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Judias
Anna BUENOANO
A.K.A.: "The Black Widow"
Born: Judias Welty
Classification: Serial
killer
Characteristics: Poisoner
- To
collect insurance money
Number of victims: 3
Date of murders: 1971 - 1980
Date
of arrest: January 11, 1984
Date of birth:
April 4,
1943
Victims profile: James Goodyear (her husband) / Bobby Joe Morris
(her boyfriend) / Michael Goodyear
(her
partially paralyzed 19-year-old son)
Method of murder:
Poisoning (arsenic) -
Drowning
Location: Florida/Colorado, USA
Status:
Executed by
electrocution in
Florida on March 30,
1998
Buenoano, known as the "Black Widow," was executed in Florida's electric
chair following her 1985 conviction for poisoning her husband, Air Force
sergeant James Goodyear in 1971.
Goodyear had died barely three months after returning
from Vietnam suffering from symptoms staff physicians never quite
identified. His body was exhumed 12 years later after Buenoano became a
suspect in another case and found to contain arsenic.
In 1984, a jury convicted Buenoano of killing her
partially paralyzed 19-year-old son, Michael Goodyear, and sentenced her
to life in prison. Michael wore heavy metal leg braces and he was unable
to walk or use his hands.
On May 13th, 1980 Judi took Michael and his
younger brother James canoeing on the East River. Sadly the canoe
capsized. James and Judi were able to get out from under the upturned
canoe but Michael, weighed down by the heavy braces didn't stand a
chance and drowned.
In 1984, a jury convicted Buenoano of attempting to
kill her boyfriend, Pensacola businessman John Gentry, and sentenced her
to 12 years imprisonment.
On June 25th 1983 Judi announced she was
pregnant and John went out to get some champagne to celebrate. When he
started his car a bomb exploded and he was seriously injured as a result.
John later said Judi had been giving her vitamins.
In fact, she was not
pregnant and had booked a cruise for herself and her children. She had
also recently been telling her friends that John had a terminal illness.
Several of the alleged vitamin capsules were recovered and found to
contain the arsenic.
She collected more than $240,000 in insurance money
from the deaths of her husband, a son, and a boyfriend in Colorado, but
was never prosecuted. Insurance benefits were also the motive in each of
the Florida cases which resulted in conviction.
Buenoano never admitted
any of the killings. Buenoano was the first woman executed in Florida
since 1848, and the third executed in the United States since the
reinstatement of the death penalty in 1976.
Florida's 'Black Widow' Executed
March 30, 1998
STARKE, Florida (CNN) - Fifty-four-year-old Judy
Buenoano, known as the "Black Widow," was executed in Florida's electric
chair Monday morning for poisoning her husband in 1971.
Buenoano, who
was given the nickname by a Florida prosecutor who said she preyed off
her mates and her young, was the first woman executed in Florida since
1848, and the third executed in the United States since the U.S. Supreme
Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976.
She passed 13 years on
Florida's death row writing letters, crocheting blankets and baby
clothes, and maintaining her innocence. "I have eternal security and I
know that when I die I will go straight to heaven and I will see Jesus,"
she recently said.
But unlike Karla Faye Tucker, the pickax killer
executed in Texas last month, Buenoano did not get sympathy from
religious circles. That may be because she has never shown remorse and
because of the nature of her crimes.
Unraveling her web of crimes
From 1983 to 1985, Buenoano faced three separate
Florida juries who convicted her of crimes against her loved ones.
Pensacola prosecutor Russell Edgar, who gave Buenoano her spider
nickname, says her motive was "twisted greed."
She collected more than $240,000 in insurance money
from the deaths of her husband, a son, and a boyfriend in Colorado.
Colorado never prosecuted her.
The crimes dated back to 1971, but
Buenoano never aroused suspicion until 1983, when her fiancee John
Gentry survived a car bombing attack in downtown Pensacola.
During the
investigation, Gentry told police that Buenoano had given him "vitamins"
that made him sick. She was sentenced to 12 years in prison for the car
bombing, and Gentry's story about the vitamins led investigators to
unravel a web of crimes against her family members.
In 1984, a jury
convicted Buenoano of killing her partially paralyzed 19-year-old son,
Michael Goodyear, and sentenced her to life in prison. Prosecutors say
she gave four different versions of what happened, but that she pushed
him out of a canoe near Pensacola's East River in 1980. "It wasn't an
accident. The guy was paralyzed," Edgar said. "He had 15 pounds of
braces on his legs without a life jacket. He was taken up the river in a
canoe and basically pitched out."
Goodyear's autopsy revealed traces of arsenic in his
system. Although it was never proved, prosecutors believed his crippling
illness resulted from her poisoning him. "A person this cruel really
needs to get what she deserves," said Ted Chamberlain, who investigated
the case.
Michael's father, too
Buenoano's death sentence resulted from a 1985
conviction for killing her husband of nine years, Air Force Sgt. James
Goodyear. The elder Goodyear, Michael's father, died of arsenic
poisoning in 1971, just three months after returning from a year's tour
of duty in Vietnam.
Despite the convictions, Buenoano's daughter,
Kimberly Hawkins, 30, steadfastly believes in her mother's innocence. "She
did things with us," Hawkins has told The Associated Press. "She worked
a lot ... but she always made time for us." Edgar says he feels sorry
for Buenoano's surviving children but not for Buenoano herself.
"They're without a father, without a brother, and now
without a mother. And we lay it all at Judy's feet. She did it."
Buenoano was electrocuted in Florida's electric chair.
Two executions in
the chair, including one last year, resulted in fires, and state
officials were forced to examine whether using it was cruel and unusual
punishment. Florida's governor, Lawton Chiles, signed a bill continuing
its use and adding the provision that if courts ever rule use of the
chair unconstitutional, lethal injection would be the state's designated
backup.
Judias "Judy" Buenoano (born Judias
Welty, also known as Judias Goodyear, also known as
Judias Morris) (April 4, 1943 - March 30, 1998), was a convicted
murderer who was executed for the 1971 murder of her husband James
Goodyear.
She was also convicted for the 1980 murder of her
son Michael Goodyear, and of the 1983 attempted murder of her fiancé
John Gentry. She is also acknowledged to have been responsible for the
1978 death of her boyfriend Bobby Joe Morris in Colorado; however, by
the time authorities made the connection between Buenoano and Morris,
she had already been sentenced to death in the state of Florida.
She is also believed to have been involved in a
1974 murder in Alabama; on his deathbed, Bobby Joe Morris confessed to
having participated in that murder, but police were unable to find
enough evidence to press charges. She was also suspected in the 1980
death of her boyfriend Gerald Dossett. After her arrest, Dossett's
body was exhumed and analysed for signs of arsenic poisoning. No
charges were laid in that case.
Buenoano was the first woman to be executed in
Florida since 1848 (when a slave named Celia was hanged for killing
her master), and was only the third woman to be executed in the United
States since the reinstatement of capital punishment in 1976.
Nationally, she was the first woman executed in the electric chair
since 1957, when Rhonda Belle Martin was electrocuted in Alabama.
Crimes
In 1971, she was married to James Goodyear
(1934–1971), a sergeant in the United States Air Force. According to
prosecutors, she was motivated by insurance money when she poisoned
him with lethal doses of arsenic. However, his death was initially
believed to be due to natural causes.
In 1973, she moved in with Bobby Joe Morris
(?-1978); in January 1978, he succumbed to arsenic poisoning. Later
that year, she legally changed her name to "Buenoano" (corrupted
Spanish for "good year," from "buen año").
Buenoano's son Michael Goodyear (1961–1980) became
severely ill in 1979, his symptoms including paraplegia; post-mortem
examination indicated that he had been the victim of severe arsenic
poisoning, which caused his disability. In 1980, Buenoano took Michael
out in a canoe; the canoe rolled, and Michael, weighed down by his arm
and leg braces, drowned.
In 1983, Buenoano was engaged to John Gentry.
Gentry was severely injured when his car exploded. While he was
recovering from his injuries, police began to find several
discrepancies in Buenoano's background; further investigation revealed
that, in November 1982, she had begun telling her friends that Gentry
was suffering from a terminal illness. Upon learning this, Gentry
provided police with the "vitamin pills" which Buenoano had been
giving him; these were found to contain arsenic and formaldehyde. This
led to the exhumations of Michael Goodyear, James Goodyear, and Bobby
Joe Morris, and to the discovery that each man had been the victim of
arsenic poisoning.
In 1984, Buenoano was convicted for the murders of
Michael and James Goodyear, and in 1985 she was convicted for the
attempted murder of John Gentry. She received a twelve-year sentence
for the Gentry case, a life sentence for the Michael Goodyear case,
and a death sentence for the James Goodyear case. She was convicted of
multiple counts of grand theft (for insurance fraud), and is thought
to have committed multiple acts of arson (again, for purposes of
insurance fraud).
Wikipedia.org
Judy
Buenoano
Yoda's Page: Serial Killer Central
Born at Quanah, Texas, on April 4, 1943, Judias Welty
was the daughter of an itinerant farm worker, named after her mother.
In later years, Judi would describe her mother as a full-blooded member of
the nonexistent Mesquite Apache tribe, but in fact, they hardly knew
each other. The elder Judias Welty died of tuberculosis when her
daughter was barely two years old, and the family disintegrated.
Judi
and her infant brother Robert were sent to live with their grandparents,
while two older siblings were placed for adoption. It was all downhill
from there, in terms of Judis family life.
Reunited with her father in Roswell, New Mexico,
after his next marriage, she found herself the target of abuse from both
parents--beaten, starved, burned with cigarettes, forced to work slave
hours around the house. At age fourteen, her anger finally exploded:
Judi scalded two of her stepbrothers with hot grease and lit into her
parents with flying fists, feet, any object she could lay her hands on.
The episode cost her sixty days in jail, confined with adult prostitutes,
but when the judge asked if she was ready to go home, Judi opted for
reform school. She remained at Foothills High School--a girls
reformatory in Albuquerque-- until her graduation in 1959, at age
sixteen, and she would despise her family from that day on.
Of brother
Robert, she once said, I wouldnt spit down his throat if his guts were
on fire. The year 1960 found Judi back in Roswell, working as a nurses
aide under the pseudonym of Anna Schultz. She gave birth to an
illegitimate son, christened Michael Schultz, on March 30, 1961, and
ever after refused comment on rumors that his father was a pilot from
the nearby air force base.
On January 21, 1962, she married another air
force officer, James Goodyear, and their first child--James, Jr.--was
born four years later, on January 16, 1966. Judis husband celebrated the
event by adopting Michael Schultz. Daughter Kimberly followed in 1967,
after the family had moved to Orlando, Florida.
A year later, Judias
opened the Conway Acres Child Care Center in Orlando, listing her
husband as co-owner despite his continuing service with the Air Force,
which would soon include a tour of duty in Vietnam.
In fact, James
Goodyear, Sr., had been home from Southeast Asia for barely three months
when he was admitted to the U.S. Naval Hospital in Orlando, suffering
from symptoms staff physicians never quite identified.
He died on
September 15, 1971, and Judi waited a discreet five days before cashing
in his three life insurance policies. Before years end, an accidental
blaze at her Orlando home paid Judy another $90,000 in fire insurance.
It was rotten luck all around ... but at least it paid well.
Loneliness was not a problem for the recent widow.
She moved her family to Pensacola in 1972, and was living with new lover
Bobby Joe the following year. Son Michael, meanwhile, had become a
problem for his mother, raising hell in school, scoring in the dull-normal
range on IQ tests.
James Goodyears death barred Mike from treatment at a
residential facility reserved for military dependents, but Judi wangled
an evaluation at the state hospital in 1974, farming her first-born out
to foster care with a provision for psychiatric treatment.
