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Robert Dale ROWELL
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Robbery
- Drugs
Number of victims: 3
Date of murders: 198 ? / 1993
Date of birth:
April8, 1955
Victims profile: Fellow
inmate in prison /
Raymond David Mata
38, and Irvin Wright, 52
Method of murder: Stabbing
with homemade knife
/
Location: Harris County, Texas, USA
Status:
Executed
by lethal injection in Texas on November 15,
2005
Summary:
Rowell went to the Houston home of Irvin Wright, looking for dope
and money.
Angie Perez and her husband, Raymond Mata, were also living in
Wright’s home, variously described as a "crack house" at trial.
Holding a gun, Rowell told Perez and Mata he would shoot them if
they tried to leave. After Rowell went into Wright’s room, Perez
heard a thumping sound followed by Wright screaming for Rowell to
stop hitting him.
After about three minutes, Wright and Rowell went to Perez’s and
Mata’s bedroom. Wright was staggering, covered in blood. Rowell
ordered the trio to get into the bathtub; he then shot all three.
Mata died from a gunshot wound, and Wright was bleeding from wounds
to the the back of his head inflicted with a claw hammer. Perez was
seriously wounded but survived to testify against Rowell. Wright
died a short time later.
Police arrested Rowell where he worked, finding a .22 caliber
revolver with six spent cartridge casings in the chamber, the gun
case, and Wright’s bank bag in his work area.
In 1974 Rowell was convicted and sentenced for Robbery and paroled.
In 1980, he was convicted and sentenced for a string of armed
robberies, exchanging gunfire with an off-duty policeman in one
case, and received a 30 year sentence. While in prison he was
convicted of manslaughter for stabbing to death another inmate and
sentenced to 8 years. He was freed under mandatory parole in 1991,
two years before the capital murders.
Citations:
Rowell v. Dretke, 398 F.3d 370 (5th Cir. 2005) (Habeas).
Final Meal:
Declined.
Final Words:
“I would like to apologize to the victims' family and all the grief
I have caused them,” Robert Dale Rowell said in a brief final
statement as the mother, sister and brother of one of his victims
watched through a window. “I would like to say I love the girls next
to them,” he said, referring to six women he selected to watch him
die. Several of them sobbed. Then he said, “Praise the Lord. Let's
go warden. That's it.” Rowell, 50, snorted twice as the drugs began
taking effect. He was pronounced dead nine minutes later.
ClarkProsecutor.org
Texas Department of Criminal
Justice
Inmate: Rowell, Richard Dale
Date of Birth: 04/08/55
TDCJ#: 999104
Date Received: 06/03/1994
Education: 14 years
Date of Offense: 05/10/1993
County of Conviction: Harris County
Race: White
Gender: Male
Hair Color: Brown
Height: 5 ft 08 in
Weight: 168
Eye Color: Blue
Prior Occupation: Mechanic
Texas Attorney General
Media Advisory
Wednesday, November 9, 2005
Robert Dale Rowell Scheduled For Execution
AUSTIN – Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott
offers the following information about Robert Dale Rowell, who is
scheduled to be executed after 6 p.m. Tuesday, November 15, 2005.
The 50-year-old Rowell was convicted of capital murder and sentenced
to death for the 1993 murder of Raymond Mata.
FACTS OF THE CRIME
In the early morning hours of May 10, 1993,
Robert Dale Rowell went to the Houston home of Irvin Wright. Angie
Perez and her husband, Raymond Mata, were also living in Wright’s
home.
Perez opened the door for Rowell, who said he was going to get
dope and money from Wright. Holding a gun, Rowell told Perez and
Mata he would shoot them if they tried to leave. After Rowell went
into Wright’s room, Perez heard a thumping sound followed by Wright
screaming for Rowell to stop hitting him.
After about three minutes,
Wright and Rowell went to Perez’s and Mata’s bedroom. Wright was
staggering, covered in blood. Rowell ordered the trio to get into
the bathtub; he then shot them.
Mata died from a gunshot wound, but
he had also been struck on the back of his head with a hammer-type
instrument. Wright and Perez survived.
Police arrested Rowell at a
steering column repair shop where he worked, and officers searched
his work area, finding a .22 caliber revolver with six spent
cartridge casings in the chamber, the gun case and Wright’s bank bag.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On March 1, 1994, a Harris County grand jury
indicted Rowell for the capital murder. A jury found Rowell guilty
of capital murder, and he was sentenced to death on April 7, 1994.
Rowell appealed his conviction and sentence to the Texas Court of
Criminal Appeals, which affirmed the conviction and sentence on
December 18, 1996. The U.S. Supreme Court subsequently denied
Rowell’s petition for writ of certiorari on October 6, 1997.
Rowell filed an application for writ of habeas
corpus in the trial court on April 14, 1998. The state habeas court
issued findings of fact and conclusions of law recommending that
Rowell be denied relief. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals adopted
the state habeas court’s findings and conclusions on September 11,
2002.
