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Lonnie Wayne
PURSLEY
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Robbery
- Drugs
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder:
March 29,
1997
Date
of arrest:
April 20,
1997
Date of birth:
September 17,
1961
Victim profile: Robert
Earl
Cook, 47
Method of murder:
Beating
Location: Polk County, Texas, USA
Status:
Executed
by lethal injection in Texas on May 3,
2005
Summary:
On Good Friday, March 28, 1997, Robert Cook was driving to his home
in Livingston,
That same day, Pursley and his family were visiting relatives in
Shepherd.
After getting into an argument with his wife, Pursley left the house
on foot.
Testimony at trial supported the prosecution’s theory that Cook must
have stopped and offered Pursley a ride.
After spending some time with Cook in his home, Pursley had Cook
drive out into the woods where Pursley savagely beat Cook to death,
took his rings and left the body.
Pursley was later seen by several witnesses driving Pursley’s
bloodstained car.
Pursley used Cook’s rings to buy drugs and admitted to several
people that he had beaten a person to death. DNA evidence and
witnesses linked Pursley to the crime.
A cheeseburger, four fried pork chops, french fries, two dinner
rolls, a piece of cheesecake and iced tea with sugar
Final Words:
"Yes. I would like to address the victim's family. I received your
poem and I ma very grateful for your forgiveness. I still want to
ask for it anyway. I have Jesus in my heart and I am sorry for any
pain I caused you all. Thank you for your forgiveness. I am sorry.
Ashlee, Pam -- I am going to miss you all. I love you all. Give
everybody my love. Give everybody my love, O.K.? Mother, James,
Justin, Corey, Brent, grand-babies and Daddy - I love you Pam. I
love you Ashlee, Pammy and Irene. I will see you all on the other
side. Couple friends on death row who have helped me; Shy town and
Crazy Jay...I love you all and for all your support. Uncle Ray too.
I am saved and I am going home, O.K.? You all stay strong. You all
stay strong. That is all."
ClarkProsecutor.org
Texas Attorney General
MEDIA ADVISORY
Wednesday, April 27, 2005 -
Lonnie Wayne Pursley Scheduled For Execution
AUSTIN – Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott
offers the following information about Lonnie Wayne Pursley, who is
scheduled to be executed after 6 p.m. Tuesday, May 3, 2005.
On January 20, 1999, Pursley was convicted and
sentenced to death for the March 29, 1997, capital murder of Robert
Cook in Polk County. A summary of the evidence presented at trial
follows.
FACTS OF THE CRIME
On Good Friday, March 28, 1997, Robert Cook was
driving to his home in Livingston, That same day, Lonnie Wayne
Pursley, his wife, and their children were visiting family at their
home in Shepherd. After getting into an argument with his wife,
Pursley left the house on foot. Testimony at trial supported the
prosecution’s theory that Cook must have stopped and offered Pursley
a ride. After spending some time with Cook in his home, Pursley had
Cook drive out into the woods where Pursley savagely beat Cook to
death, took his rings and left the body. Pursley was later seen by
several witnesses driving Pursley’s bloodstained car. Pursley used
Cook’s rings to buy drugs and admitted to several people that he had
beaten a person to death. DNA evidence and witnesses linked Pursley
to the crime.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Aug. 7, 1997 — A Polk County grand jury indicted
Pursley for capital murder.
Jan. 20, 1999 — A jury found Pursley guilty of capital murder, and
the court later sentenced him to death.
July 31, 2000 — Concurrent with his direct appeal, Pursley filed an
application for writ of habeas corpus in the state trial court.
Jan. 31, 2001 — The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed
Pursley’s conviction and sentence.
June 27, 2001 — The Court of Criminal Appeals dismissed Pursley’s
application for state habeas relief.
Aug. 10, 2001 — The trial court entered an order setting Pursley’s
execution date for November 30, 2001.
Aug. 29, 2001 — Pursley filed a motion in federal district court
seeking a stay of his execution.
Sep. 12, 2001 — The federal district court granted Pursley’s motion
for stay.
June 27, 2002 — Pursley filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus
in the federal district court.
Sep. 25, 2003 — The federal district court denied habeas relief.
Nov. 18, 2004 — The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals denied Pursley
permission to appeal.
Jan. 11, 2005 — The trial court entered an order setting the
execution date for May 3, 2005.
Feb. 16, 2005 — Pursley petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court for
certiorari review.
