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Edward GREEN
III
Robbery
Wednesday, September 29, 2004
Edward Green
Scheduled For Execution.
AUSTIN – Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott offers the following
information about 30-year-old Edward Green III, who is scheduled to
be executed after 6 p.m. October 5, 2004.
FACTS OF THE CRIME
Armed with a .357 revolver, Edward Green spotted Haden and
O’Sullivan in a car at a southeast Houston street intersection and
decided to rob them because they looked as if they had money. Green
pointed his pistol at Haden, who was driving the vehicle, and
demanded he get out the vehicle.
Haden laughed at Green and Green
shot Haden in the head and chest and O’Sullivan in an arm and the
abdomen. Haden died at the scene and O’Sullivan later died at the
hospital.
In September, police detectives learned that Green was in the
Harris County Jail for an unrelated offense. Based on information
gathered in the case, the detectives interviewed Green at the jail.
At first, Green said he knew nothing about the offense, but after
the officers told him that they had information about his role in
the killings, Green confessed to the murders.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On December 9, 1992, Green was indicted in by a Harris County
grand jury for the capital murders of Edward Perry Haden and Helen
O’Sullivan. A jury found Green guilty of capital murder on August 3,
1993.
On August 7, 1993, after a separate punishment hearing, the
court sentenced Green to death. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals
affirmed Green’s conviction and sentence on October 4, 1995. The U.S.
Supreme Court denied Green’s petition for writ of certiorari on June
24, 1996.
Green then filed a state application for writ of habeas corpus in
the trial court on April 23, 1997. The trial court entered findings
of fact and conclusions of law recommending that Green be denied
relief. On March 28, 2001, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals
denied the application based on the trial court’s findings.
On April 13, 2001, Green filed a federal habeas petition in a
Houston federal district court. On March 29, 2002, the federal court
entered a judgment denying Green habeas relief and his request to
appeal.
Green then sought permission to appeal from the 5th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals, but the appeals court denied Green’s
request on April 29, 2003. Green subsequently petitioned the U.S.
Supreme Court for certiorari review. The Supreme Court denied the
petition on January 12, 2004.
PRIOR CRIMINAL HISTORY
At the punishment phase of Green’s trial, the State presented
substantial evidence of Green’s future dangerousness. Several
witnesses testified about Green’s conduct while he was in middle
school.
According to former principals of Hartman Middle School,
Green did not go to class, disrespected teachers, did not benefit
from counseling, and got expelled for getting in a fight with
another student. Green also had numerous disciplinary problems and a
bad reputation. Further, students had violent encounters with Green.
A teen said Green raped her in October 1989. Green stated that he
did not think that his sex offense against the girl was wrong.
Several police officers testified about Green’s involvement in
five separate car thefts between 1989 and 1992.
On December 15, 1992, Green was in a segregation cell in the
Harris County Jail and became combative. He grabbed a deputy, had to
be restrained, and damaged property in the cell. Green got into
several fights with inmates while in the jail.
By Kelly Prew - The Huntsville Item
October 6, 2004
HUNTSVILLE - The execution of Edward Green III was carried out
shortly after 8 p.m. Tuesday at the Huntsville "Walls" Unit after
nearly a two-hour delay pending a decision from the U.S. Supreme
Court. Attorneys for Green had hoped discrepancies by the Houston
Crime Lab would deem a stay of execution.
In a brief final statement, Green addressed the families of his
victims, Edward Perry Haden, 72, and 63-year-old Helen O'Sullivan,
who he gunned down in Houston in 1992. "To the O'Sullivan and Haden
families, I do not come here with the intention to make myself out
to be a person I am not," Green said. "I never claimed to be the
best person." To his own family and friends, Green apologized for
the pain he caused. "I am not the best father, son or friend in the
world. I did the best I could with what I had," he said. In the end,
Green asked that "God forgive us on this day."
The lethal dose was administered at 8:11 p.m., and after a few
deep breaths, and a few unintelligible words, Green was pronounced
dead at 8:21 p.m. In the room where his family stood to watch the
death penalty carried out, Green's mother Edith A. Hawkins sobbed
and cried and collapsed and was aided out of the room, while another
witness was placed in a wheelchair briefly.
Following the execution, Annette O'Sullivan, 22, whose
grandmother was killed, said her heart goes out to the Green family.
"My family knows what it's like to lose a loved one," she said. "The
difference here is he's had time to prepare and tell his family that
he loves them and everything he wants to say to them. "We did not
have that opportunity," she said, adding that she had worried the
execution could be stopped. She said the week leading up to the
punishment had been an "emotional roller coaster" because of the
problems with the crime lab. She added that she was glad Green
apologized in his last statement, but said that couldn't take away
the fact he killed her grandmother and Haden.
Green's' lawyers, two state senators from Harris County and the
Houston police chief wanted executions stopped for all county cases
until authorities can review some 280 recently discovered boxes of
evidence that had been mislabeled and improperly stored. Attorneys
said the boxes could contain something relevant to Green's double
murder case, but prosecutors said all evidence involving Green had
been accounted for. Much of the controversy surrounding the police
lab is on reliability of DNA testing procedures. No DNA evidence was
used in Green's case; his attorneys had questioned the reliability
of ballistics evidence presented at his trial.
Gov. Rick Perry refused Monday to impose a blanket moratorium on
Harris County executions. The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles,
voting 6-0, refused a clemency request from Green. Hours before he
could be taken to the death house, Green's lawyers asked the parole
board to reconsider its vote, saying a meaningful review of the case
"is simply not possible" until all of the newly found evidence is
catalogued. The board refused. Perry also rejected a 30-day reprieve,
which he is empowered to grant. "The main evidence leading to
Green's conviction is his own confession to these brutal and
senseless murders," the governor said.
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, the state's highest criminal
court, and the U.S. Supreme Court refused to grant a stay. Green's
execution was the 14th this year in Texas and the first of two on
consecutive days this week.
WHO AM I ?........
Sometimes I try too hard
thinking that competing with self will reward
my heart with the foundation of knowledge
that only the depths of my soul can acknowledge.
This is why my determination decision
seems to appear more and more like a mission
allowing my growth and development to be something scholastic
while the balance of my life is man made, afraid and drastic,
There is no one but myself to blame
because throughout all the pleasures, I've searched for the pain.
that can bring me gravely closer to only knowing myself
while others wish to know nothing about me...but the means for my
death.
Edward Green III (#999073)
12002 FM 35 South
Polunsky Unit 12AC/32
Livingston, TX 77351 USA