Bobby Morris
moved to Trinidad, Colorado, in 1977, inviting Judi and her brood to
join him. She hung around Pensacola long enough to collect fire
insurance on a second house, then reclaimed Michael from foster care and
moved west with her tribe, settling in Trinidad as Judias Morris.
Bobby
Joe was admitted to San Rafael Hospital on January 4, 1978, but doctors
could find no cause for his sudden illness, and he was released to Judis
care on January 21.
Two days later, he collap ed at the dinner table and
was rushed back to the hospital, where he died on January 28, his death
officially ascribed to cardiac arrest and metabolic acidosis.
In early
February, Judi cashed three life insurance policies on Morris, further
fattening her bank account. Bobby Joes family suspected murder from the
first, and Morris was not the only victim on their list.
In 1974, Judi
and Bobby Joe had been visiting Morriss hometown of Brewton, Alabama,
when a male resident of Florida was found dead in a Brewton motel. An
anonymous call, traced to a local pay phone, led police to the room
where the victim was found, shot in the chest with a .22-caliber weapon,
his throat slashed for good measure.
After the news broke, Bobby Joes mother overheard
Judy telling Bobby Joe, The son of a bitch shouldnt have come up here in
the first place. He knew if he came up here he was gonna die. Later,
raving in delirium on his deathbed, Morris blurted out, Judi, we should
never have done that terrible thing.
Police in Brewton, meanwhile,
report that they could find no fingerprints inside the room, no bullet
was recovered from the corpse, and they have no firm suspects in the
case.
On May 3, 1978, Judias legally changed her own last name and that
of her children to Buenoano, the Spanish equivalent of Goodyear, in an
apparent tribute to her late husband and mythical Apache mother.
A month
later, the family was back in Pensacola, settling into a home on Whisper
Pine Drive, in suburban Gulf Breeze. Michael Buenoano had continued his
pattern of academic failure by dropping out of high school in his
sophomore year, and he joined the army in June 1979, drawing an
assignment to Ft. Benning, Georgia, after basic training.
En route to
his new post, he stopped off to visit his mother in Florida, and that
was the beginning of the end. When he reached Ft. Benning on November 6,
he was already showing symptoms of base metal poisoning.
Army physicians
found seven times the normal level of arsenic in Michaels body, and
there was little they could do to reverse its destructive action. After
six weeks of care, the muscles of his arms and lower legs had atrophied
to the point where Michael could neither walk nor use his hands.
He finally left the hospital wearing braces and a prosthetic device on one
arm, the gear weighing a total of sixty pounds.
On May 13, 1980, Michael
was canoeing with his mother and younger brother on the East River, near
Milton, Florida, when their boat overturned. James and Judi-- described
in press reports of the incident as Dr. Judias Buenoano, a clinical
physician in Ft. Walton--made it safely to shore, but Michael sank like
a stone and drowned.
Local authorities accepted Dr. Judis description of
the accident and closed their files, but army investigators were more
persistent, launching their own search for evidence on May 27. Michaels
military life insurance finally paid off in mid-September, to the tune
of $20,000, and sheriffs officers began taking a new look at the case
when they discovered two civilian policies on Michaels life.
Handwriting
experts suggested that Michaels signature on the insurance applications
may have been forged. Judy, meanwhile, went on as best she could without
her eldest son, opening a beauty parlor in Gulf Breeze, dating Pensacola
businessman John Gentry II.
For Gentrys benefit, she fabricated a stint
at nursing school, with Ph.D.s in biochemistry and psychology from the
University of Alabama, plus a recent tour of duty as the head of nursing
at West Florida Hospital. It was all nonsense, but Gentry swallowed the
bait, indulging Judis taste for expensive gifts, Caribbean cruises, and
imported champagne.
In October 1982, John and Judi purchased life
insurance policies on one another, Judi later boosting the coverage from
$50,000 to $500,000 without Gentrys knowledge, paying the premiums out
of her own pocket. By December, she was feeding Gentry vitamin capsules
that produced dizziness and vomiting.
Hospitalized for twelve days
beginning December 16, Gentry noted that his symptoms disappeared when
he stopped taking the vitamins. Even so, he was not suspicious enough to
break off his relationship with Judi in the interest of survival.
On
June 25, 1983, Gentry left a dinner party early, planning to pick up
some champagne for a private session with Judi. They had much to
celebrate, it seemed, for Judi had told him she was carrying his child.
John never made it to the liquor store, however, as a bomb exploded in
his car when he turned the ignition key. Near death, he was rushed to
the hospital where trauma surgeons managed to save his life.
Police got their first crack at questioning Gentry on
June 29, learning of the victims curious insurance situation. A
background check revealed the gaping holes in Dr. Buenoanos new
biography, and Gentry was stunned to discover that her pregnancy was
also a lie, Judi having been surgically sterilized in 1975.
Detectives further learned that Judi had been telling friends about Gentrys
terminal illness since November 1982, lately booking tickets for a world
cruise including herself and her children ... without Gentry. It was
enough for John, and he provided police with several of the vitamin
capsules Judi had prescribed in 1982.
Analysis revealed that they
contained paraformaldehyde, a poison with no known medical uses, but
Floridas state attorney declined to file charges of attempted murder,
citing insufficient evidence to prosecute.
On July 27, count officers
and federal agents searched Judis home in Gulf Breeze, retrieving wire
and tape from her bedroom that seemed to match the Gentry car bomb. In
Jamess room, they also found marijuana and a sawed-off shotgun, jailing
him for possession of drugs and an illegal weapon.
Judi, meanwhile, was
arrested at her beauty shop on charges of attempted murder. By mid-August,
authorities had traced the source of the dynamite used in the bomb,
linking the Alabama buyer to Judi via phone records showing a dozen
long-distance calls from her home. Judi made bail on the attempted
murder charge, but there was worse in store.
On January 11, 1984, she
was indicted for first-degree murder in the death of her son, with an
additional count of grand theft for the insurance scam. Arrested that
evening, she staged a fit of convulsions and wound up in Santa Rosa
Hospital under guard.
The wheels of justice were sluggish, but there was
no stopping them once they started to roll. Bobby Joe Morris was exhumed
on February 11, with arsenic found in his remains. Identical results
were obtained with the exhumation of James Good-year, on March 14, 1984.
Judis trial in the first murder case-- Michaels--began on March 22, and
she was convicted on all counts nine days later.
On June 6 she was
sentenced to life imprisonment without parole for the first twenty-five
years. July found Florida authorities exhuming the body of late
boyfriend Gerald Dossett, deceased since 1980, in another search for
arsenic, but no charges were filed in that case. On August 10, James
Buenoano was acquitted of trying to kill James Gentry, but his mother
would be less fortunate.
Judis trial in that case opened October 15 and
lasted three days; jurors deliberated a mere two hours before voting to
convict, and Judis 12-year prison sentence was made consecutive with her
life term for Michaels slaying. A year later, on October 22, 1985, Judi
went to trial for the murder of husband James Goodyear.
The trial
consumed a week, with Judi denying any criminal activity, but jurors
werent buying her act. Convicted on her second charge of first-degree
murder, she was formally sentenced to death on November 16.
Her latest
stay of execution was granted by a federal court in June 1990, and the
case remains under appeal. In the unlikely event of Judis release from
Florida, Colorado authorities stand ready to prosecute capital charges
in the death of Bobby Joe Morris.
UPDATE: Judy was executed March 30, 1998.
Florida Court Denies Appeal to Killer Known as "Black
Widow"
CNN.com
March 27, 1998
TALLAHASSEE, Florida (CNN) -- Florida's Supreme Court
unanimously ruled not to delay the scheduled Monday execution of Judy
Buenoano, known as the "black widow" because she poisoned her husband,
and drowned her son and tried to blow up her fiance.
Buenoano is to be
put to death in the electric chair at 7:01 a.m. Monday for the arsenic
poisoning of Sgt. James Goodyear, three months after he returned to
Orlando from Vietnam in 1971.
Buenoano is serving a life sentence for
the 1980 drowning of her 19-year-old partially paralyzed son, Michael,
and she was sentenced to 12 years in prison for the 1983 attempted car-bombing
murder of John Gentry in Pensacola.
Until the car bombing, Buenoano had
not been investigated or under suspicion for the earlier deaths of her
husband and son. In Thursday's ruling, the Florida court rejected
appeals based on the background of a juror at Buenoano's trial and the
work of an FBI chemist. Buenoano's attorney said she was working on a
federal appeal.
Florida hasn't executed a woman in 150 years, and
only two women have been executed in the nation since the U.S. Supreme
Court allowed capital punishment to resume in 1976 after a three year
moratorium. But Buenoano's case has not drawn as much attention as Karla
Faye Tucker's execution in Texas earlier this year. Russell Edgar, who
prosecuted Buenoano years ago for her son's drowning, gave her a
nickname that stuck. "I likened her to a black widow who fed off her
males and her young."
Buenoano said she has been the victim of "defamation,
assassination of character... to make me into a vile monster." Also, she
says she is innocent and insists jurors have been swayed by manufactured
evidence.
"I would have found myself guilty if I were the jury,"
she said.
But three separate juries have agreed that Buenoano's motive was money
-- to collect life insurance. Edgar, who calls it "twisted greed," said:
"I feel sorry for her surviving children. They're without a father,
without a brother and now without a mother, and we lay it all at Judy's
feet 'cause she did it."
Judias (Judi) Buenoano - Florida's "Black Widow"
Fight the Death Penalty USA
Judi Buenoano became the first woman to get
the electric chair in America since Rhonda Belle Martin was executed in
Alabama on the 11th October 1957.
She was the first woman to be executed
in Florida since 1848, when a slave girl named Celia was hanged for
battering her master to death.
As at July 2000, four other women remain
on death row there. Her execution on the 30th March 1998 was a
relatively low key affair unlike those of the two women who had preceded
her to the death chamber. (Velma Barfield and Karla Faye Tucker)
She was
not an especially attractive 54 year old and her execution was the third
in a series of four that Florida carried out in quick succession that
Spring. It did not attract the media attention that Karla Faye Tucker's
execution had.
Early Days
Like so many of the other criminals discussed in
these pages she had had a difficult childhood. She was born Judias Welty,
in Quanah, Texas, on April 4, 1943, the daughter of a farm laborer. She
was of Latina ethnic background.
Apparently Judi described her mother as
a member of a non-existent Mesquite Apache tribe although they were not
close to each other. Her mother (also named Judias) died of tuberculosis
when Judi was four years old, and the family were parted. Judi and her
infant brother Robert were sent to live with their grandparents, while
two older children were put up for adoption.
Her father remarried and took Judi and Robert to live
with his new wife in Roswell, New Mexico. Judi was miserable there and
claimed that both her father and step mother abused her.
Allegedly she
was beaten, starved forced to work long hours as a virtual slave -
hardly an ideal upbringing for an adolescent girl. Her family eventually
pushed her too far and at the age of 14 she was sentenced to 2 months in
prison for attacking them and her two step brothers.
After she was
released she chose to go a reform school rather than back to her abusive
family and went to the Foothills High School in Albuquerque from where
she graduated in 1959, at sixteen. She had, not surprisingly, a poor
view of her family and is reported to have said of her brother Robert "I
wouldn't spit down his throat if his guts were on fire".
Her first job came in 1960 when she was employed as a
nursing assistant in Roswell under the assumed name of Anna Schultz. In
1961 she gave birth to an illegitimate son whom she christened Michael
Schultz. She refused to confirm rumors that his father was a pilot from
the nearby USAF base.
A life of crime
She married for the first time on January 21st 1962,
to James Goodyear who was an air force officer and Judi gave birth to
their first child, James, Jr. in January 16, 1966. James Goodyear
adopted Michael.
