Shannon Charles Thomas

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Shannon Charles Thomas (July 27, 1971November 16, 2005) was a murderer executed by lethal injection by the U.S. state of Texas. He was convicted of the Christmas Eve, 1993 murder of 10-year-old Maria Rios and her 11-year-old brother, Victor Rios in their Baytown, Texas home.

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[edit] Crime

Thomas and Keith Clay's intention on Christmas Eve was to rob the two children's father, Roberto Rios, a small-time marijuana and cocaine dealer, of his drugs and money. In the early afternoon Rios was duct taped to a chair, severely beaten, tortured with a pair of shears and shot twice in the head and stabbed in the neck with a steak knife. Thomas then went upstairs to the children's room where he shot them point-blank in the head through a pillow as they lay on the floor. It appears that the motive for the killings of the children was the elimination of witnesses.

Police were unable to solve the crime for over a year until they arrested one of Thomas' friends who gave information that linked Thomas and Clay to the murders. Additionally, a postal worker and friend of the Rios testified they had seen a "beige-looking, maybe white" car in front of the house. Clay owned a white Cadillac with tinted windows which he reported stolen after the murders.

[edit] Trial and appeals

During his trial, it was revealed that Thomas had also taken part in a robbery on January 4, 1994 where Keith Clay shot Melathethil Tom Varughese, a clerk at a Texaco gas station. Clay was executed on March 20, 2003 for this murder.

Thomas had previous criminal convictions to his name. He was on probation for delivery of a controlled substance and had served time in a Harris County, Texas boot camp for assault.

After being convicted of the two children's murders, Thomas was sentenced to death by a jury on November 8, 1996. The conviction and sentence were then affirmed by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals after an automatic appeal required in all death penalty cases in Texas. An appeal for writ of habeas corpus was denied on November 24, 1998 by the Court of Criminal Appeals. Appeals to a U.S. district court were also denied and an application for a certificate of appealability was denied in the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit on October 11, 2004. Thomas did not file a clemency petition with the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles.

Thomas defence claimed that although the postal worker said that he saw two men at the Rios' home on the day of the murders, it was only under hypnosis that he identified Thomas as one of those men. Thomas continued to contend that he was completely innocent of the murders and that evidence against him was purely circumstantial.

[edit] Execution

No member of the Rios' family witnessed the execution. Thomas requested that his sister and a friend witness for him. Thomas requested no last meal.

In his final statement, Thomas said to his sister:

"I want you to be strong and get through this time. Do not fall back. Keep going forward. Don't let this hinder you. Let everybody know I love them. … This is kind of hard to put words together. I am nervous and it is hard to put my thoughts together. Sometimes you don't know what to say. I hope these words give you comfort. … Let everybody know I love them and love is unconditional as mama always told us. I may be gone in flesh but I am always with you in spirit."

As the drugs started taking effect, Thomas asked, "Is the mic still on?" He was told that it was, but then he lost consciousness.

His execution was delayed shortly by a late appeal that was denied by the Supreme Court of the United States. He was pronounced dead at 6:52 p.m. CST after being executed by lethal injection at the Huntsville Unit, Huntsville, Texas.

It was the 996th execution in the United States since the Gregg v. Georgia decision in 1976.

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