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There is no cost for this event, but registration is required and limited tickets are available so we can exercise social distancing. Register Here Buy Tickets on Eventbrite Ellie Nesler: From Folk Hero to Tragedy
A gut reaction spurring vigilante justice ultimately resulted in loss of the very son she intended to defend.
Daniel Mark Driver was a camp counselor who was accused of abusing 5 boys, including William Nesler. Driver had previous convictions for child molestation. Ellie Starr Nesler was William’s mother. William was only 6 years old.
Ellie Starr Nesler made headlines when she walked into the Jamestown Justice Court in California on April 2, 1993, and fired 5 shots into the head of Daniel Mark Driver. Her case sparked a national debate about vigilantism. At the time, Ellie said she pulled the trigger because she was afraid the system would fail and Driver would be set free. At the time, Ellie was touted as a folk hero.

According to Jon Thurber of the Los Angeles Times, the finding that Ellie Nesler had a significant amount of methamphetamine in her system when she killed Driver, caused the "sympathetic portrait" of Ellie portrayed by her defense team to "erode."
Ellie Nesler spent three years behind bars for killing Driver but was released on appeal because of alleged jury misconduct. Rather than opting for a retrial, she pleaded guilty to a lesser charge and was paroled with time served.
However, Ellie was convicted in 2002 of buying 10,000 pseudoephedrine tablets, which are used to make methamphetamine, and sentenced to six years in prison. She was released from a woman's facility near Chowchilla, California in 2006. During her first term in prison, she developed breast cancer, which ultimately caused her death in 2008 at the age of 56.
Elena Starr Nesler (August 2, 1952 – December 26, 2008)
What happened to her kids?



On July 17, 2005, William Nesler stood in a cramped courtroom, a dozen years after his mother gunned down a man accused of molesting him, and admitted no remorse for taking the law into his own hands by murdering a man in a dispute over tools. Nesler admitted he didn’t really know the 45-year-old father of two he had murdered.
Nesler was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison for stomping David Davis to death. He told Judge Eric L. Du Temple that “I’ve done bad things” but that he had been “railroaded” by the criminal justice system. In a short, rambling monologue, Nesler said he came from a good family, even if his mother, Ellie Nesler, had “killed people in a courtroom for things they done wrong.”
William Nesler had allowed David Davis to live on his family’s property in exchange for cleaning up debris. But the agreement quickly soured. In mid-June 2004, Davis called the sheriff and accused Nesler of trying to steal some of his tools. In front of three deputies, Nesler lunged at Davis, hitting and punching him. According to an arrest report, the deputies restrained Nesler -- 6 feet 2 and 230 pounds -- and handcuffed his bulging, tattooed arms.
Once released from brief lock-up, William Nesler broke into a trailer where Davis slept and pulled the smaller man out. Davis, who had a spine injury that limited his mobility, tried to flee but tripped or was tackled. As Davis lay on the ground pleading for mercy, witnesses said, Nesler stomped on his head.
The victim’s mother said it was a sad mismatch. Her son “was disabled, frail, he couldn’t run for help,” she said in court.
“It was a violent act. It was a heinous act,” said Eric Hovatter, the Tuolumne County deputy district attorney who prosecuted the first-degree murder case. “There’s been no visible sign of remorse.” Willy Nessler will be in prison until 2031, the year he's eligible for parole.

Yes, replied Ellie Nesler, “but I didn’t save my own.” Ellie was unable to visit Willy in prison because she was in the final stages of a long battle with breast cancer. She was 56 years old when she died on December 26, 2008.
Rebecca says she doesn't think Willy would be in prison today if it weren't for her mother shooting his molester. "He even stated he was over the molestation," Rebecca says. "What hurt all of us was mom being torn away from us." She added, "He talked about the fact that he really hated it when people would point him out and say, 'Hey, that's the kid who was molested,'" Dan says. "Once his mother became this national figure and his life was on display for the world, I think that was the hardest part for him."
My thoughts: When you’re a parent, you need to make it all about your kids. While we can all understand her rage, Ellie Nesler’s response made it all about her anger and she left her kids behind to suffer the consequences. We always need to consider the larger picture. It’s never just about me, or you. It’s about what’s best for humanity. This may be your belief as a decent person, or part of your religious faith. Regardless, know people are hurting today and be kind, even if you don’t agree with them. No excuses.
Thanks for listening,
Frank
Rest in Peace Dolores O’Riordan. Irish Lead Singer for the Cranberries
Published on September 27, 2020 14:01
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