Does Tennessee have the death penalty? Cleotha Abston charges and criminal record explored as Eliza Fletcher s body is found in Memphis
Does Tennessee have the death penalty Cleotha Abston charges and criminal record explored as Eliza Fletcher s body is found in Memphis × Follow Us Create Notifications New User posted their first comment this is comment text Link Approve Reject & ban Delete Log in Manage your profile Editing Story Queue Video Queue Editing Stats Writer Home SEO Redirection Admin Wiki Edits Taxonomy Home Edit Site Menu Mapping Dashboard Tag Pages Community Social Feed Queue Feed Center Notification Center Affiliate Home Manage Pages Bottom Tagline Dash Timeless Stories Logout SK POP News
Newly sworn-in DA @SteveMulroy901 is in attendance, is as Fletcher’s family.389In the court this morning where Cleotha Abston is making a first appearance on kidnapping and evidence tampering charges, just after authorities confirm #ElizaFletcher’s body found in South Memphis. Newly sworn-in DA @SteveMulroy901 is in attendance, is as Fletcher’s family. https://t.co/eOSRyposih As of now, it is yet to be confirmed if Cleotha Abston will get a death sentence or not since the decision depends on the jury. Capital punishment has existed in Tennessee since 1838, but the methods have changed over time. Police have also linked the car they suspect was used in Fletcher's kidnapping to someone who lived in the same house as Abston.
Does Tennessee have the death penalty Cleotha Abston charges and criminal record explored as Eliza Fletcher s body is found in Memphis
By Nikita Nikhil Modified 07 Sep 2022 Follow Us Comment Share Cleotha Abston has had trouble with law in the past. (Image via @901Lulu/Twitter, @victorw39784892/Twitter) Cleotha Abston has been arrested for the murder of a Memphis-based schoolteacher, Eliza Fletcher. On September 6, Memphis police found the body of Fletcher, 34, who was kidnapped while she was on her morning run near the University of Memphis. As per authorities, the deceased lady was abducted on September 2 after a man forced her into an SUV. Cleotha Abston, who reportedly has a history of rape, assault, and kidnapping, was charged with first-degree murder, aggravated kidnapping, and tampering with evidence after authorities found his DNA on a pair of footwear located where Fletcher was last seen. Lola Rossi@LolaRos30659794@MEM_PoliceDept #BlackLivesMatter violence hypocrisy groups savage criminals lawlessness period #CriminalJusticeFailure #CleothaAbston should be in jail long ago #BlackCriminals are dangerous #BlackHateWhitePeople bunch of racists too. Indeed.@MEM_PoliceDept #BlackLivesMatter violence hypocrisy groups savage criminals lawlessness period #CriminalJusticeFailure #CleothaAbston should be in jail long ago #BlackCriminals are dangerous #BlackHateWhitePeople bunch of racists too. Indeed. https://t.co/cV2QblTIVX The district attorney for Shelby County, Steven Mulroy, told reporters that Abston would be arraigned on the murder charges on September 7. "We have no reason to think this was anything other than an isolated attack by a stranger." Abston was ordered held by the judge instead of a $510,000 bail. After Abston revealed that he couldn't afford a bond or a lawyer, Judge Louis Montesi ordered a public defender to represent him. Dakarai Turner@Dakarai_TurnerIn the court this morning where Cleotha Abston is making a first appearance on kidnapping and evidence tampering charges, just after authorities confirm #ElizaFletcher’s body found in South Memphis.Newly sworn-in DA @SteveMulroy901 is in attendance, is as Fletcher’s family.389In the court this morning where Cleotha Abston is making a first appearance on kidnapping and evidence tampering charges, just after authorities confirm #ElizaFletcher’s body found in South Memphis. Newly sworn-in DA @SteveMulroy901 is in attendance, is as Fletcher’s family. https://t.co/eOSRyposih As of now, it is yet to be confirmed if Cleotha Abston will get a death sentence or not since the decision depends on the jury. Capital punishment has existed in Tennessee since 1838, but the methods have changed over time. Police have also linked the car they suspect was used in Fletcher's kidnapping to someone who lived in the same house as Abston.