Last Known to be Alive“
Joseph Neff, Staff Writer

December 102002

The News and Observer

WINDSOR — Until the moment police pressed his fin­ger­tips on an ink pad for his prints, Alan Gell did­n’t think that he would actually be

charged with killing Allen Ray Jenkins.

He did­n’t even think he was a sus­pect. He nev­er request­ed a lawyer.

Figuring he had noth­ing to hide, he spoke freely with State Bureau of Investigation Agent Dwight Ransome and Aulander Police Chief Gordon Godwin. Told that Crystal Morris and Shanna Hall had named him as the mur­der­er, he offered to help. Let me call the girls and you can lis­ten to the con­ver­sa­tion, he said. Listen to their answers.

No way, Ransome said. They believed the girls, not Gell.

Gell nev­er changed his sto­ry: He did­n’t know Jenkins, nev­er went to his house and had noth­ing to do with the mur­der. Jenkins’ decom­pos­ing body was found in his home in the Bertie County town of Aulander on April 14, 1995. He had been shot to death.

In jail, charged with the crime, Gell felt con­fused, mis­un­der­stood, angry.

These feel­ings would not go away.

Respectful boy

James Alan Gell was 20 at the time of Jenkins’ mur­der and is 28 now. Born in Columbus County, he moved around a lot as a child. Friends and fam­i­ly remem­ber him as a respect­ful boy who did chores for neigh­bors — cut­ting grass, fix­ing a mow­er — but nev­er want­ed to be paid. He had a knack for draw­ing and art.

He dropped out of high school at age 16 and got his GED soon after­ward at a com­mu­ni­ty col­lege. He worked at his moth­er’s used car lot, or for his step­fa­ther, a con­trac­tor who often worked at the sprawl­ing Perdue chicken plant.

After he got his dri­ver’s license, Gell start­ed dip­ping into drugs, first using, then sell­ing. He became more secre­tive with his fam­i­ly and began hang­ing around with a dif­fer­ent crowd. He had sev­er­al arrests for minor drug pos­ses­sion that were dismissed.

While Gell has con­sis­tent­ly denied any involve­ment in the slay­ing of Jenkins, his tim­ing was ter­ri­ble, because in the days sur­round­ing Jenkins’ mur­der, he was a one-man crime wave.

On April 2, 1995, he was arrest­ed for steal­ing a trac­tor and released that night. On April 4, he took a truck belong­ing to the father of his friend, Dewayne Conner. Gell drove the truck to Virginia and Maryland with his girl­friend, Shanna Hall, to buy drugs. On his return, he was jailed for two weeks for the truck theft.

Soon after being released on house arrest, he stole some blank checks from his moth­er, cashed them and went to Florida with Conner. In Bradenton, Fla., on May 7, Gell and Conner ran out of a Pizza Hut with­out pay­ing for their food or beer. Police arrest­ed them and soon learned there was a war­rant for Gell. They shipped him back to the Bertie-Martin Regional Jail in Windsor on June 25. He has been locked up ever since.

The charge against Gell rest­ed on the premise that Jenkins was killed April 3 — the only day Gell could have com­mit­ted the crime. He was out of state April 4 and 5 and jailed from April 6 until April 20, six days after the body was found.

The two years Gell spent in jail wait­ing for tri­al had pos­i­tive points. He sobered up, read a lot and drew, though the jail­ers would arbi­trar­i­ly con­fis­cate his art­work and pen­cils. His drug­gie friends did­n’t vis­it or write. His fam­i­ly ral­lied around him, though they did­n’t know what to do to help.

Still, Gell felt as if he had been rot­ting for two years. Nothing vis­i­ble had hap­pened in his case except a game of musi­cal chairs among his lawyers.

His first lawyer, and then his sec­ond, had quit the case to work as pros­e­cu­tors. His third was study­ing for a divin­i­ty degree at Duke University while prac­tic­ing law in Windsor. In September 1997, sev­er­al months before the start of the tri­al, she asked out, say­ing she could­n’t take class­es while fac­ing the intense demands of a capital case.

That same month, Maynard Harrell became the fourth lawyer giv­en the job of keep­ing Alan Gell off death row.

Gell’s was the 20th cap­i­tal case for Harrell, a vet­er­an defense attor­ney from Plymouth. A Bertie County native, he has the rud­dy, weath­er-beat­en face of an avid hunter and fisherman.

Harrell opened Gell’s court file and was appalled: Almost noth­ing had been done in two years.

