Texas Executes the Pickaxe Killer Karla Faye Tucker — “I Am at Peace with This”… What mostly hit me was his love. You know, his love that just surrounded me. >> She said she felt pleasure. Every single blow. She said it herself in open court. That is where this story starts. What happens next is where it gets complicated. If you want real cases broken down with verified details, not headlines, subscribe now. Houston, Texas, June 12th, 1983. Two people went about their evening with no idea their paths were about to cross and no idea that crossing would cost them everything. Jerry Lind was 27 years old. He was born on May 31st, 1956 in Smith County, Texas. The youngest of three brothers, all of whom served in the military. That background shaped him. He was hardworking, practical, and self-sufficient. When Houston’s oil boom pulled thousands of people into the city in the late 1970s and early 1980s, Jerry was among them. The city’s population had surged past 1.6 million by 1980, and Jerry came looking for opportunity. He found steady work as a cable television installer. Outside of work, motorcycles were his life. He restored them, rode them, and lived inside Houston’s tightlyknit biker community. He was also going through the collapse of his marriage to a woman named Shaun Dean, a separation that had already created enemies he may not have fully understood. Deborah Ruth Thornton was 32 years old. Her full name was Deborah Ruth Carlson Davis Thornton, and she had come a long way to get to Houston. She was born on May 10th, 1951 in Columbus, Ohio. Her early years were difficult. Her biological father had a criminal history that forced her mother to rebuild the family entirely. Her mother remarried and both Deborah and her brother Ronald Carlson were adopted into that new household. When the opportunity came to relocate to Houston, Deborah took it. She moved with Ronald to work at a trailer manufacturing company run by a man named Bill List. She had been married before Richard Thornton. Her son, William Joseph Davis, carries a different surname as a result of that earlier marriage. On the evening of June 12th, 1983, Deborah had argued with Richard and left the house. She went to a party. She met Jerry Lind there for the first time that night. They had no prior connection, no shared history. One evening brought them together. Neither survived it. Two ordinary people, one night, one apartment. The question is who came through that door and why. Carla Fay Tucker was born on November 18th, 1959 in Houston, Texas. She was the youngest of three sisters, Kathy Lynn and Carrie, and came before her. Her father, Larry Tucker, worked as a long shoreman. Her mother, Carolyn Moore Tucker, started out as a homemaker, but the family unraveled fast. Her parents fought, separated, and reconciled multiple times before finally divorcing when Carla was 10. It was during those divorce proceedings that she discovered something that shook her. She had been conceived during an extrammarital affair. The man raising her was not her biological father. By 8 years old, she was using drugs. By 14, she had dropped out of school entirely and followed her mother, Caroline, into prostitution, traveling with rock bands across the country. At 16, she married a mechanic named Steven Griffith. The marriage did not last. Years later, on the day of her execution, Griffith told the Houston Chronicle, “She always said that someday she would be famous.” By her early 20s, Tucker was fully embedded in Houston’s biker scene, running on a daily cycle of hard drug use. It was through her friendship with Shaun Dean that she was introduced in 1981 to a 37-year-old man named Daniel Ryan Garrett. They became a couple and Garrett would lead her directly into the worst night of her life. Between June 11th and 13th, 1983, a 3-day party ran at Tucker and Garrett’s home on Mckin Street in Houston. The occasion was Keranne’s birthday. Those present included Tucker, Garrett, Carrie Burell, Ronnie Burell, and James Liebrandt. Court records document the substances consumed over those three days. Placidils, dilotted, Valium, Mandrex, cocaine, bathtub speed, and alcohol layered across multiple days without interruption. During that same gathering, Shaun Dean arrived visibly injured from a recent confrontation with her aranged husband, Jerry Lind Dean. Tucker, fiercely protective of Shawn, turned her anger squarely onto Jerry. At approximately 3:00 a.m. on June 13th, 1983, Tucker, Garrett, and Librandt left the house and drove to Jerry Dean’s apartment. Tucker used a key she claimed Shawn had lost. Liebrandt stayed outside, tasked with locating Dean’s El Camino. Tucker and Garrett went inside. In the bedroom, Garrett found a ballpeen hammer on the floor and used it to strike Dean. Tucker found a three-foot pickaxe in the apartment and used it on Dean as well. Garrett then left the room to remove motorcycle parts from the apartment. Tucker remained. It was at that point she discovered Deborah Ruth Thornton hidden under the bed covers against the wall. Having witnessed everything, Thornton was also attacked. The pickaxe was left embedded in her chest. When Tucker and Garrett finally left, they took Dean’s wallet, his motorcycle parts, and his El Camino. Tucker drove the El Camino directly to Doug Garrett’s apartment, Danyy’s brother, and told him what had happened. Dean’s wallet was handed over. Doug burned its contents and threw it away. The motorcycle parts were stored briefly before being thrown into the Brazis River. The El Camino was abandoned in a parking lot near the Astradome. Every one of those actions was later documented and entered as physical evidence at trial. The following morning, Gregory Scott Trevor arrived at Dean’s apartment expecting a ride to work. He noticed immediately that the motorcycle was gone and the television had been moved. He went inside. He found both bodies. Houston police opened the investigation that same day. For 5 weeks, they had almost nothing. Then on July 20th, 1983, homicide detective JC Moer received a phone call from Doug Garrett. Doug’s girlfriend was Carrie Burell, Tucker’s own sister. He had been hearing things inside the family and could no longer stay quiet….read more 👇👇👇

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.

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