Preston Hughes Texas Execution

Preston Craig Hughes III - Texas

Preston Hughes was executed by the State of Texas for a double murder. According to court documents Preston Hughes would stab to death LaShandra Charles, 15, and her cousin Marcell Taylor, 3. According to police reports she told the officer that Preston attempted to rape her before she died. Preston Hughes was arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Preston Hughes would be executed by lethal injection on November 15 2012

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Preston Hughes III, who was convicted in the fatal stabbings of two Houston youths in 1988, was executed Thursday at 7:52 p.m. after the U.S. Supreme Court and a federal district court rejected his last-minute appeals. Hughes was the second Texas inmate executed in two days, following the execution of Ramon Hernandez on Wednesday, and is the last scheduled this year.

Hughes was convicted in 1989 of fatally stabbing LaShandra Charles, 15, and her cousin Marcell Taylor, 3, in a field behind a Fuddruckers restaurant in Houston. A police sergeant reported that Charles identified the name “Preston” and said, “He tried to rape me,” shortly before she died. 

As Hughes’ execution date neared, lawyer Patrick McCann filed a clemency petition to the Board of Pardons and Paroles, which makes recommendations to Gov. Rick Perry on whether to spare a death row inmate at the last minute. In the petition, McCann pointed to new evidence he found that indicated Hughes had been molested by an uncle. 

McCann said that Hughes’ jury never heard that evidence, and it might have affected their decision about whether Hughes deserved execution. “They came out of that trial thinking Preston was a monster, not a tragically twisted boy, tortured by memories of sadistic abuse at the hands of an older figure of trust,” McCann wrote to the parole board. “No court of appeals has ever before seen this evidence.

An ongoing debate between lawyers as the execution neared concerned the actions of the detectives investigating the crime back in 1989.

After hearing the victim say Hughes’ first name, Houston police Sgt. Don Hamilton and other detectives located him in a nearby apartment complex and found blood on his clothing and a knife in his apartment. Hughes confessed to the murder during the investigation. During his trial, however, he denied involvement. No biological evidence tied him directly to the crime. He said the blood on the knife came from a rabbit he had killed months before. At Hughes’ trial, Hamilton said he continued to ask Charles questions, but could not understand many of the answers. “I could not understand it,” Hamilton told the jury. “It was more of a mumble.”

After reviewing autopsy reports, Tarrant County’s deputy medical examiner Robert White concluded that Charles would have died within 60 seconds of the stabbing. The officers claimed to hear her speak nearly 15 minutes later. “Even with instant extensive medical attention she would have been unconscious in a matter of seconds,” White wrote in a sworn affidavit that accompanied the clemency petition. “It is simply not medically feasible that this young woman … could have spoken to the officers.”

“The officers had to have flat out lied,” McCann said.

Assistant Attorney General Fredericka Sargent contended that McCann’s accusations were “wholly without merit.”

“Dr. White makes broad assumptions about how long Shandra could have been conscious after being stabbed, but he was not there,” she wrote in a brief to the Supreme Court. “Whatever Dr. White says now, nearly twenty-five years after the fact, does nothing to call into question the integrity of those first officers on the scene.”

During the course of the last year, McCann’s work has been doubted fervently by Hughes’ advocates, including blogger John Allen, who believe that Hughes never committed the crimes and that McCann failed to raise claims of innocence. “We’ve done everything we can to get McCann to defend him, and we failed,” Allen said. “I ceased communication with him.”

McCann responded by explaining that Texas and federal law set such a high burden of proof for new claims of “actual innocence” that he would never have succeeded in such efforts. But he could not comment on why he did not agree with Allen regarding Hughes’ innocence. “I find myself in an odd position,” he said, “because I’m ethically bound not to advance a claim I think is false.”

Hughes himself sought to have McCann replaced. “I’ve been trying to get rid of him for years,” he said recently from death row in Livingston. “I’ve asked him several times to withdraw from representing me. He’s ignored my request.” In September, Mr. Hughes filed a petition to have Mr. McCann replaced, and a court rejected it.

On Oct. 26, McCann attempted to sue the Texas Department of Criminal Justice over its lethal injection protocols in civil court. In July, the department switched to single-drug executions. McCann says that they did so without any oversight and that this infringed on Hughes’ rights. “If the head of TDCJ wanted to he could bring back hanging,” McCann said.

State District Judge R.K. Sandill told McCann that he would not be permitted to represent Hughes in civil court without his client’s signature. The Court of Criminal Appeals, Texas’ highest criminal court, ordered Sandill not to stay Mr. Hughes’ execution.

