View Full Version : Another Murder by the State of Texas.


softheart
02-17-2004, 11:52 PM
Feb. 17


TEXAS----execution

Dad executed for Christmas fire that killed 3 kids


Spewing profanities at his ex-wife standing a few feet away, an angry
former auto mechanic was executed this evening for the deaths of his 3
young children in a fire at their home 2 days before Christmas 12 years
ago.

"The only statement I want to make is that I am an innocent man convicted
of a crime I did not commit," Cameron Willingham said. "I have been
persecuted for 12 years for something I did not do."

Willingham, 36, said, "From God's dust I came and to dust I will return so
the Earth shall become my throne. I gotta go, Road Dog."

He expressed love to someone named Gabby and then addressed his ex-wife,
Stacy Kuykendall, who was watching about 8 feet away through a window. He
told her repeatedly in obscenity-laced language that he hoped she would
"rot in hell" and attempted to maneuver his hand, strapped at the wrist,
into an obscene gesture.

His former wife showed no reaction to the outburst. She declined to speak
to reporters.

Willingham was pronounced dead at 6:20 p.m., 7 minutes after the lethal
dose began flowing through his veins.

Willingham previously acknowledged he was a lousy husband but insisted he
wasn't responsible for the blaze in Corsicana that killed his daughters --
2-year-old Amber and 1-year-old twins Karmon and Kameron.

The U.S. Supreme Court in November refused to review his case and a late
appeal Tuesday was rejected by the U.S. Supreme Court. Last week, the
Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles voted 15-0 to deny a clemency request.

"I can't think of a more horrible case," said Pat Batchelor, who was
district attorney in Navarro County when Willingham was the lone survivor
of the blaze Dec. 23, 1991. "All you had to do was see the pictures of
little babies.

"Anybody that can do that, you just think: My God, what kind of sadistic
monster is this?"

When firefighters arrived at the burning five-bedroom house on Corsicana's
south side, Willingham was outside. At his trial, neighbors said he was
outdoors even before flames engulfed the place and was concerned about his
car getting scorched. Prosecutors contended he just wanted to get rid of
the children.

Evidence at his trial showed an accelerant, believed to be charcoal
lighter fluid, was used to ignite the floors, a front threshold to the
house and on a concrete porch. A fire marshal testified the placement of
the accelerant was designed to impede any rescue efforts by firefighters.

"Dude's a liar," Willingham said in a recent interview on death row. "It's
all a farce ... They just didn't want to pursue what really happened."

Willingham suggested a lantern lamp dumped fluid when a shelf collapsed
inside the house and caught fire or his oldest daughter, who was
"fascinated with everything," accidentally set off the blaze.

"Either that or someone came in with the intent to kill me and the
children," he said.

Willingham, a native of Ardmore, Okla., said his wife went out shopping
and left him with the children. He was asleep late in the morning when the
2-year-old woke him with her cry for him. He saw smoke, jumped out of bed
and told her to get out of the house, he said. Willingham said he tried to
get to the twins' room, couldn't get past the flames and ran to get help.
His house had no phone.

Trial testimony showed he expressed no grief over the loss of the
children. Willingham, who did not testify in his own defense, disputed the
comments.

"They were great kids," he said.

Willingham, a 10th grade dropout, had a history of violence and a record
of felony and misdemeanor convictions both as an adult and juvenile. He
said he got hooked on inhalants as a young teenager and was in and out of
treatment centers beginning at age 14. He also spent time at a boot camp
in Oklahoma. Evidence at his trial showed he was abusive to his family and
once beat his pregnant wife with a telephone to try to force a
miscarriage.

"I was a sorry husband, a piece of crap as husbands go," he acknowledged
from death row. "I was so full of myself and so dumb."

Willingham's wife initially supported him and testified on his behalf at
his 1992 trial. But Kuykendall told the Corsicana Daily Sun earlier this
month that after reviewing case and meeting with her former husband in
prison recently, she doesn't buy his version of the events that day.

"It was hard for me to sit in front of him," she said. "He basically took
my life away from me. He took my kids away from me."

Willingham becomes the 7th condemned inmate to be put to death this year
in Texas, the 3rd in 7 days, and the 320th overall since the state resumed
capital punishment on December 7, 1982.

Willingham becomes the 14th condemned inmate to be put to death this year
in the USA and the 899th overall since America resumed executions on
January 17, 1977.

(sources: Associated Press & Rick Halperin)

Phil in Paris
02-18-2004, 03:54 PM
May you rest in peace Mr Willingham.

Phil :(