Murderpedia has thousands of hours of work behind it. To keep creating
new content, we kindly appreciate any donation you can give to help
the Murderpedia project stay alive. We have many
plans and enthusiasm
to keep expanding and making Murderpedia a better site, but we really
need your help for this. Thank you very much in advance.
Michael Durwood
GRIFFITH
Rape - Robbery
1 month after
Griffith was a regular customer of the Always and Forever Flower Shop in
Houston, operated by 44 year old Deborah McCormick and her mother.
ClarkProsecutor.org
Inmate: Griffith, Michael Durwood
Date of Birth: 7/11/50
TDCJ#: 176
Date Received: 1/8/96
Education: 12 years
Occupation: cleaning service
Date of Offense: 10/10/94
County of Offense: Harris
Native County: Los Angeles County, California
Race: White
Gender: Male
Hair Color: Gray
Eye Color: Hazel
Height: 05' 11"
Weight: 205 lb
Co-defendants: None
Prior Prison Record: None
Wednesday, May 30, 2007
Media Advisory: Michael
Griffith scheduled for execution
AUSTIN – Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott offers
the following information about former Harris County sheriff’s deputy
Michael Griffith, who is scheduled to be executed after 6 p.m. Wednesday,
June 6, 2007. Griffith was convicted and sentenced to death for the
Houston robbery and murder of Deborah McCormick.
FACTS OF THE CRIME
Deborah McCormick and her mother Mary Ringer worked
together at the Always and Forever Florist Shop and Wedding Chapel,
located in Houston. On the morning of October 10, 1994, Mary left
Deborah in the shop alone, locking the door behind her. The two women
had agreed to keep the door locked if only one of them was in the store,
and no one was to be admitted unless the customer was known to them.
When Mary returned to the shop about 30 minutes later,
she found her daughter’s body lying in a pool of blood and naked from
the waist up. She had been stabbed eleven times. Missing were four
hundred dollars that had been hidden in a makeup bag and the mother’s
credit cards that had been in the victim’s purse. The mother’s missing
credit cards were used later that day at a gas station more than
eighteen miles away from the murder scene, and they were also used at
three department stores.
Griffith was arrested a month after the murder in a
hotel room. Police discovered the stolen credit cards and an envelope
containing money and a knife. In Griffith’s car, police found a receipt
for a dozen red roses from the Always and Forever Florist Shop.
Mary Ringer testified that Griffith had been in the
shop on three other occasions to purchase roses, and she recognized him
as a customer.
The medical examiner identified the knife recovered
from Griffith’s hotel room as consistent with the knife that inflicted
the wounds on Deborah McCormick’s body. DNA testing indicated that the
knife had a mixture of two different blood types – that of Deborah
McCormick and Griffith.
PUNISHMENT PHASE
At the punishment phase of the trial, a former co-worker
from the Harris County Sheriff’s Department testified that Griffith had
a reputation for not being a peaceful and law abiding person, that
Griffith was prone to spontaneous eruptions, and that Griffith was
terminated from the sheriff’s department on January 21, 1993, for a
violation of departmental policy regarding domestic abuse.
The State also presented evidence of two other
violent robberies Griffith committed shortly after the murder of Deborah
McCormick. Griffith robbed a Guardian Savings and Loan in Harris County
on October14, 1994, four days after the murder. During the robbery,
Griffith made the lone employee walk to the restroom in the back of the
building, at which time Griffith shot her in the back of the head.
The first shot grazed her head, but a second shot
lodged and fragmented into her skull. The victim, who survived, was
still conscious and saw Griffith shoot a security camera. Griffith also
robbed a bridal salon and sexually assaulted the salesperson on October
28, 1994.
The State presented numerous examples of Griffith’s
abusive treatment of his ex-wives and girlfriends. Specifically,
Griffith’s first wife testified that Griffith began hitting her very
early on in their marriage; that Griffith was unfaithful to her, and
when she confronted him with the affairs, he broke several of her ribs;
and that she finally left him when he injured their oldest daughter in a
fight.
