fbpx
Wikipedia

William Henry Hance

William Henry Hance (November 10, 1951[1] – March 31, 1994) was an American serial killer and soldier who is believed to have murdered four women and molested 3 of the women in and around military bases before his arrest in 1978. He was convicted of murdering three of them, and not brought to trial on the fourth. He was executed by the state of Georgia in the electric chair.

William Henry Hance
Born(1951-11-10)November 10, 1951
DiedMarch 31, 1994(1994-03-31) (aged 42)
Cause of deathExecution by electric chair
Other namesChairman of the Forces of Evil
Criminal statusExecuted
Conviction(s)Murder (December 16, 1978)
Criminal penaltyDeath (December 1978 & August 1986)
Details
Victims4+
Span of crimes
1977–1978
CountryUnited States
State(s)Georgia and Indiana
Date apprehended
April 4, 1978

Investigation edit

In 1978, Columbus, Georgia was undergoing a wave of murders of women. Several elderly white women had been killed by a perpetrator nicknamed the Stocking Strangler. In addition, the bodies of two young Black sex workers had been found outside of nearby Fort Benning.[2]

The disparate groups of victims were linked by a letter to the local police chief written on United States Army stationery. The handwritten note purported to be from a gang of seven white men who were holding a black woman hostage and would kill her if the Stocking Strangler were not apprehended. The Stocking Strangler was believed to be a black man, and this had been widely reported at the time.[2]

The seven white vigilantes wished to be known as the "Forces of Evil", and wanted the police chief to communicate with them via messages on radio or television. The first letter was followed by others; eventually, a ransom demand of $10,000 was also made to keep the alleged hostage, Gail Jackson, alive. Jackson was also known as Brenda Gail Faison and other aliases.[3] The letters were followed by phone calls.[2]

The letters and calls were a hoax intended to divert attention from the real killer. Gail Jackson, the supposed hostage, had been murdered five weeks before she was found, and before the first letter was sent. Her body was discovered in early April 1978. She was 21 years old.[1][4] Soon afterward, following instructions in yet another call from the "Forces of Evil", a second black woman's body was found at a rifle range at Fort Benning. Her name was Irene Thirkield.[2] She was 32.[1]

FBI profiler Robert K. Ressler created a profile which asserted that the killer was one man, not seven; black, not white; single, not well-educated, and probably a low-ranking military man at the fort in his late twenties.[2]

Using the profile and aware that both Jackson and Thirkield were prostitutes, Georgia Bureau of Investigation officers searched near the fort for bars which had generally black patrons. They were quickly able to identify William Hance and arrest him. He was a Specialist (E-4) attached to an artillery unit at the fort[2] as a truck driver.[1] Hance had begun his military career as a Marine before joining the Army.[4]

When confronted with evidence including his handwriting, voice recordings, and shoe prints from the crime scenes, Hance confessed to killing both women and to the killing of a third woman at Fort Benning in September 1977.[2] Karen Hickman, 24, was a white Army private known to date black soldiers and socialize in black pubs.[3] Hance was not charged with Hickman's murder in the civilian system, but was charged, tried, and convicted by a court martial for her death.

Eventually, Hance was also identified as the killer of a young black woman at Fort Benjamin Harrison in Indiana.[2] Hance was not charged with this murder.

However, despite his four known homicides, he was innocent of the Stocking Strangler murders, eventually attributed to another black man, Carlton Gary.[2]

Military courts edit

  • Hance was convicted in a military court, but not tried in civilian courts, for the murder of Irene Thirkield.[5]
  • Hance was also tried and convicted in a court martial, but not a civilian court, for the murder of Karen Hickman.[4]
  • During his court martial for the murder of Irene Thirkield, Hance received a life sentence which was reversed when jurors decided he lacked the mental capacity for premeditation.[6]
  • For the deaths of both Hickman and Thirkield, Hance's final court martial sentence was life at hard labor. The convictions were set aside in 1980 and he was not retried by the military court system.[4]

