Carlos Trevino Texas Death Row

Carlos Trevino texas

Carlos Trevino was sentenced to death by the State of Texas for the sexual assault and murder of a teenage girl. According to court documents Carlos Trevino was just released from prison when he sexually assaulted and murdered a fifteen year old girl. Carlos Trevino was arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Two other men who participated in the sexual assault received lengthy prison sentences.

Carlos Trevino 2022 Information

SID Number:    05152741

TDCJ Number:    00999235

Name:    TREVINO,CARLOS

Race:    H

Gender:    M

Age:    47

Maximum Sentence Date:    DEATH ROW       

Current Facility:    POLUNSKY

Projected Release Date:    DEATH ROW

Parole Eligibility Date:    DEATH ROW

Inmate Visitation Eligible:    NO

Carlos Trevino More News

A judge has rescheduled the execution set for next month of a San Antonio man condemned for the 1996 gang rape and fatal stabbing of a 15-year-old girl.

Carlos Trevino, 45, had been set for execution on March 11, but a judge in San Antonio last week moved the execution to June 3 after Trevino’s attorneys requested that the previous execution order be withdrawn.

Trevino’s attorneys had argued that delays in sending the related paperwork to case parties invalidated the order.

Carlos Trevino, a member of the Hermandad de Pistoleros Latinos (Brotherhood of the Latin Gunmen) gang, had recently been released from prison when, according to prosecutors, he sexually assaulted Linda Salinas and stabbed her to death at a San Antonio park on June 9, 1996.

Three others also were convicted in her slaying, but only Trevino received a death sentence.

Trevino’s appellate attorneys have argued that his trial lawyers were ineffective because they failed to present evidence that he suffered from fetal alcohol syndrome and was emotionally and physically abused by his mother.

https://www.nbcdfw.com/news/execution-rescheduled-for-texas-man-condemned-in-15-year-olds-death/2314013/

Richard Vasquez Texas Death Row

Richard Vasquez texas

Richard Vasquez was sentenced to death by the State of Texas for the murder of a four year old girl. According to court documents Richard Vasquez would punch his four year old stepdaughter multiple times in the head and then sent the little girl outside of the home. The little girl would later fall off of a stool and was rushed to the hospital where she died a day later. Richard Vasquez would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Richard Vasquez 2022 Information

SID Number:    05853486

TDCJ Number:    00999319

Name:    VASQUEZ,RICHARD

Race:    H

Gender:    M

Age:    42

Maximum Sentence Date:    DEATH ROW       

Current Facility:    POLUNSKY

Projected Release Date:    DEATH ROW

Parole Eligibility Date:    DEATH ROW

Inmate Visitation Eligible:    YES

Richard Vasquez More News

A federal appeals court has upheld the death sentence of a Corpus Christi man condemned for the 1998 fatal beating of his girlfriend’s 4-year-old daughter.

In its ruling, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals was critical of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals for deciding earlier that attorneys at the 1999 trial of Richard Vasquez did an acceptable job during the trial’s punishment phase.

“It was objectively unreasonable for the state court to conclude that Vasquez’s trial counsel’s performance was constitutionally sound,” the New Orleans-based court said in a decision posted late Wednesday.

The federal judges, however, said Vasquez wasn’t prejudiced by his attorney’s “deficient performance,” that his appeals lawyers didn’t prove the lower court’s prejudice determination was unreasonable and affirmed a Nueces County jury’s decision that Vasquez should die.

Vasquez’s appeals lawyers argued that his trial attorneys did little investigation to show jurors mitigating evidence that could have led them to decide he should get life in prison rather than death.

The attorneys said Vasquez’s trial lawyers never spoke with his parents, didn’t hire a mitigation specialist but instead hired an investigator with no experience in collecting mitigating evidence in capital murder cases.

According to the court opinion, “had Vasquez’s trial attorneys undertaken even a rudimentary investigation of Vasquez’s family and social history, they would have unearthed a frightening portrait of addiction and destruction.”

Among the evidence not presented to jurors was that Vasquez’s drug-addicted father taught his son how to use and sell heroin, took him along on drug runs and robberies, and that he began using marijuana at age 10 and was addicted to cocaine and heroin by age 13. His mother lived with a drug dealer who also provided him with drugs.

