The 13th Execution of 2025
A Texas man convicted of fatally strangling and
stabbing a young mother more than 20 years ago was executed on the evening of April 24, 2025 as the victim’s mother and other relatives looked on, reported The Associated Press.
Moises Sandoval Mendoza, 41, received a lethal injection at
the state penitentiary in Huntsville and was pronounced dead at 6:40 p.m. He
was sentenced to death for his conviction in the March 2004 killing of
20-year-old Rachelle O’Neil Tolleson.
After a spiritual adviser prayed over him for about two
minutes, Mendoza apologized repeatedly to the victim’s two parents and other
relatives present, calling to each by name. “I am sorry for having robbed you
of Rachelle’s life,” he said, addressing the parents, one of her brothers, a
cousin and an uncle watching through a window from an adjoining room.
Mendoza also said he had robbed Tolleson’s daughter of her
mother, adding, “I’m sorry for that. I know nothing that I could ever say or do
would ever make up for that. I want you to know that I am sincere. I
apologize.” The daughter wasn’t present for the execution.
He then spoke briefly in Spanish, addressing his wife, his
sister and two friends watching through a window from another witness room. “I
love you, I am with you, I am well and at peace,” he said in Spanish, his words
provided in a transcript in English translation. “You know that I’m well, and
everything is love.”
As the injection began, he could be heard making two loud
gasps and then began snoring. After about 10 snores, all movement ceased and he
was pronounced dead 19 minutes later.
Prosecutors say Mendoza, 41, took Tolleson from her north
Texas home, leaving her 6-month-old daughter alone. The infant was found cold
and wet but safe the next day by Tolleson’s mother. Tolleson’s body was
discovered six days later, left in a field near a creek.
Evidence in Mendoza’s case showed he also had burned
Tolleson’s body to hide his fingerprints. Dental records were used to identify
her, according to investigators.
Pam O’Neil, the victim’s mother, told reporters after
witnessing Mendoza’s execution that it could not undo the loss of her daughter.
Reading from a statement, she said of Mendoza: “He’s been on death row 20
years. That ended today. He was put to sleep. He felt no pain. I wish I could
say the same about my daughter’s death.”
As Mendoza’s relatives and friends left the prison, they
appeared distraught and embraced one another.
Hours earlier on Wednesday, the U.S. Supreme Court denied a
final request by Mendoza’s attorneys to stop his execution. Mendoza’s attorneys
told the justices in a filing that he had been prevented by lower courts from
arguing that he had been denied effective assistance of counsel earlier in the
appeals process.
But the Texas Attorney General’s Office told the Supreme
Court that Mendoza’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel had previously
been found “meritless and insubstantial” by a lower federal court.
Lower courts also had previously rejected his petitions for
a stay. The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles on Monday denied Mendoza’s
request to commute his death sentence to a lesser penalty.
Authorities said that in the days before the killing,
Mendoza had attended a party at Tolleson’s home in Farmersville, located about
45 miles (72 kilometers) northeast of Dallas. On the day her body was found,
Mendoza told a friend about the killing. The friend called police, and Mendoza
was arrested.
Mendoza confessed to police but couldn’t give detectives a
reason for the killing, authorities said. He told investigators he repeatedly
choked Tolleson, sexually assaulted her and dragged her body to a field, where
he choked her again and then stabbed her in the throat. He later moved her body
to a more remote location and burned it, they said.
Mendoza was the third inmate put to death this year in
Texas, historically the nation’s busiest capital punishment state,
and the 13th in the U.S.
On Thursday, Alabama plans to execute James
Osgood for the 2010 rape and murder of a woman.
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