Garcia White Texas Death Row

garcia white texas

Garcia White was sentenced to death by the State of Texas for the murders of a mother and her twin daughters. According to court documents Garcia White would go to the victims apartment where he would fatally stab the mother and her twin sixteen year old daughters. Garcia White is also believed to be responsible for two more murders however was not charged. Garcia White would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Garcia White 2022 Information

SID Number:    04267939

TDCJ Number:    00999205

Name:    WHITE,GARCIA GLEN

Race:    B

Gender:    M

Age:    58

Maximum Sentence Date:    DEATH ROW       

Current Facility:    POLUNSKY

Projected Release Date:    DEATH ROW

Parole Eligibility Date:    DEATH ROW

Inmate Visitation Eligible:    YES

Garcia White More News

Texas’s top criminal court has halted Wednesday’s execution of a prisoner linked to five killings in Houston.

The Texas court of criminal appeals issued a reprieve on Tuesday to death row inmate Garcia White. Prosecutors and defence attorneys say the court did not immediately explain its decision.

Garcia White was sentenced to death after being convicted of fatally stabbing twin 16-year-old girls at a Houston apartment where their mother was also killed. White was also tied to the deaths of a grocery store owner and a prostitute.

In their appeal, White’s attorneys argued that he may have been mentally impaired because of longtime cocaine use when he waived his right to an attorney during interrogations.

They also say DNA evidence suggests a second person may have been involved in the triple slaying.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/jan/27/texas-court-reprieves-death-row-prisoner-garcia-white

Garcia White Other News

The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has halted Wednesday’s scheduled execution of Garcia Glen White, 51, who was convicted of murdering teenage twin girls in Houston in 1989.

The court, in a ruling issued on Tuesday, did not spell out specific reasons for its decision.

Lawyers for White have tried to have the execution suspended, saying he was mentally impaired. They also raised questions about his prosecution.

The killings of Annette and Bernette Edwards went unsolved for about six years until a friend of White told police during an investigation of an unrelated murder that White had killed the twins, the Texas Attorney General’s Office said.

An initial confession given by White did not match evidence at the scene. White later gave another confession with a new version of what happened in the apartment. Semen discovered on a bedsheet at the apartment was consistent with White’s, the office said.

https://www.reuters.com/article/usa-texas-execution-idUSL1N0V700W20150128

David Wood Texas Death Row

david wood texas

David Wood was sentenced to death by the State of Texas for the murders of six girls. According to court documents David Wood would murder Rosa Maria Casio, 24; Ivy Susanna Williams, 23; Karen Baker, 20; Angelica Frausto, 17; Desiree Wheatley, 15; and Dawn Marie Smith, 14. All were killed in 1987. David Wood would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

David Wood 2022 Information

SID Number:    02036774

TDCJ Number:    00999051

Name:    WOOD,DAVID LEONARD

Race:    W

Gender:    M

Age:    64

Maximum Sentence Date:    DEATH ROW       

Current Facility:    POLUNSKY

Projected Release Date:    DEATH ROW

Parole Eligibility Date:    DEATH ROW

Inmate Visitation Eligible:    YES

David Wood More News

 The man convicted nearly 17 years ago of murdering six girls and young women, then burying their bodies in the desert, is scheduled to die Aug. 20 in Huntsville, Texas.

David Leonard Wood, 52, denied killing anyone, though police link him to as many as nine murders. He will be the third El Pasoan to be executed since 1976, when capital punishment was revived in the United States.

The senior George Bush was president when Wood was sentenced to die for the murders of Rosa Maria Casio, 24; Ivy Susanna Williams, 23; Karen Baker, 20; Angelica Frausto, 17; Desiree Wheatley, 15; and Dawn Marie Smith, 14. All were killed in 1987.

El Paso police detectives also suspected him in the 1987 disappearances of Marjorie Knox, 14; Cheryl Vasquez-Dismukes, 19; and Melissa Alaniz, 14. They are still missing.

Prison administrators said a lethal dose of sodium thiopental, a sedative, is administered to condemned inmates. They also are given pancuronium chromide, a muscle relaxant that collapses the diaphragm and lungs, and potassium chloride, which stops the heart

The drugs cost $86.08, and the process lasts about seven minutes.

Marcia Fulton, Wheatley’s mother, said she planned to travel from Florida to Texas to witness Wood’s execution.

