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James Baldwin was born on 2 August, 1924 in Harlem, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA, is a Writer, Miscellaneous. Discover James Baldwin's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of James Baldwin networth?

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 2 August.
He is a member of famous Writer with the age 63 years old group.

At 63 years old, James Baldwin height not available right now. We will update James Baldwin's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2020-2021. So, how much is James Baldwin worth at the age of 63 years old? James Baldwin’s income source is mostly from being a successful Writer. He is from USA. We have estimated James Baldwin's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.
He was a writer, known for I Am Not Your Negro (2016), If Beale Street Could Talk (2018) and American Playhouse (1980).
Pictured on a 37¢ USA commemorative postage stamp in the Literary Arts series, issued 23 June 2004.
Biography in: "The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives". Volume Two, 1986-1990, pages 59-61. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1999.
Was an acquaintance of Medgar Evers , Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, and Marlon Brando. He attended King's March on Washington in 1963.
Graduated from DeWitt Clinton High School in New York [1941]
James Baldwin was born on August 2, 1924 in Harlem, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA.
Discover today's celebrity birthdays and explore famous people who share your birthday. View popular celebrities life details, birth signs and real ages.
Harlem, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA
Saint-Paul-de-Vence, Alpes-Maritimes, France



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In March 2020, NBC’s Dateline is going to cover the case of a former South Carolina Police Officer murdering his wife. The episode premiered in March of 2020.
The episode will explore the homicide, the arduous investigation following the murder, murder cover-up, and the murder trial in 2019. This includes the interview with Judy Baldwin’s family, Chester County Coroner Terry Tinker, and Prosecutor Candice Bailey.
Delve into this wiki-style article to uncover the details on what went down in 2016.
James Baldwin or ‘Jamie’ is a South-Carolina native who also was a former police officer and a dispatcher.
In 2016, just a few days before Christmas, he killed his wife Judy Orr Baldwin and orchestrated the whole thing to make it look like an accident.
Initially, the police officers believed it to be true. But As the friends and families were later informed, they pressed the investigative officer to further investigate the case as a homicide.
James Baldwin and Judy Baldwin met each other and tied the knot, eight months after they met, in 2012. Judy was known to be “Giddy” with Baldwin.
Judy Orr Baldwin, a mother of two, was previously married to her departed husband Todd, who had died in a motorcycle accident.
The trial regarding the murder started in 2018.
South Carolina court Records showed he was arrested for arson and insurance fraud. But he was freed on bond for the same.
James Baldwin murdered his wife, Judy Orr Baldwin, beating her up to death.
But, he tried really hard to make it look like an accident. He plotted the incident and a story regarding that.
The testament was, he and his wife were going on a dark, rural road driving a jeep in Chester County, South Carolina. On 14 December 2016, She was staged as ejected from the vehicle while steering the vehicle to avoid a crash in Old Richburg Road. The jeep hit the embankment resulting in the ejecting of his wife from the vehicle.
He rushed her to the emergency room too and explained the same to the doctors.
But during the autopsy of Judy’s body, the injuries found on her body were not from the accident. The suspicious relative had found blood on a mantlepiece inside the house.
To which, James clarified it to be from the accident she had while decorating for Christmas.
Judy had three injuries inflicted on her head. There was a 9-inch (229-millimeter) skull fracture.
The inconsistency of the story with the incident had the investigators further delve into the details while James Baldwin was maintaining his innocence.
The coroner in Chester County concluded that the death of Judy Baldwin was caused by “blunt force trauma”.
Chester County Sheriff’s Office deputies arrested James Baldwin after a grand jury returned the indictment bill against James.
The final trial started on 28 October 2019, almost 4 years after Judy’s death, at the Lancaster County Courthouse. The 2-hour trial concluded with a guilty verdict and convicting James for the murder of his wife.
Jude Dan Hall of York County sentence James to life in prison.
James was incarcerated starting on 14 August 2018. His exact location has not been disclosed as of penning this article but he was within the vicinity of the South Carolina Department of Corrections.
Inmate record of James Baldwin (Pic: Heavy.com)
The prison record of James unfolds that, he had never made prison escape attempts. No disciplinary actions had to be taken during the time in prison.
From 10 March 2020, he has started the job of “WardKeeper Assistant.” The state DOC said to Fox Carolina, James will be assisting in diurnal operations of a housing unit.
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You are here: Home / News / Baldwin gets life for murder of wife
November 7, 2019 By Brian Garner, Chester News and Reporter Leave a Comment
Filed Under: News Tagged With: James Baldwin
Town of Blythewood and Fairfield County Newspaper
CHESTER _ On the seventh and final day of the murder trial
of James Baldwin, by unanimous vote a Lancaster County jury found him guilty of
killing his wife, Judy in 2016.
Closing arguments from both the prosecution and the defense
in the seventh day of the trial had to do with what the evidence presented in
the earlier days of the trial indicated.
