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Frederick
Patrick McWILLIAMS
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Robbery
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder:
September 28,
1996
Date
of arrest:
October 3,
1996
Date of birth:
December 1,
1973
Victim profile: Alfonso Rodriguez
(male, 39)
Method of murder:
Shooting
Location: Harris County, Texas, USA
Status:
Executed
by lethal injection in Texas on November 10,
2004
United States Court of
Appeals For the Fifth Circuit
McWilliams and friends Kenneth Adams and Richard Hawkins were
driving around Houston looking for a car to steal for use in
robberies when they happened upon Alfonso Rodriguez asleep inside
his parked car.
Shaking him from his sleep, McWilliams and his accomplices attempted
to put the victim in the trunk of his car.
When he resisted,
McWilliams shot him once in the head at point-blank range. The
killing occurred in the middle of a crime spree by McWilliams and
accomplices in Waller and Harris counties.
A week later, Adams was stopped for speeding. A search of the car
yielded several firearms, one of which was identified as the gun
that killed Rodriguez.
During questioning by investigating officers,
Adams confessed and implicated McWilliams. After being arrested,
McWilliams at first tried to put the blame on Adams, then admitted
to shooting Rodriguez.
Citations:
McWilliams v. Cockrell, 74 Fed.Appx. 345 (5th Cir. 2003).
(Habeas) McWilliams v. Dretke, 124 S.Ct. 1513 (2004) (Cert. Denied).
Final Meal:
Fried chicken breasts, lasagna, egg rolls, shrimp fried rice,
chimichangas, turkey with liver and gizzard dressing, dirty rice,
cranberry sauce and lemonade.
Final Words:
"Well, here we are again folks in the catacombs of justice." He said
there was much he wanted to say but "not a whole to say." "There are
people that will be mad thinking I try to seek freedom from this,
but as long as I see, freedom belongs to me and I'll keep on keeping
on. The shackles and chains that just might hold my body can't hold
my mind, but will kill me otherwise." Addressing his mother and
family members who attended, McWilliams said, ""I leave my love here.
I am never going to stop loving you. My love is going to stay here."
ClarkProsecutor.org
Texas Attorney General
Media Advisory
Monday, November 8, 2004
Frederick Patrick Mcwilliams Scheduled For Execution
AUSTIN – Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott
offers the following information about 30-year-old Frederick Patrick
McWilliams, who is scheduled to be executed after 6 p.m. Wednesday,
November 10, 2004. On September 9, 1997, McWilliams was sentenced to
death for the capital murder of Alfonso Rodriguez in Houston on
September 28, 1996. A summary of the evidence presented at trial
follows.
FACTS OF THE CRIME
On the night of September 28, 1996, McWilliams
and two accomplices drove to a Houston apartment complex where
McWilliams and one of the accomplices, Kenneth Adams, talked about
stealing a car.
After McWilliams found a brown car with a man
sleeping inside, both he and Adams, who were carrying guns,
approached the vehicle. Adams pulled Alfonso Rodriguez from the car
at gunpoint while McWilliams rummaged through the glove compartment.
Adams beat Rodriguez with the butt of the gun while Rodriguez was
lying on the ground attempting to cover his head. Adams then picked
Rodriguez up, and he and McWilliams tried to put Rodriguez in the
trunk of his car.
Not wanting to be part of the robbery, the third
accomplice jumped into the driver’s seat of Adam’s car and drove
away. As he was leaving, he heard a shot. A few minutes later, he
saw McWilliams and Adams driving Rodriguez’s car, and they waved at
him to pull over. Adams, who was covered in blood, got into the
driver’s seat and told Hawkins, “Your cousin wild. He wild. He shot
a man.”
On October 3, 1996, Adams and another man were
stopped for speeding. A search of the car yielded several firearms,
one of which was identified as the gun that killed Rodriguez.
During
questioning by investigating officers, Adams confessed and
implicated McWilliams. After being arrested, McWilliams admitted to
shooting Rodriguez.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
November 15, 1996 -- A Harris County grand jury
indicted McWilliams for the capital murder of Alfonso Rodriguez.
September 4, 1997 -- A jury found McWilliams guilty of capital
murder.
