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Billy Mack Summers, Gene Summers' brother, was
mentally retarded and was living with the couple when they were
found by Abeline firefighters in their home. Each had been stabbed
repeatedly and the home was set on fire. Summers was the beneficiary
and hoped to collect $24,000 in insurance benefits.
Relatives told authorities that he was having
financial problems, and Gene Summers had decided to stop bailing him
out financially. Police were first contacted by Keenan Wilcox, who
said that his acquaintance, Gregory Summers, tried to hire him to
murder his parents and mentally retarded uncle and to burn their
house down.
He said that Summers offered to pay him from
insurance money and cash in the house. Another tipster said that his
brother, Andrew Cantu, told him that he was hired for $10,000 to
commit the murders, but he didn't receive the money.
Numerous relatives and acquaintances testified
about Summers' difficult relationship with his father and about his
many threats to kill him and burn his house down with him in it.
Witnesses also testified to his history of
violence against his family, including kicking his first wife in the
stomach when she was pregnant, beating his second wife, holding a
gun to her head, and forcing her to beg for her life on her knees,
and beating his sons.
Andrew Cantu was also convicted and sentenced to
death, and was executed in 1999.
Two accomplices, Ramon Gonzales and Paul Flores,
received plea bargains and testified against Cantu and Summers.
Citations:
Summers v. Dretke, 431 F.3d 861 (5th Cir. 2005) (Habeas).
Final/Special Meal:
Final Words:
Declined.
ClarkProsecutor.org
Inmate: Gregory Lynn Summers
Date of Birth: 3/14/58
TDCJ#: 999010
Date Received: 9/26/91
Education: 11 years GED
Occupation: general contractor
Date of Offense: 6/11/90
County of Offense: Denton venued from Taylor
Native County: Callahan County, Texas
Race: White
Gender: Male
Hair Color: Brown
Eye Color: Blue
Height: 5 ft 10 in
Weight: 140
Associated Press - Oct. 26, 2006
HUNTSVILLE — Gregory Summers was executed today
for initiating a murder-for-hire plot that authorities said led to
the fatal stabbing of his parents and an uncle. The lethal injection
of Summers, 48, came more than seven years after the execution of
Andrew Cantu, convicted of taking the $10,000 offer and fatally
stabbing Gene and Helen Summers, both 64, and Billy Mack Summers,
60. Their home in Abilene was set on fire after they were attacked
and their bodies were found in the rubble.
Gregory Summers was the 22nd inmate executed this
year in Texas, the nation's most active death penalty state. At
least three other inmates have execution dates over the next four
weeks. Asked by Warden Thomas Prasifka if he had a final statement
while strapped to the Texas death chamber gurney, Summer replied,
"No." Eight minutes later, at 9:16 p.m. CDT, he was pronounced dead.
Attorneys for Summers tried today to block the
punishment by challenging the constitutionality of the lethal
injection method, accusing prosecutors of hiding evidence and
raising questions about testimony from a trial witness who
implicated Summers. The U.S. Supreme Court three weeks ago refused
to review his case. Additional appeals delayed the execution about
three hours past its scheduled time of 6 p.m. CDT. Three appeals
went to the high court late today, and all were rejected. "When I
went to trial, all they proved was there were three murders,"
Summers said in recent interview on death row. "But they can't show
I did this with Cantu because it never happened."
Gene and Helen Summers adopted their son when he
was 3 days old. He was their only child. Prosecutors said Summers
had hoped to collect $24,000 in insurance benefits. Relatives told
authorities Summers was having financial problems and Gene Summers
finally had decided to stop bailing him out financially. Billy Mack
Summers, Gene Summers' brother, was mentally retarded and was living
with the couple when they all were killed in June 1990. "These were
real people that we all loved very, very much," Arbie McAliley, the
victims' niece, said after watching Summers die. "Justice was served,
we believe in our hearts. There was nothing inhumane about this at
all tonight. "He got a better treatment than what he gave our three
loved ones. It was brutal what they did. The only regrets we have is
we had to sit and wait for something we knew was coming."
