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Alday Family Murders
LocationSeminole County, Georgia, U.S.
DateMay 14, 1973 (1973-05-14)
Attack type
Mass murder, burglary, robbery, rape
VictimsJerry Alday, 35
Ned Alday, 62
Jimmy Alday, 25
Mary Alday, 26
Chester Alday, 32
Aubrey Alday, 57
PerpetratorsCarl Junior Isaacs
George Elder Dungee
Wayne Carl Coleman
William Carroll Isaacs
VerdictGuilty
ConvictionsFelony first-degree murder
SentenceDeath (Carl Isaacs, Dungee, Coleman)
40 years' imprisonment (Billy Isaacs)

The Alday family murders took place on May 14, 1973, in Donalsonville, Georgia, a small town in Seminole County, Georgia, when six members of the Alday family were murdered by four men who burglarized a family home.

Earlier in May 1973, 19-year-old Carl Isaacs, 26-year-old Wayne Carl Coleman, and 35-year-old George Elder Dungee escaped from a prison in Maryland. They joined with Isaacs' younger brother, 15-year-old William Carroll "Billy" Isaacs, to drive to Florida so the three escapees could avoid recapture. Prior to the drive to Florida, the four kidnapped and murdered 19-year-old Richard Miller, presumably so they could steal Miller's car.

The four passed through Georgia on their way to Florida. On May 14, 1973, they stopped at the home of Jerry and Mary Alday to steal gasoline and decided to burglarize the house to search for valuables. As several Alday family members began to return home during the burglary, starting with Jerry and Ned Alday, the four burglars held each Alday family member at gunpoint to force them inside the house, after which they shot each victim to death. In all, six Alday family members – five men (Jerry, Ned, Jimmy, Chester, and Aubrey Alday) and one woman (Mary Alday) – were murdered that day. The family members were also robbed, and Mary Alday was raped.

The Isaacs, Coleman, and Dungee fled to Alabama after the murders but later moved to West Virginia, where police apprehended them. The four faced trial in early 1974, and Billy Isaacs avoided a death sentence by testifying for the state against his associates. Carl Isaacs, George Dungee, and Wayne Coleman were each sentenced to death, although Dungee and Coleman later had their death sentences commuted to life imprisonment after retrials in the late 1980s. Carl Isaacs was executed by lethal injection on May 6, 2003, eight days away from the 30th anniversary of the murders. At the time of his execution, Isaacs was the longest serving death row inmate in United States history.

Until Mark Orrin Barton's mass murder of nine people in two Atlanta-based day trading firms in 1999, the Alday family murders were the second deadliest mass murders in Georgia history, only surpassed by the Woolfolk family murders from the 19th century.[1]

Background

THESE 2 CITATIONS ARE VERY GOOD FOR BIOGRAPHICAL INFO; THE ARTICLE CONTAINS A LOT OF BIRTH DATES. WHEN IT HAS BEEN EXHAUSTED OF ALL ITS USES, DRAG IT FROM HERE, TO THE FIRST INSTANCE IN WHICH IT SHOWS UP, AND THEN DELETE THIS TEXT.

The Alday family had lived in their Seminole County farming community near the Chattahoochee River for over 100 years prior to the murders. A surviving Alday family member, Bud Alday, who was the brother and uncle of several of the murder victims, stated that the family had a good reputation in the area, were involved in the Baptist Church, and were close-knit, despite rumors that there was internal strife amongst several Aldays regarding dividing the large amount of property they owned.[2]

Two of the younger Alday murder victims were deacons.[2]

Perpetrators

Wayne Carl Coleman was born on December 9, 1946, in the township of East Nottingham, Pennsylvania. Coleman was a half-brother of Carl and Billy Isaacs and related to the Isaacs by their mother; Coleman was the last of five children born to Betty Jamison Isaacs and Carson Coleman, the latter of whom abandoned the family shortly after Wayne Coleman's birth. As a young adult, Wayne Coleman worked several low-paying construction jobs. When Coleman was 21 years old, he began accumulating his own criminal record with a burglary conviction. Later, he was sentenced to 10 years' imprisonment for a separate robbery and sent to prison, but after demonstrating good behavior, he was transferred to the Poplar Hill Prison Camp, a minimum-security reentry facility, where he met and befriended George Dungee.[3]