Sixth Circuit Deputy Solicitor Candice Lively told the jury,
“the devil is in the details,” and proceeded to lay out the state’s case based
on those details.
“But for those details and the defendant manipulating every
scene and altering every scenario, but for that, he probably could have gotten
away with it,” Lively said.
Lively opened her closing argument by stating that the
accused “Lost control of his life and his ability to do the things that he
wanted to do: have a relationship with Teri King, have his bike club go
wherever he wanted. He attacked and killed Judy Baldwin (on Dec. 14, 2016) because
she was confronting him about his affair with Teri King,” Lively said.
Lively said the state’s case was that the evidence indicated
that Baldwin beat his wife to death and at first staged the accident in the
home to make it look like she fell against a metal stocking holder on a mantle
while on a ladder decorating a Christmas tree. When he saw the extent of her
injuries, his 22 years’ experience as a law enforcement officer and 911
dispatcher told him that the severity of her injuries couldn’t be explained by
a simple fall, so he staged an automobile accident on Old Richburg Road where
he claimed the Jeep he was taking her to the hospital in went down an
embankment and crashed into a tree, during which time Judy was thrown from the
vehicle.
She said the fact the Chester County Sheriff’s office in
2016 failed to do their due diligence in investigating the incident “is on
them.” She pointed out that Baldwin was seen in a Facebook post with
then-Sheriff Alex Underwood; Lively later called the investigation by the
Sheriff’s investigators “trash”.
That fact, she told the jury members, “is something you have
to consider as to why things were not done.”
Lively then methodically went over the evidence presented in
the trial from witnesses, including details of incidents leading up to the
alleged murder that showed a deteriorating relationship between Baldwin and his
wife and showed how his life was coming apart: friends leaving the bike club he
enjoyed, that provided recreation and access to Teri King, with whom he was
having an affair, an awkward family Thanksgiving where everyone could “feel the
tension in the air” between Baldwin and Judy.
Lively pointed to Baldwin’s law enforcement and dispatch
experience, pointing out that a dispatcher and first responder would know the
quickest way to get from one place to another in the county they work in, and not
take the longer direction on a dark road that Baldwin took to get Judy Baldwin
to Piedmont Medical Center.
Baldwin, Lively said, “would know the best way to get help
for a person you love to make sure they are not suffering, continuing to bleed
and then ultimately, die.”
Lively then showed an almost minute by minute breakdown of
the timeline the night of the murder, pointing out the four hour gap between
the last time Judy Baldwin was heard from at 7:13 p.m. and when the 911 call
came in at 11:04 p.m.
“The defendant cannot get away from the timeline and the gap
of time when Judy was beaten up until the time he calls 911 at 11:04 p.m.,” she
said.
“The last thing that we know happens where Judy is still
alive is a 7:13 p.m. phone call with her sister. The next thing, we have about
a four-hour gap there where we have no idea what he’s doing. But I will give
you exactly what he was doing.”
She added, “now that you know everything that happened in
this case, from EMS showing up, fire department showing up, SCHP, listen to
what Baldwin says in this 911 call.”
Lively then played the 911 call Baldwin made where he said
they ran off the road on Old Richburg Road and Judy had been thrown out of the
vehicle when the vehicle went down in an embankment.
“She’s not doing anything,” Baldwin said after being
prompted by the 911 operator to check if Judy was breathing.
Lively said, “This man with 22 years of law enforcement
experience, he knows when he tells dispatch that she’s been thrown from the
vehicle, he knows what’s going to happen next. And that is it’s a motor vehicle
collision; Highway Patrol is going to show up. Fire is going to show up. But at
that time until SCHP Sgt. Rikard said (the accident) doesn’t look right, it
doesn’t fit, that’s when he called his supervisor and says ‘call Chester County
investigators.’ And only then did this become something other than a motor
vehicle collision.”
She said this has all happened within a few brief hours when
Judy Baldwin was attacked and killed.
“With everything that’s being said at this point, has
(Baldwin) been able to formulate whether it is going to fit with the facts of
the case? How is he going to make it fit with what the evidence is going to
show, and he knows this,” Lively said.
Lively pointed out that at the hospital the defendant calls
Teri King, but does not call either of Judy’s boys, and when Teri suggests calling
“the Orr boys”, he says no, they’re at work, which attitude Lively charged goes
toward his intent, what his mind was thinking and his malice and uncaring.
Baldwin then tells Dr. Miller at PMC that he has no head
pain and had no loss of consciousness, Lively said.
She then points out Chris Reynolds with Chester County
Sheriff’s Office later gets consent to enter the home while Baldwin a few hours
later is interviewed by the SCHP.
At that point, Baldwin begins controlling the narrative,
Lively says, telling Sgt. Rikard when he woke up (although he told the PMC doctor
earlier there was no loss of consciousness) he was “in the creek” and he had
hit his head.
