Wanda Jean Allen Execution

Wanda Jean Allen
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Wanda Jean Allen was executed by the State of Oklahoma for the murder of her long term girlfriend. Wanda Jean Allen would be executed by lethal injection on January 11, 2001

Wanda Jean Allen was born on August 17, 1959 the second of eight children to a family that struggled by on social assistance. When Wanda Jean was twelve years old she was hit by a truck and knocked unconscious and two years later she was stabbed in the temple.

Wanda Jean Allen whose IQ was reported at 69 had a significant amount of brain damage from the two traumatic incidents. By the age of 17 Wanda Jean would drop out of high school.

Wanda Jean Allen was living with a girlfriend in 1981 when she would fatally shoot the other woman. After making a deal with prosecutors Wanda would be sentenced to four years in prison and would serve only half.

In 1988 Wanda Jean Allen was living with Gloria Jean Leathers, the two women had met in prison and their relationship was very rocky. In December of 1988 Wanda Jean and Gloria were involved in an argument at a grocery store that was broken up by a police officer. While Gloria and her mother were heading towards a police station to file a restraining order Wanda Jean would jump out and shot Leathers in the stomach, Gloria would die three days later in hospital.

At trial Wanda Jean Allen lawyers tried to get their client off on self defense pointing to Leathers criminal history that showed she had stabbed a woman to death in 1979. Unfortunately Wanda Jean Allen history also had a murder in it as well and the jury would convict and sentenced her to death.

Wanda Jean Allen would spend twelve years on death row before her execution was carried out on January 11, 2001 by lethal injection

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On Jan. 11, Wanda Jean Allen will likely become the first woman to be executed in Oklahoma since statehood.

She hopes that the state Pardon and Parole Board and Gov. Frank Keating will commute her sentence to life without parole. But if that doesn’t happen, the 41-year-old says she is at peace.

“I have peace right here,” she says, tapping her chest. “And as long as I am all right with Him, I am not afraid of what man can do to me.”

Her victim and one-time lover, Gloria Jean Leathers, died four days after being shot at close range in 1988 by Allen in front of the Village Police Station in Oklahoma City.

“I couldn’t tell you what was happening as far as mentally,” Allen said from behind the glass that separates visitors from inmates at the Mabel Bassett Correctional Center in Oklahoma City. “I was there physically, but not mentally there. But I know it was a tragic accident that day.”

Wanda Jean Allen said she and Leathers were both out of control.

Leathers had called her mother to pick her up from the house where she and Allen lived. After packing her belongings, Leathers and her mother went to the police station to file a compliant against Allen.

Allen followed Leathers and shot her. Leathers’ mother, Ruby Wilson of Edmond, witnessed the killing.

On Oct. 13, Ruby Wilson met with her daughter’s killer.

“I wanted to tell her how sorry I was for taking her daughter’s life. And I know there is no greater love than a mother’s love for a child because I have a mother as well. And I asked for her forgiveness. She forgave me. We prayed together. And I let her know I loved her for coming that day.”

Leathers and Allen met in prison. Allen was serving a 4-year sentence for manslaughter. On June 29, 1981, at a motel in Oklahoma City, Allen shot to death Detra Pettus following an argument with Pettus’ boyfriend.

“We was friends,” Allen said of Pettus. “We grew up together. We lived in the same neighborhood. We had mutual friends.

While some prosecutors say that Allen and Leathers had a relationship in prison, Allen said that was not the case.

Wanda Jean Allen was released from prison before Leathers. When Leathers got out, she called Allen.

“She didn’t have a place to stay,” Allen said. “She and her family were having problems. I allowed her to come and live with me because I know how hard it is when you get out.

“By me being locked up, I understood that situation. You have to help people when they get out. Someone had helped me when I got out, so in turn I wanted to help someone as well.”

The pair lived together on and off for three years. She described Leathers as funny and witty.

“It was the wrong type of lifestyle,” she said of the lesbian relationship. “It didn’t make either of us less human than if we were in a heterosexual relationship, a bisexual relationship. We are still human. We have emotions. We laugh. We cry. It was part of our life.”

At her trial, Oklahoma County prosecutors painted Allen as a person who hunted down her victims. Prosecutors introduced a card Allen had given Leathers.

The card had a gorilla on it. The printed message said, “Patience my ass. I am going to kill something.” Inside, Allen had written, “Try and leave me and you will understand this card more. Dig. For real, no joke.

Leathers was portrayed as meek and timid.

Wanda Jean Allen said her attorney was not given a fair shot at defending her and was limited in what he could present. In 1979, Leathers was arrested in Tulsa for the stabbing death of Sheila Marie Barker, whom she killed outside a Tulsa disco. A judge later determined the slaying was self-defense.

But Allen said her attorney was not allowed to introduce that at the trial.

Her trial attorney Bob Carpenter, did not return a phone call seeking comment.

In her first interview in 12 years, Wanda Jean Allen talked about her childhood, family, who she is and who she is not.