September 9, 1997 -- Following a separate punishment hearing,
McWilliams was sentenced to death.
March 10, 1999 -- The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed
McWilliams’ conviction and sentence.
July 22, 1998 -- McWilliams filed an application for writ of habeas
corpus in the state trial court.
April 4, 2001 -- The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denied
McWilliams’ application for writ of habeas corpus.
April 3, 2002 -- McWilliams filed a federal petition for writ of
habeas corpus in a Houston U.S. District Court.
December 31, 2002 -- The federal court dismissed habeas petition and
denied a certificate of appealibility.
March 28, 2003 -- McWilliams requested permission to appeal from the
5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
August 15, 2003 -- The 5th Circuit Court of Appeals denied
McWilliams’ request to appeal denial of habeas petition.
September 5, 2003 -- McWilliams filed a petition for rehearing on
his application for certificate of appealibility.
September 22, 2003 -- The 5th Circuit Court of Appeals denied the
petition for rehearing.
December 18, 2003 -- McWilliams petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court
for a writ of certiorari.
March 1, 2004 -- McWilliams’ petition for writ of certiorari was
denied by the Supreme Court.
PRIOR CRIMINAL HISTORY
McWilliams received probation (deferred
adjudication) for an August 1993 aggravated robbery, and he was
convicted for evading arrest in a September 1994 incident.
McWilliams also participated in the commission of several robberies
leading up to and following the capital murder of Alfonso Rodriguez,
including the September 9, 1996, robbery of Dan’s Food Market in
Brookshire; the September 24, 1996, robbery of Lucy’s Cantina in
Houston; and the October 3, 1996, robbery of the Brookshire Brothers
Grocery Store in Brookshire.
Date of
Execution:
November 10,
2004
Offender:
McWilliams,
Frederick Patrick
Last Statement:
Yes. Well
here we are again folks, in the catacombs of justice. You
know there is a lot I wanted to say - a lot I thought I'd
say - but there is not a whole lot to say. There are people
that will be mad thinking I try to seek freedom from this,
but as long as I see - freedom belongs to me and I'll keep
on keeping on. The shackles and chains that just might hold
my body can't hold my mind, but will kill me otherwise. I
love you momma, and Misty and Annette, Brenda and Anthony -
and all my friends and everybody that supported me. I leave
my love here; I am never going to stop loving you. My love
is going to stay here.
ProDeathPenalty.com
On the night of September 27, 1996, McWilliams
went driving with his cousin, Richard Hawkins and Kenneth Adams in
Adams’ red compact car in Houston.
Hawkins fell asleep in the back
seat and awoke as they turned into the parking lot of an apartment
complex. McWilliams and Adams were discussing stealing a car.
After
their first unsuccessful attempt, McWilliams and Adams found a brown
car in the lot and opened the door to find a man asleep inside the
vehicle.
They returned to Adams’ vehicle, and Adams told McWilliams
that he should have gotten the man, and McWilliams decided to return.
The two men returned to the car carrying guns.
Adams pulled the victim, Alfonso Rodriguez, from
the driver’s side at gun point while McWilliams rummaged through the
glove box.
Adams beat Rodriguez with the butt of the gun. Rodriguez
laid on the ground covering his head to avoid the blows. Adams and
McWilliams then attempted to force Rodriguez into the trunk of the
car.
Not wanting to be a part of the robbery, Hawkins jumped into
the front of Adams’ car and drove away. As he left, he heard a gun
shot. Shortly thereafter, McWilliams and Adams caught up to Hawkins
in Rodriguez’s car and waved Hawkins to the side of the road. Adams,
who was covered in blood, got into the driver’s seat and told
Hawkins “Your cousin wild. He wild. He shot a man.”
The three met up at a gas station where
McWilliams pulled a bag of jewelry from Rodriguez’s car and put it
in Adams’ car. The next day, McWilliams admitted to Hawkins that he
had shot Rodriguez. The next week, Adams was stopped for speeding. A
search of the car yielded several firearms one of which was the
weapon used to kill Rodriguez.
During questioning by investigators,
Adams confessed and implicated McWilliams. After being arrested,
McWilliams gave two statements. In his first statement, McWilliams
claimed that Adams shot Rodriguez. In his second statement,
McWilliams admitted shooting Rodriguez.