About 70 witnesses testified for the prosecution
at Summers' trial, which was moved from Abilene because of publicity
and held in Denton, about 185 miles to the east. "Using the West
Texas vernacular, they didn't have a dog in this hunt," Miles
LeBlanc, one of the trial prosecutors, said of the Denton County
jurors who convicted Summers and decided he should die. "They didn't
know this guy from Adam. And they believed, because of the evidence
we were able to present, that this guy secured the services of Cantu
to kill his parents and his disabled uncle, and after committing the
crime set the house on fire to cover it up."
Cantu, a paroled burglar at the time, was
supposed to find his payoff in a dresser drawer at the Summers'
Abilene home, but no money was there. Summers said he knew Cantu's
brother, who had worked for his father. A tip to police from Cantu's
brother led to the arrest of Cantu and two companions. Summers
became a suspect after relatives told authorities about his money
troubles. Police also received a tip on a Crimestoppers telephone
hot line about Summers' scheme.
Two men who accompanied Cantu the night of the
slayings testified against him as part of a plea bargain. They told
how Cantu slipped through a back window, stabbed Gene Summers nine
times in the chest, his wife eight times and Billy Mack Summers
seven times, then set the house on fire. Cantu denied involvement
and blamed the companions, who also testified Cantu identified Greg
Summers as the instigator.
Prosecutors also showed how Summers previously
collected insurance payoffs from fires at his grandmother's house
and a vehicle. At his trial, Summers' two ex-wives testified about
his violence toward them and his four children and how they feared
him. Summers said from death row he loved his parents but described
other relatives as "estranged."
Cantu wasn't the first man approached by Summers
to carry out the killings, according to testimony. And a fourth man
in the car with Cantu the night of the slayings left when he learned
of the activities planned for that night. Both also testified
against Summers. "There was not one crucial piece of evidence," said
Kent Sutton, another of the prosecutors. "It was the totality of the
evidence. It was the overwhelming amount of evidence."
Oct. 28, 2006
ROME — Officials in the Tuscany region of Italy
are seeking to have a convicted killer who was executed in Texas
buried in a small town near Pisa at the man's request, a teacher who
is leading the effort said Friday. Gregory Summers, 48, was executed
by lethal injection Wednesday for initiating a murder-for-hire plot
that authorities said led to the fatal stabbings of his parents and
an uncle. He had been corresponding with students from a local
middle school for several years from prison. "He let it be known
that he wanted to be buried in a white coffin with the (school)
children's signatures," said the teacher, Maria Carmela Carretta.
"He wanted it to be white as a symbol of innocence, and I, too, have
decided that while it is not my favorite color, I will wear
something white at the funeral."
Massimo Toschi, Tuscany's official in charge of
international cooperation, said the region and the municipality of
Cascina, 11 miles east of Pisa, both had agreed to have Summers
buried there at their expense. "This is dependent, obviously, on
getting consent from the family," Toschi said.
Process under way
Susanna Chiarenza, with the group Spring for Summers, said the
necessary documents had been forwarded to the Italian consulate in
Houston, which was in the process of translating them. As of late
Thursday, Summers' body was still at a funeral home in Huntsville
and had not been claimed, said Texas Department of Criminal Justice
spokeswoman Michelle Lyons. If it was not claimed "in a reasonable
time period," she said Texas prison officials would bury Summers at
the prison cemetery. Carretta said she began writing to Summers
about 10 years ago, after reading an article about him in the
Catholic news magazine Famiglia Cristiana. She decided to send a
contribution for his defense, and he sent a thank-you note. In 1998,
she got students from a local middle school involved, and last
October, they collected signatures for a moratorium against the
death penalty and gave them to Texas state Sen. Leticia Van de Putte,
a Democrat from San Antonio, when she visited Florence.
Foe of the death penalty
Italy is a firm opponent of capital punishment, which is banned
throughout the European Union. Since 1999, the lights illuminating
Rome's ancient Colosseum have turned from white to gold every time a
death sentence is commuted around the world or a country abolishes
capital punishment. Summers was convicted for his role in the fatal
stabbing of Gene and Helen Summers, both 64, and Billy Mack Summers,
60, in 1990. Their home in Abilene was set on fire after they were
attacked, and their bodies were found in the rubble.
