Washington, D.C. – 25 years ago, North Carolina State Trooper Ed Lowry and Cumberland County Sheriff’s Deputy David Hathcock were killed by Tilmon and Kevin Golphin.  The story is heart-wrenching, and for the families, a heartache that they must re-live every time Cheri Beasley is on TV.  

That’s because Beasley was part of the Golphins’ defense team…

Said Al Lowry, Ed’s brother: “I just think it’s B.S,” Lowry said of ads portraying her as pro law enforcement. “She’s for the criminals and not for the law officers, which my brother was one of them that got killed… The ad says law enforcement stands behind her. I don’t believe that for one second. People just don’t understand what she stood for 25 years ago, and people don’t change their attitude.”

25 years after slayings, officer’s brother says Beasley no friend of law enforcement

By David Larson 

The Carolina Journal

Tilmon and Kevin Golphin were troubled teenage brothers from near Richmond, Virginia, who ended an interstate crime spree by shooting and killing two officers in Cumberland County, North Carolina, on Sept. 23, 1997.

Now, 25 years later, the deaths of N.C. State Trooper Ed Lowry and Cumberland County Sheriff’s Deputy David Hathcock are again a topic of conversation as one of the key defense attorneys in the case, Cheri Beasley, is running for U.S. Senate. 

On that September day, Tilmon, 19; and Kevin, 17; entered Financial Lenders in Kingstree, South Carolina, wearing masks and armed with a Soviet military rifle believed to be stolen from their grandfather, according to the Fayetteville Observer. They forced the two female employees into the bathroom and made them face the wall. The women heard the clicking of the rifle around half a dozen times but no shots were fired. Afterwards, the brothers left with a number of items, including one employee’s green Toyota Camry. 

South Carolina police put out a “BOLO,” or “be-on-the-lookout” order, for the brothers and the green Camry. Two hours later, when Lowry pulled the Golphins over on I-95 in Fayetteville, he did not know about the BOLO. He simply noticed the driver wasn’t wearing his seatbelt. 

Before he was aware the car was stolen, Lowry allowed Kevin, the driver, to come back and sit in the passenger seat of the cruiser with him while he wrote the ticket. But when they ran the plates and learned about the BOLO and the fact that the car was stolen, the situation escalated quickly. Lowry called for backup, and without any other state troopers available, Cumberland County Deputy David Hathcock arrived soon after. 

Lowry drew his weapon and attempted to secure Kevin while directing Hathcock to secure Tilmon, but Kevin began to struggle with Lowry. Tilmon exited the Camry and walked back to where his brother was struggling. After the officers pepper sprayed Kevin, Tilmon ran back to get his rifle and began firing at both officers, first Hathcock then Lowry. Both were struck multiple times. With Lowry moaning on the ground, Kevin then armed himself with Lowry’s pistol and shot Lowry at least three times before shooting Hathcock as well. 

The brothers were later arrested, charged with the killings, and given the death penalty. The death penalties were later changed to life without parole for both brothers — in one case because the U.S. Supreme Court ruled nobody under 18 can be put to death, and in the other case because of the state’s Racial Justice Act, which largely eliminated the death penalty in North Carolina. 

During the trial, Beasley became the face of their defense to some in the victims’ families. And seeing her all these years later during her run for U.S. Senate being portrayed as a friend of law enforcement is not sitting well. Al Lowry, Ed’s brother, spoke with Carolina Journal on Sept. 22, saying every time he sees an ad for her U.S. Senate campaign, he said he wants to “jump through the screen,” adding, “It makes me sick every time I look at her because I know she’s not the right person for the job.”

Read More at The Carolina Journal 

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