• You must be logged in to see or use the Shoutbox. Besides, if you haven't registered, you really should. It's quick and it will make your life a little better. Trust me. So just register and make yourself at home with like-minded individuals who share either your morbid curiousity or sense of gallows humor.

Satanica

Veteran Member
Bold Member!
Billy Jack Crutsinger, 64, is scheduled to receive a lethal injection Wednesday evening for the 2003 killings of Pearl Magouirk and her 71-year-old daughter Patricia Syren. Authorities say Crutsinger killed the women then stole Syren's car and credit card. He was arrested three days later at a bar in Galveston, more than 300 miles (480 kilometers) away.
full

Crutsinger's appellate attorney has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to stop his execution, alleging his previous lawyer had a long history of incompetence in death penalty cases.

"The jury heard nothing from the defense that provided an explanation about the disease of alcoholism in relation to the offense conduct," including "a history of domestic violence and abuse, and repeated losses of significant friends and relatives," Lydia Brandt, Crutsinger's current attorney, wrote in her one of her Supreme Court petitions.

At trial, prosecutor Michele Hartmann told jurors that Crutsinger's actions had nothing to do with alcohol but were the result of "evil."

Brandt also argued that lower courts have wrongly denied Crutsinger funding to investigate competency and mental health claims that were not sufficiently reviewed by prior attorneys.

Lower appeals courts and the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles have declined to stop the execution. If it happens, Crutsinger would be the 14th inmate put to death this year in the U.S. and the fifth in Texas.
[....]
Crutsinger had been "spiraling downward much of his adult life." He had three failed marriages and a propensity for violence when he drank, according to a report by a forensic psychologist hired by his trial attorneys.

In the months before the slayings, Crutsinger became homeless and increasingly desperate after his wife kicked him out and his mother, who had enabled his behavior, stopped helping him, according to the report.

Crutsinger offered to do some work for Magouirk and Syren in their home, but when he realized they didn't have enough work to give him much financial relief, he flew into an alcoholic rage, the report said.

"All of his anger at being left to fend for himself and of having his safety net taken from him was then brought to bear on the victims," according to the report.

Magouirk was stabbed at least seven times while her daughter was stabbed at least nine times.

DNA evidence tied Crutsinger to the killings and he confessed to the crime.
[....]
Brandt alleges Alley performed similar shoddy work in at least six other death penalty cases. Four of those inmates have been executed. An attorney for former death row inmate Bobby Woods also alleged incompetent work by Alley before Woods was executed in 2009.

In 2006, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals removed Alley from its list of lawyers eligible to represent death row inmates in their appeals.

Alley died in 2017.

"I do the best I possibly can on all these cases," Alley told the Austin American-Statesman in a 2006 story that was part of a series that looked at bad work by court-appointed attorneys in death penalty appeals.

The Texas Attorney General's Office called Crutsinger's allegations against Alley "speculative" because he had not identified any claim that Alley should have raised but did not. The attorney general's office also said Crutsinger's case has received an "extensive review" during his appeals process.

 
Are the kidding me? What an absolute joke! Apparently he hasn’t been in AA his extended stay at the tax dollars dime or he would have worked his steps .. and one of the major the ‘themes’ .. OWN YOUR SHIT MF .. your choices .. your destruction .. AMENDS
Post automatically merged:

Friday, September 26, 2003

By the Associated Press

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.

 
Last edited:
Put him in the archives. He's history.

In 2003, an 89-year-old woman and her 71-year-old daughter were stabbed to death in their Fort Worth home. On Wednesday, [4 Sep 19,] Texas executed Billy Crutsinger for the crime.

Crutsinger was sentenced to death for the home robbery and slayings of Pearl Magouirk and her daughter, Patricia Syren. The two women were found two days after their murders, and police tracked Crutsinger to a Galveston bar using Syren’s credit card, according to court records.

In Tarrant County, Assistant Criminal District Attorney and lead prosecutor Michele Hartmann said Tuesday the loss of the mother and daughter “is still felt deeply by their family and the Fort Worth community.”

After his last appeals were denied by the U.S. Supreme Court just minutes before his execution was scheduled to begin at 6 p.m., Crutsinger, 64, was strapped to a gurney in the death chamber in Huntsville. No relatives of the women were present to witness the execution, according to a prison spokesman. Crutsinger had three friends in the viewing room, who, in his final words, he thanked for coming and supporting other death row inmates. Into the microphone hanging above his head, he said the system "is not completely right," but he was at peace and was going to be with Jesus and his family.

Link

--Al
 
Back
Top