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Ronald Gene Simmons | |
|---|---|
| Born | July 15, 1940 Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
| Died | June 25, 1990 (aged 49) |
| Cause of death | Execution by lethal injection |
| Criminal status | Executed |
| Spouse | Bersabe Rebecca "Becky" Ulibarri (b. 1941; m. July 9, 1960; died December 22, 1987) |
| Children | 7 |
| Conviction | Capital murder (16 counts) |
| Criminal penalty | Death |
| Details | |
| Date | December 22–28, 1987 |
| Country | United States |
| Locations | Dover and Russellville, Arkansas |
| Targets | Family, acquaintance, strangers |
| Killed | 16 |
| Injured | 4 |
| Weapons |
|
Ronald Gene Simmons | |
|---|---|
| Allegiance | |
| Service | |
| Years of service | 1957–1962 (USN) 1963–1979 (USAF) |
| Rank | |
| Awards | Bronze Star Medal Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Cross Airforce Ribbon for Excellent Marksmanship |
Ronald Gene Simmons, Sr. (July 15, 1940 – June 25, 1990), born in Chicago, Illinois, was one of the most notorious mass murderers in American history. Over a week in late December 1987, he killed 16 people, including 14 family members and two others in Russellville, Arkansas before surrendering to police. The murders began on December 22, 1987, targeting his wife and children, and ended on December 28, 1987, with additional killings outside the family. It was the deadliest familicide (the killing of one's own family) in U.S. history.
A retired military serviceman, Simmons murdered fourteen members of his family, including a daughter he had sexually abused and the child he had fathered with her, as well as a former co-worker, and a stranger; he also wounded four others.[1]
Simmons holds the grim distinction of being the deadliest mass murderer in Arkansas history.
Simmons was sentenced to death in two separate trials, and after refusing to appeal his sentence, was executed on June 25, 1990. His refusal to appeal was the subject of a 1990 US Supreme Court case, Whitmore v. Arkansas.
Ronald Gene Simmons was born to Loretta and William Simmons on July 15, 1940, in Chicago, Illinois. On January 31, 1943, William Simmons died of a stroke. Within a year, Simmons's mother had remarried, this time to William D. Griffen, a civil engineer for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. In 1946, the corps moved Griffen to Little Rock, Arkansas, the first of several transfers that would take the family across central Arkansas over the next decade.
On September 5, 1957, Simmons dropped out of school and joined the U.S. Navy. In July 1959, Simmons, a Yeoman Third Class was assigned to the USS Missouri then berthed with the Pacific Reserve Fleet at Naval Station Bremerton in Washington, where he met Bersabe Rebecca "Becky" Ulibarri at a USO dance at the Bremerton YMCA.
The couple was married in Raton,New Mexico on July 9, 1960. Over the next 18 years, the couple had seven children.[2]
On July 13, 1962, Simmons left the Navy, and, in January 1963, joined the U.S. Air Force. He was assigned to the Air Force Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI) and, in January 1966, was promoted to Staff Sergeant. The following year, Simmons reenlisted and volunteered for a tour in Vietnam in return for a guarantee of a billet with AFOSI in Saigon. Before the transfer to Saigon, he was assigned to the AFOSI Personnel Investigations Division. Landing at Tan Son Nhut Air Base on August 2, 1967, Simmons was in Vietnam until July 1968, including the early 1968 Tet Offensive when Saigon was attacked.[2]
During his over 20-year administrative specialist military career, Simmons was awarded a Bronze Star Medal,[3] the Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Cross,[4][5] and the Air Force Small Arms Expert Marksmanship Ribbon. Simmons retired from the Air Force and military service on November 30, 1979, with the rank of master sergeant. Simmons' service record was spotless and his performance marks were often exemplary. Simmons's career in the Air Force was primarily clerical.[2]
From 1976 to 1981, the family lived on a 2-acre property in Wills Canyon near the small town of Cloudcroft, New Mexico.[2]
In April 1976, after a three-year stint in the UK,[6] Air Force Master Sergeant R. Gene Simmons was assigned to the Space and Missile Systems Organization (SAMSO) observatory high in the Sacramento Mountains east of Alamogordo. The SAMSO Electro-Optical Research Facility focused its telescopes on air force communications satellites and detectors on high-flying aircraft. Located thirty-two miles from Holloman AFB, the observatory was a semiautonomous post with a personnel roster of one officer and seven enlisted personnel, with Simmons being the senior enlisted man. All had top security clearances.[2]
In November 1976, the Air Force announced that the observatory would be placed on "caretaker status" as soon as possible. As the staff numbers at the site decreased, Simmons took on more responsibilities and ultimately was the last person to "turn out the lights" when the observatory was deactivated in June 1978. After this, Simmons was transferred to the 6585th Test Group at Holloman Air Force Base near Alamogordo.[2]
Late in 1979, Simmons, who had over 20 years of service, chose to retire when faced with the possibility of a promotion to Senior Master Sergeant (E-8) that would require extending his service obligation and a transfer to Turkey.[2][6]
On May 5, 1981, Simmons began working as a GS-4 civil service employee at Holloman AFB. [2]
In 1981, Simmons was investigated for allegations of child sex abuse and for allegedly impregnating his 17-year-old daughter, Sheila. Social Services had been alerted anonymously on April 17, 1981.[7]The district attorney at the time, Steven Sanders, stated that Simmons' son, R. Gene Simmons Jr., revealed to him that he was the informant.[8] The son called two more times in the next three days, again anonymously. Additionally, authorities learned of the allegations through friends of Sheila who had been told about the situation and from school officials.
