COLUMBUS — A Muscogee County judge has ruled that convicted stocking strangler Carlton Gary is not entitled to a stay of execution to test DNA from the 1970’s.
Gary had sought to test DNA evidence from four of seven brutal rapes and slayings of elderly Columbus women in the late 1970’s.
But Muscogee Superior Court Judge Robert Johnston on Wednesday sided with prosecutors.
Gary is set to be executed Dec. 16.
Gary’s lawyer, Jack Martin, said he doesn’t understand why prosecutors wouldn’t want to ensure Gary is guilty before he’s put to death. Martin said he will appeal to the Georgia Supreme Court if Johnston refuses to reconsider his ruling.
Gary has a hearing scheduled on Monday before the Georgia Board of Pardons and Parole.
Local News
<img src="http://valdosta.sgaonline.com/headlines/noon.gif"/> Judge rules against stocking strangler
- Local News
-
-
City awarded $500,000 grant to help wastewater system
The City of Tifton has been awarded a $500,000 grant by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development through the state’s Community Development Block Grant Program. The funds will be matched with Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax revenue to make sewer improvements to the wastewater system in south Tifton. The entire project is expected to cost approximately $1.2 million.
-
Man faces forgery and drug charges
A stolen credit card was reported to the Tifton Police Department Saturday evening. The card was reported stolen at the Greyhound bus station, located in the 300 block of East Fifth Street.
-
TCSO installing new security system
The Tift County Sheriff’s Office is currently installing a new security camera and access system throughout the entire law enforcement center, which includes the jail.
- Perdue taps a Democrat to head public defender system
-
BREAKING NEWS: Georgia's A.J. Green suspended for four games
University of Georgia football student-athlete A.J. Green must miss four games as a condition of becoming eligible to play again, according to a decision today by the NCAA student-athlete reinstatement staff.
-
Atlanta federal court slots go unfilled
Four vacancies have been created for federal judges in Atlanta since early 2009, and cases are piling up.
-
Wild Adventures plans expansion
Labor Day may have unofficially brought summer to a close, but Wild Adventures is already looking forward to next summer with $4 million of planned expansions to Splash Island.
-
No holiday for law enforcement
Local law enforcement agencies were busy over the three-day Labor Day weekend responding to reports of shootings, burglaries and other crimes around the city and county.
Early Saturday morning, an officer radioed to responding officers that shots had been fired at the corner of Fifth Street and South Central Avenue.
According to the incident report filed at the Tifton Police Department, the officer was in a foot pursuit at 2:05 a.m. with two males who were running towards Commerce Way. Several other officers responded to the location. -
State arson investigator called in regards to fire at Cooper Tire
A state arson investigator has been called in to look into a suspicious fire at Cooper Tire at the intersection of Main and Alder streets, a double vehicle and house fire on Sussex Drive and a vehicle fire on Short Street.
Firefighters received a call at approximately 8:30 Tuesday morning that there was a fire at Cooper Tire, located at the intersection of Main and Alder streets. - Isakson seeks overhaul to immigration, health care
- More Local News Headlines
-





