On the morning of June
6th, a Memphis police officer responded to an assault call at an
apartment complex. Upon arriving at the apartment complex, the
complainant, Lakisha Thomas, reported that she had been assaulted.
Lakisha informed the
officer that her ex-boyfriend, David Ivy, had assaulted her in the area
of Park and Airways with a black Uzi type pistol with a long magazine.
She told the officer that David Ivy was also known as “Day Day.”
Indeed, Lakisha had
“Day Day” tattooed on the right side of her neck. Lakisha advised the
officer that Ivy had “said that he wasn’t going back to jail” and “that
he would come back and kill her.”
The officer described
Lakisha as being visibly upset, both at what had happened earlier in the
day and upset with what might occur in the future. Upon a visual
examination of the victim, the officer observed that Lakisha “had about
a two-inch laceration to the top of her head. She had some bruising just
above her left chest above her left breast. And she had a right black
eye on the right side of her face.”
The officer
photographed the victim’s injuries. Although paramedics were called to
the scene, Lakisha refused treatment and stated that “she would seek
medical attention via her own means.”
A warrant charging
David Ivy with aggravated assault was issued on June 7, 2001. Although
the Sheriff’s Department attempted to serve the warrant on June 7, the
warrant was not served until June 27, 2001.
Lakisha contacted the
Sheriff’s Department on the morning of June 8th and provided the
Sheriff’s Department with an alternate address for David Ivy. She
indicated that he may be found at “an address on Meda.”
Later that day, Lakisha
went to the Citizens Dispute office, completed some paper work about the
incident, and was eventually interviewed. Lakisha was then taken to the
judicial commissioner to obtain an order of protection. She was also
referred to the domestic violence unit of the police department for a
warrant for aggravated assault.
The ex parte order of
protection was granted. A hearing was scheduled on the matter for June
21, 2001. The ex parte order was never served on the respondent, David
Ivy. The order noted that attempts were made on June 15, 19, and 20. The
order further noted: “After diligent search and inquiry Ivy is not found
in my county. Two days later, on June 8th, the same officer again
encountered Lakisha.
However, this time,
Lakisha was outside her apartment building in the parking lot and she
was pronounced dead. Deborah Kelley, Lakisha’s cousin, testified that
Lakisha lived in the Magnolia Place Apartments on Millbranch. She
explained that her sister, Jackie Bland, lived in the Millbranch Park
apartments.
Ms. Kelley knew David
Ivy as Lakisha’s boyfriend. The couple dated for almost a year. At some
point, Lakisha attempted to end her relationship with David Ivy.
Although Lakisha had moved out of the house they shared, Ms. Kelley
remarked that the couple “would always end up talking back together.”
Ms. Kelley stated that
Lakisha Thomas eventually moved into the Magnolia Place Apartments off
Millbranch. Ms. Kelley related an incident that occurred at her home
about a month before Lakisha’s murder, during which Ivy had grabbed
Lakisha by her hair. Ms. Kelley told Ivy, “Uh-huh, don’t do that. Let
her go. You’ve got to get out of here with that.” Ivy retorted, “I told
you about playing with me, bitch.” He then left.
A few days prior to
Lakisha’s murder, Ms. Kelley arrived at her sister’s apartment where she
found Lakisha, sitting at the kitchen table wearing sunglasses. Lakisha
had blood on her shirt. Jackie Bland stated, “Look what Day Day did to
Kisha.” Lakisha then removed her sunglasses, revealing a black eye. She
remarked that her shoulder was hurting and that “she thinks she had a
hole in her head.”
Lakisha explained that
David Ivy had “caught her at Mapco . . . and jumped on her, hit her in
the head with a pistol.” Ms. Kelley testified that Lakisha was nervous
and scared, scared that Ivy was “trying to kill her.” Jackie Bland then
contacted the police.
Ms. Kelley later drove
Lakisha to Eastwood Hospital on Getwell. Several hours later, Ms. Kelley
accompanied Lakisha to 201 Poplar to “swear out a warrant [for Ivy’s]
arrest.” On the way to the police station, Lakisha indicated to Ms.
Kelley that Ivy was following them. Ms. Kelley pulled the vehicle into
an Exxon parking lot and called the police. However, by the time the
police arrived, Ivy was gone.
The three then
continued to the Shelby County Criminal Justice Center located at 201
Poplar. After leaving 201 Poplar, the three women drove to a liquor
store on Poplar Avenue. While inside the liquor store, Ms. Kelley
observed Ivy. She requested that someone “[c]all the police.”
In response, two men in
the store went to the front door. Ms. Kelley stated that Ivy then walked
back around the liquor store building. When Ms. Kelley returned to the
vehicle, Lakisha stated, “Girl, he said he going to kill me. He’s been
following me all day.” Lakisha added that “He told me if I put the
police in his business he was going to f*** me up.” An employee at the
liquor store overheard Ivy ask Lakisha if she hated him, that “it wasn’t
over,” and that “he was going to get her.” The women then waited for the
police to arrive to escort them back to 201 Poplar.