In 1967 they had a daughter, Kimberley and were now
living in Orlando, Florida. 1968 saw Judi open her first business - the
Conway Acres Child Care Center in Orlando with the financial backing of
her husband. James Goodyear, Sr. had done a tour of duty in Vietnam and
three months after his return home was admitted to the U.S. Naval
Hospital in Orlando, suffering from mysterious symptoms.
He died on
September 15th 1971, and Judi cashed in his three life insurance
policies. Towards the end of that same year Judi suffered a house fire
at her home for which she received a further $90,000 from the insurers.
Judi soon found a new boyfriend in the shape of Bobby Joe Morris who
lived in Pensacola and with whom she moved in with in 1972.
Her new life
was marred by her son Michael who was disruptive at school and of low
intelligence. She was able to get him into residential foster care for a
time. Bobby Morris moved to Trinidad, Colorado, in 1977 and Judi and her
family (including Michael) joined him there a little later.
Before she
left Pensacola, however, she was the victim of another house fire which
brought another insurance pay out. Soon after she moved to Colorado,
Bobby Joe became ill and was admitted to hospital on January 4th, 1978.
Again the cause was a mystery to his doctors and he was soon discharged.
Two days after he went home he collapsed and was taken back to hospital
where he died on January 21st of that year. Once again Judi benefited
from the insurance policies taken out on his life.
His family, however, suspected that Bobby Joe had
been murdered and that he was not the only victim. In 1974, Judi and
Bobby Joe had been visiting Bobby Joe's hometown of Brewton in Alabama,
where a man from Florida had been found dead in a motel room.
The local
police received an anonymous phone call, traced to a local pay phone
which led them to the motel room where the dead body of a man was found
who had been shot in the chest and had his throat cut. It is claimed
that Bobby Joe's mother overheard Judi telling "The son of a bitch
shouldn't have come up here in the first place. He knew if he came up
here he was gonna die".
Bobby Joe confessed to his part in this killing
on his deathbed. However at the time the police could find no
fingerprints inside the room and no bullet was recovered from the corpse
so they did not have enough evidence to bring charges.
On May 3rd 1978,
Judi legally changed her surname and that of her children to Buenoano,
the Spanish equivalent of Goodyear, in an apparent tribute to her late
husband. She and her family moved back to Pensacola. Michael Buenoano,
as he had now become, had done badly a school and joined the army in
June 1979.
He was based in Georgia. He soon started to show signs of
illness and was diagnosed as suffering from arsenic poisoning which
rapidly affected his upper and lower limbs.
He was given heavy metal leg
braces in the military hospital and on discharge into the care of his
mother unable to walk or use his hands.
On May 13th, 1980 Judi took
Michael and his younger brother James canoeing on the East River. Sadly
the canoe capsized. James and Judi were able to get out from under the
upturned canoe but Michael, weighed down by the heavy braces didn't
stand a chance and drowned.
The police accepted Judi's account of what
happened but the army investigators were not so easily taken in. Judi
received $20,000 from Michael's military life insurance but the sheriffs
officers began taking interest in the case when it was discovered that
there were also two other, civilian, policies on Michael's life.
It was
suggested by handwriting experts that Michael's signature on the
insurance applications may have been forged. After Michael's death Judi
opened a beauty salon in Gulf Breeze and also began seeing a Pensacola
businessman named John Gentry II.
She told John Gentry that she had
various bogus qualifications and had worked as a senior nurse in
Florida. She persuaded him that they should take out life insurance
policies on each other in October 1982 and later increased the size of
the one on him to$500,000.
She also persuaded him to take vitamin
capsules which made him feel nauseous and dizzy. When he complained of
these effects Judi allegedly told him to double the dose!
On June 25th 1983 Judi announced she was pregnant and
John went out to get some champagne to celebrate.
When he started his
car a bomb exploded and he was seriously injured as a result. Four days
later he was well enough to answer questions from the police which led
them to examine Judi's background in minute detail. Many inconsistencies
between what John thought was the case and what the police found to be
reality emerged.
Judi had no medical qualifications, she was not
pregnant and had booked a cruise for herself and her children. She had
also recently been telling her friends that John had a terminal illness.
Several of the alleged vitamin capsules were recovered and found to
contain the arsenic.
At this stage however, there wasn't sufficient
evidence to charge Judi with attempted murder. A later search of Judi's
house revealed wire and tape in her bedroom which matched the remains
from the bomb in John's car. Later the police also traced the source of
the dynamite and were able it to link Judi through telephone records.
She was duly arrested and bailed on the charge of attempted murder of
John Gentry. On January 11th 1984 she was arrested again and charged
with first degree murder in respect of Michael's death. In February the
body of Bobby Joe Morris was exhumed and arsenic found. It was also
found in the body of James Goodyear who was exhumed in March of that
year.
Judi was tried separately for each murder and for the
attempted murder. She was sentenced to life imprisonment without parole
for the first twenty-five years on June 6th 1984 for Michael's murder.
Surprisingly she was acquitted of the charge of attempted murder but she
was found guilty of first degree murder in the case of her first husband
James Goodyear.
The jury deliberated for 10 1/2 hours and for this she
was sentenced to death by electrocution on the 26th of November 1985.
Colorado prosecutors decided not to continue with case against her over
the murder of Bobby Joe Morris as she was already under sentence of
death in Florida. It is estimated that she collected around $240,000 in
insurance money from the deaths of her husband, son and boyfriend in
Colorado.
On death row
Condemned female inmates are housed at the Broward
Correctional Center at Pembroke Pines in Florida - where Judi was to
spend the next 13 years. She continued to appeal and had three death
warrants handed down over the years. She spent her time confined to 6 x
9 x 9.5 feet high cell.
Death row inmates are served meals three times a
day: at 5:00 a.m., from 10:30 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. and from 4:00 p.m. to
4:30 p.m. Food is prepared by prison personnel and is transported in
insulated carts to the cells. Inmates are allowed plates and spoons to
eat their meals. Visitors are allowed every weekend from 9 a.m. to 3
p.m.
Inmates may receive mail every day except holidays and weekends.
They may have cigarettes, snacks, radios and black and white televisions
in their cells. They do not have cable television or air-conditioning
and they are not allowed to associate with each other. They can watch
church services on closed circuit television. While on death watch, (after
a death warrant has been signed) inmates may have radios and black and
white televisions positioned outside their cell bars.
Death row inmates wear orange t-shirts and blue
colored pants (as worn by regular inmates). They are counted at least
once an hour and are escorted in handcuffs to the exercise yard and the
shower.
They are confined to their cells at all other times, except for
medical reasons, exercise, social or legal visits or media interviews.
It is a fairly harsh regime for long term incarceration. Judi spent the
13 years writing letters and crocheting blankets and baby clothes and
also taught Bible study to other inmates. A former death row inmate,
Deirdre Hunt, claimed that "Judy was like a mother to me."
Execution
All executions in Florida are carried out at the
State Penitentiary at Starke and prior to 2000 all were carried out by
electrocution in the state's 75-year-old electric chair. A total of 240
men and one woman have been put to death in the three-legged chair which
was built by inmates in 1923. (It was rebuilt in 1999 for the execution
of Allen Lee "Tiny" Davis who was considered to be too heavy for the old
chair)
Judi's last appeal was turned down on March 29th 1998 (see
Appendix) and the then state Governor Lawton Chiles duly signed her
death warrant. She was transferred to Starke and confined to a 12-by-7
foot cell where she passed her time watching a small black and white
television through the bars in the death watch area adjacent to the
execution room.
Judi spent her final hours seeing her adult children,
Kim Hawkins and James Goodyear, other relatives and her legal and
religious advisers. Jeanne Eaton, a cousin, who visited before the
execution was quoted as saying afterwards "She had no fear at all, she’s
mostly afraid of leaving her children and how upset they were." In a
television interview a few days before the execution Judi said "I would
like to clear the record for my grandson, I would like for him to know
that his grandmother was not a murderer."
Execution was set for 7.00 a.m. on the Monday 30th
March 1998. At 4:30 a.m. she was showered and dressed, probably by
female corrections and her head shaved to give good electrical
conductivity and so that her hair did not catch fire during the
electrocution. Her final meal consisted of broccoli, asparagus,
strawberries and hot tea.
Judi entered the execution chamber at 7:02 a.m.
accompanied by several guards. She was strapped into the large oak chair
(see left) with 8 leather straps over her waist, wrists, chest and legs.
The calf and head piece electrodes were fitted, each containing
moistened sponge to reduce burning of the flesh. Asked if she had a
final statement she replied "No, sir," squeezing her eyes shut and
keeping them shut, not looking at the witnesses on the other side of a
glass partition.
A leather mask was placed over her face and at the
signal from the warden the automatic electrocution cycle commenced at
7:08 a.m. A small amount of white smoke (or steam?) was seen to curl up
from her right leg throughout the 38 second cycle, but there were no
flames.
She was pronounced dead at 7:13 a.m. In an interview afterwards
prison spokesman Gene Morris said. "She was very solemn. This is the
first time I’ve seen that expression on her," he said. "She stared
straight ahead, made no visible expression." Judi's was the third of a
series of four executions carried out in Florida over the period
23/03/98 to 31/03/98. The identity of the executioner is a well kept
secret.
The execution protocol is as follows : - The
automatic cycle begins with a nominal 2,300 volts, 9.5 amps, for 8
seconds; 1,000 volts, 4 amps for 22 seconds; and 2,300 volts, 9.5 amps
for 8 seconds (actual values below). When the cycle is complete, the
equipment is manually disconnected and the safety switch is then opened.
In Judi's case the cycles of electricity were officially recorded.
Conclusion
Judy was dubbed the "Black Widow" at her trial by
Pensacola prosecutor Russell Edgar and the name was ceased upon by the
media. Edgar described her as a scheming, cold-blooded killer. "She’s
like a black widow - she feeds off her mates and her young. It does
appear the motive was twisted greed," he said.
Like so many of the other cases examined on these
pages Judi had a hard and difficult upbringing. One wonders how this
affected her personality. Did her own low self worth lead her to the
view that the lives of others were also of little value while her hatred
of childhood poverty make her resolve never to be poor herself?
It would
seem that the motive for the arsons and the murders was principally for
financial gain as Russell Edgar said and that she had a shallow
relationship with her husband and boyfriends. Did she think, as so many
have done before her, that she would somehow get away with murder.
She
very nearly did - had she not tried to kill John Gentry she may well
have done. According to Ted Chamberlin, the Pensacola detective who
painstakingly examined her past and discovered her trail of insurance
scams and death. "Judy just went one murder too far. If she’d just let
that last boyfriend alone, she probably could have walked away from the
other murders."
He described her as " the coldest killer I ever knew" It
seems that once a person has committed the first murder each successive
crime is easier and when the perpetrator can just walk away from it
without too many awkward questions (as she had done) - why not do it
again when it so profitable?
It is probable also that she never thought that she
would actually one day sit in the electric chair. Hardly any of the
women who committed murder in the US have been sentenced to death and
virtually none executed even if the occasional jury had voted for death.
No woman had been executed in Florida in her life time and only two
others in the country as whole, so the potential of the death penalty
was unlikely to have been much of a deterrent to her.
Amnesty International
Judy Buenoano was the 1st woman put to death in
Florida since 1848, and only the 3rd woman executed in the nation since
1976. She was pronounced dead at 7:13 a.m. (eastern time)
Buenoano, 54, a former nail salon owner, was executed
for the arsenic poisoning of her husband in 1971. Prosecutors said she
committed that murder for the same reasons she killed her son in 1980
and tried to kill her fiance in 1983 -- insurance money.
She also was
suspected of killing a boyfriend in 1978 but was never charged because
she had already been sentenced to death.