Thereafter, Rowell filed a habeas petition in a
Houston U.S. district court on September 2, 2003. On February 23,
2004, the federal district court denied Rowell’s federal writ
petition. Rowell then sought permission to appeal from the 5th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals, but the court denied Rowell’s request on
January 25, 2005. Subsequently, Rowell filed a petition for writ of
certiorari in the U.S. Supreme Court, but the Court denied
certiorari review on October 3, 2005.
PRIOR CRIMINAL HISTORY
Rowell began preying on people in 1973. He
committed a string of armed robberies which resulted in his first
trip to state prison. For these robberies, Rowell received
concurrent sentences of ten and twelve years.
After he was paroled from prison, Rowell once
again went on a robbery spree. In 1980, Rowell robbed two stores at
gunpoint. During this crime spree, an armed Rowell robbed the
manager of a restaurant, while a Houston police officer was in the
restaurant. After Rowell ran out of the restaurant, the officer,
with his weapon drawn, followed and identified himself as a police
officer. Rowell turned around, shot at the officer, then ran again;
the officer returned fire.
Rowell was apprehended while lying under
a vehicle in a parking lot about a half block away. Rowell was
sentenced on November 18, 1980, to 30 years in state prison to be
served concurrently for each of the robberies he committed during
this spree. While in prison, Rowell fatally stabbed another inmate
between ten and fifteen times in the chest with a homemade knife.
For this killing, Rowell was convicted of voluntary manslaughter and
sentenced to eight years in prison.
Psychological testing on Rowell indicates that he
is subject to depression, psychopathic behavior, deviancy, anxiety,
social introversion, and drug and alcohol addiction. A psychiatrist
who testified for the defense stated that Rowell’s psychological
profile was unusual for a capital defendant because Rowell does not
act impulsively; rather, he scores high in his ability to think
rationally and act purposefully.
ProDeathPenalty.com
On 05/10/1993 in Houston, Texas, Rowell entered a
crack house in an attempt to rob Irving Wright of drugs and money.
Rowell started shooting with a 25 caliber pistol striking all three
victims, killing Wright and Raymond David Mata. Another man was shot
in the left arm and leg and paralyzed. Rowell then robbed the
victims of unknown money and fled the scene by car. Rowell came to
the home of people with whom he was supposedly friends in search of
drugs and money.
While he probably could have gotten what he wanted
with very little resistance from Wright due to his size, Rowell
chose instead to beat him in the head with a claw hammer. Then,
still receiving no resistance from any of the victims, Rowell
marched all three into the bathroom and shot them.
One of the
victims also had signs of continued beatings after he was shot.
Rowell then proceeded to take a shower and clean himself up.
Texas Execution Information
Center by David Carson
Txexecutions.org
Robert Dale Rowell, 50, was executed by lethal
injection on 15 November 2005 in Huntsville, Texas for killing two
men in a crack house robbery.
At about 4:00 a.m. on 10 May 1993, Rowell, then
38, arrived at the north Houston home of Irvin Wright, 52. Raymond
Mata, 38 and Mata's wife, Angie Perez, were also living in Wright's
home. Perez opened the door for Rowell. Rowell then pulled out a gun
and said that he was there to get drugs and money from Wright. He
told Mata and Perez he would shoot them if they tried to flee.
Rowell then went into Wright's room and began
hitting him with a claw hammer. From the other room, Perez heard a
thumping sound, followed by Wright screaming for Rowell to stop
hitting him. After about three minutes, Rowell came into Mata and
Perez's bedroom, bringing Wright with him, staggering and covered in
blood. Rowell ordered the three of them to get into the bathtub. He
then shot them, killing Mata and wounding Perez and Wright. He then
beat Mata on the head with the hammer. Rowell then took a shower,
stole some money, and drove away. Wright later died in a Houston
hospital. Perez survived to testify against Rowell.
Police arrested Rowell at the mechanic's shop
where he worked. Officers found a .22-caliber revolver with six
spent cartridge casings in the chamber. They also found a bank bag
belonging to Wright.
At the trial, the state presented evidence that
Rowell beat Mata on the head with a claw hammer after shooting him.
Prosecutors said that Rowell went to Wright's home intending to rob
him because he thought he had been overcharged for crack cocaine.
The defense claimed that there was no robbery and that Rowell only
fired after Wright and Mata lunged for his gun.
Rowell had a history of robbery and violence. In
1974, at age 18, after a string of robberies, he was convicted and
sentenced to 12 years in prison. He served 4½ years of that sentence
and was paroled in 1978. While still on parole, he went on another
robbery spree. He was caught after shooting at a Houston police
officer while robbing a restaurant. He was convicted in 1980 on
three counts of armed robbery and sentenced to 30 years in prison.
In 1982, while in prison, Rowell fatally stabbed another inmate
between 10 and 15 times in the chest with a homemade knife. He was
convicted of manslaughter and given another concurrent 8-year
sentence. He was paroled again in 1991. (At the time, the state of
Texas was under strict prison population caps imposed by U.S.