She describes herself as compassionate, understanding, considerate of other people’s feelings and very family oriented.

I am not a monster,” Allen said. “I am a human. I laugh and I cry, just as you do and others. I am not a vengeful-type person. I don’t try to hurt people.”

Allen was the oldest girl among eight siblings.

“We had love,” Allen said. “We didn’t have a lot of financial support or materialistic things. But we had love in the house.”

In her teens, she got into trouble for what she calls behavior problems and spent some time in a juvenile facility. She later spent some time in foster care

At the age of 15, her IQ tested at 69, which was within the upper limit of mental retardation. Later, she was tested at an IQ of 80.

“I think my motor skills are different from other people that can comprehend things faster. I am not as fast at getting things as some people. I am slow in that area. But over the years, you know, you deal with your handicap. To be in society, you have to deal with that. It can be a limitation on what you can do.”

Wanda Jean Allen graduated from U.S. Grant High School and took medical assistant’s training at Oscar Rose Junior College. She worked at a veterans’ hospital and at the Oklahoma City Golf and Country Club, among other jobs.

She is one of three women on death row. On Sept. 14, all three got baptized.

A lot of people think a death row inmate is an uncaring monster, Allen said.

“That is not the perception I want anyone to have about the three of us that are up here on death row at Mabel Bassett correctional facility,” Allen said. “We are humans. We care for other people. We feel what they are going through. Even if we are in a worse position than they are, we still focus on them.”

Wanda Jean Allen is locked down 23 hours a day, seven days a week.

She has no personal property in her cell, other than a television and radio. She is a fan of the Chicago Bulls, likes opera and reads John Grisham and Danielle Steele novels.

She repeatedly talks about her family. Her mother, Mary Allen, lives a few miles from the prison that has housed her daughter for 12 years.

“Your family is always going to be there regardless what you are going through,” she said. “The good times. The bad times. They are going to be there. My family has been doing this time with me. A lot of people don’t realize that. What you go through, you take your family through it as well.”

Wanda Jean Allen says she has a need to help people. If she could talk to children, she would tell them to stay close to their family and be independent.

“A life of crime ain’t where it is at,” she said. “You don’t have to prove nothing to no one. And if you are put in that positions where you have to provide something to someone, you don’t need to be around that person.”

In December, Allen will make an appearance before the five-member Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board.

“I am not nervous,” she said. “I am going to tell them what is my heart. Be direct with them. Tell them how I feel. Ask them to spare my life.”

Wanda Jean Allen has not been told much about the execution process, which is carried out shortly after 9 p.m. by lethal injection at Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester.

“If it came to it, I will just have to deal with those circumstances. My faith is strong. I know who has the last say so. I am talking about God.”

https://tulsaworld.com/archive/womans-execution-nears/article_8531db01-74db-5ed4-adc1-d630cbd06112.html

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Why Was Wanda Jean Allen Executed

Wanda Jean Allen was executed for the murder of her girlfriend

When Was Wanda Jean Allen Executed

Wanda Jean Allen was executed on January 11, 2001

Christina Riggs Execution

Christina Riggs

Christina Riggs was executed by the State of Arkansas for the murders of her two young children. Christina Riggs would be executed by lethal injection on May 2, 2000. Many believe that Christina wanted to be executed and from the time of the murders to her actual execution was less than three years.

Christina Riggs was born in Oklahoma on September 2, 1971 and she would work on a practical nurse.

On November 4, 1997 Christina Riggs planned the murders of her children. She gave them Amitriptyline in order to sedate her five year old son and two year old daughter. Christina then injected potassium chloride into her sons veins however she forgot to dilute the drug and it caused her son pain. Christina Riggs would smother her son and then would smother her two year old daughter.

Christina Riggs attempted to kill herself by taking 28 amitriptyline pills and injecting herself with potassium chloride. Christina’s mother would find her passed out on the floor and the two dead children in the bed. According to her defense team Riggs who dealt with major depressive disorder did not want her children split up after her suicide so decided to kill them

Christina Riggs would plead not guilty by reason of insanity however the defense would not work. Riggs would not allow her lawyers to put up a defense when it came to capital punishment. Christina would be sentenced to death.

Christina Riggs refused to file any appeals so her case blazed through and she was executed by lethal injection (using the same chemical she gave her son) on May 2, 2002

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A former nurse became the first woman to be executed in Arkansas for more than 150 years on Tuesday night, put to death by lethal injection for killing her two children in 1997.

Christina Marie Riggs’ last words were directed to the five-year-old son and two-year-old daughter she murdered. “I love you, my babies,” she said as a lethal mix of chemicals was injected into her wrist at a prison in Varner.

Riggs’ mother and lawyer initially argued that she had been suffering from post-traumatic stress from her work as a nurse treating victims of the terrorist bombing of a government building in Oklahoma City.

But Riggs, 28, waived her right to appeal and prevented her lawyer from applying for clemency, saying that she could not live with the guilt of the murders and wanted to be reunited with her children in heaven

“There is no way words can express how sorry I am for taking the lives of my babies,” she said before the execution. “Now I can be with my babies, as I always intended.”