April 18, 2005 — The U.S. Supreme Court denied the petition for
certiorari review.
PRIOR CRIMINAL HISTORY
Pursley has prior convictions for burglary of a
habitation, theft by appropriation and unauthorized use of a motor
vehicle. #437783, 5 year sentence from San Jacinto County for 1
count of Burglary of a Habitation, 07/08/87 released on Parole,
12/21/90 returned from Parole with a new conviction; #571873 on a 10
year sentence from San Jacinto County for 1 count of Theft By
Appropriation; 06/14/91 released on Parole; 08/24/92 returned from
Parole with new conviction; #621739 on a 20 year sentence from Polk
and San Jacinto County for 1 count of Burglary of a Habitation; 1
count of Burglary of a Vehicle and 1 count of Unauthorized Use of a
Motor Vehicle; 11/28/95 released on parole.
ProDeathPenalty.com
On March 29, 1997 Lonnie Pursley and a co-defendant
murdered Robert Earl Cook, 47, inside the Deer County subdivision in
Livingston, Texas.
They took the victim into a wooded area where
they beat him to death and robbed him.
Pursley had received a five year sentence for
burglary charge and was released on parole in 1987.
He was returned to prison in 1990 on a ten year
sentence for theft and was paroled six months later.
Just over one year later he was returned to
prison with a twenty year sentence for a burglary charge of which he
served just over three years before being paroled again a year and a
half before he murdered Robert Cook.
Texas Execution Information
Center by David Carson
Txexecutions
Lonnie Wayne Pursley, 43, was executed by lethal
injection on 3 May 2005 in Huntsville, Texas for the robbery and
murder of a 47-year-old man.
Robert Cook had plans to spend time with his
mother on 29 March 1997, but he failed to show up. When Cook failed
to come home from work the next two nights, his mother called the
police. Cook's niece and next-door neighbor, Sheila Dupree, told
police in their investigation that on the night of 28 March, she
observed a large man smoking a cigarette in the doorway of Cook's
Livingston trailer home. She saw Cook sitting inside with an
emotionless expression on his face. Dupree also observed that the
following day, the gate on Cook's property was not closed properly,
and his car was gone.
Other witnesses reported seeing Pursley, then 35,
driving a turquoise car matching the description of Cook's vehicle
on 29 and 30 March. Several of these witnesses observed that the
vehicle had blood on the inside and outside of it, and that Pursley
had blood on his clothing.
On 6 April, a passer-by discovered Cook's body in
a wooded area at the dead end of a dirt road, approximately 2½ miles
from Cook's home. Cook had been beaten to death by blows to the
chest and abdomen. Cook's car was discovered in a wooded area on 15
April. There was a large amount of blood spattered throughout it.
Pursley was arrested on 20 April.
At the trial, witnesses testified that on the
night of 28 March, Pursley and his family were visiting his in-laws'
house in Shepherd. Pursley got into an argument with his wife and
left the house on foot. Prosecutors surmised that Cook, who was
driving home from work on US Highway 59, saw Pursley walking on the
road and stopped to offer him a ride. Pursley's cousin, Richard
Winfrey, testified that Pursley told him he had beaten someone to
death in his car and had hidden the car in the woods off of a dirt
road.
Winfrey further testified that Pursley asked him for fake
identification so he could leave the country. Prosecutors said that
Pursley used some rings he took from the victim to buy drugs. The
prosecution also presented evidence that Pursley's DNA was found on
a cigarette but from the ashtray of Cook's car.
Pursley had numerous prior convictions for
burglary and theft. He had been sent to prison three times from 1987
to 1992, each time being released on parole and committing new
crimes while on parole. (At the time, early release was common in
Texas due to strict prison population caps imposed by U.S. District
Judge William Wayne Justice.) At the time of the murder, he was on
parole after having served 3 years of a 20-year sentence for
burglary.
A jury convicted Pursley of capital murder in
January 1999 and sentenced him to death. The Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals affirmed the conviction and sentence in January 2001. All of
his subsequent appeals in state and federal court were denied.
On an anti-death-penalty web site, Pursley
claimed that the witnesses' testimony against him was perjured and
that the evidence against him was "fabricated, botched, tainted, and
yes, even planted!"
Shortly before being led into the death chamber,
Pursley was handed a statement from his victim's relatives, in which
they offered their forgiveness. "I received your poem, and I am very
grateful for your forgiveness," Pursley said to Cook's relatives in
his last statement. "I still want to ask you for it anyway. I have
Jesus in my heart, and I am sorry for any pain I caused you all.