District Judge William Wayne Justice.) According to court records,
Rowell was using $500 worth of cocaine a day at the time of the
killings.
A jury convicted Rowell of capital murder in
April 1994 and sentenced him to death. The Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals affirmed the conviction and sentence in December 1996. All
of his subsequent appeals in state and federal court were denied.
Rowell declined to speak with reporters while on
death row. In a 1998 psychological evaluation report, Rowell stated,
"The whole neighborhood did drugs, and once you do them, you always
want them. Before I did drugs, I stayed with my grandfather and
fished, and I was happy."
There were no serious efforts to stop Rowell's
execution, either by his own lawyers or by anti-death-penalty
organizations.
"I would like to apologize to the victim's family
and all the grief I have caused them," Rowell said in his last
statement. He also expressed love to some friends who attended his
execution. He concluded his last statement by saying, "Praise the
Lord. Let's go warden. That's it." The lethal injection was then
started. He was pronounced dead at 6:24 p.m.
National Coalition to Abolish
the Death Penalty
TEXAS - Robert Dale Rowell - November 14, 2005
Robert Dale Rowell, a white man, will be executed
in Texas on Nov. 15, 2005 for the May 10, 1993 capital murder of
Raymond David Mata.
Rowell entered a Houston crack house on May 10,
1993 to rob drugs and money. While in the course of committing or
attempting robbery, Rowell shot Mata and two others. One of the
three victims survived the shooting to testify.
During the presentation of mitigating evidence at
the sentencing phase of trial, Rowell’s brother, two Texas
Department of Criminal Justice employees, and two prison ministry
counselors testified that “Rowell was a good brother, son, and
grandson; he was a good employee” and that “he found religion while
incarcerated.”
They also testified that Rowell would not be
violent once “free from the influence of drugs.” In his federal
appeal Rowell claimed that his constitutional rights were violated
when the court refused to expand on the term “society” in special
issue one.
According to Texas law, at sentencing the jury is
asked two special issue questions; the answers to these questions
lead either to a life sentence or a death sentence. The first
question is in regard to the defendant’s future dangerousness to
society. The jury sent a note to the court during deliberations
requesting clarification of the term “society” as used in special
issue one. To which the trial judge answered “I am prohibited by law
from expanding on the Court’s charge.”
Additionally, the trial court did not allow the
jury to consider how long Rowell would be confined without parole if
sentenced to life. Forty-nine year old Rowell would be 84 years old
before his first opportunity for parole. Perhaps, had the judge
clarified for the jury that society meant prison society during a
life sentence and the broader society on parole, the jury would have
found that Rowell would not be a danger to other inmates and would
not be a danger when paroled as an 84 year old man in 35 years.
Instead the jury may have considered Rowell’s future dangerousness
as a prediction of his dangerousness if released now.
Because the jury that decided Rowell’s fate did
not clearly understand the issue of future dangerousness and did not
know how long he would be in prison before his first chance at
parole, Rowell’s death sentence should be reviewed. Please write to
Texas Gov. Rick Perry requesting that Robert Dale Rowell’s execution
be stopped.
Drug addict executed Tuesday
The Huntsville Item
November 16, 2005
Looking at six women who came to support him
during his last hour, Robert Dale Rowell apologized to his victims'
families. “I would like to apologize to the victims' family and all
the grief I have caused them,” Rowell said in his brief final
statement, as the mother, sister and brother of one of his victims
watched through a window. Rowell was a habitual drug user who
murdered two people at a Houston crack house 12 years ago.
He then addressed his friends, saying, “I would
like to say I love the girls next to them,” he said. Several of the
women sobbed and had to support each other as they watched the
lethal drugs begin to take effect. Rowell said, “Praise the Lord.
Let's go warden. That's it.”
The 50-year-old then snorted twice and drew his
final breath. He was pronounced dead nine minutes later at 6:24 p.m.
CST.
Rowell had already been to prison, where records
showed he fatally stabbed a fellow inmate while serving a sentence
for robbery, and was free under mandatory supervision when he was
arrested for the 1993 shooting spree that sent him to death row.
His execution was the first of two scheduled in
Texas on consecutive nights this week. He was the 18th prisoner this
year to receive lethal injection in the nation's most active capital
punishment state. Condemned inmate Shannon Thomas was to follow him
to the death chamber gurney Wednesday night for a triple slaying in
Baytown on Christmas Eve in 1993. The U.S. Supreme Court last month
refused to review Rowell's case and no late legal attempts were made
to spare him.
Raymond Mata, 38, and Irvin Wright, 52, were
killed May 10, 1993, when Rowell showed up at Wright's house before
dawn complaining about paying too much for some crack cocaine. Mata
also was living there with his wife, Angie Perez. “He always had a
dope problem,” said Kelly Siegler, the Harris County district
attorney who prosecuted the capital murder case and used Rowell's
extensive criminal history to persuade jurors to send him to death
row.
Wright was beaten with a claw hammer. Then all
three were herded into a bathroom where they were shot in a bathtub.
Perez was seriously wounded but survived to testify against Rowell.