Human rights activists said her desire to die confirmed her mental instability, and asked for the execution to be stopped on the grounds that it would amount to state-assisted suicide. But the Arkansas governor, Mike Huckabee, turned down their appeal.

Yesterday Riggs’ lawyer, John Wesley Hall, said: “It started out as a suicide and ended as a suicide.”

Riggs told the police that in November 1997 she gave her son, Justin, and daughter, Shelby, some anti-depressants in a cup of water to sedate them.

She then injected a large dose of potassium chloride into her son’s neck with the aim of putting him to sleep. When he woke up and started crying, she injected him with morphine and smothered him with a pillow. She also smothered her daughter.

She laid the two dead children on her bed, before injecting herself with potassium chloride and swallowing 28 anti-depressants.

She left a suicide note for Shelby’s father saying: “I can’t live like this any more, and I couldn’t bear to leave my children behind to be a burden on you or to be separated and raised apart from their fathers and live knowing their mother killed herself.”

The prosecution portrayed her as a cold-blooded killer to whom her children were an “inconvenience”.

She was accused of leaving them locked in their room for hours while she went out at night to karaoke bars.

Doctors testifying for her said she had been severely depressed as a result of sexual abuse as a child, a series of failed relationships with men, lack of money, and lack of self-esteem because of her obesity.

She went to her death weighing 122kg (270lb). She agreed to the execution needles being put in her wrists when her executioners were unable to find a vein in her arm.

Denying that her misfortunes excused her acts, the county prosecutor, Larry Jegley, said: “She claims she was horribly depressed, she was overweight and she was a single mom, and she didn’t have enough money.

“My response to that is ‘welcome to America’. Plenty of folks are in far worse situations than she was.”

Women put to death in America

A total of 560 women have been executed in the US, 3% of the convicts put to death. Five have been executed since 1976, when the death penalty was reinstated after a brief moratorium:

Velma Barfield By lethal injection in North Carolina on November 2 1984 for killing four people, including her mother and fiance, with ant poison. The sunday school teacher confessed and went to her death in pink pajamas after a meal of Cheez Doodles, a popular snack

Karla Faye Tucker By lethal injection in Texas on February 3 1998 for hacking two people to death with a pickaxe. She claimed to have undergone a religious conversion in prison and appealed unsuccessfully to the state governor, George W Bush, for clemency

Judy Buenoano By electric chair in Florida on March 30 1998 for poisoning her husband with arsenic. She was also convicted of drowning her son, who used a wheelchair

Betty Lou Beets By lethal injection in Texas on February 24 2000 for shooting her fifth husband and burying his body in her garden. The 62-year-old grandmother had been charged with, but not convicted of, shooting dead her fourth husband, whose body was also found in the garden, and was convicted of shooting and wounding her second husband. She claimed that she had been the victim of physical abuse by her successive spouses, but her appeal for clemency was turned down by Mr Bush

Christina Marie Riggs By lethal injection in Arkansas on May 2 2000 for the murder of her two children. She waived her right to appeal and forbade her lawyer to apply for clemency

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2000/may/04/julianborger

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28-year-old former nurse who had asked for the death penalty after murdering her two small children died by lethal injection Tuesday night, the first woman to be executed in Arkansas since 1845.

Christina Marie Riggs was put to death by lethal injection for killing her son, Justin, 5, and daughter, Shelby Alexis, 2, in November 1997.

Christina Riggs admitted killing the children, and explained that she was deeply depressed at the time. She said she gave her son potassium chloride and morphine and when that didn’t kill him, she smothered him with a pillow. Then she smothered her daughter. She also tried to kill herself with potassium chloride.

Potassium chloride was one of the three drugs the state used in executing Riggs.

The lethal injection was administered 9:18 p.m. Riggs was pronounced dead at 9:28 p.m.

Before the injection was administered, she made a statement that began,”No words can express just how sorry I am for taking the lives of my babies. No way I can make up for or take away the pain I have caused everyone who knew and loved them.”

After the injection was administered, her last words were, “I love you, my babies.”

At her 1998 trial, Christina Riggs asked jurors to sentence her to death, saying: “I want to be with my babies. I want you to give me the death penalty.”

Prosecutors said Riggs’ children had become an inconvenience. They said, for example, that she left them alone while she went to karaoke contests.

She gave both an antidepressant to make them drowsy, then injected Justin with the potassium chloride. But when Justin began crying, Riggs injected him with morphine left over from a hospital patient.

Then she smothered both children.

Riggs then took 28 antidepressant tablets in a suicide attempt.

The children were found dead in Riggs’ bed. Riggs was found on the floor.

Initially, Christina Riggs pursued appeal of her death sentence.

“We had to beg her to file an appeal of the conviction,” said her lawyer, John Wesley Hall Jr. of Little Rock.

But she soon withdrew it. “She just wanted to get it over with,” Hall said.