“I had promised Desi at her grave the day I buried her that I would find out who did this and help bring them to justice,” Fulton said. “Twenty-two years later, it looks like I will be able to keep my promise.”

The execution will bring to a close a terrifying case for Northeast El Paso, where young women disappeared in 1987 at an alarming rate.

In the beginning, Fulton said, families of the young women who were reported missing had a hard time persuading police to investigate.

She said police initially treated the missing teenagers as mere runaways, and the young women as prostitutes and nightclub dancers who led risky lifestyles.

“I told them my daughter was not a runaway,” Fulton said.

Wheatley was last seen getting into Wood’s truck on June 2, 1987, after he offered her a ride home. Her body was found Oct. 20, 1987, in a shallow grave along the 12000 block of McCombs.

To call attention to the disappearances, Fulton, Karen Baker’s mother and others demonstrated at the Stanton Street international bridge.

Al Marquez, then a city detective, said El Paso police mobilized once they realized something heinous was going on.

“We formed a special task force to look into the murders and disappearances. We brought in experts and dogs from out of town to search for bodies.”

During the investigation, the Police Department interviewed 400 people and investigated 50 suspects. Detectives traveled to Florida, Utah and Mexico to follow up on leads. They consulted with FBI profilers, and used aircraft with heat-sensing equipment to comb the desert for more victims.

Although Wood was a prime suspect early on, Marquez said, detectives had a hard time coming up with the evidence they needed to arrest him

A prostitute who accused Wood of tying her up and sexually assaulting her in 1987 in the Northeast desert helped break the case. Her account placed him in the area where the six bodies were buried.

Convicted in 1988 of sexually assaulting the woman, Wood was taken off El Paso streets and sentenced to 50 years in prison. Soon after, with six murders hanging over him, Wood became known as “The Desert Killer.”

Wood’s world consisted of biker clubs, topless bars, tattoo parlors, prostitutes, drugs and alcohol. His dark subculture snared some of the teenagers and young women who became his victims. The Northeast end of town was his playground.

The girls and women who disappeared in 1987 shared the same physical characteristics. They were small and slender.

At least some of the victims, such as Karen Baker and Wheatley, trusted Wood enough to see him socially or climb into his vehicle.

Baker was last seen at the Hawaiian Royale Motel on Dyer Street, leaving with Wood on June 4, 1987. The 20-year-old told someone at the motel she was excited about meeting Wood later that night for a date. Exactly three months later, her body was found in the desert.

Mary Baker, her adoptive mother, said Karen was attending cosmetology school and trying to get her life together when she vanished.

Most of Wood’s victims knew him or had some connection to the other young women who disappeared that year. Parents of three of the victims also had something in common: They worked at Rockwell Industries.

Ivy Susanna Williams, who had been charged with prostitution and drug possession, also was known to stay at the Hawaiian Royale Motel. She was married to Ray Fierro of El Paso, but he told police he had not seen her for a year. Williams worked as a topless dancer, as did Rosa Maria Casio and the underaged Angelica Frausto.

Before her disappearance, Frausto was seen with Wood on his motorcycle. Before that, she had hung around the Hawaiian Royale Motel.

Wheatley lived on Tiber Street, near Wood’s home, and knew of him through friends.

Knox, who might have been pregnant, was the first to vanish, on Feb. 14, 1987. She used to ride the bus to school with Wheatley when Wheatley lived in Chaparral, N.M. Baker, who was older, previously lived in Chaparral.

Alaniz and Wheatley attended H.E. Charles Middle School. Vasquez-Dismukes had also been a student there. The school was near Wood’s home.

Denise Frausto said her sister, Angelica Frausto, knew Wheatley. “Angie nicknamed (Desiree Wheatley) ‘Baby Girl,’ and tried to look out after her, so that the older guys would not take advantage of her,” Frausto said.

Cheryl Vasquez-Dismukes, who graduated from Andress High School, married Robert Dismukes by proxy a week before she vanished. Dismukes was in prison at the time, serving a sentence for attempted murder.

Erika Dismukes, her mother-in-law, said last week that she suspects that Cheryl is alive. Yet, for practical reasons, she said, she had her officially declared dead last year.

Casio was the only victim who did not appear to have any Northeast El Paso or Chaparral connections.