On Monday, Allen filed a motion for DNA testing in state district court, asking the court to order testing of a vaginal swab that prosecutors at trial argued included Hughes’ DNA. On Thursday, the motion was denied.

Activist Ward Larkin, who has worked closely with Allen, attempted to file a second, different clemency petition with the Board of Pardons and Paroles. The board rejected the petition, and Larkin sued the board. A federal civil court refused to rule on the matter, saying it did not have jurisdiction.

Before he was executed, Hughes thanked Allen and others for their work on his case and maintained that he did not commit the murder, according to officials at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. “Please continue to fight for my innocence,” he said, “even though I’m gone.”

https://www.texastribune.org/2012/11/15/preston-hughes-executed-1988-murderpreston-hughes-/

Ramon Torres Hernandez Texas Execution

Ramon Torres Hernandez

Ramon Torres Hernandez was executed by the State of Texas for the kidnapping, sexual assault and murder of a woman. According to court documents Ramon Torres Hernandez, who was a convicted sex offender, was driving with Santos Minjarez and Abel Abdygapparova when he saw the victim Rosa Maria Rosado standing at a bus stop. The plan was to steal the woman’s purse however Rosado fought back and was dragged inside of the vehicle. The woman was brought to a motel room where she was sexually assaulted and murdered.

Ramon Torres Hernandez was later linked to the sexual assaults and murders of two young teenagers. Ramon Torres Hernandez and Santos Minjarez were convicted and sentenced to death. Abel Abdygapparova was sentenced to life in prison. Santos Minjarez would die on death row in 2012. Ramon Torres Hernandez was executed by lethal injection on November 14, 2012.

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Sex offender Ramon Torres Hernandez is headed for execution for the rape, robbery and slaying of a 37-year-old San Antonio woman 11 years ago.

Hernandez was one of three people convicted in the murder of Rosa Maria Rosado. She was grabbed and thrown into a car driven by Hernandez when she wouldn’t release her purse during a drive-by robbery at a San Antonio bus stop.

The U.S. Supreme Court last month refused to review his case, and the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles refused the 39-year-old Hernandez’s a clemency request earlier this week.

His execution Wednesday evening in Huntsville would be the 14th this year in Texas. Another inmate, Preston Hughes, is to die Thursday for a double murder in Houston in 1988.

https://www.beaumontenterprise.com/news/article/Execution-set-for-6-p-m-today-will-be-14th-this-4036448.php

Mario Swain Texas Execution

mario swain texas

Mario Swain was executed by the State of Texas for the kidnapping and murder of a woman. According to court documents Mario Swain would break into the womans home, kidnap her and drive to a remote location where she was beaten and stabbed. Mario Swain would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Mario Swain would be executed by lethal injection on November 8 2012.

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A man who was sentenced to die in the fatal beating, stabbing and strangling of an East Texas call center supervisor more than a decade ago, displayed a pattern of obsession and violence that a former district attorney said indicated the potential of a serial killer.

Mario Swain has since filed two unsuccessful appeals and the U.S. Supreme Court has refused to review his case. Swain, 33, is scheduled for execution Thursday.

Worried friends alerted police when Lola Nixon didn’t show up for dinner two nights after Christmas in 2002. Officers discovered signs of forced entry at her home near Dallas – and blood throughout – but no sign of the 46-year-old woman. Neighbors said they had seen a truck parked outside the night she went missing, and police traced that vehicle to a man who said his grandson, Swain, had borrowed it.

Swain gave several confessions, and said his friends had beaten Nixon while burgling her home. But those friends all had credible alibis.

Eventually he led detectives to Nixon’s body, in the backseat of an abandoned vehicle at a remote site in Gregg County. She had been beaten with a tire iron, stabbed and strangled.

“Unless you knew where you were going, you wouldn’t get there,” Lance Larison, a prosecutor at Swain’s 2004 trial, said.

Evidence indicates Nixon fiercely resisted the attack and that Swain left her bleeding in her bathtub before throwing her in the back of her BMW and driving her to the site where she was found. He then returned to her house and tried to clean up.

The tire iron was recovered from a trash container where Swain said he had thrown it. Prosecutors said Swain used Nixon’s credit cards and that he gave a piece of her jewelry to a friend.

Nixon’s blood was found on Swain’s clothing in the truck, along with her car keys and garage door opener

At trial, prosecutors presented evidence and witnesses that showed a pattern of crimes: Swain gathered information about women he wanted to rob, then attacked them, forcing them to inhale the anesthetic halothane and hitting them over the head with a wrench or shooting them with a stun gun.

“Not only did he stalk, he started making physical assaults,” Larison said.

