A federal inmate formerly residing in Pennsylvania pleaded
guilty today to murder, carjacking and kidnapping, announced Assistant Attorney
General Brian A. Benczkowski of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division and
U.S. Attorney Christina Nolan for the District of Vermont.
Donald Fell, 38, formerly of Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania,
pleaded guilty to a federal indictment arising from the Nov. 27, 2000
kidnapping, carjacking and murder of 53-year old Teresca King.
Fell pleaded guilty to all four charges pending against him,
including carjacking with death resulting, kidnapping with death resulting,
brandishing a firearm in furtherance of a crime of violence and transportation
of a firearm by a fugitive from justice.
Chief U.S. District Court Judge Geoffrey W. Crawford accepted Fell’s
guilty plea in U.S. District Court in Rutland, Vermont. Immediately after the guilty plea, Judge
Crawford sentenced Fell to serve life in prison without the possibility of
release. Fell also agreed to waive
direct appeal.
During the plea, Fell admitted to murdering Rutland man
Charles Conway while Fell’s friend and now deceased co-defendant Robert Lee
murdered Fell’s mother Debra Fell, 46, in an apartment on Robbins Street in
Rutland. The two men then carjacked and
kidnapped Teresca King in Rutland and drove into New York State, where they
killed Mrs. King. Lee and Fell were
natives of Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, who came to Vermont in late 2000.
According to the plea
agreement, on the evening of Nov. 26, 2000, defendant Donald R. Fell, Robert
Lee, Debra Fell, and Charles Conway were socializing in the apartment of Debra
Fell on Robbins Street in Rutland. In
the early morning hours of Nov. 27, 2000, Fell attacked Charles Conway with a
knife and killed him. Robert Lee
attacked Debra Fell with another knife, killing her.
After killing Conway and Debra Fell, Fell and Lee walked
together to the Price Chopper grocery store in Rutland, carrying an unloaded
Mossberg 12-gauge shotgun, looking for a car in which to leave Vermont. At approximately 3:30 a.m., Fell and Robert
Lee confronted Teresca King when she arrived in her Vermont plated Plymouth
Neon automobile at the Price Chopper to work her early morning shift. At shotgun point, Fell and Lee stole King’s
car keys and forced her into the backseat of her car. The two men then took turns driving the car
west out of Vermont into New York State, and then south for several hours. Shortly after dawn on Nov. 27, 2000, the men
parked King’s car at the side of the road in rural Dover Plains, New York, and
took King into the woods. In a spot not
visible from the road, Fell and Lee battered King to death, kicking her in the
head and striking her face with a rock as she lay on her back. Leaving King’s body in the woods, Fell and
Lee continued driving south in her car.
The two men stopped in their hometown of Wilkes-Barre for a
night. In Wilkes-Barre, they stole a
pair of Pennsylvania license plates from another Plymouth Neon and put them on
King’s car, and discarded King’s Vermont plates. Continuing southwest, the two men paused to
refuel in Clarksville, Arkansas, where a local law enforcement officer stopped
the Plymouth Neon due to the stolen plates.
Fell and Lee were arrested, and the Mossberg 12-gauge shotgun was
seized.
The United States extends its sympathy and gratitude to Mrs.
King’s family, who closely followed the case since 2000, attending all court
hearings and displaying remarkable patience with the extraordinary delays. The United States also extends its sympathy
to the family members of Charles Conway.
In his plea today, Fell acknowledged that he murdered Mr. Conway while
Fell’s deceased co-defendant, Robert Lee, was murdering Fell’s mother, Debra
Fell. By encompassing Fell’s role in
these murders in the plea, the loss of the lives of Mr. Conway and Mrs. Fell
are recognized.
The investigation was conducted by the FBI, the Rutland
Police Department, the Vermont State Police, the New York State Police and the
Clarksville, Arkansas Police Department.
The U.S. Marshal’s Service also worked hard on the case over the years.
The case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Bill
Darrow and Jon Ophardt, along with Trial Attorney Sonia Jimenez of the Criminal
Division’s Capital Case Section of the Department of Justice.
U.S. Attorney Christina Nolan commended U.S. Attorney’s
Office prosecutors and staff for their commitment and tremendous work on this
case for more than 17 years. She noted
that Assistant U.S. Attorney Darrow has prosecuted this case with distinction
and remarkable dedication over its entire lifespan, and she thanked the
Department’s Capital Case Section and its prosecutors for their support and
partnership. She acknowledged the
tremendous toll that nearly 18 years of litigation has taken on the victims’
families and stated that, in supporting the plea agreement, the United States
hoped to bring that protracted ligation to resolution and secure finality for
the victims, the public, law enforcement, and all other parties involved.
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