Rogelio Cannady
Rogelio Cannady Jr., 37, was executed by lethal injection on 19 May
2010 in Huntsville, Texas for killing a fellow prison inmate.
At age 17, Cannady assaulted a fellow teenager while attempting to
steal a bicycle. On 29 June 1990 - the day he was released on bond -
Cannady killed Ricardo Garcia, 16, and Ana Robles, 13 - both runaways
from a youth home. Garcia was stabbed 13 times. Robles was raped and
strangled.
On 28 May 1991, Cannady was transferred from the Cameron County Jail
to the McConnell Unit of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice in
Beeville with two consecutive life sentences for murder, as well as a
concurrent 20-year sentence for the earlier robbery.
On 10 October 1993, Cannady, then 21, beat his 55-year-old cellmate,
Leovigildo Bonal, with a steel padlock attached to the end of his
belt. While Bonal was unconscious, Cannady tied his hands behind his
back. He also kicked Bonal repeatedly in the head with steel-toed
boots. Cannady then dismantled the lock and disposed of most of it in
the cell's commode. He hid the belt and the remainder of the lock in
his boots.
Bonal was serving a 15-year sentence for murder. He died two days
after the attack.
In order for a murder to qualify as capital murder, one or more
aggravating factors must be present. In most capital murder cases, the
aggravating factor is that the murder was committed alongside another
felony, such as burglary, robbery, or rape. In 1993, the Texas
Legislature revised the capital murder statute. The new law made being
a prisoner serving a life sentence or 99-year sentence for murder or
certain other felonies into an aggravating factor. This revised
statute went into effect on 1 September 1993.
Before his trial began, Cannady's lawyers argued that the revised
statute did not apply in his case because the offenses for which he
received life sentences were committed prior to 1 September 1993. The
trial judge agreed with this assessment and reduced the charge against
him from capital murder to murder.
The state appealed the trial court's ruling. The Thirteenth Court of
Appeals reversed it, holding that the effective date of the revised
capital murder statute applied to the date that the instant offense
was committed, not to the prior offenses that elevated the charge to
capital murder. The "ex post facto" clause of the U.S. Constitution
was not violated because Cannady's crime was defined as capital murder
before he committed it. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals and the
U.S. Supreme Court declined to review the case, thereby allowing the
appeal's court's interpretation of the statute to hold.
Once the trial was underway, Cannady claimed he killed Bonal in self
defense. He testified that Bonal had made several sexually suggestive
comments to him that were ominous in a prison setting. He also said
that Bonal once sat near him and rubbed his leg. Cannady testified
that on the night of the killing, he saw Bonal touching himself
sexually. He confronted Bonal and hit him in the face. It then seemed
that Bonal was trying to reach for something, so Cannady attached his
lock to his belt and began beating him. He kept hitting Bonal because
Bonal kept coming toward him.
A jury convicted Cannady of capital murder in December 1997 and
sentenced him to death. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed
the conviction and sentence in January 2000. All of his subsequent
appeals in state and federal court were denied.
In his later appeals, Cannady claimed that he did not kill the two
runaway teens, at all, but was coerced into signing a confession. "I
got scared," he said in an interview from death row. "I was afraid I'd
get the death penalty. Ironically, I did."
Cannady also maintained that he killed Bonal in self-defense because
he was making sexual passes at him. "I think anybody would have done
the same thing," he said.
Cannady's execution was attended by two of his brothers, a niece, and
three friends. "I'm going to be OK," he told them as they watched
through a window. "Y'all take care of yourself ... May God have mercy
on my soul." With his last statement concluded, the lethal injection
was started. Cannady then laughed and lifted his head from the gurney.
"I thought it was going to be harder than this," he said, grinning.
"I'm going to sleep now. I can feel it. It's affecting me." He then
lost consciousness. He was pronounced dead at 6:19 p.m.

By David Carson. Posted on 20 May 2010.
Sources: Texas Attorney General's office, Texas Department of
Criminal Justice, court documents, public records, Associated Press.
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