Thank you for your forgiveness." Cook's sister, sobbing, replied, "We
forgive you." Pursley also thanked his friends and expressed love to
them. His daughter became so overwrought that she was escorted from
the viewing chamber. The lethal injection was then begun, and
Pursley was pronounced dead at 6:23 p.m.
Lonnie Pursley, a white man, is scheduled to be
executed by the state of Texas on May 3, 2005 for the March 1997
murder of Robert Earl Cook, a white man, in Deer County. It is
alleged that Pursley beat Cook to death on March 28, 1997. At trial,
Pursley was found guilty of capital murder and sentenced to death.
The death penalty is a draconian punitive measure
that a has been shown to be overtly capricious and discriminatory,
as well as prone to occasional error. Even in the absence of its
conflict with morality and these critical flaws, capital punishment
ceases to possess any type of substantive benefit over long-term
incarceration that could be used to justify its use.
The problem at hand is far deeper than Pursley.
Remedying the very ills that led Pursley to murder should be Texas’
primary concern, not extinguishing his life. Sending Pursley to
death will not contribute to the resolution of these issues, nor
will it in any way undo his criminal past. By taking the life of
Pursley, Texas is merely contributing to a culture of violence that
breeds the very type of behavior that it is seeking to prevent
through Pursley’s execution. The vicious cycle must stop.
Please write to Gov. Rick Perry and request that
he stop the execution of Lonnie Pursley.
Texas man apologizes for crime at execution
Reuters News
Tue May 3, 2005
HUNTSVILLE, Texas (Reuters) - A Texas man
apologized for the pain his crime caused his victim's family as he
was executed on Tuesday for a 1997 murder. Lonnie Pursley, 43,
thanked the family of victim Robert Earl Cook for a poem of
forgiveness they sent him shortly before he received a lethal
injection. "I received your poem and I am very grateful for your
forgiveness. I still want to ask for it anyway," he said to
witnesses while strapped to a gurney in the Texas death chamber. "I
have Jesus in my heart and I am sorry for any pain I caused you."
The poem by Cook's nephew, Jamie Hollis, read in
part, "A soul that is lost, pays no greater cost, than to leave this
world, without being forgiven." "No, not by my family or me, for we
forgive," it said.
Pursley was condemned for beating Cook to death
near the east Texas town of Livingston on March 29, 1997, then
taking his rings and trading them for drugs.
He was the sixth person put to death this year in
Texas, which leads the nation in capital punishment. The state has
four more executions scheduled this year. Texas has executed 342
people since resuming the death penalty in 1982 after the U.S.
Supreme Court lifted a four-year national ban.
For his final meal, Pursley requested a
cheeseburger, four fried pork chops, french fries, two dinner rolls,
a piece of cheesecake and iced tea with sugar.
3-time parolee executed for fatal beating
Dallas Morning News
Tuesday, May 3, 2005
HUNTSVILLE – An apologetic convicted killer
Lonnie Wayne Pursley was executed Tuesday for the robbery and fatal
beating of an East Texas man while he was on parole for a third
time. In a final statement, Pursley thanked relatives of his victim
for a statement delivered to him shortly before he was taken to the
death chamber in which they offered their forgiveness. "I'm very
grateful for your forgiveness," he said.
His victim's sister,
between sobs, replied, "We forgive you." "I've got Jesus in my heart.
I'm sorry for any pain I've caused," he said. Pursley, 43, then
turned toward his own witnesses and expressed love to them. "I'm
going to miss you all. Give everybody my love. I'll see you all on
the other side," he said.
Pursley thanked fellow death row inmates for
their support, adding, "I'm saved and I'm going home. OK? Y'all stay
strong." He gasped and snored as the drugs took effect. Pursley was
pronounced dead at 6:23 p.m. CDT, eight minutes after the drugs
began flowing. His daughter, who was among the witnesses, became
very emotional and was escorted from the chamber prematurely.
Pursley became the sixth Texas prisoner executed
this year. Two more are scheduled to die later this month. The
former cook and laborer was a ninth-grade dropout who authorities
said used rings he took from the slaying victim, 47-year-old Robert
Earl Cook, of Livingston, to buy drugs.
Cook's nephew, Jamie Hollis, said in the family
statement that while they forgave Pursley and "cannot gain joy from
another human being losing his life," it was more important that
Pursley ask for forgiveness "from our Father in heaven that
determines where we spend eternity."
