Marion Albert Pruett

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Marion Albert Pruett
Birth name: Marion Albert Pruett
Died: April 12, 1999
Cause of death: lethal injection
Penalty: capital punishment
Killings
Number of victims: five confirmed
Span of killings: 1979 through 1981
Country: USA
State(s): Mississippi, Arkansas, New Mexico, Florida, Colorado
Date apprehended: 1981

Marion Albert Pruett (c. 1950 – April 12, 1999) was a serial killer[1] executed in Arkansas by lethal injection. Marion Pruett was sentenced to death for the October 12, 1981, murder of Bobbie Jean Robertson, a convenience store clerk in Fort Smith, Arkansas. She was one of at least five people Pruett killed; three of which were killed during that same week.

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[edit] Witness protection

In 1979, Pruett was given $800, a new name (Charles "Sonny" Pearson) and placed in the federal witness protection program after testifying about a murder in an Atlanta, Georgia federal prison.

[edit] The murders

Marion Pruett is known to have killed Peggy Lowe, a Mississippi loan officer, kidnapped and murdered Arkansas convenience store clerk Bobbie Jean Robertson, and two others in Colorado. He also murdered his wife in New Mexico.

In April 1981, his common-law wife Pamela Sue Barker, also known as Michelle Lynn Pearson, was found dead in Rio Rancho, New Mexico. She had been blundgeoned with a ballpeen hammer and had been burned.

Pruett abducted Robertson from a Fort Smith convenience store where she worked, took her to a wooded area behind the store and shot her. From death row, he asked a Mississippi newspaper to pay him $20,000 to disclose the location of Barker's engagement ring (his offer was refused) and offered to reveal the location of a Florida victim's body in exchange for a paid appearance on Geraldo.

He received life sentences for Barker's murder, as well as the murders in Colorado and Mississippi. Pruett also confessed to killing a cellmate in a Georgia prison. [2]

Pruett was interviewed by the A&E Television Networks show American Justice in an episode titled “Dealing With The Devil”. The episode included footage of Pruett two weeks before he was executed and interviews with his victims' relatives and the government official who put him in the witness protection program.[3]

[edit] Trial

At his New Mexico trial for Barker's murder, Pruett said that he had killed people and committed robberies to support a cocaine habit that sometimes ran up to $4,000 a week. However, he denied killing his wife. [4]

[edit] Execution

Pruett was executed by lethal injection at 9:00 p.m. at the Cummins unit of the Arkansas Department of Correction on April 12, 1999.[5] Pruette was the 19th person executed by the state of Arkansas since Furman v. Georgia, 408 U.S. 238 (1972), after new capital punishment laws were passed in Arkansas and that came into force on March 23, 1973.

[edit] See also

[edit] References