When Jim Martin was arrested and convicted of the murder of his mother in Savannah, GA, in 1991, it was regarded by police, and later by a jury, as an open-and-shut case of a "crackhead son" killing his mother to get money to buy his drugs. Martin still maintains, years later, that it was his female-impersonator drug supplier that actually killed his mother, and Martin's aunt claims that, while crack cocaine might have expedited the process, that Nazarene-minister mother and rebellious homosexual son were doomed to a showdown with or without drugs.
When Jim Martin was arrested and convicted of the murder of his mother in Savannah, GA, in 1991, it was regarded by police, and later by a jury, as an open-and-shut case of a "crackhead son" killing his mother to get money to buy his drugs. Martin still maintains, years later, that it was his female-impersonator drug supplier that actually killed his mother, and Martin's aunt claims that, while crack cocaine might have expedited the process, that Nazarene-minister mother and rebellious homosexual son were doomed to a showdown with or without drugs.