The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Police make unusual effort to get a killer out of prison

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seen in the inmates who came over to work at the police department from the Spalding County Correction­al Institute. He was disappoint­ed by how many inmates got fired from the work detail for goofing off or doing a sloppy job.

Hard worker

That changed after Ferrell showed up. Officers started coming to the chief to brag about the new guy and how he was friendly and, importantl­y, didn’t have to have a guard standing over his shoulder all day. Yates learned that when Ferrell was a little boy, his mother was murdered while he was feet away in their home. As the chief and the inmate struck up a relationsh­ip, the lawman thought of how that early trauma must’ve affected Ferrell.

Ferrell would sit and chat in the chief ’s office at the police department, which is a long cinder-block former elementary school that sometimes smells of marijuana emanating from the evidence room. Ferrell would tell the chief about his plans for life after prison, which could be summarized by saying, simply, that he intended to work and never return to prison. They talked about remorse.

When Yates heard Ferrell was coming up for parole, he decided to write to the board, not realizing until days later that two of his officers were doing the same. Yates told Ferrell about his decision, adding a postscript — part joke, part threat: If you get in trouble again, I’m coming after you.

Ferrell swore he wouldn’t let the chief down. In the back of his mind, the chief knew his support of Ferrell’s cause might not go over well with the family of the woman he killed.

Her name was Quishanna Loynes and she was 29. She was 10 weeks pregnant and brushing one daughter’s hair, with her other young daughter and son at her side, one night in October 2008. The front window of their first-floor apartment near Avondale Estates was plastered in Halloween decoration­s.

Out in the parking lot, other residents were arguing.

Initially Ferrell, who lived in the complex, was trying to stop the fight, but another bystander, Dequontist Lucas, told Ferrell to stay out of it, according to DeKalb County Police court testimony. Ferrell and Lucas started to argue and then each pulled a gun and shot at the other. (Both said the other fired first.) Neither man was shot, but one bullet flew toward Quishanna Loynes’ apartment.

Tyshara Loynes was 9 years old when that round pierced the window and hit her mom in the back.

Chaos followed that night in the kids’ lives and it wouldn’t stop for years, Tyshara Loynes said. They went to live with their dad. Their dad went to prison. They ended up in foster care. Constantly they’ve missed their mom — needed their mom. Her guidance and love.

Guilty plea

Ferrell pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaught­er and got 15 years in prison. Lucas pleaded guilty to numerous charges and got 20 years, which was on top of the life sentence he received in Cobb County for the murder of 16-year-old Samuel “Dra” Steward during a July 2008 robbery.

Tyshara Loynes remembers Ferrell. He’d been a friend of her mom’s fiance.

“I don’t think by any means he’s a terrible person,” Tyshara Loynes said, “but the effect of what he did was terrible, and it led us to go through some terrible things.”

She isn’t surprised to hear Ferrell is remorseful. She recalls him sending word to the kids after the shooting saying that he was sorry, especially because his own mother was murdered.

That crime had shot a chill through DeKalb County in 1982.

“Two men wearing ski masks tucked Eric in his bed at his south DeKalb home Monday night,” read the opening line in the frontpage article in the Jan. 27, 1982, edition of the Atlanta Constituti­on. “Thirty minutes later his 26-year-old mother lay dead on the front porch from a gunshot wound.”

Janice Dismuke and a friend had been briefly held at gunpoint by the men, who took their jewelry and ransacked the house. Moments later, Dismuke was shot in the back and the men ran away.

Ferrell, who was about 5, was raised after that by an aunt who died after he went to prison, according to Griffin Capt. Homer Daniel, one of the letter writers. The Georgia Department of Correction­s said Ferrell can’t be interviewe­d.

Does similar childhood experience lead Tyshara Loynes to think Ferrell should now get out of prison early? No.

“I’m not going to say he should be locked up forever,” said the 20-year-old, who is a college student in Indianapol­is, where her siblings also live. “But I think when you do something, you should suffer the consequenc­es.”

Told the daughter wanted Ferrell to serve his whole prison stint, the chief said he understood.

“And,” Yates said, “I can’t say I wouldn’t feel the same way.”

Tyshara Loynes can also understand different points of view. She doesn’t have to look far to find them. Her own older sister, JaSha, said she’s always felt Ferrell’s sentence was too long. “My mom wouldn’t want that for him,” JaSha Loynes told the AJC.

The Loynes siblings have all aged out of foster care and say they are leading happier lives these days.

About two weeks after the police sent their letters, the board set a tentative parole month of August 2020, which would be an early release of about four years, according to records. It isn’t clear if the letters helped or not because the parole board’s deliberati­ons are private and confidenti­al, but the board says it considers all letters.

In the end, the board could still decide not to let Ferrell out on parole, but if he does everything right from here on, his chances would seem good.

The police chief said he wants to get Ferrell a job working for the city, maybe in sanitation or the streets department. He isn’t so worried about Ferrell messing up on parole. Otherwise, Yates said, he wouldn’t stake his profession­al reputation on the inmate and, ultimately, on mercy.

Told the daughter wanted Ferrell to serve his whole prison stint, the chief said he understood. ‘And,’ Yates said, ‘I can’t say I wouldn’t feel the same way.’

 ?? BOB ANDRES / ROBERT.ANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Griffin police Chief Mike Yates took the unpreceden­ted step, for him, of asking the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles to act favorably on Eric Ferrell’s appeal for early release from his 15-year prison sentence for voluntary manslaught­er in the gunshot death of a pregnant neighbor.
BOB ANDRES / ROBERT.ANDRES@AJC.COM Griffin police Chief Mike Yates took the unpreceden­ted step, for him, of asking the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles to act favorably on Eric Ferrell’s appeal for early release from his 15-year prison sentence for voluntary manslaught­er in the gunshot death of a pregnant neighbor.
 ?? AJC 2008 ?? Eric Lamar Ferrell, initially charged with felony murder in the death of Quishanna Loynes, appears in DeKalb County Magistrate Court on Oct. 22, 2008. He would later be convicted of voluntary manslaught­er and sent to prison.
AJC 2008 Eric Lamar Ferrell, initially charged with felony murder in the death of Quishanna Loynes, appears in DeKalb County Magistrate Court on Oct. 22, 2008. He would later be convicted of voluntary manslaught­er and sent to prison.
 ?? BOB ANDRES / ROBERT. ANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Sgt. Jennifer Michel of the Griffin Police Department independen­tly wrote a letter of support to the parole board that is considerin­g Eric Ferrell’s appeal for early release from prison.
BOB ANDRES / ROBERT. ANDRES@AJC.COM Sgt. Jennifer Michel of the Griffin Police Department independen­tly wrote a letter of support to the parole board that is considerin­g Eric Ferrell’s appeal for early release from prison.

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