Moises Sandoval Mendoza is scheduled to be executed by deadly injection in Texas subsequent month — lastly, after 21 years.
In 2004, he was convicted and sentenced to demise for murdering a 20-year-old mom by the title of Rachelle O’Neil Tolleson. Usually, I don’t assist the demise penalty. However Mendoza has carried out some evil issues. In accordance with authorities, he met Tolleson at a celebration. After she confirmed no romantic curiosity in him, Mendoza instructed police that he kidnapped, sexually assaulted, stabbed and burned Tolleson earlier than burying her disfigured physique beneath a pile of brush. Police discovered Tolleson’s 5-month-old daughter alone after household reported the girl lacking. Along with his confession, Mendoza’s DNA and witness testimony linked him to the crime.
I nonetheless don’t assist the demise penalty. However particulars like those involving Mendoza problem my place. The identical is true for the case of Matthew Johnson, who is ready to be executed in Texas on Could 20.
On that very same date in 2012, Johnson robbed a comfort retailer by pouring lighter fluid over the top of the clerk, 76-year-old Nancy Harris, and setting her on fireplace. In accordance with court docket paperwork, the girl could be seen within the retailer’s digital camera surveillance footage desperately making an attempt to douse the flames after Johnson leaves. When police discovered him, he was nonetheless in possession of the cigarettes, lighters and $76 he had stolen from the shop and the ring he compelled off of the sufferer’s hand. Greater than 40% of her physique was burned. Harris, a grandmother of 12 and great-grandmother of 5, died 5 days after the assault. Johnson’s execution gained’t deliver Harris again to her grieving household, however it could change the that means of Could 20 for them. Maybe on this, there’s a measure of closure.
That gained’t be the case for relations of the victims killed in a Walmart close to the southern border in 2019.
Patrick Crusius, 21, and a resident of an prosperous Dallas suburb, drove greater than 600 miles throughout Texas to El Paso on Aug. 3 — to focus on Latinos, in response to police. When he arrived, Crusius posted a manifesto expressing white supremacist ideology and admiration of racially motivated mass shooters. Then he began capturing. With an AK-47-type rifle, he dedicated one of many deadliest mass shootings on this nation’s historical past, killing 23 individuals — amongst them younger mother and father like Tolleson and grandparents like Harris. Along with the deaths, Crusius was accountable for injuring 22 others.
Nonetheless, this week, greater than 5 years after Crusius confessed to authorities that he was accountable for the bloodshed, El Paso County District Legal professional James Montoya introduced his workplace would not seek the death penalty, simply as federal prosecutors selected to not pursue execution. Within the federal case, Crusius pleaded guilty to hate crimes in 2023 and was sentenced to 90 consecutive life sentences.
Whenever you juxtapose the demise totals among the many three circumstances, the El Paso prosecutor’s resolution makes little sense. Why execute killers of two people however not the killer of 23? Whenever you juxtapose the demographics of the three Texas circumstances, the choice displays a disturbing sample. Mendoza, killer of the 20-year-old mom, is Latino. Johnson, killer of the 76-year-old cashier, is Black. These males are the final two individuals set to be executed this 12 months within the Lone Star State, they usually each killed white ladies.
Two professors within the College of Denver’s Division of Sociology and Criminology studied 40 years of Texas demise sentences (1976-2016) and located defendants accused of killing white ladies are three times more likely to be put to death. A lot of the victims on the Walmart had been Latino. Crusius is white. So regardless of being convicted within the state that has executed the most people within the nation for the reason that reinstatement of the demise penalty — he will get to stay.
I’ll say it once more: Usually I’m not a supporter of the demise penalty. The small print of Crusius’ crimes problem my place. What’s it about his case that warranted further leniency? The 2 males Texas plans to kill don’t have practically as a lot blood on their palms.