STATE NEWS
Ex-con from NY executed for soldier’s slaying
09:11 PM CST on Thursday, November 13, 2008
HUNTSVILLE, Texas -- A New York parolee with an extensive criminal record was executed Thursday night for robbing, raping and fatally shooting an Army medic at her apartment near Fort Hood.
“From Allah he came and from Allah he shall return,” Denard Manns said from the death chamber gurney.
He criticized by name his trial attorneys for what he said was an unfair trial, criticized an appeals lawyer for “purposely bringing up claims that did not exist,” and thanked another lawyer for taking on his appeal after he was supposed to be off the case.
Manns expressed love to friends and then said, “I’m ready for the transition.”
He uttered what appeared to be a brief prayer three times and was pronounced dead at 6:24 p.m. CST, 10 minutes after the lethal drugs began to flow.
Manns, 42, who came to Texas after a second prison sentence in New York for armed robbery, was condemned for the murder 10 years ago of Michelle Robson, 26.
Manns was the 17th convicted killer executed this year in the nation’s most active death penalty state and the second in as many days. Another three lethal injections are scheduled for next week in Texas.
Manns’ appeals in the courts were exhausted and the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles, acting Wednesday on a petition filed by his lawyer, refused to commute his sentence to life in prison.
The former hair stylist and mural painter from Harlem in New York City insisted he had nothing to do with the 1998, attack on Robson, who lived a few doors down from where Manns was living with a half brother and a cousin at an apartment complex in Killeen in Central Texas.
Asked last week if he knew who committed the murder, Manns told The Associated Press from a tiny visiting cage outside death row:
“That’s not for me to discuss. Police get paid to ask those questions and find out. I would never tell them.”
DNA and fingerprint evidence implicated Manns, who also was found with some of the slain woman’s property, Murff Bledsoe, the Bell County prosecutor who handled the case, said.
“You don’t forget death penalty cases,” he said. “It was a very bad crime. ... There wasn’t any evidence he knew her very well. There was no evidence they were friends.”
Investigators believed Robson, from Newton, Iowa, at least recognized her killer because there was no indication of a break-in at the apartment where she lived with her husband, also a soldier stationed at Fort Hood. Clay Wellenstein had gone home for a Thanksgiving visit to his family in upstate New York when he learned of his wife’s slaying.
He said he knew Manns only enough to say hello if they passed each other.
“I would like to know: Why?” Wellenstein, who had been married to Robson for less than a year, said this week. “And there’s never going to be an answer to it.”
Manns, he said, “should be strung out to hang and suffer.”
Manns said DNA evidence tying him to the crime was wrong.
“I know for a fact they weren’t going to give me a fair break
anyway,” he told the AP.
Robson was found dead in a bathtub, shot five times with a .22-caliber pistol.
Manns’ cousin, Eric Williams, owned such a pistol, found a bullet on the floor in his room and turned the gun over to police after learning of his neighbor’s death with a similar weapon. Tests showed at least one of the bullets recovered from the woman had been fired from the gun. Tests also showed Manns’ fingerprint on the weapon. Other evidence showed Manns left a jacket belonging to Robson at the home of a friend the day her body was discovered and that he had a ring of Robson’s.
Manns said he got the jacket from a friend and the jewelry belonging to the victim from a drug addict. He said he took the gun from some friends who were trying to shoot it, accounting for his prints.
Manns was arrested the following month and tried in 2002.
“He was a very unusual person,” one of his trial lawyers,
Frank Holbrook, recalled, noting Manns sometimes refused to go to court during jury selection.
“He was just bored with it,” Holbrook said.
Then after his conviction, Manns again refused to appear in
court at the punishment phase of the trial.
“He said he didn’t want to,” Holbrook said. “He was taking a nap.”
Jurors who decided he should die learned he’d been indicted in 1992 for 15 counts of robbery in the Bronx, N.Y., where he was known as a subway bandit who preyed on commuters traveling alone. He pleaded guilty to two counts. He also had convictions in New York for disorderly conduct, criminal mischief, larceny, controlled substance possession and unauthorized use of a motor vehicle.
“I’m not no angel, far from an angel,” Manns acknowledged from prison.
Manns was paroled in early 1998 after serving nearly six years of a five- to 10-year term for armed robbery—his second prison term for armed robbery, then came to Texas.
Three more executions are scheduled for consecutive nights next week in Texas, starting Tuesday with Eric Cathey, 37, condemned for the abduction and fatal shooting of a Houston woman whose boyfriend was reputed to a drug dealer.
Inside KHOU.com
News Your Way: Get KHOU.com headlines
delivered to your favorite RSS reader.
Submit Your Video: Upload your videos and browse others in our video section.
Find Activities: What's happening in your neighborhood? Community Calendar.
Discuss the News: Talk about the latest news, weather and entertainment headlines in our online forums.
Headlines in Your Inbox: Sign up for our e-mail alerts.
More State News
AP Texas Headlines
Popular Stories





You must be logged in to contribute. Log in | Register Now!
You are logged in as screenname | Log Out
You are logged in, but do not have a "screen" name. Create a Screen Name