A jury convicted McWilliams of capital murder on
September 4, 1997 in state court in Harris County, Texas. McWilliams
was sentenced to death on September 9, 1997.
October 1996 - The recent arrest of four suspects
from Houston - one a ""real smart kid" from Waltrip High School -
could solve several robberies of west-side suburban grocery stores,
police say.
Cases expected to be cleared include two store robberies
here last summer and possibly two others in Rosenberg and Waller,
Brookshire Police Chief Joe Garcia said this week.
Two members of
the gang also are accused in the Sept. 28 killing of a man during a
carjacking in an apartment parking lot in northwest Houston. Garcia
said the car later was used in one of the robberies. Investigation
by Garcia, Houston police investigators John Swaim and Phil Waters,
and Texas Ranger Bryant Wells resulted in the suspects' arrests over
the past three weeks in Katy and Houston.
Jailed in lieu of bail are: Kenneth Edward Adams,
18, of the 8400 block of Hearth, a Waltrip High senior, believed to
have led the gang and is charged with capital murder and aggravated
robbery.
Frederick Patrick McWilliams, 22, of the 3100 block of
Jewell, charged with capital murder and aggravated robbery. Keith
Price, 20, of the 10900 block of Fondren, charged with aggravated
robbery. Richard Hawkins, 19, of the 1400 block of Burma, charged
with aggravated robbery. Still being sought is James Patrick Tanner,
30, of the 8600 block of Rockford in Houston, wanted on aggravated
robbery charges. Adams is in the Galveston County Jail, Hawkins is
in the Waller County Jail, and Price and McWilliams are in the
Harris County Jail, Garcia said.
He said the gang was the idea of Adams, whom he
described as a good student with a spotless record. Adams, who once
worked at a Houston supermarket, organized the forays, he said.
Garcia said Adams and McWilliams are suspects in the Sept. 6 evening
robbery of Dan's Food Market here and, with Hawkins, also are
suspects in the Oct. 3 early morning robbery of B&B Food Store here.
Adams and Price are suspects in the Oct. 3 robbery of a grocery in
San Leon in Galveston County, Garcia said. Police are looking into
possible ties of members of the gang to grocery holdups last spring
in Rosenberg and last summer in Waller.
Frederick Patrick McWilliams
Txexecutions.org
Frederick Patrick McWilliams, 30, was executed by
lethal injection on 10 November 2004 in Huntsville, Texas for the
murder of a 39-year-old man during a robbery.
On 28 September 1996, McWilliams, then 22, his
cousin, Richard Hawkins, 19, and Kenneth Adams, 18, drove to a
Houston apartment complex, looking for a car to steal.
They selected
a 1983 Chevrolet and decided to steal it, but then they saw that a
man was sleeping in it. They went back to Adams' car, then after
some discussion, decided to rob the sleeping man of his car.
Adams
and McWilliams, both carrying guns, approached the car. Adams pulled
Alfonso Rodriguez Jr. from the car while McWilliams rummaged through
the glove compartment. Rodriguez resisted, and a struggle ensued
between him, Adams, and McWilliams. A shot was fired, and Rodriguez
died from a .38-caliber slug at point blank range.
Adams and
McWilliams then stole the victim's car. Hawkins had already driven
off in Adams' car. Five days later, Adams was stopped for speeding.
A search of the car yielded several firearms.
During questioning,
Adams confessed and implicated McWilliams. McWilliams was then
arrested, and confessed to shooting Rodriguez. One of the guns found
in Adams' car was identified as the murder weapon.
Richard Hawkins testified that he, McWilliams,
and Adams were at the apartment complex to steal a car. He said that
when McWilliams and Adams started beating Rodriguez, he decided that
he did not want to be part of a robbery, so he drove away in Adams'
car. As he was leaving, he heard a shot.
A few minutes later, he saw
the McWilliams and Adams driving Rodriguez's car, and they waved at
him to pull over. Adams, who was covered in blood, got into the
driver's seat and told Hawkins, "Your cousin wild. He wild. He shot
a man."