George Elder Dungee was born on March 5, 1938, in Baltimore, Maryland. Dungee had minor intellectual disability and wore glasses for myopia. His father died when he was six months old, so he was raised largely by a single mother, Fannie Dungee. Fannie Dungee worked 16 hours a day in a vegetable canning plant and often had trouble finding babysitters for her son, who frequently went truant during his schooling years. When Dungee was in his mid-20s, he identified as a gay man, but he had a girlfriend anyway, a waitress who worked at the same restaurant where Dungee was employed as a dishwasher. They had a daughter together and lived as a family unit in Baltimore for a few years while Dungee moved between jobs, since he was fired frequently for slow work performance, until his girlfriend broke up with him and requested child support. Dungee then moved back in with his mother, but eight years later, he was arrested due to owing $1,600 in child support after not having made any of his payments of $5 USD per week, and sentenced to 18 months in prison. He was sent to the minimum-security Poplar Hill Prison Camp, where he met Carl Isaacs and Wayne Coleman.[3][4]

Carl Isaacs was born to Betty Isaacs and her second husband, George Archie Isaacs, on August 9, 1953, in Fawn Grove, Pennsylvania; he was the third of seven children born to George Archie Isaacs. His younger brother, William Carroll Isaacs, more often went by the nickname "Billy" and was four years younger than Carl Isaacs.[4] When Carl and Billy Isaacs were young, their father deserted the family, leading the Isaacs children to grow up in a home that Maryland prison officials characterized as "a nightmare of social instability."[3] Growing up, Carl and Billy Isaacs lived in several locations near the border between Maryland and Pennsylvania, frequently making extra money in farming and factory jobs and frequently switching schools. At some point, Carl and Billy Isaacs were placed in foster care because their mother was rarely home due to long work hours. Carl and Billy Isaacs developed a juvenile criminal record consisting of convictions for truancy, running away from foster homes, petty crime, and several stints in reform school. Billy Isaacs' first arrest occurred when he was five years old and a police officer caught him shoplifting, after which the police officer spanked him as corporal punishment, although their mother Betty recalled that the boys were "like any other boys" until they hit puberty, at which point they began burglarizing homes.[3][4]

When Carl Isaacs was fifteen years old, he received his first adult conviction when he was found guilty of car theft and housebreaking. He was arrested several times between the ages of 16 and 19 for burglary. In February 1973, he was sentenced to four years' imprisonment for burglary and sent to the Metropolitan Transition Center in Baltimore. On March 29, 1973, Carl was assaulted and gang-raped by older inmates during a prison riot that took over his cell block, leading prison officials to transfer him to the Poplar Hill Prison Camp for his safety. There, he reunited with his half-brother Wayne Coleman, who introduced him to George Dungee.[4] Coleman and Carl Isaacs planned an escape from Poplar Hill after deciding they would likely not be paroled from their sentences early, and Coleman convinced Carl Isaacs to allow Dungee to join them in their escape. Meanwhile, Billy Isaacs had been sent to the Victor Cullen School for Boys, a reform school located in Sabillasville, Maryland, after an arrest and juvenile conviction for burglary. In April 1973, Billy Isaacs escaped from that reform school.[3]

In 1981, a reporter based out of Albany, Georgia, would allege that Carl Isaacs had participated in a total of 13 murders in his life before his imprisonment on death row, including the six Alday murders and the death of Richard Miller.[5]

At the time of the Alday family murders, Carl Isaacs was 19 years old, and his brother Billy was 15 years old. Wayne Coleman was 26, and George Dungee was 35 years old.[6]

Crime

Prison escape and murder of Richard Miller

In the early morning hours of May 5, 1973, Carl Isaacs, Coleman, and Dungee escaped the Poplar Hill facility by crawling out of a dormitory bathroom window. Somehow, Wayne Coleman also obtained a .38-caliber pistol. The trio stole a car and drove it to Baltimore, where they picked up Billy Isaacs from his girlfriend's house and decided to head towards Florida because Wayne Coleman wanted to see "the ocean." First, they drove west into Pennsylvania, where, on May 10, they kidnapped 19-year-old Richard Wayne Miller in McConnellsburg so they could steal his Chevrolet Chevelle. They drove into Flintstone, Maryland, where Coleman dragged Miller out of the car and murdered Miller by shooting him in the head. Miller's body was discovered on June 3, 1973, almost a month later.[3][7]

(The 2003 retrospective AJC article says the burglary of the Alday home began ~4:00 PM)

Alday family murders

While the Isaacs brothers, Coleman, and Dungee drove through south Georgia in Miller's stolen vehicle, the four saw what looked like a gas pump on Ned Alday's property.