Civilian courts edit

  • Hance v. State, 245 Ga. 856, 268 S.E.2d 339, cert. denied, 449 U.S. 1067, 101 S.Ct. 796, 66 L.Ed.2d 611 (1980). In this case, Hance's conviction and sentence of death in the Jackson murder were affirmed by the Georgia Supreme Court. The Thirkield murder is also included in the Court's summation of the facts.
  • Hance v. Zant, 456 U.S. 965, 102 S.Ct. 2046, 72 L.Ed.2d 491 (1982). The United States Supreme Court denied certiorari in Hance's habeas corpus appeal in the Jackson murder.
  • William Henry Hance, Petitioner, v. Walter D. Zant, Warden, Georgia Diagnostic And Classification Center, Respondent United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit. 696 F.2d 940, cert. denied, 463 U.S. 1210, 103 S.Ct. 3544, 77 L.Ed.2d 1393 (1983). After the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear his first habeas petition in the Jackson case in 1982, the federal appellate court for the 11th Circuit, which includes Georgia, affirmed Hance's conviction but ordered a retrial of the sentencing stage because the prosecutor's closing argument rendered the sentencing proceeding fundamentally unfair, and because two jurors were improperly excluded in violation of Witherspoon v. Illinois, a case about unjust challenges to jury members regarding their death penalty beliefs.[7] The federal appellate court therefore ordered the state court system to provide a new, more fair, sentencing phase trial for the murder of Jackson.
  • Hance v. State, 254 Ga. 575, 332 S.E.2d 287, cert. denied, 474 U.S. 1038, 106 S.Ct. 606, 88 L.Ed.2d 584 (1985). After a second sentencing trial resulted in another death sentence for the murder of Jackson, the Georgia Supreme Court affirmed the death sentence.
  • Hance filed another petition for habeas corpus in the Superior Court of Butts County, which is a Georgia state trial court. That court denied his petition after holding an evidentiary hearing.
  • Hance v. Kemp, 258 Ga. 649, 373 S.E.2d 184 (1988), cert. denied, 490 U.S. 1012, 109 S.Ct. 1658, 104 L.Ed.2d 172 (1989) The Georgia Supreme Court affirmed the denial of habeas corpus by the Superior Court of Butts County, and in 1989, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear his appeal of the 1988 Georgia Supreme Court ruling.
  • After the Georgia Supreme Court affirmed the denial of habeas corpus by the Superior Court of Butts County in 1988, Hance then filed a new petition for habeas corpus in the federal District Court for the Middle District of Georgia; that court denied the petition without holding an evidentiary hearing. Hance then appealed to the federal appellate court for the 11th Circuit, which decided the case in January 1993.
  • William Henry Hance, Petitioner-appellant, v. Walter Zant, Warden, Georgia Diagnostic & Classification Center, Respondent-appellee United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit. 981 F.2d 1180 (January 6, 1993). Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied March 11, 1993. In a relatively brief order, a panel of the federal appellate court in the 11th Circuit denied Hance's habeas appeal in the Jackson murder, and denied him the opportunity to present his case to the full appellate bench (instead of the panel).

Execution edit

Hance was sentenced to death in civilian court for the murder of Gail Jackson and sentenced to life in prison in military court for the death of Irene Thirkield. His military life sentence for Thirkield was overturned.[6] His civilian death sentence for Jackson was not. He was executed by the state of Georgia on March 31, 1994, via the electric chair. He was the 231st inmate executed nationwide since the U.S. Supreme Court restored the death penalty in 1976[5] and the 18th in Georgia.[4]

In the hours before his death, the Supreme Court voted, 6–3, not to consider his appeal. In dissent, Justice Harry Blackmun said that even if he had not recently

reached the conclusion that the death penalty cannot be imposed fairly within the constraints of our Constitution . . . I could not support its imposition in this case. ... There is substantial evidence that William Henry Hance is mentally retarded as well as mentally ill. There is reason to believe that his trial and sentencing proceedings were infected with racial prejudice. One of his sentencers has come forward to say that she did not vote for the death penalty because of his mental impairments.[8]

Hance had an IQ of 75-79 points, which classifies him as "borderline intellectual functioning" on modern medical scales of mental retardation.[4]

