HUNTSVILLE, Texas (AP) — A 67-year-old man who was convicted of killing four men more than three decades ago has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to keep him from becoming the oldest Texas prisoner put to death in an execution scheduled for Wednesday evening.
Lester Bower Jr. faces lethal injection for the October 1983 fatal shootings at an airplane hangar on a ranch near Sherman, about 60 miles north of Dallas. Prosecutors say he killed the four after stealing an airplane that he had been trying to buy from one of his victims.
“I do have remorse,” Bower, who has maintained his innocence, told The Associated Press two weeks ago from death row. “I’m remorseful for putting my family and my wife and my friends through this.
“If this is going to bring some closure to them (the victim’s family), then good. But if they think by this they’re executing the person that killed their loved one, then that’s going to come up a little bit short.”
If the execution goes ahead, Bower would be the eighth inmate given a lethal dose of pentobarbital this year in Texas, which carries out capital punishment more than any other state.
His attorneys told the high court that jurors didn’t have the opportunity in their punishment deliberations to fully consider that Bower had no previous criminal record. Attorneys also contended that the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals used an incorrect legal standard when it denied an appeal for Bower a decade ago.
“This is not a typical death penalty case,” his lead lawyer, Peter Buscemi, told the justices, urging a reprieve so the court “has sufficient time” to evaluate the appeal.
Stephen Hoffman, an assistant Texas attorney general, responded that 30 years of litigation was enough and justice already had been delayed “for the four families of the men that Bower slaughtered in cold blood.”
The Supreme Court declined in March to review Bower’s case — although three justices, Stephen Breyer, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor, said they would have thrown out his death sentence.
Bower, a chemical salesman from Arlington, was arrested and charged with capital murder after the four men were found Oct. 8, 1983.
Those killed were building contractor and B&B Ranch owner Bob Tate, 51; Grayson County Sheriff’s Deputy Philip Good, 29, who sold ultralights and was trying to sell one owned by Tate; Jerry Brown, 52, a Sherman interior designer; and Ronald Mayes, 39, a former Sherman police officer.
All were “best buddies,” according to Marlene Bushard, Good’s wife, who planned to witness the execution.
“It’s very frustrating,” she said. “You move on with your life and it hits you again. I’m just looking forward to moving on.”
Prosecutors built a circumstantial case that Bower, obsessed with obtaining the aircraft, stole it and shot the men as they showed up that Saturday afternoon at the hangar where Bower was to complete the purchase and where the four victims had planned to watch the Texas-Oklahoma football game on TV. Parts of the plane later were found atBower’s home.
Bower initially lied to his wife, who didn’t want him to buy the plane, and to investigators who tracked him down from calls made to Good that were charged to Bower’s company-issued telephone credit card. He eventually acknowledged being at the ranch, but said the victims were alive and well when he left with the disassembled plane that he properly bought, but could produce no receipt. His attorneys suggested years later that other men involved in a drug deal gone bad were responsible for the shootings.
Bower is nearly 1½ years older than William Chappell, who was executed at age 66 in Texas in 2002. Nationally, a 74-year-old prisoner was put to death in Alabama in 2004. Only one other executed prisoner in Texas served more time on death row than Bower, who is 10th in seniority among Texas’ 265 condemned inmates.
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God damn I thought is was Bud Melman at first.
Why on Earth do Americans think the only way to solve problems is by killing people?
They killed the Native Americans, then they killed thousands of black slaves on the way over and while in chains, (and continue to up until now in disproportionate numbes…and…yes I know this guy here is white.), and they killed the English and they killed each other by the millions in a CIvil War, and they killed millions of innocent people in Hiroshima to end a war.
Americans think the only solution to a nasty problem is to kill people. Well, to some of our neighbors on this planet, in places like Canada, England, Japan, even Germany and Italy, (they don’t have a death penalty in any of those countries), that’s what foreigners think of American justice.
Although I firmly believe it’s already happened, likely many times, sooner or later we will see proof that some state, quite likely Texas, has executed an innocent person. We can’t give back 20 or 30 years for false imprisonment, but at least the victim gets to walk out of prison. Killing them solves nothing. It’s a failure in every way. It costs more than a true life sentence, it does NOT serve as a deterrent, and it’s barbaric. It’s also irreversible.
I have no idea if this man is truly innocent or guilty…but I’d much prefer to see him sit in prison for the remainder of his life than take this step. If the relatives of the victims feel better when this is over, consider how they might feel if they celebrated killing the wrong man.