The first members of the Alday family to arrive at the property were Ned and Jerry, both of whom were unaware of the ongoing burglary. Their arrival startled the four burglars, who then held Ned and Jerry at gunpoint before shooting both "execution style".[7][8]

The next morning, police issued an all-points bulletin for Mary Alday's 1970 Chevrolet Impala.[1]

During a 1977 interview, Isaacs explained that he and his partners in crime murdered the victims rather than allowing them to live because, although the primary motive was robbery, the escapees did not want to return to prison and felt that they could not leave witnesses: "We figured that they couldn't take us back to prison if [the victims] couldn't talk."[9]


The gas pump at the Ned Alday farm property on River Road is what got the attention of the group as they made their way through Seminole County en route to Florida. They found no one at home and began ransacking the trailer on the property. When Ned and Jerry Alday arrived, after having lunch with Ernestine Alday at the family home a little way down the road, they startled the escapees, who forced them inside and shot them execution style. When Jimmy came by the trailer, he became the next victim of the fugitives. The same fate awaited Ned’s brother Aubrey and son Sugie as they arrived at the farm.

Apprehension

After the arrests of the four perpetrators, authorities found George Dungee carrying a wristwatch belonging to Mary Alday. The men were also carrying three weapons that would be connected to the murders.[9]

First trial

Investigators characterized Carl Isaacs as the ringleader of the group, since officials considered him the smartest and best at organizing out of them all. They characterized Dungee as a follower, which Billy Isaacs corroborated, later testifying during Dungee's trial, "[Dungee] never said much. Whenever Wayne or Carl told him to do something, he did it."[3]

The first trials for Carl Isaacs, Coleman, and Dungee took place in January 1974, and lasted for less than one week. The trials were not joint, but they were held back-to-back. The surviving Aldays hired a special prosecutor who was a family friend, former lieutenant governor Peter Zack Geer. Isaacs' attorney was Bobby Hill, an anti-death penalty state representative who served in the Georgia House of Representatives' Black Caucus.[1] The defendants did not testify at their first trials. In Geer's closing statement at Isaacs' trial, he asked the jury to "use your Georgia walking-about sense and tell me if Carl Isaacs has an 'abandoned and malignant heart,'" making reference to Georgia law's written definition of murder. The jury deliberated for 38 minutes before finding Isaacs guilty of murder.[1]

Death row, appeals, and retrial

(I guess this is where I would write about Carl Isaacs' participation in the Georgia State Prison escape, but I don't want to write a lot about that because it isn't wholly relevant to the Alday family murders, which are the focus + namesake of this article. I might dedicate 2-3 sentences to it here.)

Then I can also talk in this section about the progression of appeals for all 3 death-sentenced inmates, also describing their retrials/resentencing hearings. That is far more relevant to the Alday case.

Overturned sentence

Shortly before the apprehension and arrest of the four suspects, reporters interviewed Seminole County Sheriff Dan White; when asked what he would do with the Alday family's killers, he cited the Book of Genesis to justify Carl Isaacs, Wayne Coleman, and George Dungee receiving the death penalty. Sheriff White also stated, "If I had my way about it, I'd have me a large oven, and I'd precook [the suspects] for several days. [...] And I don't think that would satisfy me." A federal appeals court later cited Sheriff White's comments as a contributing factor for ordering new trials for the death-sentenced defendants.[1]

