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Man convicted of all charges in double homicide and robberies at bootleg liquor joint | Dayton Courts: Legal and crime news
 

Home > Blogs > Dayton Courts: Legal and crime news > Archives > 2012 > January > 18 > Entry

Man convicted of all charges in double homicide and robberies at bootleg liquor joint

DAYTON - Keron D. Simpson, the first of three men to go on trial for a bootleg liquor joint robbery that left two people dead, was convicted Thursday of all charges.

The jury received the case about 4 p.m. and returned the verdict about 8:30 p.m.

The jury convicted Simpson, 20, of 12 counts of aggravated robbery, one for each of the people present when he and two others robbed the liquor joint at 1564 Germantown St. on Nov. 14, 2010. He was also convicted of two counts of murder, for the deaths of two of those victims: Earnest “Hank” Sanders, 59, and Michelle Carter, 31.

The jurors also convicted Simpson of the firearm specifications attached to all of those charges

Montgomery County Common Pleas Judge Michael L. Tucker then convicted Simpson of one count of being a felon in possession of a weapon, the lone count tried to the bench. Tucker set sentencing for Feb. 22.

The trial started Jan. 12 and prosecutors rested on Wednesday. Simpson rested Thursday without calling any witnesses.

During her closing argument, assistant Montgomery County prosecutor Lynda Dodd said that Simpson shot Sanders, who had been operating the after-hours liquor joint from his home for more than 30 years. A different person shot Carter, but Simpson was still responsible, as he was participating in a robbery with that person, she said.

“He is a complicitor,” she said. “It doesn’t matter if it’s his gun, his bullet in her head.

Sanders died at a hospital. Carter died at the scene.

“Michelle never had a chance,” Dodd said.

Simpson’s co-defendants, Daviontae T. Norvell, 19, and Earl L. Moon, 20, will be tried separately before the same judge, common pleas court Judge Michael L. Tucker, later this year.

Simpson did not call any witnesses. Bobby Joe Cox, Simpson’s defense attorney, said that the prosecution only presented three of the 10 surviving victims. All three admitted they had been drinking at the time of the robbery, and one had been using cocaine, he said.

Cox also raised concerns about the photo lineup that helped identify Simpson as a suspect.

But assistant county prosecutor Tracey Ballard Tangeman said that Simpson’s DNA had been found on two beer bottles discovered at the scene, in the exact place where witnesses said he had been seated prior to the robbery.

“Science corroborated their identifications,” Tangeman said. “So where’s the leap of faith in believing the witnesses when even science is corroborating it.”

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