Paul Dennis Reid

Killer

Popular As "The Fast Food Killer" Justin Parks

Birthday November 12, 1957

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Richland Hills, Texas, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2013-11-1, Nashville, Tennessee, U.S. (55 years old)

Nationality United States

#58893 Most Popular

1957

Paul Dennis Reid, Jr. (November 12, 1957 – November 1, 2013 ), known as The Fast Food Killer, was an American serial killer, convicted and sentenced to death for seven murders during three fast-food restaurant robberies in Metropolitan Nashville, Tennessee and Clarksville, Tennessee between the months of February and April 1997.

1983

At the time of the murders, Reid lived with roommate Brian Fozzard at a boarding house, and he was on parole from a 1983 conviction in Texas on charges relating to the aggravated armed robbery of a Houston steakhouse.

1990

He had served seven years of a 20-year sentence, and was paroled in 1990.

Originally from Richland Hills, Texas, a suburb of Fort Worth, Reid went to Nashville to pursue a career as a country music singer.

1997

On the morning of February 16, 1997, Reid entered a Captain D's on Lebanon Road in the Donelson neighborhood of Nashville, Tennessee before opening, under the guise of applying for a job.

Once inside, he forced employee Sarah Jackson, 16, and the manager, Steve Hampton, 25, into the restaurant's cooler.

Reid forced the two to lie face down on the floor and then shot them execution style.

Money, including large amounts of change, was found missing from the cash register.

Reid used the cash from this robbery as a down payment on a car two days later.

On the evening of March 23, 1997 at a McDonald's on Lebanon Road in the Hermitage neighborhood of Nashville (located 3.4 mi northeast of the Captain D's), Reid approached four employees as they exited the store after closing.

At gunpoint, he forced them back into the restaurant.

Reid shot three employees to death execution style in the storeroom: Andrea Brown, 17; Ronald Santiago, 27; and Robert A. Sewell.

Reid attempted to shoot José Antonio Ramirez Gonzalez, but his weapon failed.

Gonzalez took this opportunity to fight back, but was overpowered after being stabbed with a knife that Reid was carrying.

Reid stabbed Gonzalez a total of 17 times and left him for dead.

Gonzalez avoided further attacks by lying completely still and pretending to be dead.

Reid then took $3,000 from the cash registers and fled.

Upon hearing a door shut, and not seeing the attacker anymore, Gonzalez crawled into the next room to a phone and dialed 911.

When the scene was discovered, Gonzalez was taken to a nearby hospital, treated, and ultimately survived.

He eventually testified against Reid.

On the evening of April 23, 1997, Reid went to the door of a Baskin-Robbins on Wilma Rudolph Boulevard in Clarksville, Tennessee after closing and persuaded the employees to let him inside.

Once inside, Reid kidnapped Angela Holmes, 21, and Michelle Mace, 16, and forced the two to Dunbar Cave State Park.

Their bodies were discovered the next day at the park.

Their throats had been slashed.

Reid was convicted on seven counts of first-degree murder across three trials.

Jurors from West and East Tennessee were brought in and sequestered, because a judge determined that the overwhelming media coverage in Nashville would prevent the selection of an unbiased jury from Middle Tennessee.

In the Captain D's murders, Steve Hampton's driver's license and a video rental card were found in the median of Ellington Parkway in East Nashville with Reid's fingerprints on each.

Reid was convicted on two counts of first-degree murder.

In the Baskin-Robbins murders, Reid's car was found to contain forensic evidence from the victims, as well as evidence of a credit card gasoline purchase near the location of the bodies on the night of the murders, placing him at the scene around the time of the crime in an area roughly 40 mi from his home.

Witnesses also placed a vehicle similar to Reid's vehicle in the immediate area at the time of the crime.

Blood evidence from the victims was found on his shoes.

He was found guilty on two counts of first-degree murder.

The Clarksville trial took place in the time between the two Nashville trials.

1999

Reid received seven death sentences for his convictions, the first two coming on April 20, 1999.

2003

Reid's execution was stayed several times in the years following, including an instance in 2003 just hours before the scheduled execution.

Reid eventually waived his right to an appeal.

Members of his family, along with anti-death penalty activists, claimed he was mentally handicapped and unable to make such a decision, and filed multiple motions (both successful and unsuccessful) to stay his execution.

However, the Tennessee Supreme Court upheld all of Reid's sentences.

Reid's case received national attention among anti-death penalty activists.

Reid resided at Tennessee's Morgan County Correctional Complex (Inmate #303893).