Vasquez was 18 when authorities said he fatally beat 4-year-old Miranda Lopez in the head because his girlfriend — the child’s mother and also a drug addict — wouldn’t tell him where she had hidden some cocaine. Evidence also showed the child had been severely sexually assaulted before she died and that cocaine levels in the child’s blood were double the lethal amount for an adult.

Vasquez called 911 to report the girl unconscious and told paramedics she fell from a stool while brushing her teeth and hit her head on the floor. He became a suspect after the nature of her injuries became more clear.

In a second Texas death row case before the court, judges allowed 44-year-old Virgilio Maldonado, a Mexican national, to try to show he’s mentally impaired and can’t be executed for killing a man during a robbery in Houston 15 years ago.

Maldonado, from the western Mexican state of Michoacan, already had a record, including a bank robbery and another slaying, when he was condemned for the shooting death of Cruz Saucedo. Prosecutors said Saucedo was killed for marijuana, money and a gun.

The mental impairment issue previously was rejected by a state court after an evidentiary hearing. The federal appeals court now will hold its own hearing. The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled mentally impaired people can’t be put to death.

The appeals court also rejected Maldonado’s appeal of a lower court ruling refusing his claim that he improperly was denied legal protections entitled to foreign nationals under the Vienna Convention.

https://www.deseret.com/2010/8/12/20134018/court-upholds-texas-child-killer-s-death-sentence

Faryion Wardrip Texas Death Row

Faryion Wardrip

Faryion Wardrip was sentenced to death by the State of Texas for the murders of five women. According to court documents in a three year span Faryion Wardrip would murder five women Terry Sims, 20; Toni Gibbs, 23; Debra Taylor, 25; Ellen Bau, 21, and Tina Kimbrew, 21. Faryion Wardrip who had just been released from prison for yet another murder reign of terror began in Wichita Falls in 1984. Faryion Wardrip would finally be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Faryion Wardrip 2022 Information

SID Number:    03709079

TDCJ Number:    00999331

Name:    WARDRIP,FARYION EDWARD

Race:    W

Gender:    M

Age:    62

Maximum Sentence Date:    DEATH ROW       

Current Facility:    POLUNSKY

Projected Release Date:    DEATH ROW

Parole Eligibility Date:    DEATH ROW

Inmate Visitation Eligible:    YES

Faryion Wardrip More News

A serial killer in Texas who has been on death row for more than 20 years for the murders of five young women has had his appeal to review his sentence denied by the U.S. Supreme Court after he claimed his public defender was ineffective and negligent in presenting his case.

Faryion Wardrip, 62, was convicted in 1999 in the deaths of four women in a 16-month span, starting in Wichita Falls, in 1984. He had been freed on parole after confessing to the murder of another woman.

His murdered victims were Terry Sims, 20; Toni Gibbs, 23; Debra Taylor, 25; Ellen Bau, 21, and Tina Kimbrew, 21. 

In September 2020, the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals overturned a lower court’s ruling granting a rehearing on the capital punishment sentence. He had petitioned for the rehearing from that court on the basis that his good conduct while in prison was not given enough consideration in the punishment phase. 

The Fifth Circuit rejected his claim for good behavior but admitted both it and the lower court did not address one part of his argument, thus he is entitled for that issue to be settled by the lower court, and granted his petition for a rehearing. 

However, instead of proceeding to federal district court, Wardrip’s defense took its case to the Supreme Court. 

Now that the nation’s highest court has rejected his appeal, which was rooted in his argument that he had inept council, Faryion Wardrip has the option to take his case back to federal district court to consider his claim about good conduct. 

In December 21, 1984, Wardrip’s first victim, Terry Sims, 23, a Midwestern State University student and part-time EKG specialist at what was then Bethania Hospital, was at a Christmas party and then was supposed to go to a a co-worker’s home to study and spend the night.

Unexpectedly, Liza Boone, the co-worker, received a call to return to the hospital to work the midnight shift. She drove Sims to her residence and gave Sims the key to her apartment, dropping her off at approximately 12:30 am. 

