IL - Eight slain in IL/MO crime spree, Nicholas Sheley charged, June 2008

An Illinois man already serving six life sentences for murder in that state tried to avoid the possibility of getting the death penalty in Missouri today.

Nicholas Sheley killed six people during a two-week spree in Illinois in 2008. He is now facing murder charges in connection with the killings of Jill and Tom Estes of Sherwood, Arkansas.

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Sheley's next court appearance is in September.
http://www.ourquadcities.com/news/sheley-wants-death-penalty-off-the-table
 
Trial date set in Missouri for Sheley
Convicted killer Nicholas T. Sheley will be tried Jan. 8, 2018, in Missouri in the June 2008 deaths of an Arkansas couple in Festus, Missouri.

The 37-year-old Sterling, Illinois, man faces the death penalty if convicted in the deaths of Jill and Tom Estes, both 54.


Jury selection is scheduled for Jan. 4-5, 2018, in Hillsboro, Missouri, according to online court records. The trial is slated to last two weeks.
 
If a judge falls asleep during a murder trial, should the defendant automatically get a new trial?

A divided Illinois Appellate Court panel recently said no; so long as the judge was not dozing through crucial evidence or motions, an inadvertent nap is harmless. “We find that a judge falling asleep during a trial does not constitute … reversible error,” Judge Daniel Schmidt wrote in the majority opinion.

The appellate decision is tied to the case of spree killer Nicholas Sheley, who was on trial for four murders in Judge Jeffrey O’Connor’s western Illinois courtroom in 2014 when the lights were dimmed so the jury could watch security camera footage on a monitor. When the presentation ended, an assistant attorney general asked that the lights be turned back on, according to the ruling. The judge didn’t reply.

“Judge?” the defense attorney asked, according to a transcript cited in the ruling. “Judge O’Connor?”

“Judge could we get the lights back on?” the assistant attorney general asked, approaching the bench.

“Hmm,” O’Connor replied, according to a transcript. A clerk allegedly poked him awake. When it was suggested now was a good time to break for lunch, the judge agreed. “Excellent time,” he said.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/...es-can-sleep-during-trial-20171105-story.html
 

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