Rowell was arrested a short time later at an auto repair shop where
he worked. Police found a .22-caliber revolver with six spent
cartridge casings and a bank bag belonging to Wright.
Rowell declined to speak with reporters as his
death date approached. Witnesses at his trial described him as
depressed, introverted, psychopathic and a chronic drug user who
turned violent while under the influence of drugs.
Rowell first went to prison in 1974 at age 18
with 10- and 12-year concurrent sentences for armed robbery. He was
paroled 4 1/2 years later. A 1980 robbery spree that included a
shootout with a Houston police officer at a restaurant ended with
his arrest while he hid under a car in a parking lot and got him a
30-year sentence. Two years later, prison records show he fatally
stabbed a fellow inmate at the Ramsey I prison in Brazoria County,
earning him a manslaughter conviction and another eight-year prison
term.
In June 1991, however, he was released under
mandatory supervision only to be arrested two years later for the
crack house shootings.
Thomas was to follow Rowell to the death chamber
24 hours later. One other execution is scheduled in Texas for
December. If carried out, the 20 lethal injections would be three
less than a year ago. A record 40 were carried out in 2000.
The Associated Press contributed to this story.
Killer in Houston crack house shooting executed
Houston Chronicle
Associated Press - Nov. 15, 2005
HUNTSVILLE — A habitual drug user was executed
this evening for the slayings of two people at a Houston crack house
12 years ago.
"I would like to apologize to the victims' family
and all the grief I have caused them," Robert Dale Rowell said in a
brief final statement as the mother, sister and brother of one of
his victims watched through a window. "I would like to say I love
the girls next to them," he said, referring to six women he selected
to watch him die. Several of them sobbed. Then he said, "Praise the
Lord. Let's go warden. That's it." Rowell, 50, snorted twice as the
drugs began taking effect. He was pronounced dead nine minutes later
at 6:24 p.m. CST.
Rowell already had been to prison, where records
showed he fatally stabbing a fellow inmate while serving a sentence
for robbery, and was free under mandatory supervision when he was
arrested for the 1993 shooting spree that sent him to death row.
His execution was the first of two scheduled in
Texas on consecutive nights this week. He was the 18th prisoner this
year to receive lethal injection in the nation's most active capital
punishment state. Condemned inmate Shannon Thomas was to follow him
to the death chamber gurney Wednesday night for a triple slaying in
Baytown on Christmas Eve in 1993. The U.S. Supreme Court last month
refused to review Rowell's case and no late legal attempts were made
to spare him.
Raymond Mata, 38, and Irvin Wright, 52, were
killed May 10, 1993, when Rowell showed up at Wright's house before
dawn complaining about paying too much for some crack cocaine. Mata
also was living their with his wife, Angie Perez. "He always had a
dope problem," said Kelly Siegler, the Harris County district
attorney who prosecuted the capital murder case and used Rowell's
extensive criminal history to persuade jurors to send him to death
row. Wright was beaten with a claw hammer.
Then all three were
herded into a bathroom where they were shot in a bathtub. Perez was
seriously wounded but survived to testify against him. Rowell was
arrested a short time later at an auto repair shop where he worked.
Police found a .22-caliber revolver with six spent cartridge casings
and a bank bag belonging to Wright. Rowell declined to speak with
reporters as his death date approached.
Witnesses at his trial described him as depressed,
introverted, psychopathic and a chronic drug user who turned violent
while under the influence of drugs. Rowell first went to prison in
1974 at age 18 with 10- and 12-year concurrent sentences for armed
robbery. He was paroled 4 1/2 years later. A 1980 robbery spree that
included a shootout with a Houston police officer at a restaurant
ended with his arrest while he hid under a car in a parking lot and
got him a 30-year sentence.
Two years later, prison records show he
fatally stabbed a fellow inmate at the Ramsey I prison in Brazoria
County, earning him a manslaughter conviction and another eight-year
prison term. In June 1991, however, he was released under mandatory
supervision only to be arrested two years later for the crack house
shootings.
Thomas was to follow Rowell to the death chamber
24 hours later. One other execution is scheduled in Texas for
December. If carried out, the 20 lethal injections would be three
less than a year ago. A record 40 were carried out in 2000.
Death row inmate is not one to stand out
With
all appeals exhausted, Rowell will become 18th to die this year
By Rosanna Ruiz - Houston Chronicle
Nov. 15, 2005
Unlike many of his fellow inmates on death row,
Robert Dale Rowell never got much television airtime or received
much newspaper ink. The 50-year-old will walk into Texas' death
chamber tonight a virtual unknown, the 18th inmate to be put to
death this year.
No public campaign has been waged on his behalf.
The National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty issued a routine
alert on Rowell's execution that does little more than lay out the
facts of his case. A last-minute reprieve is unlikely. His lawyers
are not claiming he is mentally retarded or that his trial attorney
fell asleep in court. His appeals were exhausted last month when the
U.S. Supreme Court decided not to review his case or his claim that
the trial judge should have given the jury better instructions. "There
is nothing now pending," Rowell's attorney Ed Mallett said Monday.
