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James Scott
PORTER
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics: White-supremacist
Number of victims: 2
Date of murders: 1995 / 2000
Date of birth:
August 15,
1971
Victims profile: White male transient,
40 / Rudy Delgado, 40(fellow inmate)
Method of murder:
Shooting
/ Beating with a rock -Stabbing
withmakeshift knife
Location: Bowie County, Texas, USA
Status:
Executed
by lethal injection in Texas on January 4,
2005
Summary:
Porter was convicted of Burglary in 1990 and again in 1991, then
sentenced to 5 years imprisonment.
He was paroled and in 1995 was convicted of first degree murder and
sentenced to 45 years imprisonment. Porter shot a 40 year old male
transient two times in the head and dumped his body in a water well.
Porter expressed no remorse for this murder and thought he had done
society a favor.
While imprisoned, in 2000 Porter beat to death fellow inmate Rudy
Delgado in the prison day room. Porter struck Delgado, who was
seated at a table, from behind with a rock sheathed in a pillow
case. Delgado fell to the floor and lay helpless on the ground as
Porter continued to bludgeon his face and head with the rock.
When
the pillow case finally ripped, Porter stabbed Delgado in the head
and face with a makeshift knife. Porter then stomped on Delgado’s
head and face with steel-toed work boots. Once the attack was over,
Porter surrendered to a correctional officer.
Porter gave a written statement to investigators, confessing to the
murder of Delgado. In his confession, Porter admitted that he had
been planning to kill someone for some time, and had decided to use
the rock and the knife the week before the murder. Porter later
added that Delgado was a convicted child molester who had made a
pass at him.
Final/Special Meal:
Two extra crispy fried chicken breasts, two thighs, onion rings,
french fries, fried okra, five slices of buttered garlic bread, a
bowl of country gravy, a couple slices of onions, pickles, jalapeno
peppers, ketchup, mustard, sliced tomato, one pot of thick coffee
and a banana split.
Final Words:
"I am sorry for the pain I have caused you. I know it is a great
loss and I want to apologize. I am sorry. And to my family I love
you and I will see you all in heaven."
ClarkProsecutor.org
Texas Attorney General
Media Advisory
Wednesday, December 29, 2004
James Scott Porter Scheduled For Execution
AUSTIN – Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott
offers the following information about James Scott Porter, which is
scheduled to be executed after 6 p.m. Tuesday, January 4, 2005.
Porter was sentenced to death in March 2001 for murdering fellow
state prison inmate Rudy Delgado.
FACTS OF THE CRIME
In 1995, James Scott Porter was sent to the Texas
Department of Criminal Justice’s Barry Telford Unit in northeast
Texas to serve a 45-year sentence for first-degree murder.
On May 28, 2000, the fifth year of his
imprisonment, Porter brutally beat to death fellow inmate Rudy
Delgado in the prison day room. Porter struck Delgado, who was
seated at a table, from behind with a rock sheathed in a pillow
case. Delgado fell to the floor and lay helpless on the ground as
Porter continued to bludgeon his face and head with the rock. When
the pillow case finally ripped, Porter stabbed Delgado in the head
and face with a makeshift knife. Porter then stomped on Delgado’s
head and face with steel-toed work boots. Once the attack was over,
Porter surrendered to a correctional officer.
Porter gave a written statement to investigators,
confessing to the murder of Delgado. In his confession, Porter
admitted that he had been planning to kill someone for some time,
and had decided to use the rock and the knife the week before the
murder. Porter admitted to taking eleven Dilantin pills the night
before the murder to help with the “rush of killing someone no one
in particular.” Porter admitted he picked his victim at random.
Porter later bragged about the murder in letters
he wrote to other inmates and to the district attorney, and
repeatedly stated that he would kill again. In a hearing held
outside the jury’s presence at his trial, Porter asserted that he
wanted to be convicted and sentenced to death for this murder.
