August 20, 2001
Convicted killer Jeffery Doughtie was executed
Aug. 16, 2001, for using a metal pipe to fatally beat an elderly
couple at their Corpus Christi antiques shop after they refused to
give him money to support his $400-a-day drug habit.
The drug-addicted transient went on a crime spree
in 1993 in Corpus Christi, first killing an elderly couple who sold
antiques, then strangling and bludgeoning to death a 75-year-old
woman.
He was convicted of capital murder in both cases and was
sentenced to die for the deaths of Jerry and Sylvia Dean, who owned
Golden Antiques and Collectibles.
A customer came into the store on
Aug. 2, 1993, and found the couple unconscious and lying in pools of
blood. Jerry Dean, 80, died hours after the attack. His wife, Sylvia,
75, lingered in a coma for 25 days before she died.
In a written confession, Doughtie said he beat
the couple, whom he had known for several years, when they refused
to loan him $30. He stole money and jewelry from the store,
including Sylvia's wedding ring.
He was also convicted for the Aug.
22, 1993, slaying of 75-year-old Maria Lozano, who was bludgeoned
with a perfume bottle and strangled in her Corpus Christi home.
"For about nine years, I've thought about the
death penalty, if it's right or wrong. I don't have the answer. But
I don't think this world is a safer place without me in it,"
Doughtie said while strapped to the gurney in the death chamber.
He said the punishment should have been carried out much sooner. "Killing
me now ain't hurting me. It gave me time to say goodbye to my family,"
he said. He looked toward some friends watching through a nearby
window, expressed love and thanked them. |