The trial was not even one to stand out for Kelly
Siegler, the Harris County assistant district attorney who
prosecuted the case in 1994. "The fact that he killed somebody
before is probably what convinced the jury that he needed the death
penalty," she said. Rowell was convicted of capital murder in the
fatal shooting of crack dealer Irvin Wright and housemate Raymond
Mata. Angie Perez, Mata's wife, was seriously wounded.
Much of his defense centered on his lawyers'
contention that Rowell did not rob the victims and the death penalty
should not have been available. After the jury convicted Rowell, his
lawyers tried to use the punishment phase of the trial to mitigate
the crime by showing Rowell had begun a life of drug abuse at 13. A
year later, according to court records, Rowell was injecting heroin
and taking "anything else that I could get my hands on." Soon, he
turned to robbery and burglary to support his $100-a-day drug habit,
which led to his first conviction in 1974 for assault. He also was
convicted for holdups of a drug store and a convenience store.
In
1980, he attempted to rob a restaurant, where he exchanged gunfire
with an off-duty Houston police officer. In 1982, he stabbed another
inmate more than a dozen times, claiming the other man had made
sexual advances toward him. He was convicted of voluntary
manslaughter and sentenced to eight years in prison. Rowell stayed
clean for almost two years after his release from prison in 1991.
But after his introduction to crack cocaine, he told authorities his
"life deteriorated rapidly" and he was soon using an ounce, or $500
worth of cocaine a day.
According to court records, about 4 a.m. on May
19, 1993, Rowell went to his dealer's home in the 100 block of Red
Ripple in northwest Houston to steal his money and drugs because he
felt he had been overcharged. Perez, who testified during the trial,
said she heard "thumping" sounds as Rowell was beating the 600-pound
Wright in the next room. Rowell ordered the three into the bathroom
tub where he shot them. Mata, shot in the head, died instantly.
Wright died later. Perez was hit in the hand and the head, and told
authorities she had numbness in her leg and trouble walking.
Eleven years later, Mallett describes his client
as a "reasonably literate, very nice person." "He has a history of
being violent when confronted and under the influence of drugs. All
of his offenses are drug-related," Mallett said. "He's aware he has
an extreme susceptibility to addiction and that he cannot control it
when it's available to him." Rowell earned his GED and associate's
degree in prison.
In court records, Randy Rowell explained that he
and his brother had to be more independent as children because their
mother had been on medication most of her life. Randy Rowell did not
return a phone call seeking comment for this article. "The whole
neighborhood did drugs and once you do them, you always want them,"
Robert Rowell is quoted in a 1998 report after a psychological
evaluation. "Before I did drugs, I stayed with my grandfather and
fished and I was happy."
Rowell is the first of two Harris County men
sentenced to die this week. Shannon Thomas is slated to be executed
Wednesday for the 1993 triple slayings of a Baytown father and his
two children on Christmas Eve.
Killer in crack house shooting executed
By
Michael Graczyk - Denton Record Chronicle
November 16, 2005
A habitual drug user was executed Tuesday evening
for the slayings of two people at a Houston crack house 12 years
ago.
"I would like to apologize to the victims' family
and all the grief I have caused them," Robert Dale Rowell said in a
brief final statement as the mother, sister and brother of one of
his victims watched through a window. "I would like to say I love
the girls next to them," he said, referring to six women he selected
to watch him die. Several of them sobbed. Then he said, "Praise the
Lord. Let's go warden. That's it." Rowell, 50, snorted twice as the
drugs began taking effect. He was pronounced dead nine minutes later
at 6:24 p.m. CST.
Rowell already had been to prison, where records
showed he fatally stabbing a fellow inmate while serving a sentence
for robbery, and was free under mandatory supervision when he was
arrested for the 1993 shooting spree that sent him to death row.
His execution was the first of two scheduled in
Texas on consecutive nights this week. He was the 18th prisoner this
year to receive lethal injection in the nation's most active capital
punishment state. Condemned inmate Shannon Thomas was to follow him
to the death chamber gurney Wednesday night for a triple slaying in
Baytown on Christmas Eve in 1993. The U.S. Supreme Court last month
refused to review Rowell's case and no late legal attempts were made
to spare him.
Raymond Mata, 38, and Irvin Wright, 52, were
killed May 10, 1993, when Rowell showed up at Wright's house before
dawn complaining about paying too much for some crack cocaine. Mata
also was living their with his wife, Angie Perez. "He always had a
dope problem," said Kelly Siegler, the Harris County district
attorney who prosecuted the capital murder case and used Rowell's
extensive criminal history to persuade jurors to send him to death
row. Wright was beaten with a claw hammer. Then all three were
herded into a bathroom where they were shot in a bathtub. Perez was
seriously wounded but survived to testify against him. Rowell was
arrested a short time later at an auto repair shop where he worked.
Police found a .22-caliber revolver with six spent cartridge casings
and a bank bag belonging to Wright.