The execution was carried out moments after the
U.S. Supreme Court rejected a request by Pursley's attorneys to
postpone the punishment. In their appeal, lawyers argued prosecutors
improperly withheld from Pursley's trial attorneys information that
the physician who performed the autopsy on Cook had been dismissed
while working at the Harris County Medical Examiner's Office for
sloppy performance and mismanaging of autopies. According to the
appeal, the information was favorable to the defense and "could have
been used to impeach her credibility and competence." The high court
last month had refused to review Pursley's case.
Court documents indicated that in 1997 Cook was
driving on U.S. Highway 59 near Shepherd, in San Jacinto County,
where Pursley got into an argument with his wife while attending a
gathering at his mother-in-law's house. Prosecutors speculated
Pursley was walking along the highway and Cook, who was known to
pick up hitchhikers, offered a ride. When Cook was missing after two
days, his mother filed a police report. His badly beaten body was
found about a week later in a wooded area at the end of a dead-end
road about 21/2 miles from his trailer in Polk County. Nine days
later, Cook's blood-spattered turquoise car was found in an adjacent
San Jacinto County in a wooded area.
At Pursley's trial, witnesses testified they saw
him driving a car matching the description of Cook's car, that the
car had blood on the inside and outside, and that Pursley's clothes
were bloody. A cousin testified that Pursley told him he was "pretty
sure he had beaten someone to death in his car," according to court
documents. DNA evidence found on a cigarette butt in the ashtray of
Cook's car was used to link Pursley to the vehicle.
Pursley, who declined to speak with reporters on
death row, said on a prison pen pal Web site that the case and
testimony against him were false. "Most of the evidence used against
me was fabricated, botched, tainted, and yes, even planted!" he
wrote.
At his trial, however, he refused to cooperate
with his lawyers and turned down an offer of a life prison term in
exchange for a guilty plea. Polk County jurors who decided he should
be put to death heard of his previous convictions for burglary and
theft, his three prison terms and paroles and "determined there
would be no more victims," his defense attorney, Stephen Taylor,
said. "It made a lot of difference with the jury," he said of
Pursley's record.
Pursley's repeated paroles, despite increasingly
longer sentences, were attributed in part to bed shortages and court-imposed
population limits at Texas prisons before a billion-dollar
construction program eased the crowding problems.
Victim's Relatives Forgive Remorseful
Convicted Killer Before Execution
CharismaNews.com
May 10, 2005
An apologetic convicted killer received
forgiveness from his victim's relatives just before he was recently
executed for the robbery and fatal beating of a Texas man. In his
final statement a week ago, Lonnie Wayne Pursley thanked the family
of Robert Earl Cook of Livingston for a statement delivered to him
shortly before he was taken to the death chamber in Huntsville,
Texas, the Associated Press (AP) reported.
"I received your poem and I am very grateful for
your forgiveness. I still want to ask for it anyway. I have Jesus in
my heart and I am sorry for any pain I caused you all. Thank you for
your forgiveness," he said, "The Huntsville Item" reported.
Cook's sister, between sobs, replied: "We forgive
you." Pursley, 43, then turned toward his own witnesses and
expressed love to them. Pursley also thanked fellow death row
inmates for their support. "I am going to miss you all. I love you
all. Give everybody my love, OK? ... I will see you all on the other
side," Pursley said. "I am saved and I am going home, OK? You all
stay strong. You all stay strong."
Pursley was sent to death row in 1999 for the
March 1997 robbery and fatal beating of Cook, 47, while he was on
parole for a third time. Cook's nephew, Jamie Hollis, said in the
family statement that while they forgave Pursley and "cannot gain
joy from another human being losing his life," it was more important
that Pursley ask for forgiveness "from our Father in heaven that
determines where we spend eternity."
The execution was carried out moments after the
U.S. Supreme Court rejected a request by Pursley's attorneys to
postpone the punishment, the AP reported.
Man set to die for 1997 murder
Repeat offender
was paroled three times before arrest in case
Denton Record Chronicle
Monday, May 2, 2005 - Associated Press
HUNTSVILLE, Texas – Lonnie Wayne Pursley kept
going to prison for longer and longer terms but also kept getting
paroled because of a shortage of prison space in Texas in the 1990s.
Then, in 1999, a jury in Polk County convicted him of capital murder
and sentenced him to death for the fatal beating and robbery of a
47-year-old East Texas man.
