Robert Hendrix Florida Execution

Robert Hendrix - Florida

Robert Hendrix was executed by the State of Florida for the murders of two relatives. According to court documents Robert Hendrix was upset that his cousin testified against him regarding a robbery so he shot and killed his cousin and his cousin’s wife. Robert Hendrix would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Robert Hendrix would be executed by lethal injection on April 23, 2014

Robert Hendrix More News

A man convicted of killing his cousin and the man’s wife to prevent his cousin from testifying against him in a burglary case was executed in Florida on Wednesday, a state prison official said.

Robert Eugene Hendrix, 47, was pronounced dead at 6:21 p.m. local time from a lethal injection, said Jessica Cary, a spokeswoman for the Florida Department of Corrections.

Hendrix was convicted of shooting, stabbing and beating Elmer Scott and his wife, Michelle Scott, at their mobile home in Sorrento, central Florida.

Hendrix and Elmer Scott had been involved in a home burglary, for which Scott was caught and given a reduced sentence in exchange for his testimony against Hendrix.

On August 27, 1990, the eve of his trial, Hendrix and his girlfriend, Denise Turbyville, shot his cousin, beat his head with a pistol and stabbed him in the neck, prosecutors said. When Michelle Scott intervened, she was stabbed and shot.

Turbyville, who received 75 years in prison for second-degree murder, testified against Hendrix to avoid the death penalty. She said Hendrix had discussed his plans to kill Scott and avert going back to prison, where he served 15 months for grand theft, burglary and dealing in stolen property in the Orlando area.

Defense attorneys contended Turbyville and a former cellmate of Hendrix were unreliable witnesses because they were seeking sentence reductions.

They also said the trial judge had a conflict of interest because before becoming a judge he had consulted with Turbyville’s defense lawyer, and that trial jurors had seen Hendrix shackled in the courtroom, creating a bias affecting his right to a presumption of innocence.

His appellate lawyers also contended that Hendrix received poor representation in the sentencing phase of his trial because his counsel did not produce evidence that he was addicted to drugs and had been severely beaten by his father.

The Florida Supreme Court rejected those arguments.

Florida Governor Rick Scott has overseen 15 previous executions since becoming governor in early 2011.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-florida-execution-hendrix-idUSBREA3M28720140423

William Rousan Missouri Execution

william rousan photos

William Rousan was executed by the State of Missouri for the murder of a couple. According to court documents William Rousan, his brother and his son would murder Charles and Grace Lewis in order to steal their cattle and other possessions. William Rousan would be arrested a year later, convicted and sentenced to death. William Rousan would be executed by lethal injection on April 24, 2014

William Rousan More News

It was a systematic and aseptic death minutes after midnight this morning for the man convicted of masterminding the violent and senseless murders of a rural Bonne Terre couple more than 20 years ago.

Missouri corrections officials carried out the court-mandated execution of William Rousan, age 57, just after midnight, for his part in the killing of 67-year-old Charles and 62-year-old Grace Lewis on Sept. 21, 1993. Rousan had been in prison since Dec. 20, 1996, received in the Missouri Department of Corrections the day after being sentenced to death for murder in the first degree.

As is typical, William Rousan exhausted all appeals as time of his pending death approached. In the weeks leading up to the execution the case was again put before the Missouri Supreme Court for consideration. The state’s high court denied the motion to recall the mandate, and the execution was set for 12:01 a.m. on April 23.

Family members of both Rousan and Charles and Grace Lewis witnessed the execution, along with six state witnesses. Afterward Michael Lewis, the couple’s son, made a brief statement to members of the media.

“I draw no real satisfaction from Mr. Rousan’s incarceration or execution, for neither can replace or restore the moments lost with my parents or give my sons back their grandparents they never got to know,” Michael Lewis began. “Nor can it fully heal the broken hearts and lives of our family, or his family who my heart also goes out to.

“I hope that Mr. Rousan made peace with Jesus, for that is what Charles and Grace Lewis would want, for sure.”

In his final hours Tuesday, William Rousan met with his family members and several ministers he had met over the years. 

Rousan offered a final statement giving indication he had indeed made peace about his situation.

“My trials and transgressions have been many,” Rousan said. “But thanks be to my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, I have a new home in his heavenly kingdom. May forgiveness and peace be found for all in our Lord Jesus Christ. In our Lord Jesus Christ.”