The following morning, the co-worker found Sims lying in a pool of blood after she was sexually assaulted and stabbed several times.

It was later determined that while Boone was away at work, Sims had heard Wardrip causing a disturbance and went outside to investigate. Wardrip lunged at Sims and she ran back into the apartment and locked the door. Wardip targeted Sims for ‘no apparent reason’ and broke the door down after she locked him out.

At the time of the incident, though, authorities were not able to track a suspect. Little did they know that the young woman’s death would be the first in a series of killings that went undiscovered for years.  

Gibbs disappeared on January 19, 1985, while employed at Wichita General Hospital. Wardrip came across Gibbs at about six a.m., after he had been out walking all night. 

He knew Gibbs because she was a registered nurse at the same hospital where he worked as an orderly. Gibbs offered Wardrip a ride and after he got in her car, he began hurling her around and screaming at her. He then forced Gibbs to drive down an isolated dirt road to a field.

Two days after her abduction, her car was found within a few miles of the hospital. On February 15, utility workers found her naked body in a field at the southwest corner of West Jentsch Road and Highway 281 in Archer County, one mile south of the Wichita county line, a day after she would have turned 24. 

Gibbs had been sexually assaulted and stabbed. Gibbs had a total of eight stab wounds: three to her back, three to her chest, and two defensive wounds on her left forearm and thumb.

Two months after he murdered Toni Gibbs, Wardrip traveled to Fort Worth with the intention of looking for a job. In Fort Worth he met Taylor in the early morning hours of March 24, 1985, while at a bar. 

Taylor had been at the bar with her husband but he left early because he was tired. 

Debra remained at the bar where Faryion Wardrip approached her and asked her to dance. She accepted his request and the two spent time together in the club.

He then asked to drive her home, which she agreed to. While outside, Wardrip attempted to make sexual advances, which were rejected by Taylor. This infuriated Wardrip and he killed Taylor, leaving her body at a construction site in east Fort Worth. 

When Debra failed to return home by the next morning, she was reported missing by her husband. Her body was found by two construction workers on March 29, 1985.  

On September 20, 1985, Wardrip abducted Blau in Wichita Falls. The kidnapping occurred as Blau was walking alone to her vehicle after leaving her evening job as a waitress. She was also a student at Midwestern State University in Wichita Falls. Wardrip forced Blau to drive to a secluded area, where he eventually killed her by strangulation before breaking her neck.

Leaving her body in the secluded area, he drove her car back into Wichita Falls and abandoned it along with her purse. Her blood was also discovered on the inside of the vehicle. A county road crew employee found Blau’s body in a field in Wichita County on October 10, 1985. 

On May 6, 1986, Wardrip killed Kimbrew, a waitress he had recently befriended. He went to her apartment and suffocated her with a pillow because she ‘reminded him of his ex-wife’.

Three days later, Faryion Wardrip called police in Galveston, Texas, confessing to the crime.

He was sentenced to 35 years in prison but given parole in 1997. 

After his release, Wardrip moved to Olney – 142 miles northwest of Dallas – and married and was even an active member in the community’s church. 

He was required to wear an ankle bracelet, allowing authorities to constantly track his location; he was restricted to movements for work, home and church.

Meanwhile, investigators had still not tied all the cases together. Barry Macha, who was was elected district attorney shortly before Sims was killed, inherited the case as well as the four others. 

‘I still think about Terry and her family. It was a horrific case,’ Macha told Time Record News, adding that he still is in contact with the families of the victims. 

In 1999, Macha officially reopened all the cold case murders and assigned investigator John Little to do the groundwork.

Both law enforcement officials established that the killings weren’t random and that there we some connections between the victims and Wardrip. At the time, Wardrip had known Blau, who was living near Sims. Wardrip worked at Bethania Hospital, where Gibbs was also working.

And thanks to the forensic preservations of the victim’s DNAs, Macha’s team were able to knock out some potential suspects. 

Wardrip’s DNA, however, had not been collected when he became a person of interest to them. 

So, Little was charged with the task to get it and he did it the most subtle way possible. 

The detective went to the factory where Wardrip was recently hired, approached him during his coffee break and asked him for the paper cup he had drank out of so he could spit tobacco into it. Little kept the cup as evidence.