At age 19, McWilliams was involved in the armed
robbery of a pizza delivery man. He was convicted of robbery and
received 8 years' probation. In September 1994, he was convicted of
evading police detention and spent 10 days in jail. Court testimony
showed that McWilliams was involved in at least three more robberies
in September and October 1996.
A jury convicted McWilliams of capital murder in
September 1997 and sentenced him to death. The Texas Court of
Criminal Appeals affirmed the conviction and sentence in March 1999.
All of his subsequent appeals in state and federal court were
denied. Kenneth Adams and Richard Hawkins both received felony
convictions for their role in the murder. Adams received a life
sentence. Hawkins was sentenced to 8 years in prison. Information on
their current status was not available for this report.
Despite records and testimony showing a long
history of robbery, McWilliams claimed in a death-row interview that
the Rodriguez case was a one-time event, a way to raise money to pay
his probation fees. He said that Adams and Hawkins were the leaders,
and he only joined in.
He said that he did not intend to kill
Rodriguez. "We were struggling, and the gun went off and took his
life. I can't truthfully tell whether he pulled the trigger or I did.
My hand was on top of his hand, and his hand was on top of mine. It
was a two or three-second dance of death, but it seemed to go on
forever ... I'm innocent in the sense I didn't maliciously,
knowingly, intentionally cause his death. I never intended to kill
anybody."
McWilliams said that his life at that time was
out of control. "If none of this happened, I'd have been dead at age
25," he said. "I never enjoyed doing things like that ... I just
felt in a helpless situation at the time ... Life was always against
me. The forces of life were against me." "My thought, if worse comes
to worse, is that my soul will go to a higher plane. I will have a
choice of whether to come back to Earth or move up to that higher
place," he said. "I don't know what I'll do. It depends on what's in
my best interest."
"Well, here we are again, folks, in the catacombs
of justice," McWilliams said in his last statement. There are people
that will be mad, thinking I try to seek freedom from this, but as
long as I see, freedom belongs to me and I'll keep on keeping on.
The shackles and chains that just might hold my body can't hold my
mind." McWilliams also expressed love to his family and friends. He
was pronounced dead at 6:18 p.m.
National Coalition to Abolish
the Death Penalty
Frederick McWilliams - TEXAS - November 12, 2004
The state of Texas is scheduled to execute
Frederick Patrick McWilliams, a black man, Nov. 10 for the 1996
murder of Alfonso Rodriguez, a Latino man. McWilliams was sentenced
to death at 22 in Harris County. The murder was the result of
McWilliams’ attempt to rob Mr. Rodriguez and steal his car and
pieces of jewelry. His friend Kenneth Adams was with McWilliams at
the time of the crime.
McWilliams’ sentencing was based upon references
to unproven federal offenses. These allegations were weak and
McWilliams’ connections to these crimes tenuous at best. The jury
was told of a rape and robbery, for which the sole connection was
based upon a red car in which black males were present.
In 2003, the Fifth Circuit court denied an appeal
filed on McWilliams’ behalf. The main legal issue raised was the
Simmons, a U.S. Supreme Court precedent which requires that jurors
not be given misleading information regarding the amount of time a
defendant would have to serve in prison if he is not sentenced to
death. It should be further noted that the counsel appointed by the
Texas Court of Criminal Appeals to prepare the state writ never met
with McWilliams, did not investigate the case, and raised only those
issues available in the record.
The current problems with the Houston Police
Department Crime Lab demonstrate why this death sentence is unworthy
of confidence. The HDP Crime Lab’s troubles began in late 2002 when
an independent investigation and subsequent audit revealed
widespread deficiencies in quality assurance programs, organization,
personnel qualifications, evidence and sample control, and several
other serious problems. Of 28 applicable subcategories of the audit,
the Serology/DNA section of the Lab failed 23 of them.
In response to these findings, the Houston Police
Department shut down the DNA division of the crime lab while
material from 400 cases was re-examined. This retesting process
showed a rate of error over 20 percent. Harris County has also
demonstrated unreliable forensic work and faulty ballistics analyses
in the firearms section of the HDP Crime Lab in at least four
capital cases.
Most recently, the Houston Police Department found
evidence that involved cases from 1979 through the 1990’s which had
previously been lost. Though the evidence has been largely recovered,
there is still a great deal of uncertainty as to the contents of the
boxes, which cases are affected, and whether any of the boxes
include evidence surrounding capital cases.