His last meal was a bacon cheeseburger, onion rings, a piece of pecan pie and a soft drink. He refused the sedative offered by prison staff in the hours just prior to the execution.

Whatever else William Rousan said to his family, the family of his victims or his maker wasn’t clear. Shortly before midnight the curtains on the state’s execution chamber at the Eastern Reception, Diagnostic and Correctional Center outside Bonne Terre were slid open by prison staff.

Rousan was located near the center of the room lying on a bed and covered with a white sheet up to his neck. Any restraints were not visible from the three viewing rooms – the first directly ahead of him containing members of the victims’ family, the second on his left and occupied by only two family members and a minister, and the third room on his right occupied by witnesses for the state.

He had his head raised and was looking around as the curtains were opened. He turned to the left and mouthed a few words to his family members. A prison spokesperson later said it appeared that he was saying “I love you.”

A prison staff member had noted that the order had been given to proceed with the execution.

After acknowledging his own family members, Rousan looked down and past the length of his body to the viewing room containing family members of Charles and Grace Lewis. He talked rapidly toward the window. What he was saying wasn’t audible behind the thick glass windows.

After what appeared to be nearly a minute he stopped talking and turned his head back toward his family. As he mouthed something he gasped for breath and his chest heaved a couple times before he went completely still.

The corrections spokesperson later said the order to proceed with the lethal injection had came at 12:01 a.m. The dosage of Pentobarbital was introduced into the IV and was “all in” by 12:04 a.m.

Five minutes later, at 12:09 a.m. the curtains on the viewing rooms were drawn shut and the execution team checked for vital signs. A minute later, at 12:10 a.m., word came that Rousan was pronounced dead. The curtains were opened once again allowing witnesses to view the body for a couple more minutes.

The events which led to Rousan’s state execution weren’t nearly as sterile and calm, although the murder trial revealed they were planned out. His victims, Charles and Grace, died at the hands of Rousan, his son Brent and brother Robert in a scheme to steal the couple’s cattle … knowing full well that they might murder the couple in the process.

According to court documents, throughout the summer of 1993, William and Robert Rousan talked about rustling cattle. On the morning of Sept. 21, 1993, the brothers met with William’s teenage son, Brent, at a farm in Washington County where William was living with his girlfriend, Mary Lambing. The trio discussed stealing cattle from the Lewises.

As they drove to the farm outside Bonne Terre the three talked about the possibility of having to kill the couple. They drove past the farm and William pointed out the cattle they would be taking. He parked the truck about two miles away from the farm. He got out and pulled a .22 caliber rifle from under the seat.

William and Brent reportedly argued about who would carry the loaded rifle. Brent argued that he was “man enough to do whatever needed to be done” and that he would use the weapon. William allowed his teenage son to take the rifle but warned him that if they got caught they would “fry” for murdering the couple.

Testimony at the trial showed the three would-be thieves and murderers headed off through the woods to the Lewis farm where they stopped and waited behind a fallen tree. Charles and Grace Lewis were gone, but arrived home sometime between 3 and 4 p.m. A short time later Charles started mowing the lawn. The couple’s oldest daughter called at around 4 p.m. and spoke with her mother.

It was reported during the trial that Brent Rousan heard the lawnmower and became eager to take action. He reportedly told the other two that he “didn’t come to wait all day and not do nothing.” His dad, William, told him to wait until he and Robert had secured the house. William headed toward the front door and Robert to the back.

But before the brothers could reach the house Charles apparently spotted Brent and called out to him. The teen responded by opening fire on Charles, hitting him with at least six rounds. It was later testified in court that Charles died as a direct result of those gunshots.

Grace told her daughter she heard gunfire and was going to go see what was happening. The idea of someone shooting in the distance didn’t seem too out of place. The farm was located in a rural area which often played host to hunters and recreational shooters.

As Grace exited the house she was met with several bullets from the rifle Brent was handling. He shot her several times, fracturing both her arms and rendering them useless. Still, she was able to make it back through the door to apparent safety. But William was right behind her. He reportedly grabbed a garment bag from a nearby coat rack and placed the bag over her head and upper body. He picked her up and carried her outside and laid her on the ground. It was testified that William ordered Brent to “finish her off,” which he did with a single shot to the left side of the head from close range.

