Thomas Bartlett "Bart" Whitaker (born December 31, 1979) is a former Texas death row inmate at the Polunsky Unit near Livingston. He was convicted in the December 10, 2003, murders of his mother and brother by hitman Chris Brashear and sentenced to death in March 2007. On February 22, 2018, 45 minutes before the scheduled execution at 6pm, Whitaker had his sentence commuted to life imprisonment without parole by the Governor of Texas.
Whitaker had employed Brashear and another accomplice, Steven Champagne, the getaway driver, to carry out the murders. Whitaker's father, Kent, was shot but survived. Whitaker fled to Mexico in 2004 following a tip-off that he would shortly be arrested for the murders. He lived there for over a year under the false name of Rudy RĂos. On September 15, 2005, a capital murder warrant was issued against Whitaker. Cooperating with US authorities, Mexican authorities arrested Whitaker without incident under immigration charges. In September 2005 Whitaker was handed over to US authorities at the border town of Laredo, Texas, where he was arrested for capital murder.
The State of Texas currently executes by overdosing the condemned with pentobarbital from a compounding pharmacy but defense lawyers claimed the state's first two executions of 2018 were botched because of old lethal injection drugs. Whitaker withdrew his appeal which was pending at the Supreme Court of the United States, pertaining to the purity of the drug used in Texas executions just before the Governor granted clemency and commuted his sentence.
In a rare decision, on February 20, 2018, the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles unanimously recommended that the death sentence be commuted to life imprisonment. The recommendation from the seven-member panel was sent to Republican Governor Greg Abbott. Abbott accepted their recommendation, and commuted Whitaker's death sentence, noting that Whitaker had, "Voluntarily and forever waived any and all claims to parole in exchange for a commutation of his sentence from death to life without the possibility of parole". Whitaker responded to the commutation of his sentence by saying, "I am thankful for this decision, not for me but for my dad". Previously, in 2012, Whitaker had stated his strong opposition to the idea of life without the possibility for parole, and wrote in his blog from prison:
LWOP, however, offends and assaults everything I believe in. It irrevocably denies any possibility of rehabilitation; it eviscerates hope entirely. It is for this reason that I would never sign for it, even if that were the only way to evade a return to death row.
Video Thomas Bartlett Whitaker
Early life
Whitaker attended Clements High School, but had to leave as a result of burglaries he had committed with other students. As a result, he was evaluated by a psychologist who stated that he was, "Experiencing the clinical symptoms of a delusional (paranoid) disorder". He was friends with Adam Hipp at Clements High School. Hipp admitted at the trial that he had been recruited to murder Whitaker's family in a plot in 2001 that had been aborted. During cross examination from defense attorney Randy McDonald, Hipp admitted being motivated by money to carry out the murders. At the trial, Hipp said that he had contacted the Sugar Land Police Department with information about the previous plot when he heard about the reward money on offer following the murders in 2003.
A 2009 psychological evaluation of Whitaker noted that after high school he was given, "More of the unearned trappings of wealth" whilst his thoughts became even more disorganized. Whitaker's affluent parents had bought him several luxury vehicles and paid for his tuition at Baylor University and Sam Houston State University. They also bought him a lakeside townhouse in Willis, Texas and a $4,000 Rolex watch was given to him as a graduation present hours before the murders, despite the fact that he was not enrolled at college. Whitaker also had access to a $80,000 trust fund from his grandparents, although he testified in court that he didn't know he could access it.
Maps Thomas Bartlett Whitaker
Murders
On December 10, 2003, Whitaker falsely told his family that he had just taken his final exams and would soon be graduating from Sam Houston State University. They drove to the nearby Pappadeaux restaurant in Stafford for a celebratory dinner. Meanwhile Brashear, dressed in black, including a ski mask, had entered the Whitaker family home, taken Kevin's gun and ammunition from a locked box in his room, staged a burglary, and then waited near the front door for the Whitaker family to return home.
Steven Champagne waited outside the restaurant for the Whitaker family to leave and followed them back to the family home where he waited in his car near their house. Thomas said that he needed to collect his cell phone from his parked Yukon knowing that Brashear was armed and waiting inside to kill his family.