On Tuesday, Christina Riggs had the right to stop her execution at any time by resuming the appeals process again, but she chose not to do so.

Riggs was the only woman on Death Row in Arkansas and only the fifth woman to be executed in the United States since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976.

She was the 22nd Death Row inmate to be executed in Arkansas since 1990, when the state carried out its first execution after the U.S. Supreme Court reinstated capital punishment.

The last woman executed in Arkansas was Lavinia Burnett, hanged in 1845 as an accessory to murder.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-2000-05-03-0005030190-story.html

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Christina Riggs was executed for the murders of her two children

When Was Christina Riggs Executed

Christina Riggs was executed on May 2, 2000

Betty Lou Beets Execution

Betty Lou Beets

Betty Lou Beets was executed by the State of Texas for the murder of one of her husbands. Betty Lou Beets would be executed by lethal injection on February 24, 2000.

Betty Lou Beets was born in North Carolina on March 12, 1937. According to Betty Lou she was sexually abused by her father. Beets who was deaf due to a childhood bout with measles. When she was twelve years old her mother was institutionalized and she had to raise her younger siblings

Betty Lou would marry her first husband when she was fifteen years old and would last for seventeen years. Betty Lou who was no angel would rack up a series of arrests for public lewdness. Betty Lou would marry her second husband twice, the first would end after she shot him twice in the back of the head (he would survive and testify against her at the murder trial) and she was later acquitted of attempted murder charges. The same husband would remarry Beets but they would divorce again a month later.

Betty Lou Beets would marry her third husband and soon after attempted to run him over with a car. Her fourth husband would only last a year before he disappeared.

Betty Lou Beets would marry her fifth husband in 1981, two years later Jimmy Don Beets would be reported missing. Betty Lou son told the jury that she told him to leave the house and when he returned two hours later Jimmy Don Beets would be lying dead from two gunshot wounds. Betty Lou and her son would bury the body in the front yard before reporting her husband missing. Beets and her son also spilled some of her husband’s heart medication in his boat and set it adrift. Police believed that Jimmy Don Beets had drowned.

Betty Lou Beets would be arrested two years later. The police would find the body of Jimmy Don Beets buried in the front yard. Police would also find the body of her fifth husband in a well on the propert.

Betty Lou Beets would be convicted for the murder of Jimmy Don Beets and sentenced to death. She attempted to blame the murders on two of her children however the jury did not buy it.

Betty Lou Beets would be executed by the State of Texas by lethal injection on February 24, 2000.

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BETTY LOU BEETS, a 62-year-old woman convicted of the 1983 murder of her husband, was killed by lethal injection just after 6 p.m. CST at a state prison in Huntsville, Texas. The state leads the country in executions, with 208 since resuming capital punishment in 1982. Two United Nations experts on human rights had appealed to Governor Bush in a letter Thursday to spare her from execution, saying that the domestic “abuse and extreme violence” she suffered was not made known to the jury that sentenced her to die. A federal appeals court on Thursday upheld a lower court ruling rejecting her attorneys’ plea that her case be reexamined because she was a battered wife. Beets is the fourth woman executed in the United States since the 1976 Supreme Court ruling allowing capital punishment. She is the second woman and the oldest person to be put to death in Texas since the state resumed executions.

https://www.wired.com/2000/02/betty-lou-beets-62-executed/

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The state of Texas executed Betty Lou Beets, a 62-year-old great grandmother, Thursday evening at Huntsville prison. Beets was the second woman to be put to death in Texas in the last two years—Karla Faye Tucker was executed in February 1998—and the fourth woman to die in the US since executions resumed in 1976.

Earlier in the day Beets’ attorney Joe Margulies told CNN, “She’s very scared. She doesn’t want to be strapped down to that gurney all alone.” Beets declined a last meal and gave no final statement as she lay strapped to the death chamber gurney. After she was injected with the lethal drugs she smiled at her attorney and pastor, coughed twice and gasped before being pronounced dead at 6:18 PM Central Standard Time.

Beets was convicted in 1985 of fatally shooting her fifth husband. Police found his body buried in the front yard of the couple’s trailer home near the small East Texas town of Gun Barrel City. She was also convicted of shooting and wounding her second husband and was charged with—but never tried for—killing her fourth husband. Prosecutors dubbed her the “Black Widow of Henderson County” and claimed she killed her last husband to collect insurance money.

The case attracted national and international attention because of revelations—never presented by her original trial lawyer—that Beets had suffered physical, sexual and emotional abuse both as a child and at the hands of her husbands. Her current attorneys argued that because she had inadequate defense counsel at her 1985 trial, the jury was never able to consider mitigating circumstances during the sentencing phase.

The attorneys also charged that the state parole board violated Beets’ civil rights by denying her the review process that the state legislature mandates for all murder cases involving battered women.

About 100 protesters, some holding photographs of a bruised Beets following a beating, gathered outside the prison before the execution. Death penalty opponents, domestic violence awareness organizations, Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and even officials from the UN Human Rights Commission had appealed to Texas Governor George W. Bush to commute the elderly woman’s sentence. According to the governor’s office, Bush received more than 2,100 calls and letters from people opposing the execution, while only 57 messages came from those endorsing it.

