Facundo Chavez Sentenced To Death In Texas

Facundo Chavez Texas death row

Facundo Chavez was sentenced to death by the State of Texas for the murder of a police officer

According to court documents Facundo Chavez was pulled over on a traffic stop by El Paso County sheriff deputy, Peter Herrera. Chavez would open fire on the Officer striking the Officer several times. Chavez would leave the scene after striking the fallen Officer. Peter Herrera would die from his injuries in hospital

Facundo Chavez was arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Facundo Chavez Now

Facundo Chavez was just sentenced to death, August 10 2023

Facundo Chavez Case

An El Paso jury has returned a death penalty sentence for the man convicted of killing El Paso Sheriff Deputy Peter Herrera during a 2019 traffic stop.

Facundo Chavez, 32, will be put to death after a jury of nine women and three men reached the sentencing decision Wednesday. Jurors deliberated for nearly 10 hours over two days.

The same jury convicted Chavez of capital murder of a peace officer on Aug. 3 in connection with the 2019 slaying of Herrera.

Judge Diane Navarrete, who presided over the trial, warned everyone against any outbursts in the courtroom. Spectators remained quiet when the verdict was read aloud.

Chavez had no visible reaction to the jury’s actions.

El Paso District Attorney Bill Hicks, who had been in and out of the courtroom throughout the trial, sat at the prosecutor’s table for the verdict.

Herrera was facing either the death penalty or life in prison without the possibility of parole

The trial, which began on July 26, is being held in the Criminal District Court 1 at the Enrique Moreno County Courthouse in Downtown El Paso.

Chavez was accused of brutally shooting and beating Herrera during a traffic stop about 1:50 a.m. on March 22, 2019, in the 1000 block of Chicken Ranch Road, near Socorro Road in San Elizario.

Herrera pulled over Chavez and his girlfriend, Arlene Piña, over for two traffic violations. The violations were from failing to dim high-beam headlights and improperly displaying a temporary license plate permit.

Herrera asked Chavez to stop of the vehicle. He got out of the car and immediately pulled out a handgun and shot at Herrera.

Chavez fired about 15 rounds from the handgun at Herrera at point-blank range before the gun then jammed.

Chavez then began beating Herrera with the gun.

The couple fled the scene as Herrera laid mortally wounded and in a pool of his own blood.

Another arrived at the scene and began performing first aid on Herrera to try to stop the bleeding. Herrera was then taken to Del Sol Medical Center.

Herrera died at the hospital two days later.

Chavez and Piña were later found by U.S. Border Patrol agents hiding in a shed on the property of a nearby house, according to testimony.

The graphic videos from Herrera’s body camera and patrol vehicle’s dashboard camera, along with another deputy’s body camera, during the shooting were shown to jurors several times throughout the trial

Chavez took the stand twice during the trial and confessed to the crime during his testimony.

“I shot Deputy Herrera. I beat him with a gun,” Chavez testified.

Piña was originally charged with capital murder. However, the charge was reduced to manslaughter in a plea deal made with former El Paso District Attorney Yvonne Rosales. Piña is serving a 15-year prison sentence.

https://www.elpasotimes.com/story/news/crime/2023/08/09/man-sentenced-to-death-for-shooting-of-el-paso-county-sheriff/70557778007/

Robert Bowers Sentenced To Death In PA

robert bowers PA

Robert Bowers the man behind the Pittsburgh synagogue shooting that left eleven people dead has been sentenced to death in Pennsylvania and will head to Federal death row

According to court documents Robert Bowers would enter the Tree of Life synagogue in October 2018 and opened fire killing eleven people and leaving six people injured including four police officers who arrived at the mass shooting

Robert Bowers faced more than sixty charges related to the Tree of Life synagogue shooting and the jury would find him guilty on all charges

Now the jury has decided the only appropriate punishment for the mass shooting is the death penalty.

Robert Bowers More News

he gunman who stormed a synagogue in the heart of Pittsburgh’s Jewish community and killed 11 worshippers will be sentenced to death for perpetrating the deadliest antisemitic attack in U.S. history.

