Wednesday,
August 18, 2004
Hudson
Execution Tonight
James Bryant Hudson Will Receive
Lethal Injection For 2002 Shotgun Murders Of Walter Stanley
Cole, Thomas Wesley Cole and Patsy Ayers Cole
BY
KEITH STRANGE
G-V STAFF WRITER
Declining any further appeals that could delay his execution,
convicted murderer James Bryant Hudson is scheduled to be
put to death tonight.
He is scheduled to receive a lethal injection at the Greensville
Correctional Center in Jarratt at 9 p.m.
Hudson, 57, pleaded guilty and was sentenced to death for
the shotgun deaths of brothers Walter Stanley Cole, 56,
and Thomas Wesley Cole, 64, and Wesley's wife, Patsy Ayers
Cole, 64, outside their Virgie Cole Road home on July 3,
2002.
According to his attorney, Hudson has refused to appeal
his sentence and will not be asking Gov. Mark Warner for
clemency.
Halifax County Public Defender Buddy Ward, who defended
Hudson during his trial, said Hudson is overwhelmed with
remorse and wants to die for the crimes.
"Before the trial, he informed me very specifically
that he didn't want to put on any evidence or argue his
sentence," Ward said.
Maintaining his silence throughout his February 7, 2003
trial, Hudson was convicted of one count of capital murder,
one count of first-degree murder and two counts of the use
of a firearm in the commission of murder.
The capital murder charge stems from the murder of the two
Cole brothers, while the first-degree murder conviction
is the result of the shotgun death of Patsy Ayers Cole.
All three were killed by close-range shotgun blasts, then-
Commonwealth's Attorney John Greenbacker said.
During his April 17, 2003 sentencing, Hudson stood expressionless
as the Halifax County Circuit Court gallery erupted into
cheers as tearful family members and friends of the victims
learned he would die for the crimes.
"These killings were cold-blooded and senseless,"
Judge Leslie M. Osborn said prior to sentencing Hudson to
death. "There is no evidence of motive or justification.
The victims were innocents."
Maintaining his silence throughout his February 7 trial
and Tuesday's sentencing hearing, Hudson, 55, showed no
emotion as the sentence was read.
Osborn said the fact that the defendant failed to express
sorrow for the murders weighed on his decision.
"The defendant gave no testimony in his defense and
has offered no evidence of remorse," he said.
A spokesman for the Virginia Department of Corrections said
yesterday that Hudson has made it clear he would give no
interviews.
Greenbacker said that on the day of the crimes, the two
Cole brothers were driving their pickup truck along a shared
driveway when they discovered Hudson's truck blocking the
path.
Farm worker Martin Celis painted a graphic picture through
an interpreter of a summer afternoon in the Hyco community
during Hudson's preliminary hearing.
"I was watering some plants in the Cole garden,"
he said.
"Mr. Wesley was with me and later on got in a truck
with Mr. Stanley," he added.
The migrant worker further testified he saw the truck go
to the driveway and be stopped by a vehicle operated by
Hudson.
"Mr. Wesley and (Hudson) got out of the trucks and
were standing by the driver's side," Celis said.
He added that Stanley Cole was in the passenger side of
the Cole vehicle.
A conversation ensued that lasted for a few minutes, according
to Celis.
"After that, Mr. Wesley got in his truck and moved
it to the side of the road.
"Then (Hudson) got in his truck and pulled out a large
gun.
"I saw (Hudson) discharge the weapon, when that happened
I ran," the farm worker said through his interpreter.
Celis testified that while he was fleeing the scene he heard
more shots.
"I heard Mr. Wesley ask, 'Why are you shooting me?'"
Jennifer Reagan, a neighbor who lived in a home directly
across from the Virgie Cole Road residence of Stanley Cole,
testified during the hearing she was returning home from
work at the time.
"I saw Hudson leaning against his truck.
"He was leaning against his truck with his gun propped
up," she said.
"Then I went to my mailbox and heard gunshots,"
she added.
Wesley Cole then began to run, but tripped and fell in a
ditch. Hudson shot him in the back of the head.
According to Greenbacker, after shooting the two men, Hudson
then drove to Wesley Cole's house next door and found his
wife, Patsy, in the family garden.