The last woman executed in Florida was a freed slave
who was hanged for killing her master. Only 2 other women had been
executed since the U.S. Supreme Court lifted the ban on the death
penalty in 1976, and both were by injection. In 1984, North Carolina
executed Velma Barfield for poisoning her boyfriend.
Last month, Texas
put Karla Faye Tucker to death for a double-pickax murder. Tucker was a
telegenic, avowed Christian who ministered to her fellow inmates,
expressed contrition for her crimes and even received support from the
pope.
Buenoano crocheted blankets and baby
clothes in prison and said she wanted to be remembered as a good mother.
She adamantly maintained her son's drowning was an accident. "Seeing the
face of Jesus, that's what I think about," she recently told a Florida
television station. "I'm ready to go home."
Until she tried to kill her
fiance, John Gentry, in 1983 by bombing his car in Pensacola, Buenoano
had not been suspected of the other killings. Gentry said she had given
him pills that made him sick but told him they were vitamins.
When
investigators realized Buenoano was Spanish for "Goodyear," and learned
she had been married to Air Force Sgt. James Goodyear, they exhumed his
body and found he had lethal amounts of arsenic in his body when he died
in 1971.
There was also evidence she fatally poisoned a boyfriend, Bobby
Joe Morris, in Trinidad, Colo., in 1978. She was convicted of drowning
Michael Goodyear, her 19-year-old son, by giving him arsenic -- which
might have caused his paralysis -- and pushing him out of a canoe.
Monday would have been his 37th birthday.
The motive for the murders was "twisted greed,"
because she was trying to claim about $240,000 in insurance money, said
prosecutor Russell Edgar, who gave Buenoano her nickname.
On Sunday, the
11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta and then the U.S. Supreme
Court denied her last appeals, which claimed she was innocent and called
Florida's electric chair "barbaric.... It belongs in Frankenstein's
laboratory."
Judy
Buenoano
Reuters
FLORIDA: An attorney for death row inmate Judi
Buenoano, who may be the next woman executed in the United States, told
the Florida Supreme Court on Thursday sealed FBI documents might weaken
the case against her client. Buenoano, 54, who has been nicknamed the "Black
Widow," is scheduled to be electrocuted March 30 for the death of her
1st husband.
She also was convicted of drowning her handicapped son and
plotting to blow up her boyfriend. Buenoano's husband, Air Force Sgt.
James Goodyear, died of an apparent heart attack shortly after returning
home from a tour of duty in Vietnam in 1971. But an investigation 13
years later revealed that he had been poisoned. Buenoano was convicted
in 1985.
Sylvia Smith, Buenoano's state-appointed attorney,
said she has been unable to see sealed documents that might cast doubt
on the accuracy of FBI analysis of arsenic-laced pills that were used to
convict Buenoano.
But state prosecutors, who pointed out that Buenoano
has been convicted of multiple murders, told the court that Smith was
only trying to postpone her client's execution date. "This case clearly
shows that (Smith) would like to start this case all over again," said
Katherine Blanco, assistant attorney general arguing against the appeal.
In April, 1997, the U.S. Department of
Justice issued a report detailing the results of an 18-month
investigation of certain components of the FBI's laboratory. The records
contained allegations critical of the reliability and integrity of some
of the examiners. Much of the report was sealed.
Smith argued that the
FBI report could bolster her case if it showed that the scientist or lab
was incompetent. A lower court ruled against her and the record remained
sealed. When Texas executed Karla Faye Tucker on Tuesday, 14 years had
passed since a woman was put to death in the United States.
As Buenoano's execution date approaches, death penalty opponents are
expected to focus attention on the fact that Buenoano would be the 1st
woman executed in Florida since 1848.
(Source: Reuters)
Judy
Buenoano
St. Petersburg Times
FLORIDA: Saying she is afraid her mother will be
disfigured by Florida's electric chair, the daughter of a woman on death
row begged state lawmakers to allow execution by lethal injection
instead of electrocution.
Kimberly Hawkins, 30, said that "I'm fixing to watch
my mom die in the electric chair. People have burned alive in it. I
don't want to see her burned alive in it. I accept the penalty that she
has to die. But we can choose a better way for her to die." Her mother,
Judy Buenoano, is scheduled to die in the electric chair on March 30.
Buenoano was convicted of poisoning her husband with arsenic in 1971,
then collecting $85,000 in life insurance proceeds. Hawkins was 3 when
her father died.
Florida's electric chair has been idle
since last March 25, when a footlong flame erupted from Pedro Medina's
headpiece as he was being electrocuted. The fire was blamed on human
error. Later, the Florida Supreme Court ruled that the chair is not
cruel or unusual punishment.
The fire led many to say injection is a
more humane method of execution. Tuesday, Rep. Tracy Stafford, a
Democrat from Broward County, argued that the electric chair "tends to
be sensationalized and trivialized. There are few things we do that are
more solemn than carrying out a death penalty.
Sometimes, electrocution
lends itself to a little more frivolity than I think the state should be
involved in." Stafford could not persuade his colleagues to unplug Old
Sparky just yet, and the House committee voted down a propsoal to
institute lethal injection. The issue may be revived this spring, as
another bill moving through the Florida Senate also promotes lethal
injection as an alternative to the electric chair.
Rep. Victor Crist, R.-Temple Terrace, who once
suggested the guillotine as a humane means of execution, said
electrocution is quick and painless. Hawkins "was very emotional and
very touching,but she was incaccurate in her information.
She said that
bodies are scarred by electrocution, and they are not. Medina had a
slight scar; it is like sunburn in a spot," Crist said. He added that he
is concerned that nay change in death penalty methods could spur appeals,
slowing executions for the 380 people now on Florida's death row.
Hawkins, a waitress in Navarre, near
Pensacola, was 16 when her mother was arrested. Dubbed the "black widow,"
Buenoano, 54, also was convicted in 1980 of killing her 19-year-old
paralyzed son by pushing him from a canoe.
In 1983, she was found guilty
of attempted murder in a car bombing that injured her boyfriend, John
Gentry. She had insurance policies on both men. Buenoano would be the
1st woman that Florida has executed since 1848, 3 years after statehood,
she is 1 of 6 women on Florida's death row.
Also this week, a lawyer for Buenoano went to the
state Supreme Court, alleging that the state has refused to disclose
information that would show an FBI crime lab manager provided unreliabel
evidence against her client.
Judy
Buenoano
Associated Press
Monday, Feb. 9, 1998
She poisoned her husband with
arsenic, drowned her paralyzed son and tried to blow up her fiance with
a car bomb. Another boyfriend mysteriously died. It's no wonder that
Judy Buenoano is called the "Black Widow." "When I was asking the judge
in the drowning case to admit the other killings (as evidence), I said 'Judge
... she's like a black widow -- she feeds off her mates and her young,'"
prosecutor Russell Edgar said.
Ms. Buenoano, a 54-year-old former nail salon owner,
is scheduled to die in Florida's electric chair March 30. The death
sentence would come months after Karla Faye Tucker of Texas become the
2nd woman to die in the United States since the Supreme Court allowed
executions to resume in 1976.
Ms. Tucker's lethal injection drew
worldwide attention, including pleas from the pope for clemency, because
of her behind-bars religious conversion. There has been no similar
outcry for Ms. Buenoano, described as one of the most infamous women in
Florida's prison system.
Ms. Buenoano's daughter believes she is innocent, but
concedes little has changed about her mother since she went to prison
more than a decade ago. "Even now she is the same," said Kimberly
Hawkins. "I love her letters. They cheer me up."
Investigators 1st became suspicious of Ms. Buenoano
in 1983, after her fiance, John Gentry, survived a car bombing in
downtown Pensacola. Gentry, who met Ms. Buenoano at a mud-wrestling
match in the early 1980s, told police she had also given him pills that
made him sick. She told them they were vitamins.
That was the key to
uncovering the other crimes in Ms. Buenoano's past, Edgar said.
Investigators had plenty to find -- including the crime that sent her to
death row, the murder of Air Force Sgt. James Goodyear. Goodyear died in
1971 of arsenic poisoning 3 months after he returned to Orlando from a
year's tour in Vietnam and 9 years after he married the former cocktail
waitress. Ms. Buenoano collected $85,000 in life insurance and veteran
benefits after Goodyear died.
In each of the 3 cases -- that of her husband, her
son and her fiance -- she received or stood to collect insurance
benefits, Edgar said. A year before being sent to death row in 1985, Ms.
Buenoano was convicted of the 1980 drowning of Michael Goodyear, the son
she had as a teen-ager before she met the Air Force sergeant. Michael,
19, partially paralyzed and wearing leg and arm braces, was pushed out
of a canoe into a river by his mother. Edgar said evidence also suggests
Ms. Buenoano poisoned boyfriend Bobby Joe Morris in Trinidad, Colo., in
1978. Colorado prosecutors decided not to file murder charges after she
got the death sentence in Florida.
The last known execution of a woman in Florida
occurred in 1848, when a freed slave was hanged in Jacksonville for the
murder of her master. Ms. Tucker, who hacked 2 people t death, was only
the 2nd women executed in the nation since the Supreme Court lifted the
death penalty ban in 1976.
Mrs. Hawkins said her mother would rather die than
live her life in the Broward Correctional Institution just north of
Miami, where the 6 women sentenced to death in Florida are housed. "She's
not scared because it's like she said, she goes to a better place," said
Mrs. Hawkins, 30. "Because where she's at now is not fun."
Ms. Buenoano was born in 1943 in Quanah, Texas, a
little town 200 miles northwest of Dallas. Her mother died when she was
4, and Ms. Buenoano spent her early years passed among relatives and
foster families in Texas and Oklahoma.
She told a federal judge during a
1990 hearing that she was sexually abused in some homes, physically
abused in others and many times went hungry.
At age 10, she lived in
Roswell, N.M., with her father and new wife whom she said beat her. She
got pregnant at 17 and gave birth to Michael in March 1961. A few months
later she met Goodyear. Now, as she waits for her execution, she spends
her time reading and knitting blankets and baby clothes that she gives
to her daughter to sell.
Ms. Buenoano's best hope to avoid becoming the next
woman scheduled to be executed may rely on Florida's means of death.
During Florida's last electrocution a year ago, a foot-long flame shot
out from the headpiece worn by the inmate, Pedro Medina. The state
Supreme Court upheld use of the electric chair last fall, but a federal
judge scheduled a hearing on the constitutionality of the chair later
this month.
Black Widow Says She's Innocent, But Tired and Ready
to Die
Orlando Sentinel
March 18, 1998
PENSACOLA, Fla. -- "Black Widow'' killer Judy
Buenoano, in a sometimes tearful television interview, has said that she
is ready to die, but is appealing to prove to her grandson she is not a
murderer.
Ms. Buenoano continued to insist she is innocent of killing
her husband with arsenic, drowning a teen-age son and attempting to
murder her fiance with a car bomb, during the interview broadcast Monday
night by WEAR-TV.
She is scheduled for execution March 30 for the 1971
murder of husband James Goodyear in Orlando. If pending appeals fail,
she would be the first woman executed in Florida in 150 years.
Ms. Buenoano was questioned by WEAR anchorwoman Sue
Straughn, who had patronized Ms. Buenoano's Pensacola nail salon before
the condemned woman's arrest in 1983. ``Seeing the face of Jesus, that's
what I think about. I'm ready to go home,'' Ms. Buenoano said, breaking
into tears. ``I'm tired, Sue. It's enough of it. I'm ready to go.'' Her
lawyers contend newly discovered records cast doubt on the accuracy of
evidence processed by the FBI crime laboratory. They also are
challenging the constitutionality of Florida's electric chair. ``I would
like to clear the record for my grandson,'' Ms. Buenoano said. ``I would
like for him to know that his grandmother was not a murderer.''
