‘Craigslist killer’ gets death penalty

Richard Beasley was convicted of murdering down-on-their-luck men who responded to ad for non-existent job.

Convicted Craigslist murderer Richard Beasley reacts as jury recommended the death penalty for each of three murder counts in the courtroom of Summit County in Akron, Ohio. Photograph: Reuters
Convicted Craigslist murderer Richard Beasley reacts as jury recommended the death penalty for each of three murder counts in the courtroom of Summit County in Akron, Ohio. Photograph: Reuters

An Ohio jury has recommended the death penalty for Richard Beasley, who was convicted of murdering down-on-their-luck men who responded to a Craigslist ad for a non-existent job.

Beasley (53) was found guilty earlier this month for the kidnapping and murder of David Pauley (51) of Norfolk, Virginia; Ralph Geiger (56) of Akron; and Timothy Kern (47) of Massillon, Ohio.

He was also convicted of the attempted murder of Scott Davis, a South Carolina man who answered the Craigslist ad and was shot in the arm while escaping after meeting Beasley and a teenage accomplice, Brogan Rafferty.

The jury took less than three hours to come to a decision recommending the death penalty, and Judge Lynne Callahan said she will sentence Beasley on March 26th.

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Beasley and his accomplice were convicted in separate trials over the deadly scheme, in which they lured three of the men by promising a bogus $300-a-week job as a ranch hand in rural Ohio.

Prosecutors said Beasley was the mastermind and trigger man behind the murders and contend he first lured Ralph Geiger, a homeless man, to Noble County where he shot and killed him to steal his identity and escape arrest on an outstanding warrant.