Saginaw Man Acquitted of Murder on Grounds of Self-Defense
This article was originally published from Saginaw and Bay City News’ author Cole Waterman.
SAGINAW, MI — A Saginaw man was all smiles on learning a jury acquitted him of murder on the grounds he acted in self-defense when he fatally shot another man over the summer.
Eric M. Wills II, 24, heaved a sigh of relief and smiled broadly when jurors announced they found him not guilty of murder or felony firearm about 2:30 p.m. on Friday, April 11. Three rows of supporters in the gallery applauded, cried, and hugged.
Wills has been jailed since his arrest on July 9, several hours after he killed Equayvis S. “Quay” Moten, 31. He remains charged in an unrelated matter with possession fewer than 25 grams of a narcotic or cocaine, but Saginaw County Circuit Judge Darnell Jackson freed him on a $20,000 personal recognizance bond.
Wills hugged his attorney, Alan A. Crawford.
“I appreciate you so much, man,” Wills told his counselor.
Wills’ mother, Nakeyia Wills, seconded her son’s gratitude for Crawford. She made the trip to Saginaw from her home in Texas to attend her son’s trial.
“It’s been a long road,” she said in the courthouse hallway, eager to see her son once he was processed and discharged from jail. Once his drug case is resolved, she plans to move him to the Lone Star State.
Wills testified on his own behalf during his trial.
Jurors began deliberating about 11:20 a.m. Friday. Had the jury convicted Wills of first-degree murder, he would have faced life imprisonment without the chance of parole. A second-degree murder conviction also carries a life sentence, though parole is possible.
“It’s the right decision,” Crawford said of the jury’s findings. “We knew all along it was a valid case of self-defense. There was no clearer scenario. It shouldn’t have been charged, and I stand by that. The jury saw this and were able to come to a quick conclusion.”










