Update: PAROLE DENIED.
The parole of Anthony Nesbitt has been denied. Nesbitt
will not have another hearing until July 2016. Thank you to everyone
who
submitted
letters and forms to block this parole.
PAROLED FORMER DEATH ROW INMATE
AND ATTEMPTED COP KILLER ELIGIBLE FOR PAROLE
While on parole
for a brutal murder Anthony Nesbitt attempted to kill
Columbus Ohio Police Officer William Bedford.
Inmate Name:
Anthony Nesbitt
Inmate Number:
A141164
A253643
Admission Date:
03/24/1992
Min Sentence
15 Years
Max Sentence
Life
Next Parole Hearing:
July , 2011
Convictions:
-Aggravated
Murder
-Felonious Assault
A Senseless Murder
On August 13, 1974 pharmacist James Christy,
the owner of Christy’s Drug Store, was working behind the
pharmacy counter.
According to Assistant Cuyahoga Country
Prosecutor Thomas Tenwick, Mr. Christy was well known as a pillar
in the community. Tenwick said that although Mr. Christy had been
robbed before, “He still had his door open to people in need”.
Around 4:00 PM three thugs entered the
pharmacy. The group consisted of brothers Anthony and Julius Nesbitt
and Eugene Fuller.
The three men approached the pharmacy counter
and asked Mr. Christy for a bottle of castor oil. Mr. Christy returned
with the bottle and gave it to the men. Anthony Nesbitt then pulled
a gun and told Mr., Christy to “freeze”.
Mr. Christy became scared when he saw the
gun and tried to run. Anthony Nesbitt then shot Mr. Christy in
the back.
The Nesbitt brothers and Fuller fled out
of the store and went to a school parking lot. They got into a
get away car and left the scene.
Mr. Christy was rushed to St. Lukes Hospital.
He was pronounced dead on arrival at 5:35PM.
Arrested and Sentenced to Death
Since Julius Nesbitt was only 17-years-old
he was committed to the Ohio Youth Commission. Fuller pled guilty
to robbery and was placed on probation. Anthony Nesbitt was charged
with the aggravated murder of Mr. Christy. Nesbitt went to trial
and faced the death penalty.
On January 23, 1975 a jury had no trouble
finding Anthony Nesbitt guilty of murdering James Christy. On February
14, 1975 Common Pleas Judge John C. Bacon sentenced Nesbitt to
death. Nesbitt became to first person from Cuyahoga County to be
sentenced to death since the death penalty was reinstated on January
1, 1974.
At sentencing Judge Bacon stated he imposed
the death penalty partly as “protection against the possibility
of individuals being executed by armed robbers”.
Judge Bacon also said Nesbitt was the first
inmate he had sentenced to death since he became a judge in 1957.
He stated, “It’s an emotional thing for me. I was feeling
compassion (for) the victim and the protection of society from
those who are too aggressive with firearm”.
Judge Bacon could never have known how
prophetic his words would become years later.
Death Row To Parole
Nesbitt spent three years on death row.
Until the 8th District Ohio Court of Appeals gave him a break.
The appeals court said that a small wording
error in the indictment made Nesbitt ineligible for the death penalty.
To make matters worse they stated the error requires a resentencing
rather than a retrial. Nesbitt’s sentence was immediately
reduced to life with parole eligibility.
The first record of Nesbitt coming up for
parole is in 1989. Nesbitt received a risk score of four out of
a possible five. Nesbitt received a one-year continuance until
1990. In that year the parole board records state the following:
· The Ohio Parole Board states
Nesbitt had “Good Institutional Programs”. Nothing
in the records we received show that Nesbitt had any institutional
programming. We did find that Nesbitt took the time to post a
personal ad in a Cleveland Newspaper on July 17, 1986. The ad
reads, “ I would like to correspond with a lady that understands
the meaning of friendship. I am 30 years old and I am looking
for that special friend”.
· The Ohio Parole Board records
also state that Nesbitt deserved parole based on “Time
Served”. Nesbitt had served only 15 years of a life sentence.
Keep in mind Nesbitt originally was sentenced to death and the
only reason he got life was because of a technicality.