During Wood’s murder trial in 1992, prosecutors revealed that he was living with Joann Blaich near the Cabaret Club on Montana Avenue. Casio was last seen leaving the club with a man who fit Wood’s description.

Except for some orange fibers found where Wheatley was buried, which the court did not allow jurors to consider, there was no physical evidence — such as weapons, fingerprints, DNA or clothing — linking Wood to the crimes. But the circumstantial evidence was overwhelming.

The victims knew Wood or had met him through friends, and he was seen with the young women before they disappeared.

Perhaps the most compelling testimony at his trial came from the prostitute Wood had sexually assaulted, and his two former cellmates, Randy Wells and James Carl Sweeney Jr. The prisoners said Wood told them he had killed the women. Wells, in fact, said Wood claimed to have killed 15 women.

Both of Wood’s cellmates had something to gain. One stood to collect a $25,000 reward. Prosecutors dropped a murder charge against the second one in exchange for his testimony.

Dolph Quijano, one of Wood’s lawyers, said former El Paso District Judge Peter Peca made sure Wood got a fair trial.

“He bent over backwards for the defense,” Quijano said.

Heavy publicity in El Paso led the judge to move Wood’s trial to Dallas.

Prosecutor Debra Morgan told jurors that Wood, interested in sex, lured the women to the desert by offering them drugs. Two victims, Williams and Baker, were found with their clothes on. The rest were in different stages of undress.

The prostitute who testified against Wood said he told her he had cocaine buried in the desert.

In a recent interview, Denise Frausto, Angelica Frausto’s sister, said she believed Wood did not act alone.

“The day before Angie disappeared, she took someone to a stash house on Yarbrough (in East El Paso). She was very excited about it,” Frausto said. “There were 15 large black trash bags in the garage of the house full of marijuana. After her body was found, people she used to hang around with told our family that Angie was selling drugs for a cop out of a room at the Hawaiian Royale Motel.

“They also said Wood was seen with that cop and a judge at the motel,” she said. “We told the cops all this, but they brushed it off. Then, we started receiving threats, and my mother told us to just drop it.”

Freddie Bonilla, an investigator hired by Wood’s lawyers, said he tried to pursue a lead that had grown cold by the time the defense team found out about it.

“If Wood killed these girls, I don’t think he did it alone, and he probably didn’t kill all of them,” said Bonilla, who retired as a homicide investigator with the El Paso Police Department and the El Paso County Sheriff’s Office. “Wood was a convenient suspect.”

According to court records, intriguing information surfaced unexpectedly after Wood’s trial had started. It had sat in a box for a couple of years in a locker at the El Paso Police Department. Prosecutors made it available to Wood’s lawyers as soon as it came to their attention.

One of the items was a Crime Stoppers tip alleging that three people had seen a biker known as “Corey” shoot Dawn Marie Smith and bury her body in Chaparral. According to the tipsters, the biker was romantically involved with a woman who knew Wood and who was sheltering Smith at the time in her trailer house.

Smith, believing she was pregnant, had run away from home in June 1987. Her family last heard from her in August. Her body was found on Oct. 20, 1987.

“I believe Smith’s body was moved from Chaparral and reburied in El Paso,” Bonilla said. “A couple of years had passed since the tip, and by the time we got to Chaparral to check this, the trailer where these people lived was gone.”

Wood’s lawyers filed an unsuccessful motion to have Smith’s body exhumed so an expert could examine her remains for gunshot wounds.

During the trial, another woman’s body was found in the desert on the East Side, wrapped in an orange blanket. The victim was older than the others, between 40 and 45 years old.

“We suspected there was a connection to the Northeast murders, but the police said it was not related,” Bonilla said. “The orange fibers from the Wheatley case might have come from this orange blanket.”

Another belated tip was a reference in police detective Ben Ayala’s notes alluding to a sex-and-drug ring involving the murders. This group purportedly did not involve Wood. Ayala, who was part of the police task force, died in a vehicle accident before he could check further.

Other police investigators told Wood’s lawyers that the tip led nowhere.

Across the years, six trial dates were scheduled for Wood. He received a continuance in 1991 to pursue yet another lead. This time it was from FBI agents in Las Vegas. They notified El Paso police in 1989 that a man had confessed to killing young women in El Paso. The man, Edward Dean Barton, was 27 at the time. Except for his blue eyes, he supposedly resembled Wood, who had hazel eyes.