Controversy edit

Other issues besides Hance's mental and psychiatric status had created controversy prior to the day of his electrocution, and one—the question of racial bias in the state sentencing jury—veritably exploded afterwards. The Georgia State Board of Pardons and Paroles had not even proofread its order denying his stay of execution, and conflated it with another document about some other prisoner. The Georgia Supreme Court denied his appeal by only one vote, 4–3.[8]

One of his jurors at his second sentencing (after the first was reversed for prosecutorial misconduct),[9] a white woman named Patricia Lemay, came forward to report that other jurors made racial remarks about Hance such as "just one more sorry nigger that no one would miss"[8] and, if executed, he would be "one less nigger to breed."[9]

There was only one black juror, a 26-year-old woman named Gayle Lewis Daniels. According to Lemay, Daniels was subjected to racial invective in the jury room.[10] According to both Lemay and Daniels herself, Daniels refused to vote for the death penalty. The other jurors ignored her and reported to the judge that they were unanimous. When the jury was polled in the presence of the court, Daniels was by then too frightened to speak up. The other jurors had told her that she could be convicted of perjury if she continued to hold out, since she had testified, during jury selection, that she could vote for the death penalty.[10]

The evidence of Lemay and Daniels outraged many press outlets. Said one newspaper afterwards,

Hance might as well have been lynched, for he was denied due process of law. ... There is compelling evidence that the law was not followed, that Hance's civil rights were violated, that he was a victim of racism and political expediency.[11]

At a law school conference the following year, attorney Ronald J. Tabak stated at some length his opinion that Hance's race contributed to the sentence.[12]

In popular culture edit

Hance was portrayed by Corey Allen in the second season of the Netflix series, Mindhunter.[13][14][15]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "GI Held in Murders". Newport Daily News. Newport, Rhode Island. United Press International. April 6, 1978. Retrieved November 30, 2008 – via NewspaperArchive.com.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Ressler, Robert K.; Schactman, Tom (1992). Whoever Fights Monsters: My Twenty Years Hunting Serial Killers for the FBI. New York: St. Martin's Press. pp. 157-161. ISBN 0-312-95044-6.
  3. ^ a b "Hance, William Henry: Forces of Evil", Serial Killer Crime Index at Crimezzz.Net. Retrieved November 30, 2008.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "Georgia Inmate Executed for Murdering Prostitute", Associated Press report April 4, 1994. Retrieved from Logansport Pharos-Tribune via NewspaperArchive.Com. November 30, 2008.
  5. ^ a b Applebaum, Peter (April 1, 1994). "Georgia Executes Murderer After Brief Stay From Court". The New York Times. Archived from the original on March 17, 2022. Retrieved March 17, 2022.
  6. ^ a b Smolowe, Jill (April 11, 1994). . Time. Archived from the original on November 22, 2008.
  7. ^ Witherspoon v. Illinois, 391 U.S. 510, 88 S.Ct. 1770, 20 L.Ed.2d 776 (1968).
  8. ^ a b c Herbert, Bob (April 3, 1994). "In America; Judicial Coin Toss". New York Times. Archived from the original on March 17, 2022.
  9. ^ a b Herbert, Bob (March 30, 1994). "In America; Jury Room Injustice". The New York Times. Archived from the original on March 17, 2022.
  10. ^ a b Herbert, Bob (March 27, 1994). "In America; Mr. Hance's 'Perfect Punishment'". The New York Times. Archived from the original on March 17, 2022. Retrieved March 17, 2022.
  11. ^ Questions linger after execution: pungent aroma of justice denied, unsigned editorial, Syracuse Herald American (New York), April 3, 1994. Retrieved from NewspaperArchive.Com November 30, 2008.
  12. ^ Conference Proceedings: The Death Penalty in the Twenty-First Century, December 1995, American University Law Review.
  13. ^ Dibdin, Emma (August 17, 2019). "'Mindhunter' Season 2 Cast Discuss Atlanta Child Murders, Wayne Williams - Were the Atlanta Murders Solved?". esquire.com. Retrieved September 1, 2019.
  14. ^ O'Keeffe, Jack (August 18, 2019). "This Subject From 'Mindhunter' Had His Case Go All The Way To The Supreme Court". Bustle. Retrieved September 1, 2019.
  15. ^ Shorey, Eric (August 20, 2019). "How William Hance's Murders Forced 'Mindhunter' Investigators To Consider Race". Oxygen Official Site. Retrieved September 1, 2019.

