48. Margie Velma BARFIELD
A.K.A.: "Death Row Granny"
Classification: Serial killer
Characteristics: Poisoner
Number of victims: 5 - 7
Date of murders: 1969 - 1978
Date of arrest: May 13, 1978
Date of birth: October 23, 1932
Victims profile: Husbands, fiances, and her own mother
Method of murder: Poisoning (arsenic)
Location: Robeson County, North Carolina, USA
Status: Executed by lethal injection in North Carolina on November 2, 1984
Classification: Serial killer
Characteristics: Poisoner
Number of victims: 5 - 7
Date of murders: 1969 - 1978
Date of arrest: May 13, 1978
Date of birth: October 23, 1932
Victims profile: Husbands, fiances, and her own mother
Method of murder: Poisoning (arsenic)
Location: Robeson County, North Carolina, USA
Status: Executed by lethal injection in North Carolina on November 2, 1984
Summary:
After two marraiges ended with the death of her husbands,
by 1977 Barfield was in a relationship with Stuart Taylor, who was a widower
and tobacco farmer. As she had been doing for years, she forged checks on
Taylor's account to pay for her addiction to prescription drugs.
Fearing that she had been found out, she mixed an arsenic
based rat poison into his beer and tea. Taylor became very ill and Velma
volunteered to nurse him. As his condition worsened she took him to hospital
where he died a few days later.
Unfortunately for her there was an autopsy which found
that the cause of Taylor's death was arsenic poisoning and Velma was arrested
and charged with his murder.
At the trial her defense pleaded insanity but this was
not accepted and she was convicted. The jury recommended the death sentence.
Velma appeared cold and uncaring on the stand and actually gave the District
Attorney a round of applause when he made his closing speech.
Barfield later confessed to the 1974 murder of her own
mother (in whose name she had taken out a loan) and of two elderly people, John
Henry Lee (by whom she was being paid as a housekeeper/caregiver) and Dollie
Edwards (a relative of Stuart Taylor). Velma always attended the funerals of
her victims and appeared to grieve genuinely for them.
The body of her late husband, Thomas Barfield, was later
exhumed and also found to contain traces of arsenic. Velma denied that she had
killed him.
Her motives for these four murders were the same. She had
misappropriated money from her victims and then according to her, tried to make
them ill so she could nurse them whilst finding another job to enable her to
repay the money. Needless to say, the jury was less than impressed by this
defense.
Barfield gained notoriety as the "Death Row
Granny," becoming the first woman to be executed in the U.S. since 1962,
and the first since the reinstatement of the death penalty in 1976.
Velma Margie Barfield
Velma Barfield made international headlines when she
became the first woman to be executed in America since 1962 and first since the
re-introduction of the death penalty in 1976. She was also the first woman to
be executed by lethal injection.
She was put to death at 2.00 a.m. on the 2nd of November
1984 at the Central Prison in Raleigh, North Carolina, a somewhat plump, 52
year old, grandmother, who had murdered four people.
Velma was addicted to drugs, not the hard drugs like
heroin or cocaine, but rather prescription drugs such as tranquilizers,
sleeping pills, anti-depressants and barbiturates.
Her addiction stemmed from a nervous breakdown and she
had a history of overdosing and subsequent hospital treatment, with four
admissions between 1972 and 1975.
Background
She was born on the 23rd October 1932 in North Carolina,
the oldest girl and second of a large family of nine children. She claimed her
father beat and raped her and her sisters although this was disputed by other
relatives. She dropped out of school and by nineteen had two children, a son,
Ron and a daughter, Kim by her first husband, Thomas.
To begin with the marriage was happy and they seemed like
a normal family unit. All began to deteriorate when Thomas suffered head
injuries in a car crash in 1966 and became unable to work. Velma got a job in a
store to make ends meet and support the family.
Thomas rapidly become an alcoholic and Velma began to
take anti-depressants and tranquilizers to get her through the daily stress of
what had become a miserable life. Ultimately she had a breakdown and became
addicted to the various drugs.
Thomas died in 1969 in a house fire, which may not have
been an accident and Velma re-married in 1970 to Jennings Barfield who was dead
within 6 months - the cause - arsenic poisoning.
Her limited employment opportunities could not support
her drug habit so she took to forging cheques and then killing the people she
had defrauded.
The crimes
By 1977 she was in a relationship with Stuart Taylor who
was a widower and tobacco farmer. As usual she forged checks on Taylor's
account to pay for her addiction.
Presumably Taylor began to get suspicious, because
fearing that she had been found out, she mixed an arsenic based rat poison into
his beer and tea. Taylor became very ill and Velma volunteered to nurse him. As
his condition worsened she took him to hospital where he died a few days later.
Unfortunately for her there was an autopsy which found
that the cause of Taylor's death was arsenic poisoning and Velma was arrested
and charged with his murder. At the trial her defense pleaded insanity but this
was not accepted and she was convicted.
The jury recommended the death sentence. Velma appeared
cold and uncaring on the stand and actually gave the District Attorney a round
of applause when he made his closing speech.
She subsequently confessed to the murders of her mother
in 1974 (in whose name she had taken out a loan) and of two elderly people,
John Henry Lee by whom she was being paid as a housekeeper/carer and Dollie
Edwards through whom she met Stuart Taylor (he was related to Dollie).
Velma always attended the funerals of her victims and
appeared to grieve genuinely for them. Her late husband, Thomas's body was
later exhumed and also found to contain traces of arsenic but Velma denied that
she had killed him.
Her motives for these four murders were the same. She had
misappropriated money from her victims and then according to her, tried to make
them ill so she could nurse them whilst finding another job to enable her to
repay the money. Needless to say, the jury was less than impressed by this
defense.
Death row
On death row at Raleigh Velma, now off the drugs, she
expressed remorse for the years that the pills had blurred her judgment and destroyed
her moral compass. However she could not really explain why she had killed.
She became a "born again" Christian whilst
awaiting trial and during the next six years that she spent on death row did a
lot to help and counsel other female inmates.
Appeals to save her dragged on through various courts and
there were many representations on her behalf by religious leaders.
Her final appeal was filed on October 30th 1984 in the
North Carolina Supreme Court on the grounds that she was incompetent at her original
trial by virtue of her drug addiction.
This was rejected by the court. There had been many
appeals on her behalf, the Supreme Court having rejected them on three
occasions.
The Governor of North Carolina, James B. Hunt, declined
to grant clemency and was unimpressed by her religious conversion and good
behavior on death row. (The same argument for commutation was trotted out in
the case of Karla Faye Tucker in Texas in 1998)
It is claimed by some, that Hunt could not reprieve her
without looking "soft" on crime during the run up to the state
elections in 1984. She began to accept her death and instructed her attorney,
Jimmy Little, to drop all appeals the day before she was due to be executed
saying that she wanted to "die with dignity".
She clearly had little fear of what lay ahead and is
quoted as saying "When I go into that chamber at 2.00 a.m. it's my gateway
to heaven"
Execution
Under North Carolina law she was allowed the choice of
execution by lethal gas or lethal injection and, not surprisingly, she chose
the latter. She could not face her last meal and asked a guard to get her
Coca-Cola and Cheeze Doodles instead.
She dressed in her own pink pajamas for the execution and
was made to wear a diaper. A stethoscope and heart monitor were taped to her
chest. The wheeled gurney (see below) was taken to her cell and she was secured
to it with straps over her body and legs. Catheters were inserted into her arms
and a saline drip started before she was wheeled into the execution chamber a
few minutes before 2.00 a.m.
Three syringes were attached to each of the IV lines and
these were operated by three volunteers. One of the IV lines was, in fact, a
dummy so that none of the three volunteers could be sure if he had actually
killed her or not.
She was pronounced dead at 2.15 a.m., the execution
having gone without any hitches. At 2.25 a.m. her body was whisked away by a
waiting ambulance, past the crowds of pro and anti capital punishment
demonstrators who had assembled outside the prison. She had requested that her
organs be used for transplant purposes.
In fact this was not possible as heart had not been
beating for 10 minutes and could not be restarted, although attempts were made
to, by the transplant team. Her corneas and some skin tissue were able to be
used.
Conclusion
So was Velma Barfield a monster and serial killer or just
a poor demented soul who's brain was befuddled by drugs and who always needed
more money to pay for them? My own answer is somewhere in between. As many
before her she, no doubt, found that murder came quite easily once she had
committed the first one and it offered a simple and permanent solution to the
problem of being found out by those she was defrauding.
Margie Velma Barfield (née Margie Velma Bullard) (October
29, 1932 – November 2, 1984) was a serial killer, convicted of six murders. She
was the first woman in the United States to be executed after the 1976
resumption of capital punishment and the first since 1962. She was also the
first woman to be executed by lethal injection.
History
Velma Barfield was born in rural South Carolina, but grew
up near Fayetteville, North Carolina. Her father reportedly was abusive and she
resented her mother who did not stop the beatings. She escaped by marrying
Thomas Burke in 1949. The couple had two children and were reportedly happy
until Barfield had a hysterectomy and developed back pain. These events led to
a behavioral change in Barfield and an eventual drug addiction.
Thomas Burke began to drink and Barfield's complaints
turned into bitter arguments. On April 4, 1969, after Burke had passed out,
Barfield and the children left the house, returning to find the home burned and
Burke dead. Only a few months later, her home burned once again, this time with
a reward of insurance money.
In 1970, Barfield married a widower, Jennings Barfield.
Less than a year after their marriage, Jennings died on March 22 1971 from
heart complications, leaving Velma a widow once again.
In 1974, Barfield's mother, Lillian Bullard, showed
symptoms of intense diarrhea, vomiting and nausea, only to fully recover a few
days later. During the Christmas season of the same year, Lillian experienced
the same illness as earlier that year, resulting in her death only hours after
arriving at the hospital on December 30, 1974.
In 1976, Barfield began caring for the elderly, working
for Montgomery and Dollie Edwards. Montgomery fell ill and died on January 29,
1977. A little over a month after the death of her husband, Dollie experienced
identical symptoms to that of Velma's mother and she too died (March 1, 1977),
a death to which Barfield later confessed.
The following year, 1977, Barfield took another
caretaking job, this time for 76-year old Record Lee, who had broken her leg.
On June 4, 1977, Lee's husband, John Henry, began experiencing racking pains in
his stomach and chest along with vomiting and diarrhea. He died soon afterward
and Barfield later confessed to his murder.
Another victim was Rowland Stuart Taylor, Barfield's
boyfriend and a relative of Dollie Edwards. Fearing he had discovered she had
been forging checks on his account, she mixed an arsenic-based rat poison into
his beer and tea. He died on February 3, 1978, while she was trying to
"nurse" him back to health; an autopsy found arsenic in Taylor's
system. After her arrest, the body of Jennings Barfield was exhumed and found
to have traces of arsenic, a murder that Barfield denied having committed.
Although she subsequently confessed to the murders of Lillian Bullard, Dollie
Edwards, and John Henry Lee,she was tried and convicted only for the murder of
Taylor. Singer-songwriter Jonathan Byrd is the grandson of Jennings Barfield
and his first wife. Byrd's song "Velma" from his Wildflowers album
gives a personal account of the murders and investigation.
Prison and execution
During her stay on death row, Barfield became a devout
born again Christian. While she had been a devout churchgoer all of her life
and had often attended revivals held by Rex Humbard and other evangelists, she
later said she'd only been playing at being a Christian.
Her last few years were spent ministering to prisoners,
for which she received praise from Billy Graham. Barfield's involvement in
Christian ministry was extensive to the point that an effort was made to obtain
a commutation to life imprisonment. After a Federal court appeal was denied,
Barfield instructed her attorneys to abandon plans to appeal to the Supreme
Court. Barfield was executed on November 2, 1984 at the Central Prison in
Raleigh, North Carolina. She released a statement before the execution, stating
"I know that everybody has gone through a lot of pain, all the families
connected, and I am sorry, and I want to thank everybody who have been
supporting me all these six years." Barfield declined a last meal, having
instead a bag of Cheez Doodles and a 12-ounce can of Coca-Cola. Barfield wore
pink pajamas and an adult diaper as she was put to death.
Barfield's execution raised some political controversies
when Governor Jim Hunt, who faced a bout with incumbent Jesse Helms for his
Senate seat (which Hunt lost), rejected Barfield's request for clemency.
Barfield was buried in a small rural North Carolina
cemetery, near her first husband, Thomas Burke.
Wikipedia.org
Death Sentence: The True Story of Velma Barfield's Life, Crimes
and Execution
By Jerry Bledsoe & Velma Barfield
HallMemoirs.com
Book Reviews
Amazon.com - In 1984, Velma Barfield became the first
woman since 1962 to be executed in the United States. Her crimes were unusual:
Barfield was convicted of the 1978 arsenic poisoning of her fiancé, Stuart
Taylor, and she admitted killing three other people with poison, including her
own mother.