Mr. Pursley, 43, is scheduled to receive
lethal injection tonight. He would be the sixth Texas prisoner
executed this year. The U.S. Supreme Court last month refused to
review his case. Attorneys trying to halt Mr. Pursley's punishment
were back in the courts, challenging the trial testimony of a
medical examiner.
Mr. Pursley, a Houston native who grew up in
Coldspring in San Jacinto County, was on parole for a third time
when he was arrested, tried and condemned for the death of Robert
Earl Cook of Livingston. Court documents indicated that Mr. Cook was
driving on U.S. Highway 59 near Shepherd, in San Jacinto County,
where Mr. Pursley had gotten into an argument with his wife while
attending a gathering at his mother-in-law's house.
Prosecutors
speculated that Mr. Pursley was walking along the highway and Mr.
Cook, who was known to pick up hitchhikers, offered him a ride. Both
wound up at Mr. Cook's trailer home March 28, 1997, and at some
point the pair drove into the woods in the northeast part of Polk
County where Mr. Cook was beaten to death and robbed of his rings.
Witnesses told authorities they saw Mr. Pursley driving Mr. Cook's
car later and that he traded the rings for drugs.
Mr. Pursley, who declined to speak with reporters,
said on a prison pen pal Web site that the case and testimony
against him were false. "Most of the evidence used against me was
fabricated, botched, tainted, and yes, even planted!" he wrote. "There
was not anything planted," Polk County Sheriff Kenneth Hammack, who
was a Texas Ranger at the time and investigated the slaying, said
last week. Mr. Pursley turned himself in after a warrant had been
issued for his arrest.
Stephen Taylor, one of Mr. Pursley's trial
lawyers, said his client was less than cooperative in helping
develop a defense. "He wouldn't tell us anything," Mr. Taylor said.
"He never told us how they got together, what happened, anything. We
don't know what happened to trigger the incident, how they happened
to get to the victim's residence, if he was at the victim's
residence and how he came into possession of the victim's car. ...
It was very difficult."
In 1987, Mr. Pursley received five years in
prison for burglary and was paroled three years later. Within six
months he wound up back behind bars with a 10-year term for theft
but was paroled after 14 months. The following year, he picked up a
20-year term for burglary but was out in 3 ½ years. Sixteen months
later, Mr. Cook was killed. Because of bed shortages and court-imposed
population limits, Texas corrections officials in the late 1980s and
into the 1990s were forced to release convicts early.
43-year-old is executed for robbery and slaying
By Michael Graczyk -
Ft. Worth Star-Telegram
Wed, May. 04, 2005
HUNTSVILLE - Not long after his victim's
relatives forgave him, an apologetic Lonnie Wayne Pursley was
executed Tuesday for the robbery and fatal beating of an East Texas
man. In his final statement, Pursley thanked the family of Robert
Earl Cook of Livingston for a statement delivered to him shortly
before he was taken to the death chamber.
"I'm very grateful for your forgiveness," he said.
Cook's sister, between sobs, replied, "We forgive you." "I've got
Jesus in my heart. I'm sorry for any pain I've caused," he said.
Pursley, 43, then turned toward his own witnesses and expressed love
to them. Pursley thanked fellow Death Row inmates for their support.
Pursley was pronounced dead at 6:23 p.m. Pursley became the sixth
Texas prisoner executed this year. Two more are to die this month.
Cook's nephew, Jamie Hollis, said in the
relatives' statement that while they forgave Pursley and "cannot
gain joy from another human being losing his life," it was more
important that Pursley ask for forgiveness "from our Father in
heaven that determines where we spend eternity."
Court documents indicate that in 1997 Cook was
driving on U.S. 59 near Shepherd, in San Jacinto County, and gave a
ride to Pursley, who had left a gathering at his mother-in-law's
house after getting into an argument with his wife. Cook's badly
beaten body was found about a week later in a wooded area at the end
of a dead-end road about 2 1/2 miles from his home in Polk County.
Nine days later, Cook's blood-spattered turquoise car was found in
adjacent San Jacinto County.
At Pursley's trial, witnesses testified they saw
him driving a car matching Cook's, that the car had blood on the
inside and outside and that Pursley's clothes were bloody. DNA
evidence on a cigarette butt in the ashtray of Cook's car was used
to link Pursley to the vehicle.
