HUNTSVILLE, Texas (AP) - The nation's busiest death chamber reopens this week after a nearly 9-month hiatus with the scheduled lethal injection of a former part-time car-wash worker for killing a suburban Houston woman and her young son 17 years ago.
The execution Tuesday of Derrick Sonnier, 40, would make him the fourth prisoner put to death in the nation since the U.S. Supreme Court in April upheld lethal injection as a proper method of capital punishment but the first in Texas since last Sept. 25. That's when convicted killer Michael Richard was executed in Huntsville the same day the high court decided to consider a challenge from two condemned inmates in Kentucky who contended lethal injection was unconstitutionally cruel.
The Kentucky case effectively stalled all executions around the nation. For Texas, where 405 convicted killers have received lethal injection since the state resumed carrying out capital punishment in 1982, the execution lull has been the lengthiest in two decades.
``I pretty much figured ... it was just a delay,'' said convicted murderer Karl Chamberlain, set to die a week after Sonnier for a slaying in Dallas County. ``So after they (the Supreme Court) made that ruling, I was expecting a date any time.''
``It's going to be a bloodbath with the state of Texas, like old day lynchings,'' said Kevin Watts, who has an execution date of Oct. 16 for a triple killing in San Antonio.
He and Sonnier are among at least 14 Texas inmates with execution dates as Texas is poised to quickly reassume its notoriety as the country's most active state in carrying out the death penalty. Of the 42 executions in the United States last year, 26 were in Texas. The next busiest states were Alabama and Oklahoma, each with three.
Statistics kept by the Death Penalty Information Center list only nine other inmates from elsewhere in the nation with active execution dates. Sonnier is the first of three Texas prisoners scheduled to be taken to the death chamber over 14 days in June.
Sonnier, taken to court in Houston to hear a state district judge deliver the news, declined to speak with reporters in the weeks preceding his death date.
The U.S. Supreme Court last October refused to review Sonnier's case and his attorney had no plans to raise additional appeals.
``There's just not a lot to work with,'' lawyer Jani Maselli said. ``It's horribly frustrating.''
Sonnier, born in Sulphur, La., and raised in Houston, was condemned for the slayings of a neighbor, Melody Flowers, 27, and her 2-year-old son, Patrick, at their apartment in Humble, a northeast Houston suburb. Flowers had been stabbed, beaten with a hammer until the tool's handle broke, and strangled. Her child was stabbed eight times. Both victims were found floating in a bathtub.
Evidence showed he had been obsessed with the woman and had stalked her. Witnesses testified how they repeatedly chased him away from her place where he peered through her windows and even hid in her apartment.
Sonnier's defense was that someone else was responsible for the murders. Neighbors pointed him out to police shortly after the bodies were discovered. Flowers' blouse and a towel belonging to her were found in a trash can in Sonnier's apartment and his DNA was identified on hair and blood found in her apartment.
``To this day, it still hurts,'' Sebrina Flowers, 23, who was 7 when her mother was killed, told the Houston Chronicle. She and an older sister and younger brother returned from school to find their home a crime scene.
Sonnier initially was scheduled to die in February. His execution date, however, was withdrawn by Harris County prosecutors because of the Supreme Court's pending review of lethal injection procedures, subsequently upheld by the justices in a 7-2 vote.
Chamberlain is set to die on June 11 for the rape-slaying of a Dallas woman, Felicia Prechtl, at the apartment complex where they both lived. Her death occurred in August 1991, one month before Sonnier's crime. Chamberlain acknowledges the killing, blaming drugs and alcohol for his violence.
Then the following week, Charles Hood is to die June 17 for a double slaying in the Dallas suburb of Plano in 1989. He insists he is innocent of the deaths of Ronald Williamson and Traci Lynn Wallace.
At least three executions already are on the Texas schedule for July, four more for August, three for September and Watts in October.
Among the inmates with dates is Michael Rodriguez, who has ordered his appeals dropped and is volunteering to die for his role in the murder of a suburban Dallas police officer on Christmas Eve 2000. Rodriguez was one of the infamous ``Texas 7'' convicts who escaped from a prison south of San Antonio and were caught five weeks later in Colorado, but not before fatally shooting Irving police officer Aubrey Hawkins during the robbery of a sporting goods store. His date is Aug. 14.