But her path to execution was circuitous, involving
appeal after appeal to various high courts, a grassroots movement to prevent her
death, a jailhouse spiritual epiphany, and subsequent "recollections"
of childhood abuse and torment that she claimed eventually led to her abuse of
prescription tranquilizers, which in turn clouded her judgment and enabled her
to perform murderous crimes. Death Sentence, however, is as much about the
people she left behind as it is about her fate.
Jerry Bledsoe chooses Barfield's son, Ronnie Burke, as
his protagonist. Burke is a greatly sympathetic character whose sense of horror
and shame leaps from the pages. Burke watches his own life fall apart as his
mother undergoes a transformation in prison, while he uses every last ounce of
his strength to try to save her life.
He feels duty bound to help her, but nearing the end of
the appeals process, he begs her to just quit and accept her ultimate penalty.
Yet at her funeral, divorced and in the beginning stages of alcoholism, he
cries and begs her forgiveness, apologizing for not doing more to save her.
Openly critical of the death penalty, Bledsoe focuses a
surgically precise camera on the process of state-sponsored execution and its
effects, and the result is a grim but gripping and suspenseful tale. --Tjames
Madison
From Booklist, October 1, 1998 - Poisoning fiance Stuart
Taylor only began Velma Barfield's last round of troubles. "I only meant
to make him sick," she told son Ronnie Burke. Imagine his chagrin when he
turned his mom in and then found she was in the crosshairs of county attorney
(and minion of justice extraordinaire) Joe Freeman Britt's prosecutorial
sights.
Thus a woman with lots of problems was pitted against a
crusading, highly successful death penalty proponent. Barfield had a history of
polite drug dependency and mild-to-moderate financial indiscretion when her
propensity for poisoning came to light.
Her conviction for murdering Taylor (she also murdered
her mother in what amounts to a subplot here) comes about halfway through the
book, the rest of which concerns her and her family's travails in dealing with
her crimes and the imprisonment, appeal processes, and execution plans that
followed her conviction.
This may not be instructive reading, but it is certainly
taut and engrossing on the nature of justice and the death penalty as well as
on guilt and responsibility. [Mike Tribby Copyright© 1998, American Library
Association. All rights reserved ]
Book Description - In February 1978, Stuart Taylor was
rushed to the hospital. He died the following day, while his distraught fiance,
Velma Barfield, held vigil at his bedside. When an autopsy revealed the true
cause of his death--arsenic poisoning--Velma became the prime suspect.
Confronted by her trusting son, she shocked him and her
family by saying, "I only meant to make him sick." But more
horrifying revelations were to come. Velma had killed before--and among her
victims was her own mother!
Thus began her family' s long nightmare. Velma Barfield'
s name would become known around the world in the debate about women and
capital punishment.
But nobody would know the agonies her family suffered, especially
her son, who harbored secrets that only he knew--until now. Deeply moving,
unfolds with the page-turning suspense of a psychological thriller, while
raising questions that still tear at America's conscience.
Synopsis - "New York Times" bestselling author
Jerry Bledsoe's newest true-crime masterpiece tells the inside story of an
infamous case that raises questions about the death penalty. 8-pages of photos.
No Reprieve: Jerry Bledsoe's 'Death Sentence' traces the
trials and tribulations of Velma Barfield
By Laura Argiri
Spectator Online
Why read Jerry Bledsoe's Death Sentence (Dutton, $24.95),
which is substantial and no cordial of cheer and reassurance? Because it's
genuinely instructive; if you're like most of us, it'll tell you things you don't
already know. And because it's timely: In our current social climate, amidst
the freshest expressions of our violent, pragmatic American group-soul, it's
very timely.
In the glare of recent events - barbaric praise addressed
to the murderer of a doctor who did abortions, the heckling of mourners at
Matthew Shepard's funeral - the execution of Velma Barfield is easy to
remember.
November 2, 1984, is memorable firstly because of the
media-flogged anticipation that built like a migraine prodrome throughout this
state all that autumn. Secondly, because of the demonstrators on one side, with
signs scrawled, "Bye-bye, Velma!" and carrying on in their
out-of-hand Halloween party glee, and because of the demonstrators on the other
side, mourning this multiple murderer like the last martyr.
The execution night demonstrators were oddly assorted,
perhaps not as formulaically as one might think. There were Christian groups in
both ranks. Some people who might ordinarily find the death penalty
unobjectionable in itself were keenly sympathetic with Velma Barfield for any
number of reasons: because she was a woman, because she was an elderly woman,
because of the misery she had suffered.
Sharp polarization was what she consistently inspired
after her conviction: tearful empathy, angry revulsion. The outcome of her
clemency appeals became an issue in the Hunt-Helms campaign, with the Helms
contingent stongly in favor of her death, much of the Hunt following for
leniency and Hunt himself declining clemency in opposition to the Helms side's
expectations.
Some events just lend themselves to a polarization of
passion in which facts, even unequivocal ones, are less important than their
impact, and Right and Left may be equally hysterical and repulsive in their
reactions. And after the fact, after the trials and appeals and execution, many
were haunted by a queasy, scab-picking How could she? And Why, why did she,
really?
In Death Sentence, Jerry Bledsoe illumines many issues
that had emerged only partially at the time of the execution. One is the
ferocity of Barfield's multi-drug addiction. "In the nine years between
Thomas' death and her arrest," writes Bledsoe, "she would get
prescriptions from more than two dozen doctors, not only for Valium but for
nearly two dozen other drugs, most of them also addictive, including
barbiturates, narcotics, sleeping pills, stimulants and antidepressants, all of
them prescribed by doctors trying to be helpful, and all of them dangerous and
unpredictable when combined with Valium."
It was her misfortune that she could stay vertical after
a dose that would render most of us comatose. It was also an expensive habit,
with only a fragile economy to support it. Velma, born poor, had achieved a
comfortable life in her marriage to Thomas Burke. The life and the marriage
destabilized abruptly when Thomas discovered alcohol.
Velma became upset when Thomas started attending Jaycee
meetings and having a beer or two with the guys afterward. Her anxiety was not
misplaced, for Thomas took very little time to become a full-time drunk. He
died after a fire which she later admitted setting.
With her addictions gaining ground, her employment as a
live-in caregiver was probably the worst she could have had. Unwell, needy, she
was saddled with the needs of aged and ill people.
This was hard and depressing work, worse for a
depressive. Unstable, she now endured an extra dimension of instability, a
nervous existence at the mercy of employers whose satisfaction was the only
thing between her and the street.
When Velma's overdoses and lapses did not elicit
dissatisfaction, her habit of getting hold of their checkbooks and writing
herself checks without their consent did. Not wanting to be fired, not feeling
free to quit these jobs, usually having nowhere of her own to go, Velma
resorted to arsenic.
Arsenic was the instrument of the end for her second
husband, Jennings Barfield, when he was about to divorce her, and for Stuart
Taylor, the last person she dated. She dosed her mother to keep her from
discovering a check she'd written on her. As methods go, hers was desperate,
unclever and clearly marked: Velma needing drugs, Velma needing money for them,
Velma doing what was expedient to get it. Then discovery and endangerment and
their fallout in the form of death after nasty death by
"gastroenteritis."
What kind of tragedy was hers? A tragedy of ignorance,
Bledsoe clarifies: the pharmaceutical industry's naivete about addiction and
idiosyncratic reactions. A tragedy of class, of a poor woman's indenture to
slightly-better-off members of the rural bourgeoisie.
A tragedy of thwarting: a nervous, fragile soul
blundering through a world of bad luck; a woman who just wanted a nice house
and nice husband, not an outrageous demand to make on life, and lost the things
she wanted. A tragedy of capacity: We do not come into the world with equal
resilience, and some of us are quicker than others to proceed to desperate
remedies.
And perhaps a tragedy of individual temperament.
Bledsoe's very keen and full account of Barfield's trials demonstrates that any
murder can be seen as a crime of passion by someone who, however mistakenly or
momentarily, believed that there was no alternative. Velma Barfield was someone
who came to that point rather early and rather often, and had a body count to show
for it. Arsenic poisoning, too, is a murder method of such cruelty and built-in
premeditation that it is hard to find the execution of an arsenic poisoner
unconscionable.
Yet Bledsoe's description of the pink pajamas this woman
wore to her death is affecting. I remember how the mental image of those
pajamas, described in the news after the execution in a violation of the last
privacies, troubled me in dreams long after the demonstrators retired and the
nation's eye turned elsewhere: an effective emblem of the woman's common
humanity, her reasonable desire for a comfortable life.
Bledsoe's treatment of Velma Barfield's history and
family are focused and intensive. Since the Barfield poisonings hit the news
and well through the trials, I had wondered what went on in the bosom of that
family. Bledsoe makes that clear: much worthy striving, much that was not
ideal.
Read this book, and you will meet the whole clan and
respect some of them. Though depicted with great particularity, they are all
EverySoutherner, whom many of us also are or know very well: hard-bitten,
hard-working, a full range of courtesies and brutalities ready for use as
needed. Bledsoe also makes it clear that Barfield's fall did not go unregarded.
Her son, Ronnie Burke, had been conscious of her problems from early
adolescence. He and his sister Pam watched their mother with anguished concern,
with continuous attempts to intervene.
The fact that the interventions did not succeed does not
diminish their efforts. The teenaged Pam advising Jennings Barfield not to
marry Velma, the teenaged Ronnie visiting Velma's doctors to urge them to stop
prescribing - both are important parts of this picture. This book may do what
the true crime genre rarely attempts if it provides them with deserved validation
and some measure of healing.
What in this book is least absorbing? Probably the energy
spent on Velma's spiritual awakening in prison - almost predictable on the part
of convicted murderers. One who vocally maintained his or her atheism... now,
would be interesting. What would have been a worthwhile addition?
A little diversion into arsenic poisoning as a topic unto
itself - its striking popularity as a murder method in North Carolina, its
incidence as a female crime and its frequency as a crime against kin or lovers.
And much could have been made of the remarkable
similarities between Barfield and her fellow Tarheel and arsenic poisoner
Blanche Taylor Moore. Moore, a sharper and tougher customer in many respects,
had no drug involvement but did to death a father, a mother-in-law, a lover and
two husbands: all people connected with intimacy and dependency and,
apparently, resentment of no minor caliber. Someday Bledsoe might find that
particular thorny outback of Love & Death worth exploring as well.
North Carolina Department of Correction News
November 1998
Death Sentence, the new book from best-selling true crime
novelist and former Greensboro News and Record reporter Jerry Bledsoe, recounts
the life of Velma Barfield who was executed in North Carolina in 1984.
Death Sentence begins by introducing District Attorney
Joe Freeman Britt, already famous for his death penalty prosecutions, and
Ronnie Burke, Barfield’s son who receives two phone calls.
In the first, Burke learns his mother has been arrested
in the death of her fiancé, Stuart Taylor. Hours later he receives the news
that she has confessed to the murders of Taylor, her own mother and two elderly
people she nursed.
After this introduction, Bledsoe retraces Barfield's
life, turning to her childhood in Robeson County where she suffered at the
hands of an abusive father and resented her mother who did not stop the
beatings. She escaped the brutality by marrying Thomas Burke. Their marriage
produced two children and much happiness until Barfield had a hysterectomy and
developed back pain – events that resulted in behavior changes and drug
addiction.
The marriage soured as her husband began to drink and
Barfield began to complain. Complaining turned into bitter arguments. Then in
April 1965, Barfield and the children left the house where Thomas had passed
out drunk and later returned to find Thomas dead and their home burned.
From this initial suspicious death, Bledsoe traces the
series of deaths that followed Barfield, the pain suffered by the families of
the victims and the suffering of her own children.
The story then turns from Barfield to District Attorney
Britt. The trial unfolds with Britt piecing together the case against Barfield
for the murder of Taylor and presenting evidence that she killed her mother,
her second husband Jennings Barfield, John Henry Lee and Dollie Edwards. The
trial concludes with a dramatic cross-examination by Britt of Barfield that
helps seal her fate.
While the first half of the book paints a picture of
Barfield the killer, the second half tells a story of Barfield the victim.
Barfield enters the North Carolina Correctional Institution for Women in
chapter 17 and spends the next 16 months becoming drug free and undergoing an
alleged religious conversion.
As the book traces the defense attorneys’ efforts to halt
the execution, it describes the suffering of Ronnie Burke. It also recounts the
suffering of the victims’ families as they read news accounts arguing against
Barfield’s execution.
In the closing chapters, Bledsoe helps people see the
complexity of concerns correction staff confront in carrying out an execution.
The book mentions a number of correction employees including Nathan Rice (now
retired), Jenny Lancaster, Skip Pike, Carol Oliver and Patty McQuillan.
The book presents two very different views of Barfield,
with the first half of the book portraying the prosecution of the case and the
second half describing the appeals by her attorneys. It also documents the
complexities of the execution process and the impact it can have on those who
are a part of it.