Three-time parolee set to die
The Huntsville Item
May 2, 2005
HUNTSVILLE - Lonnie Wayne Pursley kept going to
prison for longer and longer terms but also kept getting paroled
thanks to a shortage of prison space in Texas in the 1990s. A jury
in Polk County ensured he wouldn't get out again when they convicted
him in 1999 of capital murder and sentenced him to death for the
fatal beating and robbery of a 47-year-old East Texas man.
Pursley, 43, is scheduled to receive lethal
injection tonight. He would be the sixth Texas prisoner executed
this year. The U.S. Supreme Court last month refused to review his
case. Attorneys trying to halt Pursley's punishment were back in the
courts, challenging the trial testimony of a medical examiner.
Pursley, a Houston native who grew up in
Coldspring in San Jacinto County, was on parole for a third time
when he was arrested, tried and condemned for the death of Robert
Earl Cook, of Livingston. Court documents indicated Cook was driving
on U.S. Highway 59 near Shepherd, in San Jacinto County, where
Pursley had gotten into an argument with his wife while attending a
gathering at his mother-in-law's house.
Prosecutors speculated
Pursley was walking along the highway and Cook, who was known to
pick up hitchhikers, offered Pursley a ride. Somehow both wound up
at Cook's trailer home March 28, 1997, and at some point the pair
drove into the woods in the northeast part of Polk County where Cook
was beaten to death and robbed of his rings. Witnesses told
authorities they saw Pursley driving Cook's car later and that he
traded the rings for drugs.
Pursley, who declined to speak with reporters on
death row, said on a prison pen pal Web site that the case and
testimony against him were false. "Most of the evidence used against
me was fabricated, botched, tainted, and yes, even planted!" he
wrote. "There was not anything planted," Polk County Sheriff Kenneth
Hammack, who was a Texas Ranger at the time and investigated the
slaying, said last week. Pursley turned himself in after a warrant
had been issued for his arrest.
Stephen Taylor, one of Pursley's trial lawyers,
said his client was less than cooperative in helping develop a
defense. "He wouldn't tell us anything," Taylor said. "He never told
us how they got together, what happened, anything. We don't know
what happened to trigger the incident, how they happened to get to
the victim's residence, if he was at the victim's residence and how
he came into possession of the victim's car. "We did the very best
we could do. It was very difficult."
About a week after Cook's mother filed a missing
person report, a passer-by found his decomposing body in a wooded
area at the end of a dead-end dirt road about 2 1/2 miles from his
home. Nine days later, Cook's car was found abandoned in a wooded
area in neighboring San Jacinto County, where Pursley was well known
to authorities.
"Lonnie's just one of those souls that got
involved in drugs and totally devastated his life and went
downhill," San Jacinto County Sheriff Lacy Rogers said. DNA evidence
found 18 months later on a cigarette butt in the ashtray of Cook's
car was used to link Pursley to the vehicle, according to court
documents.
In 1987, Pursley received five years in prison
for burglary and was paroled three years later. Within six months he
wound up back behind bars with a 10-year term for theft but was
paroled after 14 months. The following year, he picked up a 20-year
term for burglary but was out in 3 1/2 years. Sixteen months later,
Cook was killed. Because of bed shortages and court-imposed
population limits, Texas corrections officials in the late 1980s and
into the 1990s were forced to release convicts early until new
prisons were built that eased the problem. "It's not our decision
who stays in or who gets out," Rogers said. "It happens a lot.
During most of those times, it was overcrowding there."
At least three other Texas inmates have execution
dates for later this month.
Coming Execution - Lonnie Wayne Pursley -
Texas
New Criminologist Online
April 30, 2005
On 03/29/97 the Lonnie Pursley and a co-defendant
murdered Robert Earl Cook, a 47-year old white male inside the Deer
County Subdivision in Livingston, Texas. They took the victim into a
wooded area where they beat him to death and robbed him.
Pursley was an habitual criminal who had served
5-year sentence from San Jacinto County for 1 count of Burglary of a
Habitation, 07/08/87 released on Parole, 12/21/90 returned from
Parole with a new conviction; #571873 on a 10 year sentence from San
Jacinto County for 1 count of Theft By Appropriation; 06/14/91
released on Parole; 08/24/92 returned from Parole with new
conviction; #621739 on a 20 year sentence from Polk and San Jacinto
County for 1 count of Burglary of a Habitation; 1 count of Burglary
of a Vehicle and 1 count of Unauthorized Use of a Motor Vehicle;
11/28/95 released on parole.
Pursley, 44, had been on Death Row for just six
years and he is due to be executed, by lethal injection, on 3 May
2005.
