder of 89-year-old Freda Dale, who medical examiners said died in her home from a fear-induced heart attack.

Whitfield is being held without bail, and his attorney and his family declined to comment. He's charged with several other crimes in addition to murder, and has not entered a plea. He faces life without parole if convicted.

Authorities said Whitfield and an accomplice, armed with semiautomatic rifles, planned to rob the Fort Financial Credit Union in Gastonia in September. The bank's staff locked its security doors as the men approached, leaving them stuck outside. They fled but crashed on Interstate 85. Officials said the other man was caught shortly after the crash, while Whitfield ended up at Parnell's doorstep.

Parnell's husband came home from a funeral and found her around 4:30 p.m., slumped over in the chair. Whitfield, police say, had fled after Mary Parnell went into cardiac arrest and broke into another nearby home. He was arrested while walking in the neighborhood.

Parnell's autopsy report said she had an enlarged heart, was overweight and had advanced liver disease, kidney disease, hypertension, heart disease and was a diabetic, all of which were decided to be secondary factors. Dr. Steven Dunton, the deputy chief medical examiner in Dekalb County, Ga., said an autopsy finding of natural causes can be upgraded by what he calls an external environmental factor.

In Parnell's case, doctors listed her cause of death as a heart attack due to "stress during home invasion."

"There's nothing seen by the pathologist that would show a person died that way," Dunton said. "That's entirely from circumstantial information."

Legal experts said those circumstances will be crucial to winning a murder conviction. Prosecutors must show what Whitfield did inside Parnell's home caused her death, said Michael Tigar, a Duke University Law School professor.

"Jurors very often resent what they see as overcharging," Tigar said. "They resent lawyers who claim too much for their cases. In most cases, (lawyers have) stretched the analysis or theory in order to heighten punishment, and are often penalized by the jury because of it."

Parnell's family — four children, five grandchildren and her husband of 59 years, Herman — support the decision to seek a murder conviction, said the family attorney, H. Monroe Whitesides.

Whitfield, he said, "breaks into the house that she occupied with her husband for 59 years, and he kidnaps her and moves her to another room and she has a heart attack. And you think that this Whitfield character ... ought to be excused for that?"

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Kate Spade

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This makes me SOO mad. I don't think this would be the case if he was white.

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Chanel

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The charges seem extreme and very selectively applied in this case.

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Hermes

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collegegirl5858 wrote:

This makes me SOO mad. I don't think this would be the case if he was white.



I disagree.  Had I not posted his picture, would you have had this same thought?



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Hermes

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D wrote:

collegegirl5858 wrote:

This makes me SOO mad. I don't think this would be the case if he was white.



I disagree.  Had I not posted his picture, would you have had this same thought?



I agree with this disagreement.  And I also wonder if some of the charges are so severe because of how they were going to rob the bank... hello, semi-automatic weapons imply willing to harm/kill someone if necessary.

I don't know that I think it should be life without parole though.  I mean he's only 20 with no prior record.



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BCBG

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That does seem harsh. I had no idea such a law existed. I would have assumed he'd get manslaughter in some low degree just because it wasn't at all premeditated.


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Hermes

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Yeah, I would have assumed that he would get involuntary manslaughter or something. But I do know that possession of a weapon, even if it's not used in your crime, really ups your charges.

I do think he should be punished to some degree - I mean, he did kill her as a result of robbing a bank and then breaking and entering, even if murder wasn't his intention - but I don't know if life without parole is fitting. It seems too harsh.

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Marc Jacobs

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TOTALLY NOT 1st DEGREE! It looks like the prosecutors are hoping for a not guilty verdict because really there is no intent or premeditation of this woman's death.

He should be charged with breaking and entering and attempted robbery of the bank. Since the woman's heart was in bad condition, she could have had a heart attack at just about anything - would that anything be charged with murder? No.

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Marc Jacobs

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no way should he be charged with 1st degree murder.  breaking and entering perhaps??  life without parole is really harsh.  i'll be interested in the outcome of the trial or if there is some sort of lesser plea offer. 



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Marc Jacobs

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So, he and a friend approached a bank with guns and were locked out. Had they not fled and he not have broken into a home and scared a woman to death what would have been the crime? I'm just wondering if it would have even been attempted bank robbery since they didn't even make it into the bank. Just wondering what trouble they would have been in if they were locked out, called it quits and gone back home...

1st degree murder is too harsh. Breaking and entering and a lesser charge of killing someone (involuntary manslaughter?) would suffice.

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Kate Spade

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FashionPrincess wrote:

D wrote:

collegegirl5858 wrote:

This makes me SOO mad. I don't think this would be the case if he was white.



I disagree.  Had I not posted his picture, would you have had this same thought?



I agree with this disagreement.  And I also wonder if some of the charges are so severe because of how they were going to rob the bank... hello, semi-automatic weapons imply willing to harm/kill someone if necessary.

I don't know that I think it should be life without parole though.  I mean he's only 20 with no prior record.




Yes. I would have thought to myself "Something is fishy here..." and done further research. This is just one more example of racism in our judicial system.



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