Friday, October 12, 2012

Lone survivor testifies at Ohio Craigslist trial

Brogan Rafferty, 17, sorts papers at the defense table next to a photo of Jesus Christ propped up on a pair of eyeglasses during his murder trial in the Summit County Common Pleas courtroom in Akron, Ohio on Friday, Oct. 12, 2012. Rafferty and an adult accomplice are charged with three killings in a plot to lure victims through phony Craigslist job offers. (AP Photo/Akron Beacon Journal, Phil Masturzo)

Brogan Rafferty, 17, sorts papers at the defense table next to a photo of Jesus Christ propped up on a pair of eyeglasses during his murder trial in the Summit County Common Pleas courtroom in Akron, Ohio on Friday, Oct. 12, 2012. Rafferty and an adult accomplice are charged with three killings in a plot to lure victims through phony Craigslist job offers. (AP Photo/Akron Beacon Journal, Phil Masturzo)

Defense attorney Edward Smith heads to the podium to cross-examine a witness during the first day of 17-year-old Brogan Rafferty's murder trial in the Summit County Common Pleas Courtroom in Akron, Ohio on Friday, Oct. 12, 2012. Rafferty and an adult accomplice are charged with three killings in a plot to lure victims through phony Craigslist job offers. (AP Photo/Akron Beacon Journal, Phil Masturzo)

Noble County Sheriff Stephen Hannu leaves the witness stand after giving testimony during the first day of 17-year-old Brogan Rafferty's murder trial in the Summit County Common Pleas Courtroom in Akron, Ohio on Friday, Oct. 12, 2012. Rafferty and an adult accomplice are charged with three killings in a plot to lure victims through phony Craigslist job offers. (AP Photo/Akron Beacon Journal, Phil Masturzo)

Brogan Rafferty, 17, is escorted by police from the Summit County Common Pleas Courtroom in Akron, Ohio on Friday, Oct. 12, 2012. Rafferty and an adult accomplice are charged with three killings in a plot to lure victims through phony Craigslist job offers. (AP Photo/Akron Beacon Journal, Phil Masturzo)

Brogan Rafferty, 17, left, stands with his defense attorney John Alexander in the Summit County Common Pleas Courtroom in Akron, Ohio on Friday, Oct. 12, 2012. Rafferty and an adult accomplice are charged with three killings in a plot to lure victims through phony Craigslist job offers. (AP Photo/Akron Beacon Journal, Phil Masturzo)

AKRON, Ohio (AP) ? Hoping to land a farm job and move close to his family, Scott Davis met his new boss and walked with him through the autumn-color woodlands of southeast Ohio last year.

Then he heard the click of a gun at the back of his head.

"I spun around," the soft-spoken Davis told a hushed courtroom Friday at the murder trial of Brogan Rafferty, a 17-year-old charged in a plot to lure victims through phony Craigslist job offers. Three men were shot to death. Davis was the only victim to survive and tell his story.

Gently prodded by the prosecutor, Davis testified that he pushed the gunman's arm away and got shot in the arm. Then he began a race for his life through the brush, the sound of gunfire ringing through the trees.

Davis told a harrowing story to jurors, saying he ran through the woods and hid for seven hours. "I was worried about bleeding to death," he testified.

Prosecutors say the plot involving Rafferty and Richard Beasley, a self-styled chaplain and the alleged triggerman, targeted men desperate for work who responded to Craigslist job ads.

Davis, 49, described how he responded to one such ad, sold his South Carolina business and moved last year to be closer to his family in the Canton area.

Davis said he, a man who called himself "Jack" and Rafferty shared a restaurant breakfast before Rafferty drove the trio to an isolated Noble County farm, ostensibly to show Davis where he would be working as a farmhand and live in a trailer with hunting rights.

Prosecutors say "Jack" was Beasley, Rafferty's mentor. Beasley, 53, of Akron, has pleaded not guilty and will be tried separately.

According to Davis, "Jack" urged him into a wooded area to look for farm equipment and eventually suggested that the two turn back.

"I heard a curse word and then a gun cock," Davis testified.

Davis said he turned around and found himself face-to-face with a handgun. He said he pushed the weapon aside, was wounded in the arm and fled as "Jack" fired at him.

Davis said he ran as fast as he could "but I kept falling down." He said he eventually hid in a creek bed and tried to stop the bleeding amid rising pain. Fearing loss of blood would kill him, Davis said he climbed to a hilltop in the moonlit night to look for a house. He found one and managed to get there and ask for a phone to dial 911.

"I was getting weak at that point," Davis testified.

Under questioning by prosecutor Emily Pelphrey, Davis identified the younger accomplice by describing the defendant's courtroom outfit.

Under cross-examination by defense attorney John Alexander, Davis testified that "Jack" had orchestrated the farm visit and fired at him.

Alexander posed repeated questions fingering Beasley as the mastermind, each time beginning, "'Jack' was the one ... "

In her opening statement, Pelphrey said Rafferty chose to participate in the three killings and Davis' wounding, even if he wasn't the triggerman. Rafferty, of nearby Stow, kept his head down and took notes as the alleged plot was detailed for the jury.

Pelphrey showed the jury timelines for each victim and said they had been desperate to improve their lives or find "the light at the end of the tunnel." A photo of each victim's grave was shown on a big TV screen as she spoke.

The defendant was a quick student of the alleged plot and "a student of violent crime," Pelphrey told jurors.

"He made the choices he wanted to make," she said.

Alexander told jurors Rafferty never participated voluntarily and was afraid that Beasley would kill him and his relatives if he didn't cooperate. As for the alleged plot to lure job-seekers, Alexander said, Rafferty "had no idea any of this was going on."

The first killing came without warning for Rafferty, according to Alexander. Afterward, Beasley warned Rafferty to keep quiet by reminding him that he knew where Rafferty's mother and sister lived, the defense lawyer said.

That was an implied threat, Alexander said. "He would kill them if Brogan says anything," Alexander told jurors.

The body of David Pauley, 51, of Norfolk, Va., was found on Noble County property owned by a coal company and often leased to hunters.

Timothy Kern, 47, of Massillon, was found in a shallow grave near an Akron-area shopping mall. He had been shot in the head.

The body of Ralph Geiger, 55, of Akron, was found in Noble County, dead of a gunshot wound to the head.

Beasley was a Texas parolee who returned to Ohio in 2004 after serving time on a burglary conviction. He was awaiting trial on prostitution and drug charges when authorities took him into custody.

Police have said a halfway house he ran in Akron was a front for prostitution. Authorities said he was a mentor for Rafferty and had befriended him.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-10-12-Craigslist-Jobseekers%20Killed/id-d440130fbef74704a2a1e392a36d7b03

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