With the deadly deed completed, the three relatives wrapped the bodies of the couple in a tarp and tied it with a piece of rope. They collected the shell casings from the rifle and cleaned up much of the blood stains. They put the bodies near a shed and left the area.

Sometime later that night the two brothers and Brent, along with another brother, Jerry, returned to the Lewis farm. Statements made during the trials indicated that on the way there Brent bragged about the murders. When they got to the farm they loaded the bodies into the couple’s pickup. They also stole two cows, jewelry, two gas cans, soda, a saddle, and a VCR. Then they headed back to the farm William shared with his girlfriend.

Once back at the Washington County farm they dug a shallow grave near a barn. They placed the bodies, still wrapped in the tarp, into the hole and covered them with concrete. They then covered the concrete with dirt and a pile of manure. Then they burned the rags used to clean up the blood at the murder scene.

The dirty work done, they drank the stolen soda. They would later sell the stolen cattle for $962.63. Robert gave the stolen VCR to his sister and brother-in-law the following day. Some of the jewelry and the rifle used in the murders were buried on a hillside on Lambing farm. The remainder of the jewelry was given over time to Lambing as gifts from William.

The stolen pickup was hid in the woods and later burned. The stolen gas cans were eventually found at the farm where the couple were buried.

The daughter that Grace Lewis was talking to on the phone when she heard gunshots eventually became concerned when she couldn’t reach her mom or dad by phone the following day. The sheriff’s department was called and an investigation was initiated. Investigators suspected foul play but had little evidence and no real leads to speak of.

About eight months after the murders and related thefts the stolen VCR was sold to a pawn broker. Eventually it would be discovered that it was the machine taken from the Lewis home. Then on Sept. 15, 1994, a few days short of a year since the murders, the brother-in-law who had been given the stolen VCR made what he believed was an anonymous call to the police. He told investigators where the person who killed the Lewises lived.

The call was traced back to the relative of the Rousans. When investigators talked to Robert Rousan and obtained additional information they went after William, but he fled.

Then on Sept. 20, 1994, a day short of a year since the murders, William called his brother-in-law and asked for a ride to a barn in Washington County. The police were notified and Rousan was given the ride to the barn. He was arrested there a short time later, and was found to be armed with another .22 caliber rifle.

After being read his Miranda Rights, William made incriminating statements implicating himself in the murders

He told investigators that he first met Charles and Grace Lewis in 1975. He saw them again in 1989 after he escaped from custody in the state of Washington. He later said he hid in the couple’s barn, and when he was discovered by Charles he was fed, clothed, and given $20 cash. A short time later he was caught and returned to prison.

After being released from prison in 1993 William went back to the Lewis farm to reportedly thank them for their kindness and rekindle the friendship. He later said he found the couple in bad health.

William went on to tell several versions of the rest of the story. He claimed Charles had asked him to kill Grace and put her out of her misery, and to kill him because he couldn’t live without her. He would go on to tell investigators he was hired by the couple’s son to kill them in exchange for $50,000. But, he maintained, his true motivation for the murders was “mercy”.

A jury found William Rousan guilty of two counts of first-degree murder. His prior convictions for rape, assault, escape and unlawful possession of a firearm were introduced during the penalty phase of the trial. The fact that the couple were murdered as part of a robbery spree resulted in “aggravating circumstances,” which resulted in the death penalty being imposed

William’s son, Brent, remains incarcerated in the Missouri Department of Corrections serving two life sentences without parole for being the trigger man in the murder and theft scheme. William’s brother would eventually testify on the state’s behalf and serve only seven years for his part in the deadly plot.

William Rousan lived nearly 20 years behind bars in relation to the murders he masterminded. During that time his legal representation repeatedly sought a reversal or overturn of the rulings in his cases.

“As for the death penalty, I think the delay from sentencing to finalization is too long,” Michael Lewis said minutes after Rousan was executed for the murder of his parents. “I have never thought of it as revenge or justice served in terms of an ‘eye for an eye’ so to speak.

“Nor do I see it as a big deterrent to would be criminals. But I still believe it is a humane and permanent prevention of further criminal activities by the convicted inmate.”

Upon receiving word of Rousan’s execution, Missouri Governor Jay Nixon issued a statement. “Our thoughts and prayers tonight are with the family and friends of Grace and Charles Lewis, as they remember a couple murdered in a brutal and senseless crime.

