Gates County murder suspects admit guilt
Published 6:14 pm Friday, July 17, 2020
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...
|
GATESVILLE – The final two suspects in a five-year-old murder case accepted their guilt here Monday.
During a session of Gates County Superior Court, Matthew Ray Hundley and Gerald Waverly Bass each pled guilty to second degree murder in the June 13, 2015 homicide of Gates County resident Calvin Bell Jr.
After the guilty pleas were entered, Superior Court Judge J.C. Cole sentenced Hundley to a minimum of 166 months in prison (a maximum term of 212 months). Bass was given a prison term of 180/228 months (minimum/maximum).
In a weeklong jury trial earlier this year, Aaron Paul Holland was found guilty of first degree murder (with malice) in the shooting death of Bell. Judge Cole sentenced Holland to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
In Holland’s trial, Hundley and Bass testified for the prosecution.
Gates County Sheriff Ray Campbell said the testimony of Bass at the January trial revealed the motive for the murder.
“Apparently it was over retaliation for a stolen shipment of drugs,” Campbell said.
Bell, who resided on NC 37 near its intersection with NC 32 in the Hobbsville area of Gates County, was found deceased in a field adjacent to his home. He died of a gunshot wound.
Based on the initial investigation, which included the SBI who sent a crime scene technician to Bell’s residence, it is believed the incident began with the suspects entering Bell’s home, which was found ransacked when deputies arrived on the scene. It is believed that Bell arrived at his residence on June 13, 2015 and discovered the suspects inside his home.
The ensuing investigation revealed that shots were fired from two different weapons, to include a shotgun, inside the residence. Shell casings from a handgun were also discovered outside the home.
Evidence showed that Bell ran out the back door of his home, turned right, and ran about 50 yards before collapsing in a farm field adjacent to his home.
A witness at that time noticed a crew cab truck leaving Bell’s residence at a high rate of speed, northbound on NC 37, following the shooting. A truck matching that description was recovered in Portsmouth a day or two after the shooting and seized as evidence. Holland was identified as a suspect at that point.
Holland was arrested by Portsmouth Police in early October of 2015. At that time he was also the target of DEA and ATF agents on federal charges unrelated to the murder.