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Kimberly LaGayle McCarthy (May 11, 1961 – June 26, 2013) was an American death row inmate and suspected serial killer who was convicted and sentenced to death for the 1997 murder of her neighbor, 71-year-old retired college professor Dorothy Booth, in her Lancaster, Texas (Dallas–Fort Worth area) home during a robbery. She was a suspect in ...
Texas [13] 12 September 23, 2010 Teresa Wilson Bean Lewis: White 41 33 Virginia [14] 13 June 26, 2013 Kimberly LaGayle McCarthy: Black 52 36 Texas [15] 14 February 5, 2014 Suzanne Margaret Basso: White 59 44 [16] 15 September 17, 2014 Lisa Ann Coleman: Black 38 28 [17] 16 September 30, 2015 Kelly Renee Gissendaner: White 47 Georgia [18] 17 ...
Kimberly LaGayle McCarthy: 52 36 16 Female Texas [20] 19 July 16, 2013 John Manuel Quintanilla Jr. 36 25 11 Male Hispanic [21] 20 July 18, 2013 Vaughn Ross: 41 29 12 Black [22] 21 July 25, 2013 Andrew Reid Lackey: 29 22 7 White Alabama [23] 22 July 31, 2013 Douglas Alan Feldman: 55 40 15 Texas [24] 23 August 5, 2013 John Errol Ferguson: 65 29 ...
With his execution looming last Thursday, the 57-year-old Texas death row inmate watched as his attorneys’ legal arguments were rejected in the courts and his pleas for clemency disregarded, as ...
Melissa Lucio was two days away from being put to death in Texas for the murder of her 2-year-old daughter when an appeals court intervened in 2022. Now, a judge says Lucio never committed the ...
Texas' highest criminal court on April 25, 2022, delayed the execution of Lucio, the only Latina on the state's death row, who was set to die April 27, 2022. [71] Taylor Rene Parker Parker was convicted for the October 2020 slaying of her pregnant friend Reagan Simmons-Hancock and her unborn daughter Braxlynn Sage Hancock.
Melissa Elizabeth Lucio has been on death row for over a decade after being convicted of capital murder in the February 2007 death of her 2-year-old daughter, Mariah Alvarez. Lucio's lawyers have ...
Each death-row inmate may have limited association with the other inmates. The women on death row are permitted to knit and sew. [11] As of the 1990s, they made dolls for sick children. [16] The death-row inmates use a 50-by-10-yard (45.7 by 9.1 m) recreation yard with basketball hoops, a tree, and a bench. [14]