Another man, Andrew Cantu, was executed seven
years ago for killing them in exchange for $10,000. Cantu, 31, had
denied involvement and blamed the killings on two companions who
testified against him. Authorities said the slayings were the result
of Summers' parents' frustration with bailing their son out of his
financial problems and Greg Summers' attempt to get $24,000 in life
insurance.
Associated Press - October 26, 2006
HUNTSVILLE, Texas – Condemned inmate Gregory
Summers was executed Wednesday for initiating a murder-for-hire plot
that authorities said led to the fatal stabbing of his parents and
an uncle. The injection of Mr. Summers, 48, came more than seven
years after the execution of Andrew Cantu, convicted of taking the
$10,000 offer and fatally stabbing Gene and Helen Summers, both 64,
and Billy Mack Summers, 60. Their home in Abilene was set on fire
after they were attacked, and their bodies were found in the rubble.
Gregory Summers was the 22nd inmate executed this
year in Texas, the nation's most active death penalty state. At
least three other inmates have execution dates over the next four
weeks. Asked by Warden Thomas Prasifka whether he had a final
statement while strapped to the Texas death chamber gurney, Mr.
Summer replied "no." Eight minutes later, at 9:16 p.m., he was
pronounced dead.
Attorneys for Mr. Summers tried Wednesday to
block the punishment by challenging the constitutionality of the
injection method, accusing prosecutors of hiding evidence and
raising questions about testimony from a trial witness who
implicated Mr. Summers. The U.S. Supreme Court three weeks ago
refused to review the case. Additional appeals delayed the execution
about three hours past its scheduled time of 6 p.m. Three appeals
went to the high court late Wednesday, and all were rejected.
Gene and Helen Summers adopted their only child
when he was 3 days old. Prosecutors said Gregory Summers had hoped
to collect $24,000 in insurance benefits. Relatives told authorities
that he was having financial problems, and Gene Summers had decided
to stop bailing him out financially. Billy Mack Summers, Gene
Summers' brother, was mentally retarded and was living with the
couple when they were killed in June 1990. "It's taken 16 years, and
it's time," said Brenda Steele, a niece of the victims. "All they
were guilty of was loving him."
About 70 witnesses testified for the prosecution
at Mr. Summers' trial, which was moved from Abilene because of
publicity and held in Denton. Two men who accompanied Mr. Cantu the
night of the slayings testified against him as part of a plea
bargain. They also testified that Mr. Cantu named Mr. Summers as the
instigator.
Oct. 26, 2006
HUNTSVILLE -- Gregory Summers was executed
Wednesday for initiating a murder-for-hire plot that authorities
said led to the fatal stabbing of his parents and an uncle. The
lethal injection of Summers, 48, came more than seven years after
the execution of Andrew Cantu, convicted of taking the $10,000 offer
and fatally stabbing Gene and Helen Summers, both 64, and Billy Mack
Summers, 60. Their home in Abilene was set on fire after they were
attacked, and their bodies were found in the rubble.
Gregory Summers was the 22nd inmate executed this
year in Texas. Asked by Warden Thomas Prasifka if he had a final
statement while strapped to the death chamber gurney, Summer replied
"no." Eight minutes later, at 9:16 p.m., he was pronounced dead.
Attorneys for Summers tried Wednesday to block
the punishment by challenging the constitutionality of the lethal
injection method, accusing prosecutors of hiding evidence and
raising questions about testimony from a trial witness who
implicated Summers. The U.S. Supreme Court three weeks ago refused
to review his case. Additional appeals delayed the execution about
three hours. Three appeals went to the high court late Wednesday,
and all were rejected.
October 26, 2006
Gregory Lynn Summers offered no final words
before his execution by lethal injection Wednesday night at the
Huntsville Unit. Three of Summers’ friends came in support of him,
each dressed in a pink shirt and black slacks. They offered tears
and prayers to the condemned, hands pressed firmly upon the glass.
As Summers’ final moments passed his friends could be seen huddled
together, sending out one final silent good-bye. He was pronounced
dead at 9:16 p.m.