Celebrating Our Judgment
By Fylvia Fowler Kline
Seventh Day Adventist Church
In 1978 Velma Barfield was arrested for murdering four
people, including her mother and fiance. She was on death row, confined in a cell
by herself. One night a prison guard tuned into a 24-hour Christian radio
station.
Down the gray hall, desperate and alone in her cell,
Velma listened to the gospel message and accepted Jesus as her Saviour. The
outside world began to hear about Velma Barfield and how she had changed.
During the six years she was on death row she ministered
to many of her cellmates. Many were touched by the sadness of her story and the
sincerity of her love for Christ as well as the beauty of her Christian witness
in that prison. Just before her execution, Velma wrote “I know the Lord will
give me dying grace, just as He gave me saving grace, and has given me living
grace.”
Romans 6:23 says, “For the wages of sin is death, but the
gift of God is eternal life.” On earth Velma Barfield paid the price for her
crimes. The hideous nature of sin is that while we can be forgiven them and
freed from them, we, like Velma Barfield, must still face the consequences of
our sins. At least until Christ returns, sin is here to stay.
Sin cannot be eradicated. And for being born into this
world, each of us has a price to pay. This does not mean that we receive a
death sentence the moment we are born. Although we cannot avoid the
consequences of our sins, in Jesus we can overcome them. At the judgment hall,
Jesus’ blood washes away our sins and clothes us in His righteousness. [Fylvia
Fowler Kline is assistant director of the Stewardship Department for the
General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists]
Unsolved Mysteries
Female Serial Killers - True Crimes
Margie Velma Barfield (1969-1978) a 53-year old
grandmother, killed 7 husbands, fiances, and her own mother in Lumberton, North
Carolina. She burned some victims to death while they slept (made to look like
smoking in bed), arranged prescription drug overdoses for others, and resorted
to arsenic made to look like gastroenteritis for others. She was executed by
lethal injection in 1984, the first woman to be executed in the U.S. since
1976.
Death Penalty News
For clues about how the coming weeks might play in Texas,
rewind to North Carolina, 1984. It was there that "Death Row Granny"
Margie Velma Barfield, a born-again Christian who was posthumously praised by
Billy Graham for her impact on other prisoners, became the 1st woman to be put
to death in the modern era of the capital punishment. The portly, bespectacled
52-year-old private nurse and former Sunday school teacher was convicted of
lacing her boyfriend's food with rat poison. She later admitted to poisoning 3
others, including her mother.
Her case also became a last-minute political issue in a
tough U.S. Senate election in which liberal Democrat Gov. Jim Hunt challenged
Republican incumbent Sen. Jesse Helms. Political analysts said Hunt was doomed
to be hurt politically regardless of what he did. Had he commuted Barfield's
sentence, he risked alienating his conservative pro-death penalty constituency.
Some analysts said at the time that his refusal to show
compassion toward the woman may have persuaded liberal, anti-death penalty
voters to stay away from the polls. Joe Freeman Britt, the former prosecutor
who sent Barfield to death row, remembers the pressure that mounted in North
Carolina. "There were all these Velma Barfield support groups that grew up
all around the nation, all over North Carolina, European countries -- England,
France, Finland," Britt recalled. "Everybody involved in the case got
tons of letters every day about it from all over the world. That then generated
a certain political pressure in the case."
But unlike Tucker's jailhouse conversion, Britt said,
Barfield had always professed to being a God-fearing, church-going woman. He
said Barfield bolstered her image as a devout Christian by asking her employers
-- the families who hired her to care for ailing, elderly relatives whom she
later poisoned -- for Wednesday nights and Sundays off so she could go to
church.
Once imprisoned she, too, began leading Bible studies and
counseling troubled female felons. She also uttered a deathbed apology.
The image the media portrayed most often was that of a
grandmother kneeling in prayer in prison, Britt added, and some of the victims'
relatives had a difficult time believing she was capable of the crimes. Britt,
however, said he was unfazed by arguments that Barfield should not be executed
because of her Christianity -- a claim of which he was skeptical. "I
probably brought more people to the Lord than Billy Graham," he said of
his work as a prosecutor. "I mean when they go to prison, they all find
the Lord...I hope it's true. I hope they do that. And if (Tucker has) had this
experience, that's wonderful. It prepares her better for the judgment under the
law."
Although death penalty opponents had predicted a public
outrage if North Carolina proceeded with the execution of Barfield, Britt said
that never materialized. "I think the biggest flap came from other parts
of the country and particularly overseas...," he said.
Margie Velma Barfield
Born 23/10/1932, en Cumberland County, North Carolina,
Margie Bullard would look back on her childhood as a cruel period of
"permissible slavery," made worse by the attentions of a father who
began molesting her at age thirteen.
The stories are refuted categorically by seven siblings,
who deny all charges of abuse in any form, by either parent, and it must be
granted that Margie's early development seemed normal for the given time and
place. Dropping out of high school in her junior year, she eloped with Thomas
Burke at seventeen, settling in Paxton, where she bore two children without
incident.
The trouble started after fifteen years of marriage, when
Burke's luck turned sour almost overnight. Discharged from his job and
subsequently injured in a car crash, he began drinking heavily to drown his
sorrows, the ever-present liquor an affront to Margie's fundamentalist
religion.
Marriage became a sort of guerrilla warfare, with Margie
hiding her husband's whiskey, sometimes pouring it down the sink, finally
committing him to Dorothea Dix Hospital, in Raleigh, as an alcoholic. Working
at a local mill to support the family, she relied on prescription tranquilizers
for peace of mind.
Thomas came home from the hospital sober and sullen,
bitter at his wife's "betrayal." In 1969, when he burned to death in
bed, authorities dismissed the death as accidental, caused by careless smoking,
but later, with the advantage of hindsight, there would be dark suspicions of
foul play.
In 1971, Margie married Jennings Barfield. He lasted six
months, his sudden death ascribed to "natural causes," but exhumation
and autopsy in 1978 would reveal lethal doses of arsenic in his system.
By the time she murdered Barfield, Margie was already
dependent on prescription drugs, carelessly mixing her pills, with the result
that she was four times hospitalized for overdose symptoms. In contrast to her
addiction, she maintained an active interest in religion, teaching Sunday
school at the local Pentecostal church on a regular basis.
Short on cash, Margie was writing rubber checks to cover
her "medical" expenses, and her several trips to court produced
judicial wrist-slaps. In 1974, she forged her aged mother's name to a $1,000
loan application, panicking when she realized the bank might try to contact the
real Lillie Bullard for verification. Margie eliminated the problem by feeding
her mother a lethal dose of insecticide, and again the death was attributed to
natural causes.
Two years later, Margie Barfield was employed by local
matron Dollie Edwards as a live-in maid. A fringe benefit of the job was
Dollie's nephew, Stuart Taylor, who began dating Margie on the side, but their
romance did not stop Barfield from poisoning her employer in February 1977. Her
motive remains unclear -- there were no thefts involved -- and physicians
ascribed the sudden death to "acute gastroenteritis."
Margie next moved in with 80-year-old John Lee and his
wife Record, age 76. After forging a $50 check on Lee's account, she sought to
"make him sick" and thereby gain some time to cover the shortage, but
her plans obviously went awry.
First poisoned in April 1977, John Lee lost 65 pounds
before his eventual death, on June 4. After the funeral, Margie began feeding
poison to Lee's widow, but she gave up her job in October 1977, leaving a frail
survivor behind.
Moving on to a Lumberton rest home, Barfield was twice
caught forging checks on Stuart Taylor's account. He forgave her each time, but
they argued fiercely after her third offense, on January 31, 1978.
That night, Margie spiked his beer with poison, keeping
up the dosage until Taylor died on February 4. Relatives rejected the diagnosis
of "acute gastroenteritis" and demanded a full autopsy, resulting in
the discovery of arsenic.
Under interrogation, Margie confessed the murders of
Taylor, her mother and second husband, Dollie Edwards and John Lee. Aside from
the motiveless Edwards slaying, they were all "accidents," bungled
attempts to cover up for forgery and theft.
A jury deliberated for less than an hour before
convicting Barfield of first-degree murder, and she was executed by lethal
injection on November 2, 1984.
Margie Velma Barfield (1969-1978) a 53-year old
grandmother, killed 7 husbands, fiances, and her own mother in Lumberton, North
Carolina. She burned some victims to death while they slept (made to look like
smoking in bed), arranged prescription drug overdoses for others, and resorted
to arsenic made to look like gastroenteritis for others. She was executed by
lethal injection in 1984, the first woman to be executed in the U.S. since
1976.
Death Sentence: The True Story of Velma Barfield's Life,
Crimes, and Execution
By Jerry Bledsoe
SINOPSIS
On February 3, 1978, North Carolina farmer Stuart Taylor
was rushed to the hospital. His forty-six-year-old fiancee, Velma Barfield, a
devout Sunday school teacher, held vigil at his bedside. But prayers couldn't
save him. An autopsy revealed that arsenic had killed him.
To those who knew her, Velma was a devoted mother and
grandmother, a sweet and selfless caregiver. But her life was a fragile web of
lies that unraveled with alarming speed, exposing a deeply disturbed woman
addicted to prescription drugs, driven to bouts of suicidal despair. And
murder.
Turned over to the police by her son, Velma stunned her
family by admitting to having murdered four people over the course of ten
years--including her own mother. But there were secrets she held back...secrets
not known until now.
At her trial, facing "the world's deadliest
prosecutor," Velma's angry defiance assured her the death sentence. But
after freeing herself from drugs on death rown, she found redemption and a new
reason to live. And her looming execution attracted the world's attention.
In this eye-opening account of a tragic American story,
Jerry Bledsoe takes us from the peaceful beauty of rural North Carolina to the
grim finality of the execution chamber, where last-minute appeals for clemency
from influential allies went unheeded. On a foggy November night, with the eyes
of the nation on her and the families of her victims awaiting justice, Velma
calmly faced her own death from poison. But only after a shocking final
confession to her son...
Barfield, Margie Velma
Born October 23, 1932, in Cumberland County, North
Carolina, Margie Bullard would look back on her childhood as a cruel period of
"permissible slavery," made worse by the attentions of a father who
began molesting her at age thirteen.
The stories are refuted categorically by seven siblings,
who deny all charges of abuse in any form, by either parent, and it must be
granted that Margie's early development seemed normal for the given time and
place. Dropping out of high school in her junior year, she eloped with Thomas
Burke at seventeen, settling in Paxton, where she bore two children without
incident.
The trouble started after fifteen years of marriage, when
Burke's luck turned sour almost overnight. Discharged from his job and
subsequently injured in a car crash, he began drinking heavily to drown his
sorrows, the ever-present liquor an affront to Margie's fundamentalist
religion. Marriage became a sort of guerrilla warfare, with Margie hiding her
husband's whiskey, sometimes pouring it down the sink, finally committing him
to Dorothea Dix Hospital, in Raleigh, as an alcoholic. Working at a local mill
to support the family, she relied on prescription tranquilizers for peace of mind.
Thomas came home from the hospital sober and sullen, bitter at his wife's
"betrayal."
In 1969, when he burned to death in bed, authorities
dismissed the death as accidental, caused by careless smoking, but later, with
the advantage of hindsight, there would be dark suspicions of foul play.
In 1971, Margie married Jennings Barfield. He lasted six
months, his sudden death ascribed to "natural causes," but exhumation
and autopsy in 1978 would reveal lethal doses of arsenic in his system.
By the time she murdered Barfield, Margie was already
dependent on prescription drugs, carelessly mixing her pills, with the result
that she was four times hospitalized for overdose symptoms. In contrast to her
addiction, she maintained an active interest in religion, teaching Sunday
school at the local Pentecostal church on a regular basis. Short on cash,
Margie was writing rubber checks to cover her "medical" expenses, and
her several trips to court produced judicial wrist-slaps.
In 1974, she forged her aged mother's name to a $1,000
loan application, panicking when she realized the bank might try to contact the
real Lillie Bullard for verification. Margie eliminated the problem by feeding
her mother a lethal dose of insecticide, and again the death was attributed to natural
causes.
Two years later, Margie Barfield was employed by local
matron Dollie Edwards as a live-in maid. A fringe benefit of the job was
Dollie's nephew, Stuart Taylor, who began dating Margie on the side, but their
romance did not stop Barfield from poisoning her employer in February 1977. Her
motive remains unclear -- there were no thefts involved -- and physicians
ascribed the sudden death to "acute gastroenteritis." Margie next
moved in with 80-year-old John Lee and his wife Record, age 76. After forging a
$50 check on Lee's account, she sought to "make him sick" and thereby
gain some time to cover the shortage, but her plans obviously went awry.