Robert Bowers spewed hatred of Jews and espoused white supremacist beliefs online before methodically planning and carrying out the 2018 massacre at the Tree of Life synagogue, where members of three congregations had gathered for Sabbath worship and study. Bowers, a truck driver from suburban Baldwin, also wounded two worshippers and five responding police officers.

The same federal jury that convicted the 50-year-old Robert Bowers on 63 criminal counts recommended Wednesday that he be put to death for an attack whose impacts continue to reverberate nearly five years later. He showed little reaction as the sentence was announced, briefly acknowledging his legal team and family as he was led from the courtroom. A judge will formally impose the sentence later.

Jurors were unanimous in finding that Bowers’ attack was motivated by his hatred of Jews, and that he chose Tree of Life for its location in one the largest and most historic Jewish communities in the U.S. so that he could “maximize the devastation, amplify the harm of his crimes, and instill fear within the local, national, and international Jewish communities.” They also found that Bowers lacked remorse.

The family of 97-year-old Rose Mallinger, who was killed in the attack, and her daughter, Andrea Wedner, who was shot and wounded, thanked the jurors and said “a measure of justice has been served.”

“Returning a sentence of death is not a decision that comes easy, but we must hold accountable those who wish to commit such terrible acts of antisemitism, hate, and violence,” the family said in a written statement.

The verdict came after a lengthy trial in which jurors heard in chilling detail how Bowers reloaded at least twice, stepped over the bloodied bodies of his victims to look for more people to shoot, and surrendered only when he ran out of ammunition. In the sentencing phase, grieving family members told the jury about the lives that Bowers took — a 97-year-old woman and intellectually disabled brothers among them — and the unrelenting pain of their loss. Survivors testified about their own lasting pain, both physical and emotional.

Through it all, Bowers showed little reaction to the proceeding that would decide his fate — typically looking down at papers or screens at the defense table — though he could be seen conversing at length with his legal team during breaks. He even told a psychiatrist that he thought the trial was helping to spread his antisemitic message.

It was the first federal death sentence imposed during the presidency of Joe Biden, whose 2020 campaign included a pledge to end capital punishment. Biden’s Justice Department has placed a moratorium on federal executions and has declined to authorize the death penalty in hundreds of new cases where it could apply. But federal prosecutors said death was the appropriate punishment for Bowers, citing the vulnerability of his mainly elderly victims and his hate-based targeting of a religious community. Most victims’ families said Bowers should die for his crimes.

Bowers’ lawyers never contested his guilt, focusing their efforts on trying to save his life. They presented evidence of a horrific childhood marked by trauma and neglect. They also claimed Bowers had severe, untreated mental illness, saying he killed out of a delusional belief that Jews were helping to cause a genocide of white people. The defense argued that schizophrenia and brain abnormalities made Bowers more susceptible to being influenced by the extremist content he found online.

The prosecution denied mental illness had anything to do with it, saying Bowers knew exactly what he was doing when he violated the sanctity of a house of worship by opening fire on terrified congregants with an AR-15 rifle and other weapons, shooting everyone he could find.

The jury sided with prosecutors, specifically rejecting most of the primary defense arguments for a life sentence, including that he has schizophrenia and that his delusions about Jewish people spurred the attack. Jurors did find that his difficult childhood merited consideration, but gave more weight to the severity of the crimes.

Bowers blasted his way into Tree of Life on Oct. 27, 2018, and killed members of the Dor Hadash, New Light and Tree of Life congregations, which shared the synagogue building.

The victims were Joyce Fienberg, 75; Richard Gottfried, 65; Rose Mallinger, 97; Dr. Jerry Rabinowitz, 66; brothers David Rosenthal, 54, and Cecil Rosenthal, 59; Bernice Simon, 84, and her husband, Sylvan Simon, 86; Dan Stein, 71; Melvin Wax, 87; and Irving Younger, 69.

