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Over six years after his arrest, still no trial date for man accused of murdering Nori Jones


POCATELLO — Bannock County prosecutors and the defense attorneys representing the local man accused of fatally stabbing 25-year-old Nori Jones in her Pocatello home in 2004 were back in court Tuesday to discuss the status of the case.
Brad Scott Compher, 45, of Pocatello, has been incarcerated at the Bannock County Jail in Pocatello since he was arrested and charged in September 2014 with felony first degree murder and a felony enhancement for using a weapon during the commission of a felony crime.
Though Bannock County prosecutors are seeking the death penalty against Compher, who is by far the Bannock County Jail’s longest-tenured inmate, no trial date has yet been scheduled in his case. And with the Idaho Supreme Court’s Dec. 14 order indefinitely suspending jury trials in the state due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, it’s anyone’s guess when Compher’s trial will begin. ....

United States , Bannock County , Jefferson County , Zach Parris , Peter Mcdermott , Gary Edward Proctor , William Duke , James Hairston , John Scott Andrew , Brad Scott Compher , Dalma Fuhriman , Stephen Dunn , Idaho Department Of Correction , Us Supreme Court , Idaho Supreme Court Dec , Oversight Committee , Capital Crimes Defense Fund , Idaho Department Of Health , Nori Jones , Scott Compher , Bannock County Jail , Idaho Supreme Court , Jone Pole Line Road , Judicial District , County Chief Deputy Prosecutor Zach Parris , Idaho Department ,

Will Ralph Northam Give Posthumous Pardons to Seven Black Rapists?


Will Ralph Northam Give Posthumous Pardons to Seven Black Rapists?
Chris Roberts, American Renaissance, December 15, 2020
On January 8, 1949, a white woman named Ruby Stroud Floyd was raped in a black part of Martinsville, Virginia. At a hospital where she was examined for internal injuries, she told police that a group of black men raped her. Police soon arrested, Frank Hairston, Jr. and Booker Millner. Their confessions led to the arrest of five more blacks: Howard Hairston, James Hairston, John Taylor, Francis Grayson, and Joe Hampton. All seven were charged with rape and aiding and abetting rape, and all confessed at least to being present at the crime. At the time, rape and accessory to rape were punishable by death in Virginia, which is what prosecutors proposed for the “Martinsville Seven.” The six trials (two of the seven men were tried together) all returned guilty verdicts with death sentences. Four of the men were executed on February 2, 1951, and three o ....

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