Summers, 48, was convicted in a murder-for-hire
scheme to kill three people, his parents Mandell Eugene Summers and
Helen Summers, both 64, and his uncle, Bill Mack Summers, 60. Each
were stabbed to death inside their home in Abilene, which was later
set ablaze. It is reported that Summers promised to pay co-defendant
Andrew Cantu, who was also convicted of capital murder and sentenced
to death, the sum of $10,000 for killing his family members. Summers’
execution marked the 22nd execution in Texas this year.
Attorneys for Summers tried Wednesday to block
the punishment by challenging the constitutionality of the lethal
injection method, accusing prosecutors of hiding evidence and
raising questions about testimony from a trial witness who
implicated Summers. The U.S. Supreme Court three weeks ago refused
to review his case. Additional appeals delayed the execution about
three hours past its scheduled time of 6 p.m. CDT. Three appeals
went to the high court late Wednesday, and all were rejected. “When
I went to trial, all they proved was there were three murders,”
Summers said in recent interview on death row. “But they can’t show
I did this with Cantu because it never happened.”
Gene and Helen Summers adopted their son when he
was 3 days old. He was their only child. Prosecutors said Summers
had hoped to collect $24,000 in insurance benefits. Relatives told
authorities Summers was having financial problems and Gene Summers
finally had decided to stop bailing him out financially. Billy Mack
Summers, Gene Summers’ brother, was mentally retarded and was living
with the couple when they all were killed in June 1990.
“These were real people that we all loved very,
very much,” Arbie McAliley, the victims’ niece, said after watching
Summers die. “Justice was served, we believe in our hearts. There
was nothing inhumane about this at all tonight. “He got a better
treatment than what he gave our three loved ones. It was brutal what
they did. The only regrets we have is we had to sit and wait for
something we knew was coming.”
Gregory Lynn Summers, 48, was executed by lethal
injection on 25 October 2006 in Huntsville, Texas for hiring the
murder of three members of his family.
Around midnight on 11 June 1990, Abeline
firefighters discovered three bodies in a burning house. Mandell
Eugene "Gene" Summers, his wife, Helen, and his brother, Billy Mack
Summers, had all been stabbed to death. The telephone line to the
house was also cut.
On 15 June, police were contacted by Keenan
Wilcox. Wilcox said that an acquaintance of his, Gregory Summers,
then 32, tried to hire him to murder his parents and mentally
retarded uncle and to burn their house down. He said that Summers
offered to pay him from insurance money and cash in the house. On 19
June, another tipster called the police. This man said that his
brother, Andrew Cantu, 22, told him that he was hired for $10,000 to
commit the murders, but he didn't receive the money.
At Cantu's trial, Ramon Gonzales, 19, and Paul
Flores testified that they agreed to commit a burglary with Cantu.
According to their testimony, Flores cut a hole in a back window
screen and crawled into the house. By the time they crawled inside,
Cantu was already stabbing Gene Summers, who was lying in bed. Cantu
threatened to kill them if they attempted to leave, then proceeded
to the living room to stab Helen Summers, who was sleeping in a
recliner.
Cantu ordered Gonzales and Flores to search the
home for the $10,000 that Summers promised to leave for them in a
dresser drawer, then he proceeded to a front bedroom, where he
stabbed Billy Mack Summers. Gonzales and Flores then told Cantu that
they couldn't find the money, so he ransacked the house looking for
it, to no avail. Cantu then doused the bedroom with lighter fluid
and set it on fire. As they drove away, Cantu ordered Flores to get
rid of the knife. Flores threw the murder weapon out of the car
window. A woman found it while mowing her lawn.
Prosecutors alleged that Summers stood to collect
$24,000 in life insurance from the death of his parents. At his
trial, prosecutors presented evidence that Summers had previously
collected insurance payoffs from fires at his grandmother's house
and a vehicle. Numerous relatives and acquaintances testified about
Summers' difficult relationship with his father and about his many
threats to kill him and burn his house down with him in it.
Witnesses also testified to his history of
violence against his family, including kicking his first wife in the
stomach when she was pregnant, beating his second wife, holding a
gun to her head, and forcing her to beg for her life on her knees,
and beating his sons.
