Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Texas executes (Rickey Lynn Lewis) longtime criminal in man’s 1990 slaying during break-in, rape of man’s fiancee



http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/texas-executes-longtime-criminal-in-mans-1990-slaying-during-break-in-rape-of-mans-fiancee/2013/04/09/00eb1172-a16f-11e2-bd52-614156372695_story.html



Texas executes longtime criminal in man’s 1990 slaying during break-in, rape of man’s fiancee

Texas Department of Criminal Justice, File/Associated Press - This undated photo provided by the Texas Department of Criminal Justice shows Rickey Lynn Lewis. Six months after he was paroled in early 1990 from a 25-year term for a third burglary conviction, Lewis was arrested for shooting and killing 45-year-old George Newman, raping Newman’s fiancée and stealing her truck after breaking into the couple’s home about 90 miles east of Dallas in Smith County. On Tuesday, April 9, 2013Lewis, 50, of Tyler is scheduled to become the second man executed in Texas this year.
HUNTSVILLE, Texas — A Texas convict with a lengthy criminal history was executed Tuesday evening for fatally shooting a man and raping the slain man’s fiancee during a home break-in more than 22 years ago.
Rickey Lynn Lewis already had been in and out of prison five times in less than seven years when he was arrested three days after the killing of 45-year-old George Newman and attack on Newman’s fiancee in 1990 at their home in a rural area of Smith County, about 90 miles east of Dallas.
Lewis, 50, acknowledged the rape, but not the killing.
“If I hadn’t raped you, you wouldn’t have lived,” he told the rape victim in the moments before the single lethal dose of pentobarbital was administered. “I didn’t kill Mr. Newman and I didn’t rob your house.
“I was just there. ... I’m sorry for what you’ve gone through. It wasn’t me that harmed and stole all of your stuff.”
Fourteen minutes after the lethal dose began, Lewis was pronounced dead.
The U.S. Supreme Court last week refused to review Lewis’ case and the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles unanimously voted against a clemency request.
No last-day appeals were filed by his attorneys to try to halt the execution, the second this year in Texas.
Earlier appeals focused on whether Lewis, a ninth-grade dropout who worked as a laborer, was mentally impaired and ineligible for the death penalty under Supreme Court rulings. The claims included a suggestion from Lewis’ attorneys that the court reconsider a denial it made in his case in 2005. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals refused that recommendation on Monday.

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