“Barton claimed to have killed four women in the El Paso, Texas, area between May and December of 1987,” the FBI report said. “Barton buried the women in the desert off Dyer Street. He chose the desert because the desert eats bodies up. Barton described the women as all being small, petite, young, with features similar to that of his wife.”

Barton also told the FBI he had hired someone to kill his wife, Mary Alice Barefoot, but changed his mind. Later, Barton, who was on parole for other crimes, escaped from a halfway house in Nevada.

Steve Simmons, then the El Paso district attorney, said in a July 30, 1991, letter that Barton’s wife confirmed her husband was in El Paso between April or May 1987 and February 1988. Simmons said that Barton was a drug addict and that his statements to the FBI “are not worthy of belief.”

The bodies might not have been found had it not been for Frank Brooks, who worked for the El Paso Water Utilities and stumbled on the first two victims, Baker and Casio, while hunting for arrowheads on Sept. 4, 1987.

There is no longer any sign of the desert graveyard between McCombs and Dyer, where cars and trucks zip by at high speeds. Today, the only things moving around the area are cottontails that scurry through mesquite trees and quail that scratch at wild melon patches.

To the immediate north, near the New Mexico line, the Painted Dunes Golf Course, which did not exist then, thrives with throngs of golfers.

Last year, the city reported that a major company was interested in creating a giant high-end development in that part of Northeast El Paso.

Some of the people who moved into new homes nearby said they had never heard of the desert deaths.

•Jan. 15, 1987 — Wood is paroled after serving about seven years of a 20-year sentence for sexually assaulting two teenage girls in Northeast El Paso. Now 29, he moves in with his father in Northeast El Paso.

•Feb. 14, 1987 — Marjorie Knox, 14, of Chaparral, N.M., disappears while visiting friends in Northeast El Paso. She is still missing.

•March 7, 1987 — Melissa Alaniz of Northeast El Paso disappears. She is still missing.

•June 2, 1987 — Desiree Wheatley, 15, of Northeast El Paso, disappears.

•June 5, 1987 — Karen Baker, 20, of Northeast El Paso, disappears.

•June 28, 1987 — Cheryl Lynn Vasquez-Dismukes, 19, of Northeast El Paso, disappears. She is still missing.

•July 11, 1987 — Families and friends of the missing women demonstrate at the Stanton Street international bridge to bring attention to the cases.

•Aug.8, 1987 — Angelica Frausto, 17, of North-Central El Paso, is last seen by her family.

•Aug. 12, 1987 — Rosa Maria Casio, 24, of Addison, Texas, disappears while visiting her sister in Juárez. Her car is found abandoned the next day in Central El Paso.

•Aug. 28, 1987 — Dawn Marie Smith, 14, of Northeast El Paso, calls her family to say she will not return home.

•Sept. 4, 1987 — A utility worker finds the bodies of Casio and Baker in the Northeast desert between Dyer and McCombs.

•Oct. 20, 1987 — Wheatley and Smith’s bodies are found within a half mile of the first two bodies.

•Oct. 24, 1987 — Police arrest Wood in the sexual assault and kidnapping of a prostitute. They also say he violated the terms of his parole.

•Nov. 3, 1987 — Frausto’s body is found in the same desert area.

•March 15, 1988 — Ivy Susanna Williams’ body is found in the same area.

•March 17, 1988 — Wood is sentenced to 50 years in the attack on the prostitute.

•May 27, 1988 — Wood marries Valerie A. Trader.

•November 1988 — Wood sues police, claiming they made him an “escape goat.”

•July 13, 1990 — A grand jury indicts Wood on serial murder charges.

•July 29, 1991 — Wood and his wife divorce.

•Oct. 21, 1992 — Testimony begins in Wood’s capital murder trial, which was moved to Dallas.

•Nov. 10, 1992 — Jurors convict Wood and recommend the death penalty.

•Aug. 20, 2009 — The state plans to execute Wood at its Huntsville prison.

https://www.elpasotimes.com/story/archives/2017/08/10/2009-david-wood-scheduled-executed-aug-20/488213001/

Jeffery Wood Texas Death Row

jeffery wood texas

Jeffery Wood was sentenced to death by the State of Texas for the murder of a gas station clerk. According to court documents Jeffery Wood and Daniel Earl Reneau planned the robbery of a gas station. Daniel Reneau went into the station and during the course of the robbery would shoot and kill the clerk. Jeffery Wood would stay in the car. However due to Texas “Law of parties” both men were arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Daniel Reneau would be executed in 2002.

