Cherish Lily Perrywinkle (December 24, 2004 – June 22, 2013) was an 8-year-old girl from Jacksonville, Florida who was abducted from a Walmart on June 21, 2013.[1] She was seen on CCTV cameras leaving the store with a man named Donald James Smith (born September 4, 1956) who was later convicted of her murder and sentenced to death.[2]
Life and murder
Cherish Lily Perrywinkle was born in Jacksonville, Florida on Christmas Eve of 2004 to Rayne Perrywinkle and Billy Jarreau, who were never married and had custody battles.[3]
On June 21, 2013, around 8:00 p.m., Rayne, Cherish, and her two younger sisters went shopping when they first met Donald Smith at a Dollar General, where he offered to buy them clothes they could not afford with a $150 Walmart gift card. The Perrywinkles then got into his white van and went with him to Walmart, where they shopped for the next two hours. At 10:30 p.m., Smith offered to get them cheeseburgers at the in-store McDonald's and Cherish followed him. However, surveillance footage shows that they walked out of the store instead, which was the last time Cherish was seen alive. About half an hour later, Rayne called the police to report that her daughter had been abducted; an Amber alert was issued five hours later.[4] The next morning, Cherish's body was found in a creek behind Highlands Baptist Church. It is believed that Smith had bound her in the back of his van, where she was sexually assaulted and strangled to death.[5]
Smith's arrest
Police immediately identified Smith as the abductor, with his van being one of the main focuses. Around 9:00 a.m. the next day, officers saw his van on the interstate and cornered him before he surrendered and was promptly arrested. Smith was known to police as a local sex offender with a long criminal history including numerous offenses against minors. He had been released from jail only three weeks before Cherish's murder.[6]
Trial
Smith's trial began in February 2018. He was found guilty of first-degree murder and sexual battery and was sentenced to death in May 2018.[7] The jurors were in tears after witnessing crime scene photos of the murder as the defense tried to suppress the images. Julie Schlax, the defense attorney, urged the jurors to focus on the law and not their raw emotions.[8][9]
Prentky, Robert A.; Barbaree, Howard E.; Janus, Eric S. (2015). Sexual Predators: Society, Risk, and the Law. Oxfordshire: Taylor & Francis. ISBN978-0-415-87045-0.
Ramsland, Katherine; McGrain, Patrick N. (2009). Inside the Minds of Sexual Predators. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO. ISBN978-0-313-37960-4.
Richards, Cara (2000). The Loss of Innocents: Child Killers and Their Victims. Washington: Scholarly Resources. ISBN978-0-520-28287-2.
Rinek, Jeffrey L.; Strong, Marilee (2018). In the Name of the Children: An FBI Agent's Relentless Recruit of America's Worst Predators. London: Quercus Editions Ltd. ISBN978-1-529-40188-2.
Contemporary news article pertaining to the U.S. Supreme Court rejection of Donald James Smith's appeal following his conviction of Perrywinkle's murder