Ms. Buenoano, 54, who lived in suburban Gulf Breeze,
was interviewed at Broward Correctional Institution in Pembroke Pines,
outside Fort Lauderdale. She previously had declined to be interviewed
by The Associated Press. Pensacola Police Det. Ted Chamberlain began
unraveling the case after the 1983 car bombing seriously injured John
Gentry in downtown Pensacola.
On learning Chamberlain Buenoano is
Spanish for "good year,'' the detective managed to find out Ms.
Buenoano had changed her last name from Goodyear. Looking into Judy
Goodyear's past led him to the 1980 drowning of her 19-year-old
paraplegic son, Michael Goodyear, when their canoe supposedly capsized
during a river fishing trip. Then Chamberlain learned that Goodyear's
husband, an Air Force sergeant, died after returning from Vietnam and a
boyfriend, Bobby Joe Morris, died in 1978, when they were living
together in Trinidad, Colo. Both deaths were mysterious.
Bodies were exhumed and autopsies indicated evidence
of poisoning in all three cases. Poison also was found in ``vitamin''
capsules Gentry said Ms Buenoano had given him. He said he had stopped
taking them when they made him sick.
In all four cases, Ms. Buenoano was
the beneficiary of life insurance policies. She was convicted and
sentenced to terms of life and 12 years for murdering her son and for
attempting to kill Gentry, before she was convicted in a separate trial
for her husband's death. Colorado authorities decided not to charge her
in the death of Morris after the Florida convictions.
In the television
interview, Ms. Buenoano contends the deaths and the bombing all were
coincidental. She was most vehement in denying she had pushed her son,
his paralyzed legs weighed down by heavy braces, from their canoe as
prosecutors alleged.
She said Michael disappeared as she rescued her
younger son, James, then about 12. "I almost lost both of my sons that
day,'' she said, stopping to wipe tears from her eyes. "Mothers just
don't murder their children. If I'd have lost both of them, I don't know
what I would have done. They would have had to put me in a mental
institution.''
Ms. Buenoano said if her husband died of arsenic, he
had been poisoned in Vietnam. "He came home from Vietnam ill and he
never got well,'' she said. "It had nothing to do with me. I was not in
Vietnam.''
There has been no public outcry over her impending
electrocution as there had been prior to the Feb. 4 execution in Texas
of another woman, Karla Faye Tucker, who admitted murdering two people
with a pickax. "Karla was a young female, very attractive and she had
become a Christian in prison,'' Ms. Buenoano said. "We all prayed that
she would be granted a stay of execution and clemency because we felt
that she was a different person and she deserved a chance. Possibly, I
am a different person. But I was a Christian when I came here. I was a
devout Catholic. I've not changed in that.''
No Victims' Kin See 'Black Widow' Die
Buenoano Had
No Last Words
By Kathleen Sweeney - Jacksonville Sun
Tuesday, March 31, 1998
STARKE - Judy Buenoano told
her family her only fear about going to the electric chair yesterday was
leaving her children behind. Buenoano, known as the ''Black Widow'' for
preying on those who loved her, was executed for murdering her husband.
She also was convicted of drowning her paraplegic son and with blowing
up her fiance's car. She was the first woman ever to be electrocuted in
Florida. Daniel Remeta, convicted of killing a convenience store clerk
in Ocala during a multistate crime spree in 1985, was scheduled to be
executed this morning, the last of four inmates executed in nine days.
While the 54-year-old said she was
unafraid, her face told a different story yesterday as prison officials
nearly carried the frail woman into the death chamber at the Florida
State Prison. She clenched her fists, shut her eyes and lowered her head
as prison officials securely strapped her into the wooden chair.
She
didn't look at the 46 witnesses behind a glass partition. When asked if
she had any last words before 2,300 volts of electricity were applied to
her body, her eyes remained shut and she whispered, ''No, sir.'' At 7:08
a.m., the power was turned on.
She flinched, hands still in fists as
smoke rose from her bare right leg. She was pronounced dead five minutes
later - the day that would have been her drowned son's 37th birthday.
''I don't have any fear about where Judy is right now,
and she had no fear,'' said Jeanne Eaton, a cousin from Houston. ''She
was mostly afraid of leaving her children and how upset they were.''
Buenoano maintained her innocence
until she died, claiming her son's death was an accident and denying
murdering the others. Prosecutors said she killed to collect $240,000 in
insurance. Until she tried to kill her fiance in 1983 by bombing his car
in Pensacola,
Buenoano had not been a suspect in the other killings. It
led to the body of her husband, Air Force Sgt. James Goodyear, being
exhumed. Lethal amounts of arsenic were found in his body.
Pensacola
police detective Ted Chamberlain, who uncovered the murders, witnessed
the execution and said the punishment didn't seem cruel. ''Here you have
a woman who killed her own - husband, boyfriends and son,'' he said. ''This
was a mean person. She needed to go.'' The victims' families were not
represented at the prison. ''Judy could have been guilty, she could have
been innocent,'' said Eaton. ''The way it was handled, she could only be
convicted.''
Buenoano spent her final day watching a hunting and
fishing show, eating chocolates, reminiscing with her children and
cousin. She finished reading Remember Me, a suspense novel. Her last
meal was steamed broccoli and asparagus, strawberries and hot tea.
Eaton
wondered why her cousin didn't receive the same support as Karla Faye
Tucker, whose death sentence in Texas was opposed by the pope and civil
rights leader Jesse Jackson. She was executed in February. ''She may not
have been as photogenic, as young or as pretty as Karla, but she was
just as good a Christian,'' Eaton said.
Judias
Buenoano
Dubbed "The Black Widow" for preying on her
family and leaving a dead husband, boyfriend and son in her trail, Judy
Buenoano was executed on Florida's temperamental Old Sparky on March 30,
1998.
Asked if she had a final statement, she answered
weakly, "No, sir," squeezing her eyes shut and keeping them
shut, not looking at the witnesses on the other side of the glass. In
her final days Judy said she wanted to be remembered as a good mother.
"Seeing the face of Jesus, that's what I think about," she
recently told a TV station. "I'm ready to go home."
In June 1971, Buenoano's husband, James Goodyear,
returned to Orlando from a tour of duty in South Vietnam and started
feeling ill. Goodyear died in September. Buenoano went to live with
Bobby Joe Morris, who also grew ill and died. Then John Gentry, who
started getting ill and checked into a hospital. Gentry had vitamins
that Buenoano was giving him analyzed and found poison.
Buenoano was convicted of drowning her 19-year-old
son, Michael Goodyear, in 1980 by pushing him out of a canoe into a
river. He was paralyzed from arsenic poisoning and was wearing heavy leg
and arm braces.
Buenoano was not a suspect in the death of her husband,
James Goodyear, or her son's drowning until she tried to kill her fiance,
John Gentry, and collect on a $500,000 insurance policy by blowing up
his car in 1983. After the attempt on Gentry's life, she changed her
name from "Goodyear" to the"Buenoano" (good year in
Spanish). When police made the Goodyear-Buenoano connection the kid's
body was exhumed and it was found to be plump with arsenic.
Prosecutors in Colorado also found evidence Ms.
Buenoano poisoned a boyfriend in 1978 but did not charge her because she
had already gotten the death penalty in Florida. Judy mantained her
innocence until the very end.
Judias Buenoano
Born at Quanah, Texas, on April 4, 1943,
Judias Welty was the daughter of an itinerant farm worker, named after
her mother. In later years, Judi would describe her mother as a full-blooded
member of the nonexistent Mesquite Apache tribe, but in fact, they
hardly knew each other.
The elder Judias Welty died of tuberculosis when
her daughter was barely two years old, and the family disintegrated.
Judi and her infant brother Robert were sent to live with their
grandparents, while two older siblings were placed for adoption.
It was all downhill from there, in terms of Judis family life.
Reunited with her father in Roswell, New Mexico, after his next marriage,
she found herself the target of abuse from both parents--beaten, starved,
burned with cigarettes, forced to work slave hours around the house. At
age fourteen, her anger finally exploded: Judi scalded two of her
stepbrothers with hot grease and lit into her parents with flying fists,
feet, any object she could lay her hands on.
The episode cost her sixty
days in jail, confined with adult prostitutes, but when the judge asked
if she was ready to go home, Judi opted for reform school. She remained
at Foothills High School--a girls reformatory in Albuquerque-- until her
graduation in 1959, at age sixteen, and she would despise her family
from that day on. Of brother Robert, she once said, I wouldnt spit down
his throat if his guts were on fire.
The year 1960 found Judi back in Roswell, working as a nurses aide under
the pseudonym of Anna Schultz. She gave birth to an illegitimate son,
christened Michael Schultz, on March 30, 1961, and ever after refused
comment on rumors that his father was a pilot from the nearby air force
base.
On January 21, 1962, she married another air force officer, James
Goodyear, and their first child--James, Jr.--was born four years later,
on January 16, 1966. Judis husband celebrated the event by adopting
Michael Schultz. Daughter Kimberly followed in 1967, after the family
had moved to Orlando, Florida.
A year later, Judias opened the Conway
Acres Child Care Center in Orlando, listing her husband as co-owner
despite his continuing service with the Air Force, which would soon
include a tour of duty in Vietnam.
In fact, James Goodyear, Sr., had
been home from Southeast Asia for barely three months when he was
admitted to the U.S. Naval Hospital in Orlando, suffering from symptoms
staff physicians never quite identified. He died on September 15, 1971,
and Judi waited a discreet five days before cashing in his three life
insurance policies. Before years end, an accidental blaze at her Orlando
home paid Judy another $90,000 in fire insurance. It was rotten luck all
around ... but at least it paid well.
Loneliness was not a problem for the recent widow. She moved her family
to Pensacola in 1972, and was living with new lover Bobby Joe the
following year. Son Michael, meanwhile, had become a problem for his
mother, raising hell in school, scoring in the dull-normal range on IQ
tests.
James Goodyears death barred Mike from treatment at a residential
facility reserved for military dependents, but Judi wangled an
evaluation at the state hospital in 1974, farming her first-born out to
foster care with a provision for psychiatric treatment. Bobby Morris
moved to Trinidad, Colorado, in 1977, inviting Judi and her brood to
join him.
She hung around Pensacola long enough to collect fire
insurance on a second house, then reclaimed Michael from foster care and
moved west with her tribe, settling in Trinidad as Judias Morris. Bobby
Joe was admitted to San Rafael Hospital on January 4, 1978, but doctors
could find no cause for his sudden illness, and he was released to Judis
care on January 21.
Two days later, he collapsed at the dinner table and
was rushed back to the hospital, where he died on January 28, his death
officially ascribed to cardiac arrest and metabolic acidosis. In early
February, Judi cashed three life insurance policies on Morris, further
fattening her bank account. Bobby Joes family suspected murder from the
first, and Morris was not the only victim on their list.
In 1974, Judi
and Bobby Joe had been visiting Morriss hometown of Brewton, Alabama,
when a male resident of Florida was found dead in a Brewton motel. An
anonymous call, traced to a local pay phone, led police to the room
where the victim was found, shot in the chest with a .22-caliber weapon,
his throat slashed for good measure.
After the news broke, Bobby Joes mother overheard Judy telling Bobby Joe,
The son of a bitch shouldnt have come up here in the first place. He
knew if he came up here he was gonna die. Later, raving in delirium on
his deathbed, Morris blurted out, Judi, we should never have done that
terrible thing. Police in Brewton, meanwhile, report that they could
find no fingerprints inside the room, no bullet was recovered from the
corpse, and they have no firm suspects in the case.
