PART2
Moer met with Doug and Carrie the following day. Doug agreed to wear a wire. A few days later, Doug rode his motorcycle to the Mckin Street house and sat with Tucker and Danny Garrett for 90 minutes. The entire conversation was recorded. On that tape, Tucker described in her own words what she experienced during the attack on Jerry Dean.
That recording became the foundation of the prosecution’s entire case. On July 20th, 1983, the same day Doug made the call. Tucker, Garrett, Liebrandt, and Ronnie Burrell were all arrested. Tucker and Garrett were formally indicted for the murders of Jerry Lind Dean and Deborah Ruth Thornton in September 1983. Their trials would be held separately.
What happened inside that courtroom and inside Tucker’s cell while she waited changed everything. Tucker’s trial opened on April 19th, 1984 in the 180th Judicial District Court of Harris County, Texas. The presiding judge was Patricia Leos. The formal indictment had been filed on September 13th, 1983. The charge was capital murder of Jerry Lind during the commission of a robbery.
Jury selection alone took 5 weeks. It ran from March 2nd through April 9th, 1984. Testimony began on April 11th and concluded on April 18th. Final arguments were heard on April 19th, and the jury returned its verdict that same day. District Attorney John B. Holmes Jr. built the prosecution around three pillars.
First, the wire recording obtained by Detective Moer. Second, the testimony of Carrie Burell, Tucker’s own sister, who told the court what Tucker had described to her directly after the night of June 13th. Third, Tucker’s own statements, her words, her voice, her account. The case was constructed almost entirely from what Tucker herself had said.
Defense attorney George McCall Serest Jr. presented three arguments in response. He contended Tucker had been severely impaired by multiple substances at the time of the offense. He argued she had received ineffective legal counsel. He also challenged the jury instructions as improper. None of those arguments moved the jury. Tucker took the stand during the punishment phase, which ran from April 23rd through April 25th, 1984.
She told the court that even being subjected to what she had put her victims through, would not be sufficient to atone for what she had done. The jury answered both special issues required under Texas law in the affirmative. The crime was deliberate and she posed a future danger. On April 25th, 1984, the court sentenced Carla Fay Tucker to death by lethal injection.
Her motion for a new trial was filed and overruled on June 29th, 1984. She appealed directly to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. That appeal, Tucker versus State 771S.W.2D523 was affirmed in 1988. Every door closed. Tucker was designated to the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Death Row.
Inmate number 777 and transferred to the Mountain View unit in Gatesville, Texas. Her death row neighbor was a woman named Pam Pillo whose sentence would eventually be commuted. Tuckers would not. What happened inside that unit over the next 14 years was not part of any rehabilitation program. It was not required. It was not incentivized. In October 1983, months before her trial even began, Tucker had picked up a Bible from the prison ministry program and read it alone in her cell.