On April 20, a caseworker went to Cloudcraft to investigate rumors. Meeting privately, Sheila confirmed the suspicions that she was pregnant with her father's child.[6][9]
An assistant Otero County prosecutor was notified on April 21. Under threat of prosecution, Simmons eventually agreed to a program of psychological counseling for the whole family.[6]
According to authorities, the initial incest had occurred in July 1980, in a hotel room in Phoenix when Simmons and Sheila were on their way from New Mexico to California for a coin show. While Simmons loved coin collecting, Sheila only pretended to enjoy it to please him.[6]
According to social workers' investigations, at least two more occurrences occurred in September 1980. In March 1981, Sheila recognized she was pregnant and told her father. She gave birth to a daughter, Sylvia, on June 17, 1981.[6][2]
A 1981 New Mexico Social Services report says that social workers tried to get legal custody of R. Gene Simmons' four daughters after he insisted the family would raise the child he fathered with the eldest daughter. The report, dated June 8, 1981, asked District Attorney Sanders to seek a court order for custody of the children. Sanders later claimed an assistant district attorney never relayed the request to him.[10]
Simmons and his family attended counseling for five weeks in 1981,[6] but they stopped in June after their lawyer informed Simmons that anything he disclosed to social workers could be used against him in court. Once the counseling sessions ended, a criminal investigation began. On June 19, the District Attorney's office referred the case to the sheriff for further investigation.[11]
Deputy Jeff Farmer drove to the Simmons property on June 20, 1981, where he met Sheila Simmons and her mother Becky. Sheila refused to make any statement or comment. On July 6, school principal Everett Banister, who lived near the Simmons family, told Farmer that he took assignments to Sheila at home and made arrangements for her final exams.[12]
On December 30, 1987, Bannister said he didn't discuss the allegations with the family because social workers were handling the case. He said he took classwork to the Simmons home so she could graduate at the end of May and that the mother and her children were friendly, but Simmons was strange.[12]
Farmer's investigation ended July 11, 1981, after Farmer met with R. Gene Simmons Jr. Farmer said the younger Simmons would not talk about the incest allegation because his sister and mother asked him not to, but that the family was "well-satisfied" with its counseling session.[12]
Former DA Sanders said Sheila Simmons ignored a grand jury subpoena and refused to discuss the incest with investigators until Sanders threatened her with contempt of court.[8] Sheila reluctantly appeared and testified against her father, telling the jurors that her father had intimate relations with her three times. Sanders said, "She testified for two hours... She broke down and cried. She said she didn't want her father to go to prison."[13] Sheila's statements eventually led to a criminal charge and an arrest warrant.[14][15]
On August 11, 1981, in Otero County, New Mexico, two months after Sheila gave birth to a daughter,[16] Simmons was charged in New Mexico's 12th Judicial Distrct, with engaging in incest three times in September 1980 and could have faced up to nine years in prison if convicted.[17][8] Sheriff's deputies planning to arrest Simmons arrived at the home 20 miles outside of Cloudcroft on August 11 to find the family had packed and moved away.[18][19]
Abe DeLeon, Otero County manager for the New Mexico Human Services Department said he received an anonymous tip that the Simmons family had gone to the Little Rock area. DeLeon then sent a "protective Service alert" about Simmons to the Arkansas Human Service Department on March 17, 1982. Walt Patterson, deputy director of the Arkansas Human Services Department, said there was no reason for the department to act on an alert from New Mexico. The proper way to handle that would have been through law enforcement agencies, who might have traced Simmons through his military pension payments. Patterson also said, "if we had been contacted by the Simmons family, we would have taken action on the New Mexico alert."[20]
Former DA Steven Sanders said he met with R. Gene Simmons Jr. in June or July 1982. Simmons said he did not know where his father lived but that he could have him returned to New Mexico if the charges were dropped.[12]
The New Mexico incest charges were conditionally dismissed on August 10, 1982.[18][21] Former DA Sanders said the indictment was dismissed because officials had been unable to locate the family and the only witness was the uncooperative daughter. The dismissal had a provision allowing reinstatement of the charges if Simmons was arrested.[12] The dismissal canceled the arrest warrant and any information stored on the FBI's National Crime Information Center (NCIC) was dropped, leaving no trace.[22]
Fearing arrest, Simmons fled with his family, first to Ward, Arkansas in Lonoke County, where he worked as a GS-2 records clerk for the Veterans' Administration Medical Center in Little Rock and then a GS-4 waivers clerk in a Little Rock Army recruiting office.[2][4]
While in Ward, Simmons impregnated Sheila a second time, the pregnancy aborted this time by Dr. Chu Iy Tan in Dermott in early 1983.[2]
Purchasing a small "farm too far from Little Rock to commute" on June 12, 1983, the family took up residence on a 14-acre tract of land[23][24] in Pope County, 6.5 miles (10.5 km) north of Dover that they would dub "Mockingbird Hill."[2][25]
The Simmons property was just 0.25 miles (0.40 km) east of Arkansas Highway 7 on a low ridge parallel to Broomfield Road, a paved county road that traversed a part of Pope County with few paved roads during the 1980s. The property was located in Pleasant Valley, an unincorporated community north of Dover, which had little else nearby except for a church, a cemetery, a corner store, and a campground.[26]
Two days after the family moved in, a "No trespassing" sign went up at the bottom of the road and a barbed wire fence came soon after.[27]
The property featured a five-bedroom mobile home, with two bedrooms under an extended roof. The spacious family room included a fireplace, while the kitchen, dining room, and bedrooms were relatively small.[24][26][28] There was no home heating and air conditioning system. The only heat came from a fireplace in the family room; only one room had a window air conditioner.[2] There was a phone, but Simmons wouldn't let it be hooked up.[29] The family used two nearby outhouses because the toilet was broken.[30] The home was surrounded by a makeshift privacy fence that was as high as 10 feet tall in some places. Several weeks before Christmas, Simmons had ordered his family to dig a new privy pit, which would eventually be where he disposed of some of their bodies.[31][2]
