Update: PAROLES DENIED.
The paroles of John Harris and Jerome Royster have been denied.
Both will not have another hearing until April of 2014.
Thank you to everyone who helped in the effort to block these paroles.
Jeanette Nichols Story
John W. Harris
and Jerome Royster received death sentences for the murder of Nurse
Jeanette Nichols. They are both now eligible for parole.
Jeanette
Nichols: Dedicated wife, mother and nurse
Jeanette Nichols was buried
at St. Paul Lutheran Cemetery (pictured here) on Mother's
Day 1974.
By all accounts Jeanette Nichols was
as close to a Saint as any one could be is this world. She
had no enemies and everyone
who knew her liked and respected her. Raised on her family's
farm in Amlin Ohio, she would learn at a young age the importance
of hard work as well as the importance of taking care of the
animals. As Mrs. Nichols got older she decided to go from taking
care of animals on the farm to taking care of people in the
hospital. Mrs. Nichols dedicated her life to helping others
by becoming a nurse. In 1950 she would graduate with her nursing
degree and six years later would marry her husband Roland.
Soon after they would have two sons, Ronald and Richard. Mrs.
Nichols loved her husband, her sons, and her job in the emergency
room at St. Anthony 's Hospital. According to Mr. Nichols, "She
always had to be in the emergency room. She liked the excitement
there. Anyplace else (in the hospital) was too boring for her."(1) Mrs.
Nichols helped many people over the nine years she worked at
St. Anthony's. Sadly, on the night of May 8, 1974 Mrs. Nichols
desire to help others would end her own life in what many people
still call Columbus Ohio's most brutal murder.
A Typical Night At Home
It was a typical night in the Nichol's household on May 8,
1974 with two exceptions. First, Mr. Nichols, a pilot and flight
instructor, was running late because he had spent extra time
working with a nervous student pilot. Second, there was a new
bedroom suite in the Nichol's bedroom, a mother's day present
from Mr. Nichols and his sons.
When Mr. Nichols arrived home
that night dinner was on the stove. As he did every night
Mr. Nichols prepared to follow
his wife to her 11PM shift at the hospital to ensure her safety.
Mr. Nichols arrived home late and Mrs. Nichols told him since
he was tired he should just sit down and eat. Before she left
Mrs. Nichols took one more look at her bedroom suite. According
to Mr. Nichols, "She opened the drawer to one of the night
stands and put her calendar and little paper items in the top
drawer. She put the telephone on the stand and started getting
ready to go to work. That was the last time she saw it (the
furniture)."(2)
Pure Evil
Jeanette Nichol's was on her
way to work at St. Anthony's Hospital (pictured here)
when she was abducted, raped and murdered.
Nurse Jeanette Nichols arrived as usual
at Saint Anthony's Hospital on May 8th 1974. She parked her
car as she always
did on Clifton Avenue, caddy corner to the hospital so she
could see the emergency room from her car. As Mrs. Nichols
was parking her car three street thugs named John Harris, Jerome
Royster and Clarence Smith were looking for a car to steal
so they could go confront someone who sold them $50 of "bad
dope." As Mrs. Nichols began to get out of her car Royster
put a sawed off shotgun in her face. Harris, Smith and Royster
forced Mrs. Nichols into the backseat of the car and drove
to Harris house.
After arriving at Harris' house Royster and Smith left to
go pick up Eric Maurice. Harris took Mrs. Nichols to his bedroom.
According to Harris his mother and grandmother were in the
living room at the time. At some point Mrs. Nichol's hands
were tied behind her back and she was gagged. Harris then raped
Jeanette Nichols. When there was a knock at the bedroom door
Harris threw Mrs. Nichols out the first floor window.
Harris then went outside and took Mrs.
Nichols into the garage. When Royster and Smith returned with
Maurice in tow Harris called them into the garage. For the
next 45 minutes Mrs. Nichols would be brutally tortured and
raped by the four criminals. Her teeth impressions would later
be found in a garment bag that was used to cover her head during
the ordeal.
