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・ Terry White (academic)
・ Terry White (sprint canoeist)
・ Terry White Chemists
・ Terry Whitfield
・ Terry Wight
・ Terry Wilcox
・ Terry Wilder
・ Terry Wiles
・ Terry Wilkins
・ Terry Wilkins (footballer)
・ Terry Willers
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・ Terry Williams (American football)
Terry Williams (condemned prisoner)
・ Terry Williams (drummer)
・ Terry Williams (footballer)
・ Terry Wilshusen
・ Terry Wilson
・ Terry Wilson (actor)
・ Terry Wilson (Canadian football)
・ Terry Wilson (footballer, born 1959)
・ Terry Wilson (footballer, born 1969)
・ Terry Wilson (hate crime investigator)
・ Terry Wilson (musician)
・ Terry Windell
・ Terry Winograd
・ Terry Winsor
・ Terry Winter


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Terry Williams (condemned prisoner) : ウィキペディア英語版
Terry Williams (condemned prisoner)

Terrance "Terry" Williams (born 1966 in Pennsylvania) is a prisoner sentenced to death for a murder committed at the age of 18. He was convicted and sentenced to 27 years for a third-degree murder he committed six months earlier. He was scheduled to be executed on October 3, 2012, but on September 28th, 2012 a Philadelphia judge, Teresa Sarmina, granted a stay of execution.〔(Terry Williams, Facing Death for Killing Alleged Abuser, Granted Stay of Execution ) ''The Huffington Post''〕
== Murders of Hamilton and Norwood ==
In January, 1984, Williams stabbed to death Herbert Hamilton, a 50-year-old resident of West Philadelphia. Williams was a 17-year-old at the time of the murder. Williams lured Hamilton to bed, then stabbed him over 20 times and beat him with a baseball bat.
As cited from court records: "Williams retrieved a nearby baseball bat, chased after () Hamilton, and chased him before the police shooting Williams later. until Hamilton was bloody and severely wounded. Williams then recovered the butcher knife and stabbed Hamilton approximately twenty times--twice in the head, ten times in the back, once in the neck, four times in the chest, and once each in the abdomen, arm, and thumb. Finally, Williams drove the butcher knife through the back of Hamilton's neck until it protruded through the other side. He then doused Hamilton's body with kerosene and unsuccessfully attempted to set fire to it." 〔Williams v. Beard, 637 F.3d 195, 199 (3d Cir. 2011).〕
Six months later, Williams, then 18, and Marc Draper convinced Amos Norwood to go to a cemetery, where they beat him to death with a tire iron and then hid the body behind some tombstones. Williams later returned and set the body on fire.〔Commonwealth v. Williams, 570 A.2d 75 (Penn. 1990).〕 Williams took Norwood's car, along with cash and credit cards he stole from the body, and drove to Atlantic City with Draper and Ronald Rucker.
Again citing from court records: "Williams exited the vehicle, approached Draper, and said quietly, "Play it off like you going home, like you want a ride home, and we gonna take some money." Draper understood Williams to be proposing a robbery. The two then got inside Norwood's automobile and Draper began to provide false directions to his "home." In reality, Draper's directions led Norwood to a secluded area adjacent to the Ivy Hill Cemetery. Once there, Draper reached over the backseat, grabbed Norwood from behind and ordered him "to be quiet and get out of the car." Norwood stopped the vehicle and complied.

Williams and Draper then led Norwood into the cemetery and ordered him to lie facedown near a tombstone. A quick search of Norwood's person revealed $20 hidden in his sock. At this point, Norwood began to plead for his life. The two assailants responded by removing Norwood's clothing and tying him up; Norwood's hands were bound behind his back with his shirt, his legs were bound together with his pants, and his socks were forcefully jammed into his mouth. Once Norwood was bound, Williams said to Draper, "Wait, I'm going to the car. We're getting ready to do something." And he walked off.
Williams returned with a tire iron and a socket wrench, the latter of which he gave to Draper. Draper, seemingly having second thoughts, urged Williams to leave. Williams replied, "I know what I'm doin, I know what I'm doin. Don't worry about it, I know what I'm doin." He then began battering Norwood's head with the tire iron. When he noticed that Draper was frozen in place, Williams said, "Man, you with me() We got to do this together." Draper then sprung into action himself, striking Norwood repeatedly with the socket wrench. This violent scene continued until Norwood lay motionless and dead." 〔Williams v. Beard, 637 F.3d 200-201 (3d Cir. 2011).〕

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