On Tuesday, the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles rejected Beets’ pleas for a 180-day reprieve and commutation of her sentence. On Thursday afternoon a federal appeals court in New Orleans denied a motion to stop the execution. In Austin, US District Judge James Nowlin dismissed the motion, saying it was “yet another example of a prisoner attempting to delay execution just prior to the execution date.”

Finally, about an hour before the execution, the US Supreme Court, without comment, refused to hear Beets’ case. Minutes later Texas Governor George W. Bush gave the go-ahead for the execution by turning down an appeal for a 30-day delay. The governor issued a cursory four-sentence statement.

“After careful review of the evidence in the case I concur with the jury that Betty Lou Beets is guilty of this murder,” Bush said. “I am confident that the courts, both state and federal, have thoroughly reviewed all the issues raised by the defendant. The courts, including the US Supreme Court, have rejected all of her appeals. I concur with the recommendation of the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles and will not grant a 30-day delay.”

Notwithstanding Bush’s claims to the contrary, Beets hardly received a fair trial and due process. Under Texas law, she could not be sentenced to death unless the state proved that she murdered her husband with premeditation, i.e., to recover a $100,000 pension and insurance policy. But her attorney, E. Ray Andrews, deliberately withheld from the jury the fact that she did not know about the insurance policy until a year-and-a-half after her husband’s murder, when Andrews himself told her about it.

This information would have seriously undermined the prosecution’s claim that Beets’ had killed for money. But to be a witness and provide testimony, he would have had to withdraw as her defense lawyer and give up his fee. His price for representing Beets was her signature on a contract surrendering all movie and book rights to her story.

“He said he was going to get rich on all this, and the case was going to be the biggest thing that ever happened to him,” Bob Miller, commander of the local Veterans of Foreign Wars post, told Beets’ appellate lawyers in a 1991 affidavit. “He said the case was going to turn into a big movie, and he had all the rights to it. It was something that he talked about pretty often.” Miller also said Andrews regularly drank heavily at the post prior to going into court to argue the case.

After becoming district attorney, Andrews was arrested by the FBI in 1994 for soliciting a $300,000 payoff to drop a death penalty case against a businessmen accused of killing his wife. He resigned from the prosecutor’s office, gave up his law license, and cried at his sentencing, saying he was a longtime alcoholic, prescription drug abuser and heavy gambler. He was sentenced to three-and-a-half years in federal prison.

Neither was the jury told that Beets had suffered years of abuse, beginning when she was a child in the 1940s. She grew up poor in a small Texas town, battling an alcoholic father and a mentally ill mother. Beets was sexually abused as early as age five and later suffered organic brain damage in a car accident. She first married at the age of 15, was beaten by many of her husbands and became an alcoholic.

In 1991, a federal court judge held that Beets’ defense attorney’s behavior violated her right to effective counsel and ordered a new trial. But the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals reinstated her conviction and death sentence, saying Beets could not show that either Andrews’ testimony or evidence of spousal abuse would have changed the trial’s outcome.

“All my momma’s life, she’s been abused,” her daughter Faye Lane said at a news conference earlier in the week. “I’ve seen it with my own eyes. And I know that if the jury heard the truth about my momma, she only could have done something like this if she’d been very scared or threatened.”

Shortly before her execution, Beets told the Athens Daily Review, “This is not a capital case, it’s about domestic violence…You don’t kill the one that survives it.”

The execution of Betty Lou Beets is a particularly gruesome example of the brutality and vindictiveness of the death penalty. But it is by no means the exception. The vast majority of the 3,600 inmates on death row come from impoverished and abused backgrounds and lack the resources for an adequate defense. They confront prosecutors, judges and politicians who want to further their careers by promoting the death penalty and appealing to the most backward and reactionary sentiments in the population.

Since becoming governor in 1995 George W. Bush, who is running for president as a “compassionate conservative,” has overseen 121 executions, more than any other governor in US history. The state parole board, which is dominated by Bush appointees, has only granted commutations to two death row prisoners. Rejections of appeals are so commonplace, the parole board rarely meets and instead votes on clemency appeals by fax. Overall, Texas is responsible for 208 of the 616 executions carried out in the US since 1976.

Support for the practice of state murder is by no means limited to the Republican Party. Just last week, President Clinton rejected calls for a moratorium on federal executions.

