Murderpedia has thousands of hours of work behind it. To keep creating
new content, we kindly appreciate any donation you can give to help
the Murderpedia project stay alive. We have many
plans and enthusiasm
to keep expanding and making Murderpedia a better site, but we really
need your help for this. Thank you very much in advance.
Billy Jack
CRUTSINGER
Name
TDCJ
Number
Date
of Birth
Crutsinger, Billy Jack
999459
10/05/1954
Date
Received
Age (when Received)
Education Level
10/08/2003
49
11
Date
of Offense
Age (at the Offense)
County
04/06/2003
48
Tarrant
Race
Gender
Hair
Color
White
Male
Gray
Height
Weight
Eye
Color
05'09"
217
Green
Native
County
Native
State
Prior
Occupation
Tarrant
Texas
Laborer
Prior
Prison Record
State Jail #1014350 on a 1 year
sentence from Cochran County for reckless injury to elderly with
bodily injury.
Summary of incident
On April 6, 2003, in Fort Worth,
Texas, Crutsinger entered the residence of a 71 year old white
female and a 88 year old white female. Crutsinger stabbed both
victims multiple times, resulting in their deaths.
Co-defendants
None
Race
and Gender of Victim
White/Female; White/Female
FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) - A 48-year-old man
faces the death penalty for stabbing an elderly mother and
daughter after he entered their home on the pretense of doing
repairs.
Billy Jack Crutsinger was convicted Thursday of
capital murder after jurors deliberated about an hour. The jury
was to hear testimony in the punishment phase of the trial Friday.
The decomposing bodies of Pearl "R.D." Magouirk,
89, and her 71-year-old daughter, Patricia "Pat" Syren, were found
inside their home April 8, two days after Crutsinger killed them
and stole Syren's Cadillac and credit card.
The blood-stained Cadillac was found outside a
Fort Worth bar. The bloody clothes that Crutsinger wore during the
killings were later recovered in trash bin near another bar.
Crutsinger was arrested at a Galveston bar the
day after the car and bodies were discovered, when authorities
began tracking purchases made on Syren's credit card.
Defense attorneys argued that Crutsinger was
illegally arrested in Galveston and that a search warrant issued
in Fort Worth to obtain another DNA sample from Crutsinger also
was illegal.