Reagan testified that Patsy Cole asked Hudson if he was
target practicing and he opened fire.
Hudson then went to his home, changed vehicles and drove
off, passing responding law enforcement on the way out of
Virgie Cole Road.
He was captured following a 23-hour manhunt.
Officers recovered a Browning automatic shotgun, several
loose shells and a box of shells, along with a .38 cal.
revolver, speed loader and box of ammunition at the arrest
scene.
"If anyone deserves the death penalty, it's Hudson,"
Greenbacker said yesterday. "These were good people
and their brutal murders were just senseless."
Stanley's wife Linda said yesterday that she hoped Hudson's
execution will offer her family some closure.
"Maybe then, it will finally be over," she said.
Deputy
Rescues Woman From Burning Vehicle
I Was Just At The Right Place
At The Right Time. Deputy Sheriff P. C. Clayton
It
was about 9 p.m. Monday night and Deputy Sheriff P. C. Clayton
had just completed a call on Mt. Carmel Road and was heading
back when he spotted a car in flames.
"It was sitting completely off the road on the other
side of the ditch," recalled Clayton.
As he approached the car Deputy Clayton said he had no idea
what to expect.
"Had someone experienced mechanical problems and gone
for help ....?
"But when I got to the door I saw a lady in the front
seat," he said.
"I yelled at her, 'Ma'am, get out, the car is on fire,'
but she didn't really acknowledge me," said Clayton.
The car was filled with smoke when Clayton grabbed 64-year-old
Joanne C.
Noe by her wrists to try to get her up. He tried again and
failed.
"Then I grabbed her and pulled her to the edge of the
car and was able to get her out and to the edge of the ditch,"
said the deputy.
Within minutes, the 1997 Saturn was completely engulfed
in flames.
Both Noe and Clayton were transported to Halifax Regional
Hospital, according the deputy.
Clayton's supervisor sent him to the hospital due to smoke
inhalation, but the deputy was back on call yesterday.
"It wasn't a big deal," said Clayton of the rescue.
"Any police officer or citizen would have done the
same."
But for Noe, Clayton's presence was a lifesaver.
State Trooper S.M. Krantz charged the North Carolina woman
with DUI following the crash.
The Saturn ran off of the road and hit the embankment, according
to police reports. The fire is believed to have originated
in the back seat of the car.cutline
Deputy Sheriff P.C. Clayton saved the life of a North Carolina
woman when he pulled her from this burning car Monday night.
Here, Clayton inspects what is left of the 1997 Saturn.
Biodiesel:
Food For The Tank
Fryer Oil Provides Renewable
Fuel Source For County Man
BY
NICHOLAS ELMES
G-V Staff Writer
Used deep fat fryer oil, which is usually discarded, has
been put to a new use by one Halifax County man concerned
with the worlds environment and the countrys
dependence on foreign oil.
Ross Horner, a science teacher at Pittsylvania Countys
Dan River High School, has been converting soiled grease
into a clean and cheap fuel alternative for any diesel engine.
Its called biodiesel.
As a general rule (compared to the traditional diesel
fuel) straight biodiesel will reduce pollutants across the
board by 75 percent, said Horner.
Sulfur is all but eliminated and carbon dioxide is
completely eliminated because any that comes out of the
tailpipe is taken back in by the plants that create the
vegetable oil in the first place. So the net production
is zero.
You cant beat it, he added. Nitrogen
oxide is the only chemical pollutant that can be raised
a little bit, but when you look at all the other things,
its kind of hard to argue too much.
Some people joke around and say they can drink the
fuel because it is so environmentally safe. It has about
the same toxicity as table salt.
Horner said that while he gets the vegetable oil free from
local restaurants that would normally have to pay to have
it disposed, it could just as easily be produced from any
number of area crops.
This is something that could be an alternative for
the areas tobacco farmers, he said. As
time goes by people are slowly getting out of tobacco. I
dont see why its not a great idea for a lot
of farmers to convert to an oil producing crop and have
a plant in the area to make biodiesel.
It sure would be nice to have a domestic fuel product
that doesnt come out of the ground and that you can
re-grow every year, he added. It could even
help create jobs.