First poisoned in April 1977, John Lee lost 65 pounds
before his eventual death, on June 4. After the funeral, Margie began feeding
poison to Lee's widow, but she gave up her job in October 1977, leaving a frail
survivor behind. Moving on to a Lumberton rest home, Barfield was twice caught
forging checks on Stuart Taylor's account. He forgave her each time, but they
argued fiercely after her third offense, on January 31, 1978. That night,
Margie spiked his beer with poison, keeping up the dosage until Taylor died on
February 4.
Relatives rejected the diagnosis of "acute
gastroenteritis" and demanded a full autopsy, resulting in the discovery
of arsenic. Under interrogation, Margie confessed the murders of Taylor, her
mother and second husband, Dollie Edwards and John Lee. Aside from the
motiveless Edwards slaying, they were all "accidents," bungled
attempts to cover up for forgery and theft.
A jury deliberated for less than an hour before
convicting Barfield of first-degree murder, and she was executed by lethal
injection on November 2, 1984.
Michael Newton - An Encyclopedia of Modern Serial Killers
- Hunting Humans
Velma Barfield
By Denise Noe
Stuart Taylor's Agony
Big, hulking, Stuart Taylor was happy as he drove his
girlfriend, plump and bosomy 46-year-old Velma Barfield, to a revival meeting
of the famous preacher Rex Humbard. Although Stuart was not extremely
religious, he knew that his girlfriend was a devoutly pious Christian and she
would love hearing the respected evangelist in person. Stuart was aware that
there were contradictory aspects of Velma’s personality. She was living out of
wedlock with him, a move that had shocked her children. She also had a criminal
record for forgery, a fact that Taylor had discovered by accident and led him
to decide he did not want to legally marry her. However, as Christians say,
it’s a Fallen World and many people do not live up to their own ideals.
Both Stuart and Velma were crisply attired in their
Sunday best as they settled into chairs at the Cumberland County Civic Center
in Fayetteville, North Carolina.
The service had just begun when a wave of nausea rolled
over Stuart. “I’m feeling sick,” he whispered to Velma. “Maybe it’s something I
ate.”
As Humbard preached, Stuart began feeling worse. Fierce
pains gripped his stomach. “I’ve got to go to the truck and lie down,” he told
his sweetheart in a weak voice.
The 56-year-old farmer rushed out of the packed room and
into the coolness of the evening air. He opened up his truck and lay down on a
seat. The feelings inside him grew worse. He could hardly think as words were
pushed out of his mind by sheer awful physical pain.
Still miserable with nausea when the meeting was finished
and Velma got into the car with him, Stuart lay back and writhed in pain as she
drove them home.
“Stop,” he said at one point, his skin clammy with sweat.
She pulled over to the side of the road. A pale and
sweaty Stuart stumbled out of the vehicle and vomited on the dirt.
At home, he was in too much pain to sleep. In the wee
hours of the morning, Velma phoned his pregnant daughter, Alice Storms, to tell
her of her father’s disturbing condition. It was Alice’s husband, Bill, who
answered the phone. Velma apologized for waking him up but said she thought it
important that Stuart’s daughter know that he was frighteningly sick. Later,
Alice phoned to ask Velma about Taylor’s illness. They both concurred that it
was probably just the flu.
Still later, Velma visited one of her boyfriend’s best
friends, a man named Sonny Johnson. “Stuart’s sick and he wants to see you,” an
obviously distressed Velma told him.
Johnson rushed over to see his friends. He found an
ashen-faced, weakened Stuart Taylor, lying in bed with a washbasin beside it to
throw up in. “Could you take care of the pigs for me until I’m over the flu?”
Stuart requested.
His friend assured him that he would.
Stuart’s condition got worse. His chest, stomach and arms
were all racked by pain and he vomited incessantly. He felt like he was on fire
from inside.
The next day, Velma drove her terribly sick lover to the
hospital. While the doctors examined and tried to treat the man, she discussed
what she knew of his medical history. She was not well-informed about it but
she knew he was a heavy drinker.
After answering the physician’s questions, Velma called
Alice. She in turn phoned her brother Billy who went to the hospital.
Together with Velma, he heard a doctor say his father’s
dreadful condition was “gastritis.” The doctor prescribed medicine and told
Velma she could take Stuart home that night, which she did.
Sonny Johnson again visited his friend at the latter’s
large, white, steeple-topped farmhouse that afternoon. Stuart had finally
improved. He still looked wan but was sitting up in bed, chatting and smoking.
He asked Johnson to talk to him from the doorway because he didn’t want to
transmit his flu.
The next day was a Friday. At around 8 p.m., Stuart had
taken a drastic turn for the worse. Velma phoned John McPherson, a neighbor and
friend. “Stuart needs an ambulance!” she told him in a voice that sounded full
of fear. McPherson called an ambulance, then drove to the house himself.
He found Stuart Taylor looking terrible. The room had a
nauseating odor because the sick man had suffered an attack of diarrhea in his
bed. The arms and legs of the sweaty and chalk-faced man thrashed around and he
made incoherent moaning noises. From time to time, he screamed. Velma had
surrounded the bed with chairs, their backs to the bed, to prevent him from
falling out of it.
The rescue squad worked quickly and efficiently to bundle
him into the ambulance. Its siren wailed as it raced to the hospital. His
concerned lover followed in Stuart’s truck.
Doctors rushed to his side but Taylor died an hour after
arriving at the hospital.
In the waiting room were Stuart’s children, Alice and
Billy, and the girlfriend who had nursed him through the illness, Velma
Barfield. The doctor said he was puzzled by the man’s sudden death and
suggested an autopsy.
Both Alice and Billy asked Velma what she thought. “If
you don’t do it,” she said, “you’ll always wonder.”
Stuart Taylor’s adult kids told the physician to perform
an autopsy.
"You've Gor to Stop Her!"
Velma Barfield and her adult son Ronnie Burke sat with
Stuart’s grieving family at his funeral. Velma placed a comforting arm around
Alice and said the words so commonly repeated under such circumstances by
believers in an afterlife: “He’s in a far better place.”
As Ronnie left the service, he looked at another person
there and observed, “You know, it’s the saddest thing but it seems like
everybody my mother ever gets close to dies.” How could the good Lord allow
this to happen to a faithful Christian like Velma Barfield?
Earlier that same Sunday, a phone call had awakened
Lumberton Police Detective Benson Phillips. The caller was weeping and
babbling. The detective could not easily make out her slurred, shrill words. He
was able to gather from some of the sounds: “Murder! . . . I know who did it! .
. . You’ve got to stop her! You’ve got to stop her!”
The sleepy police officer sighed. A crank call, he
thought. Just what he needed to start the day. He had heard of no murder in the
small town of Lumberton and he would have if one had been committed since he
investigated all homicides.
However, he suggested she call him at the station before
he hung up the phone.
When he got there, he found, as he expected to, no
homicide reports. The nutty morning caller faded from his thoughts as he got on
with his day’s work.
Then she phoned. According to Jerry Bledsoe’s Death
Sentence, “This time she was calmer, more coherent. She still didn’t want to
give details, but Phillips gradually coaxed them from her. She revealed that
she was calling from South Carolina, but she couldn’t give her name. She didn’t
want anybody to know that she had called. The man who had been murdered, she
said, was the boyfriend of Velma Barfield, who had killed him just as she had
killed her own mother. The caller admitted that she could offer no proof, but
she was sure, too, that Velma’s boyfriend and mother weren’t the only ones. Too
many other people close to Velma had died, she said, including two elderly
people Velma had worked for, but she didn’t know their names. When Phillips
pressed for evidence, she could offer none.
How did she know about all of this? Phillips asked.
‘Because,’ she said, ‘Velma is my sister.’”
****
Phillips was utterly baffled by this strange caller. He
did not trust her but then again, he could not quite dismiss her out of hand.
He had to do some checking to make sure. He called the Lumberton hospital and
inquired if anyone had died over the weekend.
Yes, he was told, Stuart Taylor. It seemed to be a death
by natural causes. Was an autopsy being performed? Phillips asked. Regional
medical examiner Dr. Bob Andrews had performed an autopsy but did not yet have
all the results back.
Phillips was intrigued and disturbed but also in an
awkward position. As Bledsoe, wrote, “He had discovered that Taylor had been
brought to the hospital from the countryside near St. Paul’s. That would put
any investigation under the jurisdiction of the sheriff. He had no
responsibility. Still, he made a note to call his old friend Wilbur Lovett at
the sheriff’s department on Monday to tell him about it.”
In the meantime, Dr. Andrews, who knew nothing of the
detective’s suspicions or those nagging doubts that Phillips related to Sheriff
Lovett, was puzzling over the results of his autopsy. Stuart Taylor had
seemingly died of gastroenteritis. It was odd for a man as healthy as Taylor to
be killed by that alone and Dr. Andrews determined to look further. Finding an
inexplicable abnormality in some liver tissue, he put some of Taylor’s tissue
samples into plastic bags. Then he mailed it to North Carolina’s chief medical
examiner and asked for more tests.
Dr. Andrews was still waiting for the results of those
tests when he spoke with a distraught Alice Storms. Her father had been so hale
and hardy. What was it that had killed him? She had a right to know!
So Dr. Andrews phoned North Carolina’s chief medical
examiner, Page Hudson. Hudson did not know about the tissues Andrews had sent
for examination. However, he asked Andrews for details about the death. Andrews
told him about the girlfriend, Velma Barfield, who had brought Stuart Taylor to
the hospital and described Taylor’s symptoms.
Hudson instantly grasped the situation. “Where’d she get
the arsenic, Bob?” he asked.
Serial Poisoner?
Soon authorities took a second look at the death
certificates of the several people close to Velma Barfield who had died. Even
when an autopsy had been performed, no special test had been done for poison.
Rather, with stunning regularity, those she knew expired of “gastroenteritis.”
The investigators were pretty certain they were dealing not only with a murderer
but a serial murderer.
The police always do best if they can get a confession.
What would be the best way to obtain one from Velma? They decided to surprise
her. They would pick her up for questioning on one of the multitude of bad
checks she had written, then confront her with Stuart Taylor’s death.
Since the checks had been written in Lumberton, Benson
Phillips would question her. Sheriff Lovett and homicide investigator Al
Parnell were present as well. They went over the checks. This was well-ploughed
territory for Barfield and she appeared nonplussed.
Then Phillips began discussing her poor boyfriend, Stuart
Taylor, who had so recently and tragically died. “Do you know he was killed by
arsenic?” the detective asked.
The plump grandmother appeared stunned by this news.
Phillips pressed on, asking for details about their
relationship. He was especially interested in knowing if Barfield had reason to
be angry with Taylor.
“Y’all think I poisoned Stuart, don’t you?” she gasped in
outrage. The two of them were in love, she maintained, and planning to wed. She
had nothing to gain by killing him. It was dreadful for them to suggest such a
thing. Why, she was the one who had nursed the poor man through his illness!
She was the one who had rushed him to the hospital! Now they were trying to
throw dirt on all her good work. They ought to be ashamed of themselves.
“Would you take a lie detector test?” Lovett asked.
Certainly. She had nothing at all to hide.
They told her a polygraph examination would be arranged
and that she was free to go. Just as she got up to exit, Parnell sprung on her,
“Velma, you know, this can go all the way back to your mother.”
She glared at the investigator, made no remark, and left
in a huff.
That Saturday morning, Ronnie Burke was visiting his
in-laws when his mother, Velma Barfield, phoned their house and asked to speak
to her son.
Ronnie Burke was a 26-year-old man with multiple
responsibilities. He had a wife and a 3-year-old son. He worked full-time and
went to college full-time at Pembroke State University where he sought a
business administration degree. He would receive it in just a couple of months.
Burke was often pressed for time and sleep but he wanted to become the first
member of his family to earn a four-year college degree, partly because he knew
how much that would please his mother. For quite awhile, Burke had been
concerned for his mother. She had suffered far more than her share of grief
through the deaths of so many people she cared about. He also knew that she was
taking more drugs than the doctors had prescribed for her.
His mother sounded overwrought. The police had taken her
to the station, she told him.
Oh no, he thought. She was back to writing bad checks to
cover drug bills.
Then a shock went through him.
“They wanted to talk about Stuart,” Mom informed him.
“They said he was poisoned. They seem to think I had something to do with it.”
Some cop had really goofed this time, Burke thought.
Burke knew that Taylor had died five weeks previously. His Mom had been
devastated. He did not know who might have poisoned the man but he knew it
could not possibly be his mother.
He told his Mom that he would be going home soon and she
should meet him there. This was a frightful mistake but Burke was certain it
could be straightened out. The cops would learn they were barking up the wrong
tree. He was anxious to comfort his mother and let her know things would work
out as they should in the end.