On May 3, 1978,
Judias legally changed her own last name and that of her children to
Buenoano, the Spanish equivalent of Goodyear, in an apparent tribute to
her late husband and mythical Apache mother. A month later, the family
was back in Pensacola, settling into a home on Whisper Pine Drive, in
suburban Gulf Breeze.
Michael Buenoano had continued his pattern of academic failure by
dropping out of high school in his sophomore year, and he joined the
army in June 1979, drawing an assignment to Ft. Benning, Georgia, after
basic training. En route to his new post, he stopped off to visit his
mother in Florida, and that was the beginning of the end. When he
reached Ft. Benning on November 6, he was already showing symptoms of
base metal poisoning.
Army physicians found seven times the normal level
of arsenic in Michaels body, and there was little they could do to
reverse its destructive action. After six weeks of care, the muscles of
his arms and lower legs had atrophied to the point where Michael could
neither walk nor use his hands. He finally left the hospital wearing
braces and a prosthetic device on one arm, the gear weighing a total of
sixty pounds.
On May 13, 1980, Michael was canoeing with his mother and younger
brother on the East River, near Milton, Florida, when their boat
overturned. James and Judi-- described in press reports of the incident
as Dr. Judias Buenoano, a clinical physician in Ft. Walton--made it
safely to shore, but Michael sank like a stone and drowned.
Local authorities accepted Dr. Judis description of the accident and closed
their files, but army investigators were more persistent, launching
their own search for evidence on May 27. Michaels military life
insurance finally paid off in mid-September, to the tune of $20,000, and
sheriffs officers began taking a new look at the case when they
discovered two civilian policies on Michaels life. Handwriting experts
suggested that Michaels signature on the insurance applications may have
been forged.
Judy, meanwhile, went on as best she could without her eldest son,
opening a beauty parlor in Gulf Breeze, dating Pensacola businessman
John Gentry II. For Gentrys benefit, she fabricated a stint at nursing
school, with Ph.D.s in biochemistry and psychology from the University
of Alabama, plus a recent tour of duty as the head of nursing at West
Florida Hospital. It was all nonsense, but Gentry swallowed the bait,
indulging Judis taste for expensive gifts, Caribbean cruises, and
imported champagne.
In October 1982, John and Judi purchased life insurance policies on one
another, Judi later boosting the coverage from $50,000 to $500,000
without Gentrys knowledge, paying the premiums out of her own pocket. By
December, she was feeding Gentry vitamin capsules that produced
dizziness and vomiting.
Hospitalized for twelve days beginning December
16, Gentry noted that his symptoms disappeared when he stopped taking
the vitamins. Even so, he was not suspicious enough to break off his
relationship with Judi in the interest of survival.
On June 25, 1983, Gentry left a dinner party early, planning to pick up
some champagne for a private session with Judi. They had much to
celebrate, it seemed, for Judi had told him she was carrying his child.
John never made it to the liquor store, however, as a bomb exploded in
his car when he turned the ignition key. Near death, he was rushed to
the hospital where trauma surgeons managed to save his life.
Police got their first crack at questioning Gentry on June 29, learning
of the victims curious insurance situation. A background check revealed
the gaping holes in Dr. Buenoanos new biography, and Gentry was stunned
to discover that her pregnancy was also a lie, Judi having been
surgically sterilized in 1975.
Detectives further learned that Judi had
been telling friends about Gentrys terminal illness since November 1982,
lately booking tickets for a world cruise including herself and her
children ... without Gentry.
It was enough for John, and he provided police with several of the
vitamin capsules Judi had prescribed in 1982. Analysis revealed that
they contained paraformaldehyde, a poison with no known medical uses,
but Floridas state attorney declined to file charges of attempted murder,
citing insufficient evidence to prosecute.
On July 27, count officers
and federal agents searched Judis home in Gulf Breeze, retrieving wire
and tape from her bedroom that seemed to match the Gentry car bomb. In
Jamess room, they also found marijuana and a sawed-off shotgun, jailing
him for possession of drugs and an illegal weapon.
Judi, meanwhile, was
arrested at her beauty shop on charges of attempted murder. By mid-August,
authorities had traced the source of the dynamite used in the bomb,
linking the Alabama buyer to Judi via phone records showing a dozen
long-distance calls from her home.
Judi made bail on the attempted murder charge, but there was worse in
store. On January 11, 1984, she was indicted for first-degree murder in
the death of her son, with an additional count of grand theft for the
insurance scam. Arrested that evening, she staged a fit of convulsions
and wound up in Santa Rosa Hospital under guard.
The wheels of justice
were sluggish, but there was no stopping them once they started to roll.
Bobby Joe Morris was exhumed on February 11, with arsenic found in his
remains. Identical results were obtained with the exhumation of James
Good-year, on March 14, 1984. Judis trial in the first murder case--
Michaels--began on March 22, and she was convicted on all counts nine
days later.
On June 6 she was sentenced to life imprisonment without
parole for the first twenty-five years. July found Florida authorities
exhuming the body of late boyfriend Gerald Dossett, deceased since 1980,
in another search for arsenic, but no charges were filed in that case.
On August 10, James Buenoano was acquitted of trying to kill James
Gentry, but his mother would be less fortunate. Judis trial in that case
opened October 15 and lasted three days; jurors deliberated a mere two
hours before voting to convict, and Judis 12-year prison sentence was
made consecutive with her life term for Michaels slaying.
A year later,
on October 22, 1985, Judi went to trial for the murder of husband James
Goodyear. The trial consumed a week, with Judi denying any criminal
activity, but jurors werent buying her act. Convicted on her second
charge of first-degree murder, she was formally sentenced to death on
November 16.
Her latest stay of execution was granted by a federal court
in June 1990, and the case remains under appeal. In the unlikely event
of Judis release from Florida, Colorado authorities stand ready to
prosecute capital charges in the death of Bobby Joe Morris.
Judy BUENOANO
Judy Buenoano was the 1st woman put to death in
Florida since 1848, and only the 3rd woman executed in the nation since
1976.
She was pronounced dead at 7:13 a.m. (eastern time)
Buenoano, 54, a former nail salon owner, was executed
for the arsenic poisoning of her husband in 1971. Prosecutors said she
committed that murder for the same reasons she killed her son in 1980
and tried to kill her fiance in 1983 -- insurance money. She also was
suspected of killing a boyfriend in 1978 but was never charged because
she had already been sentenced to death.
The last woman executed in Florida was a freed slave
who was hanged for killing her master.
Only 2 other women had been executed since the U.S.
Supreme Court lifted the ban on the death penalty in 1976, and both were
by injection.
In 1984, North Carolina executed Velma Barfield for
poisoning her boyfriend. Last month, Texas put Karla Faye Tucker to
death for a double-pickax murder. Tucker was a telegenic, avowed
Christian who ministered to her fellow inmates, expressed contrition for
her crimes and even received support from the pope.
Buenoano crocheted blankets and baby clothes in prison
and said she wanted to be remembered as a good mother. She adamantly
maintained her son's drowning was an accident.
"Seeing the face of Jesus, that's what I think
about," she recently told a Florida television station. "I'm
ready to go home."
Until she tried to kill her fiance, John Gentry, in
1983 by bombing his car in Pensacola, Buenoano had not been suspected of
the other killings. Gentry said she had given him pills that made him
sick but told him they were vitamins.
When investigators realized Buenoano was Spanish for
"Goodyear," and learned she had been married to Air Force Sgt.
James Goodyear, they exhumed his body and found he had lethal amounts of
arsenic in his body when he died in 1971.
There was also evidence she fatally poisoned a
boyfriend, Bobby Joe Morris, in Trinidad, Colo., in 1978.
She was convicted of drowning Michael Goodyear, her
19-year-old son, by giving him arsenic -- which might have caused his
paralysis -- and pushing him out of a canoe. Monday would have been his
37th birthday.
The motive for the murders was "twisted greed,"
because she was trying to claim about $240,000 in insurance money, said
prosecutor Russell Edgar, who gave Buenoano her nickname.
On Sunday, the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in
Atlanta and then the U.S. Supreme Court denied her last appeals, which
claimed she was innocent and called Florida's electric chair "barbaric....
It belongs in Frankenstein's laboratory."
Buenoano, Judias Anna Lou
Born at Quanah, Texas, on April 4, 1943, Judias Welty was the daughter of an itinerant farm worker, named after her mother.
In later years, Judi would describe her mother as a full-blooded member of the nonexistent Mesquite Apache tribe, but in fact, they hardly knew each other.
The elder Judias Welty died of tuberculosis when her daughter was barely two years old, and the family disintegrated. Judi and her infant brother Robert were sent to live with their grandparents, while two older siblings were placed for adoption. It was all downhill from there, in terms of Judis family life. Reunited with her father in Roswell, New Mexico, after his next marriage, she found herself the target of abuse from both parents--beaten, starved, burned with cigarettes, forced to work slave hours around the house.
At age fourteen, her anger finally exploded: Judi scalded two of her stepbrothers with hot grease and lit into her parents with flying fists, feet, any object she could lay her hands on. The episode cost her sixty days in jail, confined with adult prostitutes, but when the judge asked if she was ready to go home, Judi opted for reform school.
She remained at Foothills High School--a girls reformatory in Albuquerque-- until her graduation in 1959, at age sixteen, and she would despise her family from that day on. Of brother Robert, she once said, I wouldnt spit down his throat if his guts were on fire. The year 1960 found Judi back in Roswell, working as a nurses aide under the pseudonym of Anna Schultz.
She gave birth to an illegitimate son, christened Michael Schultz, on March 30, 1961, and ever after refused comment on rumors that his father was a pilot from the nearby air force base. On January 21, 1962, she married another air force officer, James Goodyear, and their first child--James, Jr.--was born four years later, on January 16, 1966. Judis husband celebrated the event by adopting Michael Schultz. Daughter Kimberly followed in 1967, after the family had moved to Orlando, Florida.
A year later, Judias opened the Conway Acres Child Care Center in Orlando, listing her husband as co-owner despite his continuing service with the Air Force, which would soon include a tour of duty in Vietnam. In fact, James Goodyear, Sr., had been home from Southeast Asia for barely three months when he was admitted to the U.S. Naval Hospital in Orlando, suffering from symptoms staff physicians never quite identified.
He died on September 15, 1971, and Judi waited a discreet five days before cashing in his three life insurance policies. Before years end, an accidental blaze at her Orlando home paid Judy another $90,000 in fire insurance. It was rotten luck all around ... but at least it paid well. Loneliness was not a problem for the recent widow.
She moved her family to Pensacola in 1972, and was living with new lover Bobby Joe the following year. Son Michael, meanwhile, had become a problem for his mother, raising hell in school, scoring in the dull-normal range on IQ tests.
James Goodyears death barred Mike from treatment at a residential facility reserved for military dependents, but Judi wangled an evaluation at the state hospital in 1974, farming her first-born out to foster care with a provision for psychiatric treatment.
Bobby Morris moved to Trinidad, Colorado, in 1977, inviting Judi and her brood to join him. She hung around Pensacola long enough to collect fire insurance on a second house, then reclaimed Michael from foster care and moved west with her tribe, settling in Trinidad as Judias Morris. Bobby Joe was admitted to San Rafael Hospital on January 4, 1978, but doctors could find no cause for his sudden illness, and he was released to Judis care on January 21.
Two days later, he collapsed at the dinner table and was rushed back to the hospital, where he died on January 28, his death officially ascribed to cardiac arrest and metabolic acidosis.
In early February, Judi cashed three life insurance policies on Morris, further fattening her bank account. Bobby Joes family suspected murder from the first, and Morris was not the only victim on their list.
In 1974, Judi and Bobby Joe had been visiting Morriss hometown of Brewton, Alabama, when a male resident of Florida was found dead in a Brewton motel. An anonymous call, traced to a local pay phone, led police to the room where the victim was found, shot in the chest with a .22-caliber weapon, his throat slashed for good measure.
