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To: Resolute Conservative
Harsh. If you believe, as I do, that her repentance, and conversion, was sincere, then life without parole would have be OK. OTOH, some also believe that life without parole is far worse than death that she in fact is in a better place now.

But think about this. I feel that the only reason that she wasn't pardoned was because she was a female. Had she been in fact spared death, then every male death row inmate in Texas would have been filing a Supreme Court lawsuit alleging that Texas discriminated in how it applied the death penalty. It would have stopped executions in Texas for at least a decade..

11 posted on 07/08/2013 2:10:19 PM PDT by ken5050 (Due to all the WH scandals, MSNBC is changing its slogan from "Lean Forward" to "BOHICA")
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To: ken5050

I don’t believe it is harsh. The one thing that really wears me out is the defense that I was “drunk” or “on drugs”. Sorry you chose to use, you chose to murder, you get the chair.

Tucker was not just along for the ride, she participated and actually initiated the physical part of both murders. After they killed the man she came back in the room and axed him some more. She then left then left the room again to return and found the girl under the bed hiding. She attacked the girl and when her companion re-entered the room and held the woman, Tucker murdered her.

Here is a brief description of the murders (it does not do justice the crime scene, pay attention to Tuckers own admission in the last sentence):

After having spent the weekend doing drugs with her boyfriend Danny Garrett and their friends, Tucker and Garrett entered Jerry Dean’s home around 3 a.m. on Monday 14 June 1983 intending to steal Dean’s motorcycle. James Leibrant, a friend, went with them to Dean’s apartment complex. Leibrant reported that he went looking for Dean’s El Camino while Tucker and Garrett entered the apartment with a set of keys that Tucker claimed Shawn Dean had lost and Tucker had found.

During the burglary, Tucker and Garrett entered Dean’s bedroom, where Tucker sat on him. In an effort to protect himself, Dean grabbed Tucker above the elbows, whereupon Garrett intervened. Garrett struck Dean numerous times in the back of the head with a hammer he found on the floor. After hitting Dean, Garrett left the room to carry motorcycle parts out of the apartment. Tucker remained in the bedroom.

The blows Garrett had dealt Dean caused his head to become unhinged from his neck and his breathing passages to fill with fluid. He began making a “gurgling” sound characteristic of this type of injury. Tucker wanted to “stop him from making that noise” and attacked him with a pickaxe. Garrett then re-entered the room and dealt Dean a final blow in the chest.

Garrett left the bedroom again so as to continue loading Dean’s motorcycle parts into his Ranchero. Tucker was once again left in the room and only then noticed a woman who had hidden under the bed covers against the wall. The woman, Deborah Thornton, had met Dean at a party earlier that afternoon. Upon discovering Thornton, Tucker grazed her shoulder with the pickaxe. Thornton and Tucker began to struggle, but Garrett returned and separated them. Tucker proceeded to hit Thornton repeatedly with the pickaxe and then embedded the axe in her heart. Tucker would later tell friends and testify that she experienced intense multiple orgasms with each blow of the pickaxe.


13 posted on 07/08/2013 2:23:01 PM PDT by Resolute Conservative
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To: ken5050

Women in Texas are already not executed on an equal basis as men. That is hypocrisy at its best. Their are some women in this world that are just as bad as men or worse. If you are a woman and get executed in Texas you are really one low-life waste of space.


14 posted on 07/08/2013 2:28:10 PM PDT by Resolute Conservative
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To: ken5050
No human can really know the heart of another.
If she was truly repentant, she would accept that she had to pay for her crime in whatever manner the state has chosen.
From the quote, it sounds like she was at peace with the decision. Why does it bother you so much? From both your beliefs and hers, it seems that Texas did her a favor.

Romans 13:4 still applies here. This is from the NIV:
“4 For the one in authority is God’s servant for your good. But if you do wrong, be afraid, for rulers do not bear the sword for no reason. They are God’s servants, agents of wrath to bring punishment on the wrongdoer.”

16 posted on 07/08/2013 2:47:32 PM PDT by FreedomOfExpression
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