william, henry, hance, november, 1951, march, 1994, american, serial, killer, soldier, believed, have, murdered, four, women, molested, women, around, military, bases, before, arrest, 1978, convicted, murdering, three, them, brought, trial, fourth, executed, s. William Henry Hance November 10 1951 1 March 31 1994 was an American serial killer and soldier who is believed to have murdered four women and molested 3 of the women in and around military bases before his arrest in 1978 He was convicted of murdering three of them and not brought to trial on the fourth He was executed by the state of Georgia in the electric chair William Henry HanceBorn 1951 11 10 November 10 1951United StatesDiedMarch 31 1994 1994 03 31 aged 42 Georgia Diagnostic and Classification State Prison Jackson Georgia U S Cause of deathExecution by electric chairOther namesChairman of the Forces of EvilCriminal statusExecutedConviction s Murder December 16 1978 Criminal penaltyDeath December 1978 amp August 1986 DetailsVictims4 Span of crimes1977 1978CountryUnited StatesState s Georgia and IndianaDate apprehendedApril 4 1978 Contents 1 Investigation 1 1 Military courts 1 2 Civilian courts 2 Execution 3 Controversy 4 In popular culture 5 See also 6 ReferencesInvestigation editIn 1978 Columbus Georgia was undergoing a wave of murders of women Several elderly white women had been killed by a perpetrator nicknamed the Stocking Strangler In addition the bodies of two young Black sex workers had been found outside of nearby Fort Benning 2 The disparate groups of victims were linked by a letter to the local police chief written on United States Army stationery The handwritten note purported to be from a gang of seven white men who were holding a black woman hostage and would kill her if the Stocking Strangler were not apprehended The Stocking Strangler was believed to be a black man and this had been widely reported at the time 2 The seven white vigilantes wished to be known as the Forces of Evil and wanted the police chief to communicate with them via messages on radio or television The first letter was followed by others eventually a ransom demand of 10 000 was also made to keep the alleged hostage Gail Jackson alive Jackson was also known as Brenda Gail Faison and other aliases 3 The letters were followed by phone calls 2 The letters and calls were a hoax intended to divert attention from the real killer Gail Jackson the supposed hostage had been murdered five weeks before she was found and before the first letter was sent Her body was discovered in early April 1978 She was 21 years old 1 4 Soon afterward following instructions in yet another call from the Forces of Evil a second black woman s body was found at a rifle range at Fort Benning Her name was Irene Thirkield 2 She was 32 1 FBI profiler Robert K Ressler created a profile which asserted that the killer was one man not seven black not white single not well educated and probably a low ranking military man at the fort in his late twenties 2 Using the profile and aware that both Jackson and Thirkield were prostitutes Georgia Bureau of Investigation officers searched near the fort for bars which had generally black patrons They were quickly able to identify William Hance and arrest him He was a Specialist E 4 attached to an artillery unit at the fort 2 as a truck driver 1 Hance had begun his military career as a Marine before joining the Army 4 When confronted with evidence including his handwriting voice recordings and shoe prints from the crime scenes Hance confessed to killing both women and to the killing of a third woman at Fort Benning in September 1977 2 Karen Hickman 24 was a white Army private known to date black soldiers and socialize in black pubs 3 Hance was not charged with Hickman s murder in the civilian system but was charged tried and convicted by a court martial for her death Eventually Hance was also identified as the killer of a young black woman at Fort Benjamin Harrison in Indiana 2 Hance was not charged with this murder However despite his four known homicides he was innocent of the Stocking Strangler murders eventually attributed to another black man Carlton Gary 2 Military courts edit Hance was convicted in a military court but not tried in civilian courts for the murder of Irene Thirkield 5 Hance was also tried and convicted in a court martial but not a civilian court for the murder of Karen Hickman 4 During his court martial for the murder of Irene Thirkield Hance received a life