A group of North Carolina soy farmers have already implemented
a similar plan.
The soy farmers down there make it and sell a biodiesel/diesel
blend at the pump for the same price as regular diesel,
said Horner.
He started making the fuel as a demonstration for his environmental
science students.
I started mainly to teach kids there are alternatives
for everything you do, he said. I made a small
batch of it in class using a regular kitchen blender.
Horner wanted to show his students that the fuel could power
a car as easily as regular diesel, so he bought a $400 used
car.
I told the kids, You think there is only one
choice, but there are others and here is one you can make.
We made it right here in class, so we put it in the car
and it ran.
Unfortunately, only a small amount of fuel could be made
in a blender at a time, so Horner started experimenting
with ways to make larger batches.
I got some five-gallon buckets and just took a hand
paint mixer with a drill and did it that way, he said.
But since it takes about a week to make a batch, it still
took some time to make enough to fill a tank.
So this spring Horner graduated to a 55-gallon setup in
his garage.
The larger batches (take) the same amount of time
because it is just a matter of proportions, he said.
And those proportions are pretty easy to come by, according
to Horner.
In addition to vegetable oil the only other ingredients
needed to make biodiesel are methanol and lye.
Horner buys the methanol, a racing fuel also called wood
alcohol, at a racetrack in North Carolina, and says the
lye, also called sodium hydroxide, is the main ingredient
in most drain cleaners.
You can get it at any grocery store, he said.
Horner said that with such easy to find ingredients he can
make a fuel that costs only 60 to 70 cents per gallon.
And the process is pretty simple.
You just put the vegetable oil in the mixer and let
it settle for a day or two to get out any chunks of food
or excess water, he said.
In a separate bucket Horner combines the methanol to make
a methoxide solution.
It takes a little while to dissolve, its not
like dissolving sugar in water, he said. It
is an exothermic reaction, and makes a lot of heat. But
as long as care is taken in choosing a proper container
and making sure the proportions are correct, it is a safe
process.
You take the methoxide mixture and pour it into the
mixing tank and you are ready to go, continued Horner.
You mix it for an hour and then let it settle for
about a day.
The result is a clean, renewable fuel and glycerine, the
main ingredient used to make soap.
And the fuel is actually better for diesel engines than
the petroleum-based alternative.
It actually makes diesel engines run a little smoother
because it is an oil, so you are actually using a lubricant
for fuel, said Horner. And it is an incredible
cleansing agent so it will remove a lot of build-ups left
by regular diesel.
So you look at it and ask, Why havent
we been using this all along.
One major reason is a distrust of alternative fuels, according
to Horner.
When you say I am going to run a car off of vegetable
oil, people get a little freaked out, he said. But
the more you educate, the less fear there is.
And there really isnt a reason to fear the idea since
that is, after all, what diesel engines were designed to
run on, according to Horner.
Rudolph Diesel originally made the engine to run on
peanut oil, he said. Even in 1908 he was saying
one day we will not be able to run everything off of this
fuel coming out of the ground.
After he died the people who make gasoline had all
of this by-product and said Hey, a diesel engine will
run off of it, lets call it diesel fuel.
Even though biodiesel is relatively easy and cheap to make,
Horner said since it is flammable people should research
the process before trying to make their own at home.
If you have a scientific mind and do some research,
you should be able to make it yourself, he said. As
long as you follow the directions carefully, use all the
safety precautions and get the right equipment to measure
the ingredients you should be fine.
Horner recommends reading From the Fryer to the Fuel
Tank, by Joshua Tickell and visiting http://www.journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html.
A
Brother Act
Jeff
Stevens Following In Brother Gregs Baseball Footsteps
BY DOUG FORD
G-V STAFF WRITER
It pays to take advantage of one's opportunities, and baseball
is no exception to that rule.
Former Halifax County resident and recent University of
Pittsburgh baseball signee Jeff Stevens is taking advantage
of natural talent and positive attitude to advance toward
his goal of playing professional baseball.
Helping Jeff along the way has been older brother Greg,
who has taken advantage of a never-say-die attitude to play
professional baseball, as a member of the Gateway Grizzlies
of the Frontier League.
