The Georgia mother's court explosion took a central stage in her son's murder trial.
Demetris Ross and Brandon Williams have been found guilty of 15 total charges related to the 2022 murder of 60-year-old Thomas Arnold at the Atlanta beltline.
Ross' mother Valerie has expressed her paranoid belief that her son is not a murderer of the Fulton County ju umpire after being convicted Wednesday.
“I believe in all my heart, with all my heart, with all my heart, with all my heart, with all my heart, with all my heart,” said the hysterical Valerie Ross. “My son, Demetrice Ross, is innocent.”
Older Ross suggested that she pleaded for her son's confidence and said that the ju judge's seven-hour deliberation was too short and that they didn't have enough time to discuss the case. According to WSBTV.
Ross and Williams were found guilty of shooting Arnold in an attempt to violent robbery after spending the evening with a friend on February 26, 2022.
Arnold was at the bar and was believed to have left before closing time at 10pm and returned to his home in the nearby Ponsey Highlands area.
Ross and Williams were discovered on surveillance cameras following the woman and made undesirable advances on the popular path surrounding the city around the same time as Arnold.
Williams is believed to be the one who fires deadly shots.
One friend testified that during trial Williams admitted to killing Arnold when he tried to steal the car.
“We cannot leave the witness because we have no face or case,” the unidentified witness testified.
The “outstanding individual” spent the night with friends and was riding a bike at the Beltline house when he was killed, According to 11Alive.
He was found suffering from a fatal gunshot wound the following morning.
An investigation into a meaningless target attack was launched and the suspect was not arrested until police released nearby security footage.
Williams was arrested two weeks after Arnold was found.
Ross was captured by the US ex-s a week later.
The trial began on April 24th and lasted for four days before the ju judge deliberated for several hours on Wednesday.
Ross and Williams both faced eight charges each.
Demetrice Ross guilty fee
- Count 1: Malicious Murder – Cruel
- Count 2: Felony murder, attempted crime to commit armed robbery
- Count 3: Felony murder, aggravated assault with a deadly weapon
- Count 5: Criminal attempts to commit armed robbery
- Count 6: Aggravated attacks with deadly weapons
- Count 7: Possession of firearms during felony committee
Brandon Williams' guilty fee
- Count 1: Malicious Murder – Cruel
- Count 2: Felony murder, attempted crime to commit armed robbery
- Count 3: Felony murder, aggravated assault with a deadly weapon
- Count 4: Felony murder, possession of firearms by convicted felon
- Count: 5: Attempt to commit armed robbery
- Count 6: Aggravated attacks with deadly weapons
- Count 7: Possession of firearms during felony committee
- Count 8: Possession of firearms by convicted felons
Both men remained linear and silent when they learned the verdict, but only rose to their feet when court officials were handcuffed before the appetizers spoke.
Court officials handcuffed both Ross and Williams before the verdict was read.
Judge Craig Schwar ruled that they brought both of them back to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
“I'm doing a very difficult job. I've been a Superior Court judge for 20 years and probably tried to trial 200 felony judges, most of them are murder,” Schwar said. According to court video. “People say, 'How do you do it? How do you deal with that grief?”
“It's never a happy day in this room,” he said before elaborating on the difficulties at the current murder trial. “This case really affected me. It's cruel and evil for two words to come to mind. That's what we have in this case. There's no reason to be here.”
Schwar called the murderer “coldly calculated” and described the murderer as an example of prisoners who were convicted of fear of criminals whose society would never show positive change after reform programs.
“These defendants' actions were moral and were intentional and intentional, without concern about the value of human life,” he said.
A jurist who speaks directly with Ross and Williams said their “disgust and despair” had achieved the fate of death in prison.





