Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Gang Member Convicted In Triple Murder Set To Be Executed In Texas Today

Miguel Paredes would become the 10th and final person to be executed by Texas in 2014.


Miguel Paredes, a San Antonio gang member involved in a triple slaying in 2000, is scheduled to be executed in Texas on Tuesday.


Miguel Paredes, a San Antonio gang member involved in a triple slaying in 2000, is scheduled to be executed in Texas on Tuesday.


minutesbeforesix.blogspot.com


Paredes, 32, along with two other co-defendants, was convicted of murdering three people in 2000 over a drug dispute with a rival gang. Paredes was the only one who got a death sentence; his co-defendants are serving life in prison.


If executed, Paredes will become the 10th and the final person to be put to death by Texas this year, which saw the fewest number of executions there since 1996.


Paredes' attorney, David Dow, filed an appeal with the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals Monday to stay the execution while it considers a petition for certiorari writ petition seeking Supreme Court review, also filed Monday.


In the writ petition, Dow argued that Paredes' previous counsel failed to discover that Paredes' suffered from a significant mental disease when he waived his "Wiggins claim" — the right to challenge his sentence based on ineffective trial counsel. The appeal says that Paredes is scheduled to be executed without ever having the opportunity to have the federal courts review the merits of his claim.


Texas officials opposed Paredes' request in a filing at the court on Tuesday morning.


When Paredes was 18, he and his fellow Hermanos Pistoleros Latinos gang members shot to death Adrian Torres, 27; his 23-year-old girlfriend, Nelly Bravo; and Shawn Michael Cain, 23.


Prosecutors said they were settling a drug debt with Torres, who was a member of rival gang, the Mexican Mafia. Paredes shot at Bravo's head and fired a shotgun at her chest. He was also found responsible for the death of Cain. The three bodies were found wrapped in carpet, burned, and dumped in a remote stretch of road in South Texas.


Paredes turned to art while he awaited his execution for 13 years.


"As long as one kid sees beyond all that crap because of my situation, that's fine," said Paredes, who expressed regret over the slayings.






from BuzzFeed - Breaking http://ift.tt/ZWwNtV

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