Porter put on little defense.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In March 2001, Porter was convicted and sentenced
to death by a jury in Bowie County, Texas. On automatic direct
appeal, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Porter’s
conviction and sentence. Porter did not pursue certiorari review
from the U.S. Supreme Court.
During the course of his state post-conviction
proceedings, Porter informed his attorney that he no longer wished
to pursue appeal of his conviction and sentence. Porter and his
attorney agreed that, if Porter’s application for post-conviction
relief was unsuccessful, counsel would inform the federal court of
Porter’s desire to waive appeal. On July 2, 2003, The Texas Court of
Criminal Appeals adopted the trial court’s findings and denied post-conviction
habeas corpus relief.
On September 26, 2003, Porter filed a federal
petition for writ of habeas corpus and a motion to dismiss that
petition, which contained a request that the federal court appoint a
mental health expert to determine whether Porter was competent to
make the decision to dismiss his federal appeals.
The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District,
Beaumont Division, appointed a psychiatrist who examined Porter and
concluded that Porter was competent. On January 30, 2004, the
district court conducted an evidentiary hearing to determine
Porter’s competency. The court ruled that Porter was competent to
dismiss his application. Therefore, the Court dismissed Porter’s
application for federal writ of habeas corpus on February 17, 2004.
Porter did not request clemency.
PRIOR CRIMINAL HISTORY
In 1990, Porter pleaded guilty to burglary of a
building and was sentenced to eight years probation.
In 1991, Porter was convicted of burglary of a
building and sentenced to five years. Porter was released on parole.
On April 21, 1995, Porter was convicted and
sentenced to forty-five years in prison for murder with a deadly
weapon. Porter shot a 40 year old white male transient two times in
the head and dumped his body in a water well. Porter expressed no
remorse for this murder and thought he had done society a favor.
Porter was serving this sentence when he committed the capital
murder in prison.
While in prison on the murder charge, prior to
committing the capital murder, Porter was convicted of possessing a
deadly weapon.
National Coalition to Abolish the Death
Penalty
James Porter - TEXAS - January 04, 2005
The state of Texas is scheduled to execute James
Porter, a white man, Jan. 4 for the May 28, 2000, murder of Rudy
Delgado, a Latino man. The murder took place while both men were
serving time in prison at the Telford Unit in Bowie County. Porter
was in prison for murder with a deadly weapon.
Porter, who has been called a white-supremacist,
has reportedly maintained that his killing Delgado was honorable. He
killed Delgado, a gay man, by bludgeoning him to death.
Porter asked U.S. District Judge Thad Heartfield
in federal district court to declare him mentally competent so that
he could withdraw any further appeals of his conviction or sentence.
Texas has executed more people in the modern era
than the next five states combined. The state has been under
increased scrutiny for its handling of death penalty cases. In the
past year, the Supreme Court has heard three appeals from inmates on
death row in Texas, and in each case reversed the findings of the
lower courts.
According to a recent New York Times article,
legal experts maintain that the Supreme Court's decision to hear
these cases demonstrates "its growing impatience with two of the
courts that handle death penalty cases from Texas: its highest
criminal court, the Court of Criminal Appeals, and the United States
Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, in New Orleans." The article
also quoted Sandra Day O'Connor, who wrote in June that the Fifth
Circuit was "paying lip service to principles" regarding appellate
law in upholding death sentences with "no foundation in the
decisions of this court."
The Court of Appeals' apparent disregard for
upholding justice coupled with the massive Houston Crime Lab scandal
has caused many prominent Texans, including former Gov. Mark White,
Houston Police Chief Harold Hurtt, and State Senator John Whitmire -
all death penalty proponents - to call for a moratorium of
executions in Harris County. Considering the existence of wide-scale
problems such as crime lab scandals and flagrant disregard for
international law Texas should not be in the business of state
killing under any circumstances. Yet it continues to carry out death
sentences.
Please take a moment to write Gov. Perry asking
for a moratorium on all executions in Texas and to spare the life of
James Scott Porter. Also, please write the Board of Pardons and
Paroles asking them to recommend clemency in all cases considering
the overwhelming turmoil within the state justice system pertaining
to the death penalty.