After the incident, the
employee observed that Lakisha “was shaking real bad and crying and
saying, ‘I know he’s going to kill me. I know he’s going to get me.’”
Another employee of the
liquor store confirmed the events occurring at the liquor store. He
specifically recalled speaking with Lakisha. He stated that “[s]he was
very afraid.” He noticed that she was “bruised pretty badly.” She
informed him that she had just filed a charge for assault against “Day
Day.” He testified that Lakisha had the name Day Day tattooed on her
neck. She stated that “he had beaten her up.” He remembered distinctly
Lakisha saying, ‘I’m afraid he’s going to kill me.’”
The surveillance
cameras of the liquor store videotaped Ivy outside the liquor store on
June 6, 2001.
On the morning of June
8th, 2001, Ms. Kelley, accompanied by Jackie Bland, Lakisha, Andrea and
Jackie’s baby, were preparing to leave Jackie Bland’s house. The plan
was to drive Lakisha and Ms. Bland to the beauty shop; then Ms. Kelley
would take the vehicle to be tuned up because they had planned on
leaving and going out of town.
That morning, the
police contacted Lakisha, indicating that they could not locate Ivy at
the address she had provided. While Ms. Kelley finished getting ready in
the house, Lakisha and Andrea had already gotten into the car. Ms. Bland,
holding her eight-month-old child, was waiting outside the door for Ms.
Kelley.
At this time, Ms. Bland
saw somebody run up and open fire into the front passenger side of the
vehicle where Lakisha was seated. The assailant was wearing a black hat,
sunglasses and had a towel over his mouth. Although the assailant’s face
was covered, Ms. Bland testified that the assailant resembled David Ivy
in appearance.
Ms. Kelley, still in
the residence, heard one shot and Jackie came running in the house,
screaming. Then Andrea came in screaming. Jackie said, ‘Call the police.
Day Day shot Kisha.” Ms. Kelley then “heard tires . . . like somebody
was getting away fast out in the parking lot.” Andrea confirmed that it
was Day Day that shot Kisha.
Ms. Hunt related that
the assailant pulled the towel from over his face, revealing himself as
David Ivy. She also stated that, before firing three shots, David Ivy
smiled and remarked, “Oh, bitch, you want me dead, huh?”
After calling 911, Ms.
Kelley went out into the parking lot where she found Lakisha slumped
over in the car seat . . . "with her arm in a sling. . . .” Ms. Kelley
raised Lakisha’s body and “saw the bullet hole. . . .”
Gregory Kelley, Bland
and Kelley’s brother, worked as a maintenance supervisor at the
Millbranch Apartments. Upon hearing the gunshots, Gregory Kelley ran in
that direction. As he approached, he heard people hollering, “somebody
just got shot in that car, that green car.” Gregory Kelley recognized
the car as belonging to his cousin Lakisha Thomas.
Upon reaching his
cousin’s body, he noticed two wounds, one to her chest and one to her
side. Gregory Kelley pulled her lifeless body out of the car onto the
pavement. He then attempted to apply pressure to the wounds while
shouting for someone to call 911. Gregory Kelley never saw the assailant;
he just saw a “white car speed up out of the apartments.”
He testified that the
car resembled the car owned by David Ivy. Jackie Bland and Andrea Hunt
further related instances of conflict in David Ivy and Lakisha Thomas’
relationship. Ms. Bland recalled an incident where she observed David
Ivy "pull a plug out of Lakisha’s head.”
She also recalled an
incident that occurred about one month prior to Lakisha’s murder.
Lakisha called Ms. Bland, telling her that Ivy had broken all the tables
in the house; he had kicked the door in; and she was “fixing” to call
the police. Ms. Bland also commented that Lakisha had often stated that
“she was tired of fighting with him and she was ready to leave Ivy alone
but she was scared.”
Ms. Hunt confirmed
Ivy’s physical abuse of Lakisha. Ms. Hunt further stated that Lakisha
would comment that Ivy “had her on 23 and 1. She could only come out an
hour a day. That was to take her kids to school and pick them up from
school.”
A Memphis police
officer stated that in May 2001 he responded to a disturbance call at
3725 Millbranch. Lakisha Thomas informed the officer that her boyfriend,
David Ivy, “had forced his way into her apartment and was moving the
belongings out of her apartment.” Lakisha further advised the officer
that David Ivy had “stated that he was going to kill her.”
The officer observed
that Lakisha Thomas was “nervous and shaking.” She informed the officers
at the scene that David Ivy “was stalking her and was constantly making
threats to her to harm her and he was upset because she ended their
relationship.”
The officer related
that Lakisha’s grip on his arm lasted so long and was so firm that she
had embedded some fingerprints in his arm. He commented that it was
obvious that she was very shaken up and afraid.
The next time the
officer saw Lakisha Thomas was on June 8, 2001, after she had been
murdered. The officer and his partner were flagged down by a maintenance
worker at the Millbranch Apartments. Upon reaching the body, the officer
was unable to detect a pulse from the victim’s body. The officer then
began interviewing witnesses.
