Skip to main content

Killer who raped 16-year-old and buried her alive is executed in Texas

NewsColony
Killer who raped 16-year-old and buried her alive is executed in Texas

A killer convicted of kidnapping, raping and burying alive a 16-year-old girl has been executed in Indiana.

Orlando Hall, 49, was put to death by lethal injection late Thursday for the 1994 murder of Lisa Rene in Texas. 

Rene was kidnapped at gunpoint from her home by a group of men and taken to Arkansas where she was murdered as revenge for a botched $5,000 marijuana deal.

Hall is the eighth person to be put to death since the Trump administration restarted federal executions in July, ending a 17-year hiatus.

He is also thought to be the first person executed under an outgoing administration in over a century.

Orlando Hall

Orlando Hall

Lisa Rene

Lisa Rene

Orlando Hall, 49 (left), who was convicted over the 1994 kidnap, rape, and murder of 16-year-old Lisa Rene (right) in Texas, was executed by lethal injection in Indiana on Thursday

A judge’s stay of execution over concerns about the execution drug gave Hall a reprieve, but for less than six hours. 

After the Supreme Court overturned the stay, he was put to death just before midnight.

Hall, a changed man in prison according to his lawyers and a church volunteer who had grown close to him, was consoling his family and supporters at the end. 

‘I’m OK,’ he said in a final statement, then adding, ‘Take care of yourselves. Tell my kids I love them.’

As the drug was administered, Hall, 49, lifted his head, appeared to wince briefly and twitched his feet.

He appeared to mumble to himself and twice he opened his mouth wide, as if he was yawning. Each time that was followed by short, seemingly labored, breaths. 

He then stopped breathing. Soon after, an official with a stethoscope came into the execution chamber to check for a heartbeat before Hall was officially declared dead.

Hall was among four men convicted in the abduction and death of Lisa Rene in 1994.

According to federal court documents, Hall was a marijuana trafficker in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, who would sometimes buy drugs in the Dallas area. 

On Sept. 24, 1994, he met two men at a Dallas-area car wash and gave them $4,700 with the expectation they would return later with the marijuana. The two men were Rene´s brothers.

Instead, the men claimed their car and money were stolen. Hall and others figured they were lying and were able to track down the address of the brothers´ apartment in Arlington, Texas.

A judge has vacated the federal death sentence for Bruce Carneil Webster, now 46, who was convicted of killing a 16-year-old Texas girl in 1994, after determining and he was and is intellectually disabled. Webster is pictured in a booking photo from his 1994 arrest

A judge has vacated the federal death sentence for Bruce Carneil Webster, now 46, who was convicted of killing a 16-year-old Texas girl in 1994, after determining and he was and is intellectually disabled. Webster is pictured in a booking photo from his 1994 arrest

Webster was among four men prosecutors say kidnapped Lisa Rene (pictured) from her Arlington, Texas, home to get revenge on her two brothers for a botched $5,000 marijuana deal

Webster was among four men prosecutors say kidnapped Lisa Rene (pictured) from her Arlington, Texas, home to get revenge on her two brothers for a botched $5,000 marijuana deal

Bruce Webster (left) was also sentenced to death for the murder of Rene (right), but the sentence was scrapped last year after a judge ruled Webster is mentally disabled 

When Hall and three other men arrived, the brothers weren´t there. Lisa Rene was home, alone.

Court records offer a chilling account of the terror she faced.

‘They´re trying to break down my door! Hurry up!’ she told a 911 dispatcher. A muffled scream is heard seconds later, with a man saying, ‘Who you on the phone with?’ The line then goes dead.

‘She was studying for a test and had her textbooks on the couch when these guys came knocking on the front door,’ retired Arlington detective John Stanton Sr. recalled. 

Police arrived within minutes of the 911 call, but the men were gone, with Rene. Stanton still winces at the near-miss of thwarting the crime in its early stages.

‘It was one that I won´t ever forget,’ Stanton said. ‘This one was particularly heinous.’

The men drove to a motel in Pine Bluff. Rene was repeatedly sexually assaulted during the drive and at the motel over the next two days.

On Sept. 26, Hall and two other men drove Rene to Byrd Lake Natural Area in Pine Bluff, her eyes covered by a mask. 

They led her to a grave site they had dug a day earlier. Hall placed a sheet over Rene´s head then hit her in the head with a shovel. 

When she ran another man and Hall took turns hitting her with the shovel before she was gagged and dragged into the grave, where she was doused in gasoline before dirt was shoveled over her.

A coroner determined that Rene was still alive when she was buried and died of asphyxiation in the grave, where she was found eight days later.

The crime took place just days before Bill Clinton signed the 1994 Crime Bill into law by Bill Clinton, massively expanding use of the death penalty.

Hall's execution was the eighth to be carried out since Trump restarted federal executions in July, and is thought to be the first under an outgoing administration in more than a century

Hall's execution was the eighth to be carried out since Trump restarted federal executions in July, and is thought to be the first under an outgoing administration in more than a century

Hall’s execution was the eighth to be carried out since Trump restarted federal executions in July, and is thought to be the first under an outgoing administration in more than a century 

One of the 60 new offenses that were punishable by death under the bill was ‘kidnapping resulting in death.’