Inmate who killed child molester executed
Houston Chronicle
AP January 4, 2005
Condemned inmate James Porter was executed
tonight for fatally beating a convicted child molester nearly five
years ago while in prison.
Porter, who dropped his appeals and ordered
nothing be done to stop the first execution of the year in the
nation's most active capital punishment state, apologized to the
relatives of his victims and expressed love to his family. "I am
sorry for the pain I have caused you,'' he said in a brief final
statement. "I know it is a great loss and I want to apologize. I am
sorry. ``And to my family I love you and I will see you all in
heaven.''
He closed his eyes and quickly stopped breathing
as the lethal drugs took effect and his mother sobbed while watching
through a window nearby. Six minutes later, at 6:12 p.m. CST, Porter
was pronounced dead.
Porter, 33, from Lake Dallas, was sentenced to
die for using a smuggled rock wrapped in a pillowcase to fatally
pummel fellow prisoner Rudy Delgado, 40. Porter's lawyer, Robin
Norris, said Porter had been advised that attorneys were ready to
help him, even at the last minute.
Porter already was serving a 45-year term for the
1995 shooting death of a transient in Denton County when he attacked
Delgado in May 2000 at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice
Telford Unit near Texarkana. Delgado, who also was stabbed and
kicked, was serving a 15-year term for sexually assaulting a child
in Dallas County.
"I believe he was taken out too easy,'' Anna
Acevedo said after watching her brother's killer die. "He didn't
feel the same pain my brother did. I would have been happy to see
him feel the same pain my brother felt. "His apology wasn't good
enough for me.''
Porter said Delgado was gay and made a pass at
him, which the former white supremacist didn't appreciate. "What I
done is what I done,'' Porter told The Associated Press in a recent
interview. "I'd taken a 2-pound rock to somebody's head and spread
them all over the place. I guess at that time, I just lost all my
cool and didn't care anymore.''
He wrote letters to James Elliott, the Bowie
County prosecutor handling his capital murder trial, referring to
his victim in epithets and said he should be applauded for ridding
society of a child molester. Elliott used the letters at Porter's
trial, telling jurors the convicted murderer was boasting and proud
of killing Delgado. ``In a way, I was,'' Porter said from death row.
``That dude never touched any little boys again.''
In another letter, Porter warned he would murder
again and didn't care if it was another prisoner or a corrections
officer. ``The letter where he said 'I'm going to kill again the
next chance I get' was fairly convincing,'' Elliott said.
Norris said Porter had a difficult childhood that
included being raped. He ran away from home when he was about 14 and
linked up with supremacists who shared his hatred of gays, Norris
said. In prison, Porter claimed allegiance to white gangs and
acquired extensive tattoos, including letters that spell ``HATE'' on
four fingers of his right hand.
``I'm over that,'' Porter said. ``I've kind of
stepped out. There's too much ignorance that comes with it.'' He
said he eventually realized he was wrong to repunish Delgado ``for
something he was already punished for.'' ``I'm just thankful I had
the chance to get salvation,'' he said, adding that he was convinced
he would be going to heaven ``although I don't deserve it.'' ``I
know where I'm going. I know what's going to happen,'' Porter said.
``I'm set. I'm secure in that and I'm at a real peace with it. I've
never felt that kind of peace. And I like it, instead of all the
hate, the chaos, the anger and the aggravation I usually feel.''
Porter was one of at least nine men in Texas with
execution dates already this year, including four in January. The
state carried out 23 executions last year.
Killer of child abuser set to be executed today
By Michael Graczyk -
FortWorth Star-Telegram
Jan. 04, 2005
LIVINGSTON - Convicted killer James Porter
figured he did society a favor by fatally beating a child molester,
even though he wound up on Death Row for it. Now he believes he's
doing himself a favor by short-circuiting his appeals to ensure a
trip to Texas' death chamber today. "I'm the type of individual to
face up to my responsibility and my mistakes," Porter, 33, said
recently.
