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Kevin Lee HOUGH
Robbery
DOB: 08-17-1959
DOC#: 872039 White Male
Allen County Superior Court Special Judge Edward J. Meyers
Summary: Hough was upset with
his cousin's landlords, Bosler and Rubrake. When his cousin failed
to pay rent, his landlords took his cousin's property. Along with
his brother, Duane Lapp, Hough went to their residence in Fort Wayne
"to get the property back."
They were invited inside and once downstairs,
Hough pulled a .45 automatic pistol. When Rubrake swung at him,
Hough shot him in the chest. Bosler dropped to the floor and Hough
shot him in the back. Hough then shot Rubrake again in the face.
Hough took a TV remote and a beer which he
thought may have fingerprints and left. Lapp testified at trial as
the State's star witness.
Conviction: Murder, Murder
Sentencing: June 11, 1987 (Death
Sentence, Death Sentence)
INDIANA - Condemned for killing 2 men during a robbery,
Kevin L. Hough was executed this morning. Ending 17 years of appeals,
the U.S. Supreme Court denied Hough's final appeal Thursday and
refused to stop his execution.
Hough, 43, received a lethal
injection this morning just after midnight at the Indiana State
Prison. He was convicted of the 1985 murders of two Fort Wayne men.
"I hope the victims' families get some measure of satisfaction,"
Hough said shortly before he was put to death. "Hopefully, their
grief won't be as much." Prison officials said Hough was pronounced
dead at 12:25 a.m.
He spent Thursday afternoon talking with his
daughter, mother, grandmother and aunts. "He actually has dealt with
this whole situation with great dignity," said John Stainthorp,
Hough's attorney, adding that his client "is obviously concerned (that)
he didn't get adequate representation of justice." Hough expected to
spend his last hours with a Catholic priest. Wednesday, Gov. Frank
O'Bannon denied Hough's request for his death sentence to be
commuted to life in prison.
In 1987, Hough was sentenced to die for killing
Ted Bosler and Martin "Gene" Rubrake, longtime Fort Wayne roommates.
Those crimes came soon after another man died at Hough's hands.
Prosecutors said he used a cattle prod to torture Antoni Bartkowiak
before shooting him. That killing helped prosecutors convince a
judge that the death sentence was appropriate.
6 hours before the scheduled execution, heavy
rain blew across Indianapolis, drenching the governor's residence at
46th and Meridian Streets and a half-dozen protesters gathered
outside. "The way we look at it, there's a man in Michigan City
waiting to die a violent death," said Charlie Kafoure of the Indiana
Information Center on the Abolition of Capital Punishment. "We can
afford to stand in the rain." O'Bannon, however, wasn't there,
having moved while the building is renovated.
The demonstrators said
it was symbolically correct to protest there; O'Bannon has declined
to stop all previous executions carried out during his time in
office. "It's wrong to kill for the sake of killing," said Steve
Schutte, a public defender. "It's wrong that Mr. Bosler and Mr.
Rubrake were killed, and it's wrong to kill Mr. Hough."
Hough's current attorneys argue that their client
received abysmal legal representation from two part-time public
defenders. But state and federal courts disagreed, affirming Hough's
death sentence. Hough maintains his innocence in all 3 murders.
Prosecutors maintain the following: On Nov. 6,
1985, Hough and his 16-year-old brother, Duane Lapp, went to the
roommates' house. Hough helped Rubrake unload groceries from his car,
then followed him into the basement.
He pulled a .45-caliber pistol
from his shoulder holster and told Bosler and Rubrake to lie on the
floor. He shot Rubrake in the chest and Bosler while he was lying
down. When Rubrake appeared to move, Hough shot him in the face.
Before leaving the home, Hough took a beer can and remote control he
thought might have his fingerprints and removed several rings from
the bodies of Bosler and Rubrake. As he left, he stepped on
Rubrake's face.
After the killings, Hough dropped his brother off
and then almost immediately moved to Indianapolis. 11 days earlier,
Hough and 2 other men went to rob a home. Bartkowiak answered the
door. Hough stuck a handgun into Bartkowiak's abdomen, made him lie
on the floor and handcuffed his hands behind his back. After
ransacking the house, Hough used a cattle prod to torture and
question Bartkowiak about possible cocaine that was in the house. He
then took Bartkowiak to the basement and shot him in the back of the
head.
Hough was convicted of murdering Bartkowiak and
sentenced to 60 years. Hough becomes the 1st condemned inmate to be
put to death this year in Indiana and the 10th overall since Indiana
resumed capital punishment in 1981. Hough becomes the 30th condemned
inmate to be put to death this year in the USA and the 850th overall
since the state resumed executions on January 17, 1977.
(sources: Associated Press & Rick Halperin)
Hough, a violent three-time killer from a "dysfunctional"
family, is scheduled for execution May 2. Prosecutors said Hough,
42, stepped on the face of a man he shot and used an electric shock
device on another victim before killing him.
Hough was sentenced to
death for the murder of two men who had become involved in a rent
dispute with his cousin. The victims were his cousin’s landlords.
Also, Hough was convicted of a previous murder during a robbery. In
that murder, Hough forced the victim to lean over a rollaway bed,
put a pillow against the victim’s head and shot him, prosecutors
said.
The murders Hough received a death sentence for
occurred on Nov. 6, 1985. The victims, Gene Reubrake and Ted Bosler,
were his cousin’s landlords. There was a dispute over back rent.
Hough and his brother, Duane Lappe, went to the victim’s home in
Fort Wayne.
After helping one of the victims carry some groceries
into the house, Hough pulled a gun and told the two men to lie on
the basement floor. When Rubrake swung at Hough with a television
remote control, Hough shot him in the chest.
The other victim,
dropped to the floor. Hough then shot him in the back. Meanwhile,
when Rubrake appeared to move in the floor, Hough shot him in the
face to finish him off. Hough removed several rings from the bodies
of the victims. Before leaving the basement, he stepped on Rubrake’s
face, prosecutors said.
A month before those murders, Hough had killed
Antoni Bartkowiak. This slaying occurred on Oct. 27, 1985. Hough,
Juan Fernandez and Donald Maley went to the home of Greg Nicola to
rob him. Bartkowski answered the door. Only Hough and Maley went
inside the house. Bartkowiak was handcuffed and held at gunpoint.
After ransacking the house, Hough asked Bartkowiak if he had any
cocaine hidden around the house. When Bartkowiak denied it, "Hough
used a device to inflict electric shocks on Bartkowiak," according
to federal court documents.
Later, Hough and Maley took Bartkowiak
to the basement. Hough told Maley to get a cushion from the couch
upstairs. Once in the basement Hough forced Barkowiak to lean over a
rollaway bed. Hough then took the cushion, placed it over the back
of the victims’ head and shot him. Hough took two bags of items and
$80 from Bartkowiak’s wallet.
Defense lawyers have portrayed Hough
as being raised in a dysfunction family and as an unloved and
unwanted child. Before the murders, he had a history of juvenile
crimes, including armed robbery. A psychological analysis of Hough
concluded that he had no remorse for the murders, was deeply
troubled, had few feelings for others and refused to take any
responsibility for his actions.