No inde­pen­dent inves­ti­ga­tion had been con­duct­ed for the defense: no inter­view­ing of wit­ness­es, no spade­work to chal­lenge or rebut the state’s case for Gell’s guilt. Nor did Gell have a mit­i­ga­tion spe­cial­ist, an inves­ti­ga­tor whose job is to pre­pare the case for why a jury, in the event of a guilty ver­dict, should reject the death penalty.

And, per­haps most telling, few motions had been filed.

Aptly named, motions move a court case along, dri­ving the sched­ule, evi­dence, wit­ness­es and legal issues. Of those that had been filed for the defense when Harrell took over, most were filed the day that Gell’s third attor­ney asked out of the case.

With just a few months to inves­ti­gate and pre­pare the case, Harrell was row­ing upstream, with one arm tied behind his back.

Few files shared

Gell was thrilled with the appoint­ment of the vet­er­an defense lawyer. He thought Harrell was going to fix everything.

But Gell soon became dis­ap­point­ed, as Harrell made little progress.

Despite a 1997 order to do so, pros­e­cu­tors had not turned over any mate­r­i­al that could help exon­er­ate Gell. And Gell’s defense team turned up none of its own.

The pace had picked up in August 1997, when pros­e­cu­tors dis­missed first-degree mur­der and rob­bery charges against Crystal Morris and Shanna Hall and accept­ed guilty pleas to sec­ond-degree mur­der. The girls would face up to 10 years in prison, not life.

After the guilty pleas, the local pros­e­cu­tors who had been han­dling the case hand­ed it off to lawyers from then-Attorney General Mike Easley’s office, because one of Gell’s for­mer lawyers now worked for the dis­trict attor­ney, cre­at­ing a con­flict of interest.

Alarmed that the case was final­ly mov­ing ahead, Gell’s moth­er paid $2,500 to Clifton Hardison, a pri­vate inves­ti­ga­tor. Despite repeat­ed prod­ding, he pro­duced no new evi­dence. Eight days into the tri­al, he faxed a report based entire­ly on a 4‑month-old inter­view with Gell. Rather than gath­er­ing the infor­ma­tion Harrell request­ed, he report­ed old or irrel­e­vant facts about such things as Gell’s sex life and his first meet­ing with Crystal and Shanna when buying marijuana.

Shortly before the tri­al began on Feb. 2, 1998, Harrell read a news­pa­per sto­ry say­ing that three peo­ple had seen Jenkins in Ahoskie on April 10 — a full week after Gell had sup­pos­ed­ly killed him.

This was impor­tant: Gell had an iron­clad ali­bi from April 4 until after Jenkins’ body was found April 14. He was out of state with Shanna on April 4 and 5, and in jail on the car-theft charge thereafter.

Harrell asked Superior Court Judge Louis Meyer to order pros­e­cu­tors to hand over any excul­pa­to­ry evi­dence — mate­r­i­al that could prove Gell’s innocence.

The pros­e­cu­tors replied that there was none. Some wit­ness­es had said they saw Jenkins after April 3, pros­e­cu­tor Debra Graves said, but they were mistaken.

Ransome talked to those wit­ness­es a num­ber of times, and the dates change from time to time,” Graves said. There was noth­ing excul­pa­to­ry about that infor­ma­tion, and con­se­quent­ly we did not provide it.”

At Judge Meyer’s insis­tence, how­ev­er, pros­e­cu­tors hand­ed over state­ments by 10 people.

All had been re-inter­viewed after April 3 had been estab­lished as the date of death, Meyer said, and all said they were unsure when they last saw Jenkins.

But out of an abun­dance of cau­tion,” Meyer let the defense lawyers read the statements.

So on the first day of tri­al, the state final­ly gave Gell’s lawyers reports of peo­ple who said they saw Jenkins alive after April 3.

But only some. All but one of the state­ments were from peo­ple whom Police Chief Godwin and SBI agent Ransome had re-inter­viewed after telling them Jenkins was killed April 3.

Like all defen­dants, Gell had the con­sti­tu­tion­al right to evi­dence in law enforce­ment files that could prove his inno­cence or cast doubt on the truth­ful­ness of wit­ness­es such as Crystal and Shanna.

Whether inten­tion­al­ly or inad­ver­tent­ly, the pros­e­cu­tion team did not turn over the state­ments of Donald Hale, Jenkins’ life­long friend who said he chat­ted with him April 7. They also did not pro­vide the account of Willie Hoggard, his across-the-street neigh­bor who said he saw him that same day; and that of Ricky Alan Odom, who told police he talked with Jenkins about roof­ing his home on April 7; and that of Jenkins’ broth­er Sidney, who said he had honked at him in town on April 8; and Edward and Margaret Adams, who saw him April 9.

