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Michael Perry
Michael James Perry, 28, was executed by lethal injection on 1 July
2010 in Huntsville, Texas for the murder and robbery of three people.
On 24 October 2001, Perry, then 19, and Jason Burkett, 19, went to the
Montgomery home where Sandra Stotler, 50, lived with her 17-year-old
son, Adam. As Perry later confessed, he and Burkett decided that they
needed one or two new vehicles. They knew that Adam Stotler's parents
had "a lot of money" as well as "a newer Camaro and Isuzu Rodeo." They
devised a plan to ask to spend the night at the Stotlers and then
steal the Camaro while they were asleep. Driving Burkett's
girlfriend's truck, they went to the home at about 7 p.m. Mrs. Stotler
told them that Adam would not be home until around 9 p.m.
They started driving away, but then decided to go back and steal the
car while only Mrs. Stotler was home. They parked the pickup down the
street and walked back to the house. Burkett knocked on the door and
asked to use the phone while Perry snuck into the house through the
garage, with the shotgun. Perry hid in the laundry room and knocked on
the back door. When Mrs. Stotler came to answer the door, he shot her
with the shotgun. She fell to the floor. When he saw that she moved,
as if trying to get up, he shot her again. He and Burkett then grabbed
some blankets and sheets off the bed to cover thee body. Burkett ran
down the street and got the truck and loaded the body into it with the
blankets and sheets. Perry wanted to steal the Camaro, but was unable
to find the keys. They drove away in the truck, disposed of the body
at Crater Lake, then drove to Conroe and picked up Burkett's
girlfriend, Kristen Willis.
The group drove back to the Stotler's gated community. They didn't
know the code to open the gate, but they knew Adam would be coming
home soon. While they were waiting, they devised a plan to tell Adam
that a friend of theirs had shot himself while they were hunting
squirrels, and they needed his help. Adam then arrived in the Isuzu
Rodeo with his friend, Jeremy Richardson, 18. After Perry and Burkett
asked Adam for help, they drove out to a wooded area, while Adam and
Jeremy followed in the Rodeo. The four boys got out of their vehicles
and walked into the woods while Willis stayed in her truck. Adam then
suggested that they look for the friend from a different road, so he
and Perry drove away in the Rodeo while Burkett and Richardson stayed
in the woods.
According to Perry's confession, Adam parked the Rodeo, and the two of
them got out. Burkett then approached them with the shotgun, alone.
Burkett asked them if they heard gunshots, for he fired his shotgun
several times to signal his location to them. Burkett told Adam he
would take him to where the others were. Perry walked back to the
Rodeo while Adam went with Burkett. Perry saw Burkett shoot Adam, then
he covered his eyes and heard another shot. He uncovered his eyes and
saw Burkett shoot Adam a third time. Perry then walked over to Adam's
body and pulled his car keys out of his pocket. Burkett and Perry
drove the Rodeo back to where Willis was waiting. She became upset
with them and drove home. Burkett drove Perry back to the Stotlers.
Perry grabbed Adam's wallet from the Isuzu and took the keys to the
Camaro off of his key ring. He then drove the Camaro away. The boys
then went home, smoked some cigarettes, got cleaned up, and went out
to a club.
On the morning of 26 October, Perry was driving the stolen Camaro when
police spotted him committing traffic violations. After a high speed
chase, Perry wrecked the Camaro and fled on foot. He was apprehended
and booked as Adam Stotler, whose wallet he was still carrying. He was
then released on bond.
On 27 October, Sandra Stotler's body was found in Crater Lake at 4:30
p.m.
On 30 October, a Montgomery County sheriff's corporal spotted the
stolen Rodeo at a truck stop, with three occupants. The vehicle struck
the corporal in the course of fleeing, but the officer was able to
shoot out a rear tire. The vehicle crashed. Perry and Burkett fled on
foot, carrying a shotgun. They climbed a fence and ran to a nearby
apartment complex, where police arrested them and recovered the
shotgun. Perry, who had a deep cut on his arm from the crash, was
taken to a hospital for treatment. Officers questioned him at the
hospital and obtained the confession related above.
At his trial, Perry claimed that police coerced the confession from
him and ignored his request for a lawyer. "I had a gun shoved in my
face," he testified. "At the time, there was quite a bit of
excitement. I was under the influence. My arms hurt pretty bad and I
was real scared ... my condition in my mind state was that I am going
to tell [the detective] anything he wants to hear to get him away from
me, to get out of this situation, and that's what I did."
Perry had been diagnosed with personality and conduct disorders as a
schoolchild. He ran away from home while in junior high school and
became a drifter. He supported himself by stealing and selling pills
and other items.
A jury convicted Perry of the capital murder of Sandra Stotler in
February 2003 and sentenced him to death. The Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals affirmed the conviction and sentence in December 2004. All of
his subsequent appeals in state and federal court were denied.
Jason Aaron Burkett was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to
life in prison. He remains in custody as of this writing.
On a web site set up on his behalf, Perry claimed he was innocent. He
stated that "it has now clearly been proven, that the crime actually
happened between the 26th and the 27th, at times I was in jail." He
emphasized the evidence against Jason Burkett. He also implied that
Kristen Willis could have been responsible. "At trial, Kristen stated,
that she was afraid of Jason," Perry wrote. "So afraid that she'd do
anything for him? Even murder??" He further implied that Willis was
given full immunity because her father was a police officer in Montgomery County.
Regarding the circumstances of his arrest on the 26th, Perry only
stated that he was taken in for "traffic violations and evading
arrest" and omitted any mention of whose car he was driving or whose
wallet he used for identification.
Sandra Stotler's mother and daughter and Jeremy Richardson's brother
attended Perry's execution and watched it from a viewing room. Perry's
mother watched from another viewing room.
"I want to let everyone here who is involved in this atrocity know
they're forgiven by me," Perry said in his last statement at his
execution. He sobbed briefly, then mouthed "I love you" to his mother.
He twice whispered, "I'm coming home, Dad." The lethal injection was
then started. He was pronounced dead nine minutes later at 6:17 p.m.

By David Carson. Posted on 2 July 2010.
Sources: Texas Attorney General's office, Texas Department of
Criminal Justice, court documents, public records, Houston Chronicle,
savemichaelperry.info.
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