After the news broke, Bobby Joes mother overheard Judy telling Bobby Joe, The son of a bitch shouldnt have come up here in the first place. He knew if he came up here he was gonna die. Later, raving in delirium on his deathbed, Morris blurted out, Judi, we should never have done that terrible thing. Police in Brewton, meanwhile, report that they could find no fingerprints inside the room, no bullet was recovered from the corpse, and they have no firm suspects in the case.
On May 3, 1978, Judias legally changed her own last name and that of her children to Buenoano, the Spanish equivalent of Goodyear, in an apparent tribute to her late husband and mythical Apache mother. A month later, the family was back in Pensacola, settling into a home on Whisper Pine Drive, in suburban Gulf Breeze.
Michael Buenoano had continued his pattern of academic failure by dropping out of high school in his sophomore year, and he joined the army in June 1979, drawing an assignment to Ft. Benning, Georgia, after basic training. En route to his new post, he stopped off to visit his mother in Florida, and that was the beginning of the end.
When he reached Ft. Benning on November 6, he was already showing symptoms of base metal poisoning. Army physicians found seven times the normal level of arsenic in Michaels body, and there was little they could do to reverse its destructive action.
After six weeks of care, the muscles of his arms and lower legs had atrophied to the point where Michael could neither walk nor use his hands. He finally left the hospital wearing braces and a prosthetic device on one arm, the gear weighing a total of sixty pounds.
On May 13, 1980, Michael was canoeing with his mother and younger brother on the East River, near Milton, Florida, when their boat overturned. James and Judi--described in press reports of the incident as Dr. Judias Buenoano, a clinical physician in Ft. Walton--made it safely to shore, but Michael sank like a stone and drowned. Local authorities accepted Dr. Judis description of the accident and closed their files, but army investigators were more persistent, launching their own search for evidence on May 27.
Michaels military life insurance finally paid off in mid-September, to the tune of $20,000, and sheriffs officers began taking a new look at the case when they discovered two civilian policies on Michaels life. Handwriting experts suggested that Michaels signature on the insurance applications may have been forged.
Judy, meanwhile, went on as best she could without her eldest son, opening a beauty parlor in Gulf Breeze, dating Pensacola businessman John Gentry II. For Gentrys benefit, she fabricated a stint at nursing school, with Ph.D.s in biochemistry and psychology from the University of Alabama, plus a recent tour of duty as the head of nursing at West Florida Hospital. It was all nonsense, but Gentry swallowed the bait, indulging Judis taste for expensive gifts, Caribbean cruises, and imported champagne.
In October 1982, John and Judi purchased life insurance policies on one another, Judi later boosting the coverage from $50,000 to $500,000 without Gentrys knowledge, paying the premiums out of her own pocket. By December, she was feeding Gentry vitamin capsules that produced dizziness and vomiting.
Hospitalized for twelve days beginning December 16, Gentry noted that his symptoms disappeared when he stopped taking the vitamins. Even so, he was not suspicious enough to break off his relationship with Judi in the interest of survival. On June 25, 1983, Gentry left a dinner party early, planning to pick up some champagne for a private session with Judi.
They had much to celebrate, it seemed, for Judi had told him she was carrying his child. John never made it to the liquor store, however, as a bomb exploded in his car when he turned the ignition key. Near death, he was rushed to the hospital where trauma surgeons managed to save his life. Police got their first crack at questioning Gentry on June 29, learning of the victims curious insurance situation.
A background check revealed the gaping holes in Dr. Buenoanos new biography, and Gentry was stunned to discover that her pregnancy was also a lie, Judi having been surgically sterilized in 1975.
Detectives further learned that Judi had been telling friends about Gentrys terminal illness since November 1982, lately booking tickets for a world cruise including herself and her children ... without Gentry. It was enough for John, and he provided police with several of the vitamin capsules Judi had prescribed in 1982. Analysis revealed that they contained paraformaldehyde, a poison with no known medical uses, but Floridas state attorney declined to file charges of attempted murder, citing insufficient evidence to prosecute.
On July 27, count officers and federal agents searched Judis home in Gulf Breeze, retrieving wire and tape from her bedroom that seemed to match the Gentry car bomb. In Jamess room, they also found marijuana and a sawed-off shotgun, jailing him for possession of drugs and an illegal weapon.
Judi, meanwhile, was arrested at her beauty shop on charges of attempted murder. By mid-August, authorities had traced the source of the dynamite used in the bomb, linking the Alabama buyer to Judi via phone records showing a dozen long-distance calls from her home. Judi made bail on the attempted murder charge, but there was worse in store.
On January 11, 1984, she was indicted for first-degree murder in the death of her son, with an additional count of grand theft for the insurance scam. Arrested that evening, she staged a fit of convulsions and wound up in Santa Rosa Hospital under guard. The wheels of justice were sluggish, but there was no stopping them once they started to roll.
Bobby Joe Morris was exhumed on February 11, with arsenic found in his remains. Identical results were obtained with the exhumation of James Good-year, on March 14, 1984. Judis trial in the first murder case-- Michaels--began on March 22, and she was convicted on all counts nine days later. On June 6 she was sentenced to life imprisonment without parole for the first twenty-five years. July found Florida authorities exhuming the body of late boyfriend Gerald Dossett, deceased since 1980, in another search for arsenic, but no charges were filed in that case.
On August 10, James Buenoano was acquitted of trying to kill James Gentry, but his mother would be less fortunate. Judis trial in that case opened October 15 and lasted three days; jurors deliberated a mere two hours before voting to convict, and Judis 12-year prison sentence was made consecutive with her life term for Michaels slaying. A year later, on October 22, 1985, Judi went to trial for the murder of husband James Goodyear.
The trial consumed a week, with
Judi denying any criminal activity, but jurors werent buying her act.
Convicted on her second charge of first-degree murder, she was formally
sentenced to death on November 16.
Her latest stay of execution was granted by a federal court in June 1990, and the case remains under appeal. In the unlikely event of Judis release from Florida, Colorado authorities stand ready to prosecute capital charges in the death of Bobby Joe Morris.
Michael Newton - An Encyclopedia of Modern Serial
Killers - Hunting Humans
Buenoano v. State,
478 So.2d 387 (Fla.App. 1985) (Direct Appeal-Michael).
Appellant appeals from judgments and sentences for
the offenses of first degree murder and first degree grand theft.
Appellant was accused of murdering her invalid son, Michael Goodyear, by
drowning him and of stealing more than $20,000 from Prudential Life
Insurance Company by defrauding the company of insurance proceeds on the
son's life. We affirm as to both convictions.
After three months of therapy at Walter Reed Hospital
beginning January 24, 1980, Michael Goodyear (age 19) had been
transferred to Tampa to begin long- term physical therapy and
occupational rehabilitation for profound heavy metal neuropathy, a
degeneration of nerves outside the spinal column which had left Michael
with no nerve or muscle function below his knees and elbows.
On May 12, 1980, appellant traveled to the Veterans'
Administration Hospital in Tampa to pick up Michael, her son, and return
to their home in Pensacola. Michael required braces, weighing
approximately 3 1/2 pounds each, on both legs for ambulation and a
Robbins hook on his right arm, weighing approximately two pounds, to
enable him to hold objects.
His treating physician at Walter Reed, Dr.
Barry, had cautioned Michael that adequate provisions for his safety
would have to be taken should he go for a boat ride, because he would be
unable to swim or save himself should the boat overturn. Michael was
discharged to his mother, appellant, so that he could receive long-term
rehabilitative care in Pensacola. Appellant had stated that she was
spending nearly $40,000.00 in home alterations for Michael's return. Dr.
Barry informed appellant that Michael had a severe impairment and might
never regain complete function of his arms and legs. According to Dr.
Barry, Michael would be unable to walk without his braces, cast a
fishing line, or swim.
The day after Michael's discharge from the VA
hospital, appellant, Michael, and appellant's other son, James (age 14),
and daughter, Kimberly (age 13), went on a fishing trip on the East
River in Santa Rosa County. While Kimberly was left ashore at the East
River Bridge, appellant, James, and Michael went out in the river in a
two-seater canoe in the middle of which a folding lawn chair with legs
approximately eight inches high had been placed for Michael. They
started fishing between 10:30 and 11:00 A.M., moving upriver along the
shore. Michael, seated in the lawn chair, wore both his leg braces with
leather shoes, his Robbins hook and, by James' account, a ski belt.
At trial, James testified that approximately a mile
upriver from the bridge, about two hours after they had started fishing,
they were six to eight feet from shore when a snake fell into the canoe
and, in the ensuing confusion, the canoe hit a submerged log and
capsized. James said that he was knocked unconscious and remembered
nothing more until he was in an ambulance.
James' grand jury testimony
reflected that he was unsure of how the canoe capsized. His written
statement made for an Army investigator referred to the submerged log,
but made no reference to the snake. Curiously, James was unable to say
whether his written statement was his handwriting or bore his signature.
Ricky Hicks testified that he had gone fishing on the
East River between 2:00 and 2:30 PM. He had been fishing for about an
hour when he retrieved appellant and James from the river approximately
600 feet from the bridge. Hicks said that an overturned canoe, an ice
chest, a flip-flop and a plastic lunch bag were floating near them in
the river.
Hicks testified that appellant told him that she had "lost
the other boy" after a snake had gotten into the canoe which overturned
as she tried to hold the snake down with a paddle. She said it was
useless to go back for Michael.
Upon returning to shore, appellant's
first concern appeared to be for James. She asked Hicks for a beer and
drank it. Hicks *389 drove appellant's car to a nearby phone where he
called the county rescue squad. The county sheriff and Hicks returned to
the capsized canoe to look for Michael.
They picked up the debris,
including two ski belts. Hicks stated that thirty minutes had passed
since he had rescued appellant and James. During that time the canoe and
debris had barely moved as the river's current was very slow that day.
Rescue squad diver Diamond testified that approximately three hours
after the canoe allegedly capsized, Michael's brace-laden body was found
midriver approximately one-quarter mile upriver from where the canoe had
been recovered and appellant and James had been rescued.
Diamond stated
the river's current was "very, very slow" that day and was no impediment
to swimming upstream.
Appellant first reported that Michael was wearing a life jacket, but later
stated that he wore a ski belt.
While appellant and James stated Michael
was wearing a ski belt when the canoe capsized, no ski belt was on
Michael's body when it was recovered. Dr. Barry testified that a secured
ski belt could not have slipped off Michael, given the braces he was
wearing.
The appellant's version was that Michael was thrown into the
water when the canoe capsized, which she said occurred approximately a
mile upstream from where Hicks discovered her and James.
She said that
she surfaced after the canoe capsized, spotted James face down in the
water, cleared his air passage, and resuscitated him. Not finding
Michael, she said she began swimming downstream with James until she was
picked up by Ricky Hicks. She said the current was too strong to swim
anywhere but downstream.
A former neighbor and, later, housemate, Constance
Lang, testified that appellant was ashamed of Michael. Appellant would
have Lang, who was acting as a live-in baby sitter, take Michael from
the house when visitors arrived.
Lang said that appellant was distant to
Michael, while being close to James and Kimberly. Former neighbor Ken
Barnes visited often in appellant's home and observed that James and
Michael did not have a good relationship.
He felt that appellant had an
obvious bond with James, but not with Michael. Appellant's former sister-in-law,
Peggy Goeller, testified that she had spoken by telephone with appellant
twice in November, 1980.
Appellant made no mention of Michaels' death
during the first call. During the second call, appellant told her that
Michael had recently died during Army maneuvers. Kimberly testified for
the defense that appellant and Michael had a loving relationship.