While reconciling with Wanda, his estranged wife, Little Gene decided to temporarily have their three-year-old daughter, Barbara, spend time at his parents' house until Little Gene and Wanda could afford a new place. They planned to reunite and remarry in February 1988. Little Gene had arrived at Mocking Bird Hill on December 21. Wanda had decided to stay in New Mexico for Christmas.[26]
Even at home, Simmons was a recluse who spent much of his time at home in his room alone.[32]
He was described variously as a reclusive loner,[33] a quiet and stingy man, an unsmiling man with a piercing stare[27] who compelled his children to perform heavy labor, such as carrying five-gallon containers of dirt to maintain a steep driveway. Loretta Simmons, 17, described her father as a "drunken bum" to a school classmate who occasionally stayed overnight and who said Simmons "had a beer in his hand all the time. He had one little room he would stay in all the time. It was dark and seemed spooky and it stunk. Nobody ever went in there but him."[34] It was the only room with an inside lock and had always been off-limits to the children.[2]
In Pope County, Simmons worked a string of low-paying jobs, going from an "industrial" cleaner's job at a pickle plant in Atkins to a "processor" job at a frozen food plant in Russellville and, then, part-time clerk on the nightshift at a Sinclair Mini Mart.[2][27] He quit a 20-month position as an accounts receivable clerk at Woodline Motor Freight on November 19, 1986, after being reprimanded by his boss, Joyce Butts, about his behavior toward a co-worker, Kathy Kendrick.[25][26] He worked weekend night shifts at the Mini Mart[2] for approximately three and a half years[35] before quitting on December 18, 1987.[36]
The number of people in the home had decreased to six. Gene Jr.—"Little Gene"—moved out before the family left New Mexico and married Wilma Sue Pitts in Alamogordo on February 28, 1984. Sheila married Dennis McNulty, whom she had met at a business school a year or so earlier, in August 11, 1984, and took her daughter, Sylvia, with her when she left and moved to Camden. William moved out after securing full-time hours at Hardee's (where he made shift manager) in 1984. He married Renata May in October 1985 and the couple moved to Fordyce. The fourth oldest child, Loretta, was an honors student in the senior class at Dover High School. Set to graduate the following spring, she had made little effort to hide her desire to leave home at her first opportunity.[2][26][29]
Simmons owned three weapons. In 1968, when stationed with Air Force OSI in San Francisco, he had purchased a long-barreled Ruger .22-caliber revolver and a Winchester .243-caliber rifle, which was still in its box in 1987. On May 5, 1984, he bought a snub-nose Harrington & Richardson revolver at the Walmart store in Russellville. He took the two pistols with him on his December 1987 rampage in Russellville.[2]
Some time before the 1987 Christmas holiday, Simmons decided to kill all the members of his family. It was the one time that his immediate family would gather in a short period.
On the morning of December 22, he first killed his wife Rebecca and eldest son Gene by bludgeoning them and shooting them with a .22-caliber pistol.[37] He then killed his three-year-old granddaughter Barbara by strangulation.
Simmons dumped the bodies in a pit he had forced his children to dig for a new outhouse almost two months earlier.[38]
Simmons then waited for his other children to return from school for Christmas break. Investigators believed the Simmons children, Loretta, Eddy, Marianne, and Becky (ages seventeen, fourteen, eleven, and eight) were separated and that each was strangled. It was thought that each child's head was held under water in a trash barrel that Simmons had placed in the nonfunctional bathroom and filled to make sure they were no longer breathing. The four children were subsequently dumped in the pit with the other bodies.[26][31]
They were all wearing school clothes. Eddie had a lunch ticket in a pocket. The girls still had barrettes in their hair, and one of them had gum in her mouth.[39] According to the autopsy, Loretta may have struggled trying to escape. Cuts on her face were consistent with being punched at least twice. Her watch and one of her earrings were broken.[26][40]
After he killed the family that had been living at home, Simmons made plans for what he was going to do in Russellville on Monday after the holiday weekend, got drunk and went around the house beating holes in the sheet rock walls and ceiling.[37]
Around mid-day on December 26, the remaining family members arrived at the home, as Simmons had invited them over for the holidays. The first to be killed was Simmons' son Billy and his wife Renata, who were both shot dead. He then strangled and drowned their 20-month-old son, Trae. Simmons also shot and killed his oldest daughter, Sheila (whom he had sexually abused), and her husband, Dennis McNulty. Simmons then strangled his child by Sheila, seven-year-old Sylvia Gail, and finally, his 21-month-old grandson Michael. Simmons laid the bodies of his whole family in neat rows in the lounge. Their bodies were covered with coats except that of Sheila, who was covered by Rebecca Simmons' best tablecloth. The bodies of Trae and Michael were wrapped in plastic sheeting and left in abandoned cars at the end of the lane.
The older six relatives had been shot as many as seven times each.[41][37]
After the murders, Simmons drove to a Sears store in Russellville, where he retrieved Christmas gifts that he had previously ordered for his family. That night, he went for a drink at a private club in Russellville—Pope County being a dry county, alcoholic beverages were only available in "private" clubs—before returning home where he spent the rest of the evening and the following day drinking beer and watching television.[31]
On the morning of December 28, the first Monday after Christmas, Simmons wrote a short letter, stuck it in an envelope with $250, and addressed it to his mother-in-law, May Novak. "Dear Ma, sometimes you reap many more times what you sow. This is just a little token of our appreciation. Keep it in remembrance of us. Love, Gene." [42] Simmons mailed it on his way through Dover.
