Home >

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 8, 2020

For media inquiries only, contact:
Mike Lewis (334) 353-2199
Joy Patterson (334) 242-7491

Attorney General Steve Marshall Announces Court of Criminal Appeals Upholds
Lowndes County Capital Murder Conviction

(MONTGOMERY) – Attorney General Steve Marshall announced that the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals has affirmed the conviction of Deandra Marquis Lee for six counts of capital murder during a robbery. Lee, 24, of Montgomery, was convicted in Lowndes County Circuit Court in October 2018, for the 2012 murders of nine-year-old twins Jordan and Taylor Dejerinett, and their 73-year-old caregiver, Jack Mac Girdner.

The evidence at trial revealed that on June 3, 2012, Terrye Moorer dropped off her nine-year-old twins, Jordan and Taylor Dejerinett, with Girdner, their caregiver who was also Moorer’s friend from church. That night, when Moorer drove to Girdner’s residence to pick up her children, it was dark and no one was home. Moorer filed a police report and on June 5, 2012, the bodies of Girdner and the two children were found on a dirt road off of Alabama Highway 21 in Lowndes County.

Police developed Lee as a suspect based upon reports that he was seen driving Girdner’s white Mercedes on the day of the murders and the last call made to Girdner’s phone was from a number belonging to Lee’s mother. Joe Hamilton, Lee’s cousin, testified that on June 3, Lee took Hamilton home in a white Mercedes that had a skateboard and a bag in the back. Moorer testified that her children had similar items with them when she left them with Girdner. Lee’s
fingerprints were also found inside Girdner’s vehicle. Furthermore, Lee told several people that he murdered Girdner, but not the children. Finally, Curtis Robinson, who was incarcerated with Lee in Autauga County, testified that Lee “went there to commit burglary and it turned to something else.” He added that Lee told him he shot and killed Girdner and the two children.

Lowndes County District Attorney Charlotte Tesmer’s office prosecuted this case and obtained a guilty verdict. Lee was sentenced to life imprisonment without parole. Lee subsequently sought to have his conviction reversed on appeal.

The Attorney General’s Criminal Appeals Division handled the case during the appeals process, arguing for the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals to affirm Lee’s convictions. The Court did so in a decision issued Friday, September 4, 2020. Attorney General Marshall commended Assistant Attorney General John Davis for his successful work on this case and thanked the State Bureau of Investigation and District Attorney Charlotte Tesmer and her staff for their valuable assistance in defending the capital murder conviction.

–30–