Source: The Monitor
The execution Tuesday of Derrick Sonnier, 40, would make him the fourth prisoner put to death in the nation since the U.S. Supreme Court in April upheld lethal injection as a proper method of capital punishment but the first in Texas since last Sept. 25. That's when convicted killer Michael Richard was executed in Huntsville the same day the high court decided to consider a challenge from two condemned inmates in Kentucky who contended lethal injection was unconstitutionally cruel.
The Kentucky case effectively stalled all executions around the nation. For Texas, where 405 convicted killers have received lethal injection since the state resumed carrying out capital punishment in 1982, the execution lull has been the lengthiest in two decades.
``I pretty much figured ... it was just a delay,'' said convicted murderer Karl Chamberlain, set to die a week after Sonnier for a slaying in Dallas County. ``So after they (the Supreme Court) made that ruling, I was expecting a date any time.''
``It's going to be a bloodbath with the state of Texas, like old day lynchings,'' said Kevin Watts, who has an execution date of Oct. 16 for a triple killing in San Antonio.
He and Sonnier are among at least 14 Texas inmates with execution dates as Texas is poised to quickly reassume its notoriety as the country's most active state in carrying out the death penalty. Of the 42 executions in the United States last year, 26 were in Texas. The next busiest states were Alabama and Oklahoma, each with three.
Statistics kept by the Death Penalty Information Center list only nine other inmates from elsewhere in the nation with active execution dates. Sonnier is the first of three Texas prisoners scheduled to be taken to the death chamber over 14 days in June.
Sonnier, taken to court in Houston to hear a state district judge deliver the news, declined to speak with reporters in the weeks preceding his death date.
The U.S. Supreme Court last October refused to review Sonnier's case and his attorney had no plans to raise additional appeals.
``There's just not a lot to work with,'' lawyer Jani Maselli said. ``It's horribly frustrating.''
Sonnier, born in Sulphur, La., and raised in Houston, was condemned for the slayings of a neighbor, Melody Flowers, 27, and her 2-year-old son, Patrick, at their apartment in Humble, a northeast Houston suburb. Flowers had been stabbed, beaten with a hammer until the tool's handle broke, and strangled. Her child was stabbed eight times. Both victims were found floating in a bathtub.
Evidence showed he had been obsessed with the woman and had stalked her. Witnesses testified how they repeatedly chased him away from her place where he peered through her windows and even hid in her apartment.
Sonnier's defense was that someone else was responsible for the murders. Neighbors pointed him out to police shortly after the bodies were discovered. Flowers' blouse and a towel belonging to her were found in a trash can in Sonnier's apartment and his DNA was identified on hair and blood found in her apartment.
``To this day, it still hurts,'' Sebrina Flowers, 23, who was 7 when her mother was killed, told the Houston Chronicle. She and an older sister and younger brother returned from school to find their home a crime scene.
Sonnier initially was scheduled to die in February. His execution date, however, was withdrawn by Harris County prosecutors because of the Supreme Court's pending review of lethal injection procedures, subsequently upheld by the justices in a 7-2 vote.
Chamberlain is set to die on June 11 for the rape-slaying of a Dallas woman, Felicia Prechtl, at the apartment complex where they both lived. Her death occurred in August 1991, one month before Sonnier's crime. Chamberlain acknowledges the killing, blaming drugs and alcohol for his violence.
Then the following week, Charles Hood is to die June 17 for a double slaying in the Dallas suburb of Plano in 1989. He insists he is innocent of the deaths of Ronald Williamson and Traci Lynn Wallace.
At least three executions already are on the Texas schedule for July, four more for August, three for September and Watts in October.
Among the inmates with dates is Michael Rodriguez, who has ordered his appeals dropped and is volunteering to die for his role in the murder of a suburban Dallas police officer on Christmas Eve 2000. Rodriguez was one of the infamous ``Texas 7'' convicts who escaped from a prison south of San Antonio and were caught five weeks later in Colorado, but not before fatally shooting Irving police officer Aubrey Hawkins during the robbery of a sporting goods store. His date is Aug. 14.
Source: The Monitor
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