A jury convicted Summers of capital murder in
August 1991 and sentenced him to death. The Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals affirmed the conviction and sentence in June 1994. All of
his subsequent appeals in state and federal court were denied.
Andrew Flores Cantu, who had a prior burglary
record, was also convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death.
He was executed on 16 February 1999. Ramon Gonzales was convicted of
burglary and sentenced to 20 years in prison. He has been out on
parole since 1999. Information on Paul Flores was not available for
this report.
"I had nothing to do with this," Summers said in
an interview from death row the week before his execution. "They
know that ...I am so outraged that a system in a country that's
supposed to be civilized can sit back and watch an innocent man be
convicted and be sent to the death chamber, and nobody gives a damn,"
Summers said. "When I went to trial, all they proved was there were
three murders," he said. "But they can't show I did this with Cantu
because it never happened." "My parents were the greatest," Summers
said of the couple who adopted him when he was three days old. "I
didn't have to worry about not being wanted or a mistake or anything
like that." Summers said he knew Andrew Cantu's brother, who had
worked for his father.
Summers' execution was delayed about three hours
by final appeals efforts. When the warden asked whether he had a
final statement, Summers answered, "no." The lethal injection was
then started. He was pronounced dead at 9:16 p.m.
Mandell Eugene Summers, Helen Summers, and Billy
Mack Summers were fatally stabbed and left in a burning building.
Evidence at trial revealed that Gregory Lynn Summers hired Andrew
Cantu for $10,000 to murder Summers's relatives--father, mother, and
mentally retarded uncle, respectively--for financial gain. Summers
expected to collect $24,000 in insurance proceeds. The family had
adopted Summers when he was three days old.
Andrew Cantu told a friend named Max that he [Cantu]
had a job to do -- kill three old people; he explained that the
intended victims were Gregory Summers' parents and Cantu asked for
the friend's assistance. Max declined to help in any way, using the
fact that he was on probation as an excuse. Later that same night,
Cantu borrowed his brother's black sweat pants and sweat shirt, and
paced in and out of the house as if waiting for someone, but no one
arrived.
Early on June 11, 1990, Summers and Cantu were
riding in Summers' truck and approached Max and asked him to contact
his cousin, Ramon Gonzales. He was unable to contact him, but
Gonzales heard that Max had tried to reach him, and thinking that
Max was having gang troubles, Gonzales came to Abilene from Haskell
with a friend, Paul Flores.
Gonzales had previously only briefly met Cantu,
and Flores met him that day. While riding around with Gonzales,
Flores, and Max, Cantu asked if they would "waste" three old people
whose adopted son wanted them killed. Cantu added that he would be
paid with money, jewelry, and guns in the house, and from insurance
policies collected later. When the others refused to help, Cantu
changed the subject to burglary of a house. Gonzales and Flores
agreed to join in the burglary. Max declined, saying he was on
probation.
Gonzales dropped Cantu off at his house then took
Max home. Max attempted to dissuade the others from assisting Cantu
and believed they were homebound when last he saw them. However,
Gonzales and Flores returned to pick up Cantu, who had again
borrowed his brother's black sweat pants and shirt, explaining to
his brother that he was going to pull a "heist."
The three then went to a grocery store where
Cantu purchased lighter fluid, gloves, pantyhose, and a cap. The
cashier later identified Cantu and remembered some of the items he
purchased. Cantu had earlier that day bought a knife from Flores.
They then rode around before setting out for the house to be
burglarized. Sometime near midnight, they drove through an alley
behind the Summers' residence. Cantu was dropped off in the alley
behind the house and cut the telephone line. Gonzales picked up
Cantu, drove to a nearby street and parked. The three got out and
walked toward the alley behind the Summers' home. Cantu carried the
knife and lighter fluid.
A neighbor, seated on her unlit porch, saw three
men and remembered that one was carrying a knife which shone in the
streetlamp's light. The three men entered the Summers' yard through
a back gate. Cantu cut a hole in a back window screen and crawled
into the house. By the time Gonzales and Flores had crawled inside,
Cantu was already stabbing Gene Summers, who was lying in his bed.