However, she admitted that she had made the statement to appellant
during an argument "... just like you killed Michael." On rebuttal, the
state presented Kimberly's boyfriend, David Lackey, who testified that
Kimberly had told him that appellant had drowned Michael in order to
collect insurance.
Bank records showed that appellant had a history of
returned checks from June, 1979 until July, 1980. Employment records
showed that appellant worked as a licensed practical nurse from December,
1978 to September, 1980, earning $3.50 per hour.
At the time of his
death, Michael was covered by several insurance policies.
Two policies,
one issued in 1962, the other issued in 1964, with face values of
$1,000.00 each and double indemnity provisions in case of accidental
death, were owned by appellant.
On April 5, 1980 there was a *390
request signed by appellant and Michael for duplicates of these policies.
A third policy owned by appellant, with a face amount of $15,000.00 and
an accidental death benefit of an additional $30,000.00 was purchased
March 22, 1978.
The fourth policy purchased by appellant on October 8,
1978 insured Michael for $20,000.00 with a double indemnity accidental
death provision.
There was no requirement that an insured of Michael's
age undergo a health physical for the amounts of coverage involved.
As a member of the Army, Michael was insured for $20,000.00 under a
servicemen's group life policy on which he had designated the principal
beneficiary to be determined "by law." Subsequent to Michael's death,
appellant, as beneficiary of the above policies, received over
$100,000.00 in benefits.
The state's theory was that appellant did not
love Michael, viewed him as a burden and set out to kill him in such a
way that his death would appear as an accidental drowning so that she
could collect the life insurance proceeds. The defense's version was
that Michael's death was a result of accidental drowning.
Buenoano v. State,
527 So.2d 194 (Fla. 1988) (Direct Appeal-Goodyear).
Judias V. Buenoano appeals her conviction for first
degree murder and sentence of death. We affirm both the conviction and
sentence.
On August 31, 1984, Buenoano was indicted for first
degree murder for the September 16, 1971 death by suspected arsenic
poisoning of her husband, Sergeant James E. Goodyear.
Evidence at trial
revealed that, shortly after Sergeant Goodyear returned to Orlando from
a tour of duty in South Vietnam, he began suffering from nausea,
vomiting and diarrhea.
When hospitalized at the naval hospital in
Orlando on September 13, 1971, Goodyear reported to Dr. R.C. Auchenbach
that he had been ill with these symptoms for two weeks.
When Dr.
Auchenbach could find no explanation for these symptoms, he attempted to
*196 stabilize Goodyear's condition but these attempts failed. Goodyear
suffered fluid overload and pulmonary congestion and died as a
consequence of cardiovascular collapse and renal failure.
No toxicological assay was performed at the time of
Goodyear's death because there was no reason to suspect toxic poisoning.
However, Dr. Auchenbach testified that, had he known in 1971 arsenic was
present in Goodyear's body, his medical opinion would be that Goodyear
could have died as a result of acute arsenic toxication because
circulatory collapse and the other symptoms Goodyear exhibited are
manifestations of acute arsenic poisoning.
Forensic toxicologist Dr.
Lenard Bednarczyk analyzed tissue samples from the exhumed body of
Goodyear. He testified that the level of arsenic found in the liver,
kidneys, hair and nails of Goodyear indicated chronic exposure to
arsenic poison.
The opinion of Dr. Bednarczyk and Dr. Thomas Hegert, the
Orange County medical examiner who autopsied Goodyear's remains in 1984,
was that Goodyear's death was the result of chronic arsenic poisoning
occurring over a period of time.
In addition to the medical evidence regarding
Goodyear's condition, Debra Sims, who lived with Buenoano and Goodyear
shortly before Goodyear's death, testified that Goodyear became sick
gradually and that she witnessed him having hallucinations about a
rabbit on his bed as he picked at the bed linens.
She also testified
that Buenoano hesitated to take Goodyear to the hospital when he became
ill. Two of Buenoano's acquaintances, Constance Lang and Mary Beverly
Owens, both testified that Buenoano discussed with each of them on
separate occasions the subject of killing a person by adding arsenic to
his food. Owens and Lodell Morris each testified that Buenoano admitted
she killed Goodyear.
Evidence was also presented at trial that Bobby Joe
Morris, with whom Buenoano lived after Goodyear's death, became ill and
died after exhibiting the same symptoms of vomiting, nausea, fever and
hallucinating that Goodyear exhibited before his death.
When Morris'
remains were exhumed in 1984, the tissue analysis revealed acute arsenic
poisoning. After Morris' death Buenoano and John Gentry began living
together and later became engaged. Gentry testified at trial that
Buenoano told him Goodyear died in a plane crash in Vietnam and Morris
died of alcoholism.
In November of 1982, Gentry caught a cold, and
Buenoano began giving him the vitamin C capsule Vicon C to treat it.
Because he was experiencing extreme nausea and vomiting, Gentry checked
into a hospital on December 15, 1982.
After a full recovery he returned
home, and on that same day Buenoano gave him Vicon C capsules again. The
nausea and vomiting returned. Gentry had the capsules chemically
analyzed, and the capsules were found to contain paraformaldehyde, a
class III poison. Testimony at trial was that Buenoano had been telling
her associates Gentry was suffering from terminal cancer.
Following Goodyear's death in 1971, Buenoano
collected the benefits from various life insurance policies on her
husband's life totalling approximately $33,000. She also received
$62,000 in dependency indemnity compensation from the Veterans
Administration.
When Bobby Joe Morris died, Buenoano again received
insurance money from three separate policies on Morris' life totalling
approximately $23,000. The house mortgage was also paid off. Buenoano
owned life insurance on Gentry's life totalling $510,000 in benefits,
and she was a 50% beneficiary under his will.
At trial the jury found Buenoano guilty of first
degree murder for the death of James Goodyear and recommended imposition
of the death penalty. The trial court found four aggravating
circumstances and no mitigating factors and sentenced Buenoano to death.
United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit.
No. 98-1104.
In Re: Judy A. BUENOANO,
Petitioner.
March 29, 1998
Application for Leave to File
Second or Successive Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus.
Before TJOFLAT, COX and CARNES,
Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
Judy Buenoano is scheduled to be
executed on the morning of March 30, 1998 for the arsenic poisoning
murder of her husband James Goodyear in 1971. We have previously
affirmed the denial of her first federal habeas petition. See
Buenoano v. Singletary, 963 F.2d 1433 (11th Cir.1992), on
return from remand, Buenoano v. Singletary, 74 F.3d 1078 (11th
Cir.1996).
The procedural history of the case through that stage is
contained in our two prior opinions. The procedural history of the case
since our last opinion was issued is contained in the Florida Supreme
Court's latest opinion in the case, Buenoano v. State, ---
So.2d ---- (Fla. Mar. 26, 1998), which affirmed the state trial court's
denial of Buenoano's third state post-conviction motion and her request
for stay of execution.
Buenoano has now filed a motion
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b) seeking an order authorizing her to file
and the district court to consider a second federal habeas corpus
petition attacking the state court judgment pursuant to which she is to
be executed. She seeks to raise two claims in that second petition: 1)
the State withheld critical exculpatory evidence of guilt or presented
false or misleading evidence in violation of Brady v. Maryland,
373 U.S. 83, 83 S.Ct. 1194, 10 L.Ed.2d 215 (1963), and Giglio v.
United States, 405 U.S. 150, 92 S.Ct. 763, 31 L.Ed.2d 104 (1972);
and 2) she was denied her right to a fair and impartial jury because one
of the jurors failed to disclose during jury selection that he had been
convicted of involuntary manslaughter. Buenoano raised both of these
claims in her third state post-conviction proceeding, and the Florida
Supreme Court's comprehensive opinion affirming the denial of relief in
that proceeding accurately sets out the facts relating to each of the
claims. See Buenoano, --- So.2d at ----.
The showing Buenoano must make
before she is entitled to file a second federal habeas petition, since
her claims are not based on a retroactively applicable new rule of
constitutional law, is prescribed in 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(2)(B). Under §
2244(b)(2)(B)(i), Buenoano is required to show that the factual
predicate of her claim could not have been discovered previously through
the exercise of reasonable diligence. Under § 2244(b)(2)(B)(ii), she is
also required to show that "the facts underlying the claim, if proven
and viewed in light of the evidence as a whole, would be sufficient to
establish by clear and convincing evidence that, but for constitutional
error, no reasonable factfinder would have found [her] guilty of the
underlying offense."
As to the Brady and
Giglio claim, even assuming that Buenoano has met the first
requirement of § 2244(b)(2)(B), she has failed to meet the second one.
Her new evidence relates to Special Agent Roger Martz's credibility. He
did not even testify against her in the trial that resulted in her death
sentence, which was imposed for the murder of James Goodyear. His
laboratory examination of capsules Buenoano had given to John Gentry, a
man with whom she was living in 1982, did lead to a stipulation at the
trial that those capsules contained poison. The most Buenoano could hope
to achieve with her new evidence about Special Agent Martz is erasure of
that stipulation. However, even erasing that stipulation entirely, the
evidence that Buenoano murdered James Goodyear in 1971, the only crime
for which she was sentenced to death, is still quite strong.
It was essentially undisputed
that John Goodyear, Buenoano's husband, died as a result of acute
arsenic poisoning. See Buenoano v. Singletary, 74 F.3d at 1080.
Special Agent Martz had nothing to do with that determination. Despite
the fact that Goodyear was obviously seriously ill and even
hallucinating, Buenoano hesitated to take him to the hospital. See
id. Furthermore, as we have previously summarized:
Two of Buenoano's acquaintances,
Constance Lang and Mary Beverly Owens, testified that Buenoano discussed
with each of them on separate occasions the subject of killing a person
by adding arsenic to his food. Lang testified that Buenoano had joked on
several occasions about lacing her husband's food with arsenic.
Owens
testified that after hearing an upsetting phone call between Owens and
her husband, Buenoano suggested that Owens take out more life insurance
and then poison him with arsenic. Following Goodyear's death, Buenoano
collected $33,000 in life insurance proceeds and $62,000 in indemnity
compensation from the Veterans Administration. Owens and another
acquaintance, Lodell Morris, both testified that Buenoano admitted
killing Goodyear.
Id. at 1080-81. There
was more evidence:
After Goodyear's death, Buenoano
lived with Bobby Joe Morris, who became ill and died after exhibiting
the same symptoms that Goodyear had exhibited. When Morris's remains
were exhumed in 1984, the tissue analysis revealed acute arsenic
poisoning. Buenoano collected approximately $23,000 in life insurance
proceeds following Morris's death.
Id. at 1081. None of
that evidence involved, either directly or indirectly, Special Agent
Martz.
Accordingly, even if there is
some constitutional error (which is by no means clear) connected with
the new evidence relating to the stipulation about the capsules Buenoano
gave to John Gentry, Buenoano clearly has failed to meet her §
2244(b)(2)(B)(ii) burden of showing that but for that error "no
reasonable factfinder would have found [her] guilty of the underlying
offense."
Buenoano's claim concerning one
of the jurors at her trial failing to disclose that he had been
convicted of involuntary manslaughter is not based upon a new rule of
constitutional law that the Supreme Court has made retroactively
applicable to her case, so the § 2244(b)(2)(A) exception to the bar
against second habeas petitions does not apply. The § 2244(b)(2)(B)
exception is also inapplicable because, even if the facts she alleges
concerning the juror were proven, that would not establish by clear and
convincing evidence that, but for any related constitutional error, no
reasonable factfinder would have found her guilty of the underlying
offense.
The application for an order
authorizing the filing of a second federal habeas petition is DENIED.
Buenoano's request for a stay of
execution is denied. The panel will not entertain a petition for
rehearing.