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Post by MXB on Feb 11, 2007 21:53:43 GMT -5
Support needed for Tim Hancock in Court
Posted by: "KarenETorley@aol.com" KarenETorley@aol.com
Sun Feb 11, 2007 4:56 am (PST)
I am going back to trial begining 20th Feb in Lebanon Ohio.
The Court is The Warren County Court of Common Pleas.500 JUSTICE DRIVE, LEBANON OHIO 45036 TELEPHONE (513) 695-1000/422- 9191/425- 1000/925- 1000/783- 4993
Times and dates of the trial.
02-20-2007 022007 09:00 AM FOUR DAY JURY TRIAL 02-21-2007 022107 09:00 AM FOUR DAY JURY TRIAL 02-22-2007 022207 09:00 AM FOUR DAY JURY TRIAL 02-23-2007 022307 09:00 AM FOUR DAY JURY TRIAL
In case I do recieve the death sentence again, I want to challenge those of you who may have doubt of the injustice to come and watch. Listen and see for yourself and then Judge the truth. It's only by caring people and by someone who has no voice, can truly be heard!!
I NEED people to come and support me in that court in February. Please try to be there.
Tim
_http://torley. org/Tim-Hancock/ Tim-Hancock/ _ (http://torley. org/Tim-Hancock/ Tim-Hancock/)
Timothy Hancock 219 467 Man C I, DR 3 PO Box 788 Mansfield Ohio 44901 USA
_www.torley. org_ (http://www.torley. org/)
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Post by MXB on Feb 11, 2007 22:33:30 GMT -5
Please be there to support Tim if you can.
MXB
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Post by MXB on Mar 20, 2007 7:04:12 GMT -5
February 26, 2007
Jury considers death penalty case
BY JANICE MORSE
LEBANON – A jury has begun deliberations in an unusual death-penalty case here.
Judge James Flannery sent the case of Timothy Hancock to a Warren County Common Pleas Court jury around 3:20 p.m. today.
In 2001, a different jury found Hancock guilty in the 2000 strangulation of his cellmate, Jason Wagner, at Warren Correctional Institution in Turtlecreek Township.
The original jury’s recommendation of a death sentence was overturned, and a series of appeals stopped short of granting Hancock a new trial.
In what could be Ohio’s first case of its kind, the state Supreme Court said Hancock’s aggravated murder conviction should stand, but a new jury should consider what sentence to recommend for Hancock.
There are four possible choices: death, life without parole, life with parole eligibility after 30 years or life with parole eligibility after 25 years.
Although Warren County prosecutors argue that the heinousness of the slaying and other factors call for the death penalty, lawyers from the Ohio Public Defender’s Office presented evidence attempting to persuade the jury to spare Hancock’s life.
Hancock, 37, is already serving a life sentence for the 1989 robbery and slaying of an elderly woman in Allen County, where he previously lived.
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