Advocacy of the death penalty is considered by the media and the political establishment to be a prerequisite for anyone seeking high national office. Even as evidence of wrongful convictions of death row prisoners generates growing public concern about capital punishment, reflected even in some official circles—as evidenced by a moratorium on executions by the Republican governor of Illinois—all of the current presidential candidates of both parties reaffirm their commitment to this barbaric practice. They make a point of aligning themselves with the law-and-order elements that hold sway in both big business parties.

https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2000/02/exec-f26.html

Betty Lou Beets FAQ

Why Was Betty Lou Beets Executed

Betty Lou Beets was executed for the murder of one of her husbands

When Was Betty Lou Beets Executed

Betty Lou Beets was executed on February 24, 2000

Judy Buenoano Execution

Judy Buenoano

Judy Buenoano was a serial killer who was convicted of two murders but believed to be responsible for several more. Judy Buenoano would be executed by the State of Florida on March 30, 1998

Not a lot is known about Judy Buenoano early life however she would marry James Goodyear who would die in 1971 in what doctors believed at the time to be by natural causes.

Judy Buenoano would move in with Bobby Morris in 1973 and he would die in January 1978. In 1980 Judy son Michael would become sick with an illness that took away the use of his legs. Later that year Michael would die when he fell from a canoe and drowned.

In 1983 Judy Buenoano was involved with John Gentry who would later be severely injured when his car exploded. When police were investigating the case they learned that there were sketchy moments in the history of Judy Buenoano.

It turned out Judy was telling friends that Gentry was suffering from a terminal illness in the months before his accident and police would learn that she was giving him vitamins that were laced with arsenic.

Police would exhume the bodies of her first husband, her son and Bobby Morris all of which had arsenic in their systems.

Judy Buenoano would be sentenced to death for the murder of James Goodyear, a life sentence for the murder of her son and a twelve year sentenced for the attempted murder of Gentry. Judy would also be convicted of a number of fraud charges relating to collecting the insurance money after each victim died.

On March 30, 1998 Judy Buenoano was executed in the electric chair at Florida State Prison.

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one were the painted, manicured fingernails and the fashionable dark hair. Gone was the tough-edged woman who drove around Pensacola in a Corvette and told bigger-than-life stories about her life, her businesses and her Chanel perfume.

Judy Buenoano walked shakily to Florida’s electric chair Monday, her head freshly shaved. Guards had covered it with gel – highlighting every bump, every vein – to conduct the electricity better. She wasn’t the same person who had boasted that Florida would never execute her. She was, simply, an old, frightened woman.

And by 7:13 a.m., Judy Buenoano, 54, had become the first woman executed in the state in 150 years and the first woman to die in the chair.

Prosecutors called Buenoano the “Black Widow,” saying she attracted men to kill them for insurance money. She was executed for killing her Vietnam veteran husband with arsenic in Orlando 27 years ago, but Pensacola juries also found her guilty of drowning her paralyzed son in 1980 and trying to firebomb her boyfriend in 1983.

She had gotten about $240,000 in insurance money from the deaths of her husband, son and a common-law husband who died of arsenic poisoning in Colorado in 1978. Prosecutors said she had used some of the money for a new car, for a diamond ring, to start her nail salon, to live the high life.

She might have gotten away with her crimes, they said, if she hadn’t botched the bombing and left a trail back to her.

Florida had not executed a woman since 1848, when a freed slave was hanged for killing her former master. Because of that, Buenoano’s death attracted widespread media attention. Early Monday, lights from TV cameras and satellite trucks rivaled those beaming from Florida State Prison. Reporters outnumbered protesters.

Judy Buenoano met with her two children, a cousin and her spiritual adviser through the night. They had Communion and a final contact visit. Buenoano dozed from 1 until 4 a.m., when she received a last meal of steamed vegetables, fresh strawberries and hot tea.

Throughout Sunday, she had been talkative and upbeat, a corrections spokesman said.

But when she entered the death chamber shortly after 7 a.m., Buenoano held tightly to the hands of two male guards who helped her walk. She was pale and terrified. But she seemed determined to face her death with a kind of stoic dignity.

As authorities strapped her in, she grimaced, especially as they tightened the belt around her chest. Through most of the preparations, she kept her eyes shut, not looking at the people who gathered to watch, including her spiritual adviser and the brother-in-law of Air Force Sgt. James Goodyear, her poisoned husband.

Asked whether she had a last statement, Judy Buenoano said in a barely audible voice, “No, sir.” Moments later, as the current flowed, her fists clenched. She seemed almost dwarfed in the 75-year-old oak chair. Smoke rose from the electrode attached to her right leg.

The witnesses watched silently. In the front row sat Orange-Osceola Chief Judge Belvin Perry, who prosecuted Buenoano in 1984. Next to him was Dusty Rhodes, who as a state attorney investigator had gathered evidence against Buenoano in the Goodyear case.

The two had become experts on arsenic. They had watched the exhumation of Goodyear’s body to check for poison. They had tracked down a witness who said Buenoano told her not to divorce her husband but instead kill him with arsenic. But you’ll need the stomach for it, the friend quoted Buenoano as telling her.

Perry and Rhodes called Judy Buenoano a cold, calculating killer.

“It was very serene, clinical,” Perry said of the execution. “It brings finality and a final chapter in this saga.”

As they drove home from Starke on Monday, the two talked about how Buenoano’s death had been humane compared with the agony Goodyear endured and the pain her 19-year-old son, Michael, felt as he drowned in a river with braces on his arms and legs.

