The Oklahoman

3 inmates convicted of murder

- BY KYLE SCHWAB Staff Writer kschwab@oklahoman.com

Jurors on Thursday night convicted three inmates and acquitted one in the death of a fellow inmate.

All four had been accused of beating and stomping Maurice “Little Smoke” Pendleton on July 18, 2017, inside the Oklahoma County jail. Prosecutor­s alleged the attack was gang-related.

After more than three hours of deliberati­ng, jurors found the three inmates guilty of second-degree murder.

Jurors will deliberate punishment Friday.

Convicted were Todd Alan Miller, 32; Antonio Dewayne Ligons, 36; and Martaveous Dwayne Gillioms, 21. Acquitted was Hareth Hameed, 19. All four denied involvemen­t in the death and disputed gang affiliatio­n.

The assault took place just before noon July 18, 2017, on the jail’s eighthfloo­r basketball court, according to investigat­ors.

Pendleton had just been arraigned by video on an assault charge. The four inmates had been awaiting disciplina­ry hearings for getting into trouble while at the jail.

A key witness, Raymundo Rubio, another inmate, also was in the basketball court for a disciplina­ry hearing. Rubio, 22, testified that Ligons threw the first punch after faking a handshake with Pendleton, and then the others jumped him.

Rubio said Miller, Ligons and Gillioms struck Pendleton “a lot of times.”

Pendleton then ran around the court, attempting to escape the attack, Rubio testified.

The three inmates also tried to strip Pendleton, he said.

Rubio testified Hameed just stood there during the attack, which lasted about 90 seconds.

“What happened on the ball court killed Maurice Pendleton,” Assistant District Attorney Jessica Foster said during closing arguments. “He was killed for no reason.”

A maintenanc­e man intervened after hearing Pendleton bang on the door to the court and observed the altercatio­n inside, according to prosecutor­s.

Pendleton died that evening at a hospital.

Miller, Ligons and Gillioms also were convicted of a felony gang associatio­n offense.

Prosecutor­s allege those three are associated with the Rollin 20s and Rollin 90s Crips.

Pendleton, 36, of Midwest City, was a member of a rival gang, the 107 Hoover Crips, according to prosecutor­s.

Before the attack, though, the victim said he didn’t “gang bang” like that, according to investigat­ors.

The assault was not recorded by jail surveillan­ce cameras. After the altercatio­n, the sheriff said changes were made at the jail to prevent future incidents.

Two of the inmates already were facing murder charges at the time of jail death. Gillioms is awaiting trial. Hameed was sentenced to 30 years in prison after pleading guilty.

During closing arguments, defense attorney Michael Johnson said the medical evidence doesn’t support the “blow after blow” beating alleged by prosecutor­s.

Instead, Johnson, who represents Ligons, contended Pendleton’s death was caused by his sickle cell disease.

The state medical examiner determined Pendleton’s cause of death was “traumatic head injury sequela.” Other significan­t conditions contributi­ng to death were small vessel disease of the heart, emphysema and sickle cell trait with sickling. The manner of death was homicide.

 ?? [PHOTO BY JIM BECKEL, THE OKLAHOMAN] ?? From left, Martaveous Dwayne Gillioms, Todd Alan Miller, Hareth Hameed and Antonio Dewayne Ligons appear Aug. 27 at the Oklahoma County courthouse for their murder trial.
[PHOTO BY JIM BECKEL, THE OKLAHOMAN] From left, Martaveous Dwayne Gillioms, Todd Alan Miller, Hareth Hameed and Antonio Dewayne Ligons appear Aug. 27 at the Oklahoma County courthouse for their murder trial.
 ??  ?? Maurice Pendleton
Maurice Pendleton

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