Bowers, who traded gunfire with responding officers and was shot three times, told police at the scene that “all these Jews need to die,” according to testimony. Ahead of the attack, he posted, liked or shared a stream of virulently antisemitic content on Gab, a social media platform popular with the far right. He has expressed no remorse for the killings, telling mental health experts he saw himself as a soldier in a race war, took pride in the attack and wished he had shot more people.

In emotional testimony, the victims’ family members described what Bowers took from them. “My world has fallen apart,” Sharyn Stein, Dan Stein’s widow, told the jury.

Survivors and other affected by the attack will have another opportunity to address the court — and Bowers — when he is formally sentenced by the judge.

The synagogue has been closed since the shootings. The Tree of Life congregation is working on an overhauled synagogue complex that would house a sanctuary, museum, memorial and center for fighting antisemitism.

https://news.yahoo.com/jury-resumes-deliberations-over-death-131602865.html

Joseph Zieler Florida Death Row

Joseph Zieler florida

Joseph Zieler was sentenced to death by the State of Florida for the murders of Robin Cornell and her babysitter, Lisa Story

According to court documents Joseph Zieler would break into a Cape Coral apartment in May 1990. Zieler would sexually assault both eleven year old Robin Cornell and her babysitter Lisa Story before suffocating the pair. The brutal crime would go unsolved until Zieler would be arrested in 2016 and finally in 2023 he would be found guilty and sentenced to death

During his sentencing Joseph Zieler attempted to attack his lawyer however he was quickly restrained by courtroom security

Joseph Zieler Now

Joseph Zieler has yet to be moved into the Florida Department Of Corrections

Joseph Zieler Case

Joseph Zieler will soon find out if he will spend the next 25 years in prison or be sentenced to death for killing 11-year-old Robin Cornell and 32-year-old Lisa Story 33 years ago.

A jury listened to Jan Cornell, Robin’s mother, who described Robin as a joy. She talked about how her daughter was funny, caring, and very loving to everyone including family, friends, classmates, and anyone who met her.

“We’ve lived in fear. We have lived in sadness. We miss them both,” Jan said.

Randy Richards, Lisa Story’s fiancé, also talked to jurors. He told them Story was happy with the way life was going and she was doing well at her job.

“Her impact across society was unbelievable,” he said.

In the state’s argument, it was testimony like this and photos the state displayed to the jury as to why they said Zieler should get the death penalty. They are putting forward four aggravating factors, which means there are factors that make the crime worse, calling for the death penalty.

  • The defendant was previously convicted of another capital felony or of a felony involving the use or threat of violence to the person.
  • The capital felony was committed while the defendant was engaged in felony burglary.
  • The capital felony was a homicide and was committed in a cold, calculated, and premeditated manner without any pretense of moral or legal justification.
  • The capital felony was especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel.

Jurors must come to a unanimous decision during this phase. They have to agree state attorneys proved the factors beyond a reasonable doubt. If they all agree, that’s when only eight of the 12 jurors are needed to recommend the death penalty. This is because of a new state law in Florida, which was sparked by the sentencing of the Parkland shooter.
Ultimately it’s still up to the judge to decide Zieler’s fate, though the recommendation has to strongly be taken into consideration

However, the defense has nothing to prove, besides trying to convince the jury Zieler’s life should be spared. They brought in one doctor on Tuesday with another coming in on Wednesday.

Dr. Julie Harper, a psychiatrist, evaluated Zieler back in July 2022. She also spoke with several of his family members and others who knew him. They focused on his childhood first, discussing school and the type of home he grew up in.

“Joanne [Zieler’s mother] didn’t demonstrate a lot of caring or loving behaviors,” Harper said. “He was very frightened of his father.”

The doctor went on to say because his father was abusive to Zieler’s family members, it made Zieler’s childhood complicated.

“This is a complicated person to grow up with when you’re supposed to be learning about rules of society and being frightened to break rules in the home because of the risk to yourself, so I think that makes him very confused regarding his father,” Harper explained.

She also evaluated him mentally and later diagnosed him with major depressive disorder and mild neuro-cognitive disorder. The doctor spoke at several head injuries Zieler sustained from accidents and falling as a child.