“William Rousan was convicted of both killings and sentenced to the ultimate punishment provided by Missouri law … that sentence now has been carried out. I ask that Missourians remember the Lewises at this time and join us in keeping their loved ones in their thoughts and prayers.”

This morning’s execution brings the total number of documented executions by the state (since 1938) to 112. That list includes three mandated deaths for kidnapping, six for rape, and 103 for murder.

https://dailyjournalonline.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/state-executes-rousan-for-murdering-couple/article_d7603ba1-a54f-5720-87e1-12b6c02ff094.html

Jose Villegas Texas Execution

Jose Villegas photos

Jose Villegas was executed by the State of Texas for a triple murder. According to court documents Jose Villegas would stab to death his ex girlfriend, her mother and her three year old son. Jose Villegas would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Jose Villegas would be executed by lethal injection on April 17, 2014

Jose Villegas More News

Jose Villegas, a man convicted of fatally stabbing his ex-girlfriend, her 3-year-old son and her mother 13 years ago at a home in Corpus Christi was executed by Texas prison officials Wednesday.

The lethal injection of Villegas, 39, was carried out after his attorneys unsuccessfully argued to the U.S. Supreme Court that he was mentally impaired and ineligible for the death penalty.

“I would like to remind my children once again I love them,” Villegas said when asked if he had a statement before being put to death. “Everything is okay. I love you all, and I love my children. I am at peace.”

Just as the pentobarbital began taking effect, he said, “It does kind of burn. Goodbye.” He gasped several times, then started to breathe quietly. Within less than a minute, all movement had stopped.

Villegas was pronounced dead at 7:04 p.m., 11 minutes after the lethal dose of the sedative began. He became the seventh prisoner executed this year in the nation’s most active death penalty state.

Six relatives of his victims witnessed the execution but declined to comment afterward.

“I was struck by the calm and peacefulness inside that room as opposed to the utter terror the victims must have been in as Jose Luis Villegas stabbed them,” Mark Skurka, the Nueces County district attorney who prosecuted Villegas, said after watching the execution

He made no attempt to make peace with the family, apologize to the family or show any remorse for taking the lives of three people,” Skurka said. “The family expressed to me that they are glad that this is finally over and that justice has finally been done, even though it took a very long time in their minds for this to happen.”

Villegas’ lawyers filed a last-day appeal asking the Supreme Court to stop his punishment, saying testing in February showed he had an IQ of 59. The high court denied it several hours later, slightly delaying the punishment. Four of the nine justices indicated in the brief court order that they would have given him a reprieve.

The Supreme Court has prohibited execution of mentally impaired people, although states have been allowed to devise procedures to make their own determinations. Courts also have embraced scientific studies that consider a 70 IQ a threshold for impairment, and the high court justices are reviewing a Florida law stipulating that number for death penalty eligibility.

The Texas Attorney General’s office disputed the IQ finding, saying previous examinations of Villegas showed no mental impairment and the number cited in his appeal was based on testing after he received an execution date and had no incentive to do well on the test. State attorneys also argued his lawyers had 10 years to raise impairment claims but didn’t do so until days before his scheduled punishment.

Villegas was convicted of fatally stabbing Erida Salazar, 23, her 3-year-old son, Jacob, and Salazar’s mother, Alma Perez, 51, in January 2001. Their bodies were discovered by Salazar’s father when he returned home after being excused from jury duty. Each had been stabbed at least 19 times.

Villegas, a former cook, dishwasher and laborer, was free on bond for a sexual assault charge and was supposed to go on trial the day of the killings for an incident in which a woman said he punched her in the face.

Police spotted Villegas driving Salazar’s stolen car and he led them on a chase that ended with him on foot and urging officers to shoot him. When arresting him, police found three bags of cocaine in his baseball cap.

Following his conviction for capital murder, Villegas was convicted of two counts of indecency with a child related to the daughter of the woman he was accused of punching in the face prior to the slayings. Relatives have said Salazar’s mother had urged her daughter to break up with Villegas when she learned of the sex charges against him.

Villegas also had convictions for making terroristic threats to kill women, burglary and possessing inhalants.

Attorneys argued the slayings were not intentional and Villegas was mentally ill. A defense psychiatrist testified Villegas experienced “intermittent explosive disorder,” a condition that led to uncontrollable rages.

