Title Premier
Title Examiner
Copper Title Sep 2016 - Sep 2018
Title Examiner
Title Partners Agency, Llc Feb 2015 - Sep 2016
Title Examiner
Investors Title Company and Affiliates Nov 2010 - Jul 2014
Title Examiner
St. Louis County Nov 2008 - Jan 2010
Abstract Clerk
Education:
Missouri Baptist University 1989 - 1993
Christian Academy of Greater St. Louis 1988 - 1989
Skills:
Customer Service Microsoft Excel Microsoft Word Public Speaking Microsoft Office Strategic Planning Powerpoint Data Entry Event Planning Team Building Title Searches Chain of Title Retail Sales Typing Phone Etiquette Phone Manner Multi Line Phone Supervisory Skills Employee Training Credit Card Fraud Fraud Detection Teamwork
Interests:
Computer Programming Audio/Visual Equipment New Technologies Photography Camping Hunting Fishing
Dr. Gray graduated from the Univ of West Indies, Fac Med Sci, Kingston, Jamaica (950 01 Pr 1/71) in 1981. He works in North Miami Beach, FL and specializes in Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine. Dr. Gray is affiliated with Jackson North Medical Center and University Of Miami Hospital.
Ronald Gray was stationed at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, when he was convicted in a series of rapes and murders. He could become the first person to be executed by the military in a half century. A military policeman stands outside the Fort Bragg courthouse, Dec. 22, 2015. Photo: Jonathan Drake/Reut
Date: Dec 29, 2016
Category: U.S.
Source: Google
Oklahoma woman talks about “life-changing” news after judge lifts stay of execution for sister's killer
Judge J. Thomas Marten of the US District Court for the District of Kansas wrote last week that a previously granted stay of execution to former US Army soldier Ronald Gray was no longer in effect, denying his request to further block the military from carrying out the death sentence.
Date: Dec 29, 2016
Category: U.S.
Source: Google
Former U.S. Army soldier could be military's first execution since 1961
Last week, a federal court rejected an order that placed a hold on the execution of Ronald Gray,The Fayetteville Observer reported. In 1988, a military court found Gray guilty of two murders and five separate rapes that took place while he was stationed at the North Carolina military base. He plead
"It was two years (ago) the last time we touched this exact same field, and being on the sidelines (gave me) chills and goosebumps, and the crowd actually chanting and not being able to hear the whistle from the bottom of the crowd, it was excitement," said Ronald Gray, a junior euphonium player in
In the meantime, Hasan will join the five people who already on the military death row. That group includes Ronald Gray, who is appealing his death sentence for multiple murders and rapes in federal court. His death sentence was approved five years ago by then-President George W. Bush.
Date: Aug 29, 2013
Category: U.S.
Source: Google
Before an execution date, Fort Hood shooter faces years of appeals
There's no way to estimate how long the appeals process could take for Hasan or any other case. The longest current case is that of Ronald Gray, a former Army cook at Fort Bragg in North Carolina who was convicted in 1988 on 14 charges, including two premeditated murders.
Date: Aug 29, 2013
Category: U.S.
Source: Google
On military death row, execution is anything but guaranteed
In 1988, former Army Specialist Ronald Gray was convicted of abducting, raping, sodomizing and murdering 18-year-old Pfc. Laura Lee Vickery-Clay near Fort Bragg, N.C. Gray, who has been on death row for 25 years, was also convicted for attempting to murder and rape Pfc. Mary Ann Lang Nameth, 20, and
Date: Aug 27, 2013
Source: Google
Study Confirms Viral Load Most Important Predictor of HIV Transmission
iology and prevention. According to an editorial accompanying Hughes and his teams paper, Ronald Gray, PhD, and Maria Wawer, MD, of Johns Hopkins University point out that these estimates are needed for modeling the epidemic and for projecting the effects of preventive interventions. Indeed, theyepidemiology and prevention. According to an editorial accompanying Hughes and his teams paper, Ronald Gray, PhD, and Maria Wawer, MD, of Johns Hopkins University point out that these estimates are needed for modeling the epidemic and for projecting the effects of preventive interventions. Indeed