Later that morning, armed with two .22-caliber revolvers,[33] Simmons drove a copper-colored Toyota Corolla[2] belonging to his oldest son, Ronald Gene Simmons, Jr., to Russellville. Simmons had meticulously mapped out his murderous route in town.[42]
His first target was Kathy Cribbins Kendrick at Peel, Eddy and Gibbons Law Firm, near the town center. Simmons had been infatuated with Kendrick when they both worked at Woodline Motor Freight Company, but she had rejected him. After walking into the office, he shot and killed Kendrick.
As he left, someone called police. It was about 10:17 AM. There was one dispatcher on duty.[42]
Simmons next went to an oil company office a little over a mile west on Main Street, where he intended to kill the owner, Russell "Rusty" Taylor. Taylor had previously also owned the Sinclair Mini Mart[43] from which Simmons had recently resigned. He shot and wounded Taylor before killing another person in the building named James David Chaffin; Chaffin was the only deceased victim who was a stranger to Simmons.[44] Another employee in the building was shot at, though the bullet missed.[31]
Simmons then drove back 3.5 miles through downtown to the Sinclair Mini Mart at 2400 East Main Street, shooting and wounding owner-manager David Salyer and clerk Roberta Woolery.[43][45][35] His final target was the office of the Woodline Motor Freight Company, where he shot his former supervisor twice, wounding her.[46] He then ordered one of the employees at gunpoint to call the police, telling her “I’ve come to do what I wanted to do. It’s all over now. I’ve gotten everybody who wanted to hurt me.”[47][31]
When the police arrived, Russellville Police Chief Herb Johnston entered the building unarmed alone.[48] Simmons handed over his gun and surrendered without any resistance. The Ruger was in a paper bag placed on a desk.[42]
Johnston later recalled, "When I was walking him to the car I asked him 'Why didn't you kill yourself?' He said he was afraid he would make a mess of it. He didn't want to be a vegetable.[49]
After his first trial, his attorney substantiated Simmons' intent, saying his client never intended to survive, that he intended to take his life after the Russellville shootings, but didn't "because of the trouble he was having killing people....He shot seven people—only two of them died."[50]
Throughout the 45-minute-long rampage, "wielding" two revolvers, Simmons had killed 2 , and wounded four others and briefly held a woman hostage.[51]
On December 29, 1987, Circuit Court Judge John G. Patterson held a probable cause hearing for Simmons, who wouldn't answer any questions. He wouldn't even nod or shake his head. Frustrated, Patterson ordered Simmons held without bond and appointed two local lawyers, John Harris and Robert E. "Doc" Irwin as his defense attorneys [17][52] after Russellville Police Chief Herb Johnston filed information accusing Simmons of two counts of capital murder and four of attempted capital murder.[53] Prosecutor John Bynum Filed two counts of capital murder and four counts of attempted murder on December 30 for the victims shot in Russellville. He said he would seek to have Simmons executed if he was found guilty on the capital charges. He also said he would eventually file charges against Simmons in the deaths of his fourteen family members.[54]
"There's nobody here, no sign of life." Sheriff's deputy James Hardy reported from outside the Simmons home on Broomfield Road around 1 P.M. on December 28, 1987.
After he was taken into custody, Simmons refused to talk or respond to any questions about his family. Sheriff James Bolin knew from witnesses in Russellville that Simmons had a large family. With the judge handling search warrants out of town, the sheriff decided an emergency search was justified.[52]
After the shootings in Russellville, authorities went to the Simmons home on Broomfield Road where the bodies of William and Renada Simmons and Sheila, Dennis and Sylvia McNulty were found inside after Sheriff Bolin, without a warrant,[55] gained access through an unlocked window on the south side of the residence.[2][56][49] A deputy, Ray Caldwell, later said the entry was made to determine if "anybody was alive."[52]
One of the investigators followed Caldwell with a video camera borrowed from the Arkansas State Police as he entered every room. R. Gene Simmons' room was the last to be entered. It was locked until Sheriff Bolin kicked it in. The only room with an air conditioner, it had shelves lined with books, and behind a curtain, imported beer and gourmet food were stored—luxuries he hoarded.[52]
Just before the sun set, the bodies in the house were taken out in body bags and loaded into vans.[52]
After that discovery, authorities planned to search a large pond for other family members thought to be missing.[57] Pope County Sheriff Jim Bolin said that Simmons' wife, four of their children, aged 7 to 17, and four grandchildren were unaccounted for.[58] On December 29, seven bodies were discovered in a mass grave about 150 feet from the house. When a deputy noticed the freshly dug earth, the search in the pond was stopped and the crew started digging. The burial pit was 3 feet, 4 inches wide and 6 feet, 2 inches long. The first of the seven bodies was located two feet below the surface.[52]
Other searchers then discovered the bodies of the children in the two cars.[59][17] Of the 14 bodies, six were shot and eight were strangled "with cord."[60][61] Testimony and video in the trial identified the cords used were fish stringers.[62][26][52]
Sheriff Bolin said walls and the ceiling in the house had been punched-in in places by what looked like blows from a heavy metal tool, suck as a wrecking bar.[33] Attorney John Harris recalled Simmons telling him he used a hammer.[37]
In New Mexico, Simmons exerted complete control over his family, subjecting them to relentless abuse—primarily verbal, but at times physical. He first struck his wife in front of their children in 1978. After school and on weekends, the kids mainly went around and found rocks—they were building a stone wall around the property.[6] The eldest daughter, Sheila, endured the worst of it, suffering sexual abuse at his hands.