During his time he spent much time advertising
for pen pals: “Hello! My name is Lonnie. I am currently on Texas'
infamous Death Row. I was arrested on April 20, 1997 when I turned
myself over to the authorities after finding that there was a
warrant for arrest on the charge of Capital Murder. Family members
are no longer supporting me, nor are they keeping in contact with
me. I would like to find someone to correspond with. Please be
patient with me, as I am not financially stable. There are things in
here that are very much needed to get by, such as: hygiene items,
writing supplies, and stamps. Any and all help will be greatly
appreciated. I was born in Houston, Texas on September 17, 1961. I
was raised in a small East Texas town called Coldsprings. I'm 5'9"
tall, 230 pounds, with blue eyes and dusty blond hair. My interests
are rodeo - both watching and participating when I had the chance
to, playing handball and lifting weights. I also like to do artwork.
RACE, SEX, AGE - none of these matter. I hope to hear from you soon.
THANKS! I remain.”
So, if you intend to correspond with this lowlife,
you had better be quick.
Canadian Coalition to Abolish
the Death Penalty
TEXECUTED MAY 3, 2005 - Lonnie Wayne Pursley
Lonnie Pursley, 43, thanked the family of victim
Robert Earl Cook for a poem of forgiveness they sent him shortly
before he received a lethal injection. "I received your poem and I
am very grateful for your forgiveness. I still want to ask for it
anyway," he said to witnesses while strapped to a gurney in the
Texas death chamber. "I have Jesus in my heart and I am sorry for
any pain I caused you." The poem by Cook's nephew, Jamie Hollis,
read in part, "A soul that is lost, pays no greater cost, than to
leave this world, without being forgiven." "No, not by my family or
me, for we forgive," it said. "
Lonnie Wayne Pursley - Death Row, Texas
Address to Contact Prisoner : Lonnie Wayne
Pursley #999294, Polunsky Unit 12-DA-09, 12002 FM 350, South
Livingston, Texas 77351 USA.
What Happened ?
On April 20, 1997 after hearing that was a Capital Murder warrant
for my arrest, I turned myself in to clear my name. I was held for
nineteen months on the word of an ex felon and lifelong drug abuser.
Meanwhile, The Polk County Sherriff's Department, along with the
District Attorney's office, FABRICATED this case against me. The
record will show that most of the witnesses' testimonty against me
was perjured. It will also show that most of the evidence used
against me was fabricated, botched, tainted, and yes, even planted !
Evidence! There was also evidence which was overlooked that may have
exonerated me from the crime. I am indigent and depending upon Court
Appointed attorneys who have been very ineffective. I could use any
help available.
LONNIE'S PENPAL REQUEST :
Penpals : Hello! My name is Lonnie. I am
currently on Texas' infamous Death Row. I was arrested on April 20,
1997 when I turned myself over to the authorities after finding that
there was a warrant for arrest on the charge of Capital Murder.
Family members are no longer supporting me, nor are they keeping in
contact with me. I would like to find someone to correspond with.
Please be patient with me, as I am not financially stable. There are
things in here that are very much needed to get by, such as :
hygiene items, writing supplies, and stamps. Any and all help will
be greatly appreciated. I was born in Houston, Texas on September
17, 1961. I was raised in a small East Texas town called Coldsprings.
I'm 5'9" tall, 230 pounds, with blue eyes and dusty blone hair. My
interet are rodeo - both watching and participating when I had the
chance to, playing handball and lifting weights. I also like to do
art work. RACE, SEX, AGE - none of these matter. I hope to hear from
you soon. THANKS! I remain, Lonnie Wayne Pursley
Background: Defendant convicted of capital murder
petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus. The United States District
Court for the Eastern District of Texas denied the petition and the
defendant's subsequent application for a certificate of
appealability (COA).
Holdings: On the defendant's application for a
COA, the Court of Appeals held that:
(1) alleged victim impact evidence presented at the guilt phase was
not so unduly prejudicial that it rendered the trial fundamentally
unfair, and
(2) order that defendant be restrained in shackles and handcuffs
during voir dire, and exclusion of the defendant from individual
voir dire, did not deny defendant his constitutional rights to a
fair trial and a presumption of innocence. Application denied, and
denial of habeas relief affirmed.
