She later said she ended up on her knees on the cell floor before she understood what was happening. She converted to Christianity that same month. Over the years that followed, she completed her GED, led voluntary Bible studies, and counseledled other women on death row who had no outside support. The warden of the Huntsville unit later testified on the record that Tucker was a model prisoner and that after 14 years, she had in all likelihood been genuinely reformed.
That statement came from a corrections official with no political stake in the outcome. In March 1989, novelist Beverly Lowry began visiting Tucker at Mountain View. Lowry had clipped a Houston Chronicle article featuring Tucker’s photograph back in 1986 and kept it. She arrived expecting one thing and found something she could not easily explain.
Those visits eventually became the basis for her book Crossed Over, a murder, a memoir. In 1995, Tucker married Reverend Dana Lane Brown, a prison minister who had been part of her faith journey since her early years at Mountain View. The ceremony was held inside the prison. She also at some point during those years knitted Detective JC Moira’s sweater.
The man who had recorded her confession, coordinated her arrest, and put her on death row. He kept it. Not everyone accepted the transformation at face value. Retired FBI profiler Candace Dong, who later analyzed the case, acknowledged that the change appeared genuine, but pointed out that it began almost immediately after Tucker’s arrest before the full weight of a death sentence had landed.
Tucker’s supporters had one answer to that observation. She maintained the same behavior, the same positions, and the same documented record for 14 consecutive years. At some point, the length of the record becomes evidence of its own. By the mid 1990s, Tucker had become something she never sought to be a cause.
And the people who took up that cause were the last people anyone expected. By 1998, Carla Fay Tucker’s case had moved far beyond the walls of a Texas courtroom. It had become a national conversation, and the voices entering that conversation were ones nobody anticipated. Pat Robertson, founder of the Christian Broadcasting Network and a lifelong supporter of Capital Punishment, publicly called for her sentence to be commuted.
Jerry Fwell, founder of the moral majority and another long-standing advocate for the death penalty, went on television and said Tucker had convinced him to reconsider. Pope John Paul II sent a formal appeal directly to Governor George W. Bush. Italian Prime Minister Romano Prody added his voice. So did N. Gingrich, then Speaker of the US House of Representatives.
The World Council of Churches, filed a formal appeal. Amnesty International, represented publicly by Bianca Jagger, took up her case. United Nations Commissioner on summary and arbitrary executions, Baker Whya, also intervened formally on her behalf. Ronald Carlson, the brother of Deborah Thornton, one of the women Tucker had been convicted of killing, had initially supported the execution.