Another ex-wife testified Griffith was charming and
often gave her gifts while they were dating but became violent on the
day they were married. During the three-year marriage, Griffith was
physically abusive and began beating her four or five months into the
marriage. Griffith once threatened to kill her for wearing a dress he
thought was too tight. After they had separated, Griffith attacked her
when she attempted to take money out of their bank account; during the
attack, Griffith broke down her front door, broke her car windows, and
took the money she had withdrawn.
Griffith began dating a co-worker from the Harris
County Sheriff’s Department in October 1992. At first, Griffith was
charming and sent flowers and gifts frequently, but soon became very
possessive, jealous, and temperamental. On one occasion, Griffith choked
her and threatened her with a gun.
In January 1993, Griffith, who was despondent over
losing his job, held the girlfriend hostage at his apartment for twelve
hours, during which time he threatened her with a pair of scissors and
told her he should kill her. At one point, Griffith told her “it’s a
good day for you to die” and that she could say goodbye to her children
before he killed her. The girlfriend escaped, and Griffith was arrested
for assault.
Hilda Garcia testified that, when they first began
dating, Griffith treated her well and gave her flowers, but soon became
very possessive and temperamental. Griffith struck her on two occasions,
one time chipping her tooth. On September 19, 1994, Griffith became
angry and destroyed some things in Garcia’s home, then attacked her when
she tried to throw him out. Garcia filed assault charges against
Griffith for this incident.
As a rebuttal witness, the State called Allan
Brantley, an FBI agent who works at the National Center for the Analysis
of Violent Crimes. Brantley testified that there was a high probability
that Griffith would engage in future acts of violence that were
consistent with his past behavior. Brantley opined that Griffith’s
actions were motivated by a sexual drive, and that such sexual drives do
not go away.
Brantley compared Griffith to a sexual predator who
enjoys both the sexual aspect of his actions, as well as the power,
control, and domination of a weaker individual. Such a predator will
continue to look for similar outlets for sexual gratification, and, if
isolated from females, he will look for a similar victim within the
available population, which could include weaker males.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Griffith was convicted and sentenced to death in
December 1995 for the capital murder of Deborah McCormick. The Texas
Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed his conviction and sentence. The U.S.
Supreme Court denied certiorari review of this decision. The Texas Court
of Criminal Appeals denied state habeas corpus relief on October 8,
2003, after adopting the trial court's findings of fact and conclusions
of law.
Griffith’s federal petition for writ of habeas corpus
was denied on September 27, 2005. The district court also denied a
certificate of appealability (COA) in the same opinion. Griffith filed a
notice of appeal on October 5, 2005. Griffith’s request for COA was
denied by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on July 21, 2006. The
Supreme Court denied certiorari review of this decision on January 8,
2007.
PRIOR CRIMINAL HISTORY
Griffith has no prior prison record. However, in
addition to his death sentence, Griffith was also sentenced to 60 years
in prison on two counts of aggravated robbery. Griffith has committed
numerous unadjudicated crimes, as described in the section regarding the
punishment phase evidence.
AP - June 7, 2007
HUNTSVILLE, Texas — A former sheriff's deputy who
killed a Houston woman during a robbery, sexual assault and stabbing
attack took away the glue that held their family together, the daughter
of the murder victim said after the man was put to death. "We will never
be the same," Dawn Kirkland said after Michael Griffith quietly was
executed Wednesday evening for the slaying of her mother, Deborah
McCormick, at her family's flower shop nearly 13 years ago.
Griffith, 56, one of the rare ex-lawmen on death row
in Texas, made no final statement from the death chamber gurney,
replying to the warden with a "No, sir" when asked if he had anything to
say. But as the lethal drugs began flowing, he whispered, "Please take
my spirit to the Lord."