As a result of the HPD Crime Lab problems, the
Chief of Police requested a halt on executions in Harris County and
State Senator Rodney Ellis, and State Senator John Whitmire called
for a halt to executions as well. Governor Perry has insisted this
is not necessary. Less than one-fourth of the state's murders take
place in Harris County, but it accounts for 36 percent of all
inmates under death sentence in Texas. It is inconceivable that a
county with such large-scale problems would continue to execute
people especially at such an alarming rate.
Please urge Texas Governor Rick Perry to stop the
execution of Frederick Patrick McWilliams until Harris County's
Crime Lab matter is cleared. Please further urge Governor Perry to
consider the possibility of a life sentence instead of the death
penalty for McWilliams and other convicted murderers.
Killer who's outlived own predictions executed
Houston Chronicle
Associated Press - Nov. 10, 2004
HUNTSVILLE -- Condemned killer Frederick
McWilliams was executed tonight for the fatal shooting of a man in
Houston eight years ago during a car theft.
"Well, here we are again folks in the catacombs
of justice," McWilliams said when asked by the warden if he had a
final statement. He said there was much he wanted to say but "not a
whole to say." "There are people that will be mad thinking I try to
seek freedom from this, but as long as I see, freedom belongs to me
and I'll keep on keeping on," he said. "The shackles and chains that
just might hold my body can't hold my mind, but will kill me
otherwise." McWilliams then told his mother, who watched through a
window a few feet away, a sister and several friends that he loved
them and would never stop. Ten minutes later, at 6:18 p.m. CST, he
was pronounced dead.
McWilliams, 30, was the 22nd Texas prisoner
executed this year and the second in as many nights. Two more
convicts are set for lethal injection next week.
McWilliams, a former warehouse worker whose hopes
for a career as an architect were derailed by armed robbery
convictions, was on probation when he was arrested for the beating
and shooting of Alfonso Rodriguez at a Houston apartment complex.
The U.S. Supreme Court earlier this year refused
to review McWilliams' case and his attorney said appeals
possibilities were exhausted. A clemency petition and a request for
a 180-day reprieve were both rejected by the Texas Board of Pardons
and Paroles. At the time of the slaying, McWilliams was on probation
for armed robberies and had been linked to other holdups. "I never
enjoyed doing things like that," he said recently from a small
cage-like cubicle in the visiting area outside death row. "I just
felt in a helpless situation at the time."
Court records show McWilliams, a cousin, Richard
Hawkins, and a third man, Kenneth Adams, were driving around Houston
the night of Sept. 27, 1996, and discussed the prospect of stealing
a car. "We were going to use the car as a getaway vehicle for a
crime the next day," McWilliams said. "My job was to steal the car."
As Hawkins dozed in the back seat of their car,
McWilliams and Adams selected a 1983 Chevrolet in the parking lot of
an apartment complex only to find Alfonso Rodriguez sleeping inside.
They then returned to their own car. According to testimony, Adams
told McWilliams he should have gotten the man and the two decided to
go back, this time armed. Rodriguez was pulled from the driver's
side at gunpoint and was beaten by Adams as McWilliams rifled
through the glove box.
According to McWilliams, Adams and Rodriguez
were wrestling and Adams dropped his weapon in the struggle.
Rodriguez grabbed he gun. "The victim rushed me. He had his hand on
the pistol. I had a hand on the pistol," McWilliams said. "I don't
know if he pulled the trigger or I pulled the trigger. "The gun went
off."
A week later, Adams was stopped for speeding and
police found guns in his car, including one tied to the Rodriguez
slaying. He told them McWilliams was the gunman, leading to
McWilliams' arrest, subsequent trial and death sentence. "I never
intended to kill anybody," McWilliams said from prison. Hawkins, now
27, received an eight-year prison term. Adams, now 26, received a
life sentence.
"Not a day goes by that I don't wish I could take
that whole day back," said McWilliams, whose middle name is Patrick
and is known on death row as "Freddie P." Three of his upper front
teeth were capped in gold with the initials P, E and E engraved in
gothic letters.