“Girlfriends told us he loved to watch detective shows, crime science shows, that he was fascinated by them,” he said. “He would keep lists of women’s cars and certain license plates.”

He was “a serial killer in training,” the prosecutor said

Earlier this year, a federal appeals court rejected Swain’s appeal that argued his confessions to the slaying should not have been allowed at trial, that his lawyers were deficient and that there was a problem in jury selection. The U.S. Supreme Court three weeks ago refused to review Swain’s case. And last week the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals refused an appeal challenging an investigator’s trial testimony.

Nixon was unmarried and lived alone. She had been a supervisor at a telephone call center in Longview where Swain once worked.

Swain declined from death row to speak with reporters as his execution date neared.

His lethal injection would be the 13th this year in Texas, where two more executions are set for next week.

https://www.beaumontenterprise.com/news/article/Man-set-to-die-in-2002-slaying-of-East-Texas-woman-4016872.php

Donnie Roberts Texas Execution

donnie roberts texas

Donnie Roberts was executed by the State of Texas for the murder of a woman. According to court documents Donnie Roberts would shoot and kill the victim Vickie Bowen, before stealing a number of items from her home. Donnie Roberts would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Donnie Roberts would be executed by lethal injection on October 31 2012

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Texas Donnie Lee Roberts, convicted in his girlfriend’s 2003 slaying in Texas, was executed Wednesday for fatally shooting the woman and taking items from her home to sell or trade to support his drug habit.

Roberts, 41, became the 12th inmate to be put to death this year in the nation’s most active capital punishment state. He was given a lethal injection for the killing of Vicki Bowen at her East Texas home.

“I’m really sorry. I never meant to cause you all so much pain,” Roberts said to Bowen’s father, who was seated in a chair close to a glass window in the death chamber viewing area. “I hope you can go on with your life.

“I loved your daughter. I hope to God he lets me see her in heaven so I can apologize to her and see her and tell her.”

Roberts also asked two of his friends who watched through another window to tell his own daughter he loved her.

He repeated that he was sorry and took several deep breaths as the lethal dose of pentobarbital began taking effect. He snored briefly before slipping into unconsciousness, and was pronounced dead 23 minutes later.

Bowen’s relatives, including some who sat on the floor where they were gathered as Roberts was put to death, declined to speak with reporters after the execution.

Roberts’ punishment came after the U.S. Supreme Court refused to review his case earlier this week, and no additional appeals were filed to try to block the lethal injection.

At the time of his arrest for the October 2003 slaying of the 44-year-old Bowen, Roberts had violated his probation for a robbery conviction in Louisiana by fleeing to Texas after dropping out of a drug treatment program.

Authorities said he apparently met Bowen, a dental assistant, at a bar and moved in with her at her Lake Livingston home, about 75 miles northeast of Houston. Their relationship soured because Roberts wasn’t working and was abusing drugs and alcohol, investigators said, and he shot Bowen after she refused his demand for money.

Roberts was arrested at a suspected crack house in the town of Livingston when a truck missing from Bowen’s home was spotted there the same day Bowen’s body was discovered.

“He was cooperative and confessed several times,” District Attorney Lee Hon said. “He was saying he wanted the death penalty.”

Roberts told authorities he made several trips from the house where Bowen was shot, collecting property that he took into town to sell and trade for crack.

He also surprised detectives by confessing to the shotgun death of a man that happened a decade earlier in Natchitoches Parish, La. Louisiana authorities initially believed the victim, Al Crow, had died of asphyxiation in a fire at the camper trailer where he was living but reopened the case following Roberts’ disclosure, found shotgun pellets and determined it was a homicide.

Roberts was charged with murder but not tried for Crow’s death.

Stephen Taylor, one of Roberts’ lawyers at his Texas capital murder trial, said the confessions complicated his trial defense.

“It’s almost like somebody saying he was a serial killer, that he’s killed before and he killed again,” Taylor said. “It’s one thing to say you have the right to remain silent. Use it!

“It’s always sad for someone to lose his life, especially for something so stupid.”

Bowen didn’t show up for work on Oct. 16, 2003, and a co-worker who went to check on her found her body wrapped in a blanket and lying in a pool of blood. A medical examiner determined Bowen was killed with two gunshots to her head.

Roberts took the witness stand and tried to blame Bowen for the gunfire, saying he was acting in self-defense by grabbing a .22-caliber rifle after seeing her reach down inside a couch to locate a pistol that was kept there.

Evidence at trial showed Roberts had a record for battery while being held in jail in Fulton County, Ga., that he’d threatened his wife to give him money for drugs, and that he warned there would be another killing if he didn’t get a single-person cell in Polk County when he was jailed for Bowen’s murder.