According to attorney John Harris, when the family fled New Mexico, Simmons became a fugitive with a felony warrant hanging over him. Unbeknownst to him, New Mexico had ceased pursuing that warrant, and the case became inactive in 1982. Simmons remained convinced that there was still an active warrant out for his arrest. As a result, his grip on the family tightened, and the abuse escalated. Financial struggles and personal failures deepened his obsessions, pushing him further into isolation and tightening his oppressive control over those trapped under his rule.[63]
Simmons confided to Harris that he was concerned that his wife might divorce him and that would be the end of everything with his record (the incest charges). He had a lot of debt and had quit his remaining part-time job. Becky had a lump in her breast that compounded his worries.[37]
Simmons kept a tight rein on his family, according to schoolmates, particularly his wife and 17-year-old daughter. While the children were all talented in school, they were intensely shy and refused to discuss family life.[64]
On December 31, 1987, Pope County sheriff's investigators said they believed Ronald Gene Simmons, Sr., might have been enraged after learning that his wife was secretly preparing to leave and divorce him.[65][27] In Russellville, witnesses told them Simmons harbored personal grudges against victims shot in Russellville and that he had an unrequited amorous infatuation with Kathy Kendrict who had rejected repeated advances and filed a sexual harassment complaint against Simmons.[17]
The three oldest siblings, all adults who had left home, were working in concert to convince Becky to leave Simmons.[26]
In a summer 1987 four-page handwritten letter from Rebecca Simmons to son William, she wrote, in part, "I am a prisoner here and the kids too ... Dad has had me like a prisoner ...." "I don't want to live the rest of my life with Dad." "Every time I think of freedom I want out as soon as possible." The slain wife of R. Gene Simmons was contemplating leaving, but worried she could not find a job but decided to wait. "God is telling me to be more patient, Right now I'll just say (I'll) do some checking and then it will help me make my decision." "I know when I get out I might need help, Dad has had me like a prisoner, that the freedom might be hard for me to take, yet I know it would be great, having my children visit me anytime, having a telephone, going shopping if I want, going to church." The letter depicts a suppressed, isolated family living in fear.[66][67][68]
In a September 29, 1987, letter to Sheila, Becky wrote, "Billy, I know, worries over me so I've been doing a lot of thinking of leaving your dad. I've been a prisoner long enough. Bill and I are trying to find a way. I just don't want to give your dad anything. He has mistreated us all long enough, so I feel no pity for him, and being alone is what he deserves. All this will take time but I don't want to continue this life with Fatso." Becky often referred to Gene as "Fatso" in letters that didn't get mailed through him.[26][2]
Becky Simmons' family said they didn't trust Simmons because he seemed to get stranger and stranger each year. Becky's older sister, Viola O'Shields, said, "He was a very loving man at one time. He loved his family."[6] Manual Ulibarri, her brother, said Simmons had his sister “so isolated so she couldn’t go anywhere or do anything. The only time she could go out was to wash clothes.”[9] "Gene never liked his stepfather," said his sister-in-law, Edith Nesby. "Actually, he didn't like anybody. ... Anything that went wrong was always somebody else's fault."
"In my heart, I think I know the reason why. Like told you before, he just had lost control of the family. He couldn't bear to be with... Like a general, he had to have control all the time, said Manuel. "After the incest he lost control. My sister Becky was sleeping in the room with the girls.... Gene just lost control of the family and couldn't take it. In other words, they just didn't have anything to do with him and he couldn't take it.[38]
In the last eight months of his life, Simmons corresponded with KHTV news anchor Anne Jansen, exchanging eight letters and speaking four times—twice at Pope County detention center, once at Tucker, and once at Cummins Unit. He asked Jansen to keep their conversations private, stating he would have stopped communicating if he thought it was for journalistic purposes. [52]
During her first conversation with Simmons, Anne quickly observed his intense paranoia. He believed that even unbolted items, like light bulbs and wall switches, could contain listening devices. Ironically, he was always eager to keep an eye on everything.[52]
It was thought that Simmons planned to kill himself after his rampage in Russellville. After several shots from the .22-caliber pistols failed to kill multiple victims, he worried that using it for suicide might leave him disabled instead. He also doubted his chances of dying if he tried to shoot it out with the police.[37]
The autopsy results showed that the victims died from gunshots or strangulation.[26][60][61]
| Date | Name | Age | Relationship | Cause of death |
| December 22, 1987 | ||||
| Ronald Gene Simmons Jr. | 26 | Son | Gunshot | |
| Bersabe Rebecca Simmons | 46 | Wife | Gunshot | |
| Barbara Sue Simmons | 3 | Granddaughter (daughter of Ronald Gene Simmons, Jr.)[69][70] | Strangulation | |
| Loretta Simmons | 17 | Daughter | Strangulation | |
| Eddy Simmons | 14 | Son | Strangulation | |
| Marianne Simmons | 11 | Daughter | Strangulation | |
| Rebecca "Becky" Simmons | 8 | Daughter | Strangulation | |
| December 26, 1987 | ||||
| William "Billy" Simmons II | 22 | Son | Gunshot | |
| Renata[71] Lynne May Simmons | 21 | Daughter-in-Law | Gunshot | |
| William H. "Trae" Simmons III | 1 | Grandson | Drowning | |
| Sheila Simmons McNulty | 24 | Daughter | Gunshot | |
| Dennis McNulty | 33 | Son-in-Law | Gunshot | |
| Sylvia Gail McNulty | 6 | Granddaughter/Daughter | Strangulation | |
| Michael McNulty | 1 | Grandson | Strangulation | |
| December 28, 1987 | ||||
| Kathleen "Kathy" Kendrick | 24 | Acquaintance | Gunshot | |
| James David "Jim" Chaffin | 33 | Stranger | Gunshot |