Villegas became the third Texas inmate executed with a new stock of pentobarbital from a provider corrections officials have refused to identify, citing the possibility of threats of violence against the supplier. The Supreme Court has upheld that stance.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/texas-man-put-to-death-for-murdering-3-year-old-two-others/

Ramiro Hernandez Texas Execution

Ramiro Hernandez - Texas photos

Ramiro Hernandez was executed by the State of Texas for the murder of a man. According to court documents Ramiro Hernandez had escaped from a Mexican prison and made his way into the USA. Glen Lich hired him to do some work around his ranch. On the day of the murder Ramiro Hernandez would lure Glen Lich into a remote area and would beat the man to death before reentering the Lich home and attacking his wife. Ramiro Hernandez would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Ramiro Hernandez was executed by lethal injection on April 10 2014

Ramiro Hernandez More News

Ramiro Hernandez-Llanas, 44, was in the US illegally when he killed a former university professor who had hired him to help with renovations on his home.

The execution by lethal injection went ahead after Texas’ parole and pardons board refused to delay his case.

Hernandez-Llanas is the sixth Texas prisoner executed this year.

He was the second person this week to be executed in the state by lethal injection with a new supply of pentobarbital.

Earlier this week, a US appeals court rejected a bid by lawyers for Hernandez-Llanas and another death row inmate, Tommy Lynn Sells, to learn who is supplying Texas with the drug.

They argue they need to know the source to ensure the executions will not be botched.

But Texas officials have refused to identify the source of the sedative, saying secrecy is needed to protect the provider from threats of violence.

Hernandez-Llanas was pronounced dead at 18:28 local time (23:28 GMT) at the Texas state death chamber in Huntsville.

In a final statement, he asked forgiveness from the victim’s family and said he was at peace, the Associated Press news agency reports.

In 1997, Glen Lich, 49, hired Hernandez-Llanas to work for him to help renovate his ranch near the city of Kerrville.

Unbeknownst to Lich, Hernandez-Llanas had recently escaped from a Mexican prison where he was serving a 25-year sentence for a 1989 murder.

Several days later, Hernandez-Llanas lured Lich away from his house by telling him falsely there was a problem with a generator. He beat the man to death with a length of steel rebar, then entered the house and attacked Lich’s wife.

Sentenced in 2000 for Lich’s murder, he was among more than four dozen Mexican nationals awaiting execution in the US in 2004 when the International Court of Justice in The Hague, Netherlands, ruled they had not been properly informed of their consular rights when arrested.

Another one of those Mexican nationals, Edgar Tamayo, 46, was executed by Texas in January despite objections of both the Mexican and US governments.

Euclides del Moral, a Mexico foreign ministry official, said on Tuesday “the execution of a Mexican national is of great concern”.

But the issue did not play a large part in Hernandez-Llanas’ appeals, which focused primarily on claims that his mental impairment made him ineligible for the death penalty.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-26964869

Tommy Lynn Sells Texas Execution

tommy lynn sells serial killer

Tommy Lynn Sells who was a serial killer would be executed by the State of Texas for the murder of a thirteen year old girl. According to court documents Tommy Lynn Sells would murder 13 year old Katy Harris in her own bed. After he was arrested Tommy Lynn Sells would confess to dozens of murders and authorities would later tie him to seventeen murders. Tommy Lynn Sells would be executed by lethal injection on April 3, 2014

Tommy Lynn Sells More News

Convicted serial killer Tommy Lynn Sells, who was sent to prison in 1999 and claimed responsibility for dozens of murders across the country, was executed Thursday in Texas.

Sells, 49, was convicted of killing 13-year-old Katy Harris while she slept in her Del Rio, Texas, home. Her murder landed Sells on death row, but he has been linked to at least 17 other killings and claims he has killed as dozens more.

Sells declined to make final remarks before his death, then took a few breaths, closed his eyes and began to snore as the lethal-injection drugs took effect, The Associated Press reported. He soon stopped moving and was pronounced dead 13 minutes later at 6:27 p.m. CT.

Sells’ execution earlier had been halted when a district court ruled that the Texas prison system was required to disclose information about its lethal-injection drugs supplier and how the drugs are tested. But a federal appeals court on Wednesday threw out the ruling and reversed the decision.

