Current:Home > FinanceMan convicted of killing LAPD cop after 40 years in retrial -ProfitPoint
Man convicted of killing LAPD cop after 40 years in retrial
View
Date:2025-04-20 18:00:00
LOS ANGELES (AP) — A man accused of killing a Los Angeles police officer during a traffic stop four decades ago has been convicted again in a retrial this week.
Jurors deliberated for two weeks before finding Kenneth Gay, 65, guilty of murdering Officer Paul Verna in 1983. Gay, who has been incarcerated roughly four decades already, will serve a life sentence because he was convicted of murder with special circumstances.
“It’s not exactly happiness. We’ve been in trial for 11 weeks and to have the jury be out so long, it was agonizing,” Sandy Jackson, Verna’s widow, told the Los Angeles Times. “But the end result was what it should be. (Gay) should not be out among us.”
Prosecutors said Gay and his co-defendant, Raynard Cummings, were passengers in a car that Verna, a motorcycle officer, stopped for speeding through a stop sign in Lake View Terrace, a suburban neighborhood in Los Angeles’ San Fernando Valley.
Prosecutors said the two men, who had committed more than a dozen robberies in the weeks prior, thought Verna would arrest them because they were armed ex-convicts riding in a stolen car.
Verna wrote down Pamela Cummings’ name — a crucial move that later helped detectives solve the murder — and leaned into the car to ask Cummings and Gay for identification. Fear of being arrested, Cummings fired the first shot and then, prosecutors say, passed the gun to Gay, who jumped out of the car to pump another five bullets into the officer.
The original trial was held in 1985 and separate juries convicted Cummings and Gay, who each accused the other of being the shooter, and recommended the death penalty. Three years later, the state Supreme Court overturned Gay’s death sentence on the grounds of incompetent counsel, but left the guilty verdict in place.
The court again sentenced Gay to death in 2000 after a retrial just for the penalty phase of the case. The high court overturned that, too, and later the justices unanimously decided to vacate Gay’s initial guilty conviction. The justices wrote that Gay’s attorney, who was later disbarred and has since died, among other things, did not introduce crucial evidence that might have swayed the jury to come to a different verdict.
Gay had insisted on his innocence and maintained that Cummings was the lone shooter. Cummings remains incarcerated in San Quentin State Prison.
veryGood! (941)
Related
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- 'Star Trek: Picard' soars by embracing the legacy of 'The Next Generation'
- How to be a better movie watcher
- We recap the 2023 Super Bowl
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- At 3 she snuck in to play piano, at nearly 80, she's a Colombian classical legend
- 'Titanic' was king of the world 25 years ago for a good reason
- The Missouri House tightens its dress code for women, to the dismay of Democrats
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Fear, Florida, and The 1619 Project
Ranking
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- U.S. women's soccer tries to overcome its past lack of diversity
- In bluegrass, as in life, Molly Tuttle would rather be a 'Crooked Tree'
- Tom Verlaine, guitarist and singer of influential rock band Television, dies at 73
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- 'Extraordinary' is a super-powered comedy that's broad, brash and bingeable
- 'The Angel Maker' is a thrilling question mark all the way to the end
- An Oscar-winning costume designer explains how clothes 'create a mood'
Recommendation
Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
Clunky title aside, 'Cunk on Earth' is a mockumentary with cult classic potential
Prosecutors file charges against Alec Baldwin in fatal shooting on movie set
Classic rock guitar virtuoso Jeff Beck dies at 78
Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
'Star Trek: Picard' soars by embracing the legacy of 'The Next Generation'
Bret Easton Ellis' first novel in more than a decade, 'The Shards,' is worth the wait
'80 for Brady' assembles screen legends to celebrate [checks notes] Tom Brady