Burke, his wife, and toddler dwelled in a modest duplex
on the outskirts of Lumberton, North Carolina. When Velma arrived there, he
comforted her just like he had intended to. He did not believe she would need a
lawyer. Attorneys are terribly expensive, after all, and he and his mother were
people of very limited means. The police would realize soon that she could not
have had anything to do with Stuart’s death and just drop it. There was no need
to worry, he assured her.
That Monday, Burke was at work when a woman phoned. She
would not say who she was but told him, “I’m a friend of your mother’s.”
What did she want to tell him?
“I’ve heard she’s going to be arrested today,” she said.
“I thought you ought to know.”
“Are you sure?”
“Yes, they’re going to charge her with Stuart’s death. .
. . I know someone who works in the sheriff’s department.”
It did not seem possible that the police could go so
wrong, Burke thought. Yet, Mom had told him that they suspected her. Could the
cops be about to arrest an innocent woman for murder? That sort of thing happens
in the movies but not in real life.
Burke told his supervisor he had to leave to attend to a
family emergency. He drove to the Lumberton Police Department and talked to
Wilbur Lovett. They were not planning to arrest her that day, the sheriff told
him, but they did consider her a suspect. He could not disclose why and Burke
left Lovett’s office even more outraged and upset than he had been when he
walked in.
From there he drove to the home in which his mother was
living. Velma Barfield resided with Mamie Warwick, a senior citizen who allowed
Velma to live rent-free in exchange for her doing some household chores. Burke
found his Mom taking a nap. She was in bed as he spoke to her, telling her that
the cops still suspected her in Stuart Taylor’s death. Velma said she could not
possibly do anything like that. Then she started sobbing. Finally, she stopped
crying and told her son something he had never expected to hear. Her words were
soft, almost a whisper, yet unmistakably clear.
“I only meant to make him sick,” she said.
With that, Burke felt like the floor had been cut out
from under him.
So it had been an accident. But his mother had caused it.
She would have to go to the police and explain.
Velma wept quietly as she sat in the passenger seat of her
son’s car, being driven to the sheriff’s department. Burke could not be present
while she was questioned. She said she did not want a lawyer.
Dejected but certain he had done the right thing, Burke
phoned his sister to break the sad news to her. They agreed to meet at her
home. In times of crisis, families need to be together and Velma’s sisters,
Arlene and Faye, would eventually drive in to join their niece and nephew.
The phone rang and Burke spoke to investigator Al
Parnell.
“It’s worse than we thought,” Parnell said.
Burke was dumbstruck, wondering how could it possibly be
any worse?
“There are other people. . . . Other people she’s
killed,” Parnell told a stunned Ronnie Burke. Parnell went on to relate that
Velma Barfield had confessed to killing two people to whom she had been a paid,
live-in caregiver and her own mother, Burke’s grandmother, Lillie Bullard.
When Burke repeated what he had been told to his sister
and aunts, a pandemonium of tears and screaming broke out in the little house.
Burke recalled the loving mother who had fed and clothed
him, bandaged his cuts and wiped his runny nose, been a conscientious grade
mother for him and his sister, taken him to church and taught him right from
wrong, disciplined him and encouraged him always to do his very best. That
image was impossible to reconcile with the poisoner of four people.
Just what kind of person was Velma Barfield?
Daddy's Little Girl
On October 29, 1932, Margie Velma Bullard was born. Her
parents, siblings, and friends would always call her Velma. She was the second
child and first daughter of farmer Murphy Bullard and his homemaker wife,
Lillie. They would have nine children all together.
When Velma was born, the Bullards lived in an unpainted
wooden house in rural South Carolina. The home had neither electricity nor
running water. Unlike many farm families, they did not even have an outhouse.
Rather, “the necessary” was taken care of with chamber pots and trips to the
woods. Murphy’s parents lived in the home and so did his sister, Susan Ella,
who was disabled because an arm and leg had been shriveled by polio.
As the Great Depression worsened, Murphy Bullard found it
impossible to eke out a living from the sale of the cotton and tobacco he grew.
He sought and found work as a logger in a sawmill owned by Clarence Bunch.
Through Bunch, Murphy was able to move his family into a tiny house closer to
town. Here his third child would be born.
Then Murphy got a job in a Fayetteville textile mill and
moved his family back into his parents’ home. His father died shortly
thereafter and his mother followed her husband to the graveyard in less than a
year’s time.
The Bullard family was organized along traditional,
patriarchal lines. Murphy Bullard was the undisputed king of whatever shabby
castle his family occupied and Lillie was the submissive wife. He was an easily
angered and hard-drinking man when he did not get his way and a strict,
unbending disciplinarian with his many children. He did not spare the rod or,
in this case, the strap and the Bullard youngsters often had smarting
backsides.
One thing that especially galled him was a kid with a
“smart mouth” and both his oldest child, his son Olive, and the daughter who
had been born next, Velma, were known in the family for their tendency to give
Dad back-talk. However, Olive believed that Velma did not get punished nearly
as often or as severely as he did which led to a lot of conflict between the
two youngsters. He was convinced that their father favored Velma. She was just
as convinced that their mother favored Olive.
Velma disliked her mother’s submissive attitude toward
their father. Decades later, she wrote in her memoirs, Woman on Death Row, “I
seemed to accept Daddy’s high-tempered ways because I thought that’s the way
men are. Mamas should love their children and stand up for them, and Mama never
stood up for me, or for any of us.” Every time Velma got a beating from her
dad, she was at least as upset with the passive Mom who saw and did nothing as
she was with the aggressive dad who actually inflicted it.
Lillie Bullard believed she had to step carefully in her
own household to deal with her husband’s temper. She herself was frequently in
danger of being on the receiving end of Murphy’s fists because he was a
hysterically jealous man. He was also himself flagrantly unfaithful which
inevitably added to family tensions.
A 7-year-old Velma started school in the fall of 1939. At
first, she loved it. A smart girl, she got good grades and teachers’
compliments. School also offered a respite from her crowded home life, her
father’s strap, and her often-ill mother’s gripes and demands.
However, the child soon began having difficulty with her
schoolmates. Velma did not wear the new, store-bought, pretty dresses that so
many other girls did. Her shoes were sturdy and worn. Other children sometimes
made fun of her garments and of the plain lunches of cornbread with a side of
meat that she brought. Velma began sneaking out of the sight of the other kids
to eat. Then she began pilfering coins from her father’s pants pockets to buy
candies from a little store that was across the street from the school.
The child stole $80 from an elderly neighbor. Murphy
Bullard laid the strap on long and hard, apparently curing her of the desire to
steal at least during her childhood since there are no other reports of such
youthful indiscretions.
As Velma grew, she was assigned more and more chores. She
had to help out on the farm and care for her younger brothers and sisters. She
resented the amount of work she had to do but did not openly rebel for fear of
angering her stern dad. “I really never felt like my Mama or Daddy ever wanted
me except for the work I did,” she would say later . “I always felt that they
just really wanted me to be a slave.”
Not everything was bad in the youngster’s life, however.
Her father could be loving with his kids and lead them in ventures that were
lots of fun. Murphy Bullard often organized baseball games with his children
and others. Velma was often the only girl in the game and enjoyed playing
shortstop. She also liked swimming when her dad led the kids on excursions to a
local pond.
Despite his harsh discipline, Velma was often happy to be
a daddy’s girl. A 10-year-old Velma was walking through the business district
of Fayetteville with her father. She admired a dress in a department store
window. It was covered with pink flowers and had a wide ruffle at the hem. She
told her dad how much she loved that dress and, to her very pleasant surprise,
he marched straight in and bought it for her!
Sadly, later in her life, Velma may have become a daddy’s
girl in the most negative possible way. She told a reporter from The Village
Voice that her father had entered her bedroom and raped her. Prior to that,
there had been confusing episodes when he felt her up and she was not sure if
it was sexual or not.
Several of Velma’s brothers and sisters furiously
disputed her claim that she was an incest victim. While her family had many of
the traits characteristic of incestuous families such as a severe power imbalance
between husband and wife and a father who drank heavily, it is not possible to
say with certainty if her accusation was true or false. Velma certainly could
lie and was a champion manipulator throughout much of her life. A claim of
sexual abuse can be an easy way to play upon people’s sympathies.
In 1945, Murphy Bullard decided he was tired of working
in the mill and wanted to go back to full-time farming. He bought more acres
and, with that purchase, a small but far more modern home for his family. After
only a year, he realized he could not support his large brood on what he could
make from his crops. He returned to supplementing farm income with work in a
mill.
Later, he got a job at a textile plant in the town of Red
Springs and moved his family there. The house they moved into lacked the modern
conveniences of the one they had lived in for the last couple of years.
Velma was now in high school. She no longer got the good
grades she had achieved in elementary school. However, she found one activity
that she enjoyed at Parkton Public School and that, surprisingly, was
basketball. Although it was not standard in that era, Parkton had a girls’ team
and Velma found the fast-moving sport a good way to work off energy. Then her
mother insisted that Velma quit the team. Lillie had recently given birth to
twins and needed her eldest daughter’s help with housework more than she ever
had. Velma was terribly disappointed and saddened by her Mom’s demand.
Meanwhile, Velma and a high school boy named Thomas Burke
had developed a mutual crush. A year older than she, Thomas was a thin-faced,
jug-eared, dark-haired and lanky youth with a tender streak and a good sense of
humor. The two found each other regularly at school to make friends and flirt.
No dating would be allowed until Velma was 16, her father
told her when she expressed a wish to begin seeing Thomas outside of school.
Then her 16th birthday rolled around but her father seemed to have changed his
mind. He still did not want his daughter going out. After much pleading, Velma
got Murphy to agree to her dating. He placed firm restrictions on her, saying
she usually had to double date and always had to be home by 10 p.m. on the dot.
Although she chafed under these restrictions, Velma went along with them. She
did not have much choice if she was to avoid her father’s wrath.
Battling Over Booze
When she was 17, Thomas proposed marriage and Velma
accepted. She had a tremendous row with her father, at the end of which Murphy
Bullard broke down in tears. Velma had never seen her father, so steadfastly
and traditionally masculine, cry before. But she still wanted to be with
Thomas.
Both Thomas and Velma quit school shortly after marrying.
Thomas Burke held different jobs, in a cotton mill, as a farm laborer, and then
driving a delivery truck. Velma worked for a while in a drugstore but Thomas
disliked having her work outside the home so she quit.
The newlywed Burkes were residing in a small Parkton home
where Velma’s family had once lived when the young wife got pregnant in 1951.
On December 15 of that year, she gave birth to Ronald Thomas. His sister,
Kim,was born on September 3, 1953.
Velma Burke adored taking care of her babies. She was an
indulgent and protective mother who frequently read to her youngsters and could
not stand to be separated from them even for brief periods. She wanted both
children to grow up to be ardent Christians and regularly took them to a
Baptist church.
When her children started school, Velma Burke quickly
became known as one of the most involved mothers. She was “grade mother” for
the classes of both her youngsters and always available for class field trips
and the like. She and her children joked that they had “automatic arms” because
whenever a teacher asked the class if someone’s mother would be willing to
assist with a project, their arms instantly shot into the air. Velma Burke
could always be counted on. She often drove children in the classes her kids
attended on field trips and the youngsters would fight to ride with her because
she was so much fun.
Around this time, Velma got another paying job.
Apparently Thomas did not object. The family needed some extra cash. She took
the midnight to 8 a.m. shift at a textile plant. Thomas began a job as delivery
driver for Pepsi-Cola. The family now had enough funds to move into a more
comfortable house in Parkton. The Burkes enjoyed several good years.
In 1963, Velma began having medical problems and had to
undergo a hysterectomy. They were not as distraught as some couples might have
been because both Velma and Thomas agreed that the two children were all they
wanted.
The surgery appeared to have a drastic, and negative,
affect on Velma. She was alternately nervous or depressed and often snappish.
She began worrying that the fact that she could no longer get pregnant made her
seem less womanly and, therefore, less attractive to her husband. She started
to have more physical problems and was especially troubled by lower back pain.
Thomas Burke decided to join the Jaycees. He went off to
their weekly meetings while Velma sat at home with the kids. She began to
resent his evening absences.
Even more, she resented his drinking. Velma was a firm
teetotaler who agreed with her church that alcoholic beverages were the devil’s
drinks. Thus, she was deeply upset when she found out that Thomas was regularly
going out with his male friends for a few beers.
In 1965, Thomas had an accident as he was driving his
three-year-old Ford Galaxy. As described in Death Sentence, “The car left the
highway, hit a culvert, sailed into the air and landed on its wheels in the
driveway of a house. Thomas’ head banged the steering wheel and he was knocked
unconscious.”
He had a concussion and would ever after suffer severe
headaches. He always maintained that he had not been drinking but had only been
tired and had fallen asleep at the wheel. His wife would not buy it. She was
certain he had been drunk and redoubled her nagging on the subject.
Thomas resented her noisy attempts to talk him into
abstaining from booze. He drank no more than most of the guys he hung around
with. Why was his wife trying to run his life?
