








|
Samuel Bustamante
Samuel Bustamante, 40, was executed by lethal injection on 27
April 2010 in Huntsville, Texas for killing a man in an attempted
robbery.
On 18 January 1998, Bustamante, then 28; Dedrick Depriest, 20; Arthur
Escamilla, 29; and Walter Escamilla drove from El Campo to Rosenberg,
southwest of Houston. Before leaving, Bustamante told Solomon
Escamilla and Brandy Riha that he and the others were going "shopping"
- their term for finding a "wetback" (i.e. an illegal Mexican
immigrant) after the bars closed, offering him a ride, taking him to a
deserted location, beating him, and stealing his money and jewelry.
After some time, they noticed Rafael Alvarado. Bustamante observed
that Alvarado's clothing was in good condition, and his watch appeared
to be made of "real gold". Alvarado offered to pay the men to give him
a ride across town. They agreed, so Alvarado climbed into the bed of
the pickup, with Bustamante and Walter. Depriest was in the cab of the
truck along with Arthur, who was driving. After about fifteen minutes,
Bustamante asked Walter if he was ready. Walter told him to wait.
Nevertheless, Bustamante then stood up and stabbed Alvarado ten times
with a knife. Alvarado struggled against his attackers and broke free,
falling to the ground from the moving truck. The men stopped the truck
to look for him, but were unable to find him in the darkness, so they
left.
After returning from Rosenberg, Bustamante told Solomon and Richard
Escamilla to wash the truck before daylight. There was blood in the
bed of the truck and a handprint on the tailgate. Bustamante told
Solomon that they had gotten hold of a man, but he fell out of the
truck. Later that day, Bustamante's brother, Bill, 25, drove them back
to the scene to search for the victim, but they were unable to find
him.
Following a trail of blood, Rosenberg police found Alvarado's body in
a ditch in Fort Bend county. His death was caused by stab wounds to
the heart and liver and the attendant loss of blood.
In order to qualify as capital murder, one or more aggravating factors
must be present. Texas' capital murder statute includes attempted
robbery in its list of aggravating factors.
At his trial, Bustamante admitted killing Alvarado. He also admitted
that he and the others went to Rosenberg to go "shopping", and that
was code for picking up someone from a bar and robbing him.
Nonetheless, he claimed that he did not intend to rob Alvarado.
In addition to Bustamante's own incriminating testimony and the
testimonies of Solomon Escamilla and Brandy Riha, Dedrick Depriest
testified that, as they searched for Alvarado in the darkness for
about fifteen minutes, Bustamante stated that he wanted the victim's
boots.
Bustamante had served parts of three different prison sentences. In
December 1988, he began serving a 5-year sentence for burglary of a
building. He was paroled after a year. While on parole, he received a
new conviction for possessing a prohibited weapon. He served 6 months
of a 4-year sentence before receiving parole again in February 1991.
(At the time, early release was common in Texas due to strict prison
population caps imposed by U.S. District Judge William Wayne Justice.)
After receiving parole, Bustamante moved to North Carolina. He was
quickly in prison again, on a 1-year sentence for forgery that began
in April 1991. He was paroled after serving 5 months. After that, he
racked up convictions for shooting a gun within city limits, carrying
a concealed weapon, making threatening communications, resisting
arrest, and possessing marijuana. Some time after his last conviction
in December 1992, he returned to Texas.
During the punishment phase of his capital murder trial, Bustamante
confessed to the murder of Lloyd Harold Turner on 13 February 1998. He
said that he and his brother targeted the homeless man to "work out
some aggravation". He stabbed Turner ten to twenty times while his
brother beat him with a baseball bat. They left his body under an
overpass of highway U.S. 59.
A jury convicted Bustamante of capital murder in March 2001 and
sentenced him to death. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed
the conviction and sentence in June 2003. All of his subsequent
appeals in state and federal court were denied. He was also sentenced
to 40 years in prison for Turner's killing.
Dedrick Deshone Depriest, Walter Escamilla, and Arthur Escamilla
pleaded guilty to aggravated robbery and received 8-year sentences,
which they have completed. Bill Bustamante is still serving a 40-year
sentence for Turner's murder.
Samuel Bustamante granted a reporter's request for an interview prior
to his execution, but he failed to keep the appointment. On an
anti-death-penalty web site, Bustamante stated, "I did do wrong, yet
there is a lot more good in me than bad. We are all human and make
mistakes. Yet, do we not deserve the benefit of the doubt?"
Bustamante's execution was attended by four women he invited. No one
attended on behalf of the victims. The condemned man made no last
statement before the lethal injection was given. He was pronounced
dead at 6:22 p.m.

By David Carson. Posted on 28 April 2010.
Sources: Texas Attorney General's office, Texas Department of
Criminal Justice, court documents, Houston Chronicle,
deathrow-usa.com.
|