UPDATE 2008: GOT 4 DEATH SENTENCES: DNA: Nig who killed 4 Whites found 'not competent'; he crept into house, shot all 4 during his killing mayhem

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Judge: Man Accused Of Killing 4 In Orange Park Not Competent

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POSTED: 4:04 pm EST February 1, 2006

A Clay County judge has ruled quadruple-murder suspect Gary McCray is not competent to stand trial and ordered he be moved from jail to a secure treatment facility.

Gary McCray is accused of shooting and killing four people in Orange Park on May 23, 2004.

He was arrested in a hotel 150 miles away shortly after the shootings. The murder weapon was never recovered.

Clay County Sheriff's Office deputies called

to the house by reports of gunfire found the bodies of John Ellis Jr., 51; Phillip Perrotta, 53; Robin Selkirk, 45; and John Whitehead, 37.

Investigators describe
d the home where the shootings occurred as "a smoke house" for crack cocaine and marijuana.

A neighbor told police he saw McCray arrive at the residence seconds before hearing the gunshots.

Authorities said McCray has been arrested numerous times on charges that include domestic violence, battery on a law enforcement officer and drug possession.

Judge Joseph Buttner ordered McCray be moved to a treatment facility as soon as a bed becomes available.
 
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McCray Convicted Of 4 Counts Of Murder​

Prosecution Will Seek Death Penalty​

Published: September 8, 2008 at 10:14 AM
GREEN COVE SPRINGS, Fla. – Gary McCray did something uncharacteristic as a Clay County jury found him guilty of four counts of first-degree murder -- he sat quietly.
It took a little more than an hour Friday morning for the jury to reach its verdict and convict McCray of killing Phillip Perrotta, 53, John Whitehead, 37, John Oliver Ellis Jr., 51, and Robin Selkirk, 45, in a Orange Park house in 2004. Each was shot with a high-powered semiautomatic weapon.

Prosecutors said the slayings were drug-related, as three of the four victims were arrested along with McCray in a previous drug raid at that same house.

The trial was delayed for years when McCray was not found competent to stand trial. When it finally began in July, it was interrupted several times by outbursts from McCray, who threatened and tried to fire his attorney, lectured Judge William Wilkes and repeatedly interrupted proceedings.

At least twice he was removed from the courtroom by bailiffs.

The families of the victims who had endured the repeated delays in bringing McCray to justice told Channel 4 they were satisfied with the verdict, but it does not ease the pain.

Prosecutors said they will seek the death sentence when the penalty phase of the trial begins on Sept. 26.

Antha Whitehead, the daughter of one of the victims who attended every day of the trial, said she has decided to testify in the penalty phase.

"I for a while I thought that I wanted him to sit in a cell and think about what he's done, but throughout this whole thing, he clearly has no remorse," Whitehead said. "I believe that the death penalty will definitely take care of that."
 
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www.floridacapitalcases.state.fl.us › Documents › Enewsletter › 2008 Articles December › Articles › McCray Receives 4 Death Sentences.pdf

Man gets 4 death sentences in slayings

Man gets 4 death sentences in slayings
 By Dana Treen

GREEN COVE SPRINGS — In the middle of a May night in 2004, Gary Bernard McCray Jr.
crept down a wooded path behind an Orange Park house and peered inside to make sure his
intended victims were there.

Clothed in black and armed with two guns, the 24-year-old Jacksonville man went inside.
“Almost immediately after entering the house, the defendant began his killing spree,” Circuit
Judge William Wilkes said Wednesday during McCray’s sentencing for the four murders that
occurred that night.

Two of the victims were shot in the eye, one was shot in the upper back and one was shot four
times, Wilkes said before he sentenced McCray, now 29, to four death sentences in what was
perhaps Clay County’s worst act of violence in recent memory.

Wilkes said McCray waited until 3 a.m. to commit the crimes because he knew those inside
would likely be addled by crack cocaine at that time of night.

In September, the jury voted 12-0 to recommend death.

Calling each murder cold and calculated, Wilkes said it was clear he should follow the
recommendation.

“May God have mercy on your soul,” he said.

McCray showed little emotion at the hearing, twisting slightly back and forth as he stood
listening during the 20-minute proceeding. Wilkes added a life sentence for use of a firearm in
all four murders.

McCray was convicted of fatally shooting people he thought had identified him in an earlier drug
raid. John Ellis, 51; Phillip Perotta, 53; Robin Selkirk, 45; and John Whitehead, 37, were killed
in the Blanding Boulevard drug house. Three of them had been arrested with McCray at the same
house months earlier, according to Times-Union coverage of the case.

McCray’s DNA was detected on a black hooded sweatshirt found at the scene. After the
murders, he paid friends $400 to take him to Tallahassee, the Times-Union reported.