Cantu threatened to "waste" Gonzales and Flores if they attempted to
leave, then proceeded to the living room where he repeatedly stabbed
Helen Summers as she sat sleeping in a recliner. Cantu ordered
Flores and Gonzales to search the house for the promised money
before proceeding to a front bedroom where he murdered Billy Mack
Summers. Angry that Gonzales and Flores had not found it, Cantu
ransacked the house looking for the money himself but found none of
the promised money. Before leaving the scene, Cantu doused the
bedroom with lighter fluid and set it on fire.
As they drove from the scene, ambulance and fire
truck sirens could be heard heading in the direction of the Summers'
home. When Cantu ordered Flores to "get rid" of the knife, Flores,
called "slow poke" for his mental prowess, threw it out the car
window. This infuriated Cantu. The bloody knife was found by a woman
mowing her lawn.
The three went to the home of Cantu's uncle,
where Cantu chided Gonzales and Flores for their failure to find the
promised money and searched them for it, accusing them of theft.
Cantu threatened to kill Flores and Gonzales if they had the money
or talked about the incident. Flores and Gonzales returned to
Haskell.
The following morning, June 12, 1990, in a highly
uncharacteristic manner, Cantu asked his brother if he had seen the
news. Alerted by the strangeness of the question, his brother
watched the midday news and learned about the triple murders.
Knowing Cantu and that the victims were Greg Summers' parents, he
asked him whether he had been involved in the murders. Cantu denied
involvement. Later that week, his brother again asked Cantu if he
had any part in the murders; disgusted by the answer, he called the
police and made a statement on June 19, 1990.
Max also asked Cantu about the murders; Cantu
confessed that he had committed them and complained about not having
been paid. On June 15, 1990, a man contacted the police. He said he
was an acquaintance of Summers, reported that Summers had approached
him in the recent past, attempting to hire him to murder his parents
and uncle, and to burn their house down. Summers offered to pay the
man from insurance money and case in the house. His suspicions were
aroused upon reading the details of the murders and the victim's
identities in the newspaper.
While in custody, Summers befriended another
inmate who assisted Summers with legal work and prepared documents
for Summers. When the inmate realized that Summers was using
documents prepared by him as false evidence, he contacted prison
officials and told them of his encounter with Summers. During their
interactions, Summers told the inmate of Summers's part in the
murders. Andrew Cantu was also convicted of capital murder and was
executed in 1999. Sandra Mitchell, a relative of the victims said,
"I just think it has gone on too long. It should have happened 10
years ago."
UPDATE: Gregory Summers was executed today for
initiating a murder-for-hire plot that authorities said led to the
fatal stabbing of his parents and an uncle. "These were real people
that we all loved very, very much," Arbie McAliley, the victims'
niece, said after watching Summers die. "Justice was served, we
believe in our hearts. There was nothing inhumane about this at all
tonight. He got a better treatment than what he gave our three loved
ones. It was brutal what they did. The only regrets we have is we
had to sit and wait for something we knew was coming."
Gregory Summers, TX, October 25
Do Not Execute Gregory Lynn Summers
Texas The state of Texas is scheduled to execute
Gregory Lynn Summers on Oct. 25. Summers was convicted of murder for
his role in allegedly conspiring to kill three family members for
money. Summers allegedly hired Andrew Cantu to kill his adoptive
mother, father, and uncle for financial purposes. Cantu entered the
home of the Summers family, where he fatally stabbed Mandell Eugene
Summers, Helen Summers, and Billy Mack Summers.
During the trial, the prosecutors called William
Spaulding to testify, an inmate whom Summers befriended while in
custody. Spaulding testified only after he discovered that Summers
had betrayed him, making Spaulding’s testimony unreliable. Also,
Andrew Cantu, who was executed in 1999, never testified. His two
accomplices, both of whom stood to gain from testifying, claimed
that Cantu had made a deal with Summers, but no evidence of this
agreement exists.
