State v. Montgomery

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Defendant was entered a guilty plea to charges of murder, domestic violence, and aggravated murder with capital specifications for the murders of his former girlfriend, their two-year-old son, and his girlfriend’s nine-year-old daughter. A three-judge panel unanimously sentenced Defendant to death of the aggravated murders of the two children and to fifteen years to life for his girlfriend’s murder. The Supreme Court affirmed Defendant’s convictions and sentence of death, holding (1) the panel did not err by failing sua sponte to order Defendant to undergo a competency evaluation; (2) the evidence presented during the plea hearing was sufficient to convict Defendant of the escaping detection specification attached to an aggravated murder, and defendant’s conviction of that specification was not against the manifest weight of the evidence; (3) defense counsel provided constitutionally effective assistance during the plea and mitigation hearings; (4) Defendant was not denied due process of law and a fair trial when the panel admitted and considered graphic photographs during the plea and mitigation hearings; and (5) Defendant’s death sentence was appropriate and proportionate. View "State v. Montgomery" on Justia Law