Jeff and Greg Stevens spent much of their youth in Vernon
Hill before moving to Pittsylvania County before the time
Jeff started eighth grade.
Before then, it was a case of little brother learning from
big brother, in this case the catcher's position.
"I learned the position while catching for my older
brother in batting practice," recalled Jeff.
"That's how I learned the basics. I was somewhat a
bigger kid when I was younger, so they put me behind the
plate."
Jeff Stevens was an all-star on at least two occasions while
playing Dixie Baseball in Halifax County, first as a member
of the Halifax Dixie Youth Major League all-star team.
He later played with the South Boston 14-Year-Old Dixie
Boys all-star team which took home a state title in 1998.
"I played Halifax Dixie Youth baseball," said
Stevens.
"We were actually driving by the field on the way to
a Fourth of July party, and I told my dad, that's probably
the most fun I've ever had.
"It was a great experience with good people, and that's
what got me into it."
Halifax County's loss was Pittsylvania County's gain when
Stevens moved his eighth grade year, eventually making the
all-state team as a senior catcher at Dan River High School.
Stevens was recruited by the University of Florida out of
high school, but wasn't promised immediate playing time.
"They said I wouldn't play the first couple of years,
and probably play my sophomore or junior year," said
Stevens. "They said it was best to go to a junior college.
That way, I'd step right in and play.
Stevens' community college experience (Lake City) didn't
work out the way Stevens had hoped, but Stevens rebounded
after transferring to Louisburg College for the 2004 season.
Louisburg has produced 12 Major League Baseball players,
including Otis Nixon, Greg Briley and Chad Fonville.
"I had a very good year at Louisburg, caught most of
the games, and played first base here and there," said
Stevens, who batted .270 with nine home runs and 36 RBI's.
Stevens matriculated to the University of Pittsburgh after
the Panthers coaching staff contacted Louisburg.
"They called my coach at Louisburg and asked it they
had a catcher," recalled Stevens. They sent someone
down to see me play and they really liked me.
"Coastal Carolina, Radford and Liberty also talked
to me, but I chose Pitt.
"They got me up to Pittsburgh for a visit and offered
me a 60 percent scholarship."
Pittsburgh, a member of the Big East Conference, is an up
and coming baseball program, according to Stevens.
"They hired a new coach about five years ago, and he's
turned the program around."
Jeff Stevens has looked to the career of his older brother,
Greg, as well as other big league catchers as examples of
how the rewards of hard work and perseverance have paid
off.
Greg Stevens, primarily a catcher like brother Jeff, played
at Division III Averett University, where he played a little
third base as well.
He attended a Frontier League tryout camp last May in Washington,
Pa., and was drafted by league member Chillicothe, who released
him.
Evansville (Indiana) and Richmond (Indiana) were other teams
which showed early interest, but Stevens did not work out
for either of them.
Stevens reportedly drove over 4,000 miles in two weeks before
hooking up with Gateway for the 2004 season, where his bat
and play at third base have kept him in the lineup.
He had a .278 batting average for the Grizzlies before the
All-Star break this season, with 11 home runs, 36 RBI's
and 34 runs scored.
That has served as an example for the younger Stevens.
"He's second in the league in homers and RBI's right
now," said Stevens.
He's one of the hardest working guys I've ever seen,"
he added, with a conditioning regimen that includes running,
lifting weights and throwing.
"I've been doing plyometrics and running four times
a week and lifting weights four or five times a week, as
well as hit and throw," Jeff Stevens said.
The catching position has undergone somewhat of a metamorphosis
since the 1970's, especially in the demands of the position,
as well as from a baseball fan's perspective.
It was considered primarily a defensive position, despite
home run hitting catchers such as Josh Gibson.
Players like Gibson and Johnny Bench revolutionized it as
more of an offensive position, according to Stevens.
"I remembered talking to a couple of people who said
all I needed was to be a good catch and throw guy, to be
able to receive pitches and throw guys out," said Stevens.
"But there's more to catching than meets the eye. You
serve as the quarterback for the team, and you control the
game.
"You can make a pitcher look really good or really
bad. It's all about how you call the game, and if you have
a bad game, the pitcher will have a bad game.