The state did not hand over the tape record­ing of a phone call involv­ing Crystal Morris, the state’s key wit­ness — a con­ver­sa­tion with evi­dence that Crystal was fab­ri­cat­ing her account of the mur­der. And the state did­n’t turn over its numer­ous reports of Jenkins’ inter­est in young girls and pay­ments for sex.

The late pro­duc­tion of the wit­ness reports put Harrell at a dis­ad­van­tage. The tri­al had begun, and the lawyers were in court all day, with lit­tle time to chase down peo­ple who might help their case.

Crystal on stand

The pros­e­cu­tion began its case by putting Crystal Morris on the stand. She was demure and soft-spo­ken, a far cry from the pro­fane char­ac­ter heard on the taped phone call. The judge repeat­ed­ly urged her to speak up so jurors could hear her.

Crystal was the most impor­tant wit­ness for the state. She tes­ti­fied that she saw Gell kill Jenkins. The state had no phys­i­cal evi­dence tying Gell to the mur­der: no fin­ger­prints, no foot­prints, no fibers, no DNA evi­dence. No one had seen Gell at Jenkins’ home oth­er than Crystal and Shanna.

In the weeks after the mur­der, Crystal had giv­en six dif­fer­ent ver­sions of her role in the crime — start­ing with not know­ing any­thing about it and end­ing with an account that named Gell as the trig­ger man and acknowl­edged her own role as an acces­so­ry. She gave a sev­enth in August 1997 in the course of plead­ing guilty to second-degree murder.

Now, she pro­vid­ed Version Eight — a rearrange­ment of the crime scene. Previously, she had said Jenkins was shot as he stood at the foot of his water bed. She lat­er changed it, say­ing Jenkins was shot while stand­ing in the doorway.

At tri­al, she moved the vic­tim into the hall­way and placed Gell in the bed­room, part­ly con­cealed behind the door. She and Jenkins were walk­ing back to the bed­room, she said, when Gell fired the first shot. Jenkins stum­bled into the bed­room and Gell shot him a sec­ond time. Jenkins fell on his back. Gell stole $400 in cash from a closet.

Harrell pressed Crystal dur­ing cross-exam­i­na­tion, but not too much. He feared the jury would react bad­ly if he seemed to be bul­ly­ing a young woman.

Gell’s moth­er, Jeanette Johnson, was a ner­vous wreck through the tri­al. She was des­per­ate to help. After the SBI reports were hand­ed over, she spent sev­er­al days track­ing down peo­ple so the recent­ly hired mit­i­ga­tion spe­cial­ist could inter­view them. At night, she went home and con­duct­ed her own ama­teur forensic experiments.

After Crystal tes­ti­fied that Gell had shot Jenkins after emerg­ing from behind a door, Johnson and her hus­band Joel — Gell’s step­fa­ther — spent hours try­ing to re-cre­ate the scene. Joel Johnson, right-hand­ed like Gell, took an unloaded shot­gun and turned to his right around a door. It was awkward.

Later in the tri­al, an SBI crime scene inves­ti­ga­tor tes­ti­fied about a bloody pil­low found next to Jenkins’ body. The pil­low had been ripped in places, appar­ent­ly by pel­lets, but was still large­ly intact. The inves­ti­ga­tor spec­u­lat­ed that Gell had held a pil­low over the shot­gun muz­zle to muf­fle the blast.

That night, Jeanette Johnson made her hus­band act the scene out sev­er­al times: left hand hold­ing pil­low over muz­zle, right hand hold­ing the loaded shot­gun. Her hus­band refused to pull the trig­ger, fear­ing the recoil would smash his arm.

Jeanette Johnson hung the pil­low on a swing set. She want­ed to know what a shot­gun would do to it. Joel shot a hole in it. White stuff­ing flut­tered all over the yard.

The only med­ical evi­dence regard­ing the date of death was pre­sent­ed by Dr. M.G.F. Gilliland, a foren­sic pathol­o­gist at the med­ical school at East Carolina University. A tiny, intense woman with two decades of expe­ri­ence as a pathol­o­gist, Gilliland has tes­ti­fied in about 500 cas­es, most of them involv­ing homi­cide. She is wide­ly regard­ed as a pre­cise, pre­pared and confident witness.

Gilliland explained that the rate of decom­po­si­tion depends on tem­per­a­ture. The warmer it is, the faster the body rots. She also looked at the size of the mag­gots on the body. The age of the lar­vae would also help pin­point time of death. She gave her opin­ion: Jenkins had been dead at least sev­en days when the autop­sy took place April 15, and per­haps as many as 10 or 12 days. The mur­der could have occurred between April 3 and April 8.

