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Craigslist Killer Sentenced To Death

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UPDATE 10:42 a.m. A self-styled street preacher who teamed up with a high school student in a deadly plot to lure men with bogus Craigslist job offers has been sentenced to death.

A judge in Akron sentenced 53-year-old Richard Beasley on Thursday. The jury that convicted him recommended last week that he be executed.

Beasley was convicted of teaming up with a teenager in 2011 to lure men with offers of farmhand jobs in southeast Ohio. Three men were killed and a fourth wounded.

The co-defendant, then 16, was too young to face the death penalty. Brogan Rafferty was sentenced to life in prison without the chance of parole on his conviction last year.

One victim was killed near Akron, and the others were shot at a southeast Ohio farm during bogus job interviews.

The slain men were Ralph Geiger, 56, of Akron; David Pauley, 51, of Norfolk, Va.; and Timothy Kern, 47, of Massillon. All were down-and-out men looking for a fresh start in life, prosecutors said repeatedly during the trial.

The survivor, Scott Davis, now 49, testified that he heard the click of a gun as he walked in front of Beasley at the reputed job site in Noble County. Davis, who was shot in an arm, knocked the weapon aside, fled into the woods and tipped off police.

Davis was hoping to move from South Carolina closer to his family in northeast Ohio.


UPDATE 10:21 a.m. A self-styled street preacher who teamed up with a high-school student in a deadly plot to lure men with bogus Craigslist job offers has been sentenced to death.

Richard Beasley, 53, lured victims with offers of farmhand jobs in Noble County and robbed them. Three men were killed and a fourth was wounded in 2011.

A jury convicted him last month.

The co-defendant, then 16, was too young to face the death penalty. Brogan Rafferty was sentenced to life in prison without the chance of parole on his conviction last year.


Judge Lynne Callahan in Akron scheduled sentencing this Thursday for 53-year-old Richard Beasley. He was convicted last month by a jury that recommended the death sentence.

The judge could reduce the sentence to life in prison.

Beasley, a self-styled street preacher, and a teenage companion lured victims with offers of farmhand jobs in Noble County and robbed them. Three men were killed and a fourth was wounded in 2011.

Co-defendant Brogan Rafferty, then 16, was too young to face the death penalty. The same judge sentenced him to life in prison without the chance of parole on his conviction last year.