Prior to 1985, lower courts rejected appeals from Isaacs, Coleman, and Dungee due to "the overwhelmingly uncontroverted evidence of their willful participation in what is generally regarded as the most heinous criminal orgy in the history of the state." However, in December 1985, the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit overturned all three death-sentenced defendants' convictions and sentences. In their decision, they agreed with lower courts' rulings that there was "overwhelming evidence" of the defendants' guilt, but they agreed with the defendants' contentions in their appeals that there was also "overwhelming evidence that the community had prejudiced both guilt and sentence," referring to both the pretrial publicity in Seminole County as well as comments like those of Sheriff White, and stating that if they failed to overturn the defendants' convictions, "an obviously guilty defendant would have no right to a fair trial."[9]

South Georgia residents received news of the appeals negatively; over 100,000 citizens petitioned for the three appellate judges who overturned the defendants' sentences to be impeached, to no avail, as the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the Eleventh Circuit Court's decision. South Georgia residents also cited the appeals and retrials as having a significantly negative economic impact on Seminole County, as the county was required to pay the defendants' legal fees and other needs, like dentures for Coleman and a suit for Carl Isaacs.[9]

Retrials and resentencing

Isaacs' retrial took place in Perry, Georgia, in January 1988. Isaacs' retrial gained significant amounts of press and controversy, to the point of local police worrying about the potential threat of Isaacs being subjected to extrajudicial punishment. Isaacs' retrial also featured heightened security.[8] Billy Isaacs once again served as a primary witness, with testimony recounting the murder in detail. Isaacs was again convicted of the murders and sentenced to death.[9][8]

Coleman's retrial took place in 1988 in DeKalb County, Georgia, which is located hundreds of miles away from Seminole County. Judge Hugh Lawson was the presiding judge.[10] On May 2, Coleman's jury again convicted him of six counts of murder.[11] When it came to sentencing, jurors later reported that their votes were split on each of the six murder charges. Most favored imposing a death sentence for Ned Alday's murder, while there was an even split in their votes for the murders of Jimmy, Mary, and Aubrey Alday. After over 34 hours of deliberation, Judge Lawson determined that Coleman's jury was hung on all six murder charges' sentences and enforced six consecutive life sentences, as a life sentence was automatic in the event that a jury could not unanimously agree on the death penalty. Coleman would be eligible for parole in 15 years.[12][11][13]

Dungee was the last of the three death-sentenced men to receive a retrial, to take place in Columbus, Georgia, but proceedings concluded in mid-July 1988 when Dungee pleaded guilty to all charges against him. Two days prior, prosecutors had announced they were prohibited from seeking another death sentence against Dungee due to his intellectual disabilities, as Georgia had passed a law earlier in 1988 to protect inmates with "significantly sub-average general intellectual functioning" from being sentenced to death. After Dungee pleaded guilty, his trial judge imposed six life sentences, three running consecutively, with the understanding between both Dungee's lawyers and the prosecution being that he would likely never be paroled.[14]

Aftermath

Alday family

The six Alday family murder victims' funerals took place on May 17, 1973. Afterwards, they were buried in the cemetery of the Spring Creek Baptist Church in Donalsonville, with their resting place marked by a marble tombstone measuring 20 feet long. Their joint funeral service had over 1,000 attendees, including over 50 other Alday family members.[1] On May 18, 1973, four days after the murders and one day after the funerals, Mary Alday's mother Alberta Lane Campbell learned details of how Mary was murdered; Campbell died the next day, with the Early County News attributing Campbell's death to her overwhelming grief. The family's dog died weeks after the family's murders as well.[15]

After the murders, a memorial fund was established for the victims, the proceeds of which later went towards funding the building of a new church.[2]

In 2003, Ned Alday's granddaughter Paige lobbied for the passage of the "Alday Family Bill," requiring the state of Georgia to send twice-yearly case updates to the surviving families of the victims of death row inmates. The Georgia General Assembly passed the bill.[15] That same year, in May 2003, while standing outside the prison during Carl Isaacs' execution, Paige delivered a statement regarding the surviving Alday family members' displeasure with the way courts handled the family's case. By 2005, Paige worked with the Georgia Department of Corrections in a program designed to reduce prison recidivism, stating that her family's experience with crime and the legal system inspired her to pursue that line of work.[16]