It's uncertain why Rodriguez was asleep in his
car that night. A half brother, Melchor Hernandez, told the Houston
Chronicle that Rodriguez had a daughter, was a truck driver, worked
hard, loved rock music and "never got in trouble with the law."
On Tuesday night, Demarco McCullum, 30, received
lethal injection for the abduction, robbery, beating and fatal
shooting 10 years ago of Michael Burzinski, 29, in Houston. If the
two executions scheduled for next week and another in December are
carried out, the 25 executions for the year in Texas would be one
more than in 2003. A record 40 took place in 2000.
Convicted killer in Houston car theft executed
Wednesday
By Michael Graczyk -
Denton Record-Chronicle
AP - November 11, 2004
Condemned killer Frederick McWilliams was
executed Wednesday night for the fatal shooting of a man in Houston
eight years ago during a car theft.
"Well, here we are again folks in the catacombs
of justice," McWilliams said when asked by the warden if he had a
final statement. He said there was much he wanted to say but "not a
whole to say." "There are people that will be mad thinking I try to
seek freedom from this, but as long as I see, freedom belongs to me
and I'll keep on keeping on," he said. "The shackles and chains that
just might hold my body can't hold my mind, but will kill me
otherwise."
McWilliams then told his mother, who watched through a
window a few feet away, a sister and several friends that he loved
them and would never stop. Ten minutes later, at 6:18 p.m. CST, he
was pronounced dead.
McWilliams, 30, was the 22nd Texas prisoner
executed this year and the second in as many nights. Two more
convicts are set for lethal injection next week.
McWilliams, a former warehouse worker whose hopes
for a career as an architect were derailed by armed robbery
convictions, was on probation when he was arrested for the beating
and shooting of Alfonso Rodriguez at a Houston apartment complex.
The U.S. Supreme Court earlier this year refused to review
McWilliams' case and his attorney said appeals possibilities were
exhausted. A clemency petition and a request for a 180-day reprieve
were both rejected by the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles. "It
proves to me that there is justice," Melchor Hernandez, a half-brother
of Rodriguez, said after watching McWilliams die. "I'm grateful the
state of Texas has the death penalty," Richard Hernandez, another
half-brother, added. "I knew this day was going to come. We're just
pleased it's done with."
At the time of the slaying, McWilliams was on
probation for armed robberies and had been linked to other holdups.
"I never enjoyed doing things like that," he said recently from a
small cage-like cubicle in the visiting area outside death row. "I
just felt in a helpless situation at the time."
Court records show McWilliams, a cousin, Richard
Hawkins, and a third man, Kenneth Adams, were driving around Houston
the night of Sept. 27, 1996, and discussed the prospect of stealing
a car. "We were going to use the car as a getaway vehicle for a
crime the next day," McWilliams said. "My job was to steal the car."
As Hawkins dozed in the back seat of their car, McWilliams and Adams
selected a 1983 Chevrolet in the parking lot of an apartment complex
only to find Alfonso Rodriguez sleeping inside. They then returned
to their own car.
According to testimony, Adams told McWilliams he
should have gotten the man and the two decided to go back, this time
armed. Rodriguez was pulled from the driver's side at gunpoint and
was beaten by Adams as McWilliams rifled through the glove box.
According to McWilliams, Adams and Rodriguez were wrestling and
Adams dropped his weapon in the struggle. Rodriguez grabbed he gun.
"The victim rushed me. He had his hand on the pistol. I had a hand
on the pistol," McWilliams said. "I don't know if he pulled the
trigger or I pulled the trigger. "The gun went off."
A week later, Adams was stopped for speeding and
police found guns in his car, including one tied to the Rodriguez
slaying. He told them McWilliams was the gunman, leading to
McWilliams' arrest, subsequent trial and death sentence. "I never
intended to kill anybody," McWilliams said from prison. Hawkins, now
27, received an eight-year prison term. Adams, now 26, received a
life sentence. "Not a day goes by that I don't wish I could take
that whole day back," said McWilliams, whose middle name is Patrick
and is known on death row as "Freddie P." Three of his upper front
teeth were capped in gold with the initials P, E and E engraved in
gothic letters.
It's uncertain why Rodriguez was asleep in his
car that night. A half brother, Melchor Hernandez, told the Houston
Chronicle that Rodriguez had a daughter, was a truck driver, worked
hard, loved rock music and "never got in trouble with the law."
