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Jury recommends death penalty in case of St. Johns Co. double murder

A St. Johns County jury chose unanimously the death penalty in the case of James Colley, Jr.

Last week, the same jury spent two hours deliberating before returning a verdict of guilty on all counts, including two counts of 1st-degree premeditated murder of Amanda Colley and Lindy Dobbins.

Jury finds James Colley Jr. guilty on all counts in double-murder case, now faces the death penalty

The sentence comes after the defense team spent two days asking jurors to consider the prescription and illicit drugs in Colley's system, the domestic violence he witnessed as a child, and his caring family values.

In closing arguments, defense attorney Garry Wood asked the jurors have mercy on the 38-year-old defendant.

Defense attorney reminds jurors in #ColleyTrial - "Life without the possibility of parole is a lawful sentence which you are allowed to impose." "We're not talking about how he will live, we're really talking about under what circumstances he will die." #JamesColleyTrial @FCN2go pic.twitter.com/qkq5Wnnl33

— Julia Jenaé (@JuliaJenaeFCN) July 25, 2018

"This is a human being we're talking about," Wood said. "According to the state's own testimony, Mr. Colley was upset, he was enraged. He's an impulsive person, but that doesn't aggravate this into a case where the death penalty is warranted."

Assistant prosecutor Mark Johnson replayed a frantic 911 call made by Amanda Colley during the shootingsand detailed the gunshot wounds during the state's closing arguments. Johnson told jurors the murders deserved a punishment of death because of aggravating factors that made the crime "atrocious and heinous."

Prosecutor shows morgue shots of Amanda Colley's body and tells jury she was shot 9xs by #JamesColley "The fatal shot was to her spinal cord one of the last. All the other gunshot wounds were not immediately lethal. She was alive and trying to fight back." @FCN2go #ColleyTrial

— Julia Jenaé (@JuliaJenaeFCN) July 25, 2018

"Please stop. Please put it down." Frantic 911 call is played by prosecutor during #ClosingArguments. State says this shows the murders were especially heinous, atrocious or cruel. #ColleyTrial #JamesColleyTrial @FCN2go pic.twitter.com/bkuAJxRn0A

— Julia Jenaé (@JuliaJenaeFCN) July 25, 2018

"There was no justification for what happened," Johnson said. "The choices he made [were] for his own selfish desires because he couldn’t let go, because he was losing control and this was the only way he could regain control."

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