In some of the tests, Harper said Zieler did not do well in attention in concentration, recognition memory, spatial processing, verbal fluency and reasoning and conceptual shifting. She even addressed in outburst in court last week.

“Talking on and on and not stopping when the judge directed him to do so, that’s consistent with this low score on reasoning and conceptual shifting where he can’t shift gears,” she said.

On Wednesday morning, A neurologist testified on behalf of the defense during the penalty phase.

The doctor said Zieler has Parkinsonism, not Parkinson’s disease. This means it looks like the disease, but it isn’t and doesn’t respond to treatment.

The state is going into its rebuttal, followed by closing arguments.

It will then be in the hands of the jury for the recommendation.

The jury will recommend either death or at least 25 years in prison.

The judge will review the recommendation before handing down the sentence.

https://www.fox4now.com/news/local-news/lee-county/penalty-phase-begins-for-joseph-zieler

Duane Owen Execution Scheduled For Tonight

duane owen execution

Duane Owen is set to be executed by the State of Florida tonight, June 15 2023, for two separate murders and sexual assaults

According to court documents Duane Owen would attack 14-year-old babysitter Karen Slattery in March 1984. The teenage girl would be sexually assaulted and murdered. Two months later Owen would sexually assault and murder Georgianna Worden on May 29, 1984.

Duane Owen would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death in 1986

Duane Owen News

Thursday, convicted murderer Duane Owen, 62, is scheduled to be executed in Florida, almost 40 years after the separate brutal murders of a mother and a 14-year-old babysitter in Palm Beach County.

Owen’s attorney has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to halt Thursday’s execution, arguing that Owen is not competent to be executed.

He “lacks a rational understanding of the connection between his crime and impending execution due to his fixed psychotic delusions and dementia,” Lisa M. Fusaro argued in the filing.

Attorneys for the state of Florida filed their own motions Tuesday arguing the Supreme Court should not halt the execution, saying it is “not in the public interest” to further delay punishment using the same mental health arguments that have failed in numerous attempts before.

Owen confessed to breaking into a Delray Beach home in 1984, where 14-year-old Karen Slattery was babysitting, waited until she put the children to bed and then confronting her nude except for boxer shorts, gloves and socks, holding a knife and a hammer.

He stabbed her 18 times, then dragged her unconscious body to a bedroom where he raped her.

Afterward, court records show he said he checked in on the sleeping children, then took a shower and left.

Two months later, investigators found Owen’s fingerprint on a book near the body of Georgianna Worden, 38, of Boca Raton.

Worden had been bludgeoned to death with a hammer and then raped and posed while her two daughters slept in the next room. They discovered her body the next morning.

Court records show Owen had also broken into the homes of two other women in a similar fashion and brutally attacked and assaulted them.

Owen was convicted and sentenced to death in both cases, but his conviction in Slattery’s murder was overturned by the Supreme Court on an argument that a statement he made during his confession should have halted the questioning.

That decision was later reversed, and Owen received a new trial in 1999, although he was already facing the death penalty in Worden’s case.

Owen used an insanity defense in that trial, claiming he wanted to be a woman and thought he could become one by killing a woman.

The jury once again convicted him, and Judge Harold Cohen sentenced him to death.

Attorneys appealed the conviction, but the Supreme Court affirmed it.

Unless there is a stay by the U.S. Supreme Court, Duane Owen is scheduled to die by lethal injection Thursday at 6 p.m. at the Florida State Prison in Starke.

WPBF 25 News Investigative Reporter Terri Parker, who covered the murders in 1984 and the retrial in 1999, will be a witness to the execution.

https://www.wpbf.com/article/florida-duane-owen-execution/44201622#

Bryan Patrick Miller Sentenced To Death In Arizona

Bryan Patrick Miller was sentenced to death by the State of Arizona for two murders that took place thirty years ago

According to court documents Bryan Patrick Miller would murder 21-year-old Angela Brosso in November 1992 and 17-year-old Melanie Bernas in September 1993. Police believe that Miller knocked both of the young women off of their bicycles, dragged them into a wooded area where they would be sexually assaulted and murdered before being thrown into a canal

Bryan Patrick Miller was arrested back in 2015 however it took a long time before he could be declared mentally competent to stand trial

Bryan Patrick Miller News

Bryan Patrick Miller has been sentenced to death after being found guilty of killing two women along canals in Arizona in the 1990s.

