1st Execution of 2018
Texas carried out the nation's first execution of 2018
on January 18, 2018, giving lethal injection to a man who became known as
Houston's "Tourniquet Killer" because of his signature
murder technique on four female victims, reported CBS News.
Anthony Allen Shore was put to death for one of those
slayings, the 1992 killing of a 21-year-old woman whose body was dumped in the
drive-thru of a Houston Dairy Queen.
In his final statement, Shore, 55, was apologetic and his
voice cracked with emotion.
"No amount of words or apology could ever undo what
I've done," Shore said while strapped to the death chamber gurney. "I
wish I could undo the past, but it is what it is."
As the lethal dose of pentobarbital began, Shore said the
drug burned. "Oooh-ee! I can feel that," he said before slipping into
unconsciousness.
He was pronounced dead 13 minutes later at 6:28 p.m. CST.
"Anthony Allen Shore's reign of terror is officially
over," Andy Kahan, the city of Houston crime victims' advocate, said,
speaking for the families of Shore's victims. "There's a reason we have
the death penalty in the state of Texas and Anthony Shore is on the top of the
list. This has been a long, arduous journey that has taken over 20 years for
victims' families."
Shore's lawyers argued in appeals he suffered brain damage
early in life that went undiscovered by his trial attorneys and affected
Shore's decision to disregard their advice when he told his trial judge he
wanted the death penalty. A federal appeals court last year turned down his
appeal, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to review his case and the six-member
Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles unanimously rejected a clemency petition.
Shore's attorneys said his appeals were exhausted. They
filed no last-minute attempts to try to halt his execution.
In 1998, Shore received eight years' probation and became a
registered sex offender for sexually assaulting two relatives. Five years
later, Shore was arrested for the 1992 slaying of Maria del Carmen Estrada
after a tiny particle recovered from under her fingernail was matched to his
DNA.
"I didn't set out to kill her," he told police in
a taped interview played at his 2004 trial. "That was not my intent. But
it got out of hand."
Estrada was walking to work around 6:30 a.m. on April 16,
1992, when he she accepted a ride from him. The former tow truck driver, phone
company repairman and part-time musician blamed his actions on "voices in
my head that I was going to have her, regardless, to possess her in some
way."
He also confessed to killing three others, a 9-year-old and
two teenagers. All four of his victims were Hispanic and at least three had
been raped. Jurors also heard from three women who testified he raped them.
Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg, who as an assistant
prosecutor worked the then-unsolved Estrada case, said crime scene photos
showed Estrada was tortured and had suffered as a stick was used to tighten a
cord around her neck.
"I know this case, I know his work and the death
penalty is appropriate," she said. "A jury in this case gave Shore
death. ... I think he's reached the end of the road and now it's up to
government to complete the job."
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