On December 30, 1987, Simmons was transferred from the Pope County Detention Center to the Arkansas State Hospital in Little Rock[72] after Circuit Judge John Patterson ordered him held without bond and to undergo a psychiatric evaluation. On February 29, 1988, he was returned to Pope County[2] where Judge Patterson accepted a state hospital finding that he was competent to stand trial and that he was sane at the time of the slayings. Patterson also set a May 9 trial date.[73]
Simmons didn't plead guilty. He wanted the death penalty from the very beginning. A death sentence, under Arkansas law, was only permitted upon a jury's recommendation. If he had pled guilty, the only available sentence would have been life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.[50][37]
Defended by two local court-appointed attorneys,[74] John Harris and Robert "Doc" Irwin,[37][75] Simmons first went on trial in Ozark—moved there because of widespread news coverage[76]—for capital murder for the killings of Kendrick and Chaffin, five counts of attempted murder and a kidnapping charge. In the four-day trial, Simmons was linked to shootings at four businesses through eyewitness accounts and ballistics evidence.[77][78]
The defense rested without presenting evidence or calling witnesses. They had previously decided against an insanity defense.[75]
Prosecutor John Bynum, arguing for death, said, "There is nothing in the record that says this man is entitled to a break—nothing.[79]
Simmons was found guilty on May 12, 1988, and was sentenced to death.[80][31] Simmons was also sentenced for 30 years for each of four attempted capital murder counts, 20 years for a fifth attempted capital court, and 7 years for a first-degree false imprisonment charge.[81]
After jurors had been excused, Simmons told Circuit Judge John Patterson he had a statement to make. Speaking softly from the witness stand, Simmons stated in open court that, after careful thought and consideration, he was ready to waive all his rights to appeal.[77][82] His statement included the following:
I, Ronald Gene Simmons, Sr., want it to be known that it is my wish and my desire that absolutely no action by anybody be taken to appeal or in any way change this sentence.
It is further respectfully requested that this sentence be carried out expeditiously. I want no action that will delay, deny, defer, or denounce this very correct and proper death sentence.[83]
Judge Patterson reminded Simmons that "any time prior to execution, you have the right to change your mind and appeal." Simmons told the court that his decision was made the day of the shootings in Russellville and that he wouldn't change his mind.[84]
On May 16, Judge Patterson found Simmons to be of sound mind and could waive his right to appeal. Patterson issued an order for Simmons to be executed by lethal injection at 11 a.m. June 27.[85] Calling his sentence "proper punishment for the crime," Simmons told the judge he would not try to stop the execution. "I arrived at my decision in regard to the proper punishment on Dec. 28 and don't hold your breath for me to change it.[86]
In early January 1988, Dorothy Gueller of Woodhaven, N.Y., filed a foreclosure suit against Simmons seeking return of the property she sold Simmons on Broomfield Road and $28,081 she said was still owed.[87]The foreclosure petition was approved in May after there had been no payments since November 1987. On June 15, the property was sold at auction on the steps of the Pope County Courthouse. The only bid came from the woman Simmons had bought the property from.[24] On March 29, 1989, the house, which had been subjected to ongoing vandalism, was destroyed by fire. The state fire marshal ruled the blaze as arson.[88][89]
In a 6-1 ruling, the Arkansas Supreme Court issued a temporary stay of the execution on June 20 after attorney Mark S. Cambiano for Catholic priest Louis J. Franz raised issues of whether Arkansas had or should have had a mandatory review of capital cases or the waiver of appeals in such cases.[90]
On June 21, Circuit Judge Patterson said that the trial for the murders of Simmons family members, initially scheduled for July 18, would be postponed indefinitely pending decisions by the higher court.[91]
The Arkansas Supreme Court terminated the temporary stay on July 1, 1988, in a 5-2 ruling,[92] holding that Rev. Franz did not have standing in the case and that Simmons understood his choice not to appeal. They also held that automatic appeals were not mandated but that the court would not automatically acquiesce to a defendant's desire to decline his right to appeal. [93]
With the stay lifted on July 15, on July 15, Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton set Simmons's execution date for August 9 in a letter to A.L. "Art" Lockhart, director of the Arkansas Department of Corrections.[94]
U.S. District Judge G. Thomas Eisele stayed the execution on August 3, 1988, telling lawyers he would decide later in the month whether a court review in death penalty cases is mandatory but wouldn't consider if others had standing to intervene nor whether Simmons was competent to waive his right to appeal.[95] Eisele's stay came after attorney Mark Cambiano filed motions on August 2 on behalf of Catholic priest Louis J. Franz and Darrel Wayne Hill, an inmate who was also on death row.[96]
Attorney Mark Cambiano filed a motion on August 12 asking that a temporary guardian be appointed to Simmons, claiming that Simmons' attorneys, John Harris and Robert W. "Doc" Irwin, had provided ineffective assistance of counsel.[97]
After Circuit Judge John S. Patterson scheduled a tentative trial date for the first week of December, defense attorneys requested Simmons be brought to Russellville to make him more accessible for preparation of motions pending in state and federal courts. Simmons was moved from death row to the Russellville jail on August 19[98] and returned to death row at the Maximum Security Unit near Tucker on September 1.[99]
Judge Eisele ruled on September 23 that Rev. Franz and inmate Hill did not have standing to appeal Simmons' execution and that Simmons himself must make any further appeals in the case. He also ruled that the Arkansas Supreme Court had established that mandatory capital case appeals were not required.[100]