Jeffery Wood 2022 Information

SID Number:    05435066

TDCJ Number:    00999256

Name:    WOOD,JEFFERY LEE

Race:    W

Gender:    M

Age:    48

Maximum Sentence Date:    DEATH ROW       

Current Facility:    POLUNSKY

Projected Release Date:    DEATH ROW

Parole Eligibility Date:    DEATH ROW

Inmate Visitation Eligible:    YES

Jeffery Wood More News

Days before Jeffery Wood was expected to be executed for his role in a deadly robbery 20 years ago, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals on Friday granted him a stay of execution.

Everybody, including the prosecuting attorney, agrees Wood didn’t kill anyone.

In 1996, a 22-year-old Jeffery Wood waited in a pickup truck while his friend Daniel Reneau went inside a gas station in Kerrville, Texas, to steal the store’s safe. Reneau ended up killing the clerk during the robbery.

Most states allow a distinction between accomplices and those who physically carry out the crime.

But in Texas, sitting in that truck and taking part in the robbery was enough to get Wood convicted of murder and onto death row.

On his 43rd birthday, Jeffery Wood received news that the execution was halted.

The two-page order sent two arguments from the defense to the trial court for resolution.

One of the claims argued “false and misleading testimony” was presented by the prosecuting side’s psychiatrist and it was in violation of due process. The other claimed the judgment also violates due process because it was based on false scientific evidence through “false psychiatric testimony concerning (Wood’s) future dangerousness.”

Among the defense’s claims that were not addressed in the order: That’s Wood participation was too minimal to warrant the death penalty under the Eighth Amendment.

Reneau was a drifter who showed up in Kerrville during the summer of 1995. By November of that year, he met Wood through a friend, after couch-surfing and motel-hopping around town.

The pair eventually moved into a trailer together along with their girlfriends. Wood’s girlfriend, Nadia Mireles, noticed Reneau engaging in “erratic and threatening” behavior once the foursome started living under one roof, court documents say. Reneau had started arming himself and committing crimes.

In December 1995, Jeffery Wood and Reneau stole firearms and stored them in the trailer.

Then came the plan to steal the safe from the Texaco gas station after Wood and Reneau befriended the clerks who worked there.

Kris Keeran, the clerk Reneau would eventually shoot, allowed the two to hang around the store, scratching lottery tickets. The three of them, along with the assistant manager, discussed “how to defraud the store of money,” according to court documents. Keeran later changed his mind about stealing from the store, the filing says, which frustrated Reneau.

Sitting in a borrowed pickup truck outside the gas station in the early morning of January 2, 1996, Wood waited for Reneau to steal the safe.

His defense attorneys have argued, numerous times, that Wood did not know Reneau was carrying a gun and would subsequently shoot Keeran.

Reneau was executed in 2002.

The Texas statute commonly referred to as the “law of parties” abolishes “distinctions between accomplices and principals…and each party to an offense may be charged and convicted without alleging that he acted as a principal or accomplice.”

Crucially, it adds: “If, in the attempt to carry out a conspiracy to commit one felony, another felony is committed by one of the conspirators, all conspirators are guilty of the felony actually committed, though having no intent to commit it…”

The law is not unique to Texas. In some states, it is called “accomplice liability” or “Pinkerton liability” resulting from the 1946 US Supreme Court case Pinkerton vs. United States, according to the National Coalition Against the Death Penalty.

The statute closest to Texas’ law of parties is on the books in Georgia, NCADP says. In September 2015, Georgia executed Kelly Gissendaner, who was convicted of murder, for persuading her lover to kill her husband in 1997.

Mark Bennett, a criminal defense lawyer who has worked in Texas for over two decades, made the point that the situation is black and white in Texas because there are no accessories or accomplices to crimes in Texas. “Either you take some role in the crime or you don’t,” he explained, “and so, there is no way for Wood to be an accessory to murder.”

The last man to be convicted and executed under the “law of parties” statute in Texas was 34-year-old Robert Lee Thompson on November 19, 2009. His co-defendant, Sammy Butler, killed a store clerk whom the two were robbing. Butler is serving a life sentence. Thompson did shoot another store clerk in the robbery attempt and that man lived.

