The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia’s second execution of 2018 scheduled to take place May 3

- By Rhonda Cook rcook@ajc.com

Robert Earl Butts, who was 18 when he and a partner murdered an off-duty Milledgevi­lle prison guard, is scheduled to be executed May 3.

That would make him the second man to be put to death in Georgia this year.

An execution warrant for Butts, now 40, was signed Monday as his partner in the murder of Donovan Corey Parks waits on the U.S. Supreme Court to rule on his appeal, which was argued in Washington last fall.

In March, Carlton Gary, known as the Columbus “Stocking Strangler” and one of the state’s most notorious serial killers, died by lethal injection.

According to testimony, Butts and Marion Wilson, also 18, were trying to carry out an obligation for the Folk Nation gang — to carry out a violent act — when Butts got in line behind Parks as he was buying cat food at a Walmart in Milledgevi­lle.

Butts bought a pack of gum and followed the officer out of the store to his 1992 Acura Vigor, parked in the fire lane directly in front of the store.

They asked for a ride, and Parks agreed.

Witnesses saw Butts slide into the front passenger seat and Wilson get into the back.

Almost immediatel­y, Butts pulled out a shotgun and told Parks to drive to a nearby resi- dential area. That was where they shot Parks in the head and left him lying face down in the street.

The two then left in the Acura for Atlanta.

Security cameras caught images of Wilson and Butts putting gas into Parks’ car at a service station in nearby Gray. Once in Atlanta,

they called Wilson’s cousin for help finding a chop shop that would take the stolen car. When that failed, they bought two gasoline cans at a convenienc­e store in Atlanta and then drove to Macon, where they set the car on fire.

They were arrested when they got back to Milledgevi­lle.

At Wilson’s house, police found a sawed-off shotgun loaded with the type of ammunition used to kill Parks. Wilson, who claimed to be the Folk Nation gang’s “chief enforcer,” talked, and he put it all on Butts.

Wilson said Butts carried the shotgun with him into the store as he looked for a victim. Butts then ordered Parks out of the car and on his stomach, and he shot the correction­al officer in the back of the head, Wilson said.

While preparing for trial, defense attorneys had interviewe­d Butts’ mother, his siblings, grandmothe­r, uncle, former employers, ex-girlfriend­s and others who were in the gang with him, but none of them were called to testify on his behalf.

In his appeals, Butts claimed his trial lawyers were ineffectiv­e because none of those people were called.

But, according to court records, Butts’ mother was a drunk and a drug user, and she only came to court once, the day he was sentenced.

His mother explained when she testified at a hearing for his appeal that she managed to “sober up” in time to attend only that one day of her son’s trial.

His father was not a part of Butts’ life, and investigat­ors could not find him.

The day after Butts’ execution was scheduled, the U.S. Supreme Court handed Wilson a reprieve. The issue argued before the Supreme Court last October was the arcane question of what prior state court ruling the federal appeals should evaluate when deciding the merits of a condemned inmate’s case.

The justices’ 6-3 ruling sent Wilson’s case back to the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, with instructio­ns to use a different analysis in deciding his challenge. District Attorney Stephen Bradley said that decision should have no bearing on Butts’ case because the courts used the now-preferred analysis.

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