Mrs. Nichols was then put back in the car. Harris and Royster
dropped Maurice and possibly Smith off at a female friends
house. Harris and Royster then drove to a field where Royster
acted as the lookout. Harris forced Mrs. Nichols to lie on
her stomach. Harris then put a shotgun to the back of Mrs.
Nichols head and executed her by firing two shots at point
blank range into the back of her head. They then covered Mrs.
Nichols lifeless body with an old beat up couch.
Harris and Royster went back and picked
up Smith who followed them while they drove Mrs. Nichols car
across town. They stripped
the car, took Mrs. Nichols purse and jewelry and joined up
with Maurice. They fled to Philadelphia, PA.
It would take two days for police to find Mrs. Nichols body.
Her sons would bury their mother on Mother's Day.
Columbus police officers salute
Jeanette Nichols as her sons (front) help carry her
casket on Mother's Day 1974.
Arrested, Tried,
Pleas and Convictions
It didn't' take long for police to
find these four men. One day after Mrs. Nichols abduction,
Baxter Lee Martin was arrested
after attempting to use her credit card while trying to buy
an engagement and wedding ring for his girlfriend. He would
lead police to Harris, Royster, Smith and Maurice in Philadelphia.
They were arrested without incident. By the time police arrested
them they had already made several calls to their defense attorney
Myron Schwartz.
Mike Miller, a young prosecutor, prosecuted the case. Mrs.
Nichols murder was long before DNA and the advanced technology
of today. Plea deals were given to Baxter, Maurice, and Smith
because they were not involved directly with Mrs. Nichols murder.
The plea deals were as follows:
· Baxter
Lee Martin: Pled guilty to forgery and receiving stolen property.
He was sentenced
to one to five years in prison.
· Eric Maurice: Pled
guilty to rape, kidnapping, aggravated robbery and grand theft.
He was sentenced to 15 to 55 years
in prison.
· Clarence
E Smith: Pled guilty to kidnapping, aggravated robbery and
grand theft. He was sentenced
to 12 to 50 years in prison.
Inmate
Name:
John W Harris
Inmate Number:
A140250
Admission Date:
11/12/1974
Original Sentence:
Death
Commuted Sentence:
Life
Next Parole Hearing:
April, 2014
Convictions:
- Aggravated
Murder
- Kidnapping
- Rape
- Agg Robbery
- Petty Theft
Miller had a confession and enough evidence to go after John
Harris and Jerome Royster for the rape and murder of Jeanette
Nichols. Harris chose to go before a three-judge panel. Schwartz
tried to convince the judges that Harris was insane and should
be found not guilty by reason of insanity. Fortunately Schwartz
was no match for Miller and the evidence. Harris was convicted
of aggravated murder, kidnapping, rape, aggravated robbery.
Jerome Royster chose a jury trial. It took the seven man,
five woman jury three hours and fifteen minutes to find Royster
guilty of aggravated murder, kidnapping, rape, aggravated robbery.
Although they chose different methods of trial the end result
was the same for Harris and Royster. Both were sentenced to
die on February 28, 1975 for the rape, murder and torture of
Jeanette Nichols.
The family and friends of Jeanette Nichols and the citizens
of Franklin County believed justice was served. They were wrong.
The Injustice begins
After the convictions of those
involved in the murder of Jeanette Nichols, Prosecutor Mike
Miller made it very clear what should
be done with the four individuals implicated in her rape and
murder. In 1975 Miller sent a letter to the Ohio Adult Parole
Authority and wrote, "The facts demand that all four men
serve their maximum sentences. To grant these individuals anything
else is to make maximum prison sentences, set by statute, farcical.
If this crime does not require a full term of incarceration
then…no crime does". The parole board did not listen
to Miller.
The injustice began in 1977 when Baxter Lee Martin, who was
convicted of stealing Ms. Nichols credit card, was paroled
two years early. Martin would be shot and killed in July 1984.
A greater injustice would occur in May 1984 when the parole
board released Eric Maurice who took part in the rape and torture
of Mrs. Nichols. Maurice had served only ten years of a 55-year
sentence when he was set free. Roland Nichols, Mrs. Nichols
husband, learned about Maurice's parole after reading about
it in the newspaper. Maurice would be shot and killed later
that year in New Orleans.