His robbery conviction in Louisiana was for a Mother’s Day 2001 convenience store holdup in Baton Rouge, La., where the knife-wielding Roberts threatened to slice the throat of the female clerk.

The Texas Department of Criminal Justice Polunsky Unit, where the state’s male death row is housed, had been Roberts’ home since his capital murder conviction in 2004. The prison is just outside Livingston and not far from where Bowen was killed.

Earlier Wednesday, Roberts was moved about 45 miles west to the Huntsville Unit, the prison where the execution was carried out.

Three more Texas prisoners are set to die in November, including one next week

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/donnie-lee-roberts-executed-in-texas-for-killing-girlfriend-vicki-bowen-in-2003/

Bobby Hines Texas Execution

bobby hines texas

Bobby Hines was executed by the State of Texas for the sexual assault and murder of a woman. According to court documents Bobby Hines would sexually assault and murder a woman who lived in the same building as him. Bobby Hines would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Bobby Hines would be executed by lethal injection on October 25 2012

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Convicted killer Bobby Lee Hines was executed Wednesday for strangling and repeatedly stabbing a suburban Dallas woman at her apartment 21 years ago.

Hines,40,was 19 and on probation for burglary when he stabbed 26-year-old Michelle Wendy Haupt 18 times and strangled her with a cord. Haupt had moved from the Pittsburgh area to Carrollton to work at a computer company in Dallas,and Hines was staying next door with a maintenance man for her apartment complex.

Asked by a warden to make a final statement,Hines repeatedly asked for forgiveness.

“I know that I took somebody special from y’all,” he said as Haupt’s father stood a few feet away,watching through a window. “I know it wasn’t right,it was wrong. I wish I could give it back,but I know I can’t.

“I wish there was something I could do.”

He said he loved his family,believed life in prison would be a worse punishment,and then declared that he was “going home.”

As the lethal dose of pentobarbital was administered,he said he could feel it and was stopped in midsentence. He snored once,then slipped into unconsciousness. Twelve minutes later,at 6:28 p.m.,he was pronounced dead.

“It’s like a backache,it never goes away,” Harold Haupt said afterward about the pain of losing his daughter. “It’s always there.

“On the upside of this,Bobby Hines paid the ultimate price,a life for a life,and that’s the good news. The bad news is it took 21 years,a lot of taxpayer money and all he did was go to sleep. He didn’t suffer like my daughter did. He got like a forever sleeping pill.”

In the pre-dawn hours of Oct. 20,1991,a neighbor heard screaming and called police,but officers were unable to find the source. When other residents told the apartment manager later that day about screams and loud noises that sounded like a bowling ball being dropped repeatedly,they persuaded him to open Haupt’s door and found her dead.

Hines was arrested that day. Hines’ older brother,a manager at the complex,told police he suspected his brother was involved,according to court records. And witnesses said Hines had bragged about having a passkey that allowed him to enter anyone’s apartment.

Police interviewed Hines,noticed he had scratches on his face and neck,and got consent from his roommate to search the apartment. Detectives found Haupt’s blood on Hines’ clothing and several things that had belonged to her,including a distinctive gold charm she wore on a necklace.

Hines was tried and convicted in March 1992.

He initially was scheduled to die in 2003,but his execution was delayed for eight years until the courts resolved claims that he was mentally impaired and,thus,ineligible for capital punishment. He was scheduled to die in May and the U.S. Supreme Court refused to review his case,but the Dallas County district attorney’s office again delayed the execution so that new DNA testing could be conducted. Those tests confirmed Hines’ guilt,and the punishment was reset.

Relatives and friends of Hines filed a federal civil rights lawsuit Tuesday against the Texas Department of Criminal Justice,top agency officials and prison wardens and “all persons involved” in Hines’ execution,contending their rights had been violated because Hines had been on death row more than two decades and that his lawyers had been misleading. A federal judge in Houston dismissed the suit Wednesday.

Last week,the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals rejected an appeal from Hines,whose lawyer argued previous attorneys failed to investigate and show how Hines had been abused by his father.

William Hughey,who was one of Hines’ trial lawyers and is now a state district judge in East Texas,recalled Hines’ case as one “where it was clear his childhood had significant impact as to who he was and how he ended up.”

Hines,who had declined to speak with reporters,first was arrested at age 12 for auto theft and had other arrests for assault and burglary. He was on 10 years’ probation when the slaying occurred.

Hines’ execution was the 11th this year in Texas. Another is set for next week

https://indianexpress.com/article/news-archive/print/texas-executes-convicted-killer-bobby-lee-hines-for-1991-slaying/