Nine minutes later he was pronounced dead, making him
the 15th condemned prisoner executed this year in Texas, the nation's
most active death penalty state. Four other inmates — including a woman
— are set for lethal injection over the next three weeks.
Prison officials said Griffith, convicted and
sentenced to die for killing McCormick, 44, in October 1994, may have
been the first ex-officer to receive injection since the state resumed
carrying out executions in 1982. A former Amarillo rookie police officer,
Jim Vanderbilt, was condemned for killing the daughter of a state
lawmaker in 1975 but he died of natural causes in 2002. Robert Fratta, a
former officer in the Houston suburb of Missouri City, is awaiting
execution after he was convicted of arranging the murder of his wife in
1994.
Kirkland was among five relatives of McCormick to
watch the execution. "We came here today with justice on our minds and
heaviness in our hearts," Kirkland said in a statement released after
Griffith's death. "This is merely the end of another chapter in our
story and with this end may it bring peace to our family."
Griffith had been a repeat customer at the shop run
by McCormick and her mother, and he was known to the victim who was
alone at the time of the attack. McCormick and her mother, who
discovered her daughter's body, had a policy of not opening the door for
people they didn't know if either was away.
The U.S. Supreme Court in January refused to review
his case and Griffith's lawyer filed no additional appeals to try to
block the execution.
Griffith rose to the rank of sergeant over his 10-year
career with the Harris County Sheriff's Department but lost his job in
1993 when he was charged with assault, a violation of the department
policy on domestic abuse.
At his capital murder trial, former wives and
girlfriends testified how he courted them with flowers but later abused
them, including one who said he became violent with her on their wedding
day. Griffith also was convicted of two violent robberies involving
women — one at a savings and loan office and another at a bridal shop —
the same month as the McCormick slaying. Both women survived their
attacks and testified against Griffith.
When Griffith was arrested after the robbery and
attack at the bridal shop, police found him with credit cards belonging
to McCormick's mother that were taken in the flower shop robbery. They
also found a knife and a receipt for roses he'd purchased that day from
the store.
A medical examiner and DNA evidence identified the
knife as the murder weapon. "The evidence against him was overwhelming,"
said David Cunningham, one of his trial lawyers. "When you focus on the
circumstances of his arrest — they find him with the credit cards, the
knife with her DNA on it, they had him on at least two other crimes —
there really wasn't much. We didn't contest the issue of guilt-innocence.
It was a punishment case from the start."
A defense psychologist said Griffith had a borderline
personality disorder that showed up against wives and girlfriends.
Defense lawyers said he was scarred by a neglectful mother who often was
angry and violent when drunk and they believed the mitigating evidence
presented to a Harris County jury was good enough to spare Griffith's
life. The jury disagreed and voted for the death penalty.
After Griffith, scheduled to die next is Cathy
Henderson, facing lethal injection June 13 for the 1994 slaying of
Brandon Baugh, a 3-month-old Austin-area child she was baby-sitting. The
child's skull was crushed in what Henderson said was an accident. His
body was buried in a wine cooler box and was found 18 days after she and
the child disappeared.
Texas executes former deputy sheriff for '94
murder
Reuter News
Jun 7, 2007
HUNTSVILLE, Texas (Reuters) - Texas executed a former
deputy sheriff on Wednesday for the murder of a Houston woman during the
robbery of a wedding chapel and flower shop she owned with her mother.
Michael Griffith, 56, was the 15th person executed
this year and the 394th by Texas since the state restored the death
penalty in 1982, six years after the U.S. Supreme Court lifted a
national capital punishment ban. Both totals lead the nation.
Griffith, who was fired in 1993 by the Harris County
Sheriff for domestic abuse, was condemned for the murder of Deborah
McCormick, 44, on October 10, 1994.
McCormick, a mother of two, was found stabbed to
death in the Always and Forever Florist Shop and Wedding Chapel by her
mother, Mary Ringer. Ringer had been away from the store for 30 minutes.