On Tuesday night, Demarco McCullum, 30, received
lethal injection for the abduction, robbery, beating and fatal
shooting 10 years ago of Michael Burzinski, 29, in Houston. If the
two executions scheduled for next week and another in December are
carried out, the 25 executions for the year in Texas would be one
more than in 2003. A record 40 took place in 2000.
Texas Executes Houston Man for 1996 Murder
Reuters News
Nov 10, 2004
HUNTSVILLE, Texas (Reuters) - Texas executed a
Houston man by lethal injection on Wednesday night for a 1996 murder
during a car theft. Frederick McWilliams, 30, was condemned for the
murder of Alfonso Rodriguez Jr., 39, as he tried to steal the car
Rodriguez was sleeping in outside a Houston apartment complex on
Sept. 27, 1996.
McWilliams was the second man executed this week,
the 22nd to die this year and the 335th put to death by Texas since
1982 when the state resumed capital punishment. Texas leads the
nation in executions.
McWilliams claimed he and Rodriguez struggled
over a gun which fired and killed Rodriguez. Kenneth Adams, an
accomplice who identified McWilliams as the killer, received a life
sentence. Another accomplice received an eight-year prison sentence.
Strapped to the gurney in the execution chamber
on Wednesday night, McWilliams thanked family members and friends
for their support and told them he loved them. "I leave my love
here," McWilliams said. "I am never going to stop loving you. My
love is going to stay here."
For his final meal, McWilliams requested fried
chicken breasts, lasagna, egg rolls, shrimp fried rice, chimichangas,
turkey with liver and gizzard dressing, dirty rice, cranberry sauce
and lemonade.
Texas has three more executions scheduled this
year, with two convicts set to die next week.
Canadian Coalition to Abolish
the Death Penalty
(McWilliams Homepage)
Frederick McWilliams
Words And Poetry From Texas Death Row
Good Day Friends!
Yes it is a good day to live...My name is Frederick Patrick
McWilliams and I'm a death row inmate at the Ellis Unit in
Huntsville, Texas, USA. I've been incarcerated for 2 years and 9
months (as of July 1999) I would like to meet and greet new friends.
My only preference is sanity. I love to read and learn new things.
Also, reading takes me away from this awful place of hard brick and
steel. I absolutely love to draw and will normally send my friends
cards I've crafted, for birthdays and holidays, and other drawings.
I like drawing cartoon characters the most. I also love to write
poetry and will soon have some available for all my friends to read.
I am a 25 year old black male. I stand at 5'9"
tall and weigh 225 lbs. I offer this picture for visual assistance.
I have a supportive family but I have few friends. The friends I had
seem to have fallen by the wayside. This is why I reach out to you.
If anyone would like to write, I have more to share. One love,
Frederick McWilliams # 999242
Polunsky Unit D.R.
12002 FM 350 South
Livingston, Texas 77351 USA
PLEASE HELP !
Dearest friends,
I implore your assistance at these dire times. Assistance and
support in areas I cannot help myself. Whatever you can do will
suffice. Whether it be financial support, moral support, a word of
advice, or organizing fund raisers to aid in my defense. I do not
wish to die; like many here, I choose to defeat this corrupted
system with every fibre of my being. I'm looking for someone to
spearhead my defense fund raiser. Here's my attorney's address, in
case you'd like to obtain information concerning legal issues and my
comrades address if you'd like to send a donation to my defense fund.
For more information about the defense fund, please contact Ms. Giwa.
Thank you!
Ms. Daryl G. Weinman, Attorney At Law
812 San Antonio St. Ste 304
Austin, Texas 75701
McWilliams v. Cockrell,
74 Fed.Appx. 345 (5th Cir. 2003). (Habeas)
Defendant convicted of capital murder and
sentenced to death petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus. The
United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas
denied relief. Defendant sought a certificate of appealability (COA).
The Court of Appeals, Per Curiam, held that: (1) defendant had no
right to inform the jury that, if sentenced to life in prison, he
would be ineligible for parole for at least 40 calendar years; (2)
any burden of producing mitigating evidence was not cruel and
unusual punishment; (3) claim that state habeas court wrongfully
denied defendant access to sealed juror cards was not cognizable on
federal habeas review; and (4) petitioner failed to show cause for
his procedural default in failing to raise claim of ineffective
assistance of appellate counsel. Certificate of appealability denied.
