PENSACOLA,
Fla. (AP) - A lawyer who defended one of two adolescent brothers who
killed their father with an aluminum baseball bat died in an Alabama
plane crash along with another man, authorities said Thursday.
Attorney James Randall Stokes, 47, and businessman John Bliss
Johnson Jr., 50, both of nearby Cantonment, died when their "small,
ultra-light type plane" crashed Wednesday night near Elsanor, Ala.,
Baldwin County sheriff's officials said. They had taken off from
Cantonment. It was not immediately known which man was the pilot.
Stokes represented Alex King for free in a Pensacola trial that
drew national attention because of the defendants' ages and their
attempt to pin the blame on family friend and convicted child
molester, Ricky Chavis.
Alex was 12 and his brother, Derek, was 13 when they killed their
father, Terry King, 40, as he slept at their Cantonment home. The
boys had just returned after having run away and spending about 10
days with Chavis, who also hid them at his Pensacola home after the
murder.
Chavis, 41, also was tried for the killing and his verdict sealed
until the King brothers' trial was completed. All three were accused
of first-degree murder and faced possible life sentences.
Chavis was acquitted. The King boys' jury convicted them of
second-degree murder, but the judge threw out the verdict and took
the unusual step of ordering mediation to settle the case. Both boys
then pleaded guilty to third-degree murder.
Alex, now 13, and Derek, now 15, are serving seven- and
eight-year sentences in separate juvenile prisons. Chavis was tried
twice more, resulting in convictions for falsely imprisoning Alex,
being an accessory to murder and tampering with evidence. He
received sentences totaling 35 years but was acquitted of molesting
Alex.
Stokes also was defending another juvenile, Daniel Carter, 15,
who is charged with first-degree murder for fatally stabbing his
uncle. The teen claims he acted in self-defense when he killed Jack
Lloyd Carter last July 16. The trial is set for July 14 but likely
will be delayed due to Stokes' death.
Some witnesses to the plane crash reported hearing sounds "like
the fluttering of an engine" before the plane went down, landing in
a tree, but none saw the crash, officials said.
"We were out in the yard and at the spur of the moment looked up
and said, 'Oh, there's an ultra-light,'" Bruce Bonner, who said he
lives about a mile from the crash site, told the Mobile Register.
"He kind of made a turn and the engine just got quieter, just went
dead."
After hearing the crash and calling 911, Bonner went to the site,
he said.
"It was in a rural area, probably took about 20 minutes for them
to find the guys," he said.
Authorities sealed the area Wednesday night and continued the
investigation Thursday.
AP-ES-06-12-03 1632EDT