Police arrested Griffith about a month after the murder and found credit
cards taken during the robbery and a knife. DNA tests showed McCormick's
blood was on the knife blade.
Griffith never admitted to the crime, but in the days
leading up to the execution he asked his lawyers to stop appealing his
sentence.
While strapped to a gurney in the Texas death chamber,
Griffith was asked if he had a final statement. "No, sir," he said.
For his last meal, Griffith requested breakfast food
including fried eggs. Texas has 14 more executions scheduled through
October.
Former Harris sheriff’s deputy executed
By
Robbie Byrd - The Huntsville Item
June 07, 2007
A former Harris County sheriff’s deputy was executed
in quiet but emotional fashion Wednesday night for the murder and sexual
assault of a Houston woman more than 12 years ago. Michael Durwood
Griffith, 56, was pronounced dead at 6:18 p.m., nine minutes after the
lethal drugs hit his veins.
Griffith is one of only a handful of former police
officers on death row. While prison officials could not confirm,
Griffith is the only police officer in recent memory to be executed
since they resumed in Texas in 1982.
Griffith was executed for the 1994 murder of flower
shop clerk Deborah McCormick. McCormick was stabbed to death 11 times
with a butcher knife; twice the wounds pierced straight through her
heart.
Both of McCormick’s two grown daughers and her
brother, son-in-law and ex-husband witnessed Griffith’s execution.
“Michael Griffith will meet his judgment today and not only here on
earth,” Dawn Kirkland, McCormick’s daughter, said in a written statement
released after the execution. “We pray for his daughters and family at
this time. “As hard as this is for our family to live through, we can
only imagine the heartache this causes them as well. May God bless and
comfort you.”
Griffith offered only “no, sir” as his final statment,
glancing over briefly at his daughter, Michelle Clark, ex-wife Cheryl
Stanley and spiritual adviser witnessing the execution from the right-side
viewing chamber. As the drugs began taking effect, Griffith said in a
barely audible whisper, “Please take my spirit to the Lord.”
Clark hesitated until just before Griffith was asked
for his last statement before entering the execution viewing room,
pleaing for “a moment” before stepping up to the glass and pale green
bars that separate the chamber from witnesses. “He looks so stubborn,”
Clark said of her father only moments after the lethal dose had
completed.
Griffith was silent during the execution, prompting
his daughter to ask “is it done?” “It’s a very peaceful thing,” said Ron
Cloutier, a spiritual adviser for the family. “He’s waited for this for
a long time. The fact that the two of you were here was very important.
It made it a lot easier. It really did.”
Friends and family of McCormick fought back tears
during the execution, but did not speak, only staring forward at
Griffith’s body.
Griffith was the 15th inmate to be executed this year
and the first of five executions scheduled for June, including Cathy
Henderson, who is set to die next week. He spent the three days
preceeding his execution on frequent visits with family and friends. For
his last meal at around 4 p.m. Wednesday, Griffith requested a
breakfast.
Stanley, along with other ex-wives and girlfriends,
testified during the punishment phase of Griffith’s trial that he was
charming and abusive, pervading a “Jekyl-and-Hyde” personality. Griffith
broke several of Stanley’s ribs during their marriage, she testified,
and at one point held a gun to her head. Other romantic interests of
Griffith testified he was abusive, including a former co-worker from the
Harris County Sheriff’s Office.
In January 1993, a little over a year and a half
before McCormick’s murder, Griffith held the woman hostage, threatening
her with a pair of scissors, reportedly telling her “it’s a good day for
you to die.” The incident ultimately ended his career in law enforcement.
But other co-workers of Griffith recalled him as a
model policeman. "He was a good officer," said Bay County, Fla., Sheriff
Frank McKeithen, who worked with Griffith in the mid-1970s. "Everybody
liked him, his supervisors liked him. ... It just came as a total shock
when I read what had happened. It was gut-wrenching to see his picture.
It's like two different people."