"It's one of the tougher positions," said Stevens,
adding he looks to Major League all-star catcher Ivan "Pudge"
Rodriguez as a role model in addition to his brother.
"Pudge has always been the guy I looked up to, also
[Mike] Metheny of the Cardinals," said Stevens.
Obituaries
James
Edward Coleman
James Edward Coleman, 83, of 4000 Allen Mill Rd., Scottsburg,
died August 14 at the J.F.K. Medical Center in Edison, N.J.
Mr. Coleman was born in Halifax County on October 22, 1920,
the son of the late James Coleman and Amanda Green Coleman.
He was a member of the Spanish Grove Baptist Church and
was a WW II Army veteran.
His survivors include his wife: Bettie Mosley Coleman; daughter:
Barbara Coleman of Lynchburg; three sons: Leslie Coleman
of Scottsburg, Frederick Coleman of Clinton and Rev. William
Coleman of Evington; sister: Priscilla Morton of Mt. Vernon,
N.Y.; brother: Major Coleman of Scottsburg; 10 grandchildren,
13 great-grandchildren, 3 step-grandchildren, and six step-great-grandchildren.
A funeral service will be held Fri., Aug. 20, at 11 a.m.,
at the Spanish Grove Baptist Church, with the Rev. Ronnie
Womack officiating. Burial will follow in the church cemetery
with military rites by the American Legion Post 99.
The family will receive friends at the home of the deceased.
Luevornia
Coleman
Ms. Luevornia Coleman, sister of Mrs. Alma Somerville of
South Boston, died Thursday, August 12, at Katy Reynolds
Hospice House in Winston-Salem, N.C. Funeral services for
Luevornia Coleman will be held Thursday, August 19, at 1
p.m. at New Jerusalem Baptist Church in Winston-Salem, N.C.
Burial will take place Friday in Newton, N.C
Elaine
Womack Lee
Elaine Womack Lee, 74, of South Boston died August 14 at
the Woodview Nursing Home.
Mrs. Lee was born in Halifax County on April 16, 1930, the
daughter of the late Elsie Womack Farmer and stepdaughter
of the late Willie Farmer. She was married to the late Louis
Lee and was a member of Deliverance Tabernacle Church.
Her survivors include three sisters: Bessie Ford and Margaret
Safewright of South Boston and Gloria Johnson of Sutherlin;
and an aunt, Viola Womack Torian of South Boston.
A funeral service will be held today, August 18, at 1 p.m.,
at the Crawford House Chapel in Halifax with Bishop Larry
Burrell officiating. Burial will follow in Murphys
Grove Baptist Church cemetery.
The family will receive friends at the Crawford House on
Wednesday from 12-1 p.m. and at other times at the residence
of Bessie Ford, 213 Fairmont Apts., South Boston.
Kelly
Madison
Mr. Kelly Madison, brother of Mrs. Essie J. Richardson and
Ms. Conyers Weston, both of South Boston, died Friday, August
13 in Miami, Fl., at the age of 68.
Funeral arrangements for Mr. Kelly Madison are incomplete
and will be announced at a later date.
Andra
Dwayne Venable
Andra Dwayne Venable, 45, of 1049 Billys Lane, Halifax,
died August 15 at his residence.
Mr. Venable was born in Washington, D.C., on January 31,
1959, the son of Houston Venable and Sudie Mae Holt Venable.
He was a member of New Bethel Baptist Church and employed
by J.M. Huber Corporation.
His survivors include his wife: Jacqueline Logan Venable;
two daughters: Tina and Pam Sydnor of Richmond; son: Jerry
Sydnor of Halifax; his parents; sister: Sherdina Harrison
of Washington, D.C.; two brothers: Houston Barry Venable
and Tony Andrew Venable of Halifax; two grandchildren; his
mother and father-in-law: Mr. and Mrs. John Logan of Halifax.
He was preceded in death by a daughter: Michele Sydnor.
A funeral service will be held tomorrow, August 19, at 2
p.m., at New Bethel Baptist Church with the Rev. Ronald
Clark officiating. Burial will follow in the church cemetery.
The family will receive friends at the Crawford House, Halifax,
tonight from 7-8 p.m. and at other times at the home of
the deceased.