· The records also state Nesbitt
has “Good Community Support”. Nothing supports that
claim. Considering Nesbitt brutally killed a pillar in the Cleveland
community we have no idea who would have supported his parole.
Also Nesbitt’s only parole plan was a halfway house in
Columbus. Obviously none of those “mystery supporters” wanted
Nesbitt in their neighborhood.
Unbelievably the parole board granted Nesbitt
parole in August 1990. That decision would almost cost a veteran
Columbus Ohio Police Officer his life.
Retired Columbus Ohio Police Officer
William Bedford.
What Is Past Is Prologue
When Columbus Police Officer William Bedford,
an 18-year veteran law enforcement officer, kissed his wife and
children goodbye on a cold morning in November 18, 1991 he never
could have imagined he might never be coming home.
That same morning former death row inmate
and parolee Anthony Nesbitt left his halfway house in Columbus
Ohio. He was armed with two guns.
Officer Bedford arrived at BancOhio National
Bank to work his special duty shift. He was in full police uniform
and was clearly identifiable as a police officer.
At 9:20 AM Anthony Nesbitt stormed the bank. His hat was pulled down low and
his hands were in his pockets. According to Officer Bedford, “ He had
a weird smirk on his face. I got a bad feeling when I saw him walk through
the door”.
Nesbitt stormed up to Officer Bedford and
screamed something. He pulled the gun out of his pocket, put in
Officer Bedford’s face, and pulled the trigger.
As Nesbitt fired the gun Officer Bedford’s
years of experience kicked in. Somehow he managed to move to the
right and fall to the floor. The bullet meant for Officer Bedford’s
head went into his arm and exited his elbow. Nesbitt then fired
two more shots trying to kill Officer Bedford. By the Grace of
God the gun was empty. It turned out that Nesbitt had accidentally
put the loaded gun in his waistband and put the partially loaded
gun in his pocket.
From the floor Officer Bedford started
firing at Nesbitt. As Officer Bedford got to his feet he saw Nesbitt
running for the door and turning back to fire the gun back into
the bank. Bedford fired and hit Nesbitt multiple times. Nesbitt
only had the opportunity to fire one bullet. Fortunately it did
not hit the one customer and three employees in the bank
Nesbitt flew through the glass door. Although
he was badly wounded Officer Bedford held Nesbit at gunpoint until
other Officers arrived. Nesbitt was arrested and taken to jail.
Officer Bedford would survive. To this
day he states, “I thought I was going to die. I don’t
know how I made it out alive. It’s a miracle I am still here.”
Officer Bedford managed to stay on the
Columbus Police Force two more years. Unfortunately the trauma
from the shooting severely affected officer Bedford and caused
severe posttraumatic stress disorder. He was forced to retire in
1993.
On 3/24/92 Nesbitt went back to prison
for violating his parole. He also was convicted of felonious assault
for shooting Officer Bedford.
Nesbitt knew he could not be paroled right
away so for seven years he did absolutely nothing in prison to
rehabilitate himself. When he realized he was eligible for parole
Nesbitt took a flurry of classes between 2000 and 2002. When he
didn’t get paroled he stopped taking classes again. According
to the parole boards records he has not taken a class in nine years.
His parole records indicate that in 2004 he “Refused to participate” in
any programming.
No Parole Now...No Parole EVER
Anthony Nesbitt has been given ample opportunity
to change his criminal ways. In 1978 he caught a huge break when
he was taken off death row and given a life sentence due to a small
clerical error. Although he shot an unarmed man in the back and
killed him he somehow managed to get paroled after serving only
15 years of his life sentence. Rather than turn his life around
Nesbitt decided to storm a bank and try to kill a Columbus Police
Officer. Had Nesbitt’s crime gone like he planned he would
likely be on death row for the murder of Columbus Police Officer
William Bedford.
Anthony Nesbitt is a serious threat to
the community. Any inmate who can shoot a man in the back and kill
him and then while on parole attempt to shoot a police officer
in the head is beyond rehabilitation. Based on the fact that Mr.
Nesbitt killed James Christy and then while on parole attempted
to kill Columbus Police Officer William Bedford we believe Mr.
Nesbitt should serve his maximum sentence of LIFE in prison to
further the interests of justice and to protect the community at
large.
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