The petitioner, Lonnie Pursley ("Pursley"),
appeals from the district court's denial of his petition for habeas
corpus and subsequent application for certificate of appealability
("COA"). Pursley's application for COA is DENIED.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On January 14, 1999, Lonnie Wayne Pursley was
convicted of capital murder for the death of Robert Earl Cook ("Cook").
The evidence at trial established that on the night of March 28,
1997, Cook left work and drove down Highway 59 towards his trailer
home near Livingston, Texas. The evidence further establishes that
Cook was on Highway 59, probably at about the same time that Pursley
was walking down that highway, after leaving from his in-law's house
on foot following an argument with his wife.
Cook's niece and next-door
neighbor, Sheila Dupree, testified that later that night she
observed a large man smoking a cigarette in the doorway of Cook's
trailer home. Dupree stated that Cook sat inside with an emotionless
expression on his face and that she could tell from looking at Cook
that something was wrong. The following day, March 29, Dupree
noticed that the gate on Cook's property was not shut properly and
that Cook's car was gone.
Although Cook had plans to spend time with
his mother that day, he never showed up. When Cook still had not
returned home by the evening of March 30, his mother contacted the
police, who began searching for Cook the next day. Upon learning
that Cook was missing, Dupree told the police about the man that she
had seen standing in Cook's doorway.
Meanwhile, several of Pursley's friends and
relatives saw Pursley driving a turquoise car matching the
description of Cook's vehicle on the morning of March 29 and the
following day. At least three of these witnesses noticed that the
vehicle had blood on the inside and outside of it, and that Pursley
had blood on his clothes. At least two witnesses later testified
that Pursley had admitted to them that he had beaten someone and had
left the victim to choke on his own blood.
Pursley's cousin, Richard
Winfrey, testified that on March 30, Pursley told him that he was
pretty sure he had beaten someone to death in his car. Pursley told
Winfrey that he had hidden the victim's car in some woods located
off of a dirt road and asked him for fake identification so that he
could leave the country.
On April 6, 1997, a passer-by discovered Cook's
decomposing body lying face down in a wooded area at the end of a
dead-end dirt road, approximately 2.5 miles from Cook's home. Trauma
to the body indicated that Cook had been pummeled brutally in the
chest and abdomen with the assailant's hands, feet, or with some
other unknown object. On April 15, 1997, the police discovered
Cook's car abandoned in a wooded area. There was a large amount of
blood spattered throughout the vehicle. The only DNA evidence
linking Pursley to the crime was on a cigarette butt found in the
ashtray of the victim's vehicle eighteen months after the car was
discovered by the police.
Pursley was arrested and charged by indictment
for the murder and robbery of Cook. On January 14, 1997, the jury
found Pursley guilty, and later answered Texas' capital murder
special issues in a manner that required the trial court to sentence
Pursley to death. Pursley's conviction and sentence were appealed
automatically to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, which affirmed
on January 31, 2001, and denied rehearing on March 28, 2001. Pursley
did not file a petition for writ of certiorari to the U.S. Supreme
Court.
On July 31, 2001, Pursley filed a state application for post-conviction
relief, which the Court of Criminal Appeals dismissed based on its
determination that the trial court's conclusions were supported by
the record. Ex Parte Pursley, No. 49, 634-01, slip. op. at 2 (Tx.Crim.App.
June 27, 2001). Pursley filed a motion requesting that the Texas
Court of Criminal Appeals reconsider its order dismissing his state
habeas application. The Court of Criminal Appeals denied this
request and the trial court set an execution date. On September 12,
2001, this Court granted Pursley's motion to stay his execution.
On June 27, 2002, Pursley filed his § 2254
petition for writ of habeas corpus in the federal district court.
The district court rejected Pursley's four assignments of error and
declined to grant Pursley's request for a COA. Pursley now seeks a
COA from this Court on the following claims of error: (1) whether
the district court erred in concluding that Pursley was not denied
his Eighth Amendment and due process rights to a fair trial when
victim impact evidence was presented by the state during the guilt-innocence
phase; and (2) whether the district court erred in concluding that
Pursley was not denied his federal constitutional rights to a fair
trial and a presumption of innocence when the trial court ordered
him to appear during voir dire in shackles and handcuffs, and
further compounded the error when the trial court excluded him from
being present during individual voir dire.
* * *
Because Pursley has not made a substantial
showing that he was been denied a constitutional right, or that
reasonable jurists could debate whether his petition for habeas
corpus should have been resolved differently, his request for a COA
is DENIED; the order of the district court denying Pursley's
petition for habeas corpus is hereby AFFIRMED.