During this time, the
officer observed a white vehicle pull out of the complex at a high rate
of speed. An investigation of the crime scene revealed the presence of
spent casings and bullet fragments as well as several live rounds.
An examination of the
casings and bullets led a TBI forensic scientist to conclude that this
evidence was consistent with a scenario in which a semi-automatic nine
millimeter weapon was fired with some of the bullets passing through a
body, some bullets being fired and leaving an empty shell casing, and
some bullets not firing but being manually ejected from the weapon.
Ivy was arrested on
June 27, 2001, in Tipton County, Tennessee. He was transported back to
Memphis.
On May 16, 2002, Ivy
escaped from the Shelby County Jail. Ivy was eventually located in San
Diego, California. Tommy Westbrooks was Ivy’s parole officer in February
2001. Ivy had been placed on parole in June of 2000, with parole status
scheduled to terminate in the year 2020.
Dr. O’Brien Clary Smith,
the medical examiner for Shelby County, performed an autopsy on the body
of Lakisha Thomas. The postmortem examination of the body revealed the
presence of “multiple gunshot wounds,” a total of five wounds of
entrance to the right side of the body. “The path of those wounds went .
. . from the right side of her body over to the left and had an upward
course . . . as they progressed from right to left.”
Exit wounds were
located on the left side of the body, one in the front of the left
shoulder, two behind the left shoulder, one of the left side of the
abdomen and one on the left side. Powder burns were located on the
victim’s right upper arm.
He explained that
powder burns are small puncture wounds produced in the skin surface when
particles of burned and unburned gun powder are projected from the bale
of a weapon at a distance close enough for them to have enough energy to
actually embed themselves in the skin. And for most handguns this is out
to a range of about two feet.
He also noticed
“stipple type powder burns on the side of her right arm.” Dr. Smith
added that there was also a gunshot wound to the victim’s left arm. Dr.
Smith verified that bruising located on the victim’s person would have
been consistent with the victim sustaining the “trauma or assault that
had occurred on June the 6th.”
Dr. Smith was unable to
determine the sequence of the gunshot wounds. Nonetheless, he provided
the following description of the gunshot wounds inflicted upon Lakisha
Thomas. Gunshot wound A is an exit wound. Gunshot wound B entered the
victim’s body on the right lateral chest. The bullet fractured a rib,
pierced the right lung, and damaged the right atrium of the heart. This
bullet also damaged the pulmonary artery and pierced the left lung
before exiting the body beneath the left shoulder.
Gunshot wound C entered
at the right side of the chest. This bullet pierced the right lung and
the heart; it also bruised the upper lobe of the left lung and fractured
the second rib before exiting on the front side of the shoulder (gunshot
wound A).
Gunshot wound G entered
at the back of the victim’s left upper arm. Dr. Smith described this
wound as a re-entrance wound, i.e., one of the bullets that exited her
body re-entered due to the position of the victim’s arm.
Gunshot wound H entered
the victim’s body at her right upper back. This bullet “hit[] the spine
at the 7th thoracic vertebra. . . ” and damaged the spinal cord. This
bullet continued to damage the left upper lobe of the lung and fractured
the back of the second rib. Next, gunshot wound I entered at the right
upper buttock. This bullet bruised the intestines and the pancreas; it
produced a grazing wound to the liver, and left kidney; the bullet then
fractured the tenth rib. This bullet did not exit; rather, it lodged
itself between the skin and the left tenth rib.
The final gunshot wound
of entrance is gunshot wound J. This bullet entered on the right upper
outer thigh. This bullet damaged the uterus and the fallopian tube. It
also “produce[d] two holes in the lower portion of the colon or large
bowel” and produced two injuries to the small bowel. The bullet then
exited on the left side of the abdomen.
Dr. Smith confirmed
that the course of the gunshot wounds through the victim’s body was
consistent with the victim “balling up in a fetal like position.”
He further confirmed
that the victim was no more than two feet from the weapon when it was
discharged. Of the victim’s vital internal organs, the spleen was the
only organ not affected by the gunshots. Thus, Dr. Smith concluded that
the victim’s death was the result of the multiple gunshot wounds; two
bullets striking the victim’s heart would have ended “her life the
quickest.”
Ivy did not testify,
rather, he presented the testimony of one witness who testified that Ivy
was the father of her daughter born on April 10, 2001. She stated that
she and Ivy lived together both before and after the birth of their
daughter.
The witness explained
that she, Lakisha, and Ivy all grew up in the same neighborhood. Lakisha
lived near the witness, and their children went to school together. She
learned that Ivy was “seeing” Lakisha in October 2000. She stated that
there was no indication that Thomas and Ivy were having a difficult time
in their relationship. The last time she saw Lakisha was around 3:00
a.m. on June 6, 2001, when she appeared at her residence.
Following the proof in
the case, the jury returned with a verdict finding Ivy guilty of first-degree
premeditated murder.
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