Sells’ attorneys made a plea to the U.S. Supreme Court to stay the serial killer’s execution, but their plea was rejected Thursday.

In a statement to ABC News Thursday, Sells’ attorneys said, “It is our belief that how we choose to execute prisoners reflects on us as a society. Without transparency about lethal injections, particularly the source and purity of drugs to be used, it is impossible to ensure that executions are humane and constitutional. It is our hope that the U.S. Supreme Court and the Texas courts will ultimately agree that we must have transparency about the execution process in order to ensure that prisoners are able to protect their Eighth Amendment rights.”

Sells was a subject in a 2010 special ABC News report entitled, “Nightline Prime: Secrets of Your Mind,” which followed the inner workings of the human brain and its effects on behavior. He was included in a segment about researchers studying the brain scans of murderers and psychopaths in hopes of discovering why someone would turn into a vicious killer.

Sells, an extreme example of someone with a murderous mind, talked about his gruesome past with ABC News in a chilling 2010 jailhouse interview.

As a young boy growing up in St. Louis, Sells was addicted to killing by the time he was 14.

“I am hatred. When you look at me, you look at hate,” Sells said in 2010. “I don’t know what love is. Two words I don’t like to use is ‘love’ and ‘sorry,’ because I’m about hate.”

His drifter lifestyle helped him elude police for nearly 15 years as his victims turned up from coast to coast. Sells said his drug use fueled his killing sprees.

“The first time I did a shot of dope, it was the best feeling I ever had in my life. The first time I killed somebody, it was such a rush,” Sells told ABC News at the time. “It was just like that, a shot of dope every time I did it, it was that rush again, and I started chasing that high.”

During the interview, Sells appeared nonchalant when asked about the victims he had slain, and spoke very matter-of-factly when recounting his killing methods: beatings, stabbings, strangling. He even raped many of his targets before slicing their throats.

“I like to watch the eyes fade, the pupil fade. It’s just like setting their soul free,” Sells said at the time, without showing emotion. “I don’t have an on-and-off switch. I’m just after that drug. I’m after that feeling.”

One of the more horrific crimes Sells has confessed to committing was the slaying of 30-year-old Eileen Dardeen and her family.

Dardeen was seven-and-a-half months pregnant when Sells allegedly beat her to death. During the attack, she went into premature labor and gave birth to a baby girl.

Investigators determined the newborn was alive when she was born, but was later found bludgeoned to death, as was Dardeen’s 3-year-old son.

Her husband’s body turned up a few days later. He had been shot three times in the head.

Investigators involved with the Dardeen case said if Sells were not already sitting on death row in Texas, they would have arrested him for this crime.

Sells blamed his murderous rage on having an abusive childhood.

“I didn’t want them to live through the pain I lived through,” Sells told ABC News, explaining why some of his victims had been children.

Sells has left only one known survivor during his terrifying rampage.

Krystal Surles was just 10 years old when Sells tried to murder her while she was sleeping over at her friend Katy Harris’ house in Del Rio, Texas.

Asleep on the top bunk, Surles awoke in the middle of the night to Sells killing her friend.

Though it happened years ago, Surles told ABC News in an interview that it was a night that will remain burned in her memory.

“He had a hand on her mouth and the knife on her neck, and she’s looking at me, at the bunk bed,” Surles told ABC News at the time. “He just cut her throat, and she fell to the ground.”

Frozen with fear, Surles said Sells then walked towards the door, about to shut off the light, when he looked around the room one last time.

“That’s the first time he noticed me,” she said. “He … didn’t hesitate at all. I mean, just shut the door, came right back towards me with the knife.”

“The only thing that he said is, ‘Move your hands’ … and he reached over the top bunk and … cut my neck.”

Sells severed Surles’ windpipe and grazed her ceratoid artery. She played dead on the floor in a pool of blood until she thought Sells had gone, then she ran for help at a neighbor’s house.

Surles later identified Sells as her attacker and as the man who had brutally killed her friend, which finally put an end to his killing spree. He was later found guilty.

Sells told ABC News in 2010 that he still remembered the one that got away.

“There’s not a day goes by that I don’t think of her,” he said at the time.

https://abcnews.go.com/US/convicted-serial-killer-tommy-lynn-sells-executed-texas/story?id=23184667