Hall was one of the first to be prosecuted under the new law, using testimony given by his brother Demetrius Hall and co-conspirator Steven Beckley in exchange for prison sentences.

Hall and another man, Bruce Webster, were ultimately tried, convicted, and sentenced to death for the murder. 

Speaking at trial, Prosecutor Paul Macaluso declared: ‘You can live your whole life and have a myriad of experiences and never know that evil exists. 

‘Then you meet someone like Orlando Hall. He’s proof positive of it.’

Webster is still in jail after his death sentence was vacated by a judge after his lawyers successfully argued that mental disability made him ineligible.

Hall’s lawyers had appealed the sentence on the basis that he was convicted by an all-white jury, arguing that racial bias played a role in sentencing.

They also argued that missteps by Hall’s attorneys during preparation for his initial trial meant the jury didn’t see evidence – including a long history of family abuse – that may have moved them to save his life.

None of the appeals were successful. 

Rene´s older sister, Pearl Rene, said in a statement that she and her family ‘are very relieved that this is over. 

‘We have been dealing with this for 26 years and now we´re having to relive the tragic nightmare that our beloved Lisa went through.’

Crossing the Texas-Arkansas line made the case a federal crime. One of Hall´s accomplices, Bruce Webster, also was sentenced to death, though a court last year vacated the sentence because Webster is intellectually disabled. 

Three other men, including Hall´s brother, received lesser sentences in exchange for their cooperation at trial.

Hall´s lawyers contend that jurors who recommended the death penalty weren´t told of the severe trauma he faced as a child or that he once saved a 3-year-old nephew from drowning by leaping into a motel pool from a balcony.

Donna Keogh, 67, first met Hall 16 years ago when she and other volunteers from her Catholic church set up a program to provide Christmas presents for children of inmates at the federal prison. They have corresponded ever since.

She doesn´t understand what executing Hall accomplishes.

‘My faith tells me that all life is precious and that includes the lives on death row,’ Keogh said. ‘I just don´t see any purpose.’

Five of the first six federal executions this year involved white men; the other was Navajo. Christopher Vialva, who was Black, was put to death Sept. 24.

Critics have argued that executing white inmates first was a political calculation in a nation embroiled in racial bias concerns involving the criminal justice system, especially in the aftermath of George Floyd´s death in Minneapolis in May.

Source: Daily Mail

The post Killer who raped 16-year-old and buried her alive is executed in Texas appeared first on NewsColony.
NewsColony



source https://newscolony.com/killer-who-raped-16-year-old-and-buried-her-alive-is-executed-in-texas/

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Chinese stars moonlighting as live-streamers

NewsColony Chinese stars moonlighting as live-streamers Li JIaqi and Yang Mi joined forces to sell products online during coronavirus, blurring the boundaries between conventional celebrities and live streamers. Photo: @TrendingWeibo/Twitter The line between Chinese celebrities and live streamers continues to blur these days. Luxury brands are expanding their pool of friend-of-the-brand endorsements with top live streamers – Louis Vuitton, for example, tapped both actress Song Jia and “lipstick king” live streamer Li Jiaqi for its much anticipated 520 Chinese Valentine’s Day campaign. Celebrities, actors and singers are jumping on the bandwagon to test out their commercial values on e-commerce platforms, with Yang Mi, Li Xiaolu and Michelle Ye Xuan just a few of the screen stars moonlighting on live streaming portals including Taobao, TikTok and Red Book. So why are Chinese celebrities so eager to embrace the battlefield of live streaming e-commerce, and how are they getting on so...

Two hundred thousand Northern Beaches residents prepare for lockdown amid panic buying

NewsColony Two hundred thousand Northern Beaches residents prepare for lockdown amid panic buying Sydney’s Northern Beaches have entered  lockdown as the coronavirus cluster in the area grows to 41 cases. From 5pm on Saturday until midnight on Wednesday, the local government area will revert to lockdown orders issued across the state in March. People will only be permitted to leave their homes for five basic reasons: to seek medical care, exercise, grocery shop, work or for compassionate care reasons.  An additional 23 cases were recorded in the 24 hours to 8pm on Friday, including 10 already announced.    People line up to shop at a Woolworths supermarket in Avalon (pictured) on Saturday before the Northern Beaches goes into a lockdown at 5pm until midnight Wednesday  Two women (pictured) leave a Coles supermarket in Avalon before being required to follow stay-at-home guidelines  The toilet paper section of the Woolworths at...

Players who breached social-distancing rules put NRL restart at risk, Federal Sport Minister says

NewsColony Players who breached social-distancing rules put NRL restart at risk, Federal Sport Minister says NRL players guilty of breaking social-distancing laws have put the league’s planned return to action at risk, according to the Federal Sport Minister. Key points: The NRL wants to restart its 2020 season — suspended due to the coronavirus pandemic — on May 28 However the league has had to deal players flouting social-distancing rules The National Cabinet will meet on Friday to discuss its approach to resuming elite and community sport The league’s bold bid to resume its competition copped a major blow this week when three of its stars were fined for flouting social-distancing rules . Latrell Mitchell, Josh Addo-Carr ($50,000 each) and Nathan Cleary ($10,000) were also slapped with suspended fines by the NRL for bringing the game into disrepute. The incidents gave critics ammunition to question the league’s ability to follow strict protocol measures required to relau...