Thursday, April 2, 2009

Hit-and-run victim had complicated, tragic life




By Rhiannon Meyers
The Daily News
Published April 2, 2009

LEAGUE CITY — You might expect Maurice Devron Jones’ life to have been as simple as his death was tragic.

At 34, he worked the night shift at a McDonald’s restaurant. He walked to and from work and spent nights watching late movies on a sheet-covered couch at his mother’s house.

But as the story of his death at the hands of a hit-and-run driver draws national attention, the story of his life reveals a complicated past.

Accused of Murder

As police continue to search for the person who left Jones dead in a roadside ditch and a hastily written note of apology beside his body, his mother fields phone calls, some from strangers as far away as California, offering condolences in the death of a son whose life was a series of tragedies and challenges.

Those challenges included the 11-1/2 months he spent jailed on charges he murdered his Dickinson roommate — he was later acquitted — and the loss of the relationship with his 11-year-old daughter, Jada, whom he hadn’t seen in four years, his mother, Roberta Jones, said.

Before he died, Maurice had been trying to convince Jada’s mother to let him see Jada, Roberta said.

“I had 34 years with Maurice, but for his daughter — she won’t have that,” she said.

Aside from the note, which police speculate could have been written by a woman with a family, investigators have found few clues left behind by the driver.

Nothing came of interviews with employees of auto body shops, glass repair shops and carwashes, said Sgt. David Hausam of the League City Police Department. Investigators, so far, have little to go on to figure out who killed Maurice Jones.

Growing Up

Born at The University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston on April 23, 1974, Maurice spent most of his life in the League City area.

Roberta was a single mother who worked constantly to support Maurice and his younger sister, Jamie. Although Maurice’s father was a part of his life, they were never close, Roberta said.

Maurice and Jamie, on the other hand, were as close as siblings can be, and the two frequently wreaked havoc on their mother’s house.

“You know how women like to collect things like china?” she asked. “I never could have any china in that house.”

Teachers always told Roberta that Maurice was a sweet child, she said.

He loved history classes. He religiously watched National Geographic shows and collected the magazines, she said.

As he grew older, Maurice became a ladies’ man. No matter how many times his mother told him, “No phone calls after 10 p.m.,” the phone would still ring at 2 a.m. and there would always be a female voice on the other end, she said.

Toward the end of high school, Maurice met Heather Gilmore, then a 16-year-old single mother living in the same apartment complex.

Despite their off-and-on relationship that spanned 18 years, Maurice always remained a father figure to her son, Gilmore said.

When Maurice graduated in 1993 from Clear Creek High School, Roberta wanted him to go to college, she said.

He was so good with numbers and math, she knew he was destined to be an engineer, she said. But, Maurice had other ideas. Instead of college, Maurice took a job with an electrician in Clear Lake.

‘It Broke My Heart’

During one of his off periods with Gilmore, Maurice moved in with Michelle Stapp of Dickinson.

On Feb. 22, 2003, Stapp was found dead inside the house with a power cord around her neck. Police named Maurice as a suspect.

Two years later, police arrested Maurice in Killeen, where he was living with his sister, and brought him back to Galveston County. He sat in jail for more than 11 months because no one could afford to bail him out.

Roberta was one of the first people Maurice called from jail, she said.

“I said, ‘Maurice, did you do it?’ And he said, ‘Mama, I swear — I swear to God — I didn’t.’”

Police said Maurice confessed to the murder shortly after his arrest but the tape of that confession was left out of the trial because of a dispute about whether he had waived his right to an attorney before giving a statement.

Roberta said police and a court-appointed attorney tried to convince Maurice to confess but he maintained his innocence.

“It broke my heart to see him sit there and cry,” she said.

When he was acquitted of murder charges in March 2006, Maurice told The Daily News he owed his freedom to God.

“I started to pray,” he said. “I read my Bible, and I started to go to the (county jail’s) law library. Once I learned what all my rights were and really understood how it all worked, it changed everything for me.’”

Though he was acquitted, Jada’s mother refused to let Maurice see Jada, Roberta said.

It’s always bothered the man who loves children he couldn’t have a relationship with his own daughter, Gilmore said.

READ THE FULLL STORY HERE.


Galveston Daily News Comments Thread

10 comments:

  1. OH PLEASE! Quit trying to make this murderer sound like a NICE man! HE KILLED MY STEPMOM THEN WAS LET OFF BECAUSE DICKINSON PLEASE IS A JOKE!

    He was killed because of KARMA and it will bite you in the butt.
    This was Gods way of dealing with it.
    His "dickinson" roommate was a wonderful person and she would help anyone in need, the fact that he STRANGLED her just goes to show that hes a coward.

    Enough said. You Steve, I'm guessing Steven is your full name, Douglass, are ridiculous.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You are a freaking lying disgusting human melissa and may KARMA COME FULL CIRCLE TO YOU AND YOURS. HE WAS ACQUITTED FOR HER MURDER MEANING HE DID NOT DO IT. THAT MAN WAS AS GOOD AS THEY COME NOW DAYS. YOU ARE A HATEFUL PIECE OF PIG TRASH

      Delete
    2. Let it also be known that your step mother as you say she was....WAS WELL KNOWN IN GALVESTON COUNTY FOR DRUG ADDICTION AND ABUSE SINCE YOU WANT TO ACT LIKE SHE DID NO WRONG

      Delete
  2. I never said he was a nice man. The story came from the Galveston Daily News. Address all comments to their writer.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Note from the editor of this blog: Steve Douglass is one of the authors tasked with posting current news to this blog - and this story qualifies because it is of extreme interest to the League City community, not to mention it has garnered national attention as well.

    I think this is a case of killing the messenger, Mellisa.

    Steve did not write this story - the author is listed at the head of the story and the source is the Galveston Daily News.

    Readers should be sure to click on the enclosed link so you can read the entire story on the Galveston Daily News website.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Definition of tragic: Having the elements of tragedy; involving death, grief, or destruction:

    With no doubt the life and death of Maurice Devron Jones embodied that word. I think Mellissa mistakenly thinks the article is sympathetic towards Jones, which it is not. Its' clear led a violent and sad life and it ended the same way. That any human should lad a life like that is a tragedy.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Yeah - don't bash the poster - bash the writer at the Galveston News. You owe Mr. Douglas an apology. Would you beat up the paper boy who delivered this newspaoer?

    Sympathies to both families.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I think we have our suspect Dear Watson!

    It's clear from the comments posted on the Galveston Daily news site who "Melissa" is.

    http://galvestondailynews.com/forums.lasso?epa=195d08dbba83dd4f3f9c45b526ad0727&esi=8403dc98bdc382cc

    ReplyDelete
  7. Steve, the way she mentions your name in the comment, to me sounds like a veiled threat. I wouldn't go walking in League C anytime after dark if I were you.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Ironic isn't it? He was accused of a murder in Dickinson Texas and he died on Dickinson Road.

    ReplyDelete

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