Furthermore, the state called Dr. Grigson to
testify during the sentencing phase, where he stated that Summers
may represent a future danger. However, Dr. Grigson had falsely
testified for the state in another trial, making him unreliable as
well. Dr. Grigson has since been expelled from the American
Psychiatric Association and the Texas Society for Psychiatric
Physicians for ethics violations. He has testified in about 150
capital punishment cases, where he has almost always sided with the
prosecution. In many of these testimonies, Dr. Grigson has stated
that the defendant is 100 percent sure to be a future danger, often
without even interviewing the defendant.
One member of the APA board stated, “[Dr. Grigson]
oversteps the bounds of his professional competence.” This person
went on to say that no person could say with 100 percent certainty
that a person is a future danger to society. The court also allowed
the state to produce several other witnesses who offered nothing of
substance to the case, only character assessments of Summers. None
of these witnesses could establish that Summers and Cantu made a
deal about the murders.
Gregory Summers did not participate in the
physical murder of his family members. His sentence rests upon
unreliable testimony, and no direct evidence links him to Andrew
Cantu. With unreliable testimony from Spaulding and Dr. Grigson, as
well as no clearly established connection between Cantu and Summers,
one cannot argue that Summers is guilty beyond reasonable doubt.
Summers has never committed a violent crime, and cannot even be
linked to the murderer in this case.
Please write to Gov. Rick Perry on behalf of
Gregory Summers
Wednesday, October 18, 2006
Media Advisory: Gregory Summers Scheduled For Execution
AUSTIN – Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott
offers the following information about Gregory Lynn Summers, who is
scheduled to be executed after 6 p.m. Wednesday, October 25, for
hiring another man to kill his adopted family in 1990. A Denton
County jury sentenced Summers to death in August 1991 for hiring
Andrew Cantu to murder the three family members. Cantu was convicted
and sentenced to die in April 1991; Cantu was executed in February
1999.
FACTS OF THE CRIME
Around midnight on June 11, 1990, Abilene
firefighters discovered three bodies in a burning house. The victims
were Summers’ father, Mandell Eugene “Gene” Summers; his mother,
Helen Summers; and his uncle, Billy Mack Summers. The three were
stabbed to death, and their home set ablaze. The investigation of
the murders led to the indictment and arrest of Gregory Summers and
Andrew Cantu for capital murder.
Late at night on June 10th, Cantu and two other
men went to a grocery store where Cantu purchased lighter fluid,
gloves, pantyhose and a cap. The three men then drove to the Summers’
residence. Cantu cut the telephone line to the house, and the three
men went inside the home. Cantu stabbed Gene Summers, who was lying
in his bed; then went to the living room where he stabbed Helen
Summers; followed by a trip to a front bedroom where he stabbed
Billy Mack Summers.
Cantu and the two accomplices searched the house
for money but found none. Cantu ordered one of the accomplices to
get rid of the murder weapon. The man threw it out the car window.
The knife was found by a woman mowing her lawn. In a conversation
with a man who was not at the murder scene, Cantu admitted that he
killed the three people and complained that he had not been paid for
the killings.
On June 15, 1990, police were contacted by an
acquaintance of Gregory Summers who reported that Summers had tried
to hire him to murder Summers’ parents and uncle and to burn their
house down. The acquaintance said Summers offered to pay him from
insurance money and cash in the house. The acquaintance suspicions
were aroused after reading a newspaper story about the details of
the murders and the victims’ identities. Relatives and friends
testified about Summer’s difficult relationship with his father and
about Summers’ numerous threats to kill Gene Summers and burn his
house down with him in it.
SUMMERS’ HISTORY
The testimony from various members of Summers’
family established a pattern of horrible brutality suffered at his
hands. He assaulted his first wife, kicking her in the stomach while
she was pregnant. He terrorized his hospitalized grandmother for
money. He battered his young sons. His second wife testified that
Summers beat her, and once drove her to secluded woods where he
forced her to beg on her knees for her life as he held a cocked gun
to her head. Numerous family members testified that they feared
Summers. Evidence was also introduced that while incarcerated,
Summers threatened to have an inmate killed. Two psychiatrists
testified that Summers is a continuing threat to society who cannot
be reformed.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
06/11/90 -- Andrew Cantu killed Summers’ adoptive
parents and retarded uncle at Summers’ behest.
