Pubdate: Tue, 04 Mar 2003
Source: Lexington Herald-Leader (KY)
Copyright: 2003 Lexington Herald-Leader
Contact:  http://www.kentucky.com/mld/heraldleader/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/240
Author: Bill Estep, South-Central Kentucky Bureau

PULASKI SHERIFF'S KILLER GETS LIFE IN PRISON

SOMERSET - The man who murdered Pulaski County Sheriff Sam Catron 
apologized yesterday before going to prison for at least 25 years.

Later, Danny S. Shelley's defense attorney said Shelley was hooked on drugs 
and was manipulated into pulling the trigger by two other men, one who was 
supplying him painkillers and the other who was running for sheriff against 
Catron. Both were charged along with Shelley.

In a short hearing yesterday, Circuit Judge Paul Braden sentenced Shelley, 
31, to life in prison without the possibility of parole for at least 25 
years. When the judge asked Shelley whether he wanted to say anything, he 
offered a brief apology for one of the most stunning crimes in the area's 
history.

"I'd like to say," Shelley started, then turned to face Catron's family in 
the courtroom, "I'm terribly sorry for what has happened, for what I've done."

Sheriff Todd Wood and Chief Deputy Larry Wesley took Shelley to a state 
prison classification center after the hearing, according to Wood's office.

Several friends and family members of the slain sheriff, including his 
87-year-old mother, Jennie Rachel, were in the courtroom. They later said 
Shelley's apology seemed sincere.

"It's nice to know there's some admittance of guilt, and some sorrow," said 
Catron's sister Nancy Catron-Hruneni. "The reality is I'd still rather have 
my brother back."

Shelley pleaded guilty last month to avoid the death penalty. He is to 
testify against the two men charged with helping plot the crime, Jeff 
Morris, 35, and Kenneth White, 55, both of Pulaski County. They could face 
the death penalty if convicted.

Shelley was a regular in softball leagues around Pulaski County for years 
and was nicknamed "Pup" because he got along with everyone. But by April 
2001, he was addicted to prescription pain drugs because of problems with 
his knees, and White was supplying his habit, said Mark Stanziano, 
Shelley's attorney.

White, who once lived in Perry County, has a history of arrests on drug and 
robbery charges. He was also helping Morris in his bid to unseat Catron in 
the Republican primary last year as Catron sought a fifth term.

Stanziano said Shelley refused an offer of money to kill Catron, but White 
and Morris kept the psychological pressure on him. For instance, Stanziano 
said he understood White reported Shelley to the U.S. Drug Enforcement 
Administration, then apparently used his influence with the DEA to cool the 
investigation of Shelley.

A number of factors went into Shelley's pulling the trigger, Stanziano 
said: his knowledge or suspicion that he faced arrest, his drug problem, 
and emotional appeals by White and Morris as they used the twisted logic of 
the drug world to try to convince him that a pre-emptive strike against 
Catron was the right thing to do.

"If you've got a guy on drugs, it's easier to get him to believe these 
kinds of crazy things," Stanziano said. "He was preyed upon by the other two."

White's real goal was "creating a (drug) pipeline into the area," Stanziano 
said.

Attorneys for White and Morris could not be reached last night to respond 
to Stanziano's comments.

Earlier, however, Corbin attorney David Hoskins, who represents White, said 
Shelley has reason to embroider his comments about White in order to make 
his information more valuable.

Yesterday, Braden set a Sept. 2 trial date for Morris and White, who have 
denied involvement in Catron's murder.

The slain sheriff's brother Lewis Catron said the family signed off on the 
plea agreement with Shelley because it would help the case against Morris 
and White.

Hoskins said he anticipates filing motions to separate the trial for the 
two men. If Braden grants the motion, it could mean only one of the men 
would be tried in September.

Morris nearly pleaded guilty last year to avoid the death penalty, but he 
backed out at the last minute. Morris and White now maintain their innocence.

Morris was once a deputy under Catron before being forced out in 2001 over 
a disciplinary problem.

Police officers and prosecutors suspect drugs and politics motivated 
scheming by the three to eliminate Catron, a popular incumbent: Morris so 
he could be sheriff, and White so he would have a friend in the office.

For his part, Shelley said he had been promised a job if Morris won, 
Kentucky State Police Detective Todd Dalton has said.

Stanziano said it's doubtful Shelley would have gotten a deputy's job. He 
said there was some talk that Shelley might be in charge of the evidence 
room, which would have given him access to destroy evidence if necessary.

Shelley, who had received training in the Marine Corps, hid on a wooded 
hillside and killed Catron with a single rifle shot to the head from about 
80 yards last April 13 as the 48-year-old sheriff left a rural fire 
department fish fry where he had been campaigning.

Spectators saw a man speed away on a motorcycle. Police found Shelley and 
his rifle within minutes after he wrecked the bike, which was registered to 
Morris, a few miles from the shooting.

Stanziano said that since Shelley has gotten off drugs, he can't believe he 
did something to cause so much pain to the Catron family and his own.

However, Shelley is in good sprits even though he faces at least 25 years 
in prison, Stanziano said. "What he said to me today was, 'I've almost got 
one down."'
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