Petitioner, Frederick Patrick McWilliams
(McWilliams), was convicted of capital murder in Texas and sentenced
to death. He now seeks a certificate of appealability (COA) pursuant
to 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(2) from the district court's denial of relief
under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 on the following claims: (1) the failure to
inform the jury that, if sentenced to life in prison, he would be
ineligible for parol for at least forty calendar years under Texas's
capital sentencing scheme violated his Sixth Amendment right to
effective assistance of counsel and Fourteenth Amendment rights to
due process and equal protection; (2) he was denied his Eighth
Amendment right to protection from cruel and unusual punishment; (3)
the state habeas court wrongfully denied him access to sealed juror
cards in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment due process clause;
and (4) his appellate counsel provided ineffective assistance in
violation of his Sixth Amendment right to counsel. For the reasons
that follow, we deny COA on all of McWilliams' claims.
I.
On the night of September 27, 1996, McWilliams
went driving with his cousin, Richard Hawkins (Hawkins), and Kenneth
Adams (Adams), in Adams' red compact car in Houston. Hawkins fell
asleep in the back seat and awoke as they turned into the parking
lot of an apartment complex. McWilliams and Adams were discussing
stealing a car. After their first unsuccessful attempt, McWilliams
and Adams found a brown car in the lot and opened the door to find a
man asleep inside the vehicle. They returned to Adams' vehicle, and
Adams told McWilliams that he should have gotten the man, and
McWilliams decided to return.
The two men returned to the car carrying guns.
Adams pulled the victim, Alfonso Rodriguez (Rodriguez), from the
driver's side at gun point while McWilliams rummaged through the
glove box. Adams beat Rodriguez with the butt of the gun. Rodriguez
laid on the ground covering his head to avoid the blows. Adams and
McWilliams then attempted to force Rodriguez into the trunk of the
car.
Not wanting to be a part of the robbery, Hawkins
jumped into the front of Adams' car and drove away. As he left, he
heard a gun shot. Shortly thereafter, McWilliams and Adams caught up
to Hawkins in Rodriguez's car and waved Hawkins to the side of the
road. Adams, who was covered in blood, got into the driver's seat
and told Hawkins "Your cousin wild. He wild. He shot a man." The
three met up at a gas station where McWilliams pulled a bag of
jewelry from Rodriguez's car and put it in Adams' car. The next day,
McWilliams admitted to Hawkins that he had shot Rodriguez.
The next week, Adams was stopped for speeding. A
search of the car yielded several firearms one of which was the
weapon used to kill Rodriguez. During questioning by investigators,
Adams confessed and implicated McWilliams. After being arrested,
McWilliams gave two statements. In his first statement, McWilliams
claimed that Adams shot Rodriguez. In his second statement,
McWilliams admitted shooting Rodriguez.
A jury convicted McWilliams of capital murder on
September 4, 1997 in state court in Harris County, Texas. McWilliams
was sentenced to death on September 9, 1997.
On March 10, 1999, the Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals affirmed McWilliams' conviction and sentence on direct
appeal. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denied his state habeas
petition on April 4, 2001. McWilliams timely filed an application
for federal post-conviction relief. The federal district court
granted the State's motion for summary judgment, denying McWilliams'
petition. The district court also denied a COA on McWilliams' claims.
McWilliams now seeks a COA from this court
* * * *
For the reasons stated above we deny the
petitioner's request for a COA on his claims that: (1) the failure
to inform the jury that, if sentenced to life in prison, he would be
ineligible for parol for at least forty calendar years under Texas's
capital sentencing scheme violated his Sixth Amendment right to
effective assistance of counsel and Fourteenth Amendment rights to
due process and equal protection; (2) he was denied his Eighth
Amendment right to protection from cruel and unusual punishment; (3)
the state habeas court wrongfully denied him access to sealed juror
cards in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment due process clause;
and (4) his appellate counsel provided ineffective assistance in
violation of his Sixth Amendment right to counsel COA denied.