Perpetrators

On April 22, 2003, after Carl Isaacs had exhausted his state and federal appeals, the Houston County Superior Court ordered Carl Isaacs' execution to take place between May 6 and May 13, 2003. Isaacs filed a motion to vacate the execution order, as well as a state habeas petition, but all motions to call off the execution were denied. Isaacs was executed by lethal injection on May 6, 2003, at the Georgia Diagnostic and Classification State Prison, and pronounced dead at 8:07 pm EST.[17] Isaacs had been on death row almost 30 years and was the longest-serving death row inmate in the United States at the time of his execution.[8]

George Dungee died in 2006, at the age of 68, while still serving his sentence in Georgia State Prison in Reidsville. Although his body was not autopsied, his official cause of death was determined to be acute congestive heart failure and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Dungee had no relatives available to be notified of his death or to claim his body, so he was buried in the prison cemetery, with corrections officials serving as his pallbearers.[18][19]

Billy Isaacs was released from prison in 1993. Afterwards, he relocated to Florida, where he died on May 4, 2009.[15]

As of July 2024, Wayne Coleman remains incarcerated in the Wilcox State Prison; he has repeatedly and unsuccessfully attempted to be released on parole.[15]

InformationOn1977DocumentaryGoesHere

In 1977, Tex Fuller

While conducting research on different figures involved in the murders, a documentary filmmaker conducted an interview with Carl Isaacs, who had already been convicted and was imprisoned on death row. Isaacs made several incriminating statements on film, including that he would have murdered the Alday family again if given the chance, that "[t]he only thing the Aldays ever did that stood out was getting killed by me," and that he indeed raped Mary Alday and shot Jerry, Ned, and Aubrey Alday.[15]

In September 1988, the independent film Murder One was released in Canada and the United States. The film was a biographical crime drama based on the Alday family murders, directed by Graeme Campbell and starring Henry Thomas as Billy Isaacs, who narrated the film's events; James Wilder as Carl Isaacs; Stephen Shellen as Wayne Coleman; and Erroll Slue as George Dungee. The screenplay was written by Tex Fuller, who based his writing off of his 1977 documentary.[20] The film generated controversy for containing several factual errors – one being that Billy Isaacs received a sentence of 100 years' imprisonment, when his sentence was actually 40 years – and for painting the perpetrators, especially Billy Isaacs, in a sympathetic light. One review printed in the Orlando Sentinel recommended In Cold Blood as a superior crime film and suggested Murder One is akin to a "cheap exploitation flick".[6] Theaters in and near southwest Georgia did not show Murder One, both because representatives from the film's distributor, Miramax, felt the film's subject would be "too close to home" for the locals, and because Miramax was afraid the film would offend moviegoers.[21]