The DNA from the cup was later identified as a match with evidence found on Sims and Gibbs. Wardrip was arrested on Valentine’s Day in 1999.  

He later confessed to killing Sims, Gibbs, Blau, before surprisingly admitting to investigators that he murdered Taylor. 

Later in 1999, Wardrip was sentenced to death by lethal injection in Kimbrew’s murder and was given three life sentences for the other murders. Despite appeals, Wardrip is still on death row after 22 years. 

As of Monday, no execution date for Faryion Wardrip had been set.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10399259/Texas-serial-killer-murdered-five-women-1984-1986-death-row-appeal-rejected.html

Willie Washington Texas Death Row

Willie Washington texas

Willie Washington was sentenced to death by the State of Texas for the murder of two employees during a grocery store robbery. According to court documents Willie Washington would enter the grocery store where he was given money and food stamps before pulling out a gun and shooting two employees who would die from their injuries. Willie Washington would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Willie Washington 2022 Information

SID Number:    02200874

TDCJ Number:    00000856

Name:    WASHINGTON,WILLIE TERION

Race:    B

Gender:    M

Age:    63

Maximum Sentence Date:    DEATH ROW       

Current Facility:    POLUNSKY

Projected Release Date:    DEATH ROW

Parole Eligibility Date:    DEATH ROW

Inmate Visitation Eligible:    YES

Willie Washington More News

A federal appeals court on Wednesday sided with Texas death row inmate Willie Washington, bouncing the decades-old case back to a lower court in light of ongoing claims of bad lawyering.

The Harris County man was out on parole in 1985 when he was arrested for a double shooting in a Houston grocery store, where he gunned down Kiflemariam Tareh and wounded Yemane Kidane.

The then-36-year-old was arrested after returning to the scene with stolen money still in his pocket, according to Texas Department of Criminal Justice records.

Since his death sentence in 1986, Washington has been fighting his case, most recently by alleging deficient legal representation earlier in the judicial process.

“We see at least a debatable merit in these claims,” the court wrote this week. One of Washington’s ineffective assistance of counsel claims dings his trial lawyers for failing to challenge the selection of an all-white jury, despite notes about race on prosecutors’ jury questionnaires.

He also faulted his trial lawyers for failing to uncover potentially mitigating evidence that could have warded off a death sentence – and he faulted his later appeals attorneys for not noticing the trial lawyers’ apparent oversights.

The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals agreed that Washington’s claims at least merited another look, vacating the lower court’s ruling and sending the case back for further discovery and an evidentiary hearing.

https://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/article/Federal-appeals-court-sides-with-Houston-death-12446164.php

Daryl Wheatfall Texas Death Row

daryl wheatfall texas death row

Daryl Wheatfall was sentenced to death by the State of Texas for a double murder. According to court documents Daryl Wheatfall would murder the two victims following an argument over money. Daryl Wheatfall would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Daryl Wheatfall has maintained his innocence since being arrested and currently he is going through a resentencing hearing after his initial death sentence was vacated.

Daryl Wheatfall 2022 Information

SID Number:    03607770

TDCJ Number:    00999020

Name:    WHEATFALL,DARYL KEITH

Race:    B

Gender:    M

Age:    56

Maximum Sentence Date:    DEATH ROW       

Current Facility:    COUNTY BENCH WARRANT

Projected Release Date:    DEATH ROW

Parole Eligibility Date:    DEATH ROW

Daryl Wheatfall More News

The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has thrown out the death sentence of a Harris County man convicted of the slayings of a Houston couple more than two decades ago.

The state’s highest criminal court ruled Wednesday that jurors who sent Daryl Wheatfall to death row in 1992 had instructions during his trial’s punishment phase that have been found unconstitutional. His trial was held at a time when the Texas jury instructions covering mitigation issues in death penalty cases were evolving under U.S. Supreme Court decisions.

The appeals court has ordered his case be returned to the trial court for a new sentencing hearing.

The now 49-year-old Wheatfall was convicted of the December 1990 slayings of James Fitzgerald and his wife, L.B., in southeast Houston following an argument over $50.

https://abc13.com/texas-court-death-sentence-houston/504319/