sentence which was reversed when jurors decided he lacked the mental capacity for premeditation 6 For the deaths of both Hickman and Thirkield Hance s final court martial sentence was life at hard labor The convictions were set aside in 1980 and he was not retried by the military court system 4 Civilian courts edit Hance v State 245 Ga 856 268 S E 2d 339 cert denied 449 U S 1067 101 S Ct 796 66 L Ed 2d 611 1980 In this case Hance s conviction and sentence of death in the Jackson murder were affirmed by the Georgia Supreme Court The Thirkield murder is also included in the Court s summation of the facts Hance v Zant 456 U S 965 102 S Ct 2046 72 L Ed 2d 491 1982 The United States Supreme Court denied certiorari in Hance s habeas corpus appeal in the Jackson murder William Henry Hance Petitioner v Walter D Zant Warden Georgia Diagnostic And Classification Center Respondent United States Court of Appeals Eleventh Circuit 696 F 2d 940 cert denied 463 U S 1210 103 S Ct 3544 77 L Ed 2d 1393 1983 After the U S Supreme Court declined to hear his first habeas petition in the Jackson case in 1982 the federal appellate court for the 11th Circuit which includes Georgia affirmed Hance s conviction but ordered a retrial of the sentencing stage because the prosecutor s closing argument rendered the sentencing proceeding fundamentally unfair and because two jurors were improperly excluded in violation of Witherspoon v Illinois a case about unjust challenges to jury members regarding their death penalty beliefs 7 The federal appellate court therefore ordered the state court system to provide a new more fair sentencing phase trial for the murder of Jackson Hance v State 254 Ga 575 332 S E 2d 287 cert denied 474 U S 1038 106 S Ct 606 88 L Ed 2d 584 1985 After a second sentencing trial resulted in another death sentence for the murder of Jackson the Georgia Supreme Court affirmed the death sentence Hance filed another petition for habeas corpus in the Superior Court of Butts County which is a Georgia state trial court That court denied his petition after holding an evidentiary hearing Hance v Kemp 258 Ga 649 373 S E 2d 184 1988 cert denied 490 U S 1012 109 S Ct 1658 104 L Ed 2d 172 1989 The Georgia Supreme Court affirmed the denial of habeas corpus by the Superior Court of Butts County and in 1989 the U S Supreme Court refused to hear his appeal of the 1988 Georgia Supreme Court ruling After the Georgia Supreme Court affirmed the denial of habeas corpus by the Superior Court of Butts County in 1988 Hance then filed a new petition for habeas corpus in the federal District Court for the Middle District of Georgia that court denied the petition without holding an evidentiary hearing Hance then appealed to the federal appellate court for the 11th Circuit which decided the case in January 1993 William Henry Hance Petitioner appellant v Walter Zant Warden Georgia Diagnostic amp Classification Center Respondent appellee United States Court of Appeals Eleventh Circuit 981 F 2d 1180 January 6 1993 Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied March 11 1993 In a relatively brief order a panel of the federal appellate court in the 11th Circuit denied Hance s habeas appeal in the Jackson murder and denied him the opportunity to present his case to the full appellate bench instead of the panel Execution editHance was sentenced to death in civilian court for the murder of Gail Jackson and sentenced to life in prison in military court for the death of Irene Thirkield His military life sentence for Thirkield was overturned 6 His civilian death sentence for Jackson was not He was executed by the state of Georgia on March 31 1994 via the electric chair He was the 231st inmate executed nationwide since the U S Supreme Court restored the death penalty in 1976 5 and the 18th in Georgia 4 In the hours before his death the Supreme Court voted 6 3 not to consider his appeal In dissent Justice Harry Blackmun said that even if he had not recently reached the conclusion that the death penalty cannot be imposed fairly within the constraints of our Constitution I could not support its imposition in this case There is substantial evidence that William Henry Hance is mentally retarded as well as mentally ill There is reason to believe that his trial and sentencing proceedings were infected with racial prejudice One of his sentencers has come forward to say that she did not vote for the death penalty because of his mental impairments 8 Hance had an IQ of 75 79 points which