Charles Keeran, the father of the gas station clerk killed by Reneau, said he “originally wished for Reneau and Wood to be executed, [but he] changed his mind after Reneau’s execution,” according to The Dallas Morning News.

Keeran told the Dallas newspaper that living in prison is a better punishment, and that death was the “easy way out.”

CNN made repeated attempts to contact the Keeran family but was not able to reach them for a comment.

Terri Been, Wood’s sister, said she grew up a conservative Republican but has spent the past 20 years fighting to change the death penalty laws, which she believed in for much of her adolescence.

Both Been and Wood’s lawyer, Tyler, say Wood has a learning disability and an IQ of 80. This was the reason for a stay of execution in 2008, to give the defense time to argue Wood’s inability to comprehend actions and words at an adult level.

“Even if Jeff learns something and can say it back right away, the next day he’ll forget everything,” Been said.

The defense claims will go back to the trial court for fact finding, Kate Black, who is assisting Wood’s legal team, told CNN. It will take a bit of time and there is no time line or date set yet, she said.

“Once the trial court receives the order from today [Friday] made by the appeals court, they will set dates. For now, the stay of execution is in place until the case is resolved,” Black said.

https://www.cnn.com/2016/08/19/us/texas-execution-jeff-wood/index.html

George McFarland Texas Death Row

George McFarland texas

George McFarland was sentenced to death by the State of Texas for a robbery and murder. According to court documents George McFarland would rob a Texan grocer who was walking back to his store from the bank with a bag full of money. George McFarland would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. This case tends to get a bit of attention as George McFarland lawyer slept off and on throughout the trial

George McFarland 2022 Information

SID Number:    02901248

TDCJ Number:    00999046

Name:    MCFARLAND,GEORGE EDWARD

Race:    B

Gender:    M

Age:    61

Maximum Sentence Date:    DEATH ROW       

Current Facility:    POLUNSKY

Projected Release Date:    DEATH ROW

Parole Eligibility Date:    DEATH ROW

Inmate Visitation Eligible:    YES

George McFarland More News

One of the lawyers repeatedly slept through trial and the other had never handled a capital murder before. But last week a Houston federal judge decided that was good enough to keep George McFarland on death row, despite his longstanding claims of innocence and a conviction based largely on the testimony of a single, tentative eyewitness.

The Harris County man was sentenced to die in 1992 for the slaying and robbery of a local grocer, a 43-year-old man gunned down while walking back to his store with a bag of cash from the bank. There was never any physical evidence tying McFarland to the murder, but his primary attorney only cursorily prepared for the case, barely consulted with co-counsel, put on no evidence and dozed through key parts of the whirlwind four-day trial

I’m 72 years old,” former defense attorney John Benn later told a court. “I customarily take a short nap in the afternoon.”

The high-profile case sparked decades of legal wrangling and an award-winning movie, but it particularly resonated in Harris County in light of an earlier, more infamous sleeping lawyer case that helped usher in legislative changes to indigent defense and ended with the overturning of a local man’s death sentence.

Yet in McFarland’s case, U.S. District Judge Lynn N. Hughes determined Tuesday that the attorney’s dozing was “appalling” and “regrettable” – but in the end decided it didn’t matter because at least one of the two defense attorneys was awake at all times, so the accused was never entirely without counsel.

“It’s amazing how cavalier the courts have been with regard to this case,” said Yale Law School visiting lecturer Stephen Bright. “It’s unconscionable.”

Tuesday’s opinion came more than a decade after the case landed in Hughes’ court but, for unclear reasons, the jurist did not make a decision until months after a Houston-area activist wrote a higher court to complain about the delay.

Rusty Herman, McFarland’s current attorney, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

On an unseasonably warm night in late 1991, a robbery crew gunned down Kenneth Kwan, the owner of C&Y Grocery north of Loop 610. The father of three was on the way back from the bank with $27,000 in hand when a robbery crew opened fire.

Carolyn Bartie, a civilian worker at the Houston Police Department, was a regular customer who happened to be sitting outside to witness the whole shooting. Early on, she tentatively identified McFarland in a photo line-up – though her initial description of the shooter didn’t match the man accused.

None of the alleged accomplices was arrested or ever testified, and no prints or physical evidence tied any of the suspects to the crime.