But family members described a different Judy Buenoano. They called her a devoted Roman Catholic, a beloved mother and grandmother, a woman who had had a tough childhood but went on to raise a family of her own. They said the case against her was circumstantial and called prosecutors overzealous and high courts cowardly for not setting aside her death sentence.

Sunday, before they entered the prison to say goodbye to their mother, Buenoano’s daughter, Kimberly Hawkins, and son, James Buenoano, stood before cameras and asked the state not to commit a “hate crime against God and humanity.”

The pleas did not work. The courts refused a last-minute stay.

Twelve civilian and 12 media witnesses, plus corrections officials, were stuffed into a tiny room separated by glass from the death chamber. Female guards were brought in to be with Buenoano in her final days. One of them walked into the chamber with Buenoano, but male guards handled the execution.

Outside, death-penalty opponents and supporters waited for word on the execution – the third in Florida in eight days.

Members of Pax Christi, a state group organized with the Roman Catholic Church, held signs that read Buenoano is “a woman not a spider.”

“Executions are just an excuse for vengeance toward people,” said Martina Linnenahm, a member of the group.

Death-penalty supporters included Larin Cone, whose brother, Floyd Jr., was killed in 1981 when Edward Kennedy escaped from prison and shot him and a state trooper to death. Kennedy was executed in 1992.

Cone said Judy Buenoano did not deserve mercy because of her gender. “She killed just like a man,” Cone said, “so she should receive the same treatment as a man.”

Wayne Manning of Lawtey had a day off from work, so he brought his 7-year-old grandson, Steven, to the prison.

“He needs to learn what is going on in this world,” Manning said. “Maybe he won’t get into a situation like this, himself, if he is exposed to it now.”

https://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/os-xpm-1998-03-31-9803310252-story.html

Frequently Asked Questions

Judy Buenoano FAQ

Why Was Judy Buenoano Executed

Judy Buenoano was executed for two murders but believed to be responsible for many more

When Was Judy Buenoano Executed

Judy Buenoano was executed on March 30 1998

Karla Faye Tucker Execution

Karla Faye Tucker execution

Karla Faye Tucker was executed by the State of Texas for the murders of two men. On February 3, 1998 she was executed by way of lethal injection.

Karla Faye Tucker was born in Houston Texas on November 18, 1959 to parents in a volatile relationship. When Karla was ten years old she would learn that her father was not her father during her parents divorce proceedings.

Karla Faye Tucker was using drugs by the time she was twelve years old and would soon travel with her mother who was a groupie to a number of rock bands and would also work as a prostitute.

At the age of sixteen Karla Faye Tucker would be briefly married to an auto mechanic.

When Karla Faye Tucker was in her early twenties she would meet a man named Daniel Ryan Garrett who she would soon be in a relationship with. The two who spent a lot of time using drugs were short on cash and decided to rob someone they knew of his motorcycle

During the robbery they would grab the homeowner, Jerry Dean, and force him into the bedroom. Jerry Dean who made a grab for Karla Faye Tucker was beaten with a ball peen hammer. Tucker who was armed with a pick axe would strike Dean repeated with the tool causing his death.

When Garrett left the room to load more parts Karla Faye Tucker noticed a woman, Deborah Ruth Thornton, in the room and would strike her with the pick axe. The two women began to fight until they were separated by Garrett. Tucker would strike the woman repeatedly with the pick axe. Karla Faye Tucker would later tell people she has multiple orgasms when she killed the woman.

Karla Faye Tucker and Danny Garrett would be arrested five weeks later.

Karla Faye Tucker was initially charged with both murders however after agreeing to testify against Danny Garrett the murder charge for the Jerry Dean case was the only one she stood trial for. Danny Garrett would also only be charged with the Deborah Thornton murder. Both would be convicted and sentenced to death.

Karla Faye Tucker would be executed on February 3, 1998 by lethal injection. There was a ton of controversy around her execution for she completely changed her life while imprisoned and spent most of her time helping others. Most believed her death sentence should have been commuted.

Karla Faye Tucker Videos

Karla Faye Tucker More News

Karla Faye Tucker, the Pickax Killer turned born-again Christian, died of a lethal injection tonight, closing a long fight for her life as a crowd outside the Texas death house prayed for her soul.

Tucker, 38, was pronounced dead at 6:45 p.m. local time, becoming the first woman executed in Texas since the Civil War and only the second in the United States since the resumption of the death penalty in 1976. Although she and her attorneys had played down her gender in their many pleas for clemency, the fact that she was a woman helped arouse international interest in her cause and generate appeals for mercy from figures including Pope John Paul II and religious broadcaster Pat Robertson.

Wearing a white prison uniform and white tennis shoes, Karla Faye Tucker lay strapped on her back on a gurney as she delivered her final statements to the gathered witnesses, who included her husband, Dana Brown, a prison ministry worker she married by proxy in 1995, and Ronald Carlson, a Houston machinist and brother of one of the victims.