Rowell declined to speak with reporters as his
death date approached. Witnesses at his trial described him as
depressed, introverted, psychopathic and a chronic drug user who
turned violent while under the influence of drugs.
Rowell first went to prison in 1974 at age 18
with 10- and 12-year concurrent sentences for armed robbery. He was
paroled 4 1/2 years later. A 1980 robbery spree that included a
shootout with a Houston police officer at a restaurant ended with
his arrest while he hid under a car in a parking lot and got him a
30-year sentence. Two years later, prison records show he fatally
stabbed a fellow inmate at the Ramsey I prison in Brazoria County,
earning him a manslaughter conviction and another eight-year prison
term. In June 1991, however, he was released under mandatory
supervision only to be arrested two years later for the crack house
shootings.
Thomas was to follow Rowell to the death chamber
24 hours later. One other execution is scheduled in Texas for
December. If carried out, the 20 lethal injections would be three
less than a year ago. A record 40 were carried out in 2000.
Killer in Houston shootings to be executed
Houston Chronicle
Associated Press - Nov. 14, 2005
HUNTSVILLE — Robert Dale Rowell already had a
slaying under his belt, a fatal stabbing committed while in prison
on a robbery conviction, when a Harris County jury decided he
deserved to die for shooting three people at a Houston crack house,
killing two of them and leaving a third paralyzed.
Rowell, 50, faced lethal injection Tuesday
evening for the 1993 shooting spree that left Raymond Mata, 38, and
Irvin Wright, 52, dead. Mata's wife, Angie Perez, was seriously
wounded. He would be the 18th Texas prisoner executed this year and
the first of two on consecutive nights this week. Condemned inmate
Shannon Thomas was to follow him to the death chamber Wednesday
night for a triple slaying in Baytown on Christmas Eve in 1993.
The U.S. Supreme Court last month refused to
review Rowell's case.
Rowell has spent much of his adult life in
prison, and prosecutors used his extensive criminal history to
convince jurors to send him to death row.
Evidence showed Rowell arrived at Wright's north
Houston house on Red Ripple Road about 4 a.m. May 10, 1993, as a
dissatisfied customer complaining he'd paid too much for some crack
cocaine. Mata and Perez, who answered the door, also were living
there. Court records show Rowell, armed with a pistol, warned the
couple he would shoot them if they tried to flee. "He knew the guy
was a dope dealer, and he was thinking either he was going to get a
little dope or get some cash," Kelly Siegler, the Harris County
assistant district attorney who prosecuted the case, recalled. "And
then things went crazy."
Perez later would say she heard a thumping sound
and screams from Wright's room. Wright, investigators determined,
had been badly beaten with a claw hammer and was led into the
couple's room. All three were herded into a bathroom where they were
shot in a bathtub. Rowell then took a shower. He was arrested a
short time later at an auto repair shop where he worked. Police
found a .22-caliber revolver with six spent cartridge casings and a
bank bag belonging to Wright.
Rowell declined to speak with reporters in the
weeks before his scheduled punishment. His attorney, Edward Mallett,
did not return calls seeking comment. Witnesses at his trial
described him as depressed, introverted, psychopathic and a chronic
drug user who turned violent while under the influence of drugs.
Rowell first went to prison in 1974 at age 18
with 10- and 12-year concurrent sentences for armed robbery. He was
paroled 4 1/2 years later. He was involved in a 1980 robbery spree
that included a shootout with a Houston police officer at a
restaurant that ended with his arrest while he hid under a car in a
parking lot. That got him a 30-year sentence for robbery.
In September 1982, prison records show he used a
shank to fatally stab a fellow inmate at the Ramsey I prison in
Brazoria County, earning him a manslaughter conviction and another
eight-year prison term. In June 1991, however, Rowell was released
under mandatory supervision. Two years later, he was arrested for
the slayings that earned him a cell on death row.
"I think the jury was pretty appalled by it,"
Siegler said of his release from prison on the earlier sentences.
After Thomas, set to die Wednesday, one other
2005 execution is scheduled in Texas for December. If carried out,
the 20 lethal injections would be three less than a year ago and the
fewest for a year in Texas since 17 inmates were put to death in
2001. A record 40 were executed in 2000.
Texas executes 18th inmate of year
Monsters and Critics.com
UPI - Nov 16, 2005
HUNTSVILLE, TX, United States (UPI) -- Texas held
its 18th execution of the year Tuesday putting a 50-year-old inmate
to death for killing two people in a crack house in 1993.
Robert Dale Rowell died by lethal injection
shortly after 6 p.m. in the state prison in Huntsville, KWTX-TV in
Waco reported.
Rowell, a longtime drug user, had a long criminal
record before he went on trial for capital murder. He went to prison
in 1980 after exchanging fire with a police officer during a robbery
and received an eight-year sentence for killing a fellow inmate.
Freed in 1991, Rowell apparently managed to stay
clean for two years before getting hooked on crack cocaine. He was
convicted of killing his drug dealer, Raymond Mata, and another man,
Irving Wright, because he thought Mata had overcharged him.