Their battles over booze became an almost daily affair.
Usually, Velma started them, upset because Thomas had liquor on his breath. A
shouting, name-calling match would follow and the children were inevitably
frightened and disturbed by their argumentative parents. Ronnie was especially
concerned because he feared his dad would eventually settle the disputes the
way so many other men did-- with his fists.
To his credit, however, Thomas never employed brute
strength in his many and furious arguments with his wife.
Thomas was arrested for drunken driving in 1967. As a
result he lost his driver’s license and, with it, his job at Pepsi-Cola. He was
devastated. The shame and despair plunged him into a depression and he drank
more than ever to dull a pain that was caused by his drinking. The Burke kids
no longer invited friends over to their home because they did not want the
other kids to hear their parents fight or see their dad wiped out from booze.
A mill hired Thomas and he was able to ride to work in a
carpool (even if the word was not in common use at the time).
The household tension was taking a great toll on Velma.
She was ever more worried and frantic and had been drastically losing weight.
One day, Ronnie came home to find his mother lying on the kitchen floor in a
dead faint.
He was able to help her back to consciousness but
insisted on a trip to the hospital. Doctors there recommended she remain
hospitalized for a week. She was given vitamins and sedatives before being
released with a prescription for a mild tranquilizer, Librium.
When she got home, she eventually began taking more
Librium than was prescribed. She also went to another physician and got a prescription
for Valium. Velma Barfield had begun the avocation of “doctor shopping” that
she would pursue up until her arrest for murder. It was a pattern of going to
doctors and getting prescriptions without telling one doctor that she was
seeing another. Thus, she took medicines that were not supposed to be taken in
conjunction with each other.
Even as she constantly and loudly fretted about her
husband’s alcohol use, Thomas and her teenaged kids worried about her use of
prescription medicines. She was taking too much, sometimes leaving her as
groggy as a drunkard.
One day in April, the Burke house caught on fire. The
only person home was Thomas Burke. Both youngsters were at school. Velma said
she had been at the laundromat when she came home to see the house in flames.
Thomas Burke died of smoke inhalation.
Thomas Burke died of smoke inhalation.
At the hospital, Velma collapsed when she was told of her
husband’s death. Ronnie and her sister caught her before she could fall to the
floor.
Jennings Barfield
A few months after this loss, Velma Burke experienced
great joy and triumph through the achievement of her son. Ronnie was graduating
from high school as salutatorian. His mother sat proudly among the spectators
as he spoke at the commencement. He chose the subject nearest to his heart: his
mother. In his speech, he paid tribute to her as the reason for all of the good
qualities he possessed. Velma cried as she listened to his public praise. What
a joy to be so appreciated by one’s grateful son and to have everyone know it.
However, the Burke family continued to have bad luck.
There was another fire at their home. This time, no one was inside and no one
was hurt. But the house was gutted. While they waited for the insurance to pay
for the damage, the Burkes moved back in with Velma’s parents, Murphy and
Lillie Bullard.
Soon after Thomas’ death, Velma began dating a widower
named Jennings Barfield. Barfield was a man who had taken early retirement due
to numerous health problems. He suffered from diabetes, emphysema, and heart
disease. He had lost his wife close to the time Velma had lost her husband and
the two were probably initially brought together by a mutual desire to comfort
each other in grief. Then a romance grew and deepened and wedding bells were in
the air.
They were married on August 23, 1970. It was a church
wedding, something Velma felt she had missed out on in her youthful elopement
to Thomas Burke. Velma moved into the small home in Fayetteville that her groom
shared with his teenaged daughter, Nancy.
The newlyweds were soon having troubles, partly because
of Velma’s penchant for overdoing it with prescription medications. Jennings
found his wife in a semi-conscious state and took her to the hospital. The
doctor on duty said she had overdosed. They separated, then reconciled when she
promised to quit taking so many pills. She broke her word and went back to the
emergency room with another overdose. Both Velma and Jennings confided to
others that they believed the marriage had been a mistake. Divorce seemed in
the offing with it just a question of who would leave first.
It never actually came to that, however.
Jennings Barfield died on March 21, 1971, apparently of
the heart failure that had troubled him for years.
Widowed again, Velma did not appear to be coping well.
She was despondent and listless, often medicating herself into oblivion and
spending much of her time in bed. “After Jennings’s death,” she would recall,
“I felt emptier and more depressed than ever. I kept going to my doctors. I had
prescriptions from at least two, and usually three, doctors at a time. . . . No
matter how many pills any one doctor prescribed, they never lasted until time
for the next refill.”
She worked at Belk’s department store but her performance
there was being badly affected by her mood swings and evident drug dependency.
Her boss was a sympathetic man so, instead of firing her, he put her in the
stockroom where she could not alienate customers with a snippy or brusque
manner.
Adding to Velma’s despair was a separation from her son.
The Vietnam War was raging and Ronnie felt it was only a matter of time before
he was drafted so he decided to sign up. He had second thoughts after Jennings
Barfield’s death and his mother begged him to attempt to persuade the military
that he needed to be allowed to stay with his sick mom. He made a sincere
effort in that direction. Doctors wrote to the Army telling of Velma Barfield’s
precarious health and asking that Ronnie be permitted to honorably opt out of
his contract. It did not work and he was ordered to report to Fort Jackson in
South Carolina.
When it seemed like things could not get worse, they did.
Velma’s house once again caught fire! Velma went into hysterics. She was simply
inconsolable. Why did such things keep happening to her?
She and her daughter once again moved back in with Murphy
and Lillie Bullard. It was just in time-- for Velma was fired from Belk’s. She
had been coming in late and unable to perform her duties when she was there.
Unemployment led Velma’s chronic depression to deepen. It got even blacker when
she learned that Murphy Bullard had lung cancer. His death at 61 plunged her
into a horrible grief. Life hardly seemed worth living. Her father was dead and
her son could be sent to Vietnam and be killed.
It seemed that she would lose Ronnie even if he did not
die because he told her he was planning to marry. She did not give her son and
his prospective bride her blessing. Instead, she was crushed. She told her son,
“I’ve always been the most important woman in your life and now you’re going to
have her and you won’t even want me to come around at all!”
Ronnie tried to reassure her that his love for his future
wife did not take away from his love for his mother. His earnest reassurance
did nothing to ease her jealousy of the young woman who was to share his life.
But neither did mom’s jealousy dissuade Ronnie from going ahead with the plans
for his wedding.
In March 1972, Velma Barfield was arrested for forging a
prescription. She pleaded guilty in April and got off with a suspended sentence
and a fine. Then, finally, she got some genuinely welcome news: Ronnie was
discharged from the Army!
Grandma and Dottie
Despite the bright spot of Ronnie’s return, Velma was
still having a great deal of trouble. After her father’s death, she and her
mother fell into a pattern of frequent quarreling. Velma claimed that Lillie
was constantly ordering her about. The older woman expected to be waited on
hand and foot and the grown-up Velma was not going to be treated like a slave
by anyone. Lillie, for her part, was dismayed by Velma’s frequent use of pills
and her tendency to sometimes simply pass out from taking too many.
Lillie got dreadfully sick during the summer of 1974. Her
stomach was racked by painful cramps. She began throwing up uncontrollably and
suffering a violent diarrhea. It got so bad that Velma drove her mother to the
hospital. The doctors could not determine the cause of the sudden illness.
However, Lillie was better after a few days and went home.
On August 23, a man Velma had been dating was killed in a
traffic accident. (Velma was not present so this death, at least, was probably
just a melancholy coincidence.) He had made Velma Barfield the beneficiary of
his life insurance policy and she received a check for $5,000.
That Christmas appeared, as that holiday so often does,
to be a time of sharing, forgiveness and reconciliation. Both Lillie and Velma
enjoyed bustling about in the kitchen, making a big turkey dinner along with a
variety of rich desserts for their big extended family. Everybody at Grandma
Bullard’s house kidded around and laughed, then opened presents.
However, Lillie pulled one of her sons aside to talk to
him about something odd that troubled her. She had gotten a letter from a
finance company telling her that a loan was overdue on her car and it would be
repossessed if she failed to promptly pay it. Lillie had not taken out any loan
on the car and she owned it free and clear! Her son saw no problem. It was
probably just one of those paperwork snafus, nothing to fret about.
A couple of days later, Lillie got terribly sick. She was
nauseous, then vomiting. That was followed by an awful attack of diarrhea. Her
insides felt like they were burning up. She told Velma that she had hideous
pains in her belly and upper back. Her arms and legs flailed about her. She
threw up again and threw up blood.
Velma phoned her brother Olive who immediately drove
over. He was appalled to see their mother so sick and called an ambulance. The
rescue squad allowed Velma to ride in the ambulance with her mother.
Lillie Bullard died two hours after arriving at the
hospital.
Early in 1975, Velma was once again in hot water with the
law. She had written another string of bad checks. She was convicted on seven
counts of writing bad checks. The judge sent her to prison for six months. She
was released after serving three.
Awhile after obtaining her freedom, Velma started to look
for jobs as a caregiver for elderly, sick people. In 1976, she was living with
and working for Montgomery and Dollie Edwards. Montgomery was 94, bedridden and
incontinent. He was a diabetic and had lost his vision to that disease as well
as both legs that had been amputated. He could not feed himself. Eighty-four
year-old Dollie was in somewhat better shape but she was a cancer survivor who
had had a colostomy. At first, Velma seemed pleased to be able to move into
their comfortable brick ranch house. She got along well with both Edwardses and
found a church she liked attending, the First Pentecostal Church in Lumberton.
As time wore on, tensions surfaced between the caregiver
and her employers. Dollie often thought Velma was falling down on the job and
told her so in no uncertain terms. Velma complained that Dollie was a demanding
nitpicker. Their quarrels got more frequent and more heated.
Montgomery died in January 1977. Velma stayed on to aid
Dollie. The two continued to bicker.
It was February 26, a Saturday, when Dollie got sick. She
told her visiting stepson, Preston Edwards, that she believed she must have the
flu. Vomiting and diarrhea plagued her. He came to see her the next night and
was horrified by how weak and pale she looked. She had to go to the hospital,
he said. An obliging Velma Barfield called an ambulance. Dollie was treated by
doctors in the emergency room and sent back home without having spent the night
there. She took a turn for the worse the next day and was back in the hospital
by Tuesday. She died that evening.
Now Velma had no livelihood. That did not last long. She
was soon caring for another ailing and elderly couple, 80-year-old farmer John
Henry Lee and his 76-year-old wife, Record. Record was the one needing special
assistance for she had recently broken her leg and was hobbling around on
crutches when she could manage to get around at all.
The position seemed quite suitable to Velma. The Lees
lived in a brick house in a rural area on the outskirts of Lumberton. They were
willing to let Velma have Sundays and Wednesdays evenings off so she could
attend church services.
Problems started surfacing. Record Lee loved to gab and
the incessant chitchat got on Velma’s nerves. She and her husband often argued
and Velma disliked being present during their fights.
Then there was a check that puzzled Record. She knew she
had not signed it. John Henry called the cops but the case stalled because no
one could think of anyone who might have forged Record’s name.
On April 27, John Henry got sick. His stomach was upset
and he developed diarrhea. His condition worsened and Velma called an
ambulance. The medics rushed the sweaty, gray-faced man to the hospital. He
gradually recovered and was released on May 2, after he had spent four days
there. Doctors were mystified about the source of the sickness but thought it
was probably a virus.
“Throughout May, John Henry continued to be sick,”
according to Death Sentence. “For a few days he would be perfectly okay, then
the vomiting, the diarrhea, the cramps, the cold sweats, would start again. His
weight continued to drop drastically. His daughters were very grateful for the
attentiveness that Velma showed him. She was so sweet to him, so caring. They
felt themselves lucky that she was there.”
He took a turn for the worse and Velma called another
ambulance for him. There was little the hospital could do for the dehydrated,
terribly sick man. He died on June 4.
Some time after the funeral of John Henry Lee Velma
Barfield moved into the home of Stuart Taylor. Before Taylor became ill at the
Rex Humbard revival meeting, Velma had visited his daughter, Alice, and asked
to see a picture of her father that she had taken as a joke. It was his “dead”
picture. Stuart Taylor had stretched out on a couch, closed his eyes and folded
his hands across his chest to simulate the image of a man in a coffin. Velma
laughed along with Alice and Stuart when Alice brought the photograph to her.
Later, the memory of that shared laughter would cause
Alice to shudder.
Velma's Trial
The prosecutor in Velma Barfield’s case was a large,
blustery man named Joe Freeman Britt. He was an ardent advocate of capital
punishment who had been called “the world’s deadliest prosecutor.” During one
period of seventeen months, Britt had prosecuted thirteen first-degree murder
trials and won convictions in all of them. That was a record and got him a
mention in a Newsweek article.
