In October 1998, Gloria and Haynes were arrested on unrelated drug charges. After being questioned, police learned of more details surrounding the murders. On December 21, Higgs and Haynes were indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of first degree murder, kidnapping resulting in death, and use of a firearm during a crime of violence. Higgs was already in custody at the time, serving his 17-year trafficking sentence. The government announced they would seek death sentences for both Higgs and Haynes. After this revelation, Higgs and Haynes were tried separately in 2000. Gloria, who was a suspect in the July 18, 1998, murder of Martrelle Creighton, whom witnesses said he stabbed to death during a fight in Baltimore, cut a deal with the federal government. In exchange for not being charged with Creighton's murder and pleading guilty to lesser charges of being an
accessory-after-the-fact to the murders, he agreed to testify against Higgs and Haynes. Two of Gloria's accomplices in the murder pleaded guilty to second degree assault and were sentenced to time served, while a third accomplice pleaded guilty to second degree murder and was sentenced to 20 years in prison with all but five years suspended. Goria's testimony was the main piece of evidence presented during Higgs' trial. He was sentenced to seven years in prison.
Federal prosecution's argument The prosecution's version of events was that Higgs got into a heated argument with Tanji Jackson at his apartment on the evening of January 26, 1996. Jackson had supposedly taken a knife from the kitchen and threatened Higgs after she rejected his alleged sexual advances towards her. After the argument, the women left the apartment enraged. According to Gloria, Jackson made some kind of threat as she left the apartment. As Higgs watched the women leave, he saw Jackson appear to write down his license plate number. According to Gloria, this angered Higgs, who was concerned that she knew people who might retaliate against him. The defense claims that the real reason the women were killed was because they owed Haynes and some of his associates drug money. Two inmates at the
Charles County Detention Center said Haynes had claimed to them to have a much bigger role in the killings. One argued Haynes was more of a partner to Higgs than someone who followed orders. One said the victims owed him drug money and that Haynes "had to kill" one of the women because she had been trying to set him up. Higgs' lawyer said he only learned of the witnesses after reviewing Haynes' trial record, by which time Higgs had already been
sentenced to death. The evidence would supposedly have made both Haynes and Higgs equally culpable in the eyes of the jury, and the failure to provide the statements violated the
Brady rule. The federal judge at Haynes' trial claimed he had shown no remorse for the killings. On October 26, 2000, Higgs was sentenced to death by an all-male jury, becoming the first person from Maryland to be
sentenced to death in the federal court system. He was formally sentenced to death by a federal judge on January 3, 2001. Higgs was incarcerated at
United States Penitentiary, Terre Haute. On November 22, 2000, Gloria was sentenced to eighty-four months in a federal prison.
Disapproval of result Multiple controversies surround Higgs' case. Firstly, he was sentenced to death despite not personally shooting or killing any of the three women. The case against him was mainly built on the testimonies of Gloria and Haynes, who had both cut deals and changed their stories multiple times. The fact the murders were committed on
federal land further complicated things. Higgs was tried by the federal government in addition to state of Maryland. Had the murders occurred farther down the same road, the women would not have been killed on the Patuxent Research Refuge, and Higgs would have been tried only by the state of Maryland and not by the federal government. If he had been tried by the state of Maryland, based on state law, he would not have been eligible for the death penalty. with all remaining death row inmates resentenced to life without parole. Prior to the abolition, the last execution in Maryland occurred in 2005, when
Wesley Baker was executed for the June 1991 murder of 49-year-old Jane Tyson. ==Execution==