ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) — Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley has officially commuted the death sentences of four inmates who had been sentenced to die before Maryland banned capital punishment in 2013.
O’Malley officially signed executive orders commuting their sentences on Tuesday, one day before he leaves office.
The Democratic governor signed the commutations for Vernon Evans, Anthony Grandison, Jody Lee Miles and Heath Burch.
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Anthony grandson set free. Watch out for him as he will set up murders again. Thought the courts in Somerset put him away for ever.
ReplyDeleteStupid P.O.S. MOM is. Jody Lee Miles murdered someone from Wicomico County.
ReplyDeleteThese turds deserve to die.
GOODBYE LOSER !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteI hope O'Malley losses a kid and has to watch their murder live Happy with a free ride.
ReplyDeleteYep.
DeletePeople wonder why the crime rate is out of control. This is a prime example. Crime pays in Maryland and the presence of growing gangs since the 1980's proves it. More severe the crimes are and higher the prison security the more you gain in prestige in the gang world.
ReplyDeleteMaryland slogan "do the crime not the time".
SHAMEFUL!!!
ReplyDeleteThis will cost the state millions to keep them in jail for years - food, health care, etc.
ReplyDeleteWhat a good bleeding heart liberal. Meanwhile 57 million innocent babies weren't spared.
ReplyDeleteToo bad
ReplyDelete