Defending the accused serial poisoner was Bob Jacobson.
He was a short, freckled lawyer and one of the few in Lumberton who would
accept court-appointed cases. He had never previously tried a death penalty
case.
Velma was being tried for one count of first-degree
murder, that of Stuart Taylor. Her defense was that she did not mean to kill,
only to render her victim ill while she attempted to cover up thefts by
returning money she had pilfered from him. If true, she was guilty only of
second-degree murder and the death sentence would not even be at issue.
Because the question of intent was so crucial, Britt
argued that the jury was entitled to hear of other poisonings she had committed
and their results. Jacobson argued that that would be prejudicial since she was
only being tried for the death of Taylor.
The judge in the case was Henry McKinnon. He ruled that
the evidence linking Velma to the deaths of John Henry Lee, Dottie Edwards, and
her own mother, Lillie Bullard, be admitted.
First, the prosecutor put on both medical personnel and
family who testified to the horror of Stuart Taylor’s death. Britt also brought
out the fact that his life could have been saved had the antidote for arsenic
poisoning British antilewisite, or BAL, been administered. However, to do that,
the doctors would have had to have been informed that Taylor had been poisoned
with arsenic -- and the one person who knew that, Velma Barfield, did not tell
them.
Defense attorney Jacobson asked doctors about the effects
of the various drugs Velma had been taking and their possible interactions with
each other. Some of the physicians who testified about treating Stuart had also
treated Velma and prescribed medications for her. Their testimony showed that
she was on drugs that could have badly impaired her judgment and were
addictive.
Jacobson put Velma on the stand in her own defense. He
knew he was taking an enormous risk in doing so but felt he had to let her
explain her own confused thinking to the jury. She did well on direct
examination, saying that she had given her boyfriend poison to make him sick
but not to kill him. She said she did not tell doctors what she had done
because she feared being returned to prison. He also brought out her extensive
use of various medications, her combining a wide variety of drugs, and her
dependency on them. She admitted forging checks because she was addicted to
drugs and could not pay for them out of her own limited resources.
In the opinion of Britt, Velma Barfield was a
cold-blooded and cunning murderer who hid behind a sweet little old lady and
pious Christian masks. He would tear those masks off and show the jury who she
really was. When he cross-examined her, he began with no pretense of being
amiable or friendly. In his stance, manner, and voice, he bristled with
hostility.
She bristled right back and that was precisely what he
wanted. At one point, she seemed to be trying to argue that she had not killed
her victims. Rather, people coincidentally happened to die after she poisoned
them! After all, the first autopsies all indicated natural deaths.
“What I would like, your Honor,” Velma began during this
astonishing statement, “to say to the jury and all, these autopsies – let me
say first of all, when a person dies . . . and they ask for an autopsy to be
performed, is it not true that we have an autopsy performed to find out the
reason of the death? . . . So I don’t believe it killed them really. That is
exactly the way I feel about it.”
A stunned Britt asked, “Beg your pardon?”
“I don’t think it killed them.”
At another point, Velma seemed oddly arrogant and snippy.
“You made Mrs. Edwards sick with Singletary’s rat poison,
did you not?”
“No, I thought it was roach and ant poison.”
“So you knew these compounds would certainly make people
sick?”
“I knew it would make them sick,” the witness replied.
“You knew it would kill them, too, didn’t you?”
“No, I did not.”
The defense put on several medical witnesses to testify
to Velma’s lengthy history of chronic and overlapping drug use. None of them
could say that she had been rendered insane in the legal sense by drugs but
they testified that her judgment could have been terribly clouded.
Right after the prosecutor gave his summation to the
jury, Velma made a gesture of silent applause, repeatedly putting her hands
together without actually clapping. Her attorney and family were crestfallen.
Britt was elated. With that single, uncalled for sarcasm, he was certain that
Velma Barfield had as good as signed her own death warrant.
The jury came back with a verdict of guilty of
first-degree murder. Then it found the “aggravating circumstances” to recommend
the death penalty. Judge McKinnon fixed her punishment at death.
Death Row for One
Like most states, North Carolina had no “row” of women
waiting to be executed. When she was sentenced, Velma Barfield was the only
female in the state doomed by the law. She was housed in the Central Prison’s
section for mental cases, especially assaultive inmates, and prisoners
considered prone to escape.
Early in her prison stay, Velma went through drug
withdrawal. She had been supplied with many of her accustomed medications
during her trial. Her first days as a condemned prisoner were spent without
them and she showed the classic symptoms of cold turkey: lack of appetite,
insomnia, nausea, cold sweats, and splitting headaches. The doctor who treated
her gave her anti-depressants and anti-anxiety medications. Then gradually,
over a period of over a year, she was weaned off of them.
To the extent possible, Velma made her cell into a home.
She put up photographs of her children and grandchildren along with
knick-knacks she crocheted and inspirational religious slogans. Velma did not
usually smoke but she usually had a pack of Salem’s so that she could light one
up while having a bowel movement on her cell toilet. Velma, whose victims had
usually suffered a horrendous diarrhea before death, did not want to offend her
guards with the odor of her own excrement.
****
Velma’s radio was usually tuned into a Christian program.
Velma claimed that she had become a born-again Christian while in jail.
Although she had been a churchgoer and professed to love
Jesus all her life, Velma said that she recognized that she had never been a
true Christian. Her Christianity had been a matter of form and gesture. Then,
while at her lowest ebb and awaiting trial for her life, she had finally,
genuinely, opened her heart to Jesus and received forgiveness and salvation.
She was listening to a sermon by J. K. Kinkle when the message of God’s love
hit home for the first time. “All my life I was weighted down by my sins
because I couldn’t do better,” she wrote in her autobiography. “It never
occurred to me that Jesus really did pay the price, that Jesus alone bore the
extreme punishment – death – for my sins, not just for my “good” neighbors.
And, even more glorious, Jesus is willing to be my friend even now. I can talk
to Him, and He will listen.”
Her conversion was greeted with skepticism by many,
including the families of her victims. After all, she had spoken of Jesus and
salvation when they knew her and when she was poisoning their loved ones. Her
Christian faith had always been a fraud, they believed, and it continued to be
one. It was just a ploy to try to save her life.
However, many people were favorably impressed by Velma’s
claim to be, for the first time in her life, filled with the Holy Spirit. Tommy
Fuquay, a Pentecostal Holiness minister, believed that she was a true
Christian. “I don’t think I had ever seen anybody who had the repentant spirit
she had,” he commented. “I could see her growing and her attitude changing. The
faith in her just grew and grew each time I would see her.”
The famous evangelist Billy Graham and his wife Ruth
would come to believe Velma Barfield was their sister in Christ. Ruth Graham
kept in frequent touch with Velma by mail.
Velma found meaning in her limited life by helping other
prisoners. She was dismayed to discover how many inmates were functionally
illiterate. She often wrote letters for them.
Special rules applied to Velma because of the death
sentence and included no contact with the other inmates. However, the prison
authorities frequently broke this rule because they found that she could be a
positive influence on other prisoners. Assistant superintendent for treatment
and programs at the prison, Jennie Lancaster, put a 15-year-old named Beth into
the cell next to Velma’s. Lancaster asked Velma to try to help the girl who had
been convicted as an accessory to murder.
Velma put her hand through the bars of her own cell and
toward the next one so that Beth could hold hands with her. Beth took Velma
into her confidence, pouring out her fears, while Velma prayed aloud for her
and tried to comfort. For the first time in her life, Velma was known by her
first name and Beth was the first prisoner to call her Mama Margie. She would
not be the last. Other inmates often came to Velma for advice and words of
reassurance.
Letter writing for herself and others consumed much of
Velma’s time. She wrote to her family and to supporters she had never met. She
also kept up with her crocheting. Velma prayed and read the Bible on a daily
basis. Her son and daughter visited and sometimes brought her grandchildren
with them. Together with a pastor, she worked on her memoirs, Woman on Death
Row.
"Gateway to Heaven"
Any death sentence is automatically appealed. In June
1990, the Supreme Court turned down her appeal because it found no
unconstitutional element in the way North Carolina’s death penalty statutes
read.
A new attorney was handling Velma’s case. He six foot
tall, 200 pound, longhaired and thickly bearded 30-year-old Richard Burr. He
was the lawyer for the Southern Prisoners Defense Committee and dedicated to
aiding prisoners under a death sentence. Velma was the first doomed prisoner he
would defend. Two hundred other condemned would follow.
On September 17, the Supreme Court turned down another
appeal filed by Burr on Velma Barfield’s behalf. Her best shot would be in
North Carolina’s state courts, Burr concluded, but he had no license to
practice in North Carolina.
Thus, a short and slender 36-year-old named Jimmie Little
became her lawyer of record with Burr assisting him. Little had once been a
public defender. He also had a reputation for being willing to stick his neck
out. He had fought for his interpretation of free speech when he was a student
at the University of North Carolina by opposing the ban on communist speakers
at state campuses. As an Army officer during the Vietnam War, he had vocally
opposed America’s being in that conflict.
Little went to the Bladen County Superior Court. He filed
a motion asking for a hearing to determine whether or not his client was
entitled to a new trial. There were several complaints behind this motion but
the chief one was “ineffective assistance of counsel.” Thus, Velma was pitted
against Bob Jacobson, her previous attorney. Little argued that Jacobson had
failed in his duty to make appropriate motions and to put on helpful
psychiatric witnesses.
The judge ruled against Velma and set another execution
date. Her lawyers soon got a stay and filed more appeals. Over the next six
years, several appeals were filed and turned down, several execution dates were
set and avoided.
Both Ronnie and Kim continued to visit. As mother and son
realized time was running out, Ronnie Burke brought up the painful subject of
his father’s death in one of their conversations. He was palpably terrified of
the answer but had to ask the question.
“Did you kill him?” Ronnie asked.
“I’m sure I probably did,” she sadly replied. Slowly, the
story spilled out. Her memory was fuzzy but she believed that he had been drunk
and asleep and she lay either a cigarette or a match at the foot of the bed,
then shut the door.
She also admitted to the minister who helped her write
Woman on Death Row, that she had murdered Jennings Barfield.
Once the appeals had been exhausted, Velma and her supporters
had a thin ray of hope in the form of clemency from North Carolina’s governor.
That governor was James Hunt who was running against famous incumbent Jesse
Helms for the U.S. Senate. The governor refused Velma’s request for clemency
saying her victims had been “literally tortured to death.” Hunt tersely denied
that the senate race had played any part in his decision.
As she prepared for death, Velma was able to speak over
the phone with Billy Graham. “Velma, in a way I envy you,” the famous pastor told
her, “because you’re going to get to heaven before I do.”
Later she spoke to the Graham’s daughter, Anne Graham
Lotz, who comforted Velma by saying, “Don’t think of it as the execution
chamber. Think of it as the gateway to heaven.”
As they do at all American executions, demonstrators both
for and against capital punishment gathered outside the prison before Velma’s
death. Opponents held lit candles and hummed Amazing Grace, Velma’s favorite
hymn. A festive mood prevailed among the capital punishment supporters. They
held signs saying, “Velma’s going to have a hell of a time” and “Bye-Bye Velma”
and chanted “Die, bitch, die!”
In her cell, Velma took a final communion. They put on an
adult diaper underneath the cotton pajamas in which she had chosen to die.
“Velma, it’s time,” she was told.
Velma requested and got permission to put a robe on. Then
she checked her hair in the mirror and stepped into the hallway. She was taken
to a “preparation room” and asked if she had any last words. She did. “I want
to say that I am sorry for all the hurt that I have caused,” she began in a
firm voice. “I know that everybody has gone through a lot of pain – all the
families connected – and I am sorry, and I want to thank everybody who has been
supporting me all these six years. I want to thank my family for standing with
me through all this and my attorneys and all the support to me, everybody, the
people with the prison department. I appreciate everything – their kindness and
everything that they have shown me during these six years.”
Then the condemned prisoner was escorted to her “gateway
to heaven.” That gateway was a tiny, sterile room with a gurney in it. Velma
got up on that gurney, then lay flat down on it. Needles connected to IV leads
were inserted into her arms. She would receive something to make her sleep,
then a poison to stop her heart.
There were two lines into Velma but three executioners.
One of their thumbs would press upon a plunger that was connected to a dummy so
no one would know for certain that he or she had taken a life.
“Velma,” she was told, “Please start counting backward
from one hundred.”
Obediently, Velma began, “One hundred, ninety-nine,
ninety-eight . . . “ Her voice slurred into silence and she started to snore.
Her breathing got lighter and lighter with each breath. Then her skin turned an
ashen gray. The monitor connected to her heart showed a flat line. At 2:15
a.m., on November 2, 1984, Velma Barfield, serial murderer and born again
Christian, loving mother and killer of her children’s father and grandmother,
was dead.
Bibliography
Barfield, Velma, Woman on Death Row, World Wide
Publications, Minneapolis, Minnesota, 1985.