On September 29, Judge Eisele ordered more psychiatric evaluations for Simmons and appointed Little Rock lawyer John Wesley Hall, Jr., to advise him on possible avenues of appeal. Before making a final ruling on the competency issue, Eisele wanted a 30-day assessment of Simmons by authorities at the Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Springfield, Missouri. [101] Hall thoroughly reviewed the case records and decided that Simmons' attorneys had made all of the appropriate arguments and objections and that the appeal issues had been addressed.[37]
A December 29 order provided to the Arkansas attorney general's office by Judge Eisle ruled that Simmons could waive his right to appeal his conviction.[102]
On December 21, 1988, Judge John Patterson issued an order moving Simmons' trial for the murders of his 14 family members to Clarksville, in Johnson County because of pre-trial publicity.[103] The 14 deaths had been consolidated into one count of capital murder.[104]
On January 18, 1989, Judge Patterson refused to bar most of the evidence the state gained when officers entered Simmons' home. Sheriff Jim Bolen and other officers entered the home on December 27, 1987, after Simmons had been arrested in Russellville following the shootings there. They testified that their concern was for the welfare of the family. Bolin said he thought they could be injured, perhaps bleeding to death in the house and that his fear was based on Simmons' reaction—a quivering lip and tearful eyes—when asked about his family, though he wouldn't answer any questions.[105]
Patterson ruled that the 14 deaths would be treated as one count of capital murder.[106]
On February 9, in testimony, Dr. Bennett G. Preston, former assistant medical examiner for Arkansas, summarized what he found when he did autopsies on the 14 bodies. Other testimony indicated that no firearms were found at the Simmons home.[107]
As to motive in the trial, a family friend told investigators that Simmons' wife had been saving up money to divorce Simmons when the killings happened. During the trial Simmons had to be removed from the courtroom for punching the prosecutor, John Bynum, and trying to grab a deputy's handgun, after Bynum had introduced a letter between Simmons and his daughter Sheila in which Simmons expressed anger that Sheila had revealed that he was the father of her child, and that he would see her in Hell.[1][108]
Simmons was found guilty on February 10, 1989, again being sentenced to death by lethal injection, with the execution set for March 16 after Simmons told Judge Patterson he knew of no reason he should not be immediately sentenced. Jurors deliberated for more than four hours before reaching a guilty verdict and took another three hours to return the sentencing recommendation.[109]
He refused to appeal his death sentence, stating, "To those who oppose the death penalty – in my particular case, anything short of death would be cruel and unusual punishment." The trial court conducted a hearing concerning Simmons' competence to waive further proceedings, and concluded that his decision was knowing and intelligent.
Simmons became the subject of the United States Supreme Court case Whitmore v. Arkansas when another death row inmate, Jonas Whitmore, attempted unsuccessfully to force an appeal of Simmons' case.[110]
While on death row, Simmons had to be separated from other prisoners as his life was threatened constantly. This was because he refused to appeal his death sentence; the other prisoners believed Simmons was damaging their chances of beating their own death sentences.
In June, Assistant Attorney General Jack Gillean said Simmons could stop the execution at any time up to the point of the lethal injection by saying he wanted to pursue his right to an appeal. "That is because he is a volunteer, which is the word we're using for people who aren't appealing and who want to be executed."[91][37]
On May 31, 1990, Arkansas governor (later President) Bill Clinton signed Simmons' execution warrant, and on June 25, he died by the method he had chosen, lethal injection, in the Cummins Unit.[111] The execution commenced at 9:02 p.m. CDT and he was declared dead at 9:19 p.m.[112] None of his surviving relatives would claim the body, and he was buried in a potter's field in Lincoln County, Arkansas.[31][37]
Before his execution, Simmons gave a brief, confusing final statement, "Justice delayed finally be done is justifiable homicide."[113]
Simmons never expressed remorse for his actions.
Gene's unstinting devotion to his job was rewarded with a Bronze Star for meritorious service, the highest decoration a serviceman can receive for anything other than heroism. Gene composed the first draft of the Bronze Star citation, characterizing himself in phrases that do not appear in the final recommendation...
...awarded by quota in the failing days of the Saigon governement.
(Deleon) said his office told the district attorney about the allegation the same day by phone, and followed up with a written report to the prosecutor a week later.
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Beth Bannister, a social worker with the Otero County office of the New Mexico Department of Social Services, said the whole family willingly attended counseling sessions from April to June 1981. Abe DeLeon, the office manager, said the family stopped after the family lawyer told Simmons Sr. that anything he told social workers could be used against him.
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Sanders said he could not disclose grand jury testimony, but that Sheila told him outside the courtroom she became pregnant by her father. However, she remained loyal to her father and had to be ordered to testify before the grand jury.
(Bill) Woltz knows this because his office still has an open charge of incest against Simmons, dated August 1981, and placed in the department's inactive file a year later." "'The case was (closed) due to his absconding from New Mexico,' Woltz said. 'But it was (closed) in such a way that we can pursue it if we want to. I don't think we'll pursue it, now.'
The R. Gene Simmons house and 14 acres of land near Dover was sold at auction July (actually June) 15 at the Pope County Courthouse and only one bid was received.