Killer in Houston crack house shooting set to
die Tuesday night
By Michael Graczyk -
MySanAntonio.com
November 15, 2005
Robert Dale Rowell was in prison when authorities
said he committed his first slaying, the fatal stabbing of a fellow
inmate. Eventually released into the free world to be under
mandatory supervision, Rowell wound up back in prison — this time on
death row — for the fatal shooting of two people at a Houston crack
house.
Rowell, 50, faced lethal injection Tuesday
evening for the 1993 shooting spree that killed Raymond Mata, 38,
and Irvin Wright, 52. Mata's wife, Angie Perez, was seriously
wounded in the shooting. Rowell would be the 18th Texas prisoner
executed this year and the first of two on consecutive nights this
week. Condemned inmate Shannon Thomas was to follow him to the death
chamber Wednesday night for a triple slaying in Baytown on Christmas
Eve in 1993. The U.S. Supreme Court last month refused to review
Rowell's case.
Rowell has spent much of his adult life in prison,
and prosecutors used his extensive criminal history to convince
jurors to send him to death row. "He always had a dope problem,"
said Kelly Siegler, the Harris County district attorney who
prosecuted the capital murder case.
Evidence showed Rowell arrived at Wright's north
Houston house about 4 a.m. May 10, 1993, complaining he'd paid too
much for some crack cocaine. Mata and Perez, who answered the door,
also were living there. "He knew the guy was a dope dealer, and he
was thinking either he was going to get a little dope or get some
cash," Siegler said. "And then things went crazy." Wright was beaten
with a claw hammer and led into the couple's room, then all three
were herded into a bathroom where they were shot in a bathtub, Perez
later told authorities. Rowell then took a shower. He was arrested a
short time later at an auto repair shop where he worked. Police
found a .22-caliber revolver with six spent cartridge casings and a
bank bag belonging to Wright.
Rowell declined to speak with reporters in the
weeks before his scheduled punishment. Witnesses at his trial
described him as depressed, introverted, psychopathic and a chronic
drug user who turned violent while under the influence of drugs.
Rowell first went to prison in 1974 at age 18 with 10- and 12-year
concurrent sentences for armed robbery. He was paroled 4 1/2 years
later. He was involved in a 1980 robbery spree that included a
shootout with a Houston police officer at a restaurant that ended
with his arrest while he hid under a car in a parking lot. That got
him a 30-year sentence for robbery.
In September 1982, prison records show he used a
shank to fatally stab a fellow inmate at the Ramsey I prison in
Brazoria County, earning him a manslaughter conviction and another
eight-year prison term. In June 1991, he was released under
mandatory supervision. He was arrested two years later for the crack
house shootings.
Thomas was to follow Rowell to the Texas death
chamber 24 hours later. One other execution is scheduled in Texas
for December. If carried out, the 20 lethal injections would be
three less than a year ago and the fewest for a year in Texas since
17 inmates were put to death in 2001. A record 40 were executed in
2000.
Rowell v. Dretke,
398 F.3d 370 (5th Cir. 2005)
Background: Petitioner, who was convicted and
sentenced to death in Texas state court for capital murder, filed a
petition for writ of habeas corpus. The United States District Court
for the Southern District of Texas, Ewing Werlein, Jr., J., denied
the petition, and petitioner applied for a certificate of
appealability (COA).
Holdings: The Court of Appeals, DeMoss, Circuit
Judge, held that:
(1) petitioner failed to make a substantial showing of the denial of
a constitutional right as to his claim that his constitutional
rights were violated when the trial court refused to define for the
jury the term "society" in the future dangerousness special issue of
the punishment charge, and
(2) petitioner failed to make a substantial showing of the denial of
a constitutional right as to his claim that Texas law was
unconstitutional because it failed to assign a proper burden of
proof on the special issues and failed to provide for appellate
review of the mitigating evidence. Application denied.
DeMOSS, Circuit Judge:
Petitioner Robert Dale Rowell ("Rowell") was convicted and sentenced
to death in Texas state court for the capital murder of Raymond
David Mata. Rowell filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in the
United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The district court denied Rowell's
petition. Rowell now requests a certificate of appealability ("COA")
from this Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(2), seeking to
appeal the district court's denial of habeas relief. To begin, this
Court GRANTS Rowell's motion for leave to file a reply to
Respondent's opposition to request for COA and further GRANTS
Rowell's motion for leave to file oversize reply.
For the reasons detailed below, we DENY Rowell's
application for COA because he has failed to make a substantial
showing of the denial of a constitutional right as to his claims:
(1) that his constitutional rights were violated when the trial
court refused to define for the jury the term "society" in the
future dangerousness special issue of the punishment charge; and (2)
that Texas law is unconstitutional because it fails to assign a
proper burden of proof on the special issues and fails to provide
for appellate review of the mitigating evidence.
BACKGROUND
Rowell was convicted and sentenced to death in
April 1994 for the capital offense of murdering Raymond David Mata
while in the course of committing or attempting to commit robbery.