After learning of Maurice's parole Roland Nichols went on
a crusade to ensure no more of those involved in the murder
of his wife would be released. He fought tirelessly to keep
Clarence E Smith behind bars. In 1987 Roland Nichols passed
away from cancer. On his deathbed his greatest concern was
that people would forget about Jeanette Nichols. His new wife
promised him she would always fight the paroles. Years go by,
crimes are forgotten, and parole board members change. On May
19, 2004 Clarence E. Smith was released from prison and given
the minimum supervision time of one year. He was completely
released from supervision on July 24, 2005. We have no idea
where Clarence Smith is today and can't find anything to confirm
he was ever adjudicated a sex offender.
The greatest injustice may be yet to come.
Death Row to Possible Parole
There is no doubt John Harris and Jerome Royster raped and
killed Jeanette Nichols. They were sentenced to die for this
horrific crime. However, the appeals process would allow Harris
and Royster to escape the death penalty. They would not be
executed because the U.S. Supreme Court would abolish the death
penalty in 1978. To make matters worse both would become eligible
for parole. We would like to think these killers would never
be paroled however after spending several years dealing with
the Ohio Parole Board we know better than to believe Harris
and Royster will never be released back into society.
Inmate
Name:
Jerome Royster
Inmate Number:
A141662
Admission Date:
4/14/1975
Original Sentence:
Death
Commuted Sentence:
Life
Next Parole Hearing:
April, 2014
Convictions:
- Aggravated
Murder
- Kidnapping
- Rape
- Agg Robbery
Our greatest concern comes from the 2004 parole board decision
sheets for Jerome Royster. They read:
"Inmate has served continued time as set by the Full
Board in '94, Much improved institutional conduct, Completion
of some relevant programming, but no sex offender treatment,
Excellent work evaluations, Good interview, expressed strong
remorse & good insight into offense behavior, Willing to
do SOP [sex offender program] on parole, Has now served well
into his guideline range, This Brd Member will submit case
to COBR [Central Office Board Review] for release consideration"
The concerns with this are as follows:
· Royster had been in
prison for 30 years and had yet to take a sex offender class.
How can he have good insight
into a crime of rape when he still refuses to take a sex offender
class?
· Royster either quit
or was removed from his GED classes. In 30 years he had still
not received a high school education.
· Royster has never taken
a victim awareness class. How can one be remorseful when
he refuses to take a victim
awareness class?
· Royster received a death sentence,
which was later commuted to life. Royster will have "served
well into his guideline range" after he has been dead
for twenty years.
Fortunately this case went before all
the parole board members and a majority had the sense to vote
against parole. We may
not get that lucky in the future.
According to the parole board sheets Harris has gotten his
GED and has done marginally better than Royster in prison.
However as of 2004 he also has refused to take a sex offender
class and also has not taken a victim awareness class. Also
there is no indication of any remorse for his crime. Of course
he did make a popcorn festival float in 1998 and was a member
of the prison debate team.
Justice for Jeanette
On his deathbed Roland Nichols had
one last request. That the three individuals still incarcerated
for the murder of
his wife never get out of prison. That request was not honored
when Clarence Smith was paroled 20 years early in May 2004.
Now that same injustice could repeat itself if John Harris
and Jerome Royster are released back into the community.
We are asking all our visitors to honor Roland
Nichols
dying wish and help get justice for Jeanette Nichols by continuing
to voice their opposition to the paroles of these two brutal
rapists and murderers. Not only would their release endanger
the lives
of all citizens it would also completely dishonor the memory
of Jeanette Nichols. Mike Miller summed it up best in a Columbus
Dispatch article in June 1975. "The coming years will
dull the memory of this heinous crime to most citizens of the
community. But we will remember it always. Unfortunately the
family of Jeanette Nichols will never forget."(3)
(1) "Police
Considered Nurse Their Friend, The Columbus Dispatch, May
12, 1974
(2) " Those Who Remember Fight Parole For Nurse's Killer",
The Columbus Dispatch, October 22, 1989
(3) "Ban Is Requested On Parole for 4",
The Columbus Dispatch, June 30. 1975
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