The 12th Execution of 2026
A man who
experts for both prosecutors and defense attorneys had said was intellectually
disabled became the 600th person executed in Texas since 1982, put to death
on May 14, 2026 for the killing of a 77-year-old retired college professor, according to The Associated Press.
Edward
Busby Jr. was pronounced dead at 8:11 p.m. following a lethal
injection at the state penitentiary in Huntsville, hours after the U.S. Supreme
Court lifted a stay over his disabilities claims. The execution capped a series
of last-minute legal efforts by Busby’s attorneys seeking to spare his life.
Busby was
condemned for the suffocation death of Laura Lee Crane, a retired professor
from Texas Christian University. Prosecutors said she was abducted from a
grocery store parking lot in January 2004 and left to suffocate in the trunk of
her car with duct tape wrapped heavily around her face, covering her mouth and
nose.
The
execution was the 600th in Texas since it resumed carrying out the death
penalty in 1982. Busby also was the fourth person executed this year in Texas
and the 12th nationwide. Earlier Thursday, Oklahoma executed Raymond
Johnson for killing his ex-girlfriend and her 7-month-old daughter
nearly 20 years ago.
When asked
by the warden if he had a final statement, Busby repeatedly apologized and
asked for forgiveness.
“I am so
sorry for what happened,” he said while strapped to the death chamber gurney.
“Miss Crane was a lovely woman. I never meant anything bad to happen to her.”
He said he wished he could “take it all back” and added he had “no right to get
in that car.”
“I’ll take
the blame if that helps.”
He said he
had surrendered his life to God and urged a sister, who was praying and
watching through a window a short distance away, to find a church and “pick up
your cross.”
“I’m here
because this is the will of God,” he said before the injection got underway.
As the
lethal dose of the sedative pentobarbital began flowing, he took a sharp
breath, closed his eyes and gasped. Then he made snoring sounds that got
progressively quieter. Within 40 seconds, all movement and sounds ceased. He
was pronounced dead 38 minutes afterward.
Busby’s
execution had been in doubt after the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last
week issued a stay of execution to further review his claims of intellectual
disability. But the Supreme Court overturned the stay Thursday at the request
of the Texas Attorney General’s Office. The attorney general’s office had
argued that similar appeals were previously rejected and were “meritless” and
based on “conflicting evidence.”
Busby’s
lawyers quickly sought another stay but it was denied by a lower court.
The
Supreme Court in 2002 had barred the execution of intellectually disabled
people. But it has given states some discretion to decide how to determine such
disabilities.
Busby’s
attorneys had argued against putting him to death because a defense expert as
well as one hired by the Tarrant County District Attorney’s Office, which
prosecuted the case, both found he was intellectually disabled.
The
district attorney’s office had previously recommended Busby’s sentence be
reduced to life in prison. But the trial judge in Busby’s case disagreed with
the findings of intellectual disability and in 2023 upheld the death sentence.
In a
statement Wednesday, the district attorney’s office said it requested
Thursday’s execution date because it believed that under current law Busy was
not intellectually disabled.
Two other
prior execution
dates for Busby had been
delayed by courts.
Prosecutors
have said Busby and his co-defendant, Kathleen Latimer, abducted Crane in her
car from a Fort Worth grocery store parking lot and later put in her vehicle’s
trunk as they drove around. Prosecutors said she died in the trunk after
suffocating from having 23 feet (7 meters) of duct tape wrapped over her entire
face.
Busby was
subsequently arrested in Oklahoma City driving Crane’s car and led authorities
to her body in Oklahoma just north of the state line with Texas.
Latimer is
in prison serving a life sentence for murder.
Bryan Mark
Rigg, an author and historian who represented the Crane family as a witness to
the execution, said they “neither support or oppose the death penalty. However,
they are united in their respect for the rule of law.”
Rigg said
as a child he was a student of Crane, who for decades helped children overcome
learning disabilities and “was discarded in a field like a piece of trash.” He
said the execution was not about vengeance but “accountability under the law
and about remembering the life of an extraordinary educator.”
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