Whiteside County jury deliberating Sheley case

Prosecution, defense give closing arguments

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Nicholas T. Sheley listens as attorneys discuss an upcoming witness Friday at the Whiteside County Courthouse in Morrison. Sheley is charged with the death of Russell Reed. (Philip Marruffo/pmarruffo@saukvalley.com)
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MORRISON – Nicholas T. Sheley's murder trial has been handed over to the jury to begin deliberations.

After more than 2 hours of closing arguments from both sides this morning, the jury got the case at 12:39 p.m.

Sheley, 33, is charged with eight counts of first-degree murder and one count each of home invasion and residential burglary in the death of Russell Reed, 93, of rural Sterling.

In his closing arguments, Assistant Attorney General Michael Atterberry outlined the "overwhelming" evidence he says proves that Sheley killed Reed in his Blue Goose Road home.

On June 23, 2008, Sheley had a "one track mind" to get crack cocaine, Atterberry said.

That led him to "brutally and savagely" kill Reed in his kitchen sometime around dusk and steal his checkbook and wallet, he said.

Atterberry said the evidence also shows that Sheley dragged Reed's bloody body through the house, out to the garage, and into the trunk of his own 2003 Buick Century.

The Buick, with Reed's body in the trunk, was found 3 days later backed all the way into the driveway of a home owned by Jenna Henson, his brother's former girlfriend.

Witnesses testified last week that Sheley was driving the Buick that night and had blood on his shorts and T-shirt.

When asked by a Sterling couple about the blood, Sheley joked, that "I just got done killing somebody," then laughed and said he had been gutting fish.

“We all know that the blood didn't come from gutting fish,” Atterberry said. “He got all that blood on him when he beat poor Mr. Reed to death.”

A cigarette butt with Sheley's DNA was found in Reed's kitchen, and his green 1996 Cadillac was found hidden behind a corn crib on Reed's property.

A desperate Sheley stole a white Lincoln Continental on June 26 – the day Reed was found – and led Dixon and Lee County police on a high-speed chase that ended in a field near Harmon.

When deputies approached the car, Sheley was gone.

Defense attorney Jeremy Karlin attacked the DNA and fingerprint evidence in the case, saying that there was no scientific evidence to back up its validity.

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