McKeithen said Griffith even received Bay County
officer of the year, though he could not recall the exact year. The dual
personality of Griffith was a shining hope for defense attorney’s during
his trial.
A defense psychologist said Griffith suffered from
borderline personality disorder that showed up against wives and
girlfriends whose actions reminded him of growing up in Los Angeles
where his neglectful mother was described as often angry and violent,
often drunk.
A Harris County jury found no sympathy for Griffith
and voted for the death penalty. FBI Agent Allan Brantley, a member of
the National Center for the Analysis of Violent Crimes, testified that
there was a high probabilty that Griffith’s acts of violence would
continue, comparing him to a sexual predator. “Such a predator will
continue to look for similar outlets for sexual gratification, and, if
isolated from females, he will look for a similar victim within the
available population, which could include weaker males,” Brantley told
jurors, according to a release from the Texas Attorney General’s office.
Griffith had been a customer at the Always and
Forever Florist Shop and Wedding Chapel in Katy where McCormick worked
several times before. According to information released at the trial,
Griffith stole $400 in cash from McCormick, along with several credit
cards belonging to McCormick’s mother, Mary Ringer.
Griffith then sexually assaulted McCormick, forcing
her to perform sexual acts on him, according to information from the
TDCJ. Griffith was found in a hotel room three weeks after the murder.
In his posession were Ringer’s credit cards, a receipt from Always and
Forever and the knife police later proved to be the murder weapon.
“The evidence against him was overwhelming,” said
David Cunningham, one of his trial lawyers. “When you focus on the
circumstances of his arrest — they find him with the credit cards, the
knife with her DNA on it, they had him on at least two other crimes —
there really wasn’t much. We didn’t contest the issue of guilt-innocence.
It was a punishment case from the start.”
Txexecutions.org
Michael
Durwood Griffith, 56, was executed by lethal injection on 6 June 2007 in
Huntsville, Texas for the sexual assault, murder, and robbery of a
flower shop operator.
ProDeathPenalty.com
In December 1995, former sheriff's deputy Michael
Durwood Griffith was convicted and sentenced to death for the fatal
stabbing, rape and robbery of a woman at a northwest Houston floral shop
where he was a regular customer. He was arrested after using credit
cards stolen from the victim. Griffith stabbed Debra McCormick multiple
times after he sexually assaulted and robbed her.
During the penalty phase, the State proved that
Griffith 1) was a former Sheriff’s Deputy; 2) had a poor reputation for
being peaceful and law-abiding; 3) had a volatile temper; 4) was fired
from the Sheriff’s Department following a misdemeanor conviction for
domestic abuse; 5) was angry, physically and verbally abusive, and
extremely possessive and controlling toward two ex-wives and two ex-girlfriends;
and 6) was violent with his children.
Griffith was fired from his deputy's job in 1993
after complaints from his ex-wives and a girlfriend of violence and
torture. The State also demonstrated that Griffith had committed a bank
robbery in which he shot a teller in the back of the head, and a bridal
shop robbery during which he sexually assaulted a sales clerk.
Billy Ringer, Jr., the brother of Debra McCormick,
had a close relationship with his sister. At one time, she worked for
him at his medical practice and was much-loved by all his patients.
McCormick and her mother, Mary Jane Ringer, were also very close; the
two enjoyed running the family wedding chapel business together.
Billy said that McCormick’s death adversely affected
their father, Billy Ringer, Sr.; Deborah McCormick was the heart of the
family who planned birthday, holiday, and family events; and she was a
good Christian. Billy added his belief that, because of his sister’s
death, their father gave up his fight against cancer and passed away. He
said that his father showed progress before Deborah’s murder but stopped
eating on news of the murder and died shortly thereafter.
For the reasons discussed above, we deny Griffith's
request for a COA on all claims and as such lack jurisdiction to review
the district court's denial of habeas relief on these claims. See Miller-El,
537 U.S. at 335-36, 123 S.Ct. at 1039. COA DENIED.