After the sentencing, one victim’s twin brother said he was struck that McCray showed no
remorse.

“It’s the end of a long process,” James Perotta said. “[Phillip] died, a part of me died.”

The trial, originally scheduled for March 2006, was delayed when McCray was declared unfit to
proceed and sent to a psychiatric facility that January.
Other delays happened because of courtroom outbreaks in which McCray yelled objections and
demanded his attorneys be fired.
At his trial, McCray took 45 minutes on the stand to list what he saw as unlawful actions and
argued that pieces of evidence were illegally obtained.
In late September, jurors deciding on the sentencing recommendation listened to an hour of
McCray rambling about how their trial verdict was wrong before they recommended he face the
death penalty.
 
It gets worse. McCray, a drug dealer who called himself Goldie, supplied the drugs to them to resell.


In November 2004, McCRAY, who was twenty-four years old at the time of the crime, was charged with four counts of first-degree murder. McCRAY's trial on these charges was delayed after the trial court found him incompetent to proceed and, as a result, ordered that he be hospitalized. During a second competency hearing, based on a written report received from the hospital stating that McCRAY had regained his competency, the court found that his competency had been restored. After a third and final competency hearing, in an order filed on September 2, 2008, the trial court found McCRAY competent to stand trial. McCRAY's guilt-phase proceeding began that same day.

The Guilt Phase

The evidence presented at trial established the following facts. In the early morning hours of May 23, 2004, a number of individuals were gathered inside Robin Selkirk and Phillip Perrotta's Orange Park rental home. Prior to their deaths, Selkirk and Perrotta operated the residence as a “drug house” where people would purchase and sometimes use drugs. As the manager of the residence's drug operation, Selkirk determined which drugs came into the house and those that were sold. McCRAY, a drug dealer nicknamed “Goldie,” routinely supplied Selkirk and the rental home with drugs, particularly crack cocaine. Selkirk would, in turn, distribute those drugs in exchange for money.

At approximately 3 a.m., McCRAY approached the exterior of the rental home from a dark wooded pathway leading to the home's screened-in back porch. Before entering the residence, McCRAY peered through the kitchen window and back doorway. He was dressed in black clothing, was wearing gloves, and had on a dark hooded sweatshirt with the hood placed over his head. Although McCRAY used some type of black material to cover his face, portions of his face remained visible, including his eyebrows, eyes, nose, and cheeks.

During the time in which McCRAY surveilled the home's back entrance, Eric Whitehead, Kevin Cunningham, and John Ellis, Jr., were awake and inside the rental home's kitchen. Selkirk, Perrotta, and Eric Whitehead's uncle, John Whitehead, were in the back bedrooms. After McCRAY completed his surveillance, he entered the home through the kitchen-door entrance, wielding what Cunningham described as an AK–47 rifle wrapped in black material. Both Eric Whitehead and Cunningham immediately recognized the gunman as McCRAY. As McCRAY moved into the kitchen, Cunningham exclaimed, “[D]amn, Goldie what did you get, a new weapon? Is that an AK–47?” Following this comment, McCRAY forced Eric Whitehead, Cunningham, and Ellis into the next room by pointing his rifle and verbally ordering the three men to the back of the house.

After McCRAY forced the men into the dining room, he observed another individual, Eric Goodman, peering into the home through a kitchen window overlooking the back porch. Goodman, a coworker and friend of Perrotta's, had witnessed McCRAY walk up to the residence from the wooded area abutting the home's backyard moments earlier. Upon seeing Goodman, McCRAY pointed the rifle at him and demanded that he enter the house, but Goodman fled the scene. McCRAY then returned his attention to the people inside. He grabbed Cunningham by his ponytail, turned him around, and pushed him toward the living room. As soon as McCRAY observed Cunningham moving toward the front door, McCRAY again exclaimed, “[N]o. I said everybody to the back.” Thereafter, McCRAY grabbed Ellis by the front of his shirt, but Ellis freed himself from McCRAY's hold and proceeded to run out of the home. McCRAY followed him, and during his pursuit of Ellis outside, several individuals inside the home dispersed.

Cunningham fled the scene, and while doing so, heard “[a] volley of gunshots”—between ten and twenty in total. Eric Whitehead also fled and testified to hearing gun shots coming from the direction in which Ellis and McCRAY had run. Troy Wilson, who had been sitting on a couch in the living room and “riding out” a crack-cocaine high, got up, heard Ellis screaming, and then heard gunshots. Ellis's dead body was later found with four gunshot wounds—one through the left ear, one through the left flank, one through the right thigh, and one through the left forearm—lying near a white Mustang parked on the front yard of the next door neighbor's home.