In 1983, South Georgia-based reporter Charles Postell, who spent ten years corresponding with Carl Isaacs while Isaacs was on death row, published the book Dead Man Coming about the murders. Postell and his wife would later be accused of helping Isaacs orchestrate his escape from prison, but the charges were ultimately dropped.[22] That same year, Clark Howard published the book Brothers in Blood about the murders, and in 2011, author Thomas Cook published another book about the Alday family murders, titled Blood Echoes.[15][23]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Montgomery, Bill (2024-04-02). "2003: Sounds of grief endure in Alday case; Murderer's execution can't heal hearts". Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Archived from the original on 2024-07-29. Retrieved 2024-07-29.
  2. ^ a b c Nesmith, Jeff (1974-01-21). "What's Left of Life for the Alday Survivors?". The Atlanta Constitution. p. 1. Archived from the original on 2024-08-16. Retrieved 2024-08-16 – via Newspapers.com.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g "Aldays and Isaacs Were from Two Different Worlds (Continued from Page 1A)". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. pp. 12A. Archived from the original on 2024-03-03. Retrieved 2024-03-03 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. ^ a b c d Montgomery, Bill (1986-10-19). "Aldays and Isaacs Were from Two Different Worlds". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. pp. 1A. Archived from the original on 2024-03-03. Retrieved 2024-03-03 – via Newspapers.com.
  5. ^ "Anatomy of a Prison Break (Part 3)". The Atlanta Journal. 1981-10-04. p. 18. Archived from the original on 2024-03-07. Retrieved 2024-03-07.
  6. ^ a b "Film saga of Alday killings leaves a lot to be desired". Tallahassee Democrat. 1988-10-26. p. 19. Archived from the original on 2024-03-03. Retrieved 2024-03-03 – via Newspapers.com.
  7. ^ a b Brian Brown Photography; Vanishing Media (2023-05-17). "Remembering the Aldays on the fiftieth anniversary of that tragic day – May 14, 1973". The Donalsonville News. Archived from the original on 2024-08-02. Retrieved 2024-08-02.
  8. ^ a b c d Crenshaw, Wayne (2019-05-15). "Alday Murders Still Haunt South Georgia Almost 50 Years Later (From Page 1A)". Macon Telegraph. pp. 7A. Archived from the original on 2024-08-16. Retrieved 2024-08-16 – via Newspapers.com.
  9. ^ a b c d e Frazier, Joseph B. (1988-04-10). "Retrials for Murders of Six in Family : 15 Years Later, Rural County Burdened by High Cost of Justice". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 2024-08-02. Retrieved 2024-08-02.
  10. ^ Kovac, Joe. "A Georgia judge's self-penned obituary shows feisty side of beloved jurist". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. ISSN 1539-7459. Archived from the original on 2024-07-31. Retrieved 2024-07-31.
  11. ^ a b "Coleman Spared the Electric Chair (Continued from A1)". The Atlanta Journal. 1988-05-10. pp. 1A. Archived from the original on 2024-03-16. Retrieved 2024-03-16 – via Newspapers.com.
  12. ^ "Coleman Spared the Electric Chair". The Atlanta Journal. 1988-05-10. pp. A1. Archived from the original on 2024-03-16. Retrieved 2024-03-16 – via Newspapers.com.
  13. ^ "Coleman Juror Resents Being Used as Scapegoat". The Macon Telegraph. 1988-05-13. pp. B1. Archived from the original on 2024-03-16. Retrieved 2024-03-16 – via Newspapers.com.
  14. ^ "Dungee Gets 6 Life Sentences in Alday Killings After Pleading Guilty". The Atlanta Constitution. 1988-07-15. pp. 15A. Archived from the original on 2024-03-16. Retrieved 2024-03-16 – via Newspapers.com.
  15. ^ a b c d e f Hughes, Brad (2023-05-10). "The Alday Murders: Southwest Georgia's darkest day marks 50 years". Early County News. Archived from the original on 2024-07-31. Retrieved 2024-07-31.
  16. ^ Torpy, Bill (2005-08-09). "Alday Granddaughter Works to Improve System That Failed". The Atlanta Journal Constitution. pp. B1. Archived from the original on 2024-08-16. Retrieved 2024-08-16 – via Newspapers.com.
  17. ^ "Attorney General Baker Announces Execution of Carl Isaacs, Georgia's Longest Serving Death Row Inmate | Office of the Attorney General". Georgia Office of the Attorney General. 2003-05-06. Archived from the original on 2024-07-29. Retrieved 2024-07-29.
  18. ^ Montgomery, Bill (2007-03-19). "Infamous Killer Died Almost Forgotten". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. pp. B1. Archived from the original on 2024-03-03. Retrieved 2024-03-03 – via Newspapers.com.
  19. ^ Montgomery, Bill (2007-03-19). "Dungee: Killer Dodged Death Penalty Because of His Mental Retardation (Continued from Page B1)". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. pp. B10. Archived from the original on 2024-03-03. Retrieved 2024-03-03 – via Newspapers.com.
  20. ^ Morrison, Bill (16 Feb 1978). "Kinstonian honored for broadcasting excellence". The News & Observer. Raleigh, North Carolina. p. 31. Archived from the original on 2024-03-03. Retrieved 2024-03-03 – via Newspapers.com.
  21. ^ "TOO CLOSE TO HOME". The Orlando Sentinel. 1988-10-16. p. A-20. Archived from the original on 2024-03-03. Retrieved 2024-03-03.
  22. ^ "Charles Postell Papers". University of Georgia Special Collections Libraries. 2003. Archived from the original on 2024-08-02. Retrieved 2024-08-02.
  23. ^ Mason, Olivia (2019-02-28). "The Story of the Alday Murders is a Horror Film Come to Life". The Lineup. Archived from the original on 2024-07-31. Retrieved 2024-07-31.