Still, McFarland – who had a criminal background and a history of drug use – was arrested six weeks later after his teenage nephew called Crime Stoppers and said he’d heard the older man confess to a robbery. The teen later recanted, after McFarland had already been sent to death row

For trial, McFarland hired Benn based on the recommendation of friends. But the elderly attorney hadn’t tried a capital case in more than two decades, and started nodding off during jury selection. When the judge spotted the potential problem, he appointed Sanford Melamed – who had no capital experience – as co-counsel.

When asked if he’d really been snoozing during trial, Benn first said the court proceedings were just “boring” and later contended that he’d been “thinking,” not napping. But, unlike in the other sleeping lawyer case – where Joe Cannon dozed throughout Calvin Burdine’s trial – McFarland had a second attorney, and the courts so far have zeroed in on that.

Generally, the judge conceded, lawyers should not sleep during trial.

“The court does not approve of a sleeping lawyer,” Hughes wrote. “This is unacceptable by an attorney in any case and particularly in a case of this magnitude.”

But in this case, Texas courts already found that it didn’t matter because at least one of the two attorneys was awake – even though other attorneys later alleged Melamed was badly prepared.

“This is not a case where the trial court ignored a defendant’s constitutional rights,” Hughes wrote. “The prosecution engaged in no misconduct. While not perfect, the attorneys made efforts to defend McFarland. Viewing the evidence and McFarland’s choice in trial, McFarland has not shown that a different strategy would have ended in a different result. It is regrettable that Benn slept through trial. That does not change the fact that the court of criminal appeals did not misapply the law.”

https://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/article/Judge-rejects-appeal-from-Houston-death-row-13751264.php

William Mason Texas Death Row

william mason texas

William Mason was sentenced to death by the State of Texas for the murder of his wife. According to court documents William Mason would kidnap his wife and put her into the trunk of the car. Mason would drive to a remote location under a bridge where he would beat the woman to death. William Mason would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

William Mason 2022 Information

SID Number:    01609847

TDCJ Number:    00999040

Name:    MASON,WILLIAM MICHAEL

Race:    W

Gender:    M

Age:    67

Maximum Sentence Date:    DEATH ROW       

Current Facility:    POLUNSKY

Projected Release Date:    DEATH ROW

Parole Eligibility Date:    DEATH ROW

Inmate Visitation Eligible:    YES

William Mason More News

William “Billy the Kid” Mason is a like a wrecking ball, prosecutors said Monday during opening statements of the second death penalty trial in Harris County this year.

“Everything he touches, he destroys,” Assistant Harris County District Attorney Katherine McDaniel told jurors hearing testimony in the re-trial on the punishment phase of Mason’s capital murder case. “The choices William Mason has made continue to wreck the lives of everyone around him.”

Mason was convicted of kidnapping and bludgeoning 33-year-old Deborah Ann Mason in 1991 under the Hwy. 59 bridge over the San Jacinto river in Humble. He faces the possibility of death or prison time with a chance at parole in as little as 15 years.

On Monday, the 61-year-old sat quietly in a powder blue button-down shirt and round black glasses and listened as prosecutors laid out their case.

His defense team did not make an opening statement.

Attorney Terry Gaiser has said the case should have been tried as a murder, but because Mason tied up his wife, put her in the trunk of a car, the underlying felony of kidnapping made it a death penalty case.

Gaiser has said Mason would agree to a plea deal that ensures he will spend the rest of his life in prison, if offered.

That offer has apparently not come, as prosecutors prepared for at least a week of testimony to detail the crime and Mason’s behavior before and after the slaying, including another murder conviction during a crime spree more than a decade earlier.

McDaniel said Mason is a high-ranking member of the Aryan Brotherhood of Texas, a violent white supremacist prison gang. She said he robbed and killed a black man in 1977 after spending hours seeking out a black victim.

“Don’t you know he went through that man’s pockets and then shot him dead?” McDaniel said. She said Mason also committed an armed robbery of a Mexican food restaurant later that year, then fled to California, where he was arrested

After spending 13 years in prison for murder, McDaniel said, he was paroled. It was only 18 days after getting out that he beat his wife to death by smashing her head with concrete blocks, then weighing down her body in the San Jacinto river.

Her body was found days later by passersby after storm waters receded.

The case, in state District Judge Marc Carter‘s court, is the second death penalty trial in Harris County this year.

https://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/houston/article/Man-who-killed-wife-returns-to-court-for-retrial-6619744.php

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