Kevin entered the family home first and reportedly smiled when he saw the masked Brashear. Brashear shot Kevin once through his chest and he fell to the floor. Patricia screamed "Oh God, no" and she was also shot in the chest and fell to the floor. Kent rushed in and was shot in the shoulder with the bullet shattering his humerus. Thomas then ran inside and staged a struggle with Brashear, getting shot in his left arm to divert suspicion.
Brashear then exited through the Whitakers' back door and jumped the fence into the rear neighbour's yard, where Champagne collected him. Kevin died within minutes of being shot. Patricia died shortly after being airlifted by Life Flight service on the way to Memorial Hermann Hospital. Thomas told First Responders that he thought the gunman was black, in order to divert suspicion away from Brashear. Kent survived the murder attempt and was airlifted to the hospital.
Conviction
At his trial in March 2007, prosecutors alleged that although it wasn't Whitaker who pulled the trigger, he was responsible for the murders because he played the leading part in the conspiracy to commit murder. Whitaker was refused a plea bargain by the District Attorney in return for his admission of guilt and was tried for capital murder. The prosecutors' chief witness, Steven Champagne, claimed that Whitaker had wanted his family dead so he could capitalize on a million-dollar life insurance payout. Whitaker denies this and says that the only life insurance policy the family had was for $50,000 on his father's life. Whitaker claims that a mental disorder, exacerbated by drug abuse, caused him to want his family eliminated.
Kent Whitaker had already forgiven his son for his part in the murders and had tried to persuade the jury not to deliver a death sentence. However, the jury decided to convict Whitaker of capital murder under the Law of Parties (Texas). Chris Brashear received a life sentence in a plea bargain worked out with prosecutors. Steven Champagne agreed to testify for the prosecution in return for a 15-year sentence.
Whitaker appealed his death sentence on the grounds of the ineffectiveness of his trial counsel, prosecutorial misconduct, the arbitrariness of the death penalty punishment and the cruelty of the lethal injection, in violation of the eighth amendment to the U.S. constitution prohibiting cruel and unusual punishment.
In April 2017, his appeal against prosecutorial misconduct was dismissed by the Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit.
On October 10, 2017, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to consider an appeal based on his claims that his trial lawyer was deficient and that Fort Bend County prosecutors engaged in misconduct by improperly referring to discussion of a plea deal that never was reached. The justices provided no explanation for their refusal. On November 1, 2017, his death warrant was signed, scheduling his execution for February 22, 2018.
Whitaker has stated that his father, Kent, would have been revictimized by his execution. Kent Whitaker, the only surviving victim of the crime, wrote a book about the murders titled Murder by Family detailing his forgiveness for his son's actions. Kent also wrote to the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles asking for clemency for his son, and the Chairman of the Board met with him for half an hour. The Board unanimously recommended clemency to Governor Greg Abbott.
Thomas Whitaker and other inmates initiated an unsuccessful class action suit against the conditions on Texas death row where inmates are kept in solitary confinement for 23 hours a day.
He has contributed to Solitary Watch where he wrote about the effects of solitary confinement on himself and other death row inmates. He also won prizes in PEN America's prison writing contests for "Hell's Kitchen", "Manufacturing Anomie" and the essay "A Nothing Would Do as Well". In 2007, he founded an inmate blog, entitled Minutes Before Six which is maintained by volunteers. Texas inmates are typically executed at 6 pm in the Huntsville Unit. He also contributed to Hell Is a Very Small Place: Voices from Solitary Confinement.
References
External links
- Faces of Death Row: The Texas Tribune
- Fort Bend Criminal Case Records
- Texas Execution Information Center
- Texas Department of Criminal Justice Offender Information
- Death Row Inmates Sue Texas Governor Rick Perry For Abusive Conditions
- Forensic Files - Season 13 Episode 43 "Family Interrupted"
- OWN Murder In The Family
- Letters from Death Row: Faith Behind Bars - The Texas Observer
- THOMAS BARTLETT WHITAKER v. THE STATE OF TEXAS
- Prison Writing & Political Will
- Buried Alive: Stories From Inside Solitary Confinement
Source of article : Wikipedia