No tem­per­a­ture data had been pro­vid­ed that would help her be more pre­cise. If the room was very nice and warm, then it would tend to be on the short­er” end of the range, she said. If it took the flies awhile to get in … the longer side would be as accurate.”

Chuck Moore, a lawyer assist­ing Harrell with the defense, treat­ed Gilliland cau­tious­ly dur­ing his cross exam­i­na­tion, fear­ful that she would attack him if he pressed too hard.

He was also thrown off-guard. He had spo­ken with her in January and learned that she pegged the time since death at sev­en to 10 days, a range that would exon­er­ate Gell giv­en his rock-sol­id ali­bi from April 4 for­ward. When she offered a range of sev­en to 12 days on the stand, he was sur­prised and did­n’t regain his footing.

Moore did not ask the like­li­hood of death occur­ring on April 3, or whether Gilliland had seen the state­ments hand­ed over at the start of the tri­al from wit­ness­es who had once said they saw Jenkins alive after April 3.

The first page of the report by the Bertie County Medical Examiner said LAST KNOWN TO BE ALIVE: April 8, 1995 mid-morn­ing.” Yet Moore did not ask her a sin­gle ques­tion about this.

But Moore’s biggest prob­lem was not lack of nerve. In hind­sight, Harrell and Moore acknowl­edge, the tri­al was a litany of things not done, of evi­dence not pro­vid­ed, of ques­tions not asked.

The jury did not hear from the Hunts, the next-door neigh­bors who said they saw Jenkins on the eighth. Ransome and Godwin had re-inter­viewed Mary Hunt and writ­ten a report say­ing she had been mis­tak­en and had last seen Jenkins on the first.

The re-inter­view spoiled their use­ful­ness. Harrell feared that putting these wit­ness­es on the stand would under­mine his case.

This was a mur­der case where time since death was para­mount, yet the defense did not ask for mon­ey to hire an inde­pen­dent med­ical exam­in­er to review the autop­sy. Harrell and Moore did­n’t think the judge would allow it.

The defense lawyers knew that Crystal had giv­en dif­fer­ing ver­sions of the killing, and that her tes­ti­mo­ny was essen­tial. Yet they did not hire a crime scene spe­cial­ist to exam­ine the shot­gun pel­lets and trace their like­ly tra­jec­to­ry, or use the blood spat­ter and posi­tion of the body to map out where the shoot­er and the vic­tim were standing.

Gell had no experts to rebut the state’s ver­sion of the crime.

On Feb. 25, the jury took just over an hour to con­vict him of murder.

During the sen­tenc­ing phase, Harrell put Gell’s fam­i­ly and friends on the stand. Pleas for mer­cy, how­ev­er, are best accom­pa­nied by remorse, and Gell con­tin­ued to main­tain his innocence.

Prosecutor David Hoke called for death in a pow­er­ful clos­ing argu­ment that was more ser­mon than sum­ma­tion. He ham­mered at Gell for ambush­ing Jenkins in the sanc­ti­ty of his own home.

Hoke remind­ed jurors of the words of Gell’s pas­tor, who tes­ti­fied that Gell had nev­er acknowl­edged wrong­do­ing or shown remorse.

Gell inter­rupt­ed Hoke. I still deny the charges,” he blurted out.

This gave more fuel to Hoke, who asked jurors to think about how impor­tant it was for them to feel safe in their own homes.

Look at that feel­ing of peace, joy, com­fort in your own home,” he said. Contrast it to the act done at the hands of this man who has not yet acknowl­edged any sorrow.”

He addressed the jury, call­ing each mem­ber by name, and then:

From the Old Testament and the Book of Numbers, any­one who kills a per­son is to be put to death as a mur­der­er upon the tes­ti­mo­ny of wit­ness­es. You’ve heard the tes­ti­mo­ny of wit­ness­es. … Now, they might argue to you the New Testament changes all that. No, it does­n’t. Jesus did­n’t come to destroy the law or the prophe­cies of the Old Testament. He came to fulfill them.

Listen to this in Deuteronomy. Cursed is the man who kills his neigh­bor secret­ly and all the peo­ple shall say amen. Cursed is the man who kills an inno­cent per­son for mon­ey, and all the peo­ple shall say amen.’ It’s time to sen­tence this man, a mur­der­er, to die, and let the peo­ple of Bertie County say amen.”

The jury need­ed just two hours to reach a con­clu­sion: death.

Staff writer Joseph Neff can be reached at 8294516 or jneff@​newsobserver.​com.