GUILTY IN - Five people shot to death at 2 Franklin County homes, 25 Sept 2011

The man who allegedly pulled the trigger in the massacre of the Laurel Five pleaded guilty yesterday in a Franklin County courtroom.

snip....
Investigators allege Ison’s motive was because Roy Napier had raised the price of prescription pills he was selling Ison by $2.
http://www.eaglecountryonline.com/news.php?nID=3013
 
From April 2014:

http://eaglecountryonline.com/local-article/laurel-five-killer-girlfriend-sentenced-20-years/

A prison sentence of 20 years has been ordered for the woman who set up the drug deal that led to Franklin County’s infamous “Laurel Five” murders...

Napier, 37, had earlier reached a plea agreement with Franklin County prosecutors to plead guilty to two Class B felony charges of Conspiracy to Commit Armed Robbery and Conspiracy to Commit Dealing in a Schedule II Controlled Substance...

David Ison was sentenced in 2012 to five sentences of life in prison without the possibility of parole.
 
Indiana killer who pleaded guilty to 5 murders wants a new trial

http://www.wlwt.com/article/indiana-killer-who-pleaded-guilty-to-5-murders-wants-a-new-trial/9137478

A man who admitted he murdered five people is one step closer to getting a new trial after an Indiana appellate court decision.

“I started crying, shaking all over,” said Teresa Kennedy, who is the sister of one of the victims. “It’s hard, Lord have mercy.”

An Indiana appellate court ruled Ison met the deadline required to make the filing, and now a judge must consider the issues raised by the convicted killer.

Ison contends he was never read certain rights that are required before pleading guilty. He also wants other issues considered, including mental competency and his claim that he didn’t get adequate representation from his attorney.

The reality of a new trial is not downplayed by Franklin County Prosecutor Mel Wielhelm.

However, if Ison gets a new trial, it could backfire on him. Right now, he's serving a life sentence.

“If the law permits me to seek the death penalty, it certainly won’t be out of the equation,” Wielhelm said.
 
January 2018:

Court of Appeals denies post-conviction relief for murderer
On Dec. 28, 2017, Indiana Court of Appeals Judge Mark Bailey wrote a memorandum decision, affirmed by Judges James Kirsch and Rudolph Pyle III. Their conclusion: "Ison has not demonstrated his entitlement to post-conviction relief on grounds of involuntariness of his pleas or the ineffective assistance of counsel. The post-conviction court did not erroneously deny Ison post-conviction relief."

https://www.in.gov/judiciary/opinions/pdf/12281701lmb.pdf
 

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