Arnold Prieto is scheduled to be executed Wednesday for a cocaine-fueled triple murder in 1993. This would be the state’s first execution under Gov. Greg Abbott.
Arnold Prieto is scheduled to be the first person to be executed in Texas this year. He was convicted of a 1993 triple murder.
This also will be the first execution under the state's new governor, Greg Abbott, who was the former attorney general of Texas.
Prieto, 41, was sentenced to death for the murders of Virginia Rodriguez, 62, Rodolfo Rodriguez, 72, and Paula Moran, 90, after a drug-fueled robbery at their home in San Antonio.
Prieto was the only one of three men arrested in the case who received the death penalty. His two co-defendants, Jesse Hernandez and his brother, Guadalupe Hernandez, were the great-nephews of Virginia and Rodolfo Rodriguez. Jesse, who was 16 at the time of the murder, was sentenced to life. Charges against Guadalupe were dropped due to insufficient evidence.
The brothers introduced Prieto to cocaine and often mentioned their rich uncle, who they described as a loan shark with a closet full of money, according to court documents.
In September 1993, the three drove to the Rodriguez's house, snorting cocaine on the way. According to Prieto's confession, Guadalupe pressured him into going to the house to get his uncle's money.
The three men were let into the house by Virginia, who Prieto described as "very nice." After eating the breakfast she prepared for them, Prieto saw Guadalupe stab Virginia with a screwdriver. She was stabbed 31 times, The Austin Chronicle reported. Her husband, Rodolfo, who was in the bedroom with Jesse and Prieto, tried to help her, but Prieto stabbed him 17 times with a screwdriver. He also stabbed him through the back of the head.
The three robbed the house of jewelry and cash, during which Jesse stabbed the Rodriguez's 90-year-old family friend, Paula Moran, eight different times.
Prieto was found guilty of the three murders and sentenced to death in 1995.
The U.S. Supreme Court denied a review of Prieto's case in 2009.
Last year, Texas carried out 10 executions, the fewest since 1996. In December, a federal court of appeals stopped the state from executing a mentally ill inmate, Scott Panetti.
from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/1DZ4I6M
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