classifies him as borderline intellectual functioning on modern medical scales of mental retardation 4 Controversy editOther issues besides Hance s mental and psychiatric status had created controversy prior to the day of his electrocution and one the question of racial bias in the state sentencing jury veritably exploded afterwards The Georgia State Board of Pardons and Paroles had not even proofread its order denying his stay of execution and conflated it with another document about some other prisoner The Georgia Supreme Court denied his appeal by only one vote 4 3 8 One of his jurors at his second sentencing after the first was reversed for prosecutorial misconduct 9 a white woman named Patricia Lemay came forward to report that other jurors made racial remarks about Hance such as just one more sorry nigger that no one would miss 8 and if executed he would be one less nigger to breed 9 There was only one black juror a 26 year old woman named Gayle Lewis Daniels According to Lemay Daniels was subjected to racial invective in the jury room 10 According to both Lemay and Daniels herself Daniels refused to vote for the death penalty The other jurors ignored her and reported to the judge that they were unanimous When the jury was polled in the presence of the court Daniels was by then too frightened to speak up The other jurors had told her that she could be convicted of perjury if she continued to hold out since she had testified during jury selection that she could vote for the death penalty 10 The evidence of Lemay and Daniels outraged many press outlets Said one newspaper afterwards Hance might as well have been lynched for he was denied due process of law There is compelling evidence that the law was not followed that Hance s civil rights were violated that he was a victim of racism and political expediency 11 At a law school conference the following year attorney Ronald J Tabak stated at some length his opinion that Hance s race contributed to the sentence 12 In popular culture editHance was portrayed by Corey Allen in the second season of the Netflix series Mindhunter 13 14 15 See also editList of people executed in Georgia U S state List of serial killers in the United StatesReferences edit a b c d GI Held in Murders Newport Daily News Newport Rhode Island United Press International April 6 1978 Retrieved November 30 2008 via NewspaperArchive com a b c d e f g h i Ressler Robert K Schactman Tom 1992 Whoever Fights Monsters My Twenty Years Hunting Serial Killers for the FBI New York St Martin s Press pp 157 161 ISBN 0 312 95044 6 a b Hance William Henry Forces of Evil Serial Killer Crime Index at Crimezzz Net Retrieved November 30 2008 a b c d e f Georgia Inmate Executed for Murdering Prostitute Associated Press report April 4 1994 Retrieved from Logansport Pharos Tribune via NewspaperArchive Com November 30 2008 a b Applebaum Peter April 1 1994 Georgia Executes Murderer After Brief Stay From Court The New York Times Archived from the original on March 17 2022 Retrieved March 17 2022 a b Smolowe Jill April 11 1994 Doubts on Death Row Time Archived from the original on November 22 2008 Witherspoon v Illinois 391 U S 510 88 S Ct 1770 20 L Ed 2d 776 1968 a b c Herbert Bob April 3 1994 In America Judicial Coin Toss New York Times Archived from the original on March 17 2022 a b Herbert Bob March 30 1994 In America Jury Room Injustice The New York Times Archived from the original on March 17 2022 a b Herbert Bob March 27 1994 In America Mr Hance s Perfect Punishment The New York Times Archived from the original on March 17 2022 Retrieved March 17 2022 Questions linger after execution pungent aroma of justice denied unsigned editorial Syracuse Herald American New York April 3 1994 Retrieved from NewspaperArchive Com November 30 2008 Conference Proceedings The Death Penalty in the Twenty First Century December 1995 American University Law Review Dibdin Emma August 17 2019 Mindhunter Season 2 Cast Discuss Atlanta Child Murders Wayne Williams Were the Atlanta Murders Solved esquire com Retrieved September 1 2019 O Keeffe Jack August 18 2019 This Subject From Mindhunter Had His Case Go All The Way To The Supreme Court Bustle Retrieved September 1 2019 Shorey Eric August 20 2019 How William Hance s Murders Forced Mindhunter Investigators To Consider Race Oxygen Official Site Retrieved September 1 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Henry Hance amp oldid 1209825878, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.