08/16/90 -- A Taylor County grand jury returned 3 capital murder
indictments against Summers.
01/16/91 --Taylor County grand jury indicted Andrew Cantu for
capital murder.
05/29/91 -- Andrew Cantu was found guilty of capital murder.
05/31/91 -- The Cantu jury answered the special questions and the
trial judge sentenced Andrew Cantu to death.
06/13/91 -- Summers’ motion for change of venue was granted; all
three cases transferred to the 16th District Court in Denton County.
08/09/91 -- Guilt-innocence phase began in two of the cases (one was
not tried and remains pending.)
08/21/91 -- Summers was convicted of capital murder.
08/23/91 -- The jury answered the special issues and Summers was
formally sentenced to death by the 350th District Court judge.
09/10/91 -- Summers filed a motion for a new trial and notice of
appeal.
09/13/91 -- Summers’ cases were transferred back to Taylor County.
08/24/92 -- Summers filed a direct appeal raising 33 points of
error.
06/08/94 -- The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Summers’
conviction and sentence.
06/23/94 --Summers asked for a rehearing of the Texas court’s
opinion in one of the two cases on direct appeal.
10/07/96 -- The U.S. Supreme Court denied certiorari review.
10/01/97 -- Summers filed an application for a state writ of habeas
corpus raising 22 issues.
11/12/97 --On Summers’ state writs, Judge Holloway of Taylor County
found that no contested issues of fact exist.
02/16/99 -- Andrew Cantu was executed for his part in the murders.
10/11/99 -- The trial court recommends that the writs be denied.
02/22/01 -- Pursuant to Court of Criminal Appeals, the trial court
entered findings recommending the denial of relief.
03/28/01 -- The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denies relief on
writs.
04/04/01 -- Summers filed his federal habeas corpus petition raising
19 claims in the U.S. District Court.
11/15/01 -- Summers filed an amended federal writ petition.
03/24/04 -- The federal district court dismissed Summers’ federal
habeas petition.
04/23/04 --Summers filed notice of appeal in the Fifth Circuit.
05/10/04 -- The federal district court granted certificate of
appealability (“COA”) on three claims only.
08/03/04 --Summers filed an application for additional COA to
include seven additional claims in the Fifth Circuit.
12/08/04 --Summers filed his brief on the merits in the 5th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals.
12/02/05 --The 5th Circuit Court denied motion for additional COA
and affirms district court’s denial of habeas relief.
12/16/05 -- Summers files a motion for rehearing by all members of
the 5th Circuit Court.
01/27/06 -- Summers’ petition for rehearing was denied by the 5th
Circuit Court.
03/15/06 -- The 350th District Court of Taylor County, Texas,
scheduled Summers’ execution for Wednesday, October 25, 2006.
04/27/06 -- Summers petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court for certiorari
review of the Fifth Circuit Court's opinion.
10/02/06 -- The U.S. Supreme Court denied certiorari review.
Greg will be 43 on March 14th. He has been on DR
since he was 33 for a crime he has always denied being involved in.
In fact, since he was in there, he has always been trying hard to
prove his innocence.
He was born in Abilene, Texas, but there's no one
who takes care of him in his country. The only people he visits with
and write to are in Europe. Thus he spends very long periods in
total solitude.
He likes talking and reading, only in English so
far... He is very open minded, loves art and music. When piddling
was allowed he used to paint. Now he can only make black and white
drawings.
Greg Summers' case is now at a very delicate
phase: Greg's appeal filed to the State Court in 1999 has just been
denied and his lawyers have to urgently file a new petition to the
Federal Court within August 1st. No one knows how long it's going to
take before hearing the judge's reply nor how his response will be.
It may take one year or a few months before the judge's reply and an
execution date.
What we are trying to do is: achieving as much
support as possible here in Europe in order to be prepared in case
of a Federal Court's denial or in case Greg is given a date of
execution.
Summers v. State, 941 S.W.2d 922 (Tex.Cr.App.
1996) ().
Summers v. Dretke, 380 F.3d 844 (5th Cir.
2004) (Habeas).
Summers v. Dretke, 380 F.3d 844 (5th Cir.
2004) (Habeas).