Tuesday, July 05, 2005

July 13 hearing set for turnpike killer

It appears that the parole hearing for Paul Wessley Murray, who is serving a 10-year sentence for the Jan. 11, 1994, murder of Sheila Mayfield, Jasper, will be held Wednesday, July 13. I wasn't able to get exact information from Oklahoma prison authorities during a telephone conversation, but the person I talked to indicated that those who are up for parole for the first time usually go through a thorough personal interview with the parole board. Those who have already gone through such hearings usually go through what are called "jacket reviews" in which the board goes by what is in the prisoner's file.
Sheila Mayfield, her sister, Shelly Wells, and her grandmother, Velta Ball, were returning from a Miami, Okla., hospital where Sheila and Shelly's mother, Peggy Gordon, was recovering from surgery. They were less than one mile from the Missouri state line when a rock was thrown from the overpass, crashing through the windshield and killing Sheila instantly.
As mentioned in the June 8 Turner Report, two teens were arrested for the murder. One, 15-year-old Benji Trammel, pleaded guilty, was sent to a juvenile correctional facility, was released when he turned 18, and the crime was removed from his record.
More than five years passed before Paul Murray finally pleaded guilty to murder in the second degree. He was initially charged with first degree murder after Oklahoma officers found a notebook in his school locker which depicted the same scenario which had claimed Sheila Mayfield's life. Later, the charge was downgraded to second degree murder, to get Murray to enter his plea and to finally bring the case to a close.
Murray entered an Alford plea, meaning he conceded there was enough evidence to convict him, but he was not saying he was actually guilty. As a part of the plea agreement, as The Carthage Press reported in John Hacker's story in the Feb. 2, 1999, issue, Murray's sentence was to be reviewed in 120 days and if he maintained good behavior during that time, his sentence would be reduced from 15 to only five years in prison. He was freed after that four-month period. No five-year sentence, just the four months. Murray was released after four months despite a pre-sentence investigation which said he remained a "danger and a threat to the community and himself."
As of mid-summer 1999, Paul Murray was a free man. His brushes with the law did not end. On March 12, 2002, he pleaded guilty to a public intoxication charge. Four months later, he was stopped and charged with not wearing a seat belt. On March 10, 2003, it was failure to pay child support.Finally, and no information is available from court records as to what ended up sending Murray to prison, it was determined that he had violated the terms of his parole and he was sent to the Oklahoma State Reformatory in Granite on Sept. 11, 2003.
At the moment, Murray has spent two years and two months in prison for Sheila Mayfield's murder.

1 comment:

courts dont know said...

what's messed up with this? benji trample threw the rock, killed that woman. Paul murray was already 16, so the law went after him. might as well done it all himself