WILLIAM JUSTIN CHURCHWELL , WILLIAM J CHURCHWELL , WILLIAM1 CHRUCHWELL , WILLIAM JUSTIN CHURCHWELL
Davidson County · Booked Mar 1, 2022
Personal Information
WILLIAM CHURCHWELL was booked in Davidson County on Mar 1, 2022 on 4 felonies, including Aggravated Robbery and 3 other charges.
Charges (4)
Aggravated Robbery
Original: ROBBERY, AGGRAVATED, WEAPON OR OBJECT (Felony)
Aggravated robbery is robbery (taking property by force or fear) committed while carrying a deadly weapon, displaying an object that looks like a deadly weapon, or seriously injuring the victim. This enhanced version of robbery is charged when the robber uses or displays a gun, knife, or other weapon, or causes serious physical injury. Conviction carries 8 to 30 years in prison and fines up to $25,000.
Penalty: Class B felony; 8-30 years; fine up to $25,000
Second Degree Murder
Original: HOMICIDE, CRIMINAL (Felony)
Second-degree murder is intentionally killing another person, or killing someone through unlawful distribution of Schedule I or Schedule II drugs (or fentanyl/carfentanil) when the drug directly causes the death. Punishment ranges from 15 to 60 years in prison and up to $50,000 in fines, with enhanced sentences if the victim is a minor or if the defendant committed multiple acts of domestic abuse against the same victim showing a pattern of conduct likely to cause death.
Penalty: Class A felony; 15-60 years; fine up to $50,000
Aggravated Robbery
Original: ROBBERY, AGGRAVATED, WEAPON OR OBJECT (Felony)
Aggravated robbery is robbery (taking property by force or fear) committed while carrying a deadly weapon, displaying an object that looks like a deadly weapon, or seriously injuring the victim. This enhanced version of robbery is charged when the robber uses or displays a gun, knife, or other weapon, or causes serious physical injury. Conviction carries 8 to 30 years in prison and fines up to $25,000.
Penalty: Class B felony; 8-30 years; fine up to $25,000
First Degree Murder
Original: MURDER, 1ST DEGREE, PREMEDITATED/INTENTIONAL (Felony)
First degree murder occurs in five situations: (1) a premeditated and intentional killing; (2) a killing during the commission of certain dangerous felonies like robbery, burglary, kidnapping, or child abuse; (3) a killing caused by throwing or discharging a bomb or destructive device; (4) a killing during an act of terrorism; or (5) a killing during rape or aggravated rape. A conviction results in death, life without parole, or life imprisonment—except for those under 18 at the time of the offense, who cannot receive the death penalty.
Penalty: Violation
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