“I love all of you very much,” she said to the witnesses. “I am going to be face-to-face with Jesus now.”

Addressing her husband, she said, “Baby, I love you.”

Then a lethal dose of sodium thiopental began dripping into the veins of each arm, along with pancuronium bromide, which is a muscle relaxant, and potassium chloride, which stops the heartbeat. Within a few minutes, she was dead. Officials with the Texas Department of Criminal Justice said that Tucker also could have requested a sedative but did not.

“I never saw Karla Faye Tucker take the smile off her face,” said Vicente Arenas, a Houston television reporter who was among the witnesses.

The scene was emotional outside the Department of Criminal Justice facility here called the death house in this east Texas town of 35,000 about 60 miles north of Houston, where a record 37 men were executed last year. Several hundred people on both sides of the issue crowded against yellow police lines, some still arguing over the value of the death penalty, others praying and singing “Amazing Grace” and other hymns.

“Bye bye, Karla Faye,” read one sign. “Forget Injection, Use a Pickax,” read another.

But many others here were sympathetic to Tucker’s plight: “I’m Ashamed to be a Texan,” one sign read, and another said: “Jesus Loves Karla Faye and So Do I.”

Cheers went up from the pro-execution crowd when her death was announced.

The case had divided victims’ families. Carlson, brother of Deborah Thornton, one of the two people Tucker was convicted of helping to kill, participated in rallies at the state Capitol in Austin asking that Tucker be spared. Richard Thornton, the victim’s husband, argued that he was sick of the depiction of Tucker as “Miss Saint.”

Arenas said Thornton, who is in a wheelchair with severe diabetes and was a witness to the execution, muttered throughout the proceedings. “The world’s a better place,” he was heard to say during the execution.

It had become increasingly clear on Monday that despite Tucker’s efforts to show she was a changed person, notably in televised appearances on “60 Minutes,” Robertson’s “The 700 Club” and CNN, her quest to spare her life had failed. The state Board of Pardons and Paroles, which could have commuted her sentence to life in prison, voted 16 to 0, with two members abstaining, to deny her request. Tucker, who could have been eligible for parole in 2003 had the board agreed, had asked that she be given life in prison without the possibility of release, but there is no such sentence in Texas, and board members said they could not make a special case of Karla Faye Tucker.

After the board’s ruling, Tucker’s only hope was with the U.S. Supreme Court, which turned down two appeals without comment this afternoon, and Gov. George W. Bush (R), who, under the law, could grant her only one 30-day stay. But here in Texas, the national leader in executions with one in every three that occurs, governors have seldom intervened in death-penalty cases and Bush was no exception.

“May God bless Karla Faye Tucker and may God bless her victims and their families,” Bush said after declining to grant the stay.

No one disputed the fact that Karla Faye Tucker committed a nightmarish act. According to her own account, she began using heroin at age 10 and was a drug-addled prostitute when she and a friend, Daniel Garrett, entered the Houston apartment of Jerry Lynn Dean on June 13, 1983, to steal a motorcycle.

Garrett began beating Dean with a hammer, and Tucker, who said she was disturbed by the “gurgling” sounds the wounded man made, found a 3-foot-long pickax and began hacking at his body. Then she noticed a figure cowering under a pile of blankets and swung the pickax again, striking Deborah Thornton on the shoulder. She said that Garrett finished Thornton off; the pickax was found embedded in the woman’s chest.

Karla Faye Tucker, who testified against Garrett, was not tried for Thornton’s murder but received the death penalty for Dean’s slaying. Garrett, who was also sentenced to death, died of a liver ailment in prison in 1993.

But Karla Faye Tucker said that as she waited in the Harris County Jail for her trial, her head began to clear from the years of drugs, and meeting with jail ministry workers, she found religion and the peace that sustained her for more than 14 years on death row.

In her final days, an unusual assortment of people rallied to her cause, including the pope and Robertson, founder of the Christian Broadcasting Network and host of “The 700 Club,” who normally supports the death penalty. “The 700 Club” broadcast Tucker’s final interview today, in which she discussed what she might be thinking as she lay waiting on the gurney.

“I am going to be thinking certainly about what it’s like in heaven,” she said. “I’m going to be thinking about my family and my friends and the pain. I am going to be thankful for all the love.”

Repeatedly, in the weeks leading to her death, Karla Faye Tucker had told interviewers she was not afraid of dying. “I know that Jesus has prepared a place for me,” she said in a recent CNN report. “I know if I have to go February 3, he’s going to come and he’s going to escort me personally. I believe that.”

After the execution, Tucker’s body was taken to Huntsville Funeral Home, said prisons spokesman Larry Todd, where her husband was expected to claim it for burial.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/frompost/dec98/woman9.htm

Frequently Asked Questions

Karla Faye Tucker FAQ

Why Was Karla Faye Tucker Executed

Karla Faye Tucker was executed for a double murder

When Was Karla Faye Tucker Executed

Karla Faye Tucker was executed on February 3, 1998