Pope County Circuit Clerk Juanita Barber read the auction notice Wednesday on the steps of the courthouse. Included in the sale was a house—consisted of a trailer with built-on frame additions—and about 14 acres
The telephone, heat and air conditioning never worked and the family apparently used two nearby outhouses because the toilet was broken.
Wilma Simmons said her former father-in-law was a recluse who often stayed in his room alone to avoid contact with his family.
Woolery identified Simmons as the gunman and said she and Simmons had been co-workers at the market for 3½ years.
Sheriff's Lt. Jay Winters said Simmons had worked at the Sinclair Mini-Mart until Dec. 18.
A convenience store manager shot in the head during a rampage that left 16 people dead and four wounded in northern Arkansas apparently was saved by a wooden chair he threw at the gunman, a hospital spokesman said.
Salyer said the gunman was R. Gene Simmons, 47, who had worked for him until Dec. 18, when he quit his part-time job.
Johnston's former colleagues here remember him as a 'gutsy' cop who was willing to take risks." "He was 'a Lee Marvin type,' said Del Meyer, a police officer for Clayton and a former collegue of Johnston. 'He was all policeman and looked the part. He was a top-notch copper.'
I guess I did a foolish thing that day, but when all that is going down at the same time, you don't think, you just react.
'It was a cuel and senseless act that was committed, and the death penalty would certainly be justifie,' Bynum said.
(Prosecutor) Bynum said that no warrant was needed because authorities have right to enter and search a residence 'in any emergency situation.' He said that after Simmons was arrested in the Russellville shootings, authorities went to check on the welfare of his family, and found his house 'all dark, all curtains drawn. No one came to the door. We knew at that point that he was supposed to have family at home.' The sheriff acted completely within his rights by crawling through an unlocked window Monday and discovering five bodies in the house.'
'The gifts are still under the tree and packed in the closet as though they didn't have a Christmas at All,' (Sheriff) Bolin said.
Autopsy findings released Thursday showed that Simmons eight younger children and grandchildren, ranging in age from 20 months to 17 years, were stangled, while the older six relatives were shot as many as seven times each.
At one point, Prosecutor John Bynum caused Duvall to stop the tape to explain to the jury that they were about to see scenes showing a yellow fish stringer cord around the neck of a child's body in the grave. Then Duvall played the tape and used a pointer to show the stringer.
He lived in Dover for four years, as a fugitive with a felony warrant over his head, and it was never served on him. I do not know if they ever attempted to. They could have at any time. Not only he, but his whole family, had to live as a fugitive, his wife and all his children. As you can imagine they cannot have friends over, they cannot get on the telephone, they cannot go places. Any one of them could have spilled the beans at any moment and he would have gone to prison just like that. It was like having a sledgehammer over his head. After living that way as a fugitive, the whole family, for four years conditions just got worse and worse and worse with him where the family actually did not like it and they were afraid of him. He just got worse and worse, he was like a tyrant and you know it was going to lead somewhere. If his wife gets a divorce or one of those children tells a friend or anything he was in prison. I think that is what set this up.
Investigators said they do not know how Simmons learned of his wife's divorce plans, but they said they believe she was trying to keep him from finding out." " 'From everything we've learned about the family and his behavior, we think he would have been the last person she would have told,' (sheriff's Lt. Jay) Winters said.
The bodies of her former husband, Gene Simmons Jr, and their daughter, Barbara Sue Simmons, were found along with 12 other bodies...
Services are pending... for Barbara Sue Simmons, 3, of San Antonio, Texas, who died in Russellville, Ark." "She is survived by her mother, Wilma Sue Simmons of Alamagordo;...
'We plead not guilty and we're just going to make them prove their case,' defense attorney John Harris said Sunday. 'We're just going to see that they don't get out of line, that they give him a fair trial.'
According to police, Simmons used two .22-caliber revaovers...
Patterson announced his decision to permit Simmons to waive his right to appeal after hearing testimony from Dr. Irving Kuo, a psychiatrist with the State Hospital.
'There's no electricity, no gas, no utility connected to the house,' said fire marshall Dwayne Luter on Wednesday. 'Nothing there to start a fire accidentally.'
Justice Tom Glaze dissented to the extent that he believed the Supreme Court's review of a death sentence appeal waiver should go back to the sentencing phase of the case. Justice Steele Hays dissented on grounds that the state ought to require review of all death sentence cases in full.
Cambiano said after Monday's state Supreme Court ruling that he would seek a stay of execution from U.S. Supreme Court Justice Harry Blackmun, pending a decision by the nation's high court on whether it would hear the Simmons case.
I am convinced that no decision being more important than the decision to take a life ... that we do not do so without having benefit of all arguments. I want the benefit of careful research.
Franz, who was joined by Hill as a plaintiff in the latest filing, now want U.S. District Judge G. Thomas Eisele to consider several points, including whether Arkansas is required by the federal Constitution to condict an appellate review of Simmons' and other prisoners's death sentences.
R. Gene Simmons, 48, of Dover is less of a problem than most prisoners at the Pope County Detention Center, (Sheriff James) Bolin said Monday. 'He's quiet and doesn't make any demands.'
Hall will be required to advise Simmons on the issues that could be raised in an appeal, but Simmons told Judge Eisele that he was already aware that he could appeal the case.
Police had the right to go into the house because there was a resonable basis for thinking that family members might be in need of medical help, the judge said. The entry into the grave and the cars was legal under another doctrine—the principle that says that a person's fields and forests are not entitled to the same privacy protection as his house and lawn.
Attorney General Steve Clark and assisstant, Leslie Powell, were present in case Simmons changed his mind and appealed