Bledsoe, Jerry, Death Sentence, Penguin Putnam, New York,
NY 1998.
Jones, Ann, Women Who Kill, Beacon Press, Boston, 1996.
Kelleher, Michael D. and Kelleher, C. L., Murder Most
Rare: The Female Serial Killer, Praeger Publishers, Westport, CT, 1998.
Schoen, Elin, Village Voice, “Does This Woman Deserve to
Die?” June 5, 1984.
CrimeLibrary.com
State v. Barfield, 259 S.E. 2d 510 (N.C. 1979)
Prior to January 1978, defendant and Stewart Taylor had
been going together. On occasion, defendant stayed with Taylor at his home in
St. Pauls, North Carolina. At the time of his *310 death, Taylor was fifty-six
years old.
He had been in fairly good health until the evening of 31
January 1978, four days before his death. On that evening, defendant and Taylor
went to Fayetteville to attend a gospel sing. While at the performance, Taylor
became ill. The couple left and returned to St. Pauls. At approximately 2:30
the following morning, Taylor began vomiting and having diarrhea. He continued
to be ill throughout the day.
On the next day defendant took Taylor to Southeastern
General Hospital in Lumberton **519 where he was treated. At the time he was
examined by an emergency room physician, Taylor was complaining of nausea,
vomiting and diarrhea, as well as general pain in his muscles, chest and
abdomen.
His blood pressure was low. His pulse was weak and rapid.
He was dehydrated and his skin was ashen in color. After receiving intravenous
fluids and vitamins, as well as other treatment, Taylor was released from the
hospital and defendant took him back to his home in St. Pauls where she fed
him.
The next day, 3 February 1978, an ambulance was summoned
to Taylor's home. The attendants found him to be in great pain. His blood
pressure was very low, his breathing was rapid, and his skin was gray. During
the trip to the hospital, Taylor was restless and moaning. While he was in the
emergency room, he was given intravenous fluids.
A tracheotomy was performed but he died in the emergency
room approximately one hour after he was brought in. One of the attending
physicians, Dr. Richard Jordan, was "not satisfied" as to the precise
cause of death. After talking with two of the attending physicians, members of
Taylor's family requested that an autopsy be performed.
The autopsy was performed by Dr. Bob Andrews, a
pathologist. During the course of the autopsy, toxicological screenings were
performed on samples of Taylor's liver and blood.
Though the normal human body contains no arsenic in the
blood or in liver tissue, Taylor's blood was found to have an arsenic level of
.13 milligrams percent. His liver had an arsenic level of one milligram
percent. These findings led Dr. Andrews to conclude that Taylor died from acute
arsenic poisoning.
On 10 March 1978, Robeson County Deputy Sheriffs Wilbur
Lovette and Al Parnell talked with defendant at the Sheriff's Department in
Lumberton. After having been given her Miranda *311 warnings, defendant
executed a written waiver indicating that she understood what her rights were
and that she was willing to make a statement as well as answer questions
without the presence of an attorney.
The conversation between defendant and the deputies
related to a number of checks that had been forged on the account of Stewart
Taylor. During the interview, the officers produced a check dated 31 January
1978 in the amount of $300.00.
Defendant stated that she had seen the check before; that
she had cashed the check; and that while she had "filled out" the
check it was signed by Taylor himself. While she talked with the officers,
defendant produced two checks from her pocketbook which were dated 4 November
1977 and 23 November 1977.
Both checks were drawn on Taylor's checking account and
were payable to her. They were in the amounts of $100.00 and $95.00,
respectively.
The State introduced evidence obtained through
handwriting analysis which tended to show that the three checks were not
written by Stewart Taylor; and that the checks had been cashed by defendant at
a branch of First Union National Bank in Lumberton.
During the interview with the deputies, defendant denied
that she had forged any checks on Taylor's account. Defendant was asked by the
officers if she knew the cause of Taylor's death.
Upon being told that the autopsy had indicated that
arsenic poisoning was the cause of Taylor's death, defendant began crying,
stating that "You all think I put poison in his food." She then
proceeded to deny that she was in any way involved with Taylor's death. After
making that denial, defendant was taken home. The investigation continued
through the weekend.
On Monday, 13 March 1978, defendant returned to the
sheriff's department accompanied by her son, Ronald Burke. After she was again
advised of her constitutional rights, she executed another written waiver. She
then made a lengthy statement in the presence of Deputies Lovette and Parnell.
In her statement, she admitted that before 1 January 1978
she had forged some checks on Taylor's account which he found out about when
his bank statements came in the mail; that upon finding out about the
forgeries, Taylor talked with her and **520 threatened to "turn her
in" to the authorities; that she forged another check on Taylor's account
on 31 January 1978; that the *312 forgery bothered her because Taylor would
find out about it; that on that day, she and Taylor went to Lumberton because
she had an appointment with her doctor; that after they left the doctor's
office, they stopped at a drug store ostensibly for her to purchase some hair
spray; that instead she purchased a bottle of Terro Ant Poison; that the next
day, 1 February 1978, she put some of the poison in Taylor's tea at lunchtime;
and that later that same day, she put more of the substance in Taylor's beer.
Defendant told the officers that she felt sure that what
she had done was wrong but that she had not told anyone at the hospital about
it on the two occasions that Taylor had been taken there for treatment.
She stated that she gave Taylor the poison because she
was afraid that he would "turn her in" for forgery. She further
stated that she used the money she got out of the 31 January check to pay bills
for doctors and medicine.
She concluded by confessing that she had given poison to
other persons besides Taylor and that they too had died. Deputy Lovette then
advised defendant that there was a possibility that a number of bodies would be
exhumed.
He asked her if arsenic would be found in the bodies. When
she answered affirmatively, Deputy Lovette asked her in which bodies arsenic
would be found.
Defendant admitted that while she lived and worked in the
home of John Henry Lee as a housekeeper and nurse's aide in early 1977 she
found a checkbook for an account in the joint names of Lee and his wife,
Record; that she wrote a check on the account in the amount of $50.00; that Mr.
and Mrs. Lee found out about the forgery and asked her about it; that she then
purchased a bottle of poison, pausing to read the label which said "May be
fatal if swallowed" and that she gave Mr. Lee poison three times once in
his tea and twice in his coffee.
The state introduced other evidence which tended to show:
On or about 28 April 1977 Mr. Lee, 80 years old, became ill. Until then he had
been in good health and attended to numerous chores around his home. On 29
April 1977, he was taken to the hospital complaining of vomiting and diarrhea.
Though he was released from the hospital on 2 May 1977,
he continued to be ill throughout the month of May, complaining of vomiting,
diarrhea, and general pain through his body. On 3 June 1977, he was taken to
the *313 hospital again where the attending physician, Dr. Alexander, observed
that he was critically ill. Deep blue in color, his skin was cold and wet with
perspiration. He was confused and unresponsive and his blood pressure was
subnormal. On 4 June 1977 he died.
Though no autopsy was performed at the time of Mr. Lee's
death, his body was exhumed pursuant to a court order on 18 March 1978 and
taken to the office of the Chief Medical Examiner in Chapel Hill where an
autopsy was performed.
Toxicological screenings revealed that the liver
contained an arsenic level of 2.8 milligrams percent and the muscle tissue
contained an arsenic level of 0.3 milligrams percent. Dr. Page Hudson, Chief
Medical Examiner of the State of North Carolina, testified that in his opinion
Mr. Lee's death was caused by arsenic poisoning.
Defendant admitted to the officers that she had poisoned
Mrs. Dolly Taylor Edwards; that in early 1976 she moved into the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Montgomery Edwards in Lumberton as a live-in helper; that Mr. Edwards
died on 29 January 1977; that in late February 1977 she drove to St. Pauls
where she purchased a bottle of poison; that she noticed on the bottle the
words "Could be fatal if swallowed"; that returning home she put some
of the poison in Mrs. Edwards coffee and cereal; and that shortly afterwards
Mrs. Edwards became ill, suffering from nausea and general weakness in her
body.
The state introduced evidence that Mrs. Edwards was taken
to the hospital on 27 February 1977, was treated and released. Her condition
did not improve and she was again taken to the hospital on 1 March 1977 **521
where she died later that evening. The attending physician, Dr. Henry Neill
Lee, Jr., testified that Mrs. Edwards was dehydrated and suffered from nausea,
diarrhea, and vomiting.
In her statement to the deputies, defendant said that she
knew that the poison was responsible for the death of Mrs. Edwards; that after
Mrs. Edwards died, she threw the bottle of poison into a field behind the
Edwards residence; and that she did not know why she gave the poison to Mrs.
Edwards.
Officer Lovette testified that during the course of his
investigation he went to the field behind the Edwards home and *314 found an
empty bottle of Singletary's Rat Poison which still bore the original label. He
initialed the bottom of the bottle and kept it in his sole possession until the
time of trial.
Though no autopsy was performed on the body of Mrs.
Edwards at the time of her death, pursuant to a court order, her body was
exhumed on 18 March 1978 and sent to the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner
in Chapel Hill where an autopsy was performed. During the autopsy, toxicological
screenings were conducted on samples of Mrs. Edwards' liver tissue and muscle
tissue. In the liver tissue, there was found an arsenic level of 0.4 milligrams
percent.
In the muscle tissue, there was found an arsenic level of
.08 milligrams percent. Dr. Page testified that in his opinion Mrs. Edwards'
death was caused by arsenic poisoning.
Defendant further admitted in her statement to the
deputies that she had poisoned her mother, Lillie McMillan Bullard; that during
1974 she lived with her mother in Parkton, N. C.; and that while she lived with
her mother she forged her mother's name to a note in favor of the Commercial
Credit Company of Lumberton. (Other testimony indicated that the note was in
the amount of $1,048.00.)
She further told the deputies that she was afraid that
her mother would find out about the note; that she bought a bottle of poison
and the bottle bore the warning "Can be fatal if swallowed"; that one
day at dinnertime she put some of the poison in some soup and a soft drink and
gave both to her mother; that later in the evening on the same day she gave her
mother a soft drink which contained a dose of the poison; that Mrs. Bullard
began to vomit and have diarrhea; and that she was taken to Cape Fear Valley
Hospital in Fayetteville on 30 December 1974 where she died shortly after her
arrival.
The attending physician, Dr. Weldon Jordan, testified
that Mrs. Bullard was restless and gasping for breath when she was brought into
the hospital; that she was in shock; and that he was unable to discern any
blood pressure.
Upon the death of Mrs. Bullard, an autopsy was performed
with the permission of her family, including defendant. No toxicological
screenings were conducted at that time. Pursuant to a court order the body of
Mrs. Bullard was exhumed on 18 March 1978 and taken to the Office of the Chief
Medical Examiner in *315 Chapel Hill.
Dr. William Frank Hamilton testified that he performed
toxicological screenings upon samples of hair, muscle tissue and skin which had
been taken from the body; that the hair sample revealed an arsenic
concentration of .6 milligrams percent; that the muscle tissue had an arsenic
level of .3 milligrams percent; that the skin sample had an arsenic level of .1
milligrams percent; and that in his opinion, Mrs. Bullard's death was caused by
arsenic poisoning.
Although defendant did not admit any involvement in the
death of her husband, Jennings L. Barfield, his body was exhumed pursuant to a
court order on 31 May 1978. It was taken to the Office of the Chief Medical
Examiner in Chapel Hill where an autopsy was performed.
Toxicological screenings indicated that varying levels of
arsenic were present in his body tissue. Dr. Neil A. Worden testified that he
treated Mr. Barfield when he was brought to the emergency room of the Cape Fear
Valley Hospital in Fayetteville on 22 March 1971.
At that time Mr. Barfield complained of nausea, vomiting,
diarrhea and aching throughout his body. Mr. Barfield had **522 been brought to
the emergency room for the first time at about 11:00 p. m. on 21 March 1971. At
that time he was treated and released.
However, he returned to the hospital at 5:00 the next
morning at which time he was given intravenous fluids. By the time that Dr.
Worden first saw him at about 8:00 a. m., Mr. Barfield was in shock; his blood
pressure was low; his pulse was rapid; and his complexion was ashen. Dehydrated
and gasping for air, Mr. Barfield appeared to Dr. Worden to be in great pain.
Dr. Hamilton testified that the cause of Mr. Barfield's
death was arsenic poisoning. At the close of the state's evidence, defendant
made a motion to dismiss. Upon the court's denial of the motion, she presented
evidence which tended to show:
During the month of January 1978 defendant was under the
care of five doctors none of whom knew she was under the care of the others.
She had been seeing the doctors for some time and had obtained prescriptions
for a number of drugs from them.
Among the drugs she was taking at that time were: Elavil,
Sinequan, Tranxene, Tylenol III, and Valium. She had a history of drug abuse
and had been admitted to the hospital at least four times for overdoses.
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