McCRAY subsequently returned, brandishing a handgun instead of the rifle he was seen carrying moments earlier. As he maneuvered toward the living room, McCRAY pointed the gun at Wilson, who, at the time, was still inside. When McCRAY reached the living room, however, Wilson escaped, running through the wooded area abutting the home's backyard. During his escape, Wilson overheard screaming and around five or six more gunshots. Goodman, Cunningham, and Eric Whitehead positively identified McCRAY as the assailant. Although each admitted to suffering from crack-cocaine addictions, they testified that they were not under the influence of drugs when the shootings took place.

Police responded to the scene of the crime after receiving a 911 call from a distressed neighbor, who claimed to have heard gunshots and two sets of footsteps running outside of his home. When police arrived, the bodies of the remaining victims, Selkirk, Perrotta, and John Whitehead, were discovered. Selkirk's body was located in the carport area and had sustained two gunshot wounds to the back of the chest. Police found Perrotta's body on the kitchen floor with a single, close-range gunshot wound to the head. John Whitehead's body was located in one of the back bedrooms and had also sustained a single, close-range gunshot wound to the head. A friend of McCRAY's testified to seeing McCRAY at sometime between 3:30 and 4:00 a.m. that morning wearing dark-colored clothing and with his hair styled in dreadlocks.

Several days later, McCRAY shaved off his dreadlocks, fled the Clay County area, and drove to Tallahassee, where he was apprehended and arrested by U.S. Marshals for his connection to the murders.

An examination of physical evidence recovered from the crime scene revealed several facts linking McCRAY to the shootings. Investigators found a dark sweatshirt along the dirt road leading to Selkirk and Perrotta's rental home. Jason Hitt, a crime lab analyst with the Biology and DNA Section of the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE), testified that he extracted a DNA profile from the inside collar of the sweatshirt, the results of which established a partial DNA profile at nine of the thirteen loci that Hitt generally examines in such cases. Hitt then explained that all nine loci matched McCRAY's DNA sample. He further opined that “based upon the results for the partial profile that was obtained on the sweatshirt you can expect to find that profile in ․ one in 8 billion African Americans.” The actual murder weapons were never recovered.

Additional information received by the Clay County Sheriff's Office was used by the State to establish McCRAY's motive for these murders at trial. In February 2004, approximately three months before McCRAY's shooting spree, the narcotics unit of the Clay County Sheriff's Office conducted a drug raid of Selkirk and Perrotta's rental home while executing a search warrant. Prior to that drug raid, the narcotics unit had received complaints about drug-dealing emanating from the Selkirk–Perrotta rental home, which was identified as a crack house. Detective Vincent Hall, the case agent, believed that McCRAY was the home's main drug supplier. After executing the warrant, police arrested Selkirk, Ellis, Perrotta, Cunningham, John Whitehead, and McCRAY.

The testimony further established that in the weeks leading up the May 2004 shootings, McCRAY questioned several people about the events surrounding his February 2004 arrest. About three weeks prior to the murders, McCRAY informed Travis Russell, an acquaintance of McCRAY's, that he believed someone in the Selkirk–Perrotta rental home was wearing a wire at the time of his arrest. A week later, Goodman and McCRAY had a conversation while at the rental home, during which time McCRAY questioned Goodman about the events surrounding the February drug raid. Specifically, he asked whether Goodman knew if any individual arrested along with him was wearing a wire or acting as an informant for the police to aid in McCRAY's conviction. McCRAY wanted to know if those individuals arrested along with him “were rolling over on him” because McCRAY felt he was getting a “heavier charge.” Goodman observed that McCRAY's demeanor appeared to be distraught.

Around the same time, McCRAY also had a discussion with his friend, Amanda Long, and a separate discussion with Cunningham regarding the February 2004 arrest. During his conversation with Long, McCRAY explained that he was going away for a long time after having been arrested at that house for having drugs. McCRAY informed Long that “he was going to find out who had said something about it” and who had alerted the police to him. In his conversation with Cunningham, McCRAY asked Cunningham if the police had mentioned him; Cunningham replied in the negative.

To rebut the State's case, the defense presented the testimony of Renee Herrera, a human geneticist and professor at Florida International University. Herrera's testimony focused on sampling errors found in the statistical computations crime lab analysts use to compare DNA. However, on cross-examination, Herrera did concede that as the number of markers or sites increase—in this case, nine of thirteen—the probability of the tested DNA belonging to someone other than the DNA with which they compare it decreases. McCRAY also testified in the narrative against the advice of defense counsel.

The jury found McCRAY guilty of four counts of first-degree murder for the murders of Ellis, Perrotta, Selkirk, and John Whitehead.
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