On direct appeal in December 1996, the Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals ("TCCA") affirmed Rowell's conviction and sentence. In
October 1997, the Supreme Court denied Rowell's petition for writ of
certiorari.
Thereafter, in April 1998, Rowell filed a state
application for writ of habeas corpus. The trial court entered
findings of fact and conclusions of law recommending the denial of
relief. In September 2002, the TCCA adopted the trial judge's
findings and conclusions and denied Rowell habeas relief. Rowell
then filed a federal habeas petition in the district court in
September 2003. Respondent filed an answer and a motion for summary
judgment. In February 2004, the district court granted Respondent's
motion, dismissed Rowell's petition, entered a final judgment, and
denied Rowell a COA on his claims. Rowell timely filed the instant
application for COA.
* * *
Rowell also objects on appeal to Texas's use of
special issue no. 2, the mitigation special issue. Rowell argues
this special issue is unconstitutional because Texas law fails to
assign a burden of proof. Rowell also contends this special issue is
unconstitutional because it is not subject to appellate review of
the sufficiency of the mitigating evidence. Rowell also made the
argument (now foreclosed by Schriro v. Summerlin, --- U.S. ----, 124
S.Ct. 2519, 159 L.Ed.2d 442 (2004)) that Ring v. Arizona, 536 U.S.
584, 122 S.Ct. 2428, 153 L.Ed.2d 556 (2002), is a new substantive
rule of criminal law that should be given retroactive effect on
collateral review. Rowell insists that just as Ring should be
construed to require Texas to provide for some burden of proof on
whether a sufficient mitigating circumstance has been proven, the
Constitution also entitled him to have the TCCA review whether there
was evidence to support the jury's answer.
Respondent replies that there is no doubt Texas's
special issues are constitutional. See Jurek v. Texas, 428 U.S. 262,
268-71, 96 S.Ct. 2950, 49 L.Ed.2d 929 (1976). Respondent stresses
that here the jury at the guilt-innocence phase first found beyond a
reasonable doubt that Rowell was guilty of the intentional murder of
Raymond Mata and that the murder occurred in the course of Rowell's
committing or attempting to commit robbery.
During the punishment
phase, the jury then answered "yes" to the question of whether
Rowell would pose a continuing threat to society, thereby finding
that the State had met its burden of proving Rowell's future
dangerousness to society beyond a reasonable doubt. [FN4] Consistent
with Supreme Court precedent, Respondent argues this determination--whether
a defendant falls within the narrowed class of death-eligible
defendants--is properly subject to review by the TCCA. See, e.g.,
Swearingen v. State, 101 S.W.3d 89, 95-98 (Tex.Crim.App.2003) (reviewing
sufficiency of evidence on conviction); Guevara v. State, 97 S.W.3d
579, 581 (Tex.Crim.App.2003) (reviewing sufficiency of evidence on
future dangerousness).
Respondent contends the mitigation special
issue satisfies the Eighth Amendment's requirements for the
individualized selection decision because it allows the jury to "consider
relevant mitigating evidence of the character and record of the
defendant and the circumstances of the crime." Tuilaepa v.
California, 512 U.S. 967, 972, 114 S.Ct. 2630, 129 L.Ed.2d 750
(1994); see also Franklin v. Lynaugh, 487 U.S. 164, 182, 108 S.Ct.
2320, 101 L.Ed.2d 155 (1988) (noting Texas's special issues
sufficiently allow for jury discretion to consider mitigating
aspects). [FN5]
FN4. The State presented evidence pertaining to
the wanton and callous disregard for human life Rowell exhibited
through the facts of his crime, as related by the district court: [Rowell]
came to the home of people with whom he was supposedly friends in
search of drugs and money. While he probably could have gotten what
he wanted with very little resistance from Wright due to his size, [Rowell]
chose instead to beat him in the head with a claw hammer. Then,
still receiving no resistance from any of the victims, [Rowell]
marched all three into the bathroom and shot them. One of the
victims also had signs of continued beatings after he was shot. [Rowell]
then proceeded to take a shower and clean himself up.
The State also
presented evidence that Rowell killed a fellow inmate while in the
penitentiary by stabbing him multiple times in the chest with a
homemade knife.;FN5. Here, the jury was presented testimony by
Rowell's brother, a psychiatrist, two Texas Department of Criminal
Justice employees, and two prison ministry counselors. They
testified that: Rowell was a good brother, son, and grandson; he was
a good employee; he had, with one exception of killing while
incarcerated, a relatively clear prison record; he found religion
while incarcerated; he was depressed and introverted; and he was
previously a chronic drug user who would not be violent when free
from the influence of drugs.
* * *
Having carefully reviewed the record of this case
and the parties' respective briefing, for the reasons set forth
above, we conclude Rowell has failed to satisfy this Court that
reasonable jurists would find the district court's resolution of the
issues debatable. Rowell has also failed to show it is debatable
that his additional due process claims adequately stated the denial
of any constitutional right. Therefore, we DENY Rowell a COA.
Motions GRANTED. COA DENIED.