His sentence was announced Wednesday in a Maricopa County Court.

Miller had been found guilty of killing Angela Brosso in November 1992, on the eve of her 22nd birthday, and 17-year-old Melanie Bernas in September 1993.

The verdict had been years in the making due to Miller and his attorneys pleading an insanity defense.

Brosso and Bernas both disappeared while riding their bicycles along the Arizona Canal in north Phoenix, according to authorities.

Police believe Miller knocked Brasso off her bicycle, stabbed her, and dragged her off the trail. Her body was found near a bike trail.

Ten months later, police said Bernas’ body was discovered floating in the canal. Her bicycle was missing.

Authorities said DNA evidence collected in the aftermath of both crimes showed the attacks were linked to the same suspect, and Miller was arrested for the murders in January 2015.

According to police, Miller denied any involvement, although he acknowledged living in the vicinity of the killings at the time and said he rode his bike on paths in the area.

Jill Canetta, Melanie Bernas’ older sister, told the court Wednesday, “September of this year will mark the 30-year anniversary of the gruesome murder of our beloved little sister, Melanie. Words cannot begin to explain the level of excruciating pain we experience every single day since her murder. We live without her smile, her hugs, her companionship. We live without her love.”

Linda Brosso, Angela Brosso’s mother, added, “The defendant stole my angel from the Earth. Angela was my one and only. I will never be able to plan her wedding. I will never have grandchildren. With his actions on that night, he murdered my angel, he ripped my heart, and I will never, ever be the same.”

https://www.courttv.com/news/bryan-patrick-miller-sentenced-to-death-for-early-1990s-murders/

Bryan Patrick Miller Other News

A serial killer who referred to himself as the “Zombie Hunter” has been sentenced to death. Judge Suzanne Cohen handed down the ruling Wednesday afternoon at the Maricopa County Superior Court in downtown Phoenix.

At the end of a six-month bench trial in April, 50-year-old Bryan Patrick Miller was convicted of murdering Angela Brosso on Nov. 8, 1992 while she was out on a bike ride along a Phoenix canal the night before her birthday. Nearly a year later on Sept. 21, 1993, the body of 17-year-old Melanie Bernas was found about 1.5 miles away from where Brosso was murdered.

Investigators found both women had been sliced with a knife and showed signs of sexual assault. The murders remained unsolved for over 20 years until DNA linked Miller to the crimes in 2015. His trial finally got underway last September. Miller waived his right to a jury trial, meaning it was up to the judge alone to convict him and then decide his sentence.

Following his conviction, the sentencing phase of the trial happened last month, where Miller spoke in court for the first time. “I am not looking for sympathy today,” he said on May 22. “This time is for the family and the friends of the victims. I cannot imagine what pain they have endured for all these years.

On Wednesday, Bryan Patrick Miller received two death sentences for murder as well as an additional 24 years for two counts of kidnapping and two counts of attempted sexual assault.

“September of this year will mark the 30-year anniversary of the gruesome murder of our beloved little sister, Melanie,” Burnas’ sister, Jill Canetta, said in court. “Words cannot begin to explain the level of excruciating pain we experience every single day since her murder. We live without her smile, her hugs, her companionship. We live without her love.”

“The defendant stole my angel from the Earth. Angela was my one and only. I will never be able to plan her wedding. I will never have grandchildren,” said Linda Brosso, Angela’s mother. “With his actions on that night, he murdered my angel, he ripped my heart, and I will never, ever be the same.”

https://www.azfamily.com/2023/06/07/zombie-hunter-sentenced-death-phoenix-canal-murders/

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