“He’s already starting to control the narrative. He realizes
‘I need to let them know I don’t know how she got out of that vehicle’ because
none of it is making sense at any point, and he realizes this,” Lively said.
Baldwin reported when he found Judy she was up under the front
of the Jeep. When asked by Sgt. Rikard, Baldwin said the blood got on the front
bumper when he tried to pick Judy up.
The state maintained he placed Judy Baldwin in front of the
vehicle to make it look like an accident.
Lively said Baldwin chose to be on the darkest road in
Chester County because he had time on that dark road to set the scene and get
it right, staging the accident to explain Judy’s severe injury to the head.
“The important detail is he’s changing his story; he’s
changed it in two big ways. ‘Oh, yeah, I did get knocked out so I don’t know
what happened’ and then ‘the blood got on the front of the Jeep because I was
trying to pick her up. He’s starting to try and explain away the evidence,”
Lively said.
Lively went over the SCHP MAIT (Multidisciplinary Accident
Investigation Team) accident investigation. The accident reconstruction shows
there was no event to trigger the “black box” that controls the airbags and
evidence shows the vehicle never went over five miles per hour driving down the
embankment and only went fast enough when swerving off the road initially (when
Baldwin alleges he was run off the road by a truck) to leave tire impressions
instead of tracks), the vehicle never rolled over and there was no way Judy
Baldwin was ejected from the vehicle, Lively said.
Lively contended that when Baldwin got to the bottom of the
creek, he looked over at Judy, knew she was dead, her blood saturating the
seat, he gets her out and places her at the front of the Jeep. But Judy Baldwin
bled out in the Jeep, Lively said.
James Baldwin “placed her in that seat and then he went
inside and set the scene for the first attempt to show an accident…He put her
in that Jeep and let her bleed, goes into the bathroom, washed up, takes off
the bloody clothes that he has on…she could have sat there and bled in that
seat for three or four hours,” Lively said.
So why did Baldwin kill her? It’s all about control, Lively
explained. Baldwin lost control of the life he wanted.
Lively then summarized testimony from many of the
prosecution witnesses, including many first responders, one of which testified
that Judy Baldwin had “raccoon eyes,” which means a person has a traumatic
injury to their head resulting in blood pooling in their eyelids.
Baldwin’s law enforcement experience let him know when Judy
Baldwin’s eyes started to swell shut (after he had beaten her following an
argument) that she had a skull fracture or brain injury: injuries that couldn’t
be explained by a fall from a ladder, so he concocted the auto accident.
The pathologist who testified on the results of the first autopsy
said there looked like two possible sites of impact to Judy Baldwin’s head,
maybe three and the severity of the injuries meant she would have had to fallen
from a significant height to suffer a skull fracture.
The board certified forensic pathologist who conducted the
second autopsy said what the defendant was saying happened didn’t fit the level
of injuries Judy Baldwin suffered from a fall off of a stepladder.
“Look at the evidence,” Lively told the jury. “Look at
what’s reasonable.”
She said Chester County Coroner Terry Tinker “wanted to get
the investigation right” and he met resistance from the Chester County
Sheriff’s Office and said the sheriff should have called in SLED on the
investigation.
Lively charged the sheriff’s investigators “fed” Baldwin information
about the scene and gave him “ways out” to explain things so it sounded like an
accident and this actually helped Baldwin control the narrative of what
happened.
She then went over the testimony of the witnesses, who
imparted such facts as Judy Baldwin didn’t ever climb ladders; a neighbor
testified that Judy was already finished decorating the Christmas tree; Judy’s
nephew Rodney Wright testified he went to the residence on the night Judy died and
the ladder was upright (instead of leaned over on the Christmas tree as is
shown in pictures taken inside the residence hours later) and he said there was
so much blood someone should have called 911; another friend testified that
Baldwin never used old Richburg Road to get to I-77.
The SLED crime scene specialist who did an analysis of the
house testified that blood was found all the way up the wall and high up on the
mantle. Even the expert witness on blood splatter that the defense brought on
said the blood high on the wall and up on the mantel was blood that was being
cast off or flung from “something swung upward after the injury actions
occurred.” The expert witness said he could not rule out that an attack had
taken place.
Finally, Lively showed a comparison of the defendant’s words
during an interview at the hospital on Dec. 15 and the interview with the
Chester County Sheriff’s Office six days later and pointed out the details
Baldwin related did not match in those two interviews.
“James Baldwin killed Judy Baldwin with malice
aforethought,” Lively contended.
In the closing arguments from the defense, attorney Phillip
Jamieson’s main contention was the state’s case “seemed to indicate that my
client was a criminal mastermind or a fool, but can’t be both.” He said the
evidence and the science of the evidence did not support the state’s claim,
saying they relied on “circumstantial evidence, innuendo, half-truths and
character assassinations” to prove their case.
He told the jury the prosecution hoped they would assume a
lot from the witness testimony, but their job was not to assume, but to
determine the facts.
After deliberating for more than three hours, the jury

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