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gunpowderNlead's Blog

by gunpowderNlead from Dallas, Texas USA

Last Post 4 days, 5 hours Ago


It's taking out the Trash Thursday again..... Texas takes out the Trash on Tuesday and Thursday's....

Too bad your moral compass wasn't working the time you had your wife killed over lust for a coed, who I am sure was worth every drop of your poor wives blood. There's no fool like a old fool and for an old fool like yourself to think that a young coed would be seriously interested in you to the point of having your wife eliminated, shows just how stupid a fool you really are. Too bad your moral compass was busted the night you helped kill Officer Hawkins- I agree with Officer Hawkins wife... it's a little too late. Mr. Rodriguez, volunteering to die doesn't make you any better than the remaining 5 who will be taking the same one way flight to hell that you will, you will just get there first. The only one who should be given any recognition at all is Larry Harper, who did us all a favor and killed himself vs. being taken alive and costing the tax payers 7+ years of upkeep for a gang of sorry losers. If I were a member of your wife's family or the wife of Officer Hawkins, I would have gladly "volunteered" to be the one to insert the needle into your arm tonight and watch your miserable, cold blooded, selfish and evil life end. Good Riddance...

Now Texas... let's see you expedite the executions of the other 5- I am tired of paying for them.


"Texas 7" Fugitive Volunteering to Die Thursday
Last Edited: Thursday, 14 Aug 2008, 6:32 AM CDT Created: Thursday, 14 Aug 2008, 6:32

HUNTSVILLE, Texas -- Michael Rodriguez's downfall began with an infatuation.

If he follows through with his plans to be held accountable, it ends Thursday evening in the Texas death chamber.

Rodriguez, 45, a key member of the "Texas 7" -- a group of seven fugitives who broke out of a South Texas prison in one of the state's most notorious escapes -- has dropped all his appeals and is volunteering for execution for his part in the killing of a Dallas-area police officer almost eight years ago.

"Whatever we do, there's restitution to be made," Rodriguez, 45, told The Associated Press in a recent interview outside death row. "But in this situation, the only thing I can do is be held accountable and express sincere condolences."

Rodriguez's execution, the eighth this year in the nation's busiest death penalty state, would cap more than two years of efforts he initiated to short-circuit the appeals process and accelerate his punishment.

"Sadly, a lot of people got hurt," Rodriguez said.

Rodriguez would be the first of the six surviving members of the infamous "Texas 7" to be executed.

At the time of the December 2000 escape, Rodriguez was serving a life term for hiring a hit man to kill his wife, Theresa, 29, to collect her life insurance proceeds. She was gunned down in 1992 getting out of her car outside their San Antonio home. The triggerman, Rolando Ruiz, also is on death row.

Rodiguez was taking college classes and wanted to get rid of his wife because he'd been smitten with a younger female student.

"The lust of a coed," he said. "I can't explain it. My wife was a wonderful person and didn't deserve this. I fell for a coed. It was stupid. ... But I was a willing participant. ... I really thought I would get off, like a lot of people who are deluded."

His father, who would be convicted of helping the escaped convicts, arranged to have a vehicle waiting near the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Connally Unit south of San Antonio after the inmates got out.

The gang was captured in Colorado in January 2001 after six weeks on the run. One of them, Larry Harper, killed himself rather than surrender to authorities.

By then, however, they were involved in the fatal shooting of Aubrey Hawkins, an Irving policeman, during a Christmas Eve 2000 robbery of a sporting goods store in the Dallas suburb.

"I'm glad we got caught, so no one else would get hurt," Rodriguez said.

His five remaining accomplices -- George Rivas, Randy Halprin, Donald Newbury, Joseph Garcia and Patrick Murphy -- also are there and awaiting the outcome of appeals. None of them has an execution date.

Rodriguez's punishment was expected to draw dozens of police officers to Huntsville to stand vigil outside the prison while Hawkins' widow, Lori, was inside watching the convicted killer die.

"I'll be there," she said. "Absolutely. I wouldn't miss this."

Lori Hawkins credited Rodriguez with being "the first one to really admit his guilt" but said his words of apology were "a little too late."

"It didn't have to happen," she said of the fatal shooting of her husband of four years. "Aubrey didn't need to die."

Rodriguez first wrote to a federal judge in Dallas in early 2006, mailing a hand-printed letter mailed asking that his appeals be stopped. Court hearings eventually were held to ensure Rodriguez was competent to make that kind of decision, but his execution was on hold while the U.S. Supreme Court considered a Kentucky case that stopped all executions in the country with a challenge arguing lethal injection was unconstitutionally cruel. When the justices in April upheld the method as proper, Rodriguez's death date was set for Thursday.

"I'm ready to go," he said.

Toby Shook, a former Dallas County assistant district attorney who prosecuted Rodriguez, said he thought the former restaurant operator in San Antonio was being "very pragmatic."

"It's going to happen," Shook said, describing the case against him and the other former fugitives as "iron tight."

"He's able to at least make one decision on his own," Shook said. "He's choosing the time."

The seven prisoners overpowered workers at the Connally Unit near Kenedy on Dec. 13, 2000, took the workers' clothes, then grabbed 16 guns from the prison armory and fled in a stolen truck. They ditched that truck for another that had been left for them by Rodriguez's father.

Then 12 days later, while robbing an Irving sporting goods store of cash, clothing and more weapons, they killed Hawkins, who was shot 11 times and then run over with his own patrol car.

Acting on a tip from a resident of a trailer park outside Colorado Springs, Colo., Rodriguez and three of his cohorts were captured there Jan. 22, 2001. Harper killed himself. The remaining two surrendered two days later.


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ibejim read my blog view my photos
Aug 15, 2008 | 7:43 AM

Howya doin, Guns.

"Hawkins' widow, Lori, was inside watching the convicted killer die.

"I'll be there," she said. "Absolutely. I wouldn't miss this."

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I wonder how many relatives of the VICTIMS killed these animals feel the same way?

ibejim read my blog view my photos
Aug 15, 2008 | 7:45 AM

ERR...killed BY these animals....ugh.

gunpowderNlead read my blog view my photos
Aug 15, 2008 | 7:21 PM

Hi Jimbo. She was there, along with hundreds of Police Officers from all over the State of Texas. Of course, there were the anti-death penalty mental cripples standing out with their homemade signs.... You know Jimbo, it's been stormy here the last couple of days... if I were one of those mental cripples holding the anti-death penalty signs directly across from hundreds of Police Officers and standing under a good old fashioned Texas Thunderstorm, I might think twice about standing out in the elements holding my sign, I mean, most of the cops probably wanted to shoot them but didn't, however, who could really dispute an Act of God in the form of a lightening bolt?

Oh a few minutes after the bastard entered the gates of hell someone stood and read his final statement, telling the victims families how sorry he was (like we didn't already know what a sorry sob he is). He mentioned God, the Lord and Scripture in his final statement- Too bad none of that was on his mind when he had his wife gunned down or when he and the 6 lowlifes gunned down the cop and proceeded to run over and over his body. He wasn't thinking about God nor scriptures during those deeds. But, like most criminals who go to Prison, he found Jesus and I supposed asked for forgiveness from Him, however, he never asked for forgiveness from his victims family... not that any would probably be given, but he could have at least asked... since, afterall, he felt so badly about what he did.... right?

Oh well that ends this weeks version of "Texas Taking out the Trash".... another episode will fir

oughtm11 read my blog
Aug 18, 2008 | 12:18 PM

Can we get any more volunteers?

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gunpowderNlead

100% Texan

Member Since: 3/20/2008