At Porter's request, no appeals were pending in
the courts, and no clemency petition was filed with the Texas Board
of Pardons and Paroles, said his lawyer, Robin Norris. "I believe as
much as I can determine that he is in fact determined to go," Norris
said.
The tattoo-covered Porter, whose body art touts
what he said is his former allegiance to white-supremacist prison
gangs, is the first of nine Texas inmates set to die this year,
including four in January. Texas carries out the death penalty more
often than any other state, with 23 executions last year.
Porter was serving a 45-year term for the 1995
fatal shooting of a transient in Denton County when he killed fellow
inmate Rudy Delgado in 2000. According to court records, Porter
smuggled a rock into his cell at the Texas Department of Criminal
Justice Telford Unit near Texarkana, stuffed it in a pillowcase and
used it to beat Delgado, serving a 15-year term for sexually
assaulting a child in Dallas County. "Dude was a homosexual," Porter
said of Delgado, 40. He "asked me several times if that was
something I might dig. One day, frustration started eating on me,
like a little old black shroud covering my eyes. I'm going to kill
someone. "I guess at that time I just lost all my cool and didn't
care anymore."
By the time prison officers stopped the attack,
Delgado's head had been battered with the rock and by kicks from
Porter, and he had been stabbed in the neck. "Porter stomped the man
until his face could not be recognized as being that of a human,"
said James Elliott, the assistant district attorney in Bowie County
who prosecuted Porter.
Texas executes killer incited by gay hate
By
Ann Rostow -
PlanetOut.com
Tuesday, January 4, 2005
Prison officials in Huntsville, Texas, executed
the first death row inmate of 2005 on Tuesday evening at 6 p.m.
James Porter, 33, earned a death sentence for the murder of a fellow
prisoner, Rudy Delgado, whom Porter believed was gay.
According to the Associated Press, Delgado was
serving 15 years for sexual abuse of a child at the time. Porter
claimed that Delgado was gay. "Dude was a homosexual," said Porter,
who added that Delgado "asked me several times if that was something
I might dig." According to the Texas death row Web site and wire
reports, Porter was serving 45 years -- for shooting a homeless man
and dumping his body in a well -- in the Telford Unit in Northeast
Texas, where he encountered Delgado. At some point, Porter said he
snapped.
"One day, frustration started eating on me, like
a little old black shroud covering my eyes," he said in a recent
interview. "I guess at that time, I just lost all my cool and didn't
care anymore." On May 28, 2000, Porter walked into the day room with
a rock inside a pillowcase and beat Delgado to death.
Prosecutor James Elliot told the press that after
the attack, Delgado's face "could not be recognized as that of a
human." Porter reportedly then helped seal his own fate by writing a
note to Elliot during his murder trial, pointing out that the world
was better off with Delgado dead.
Porter said later that he was sort of proud of
himself. "That dude never touched any little boys again." According
to the Associated Press, Porter eventually expressed regret. "It
wasn't my place to repunish him for something he was already
punished for," he said. "I'm sorry it happened. That's all I can say."
In 2004, Texas led the nation in executions,
putting 23 men to death, over half of them African-American.
Killer of child molester says he is ready to be
executed; No appeals filed
FamilyBadge.org
Associated Press
LIVINGSTON - Convicted killer James Porter
figured he did society a favor by fatally beating a child molester
even though he wound up on death row for the slaying. Now he
believes he's doing himself a favor by short-circuiting his appeals
to ensure a trip to Texas' death chamber today. "I'm the type of
individual to face up to my responsibility and my mistakes," Porter,
33, said recently from a small visiting cell outside Texas' death
row.
At Porter's request, no appeals were pending in
the courts and no clemency petition was filed with the Texas Board
of Pardons and Paroles, said his lawyer, Robin Norris. "I believe as
much as I can determine that he is in fact determined to go," Norris
said.
The tattoo-covered Porter, whose body art touts
what he said is his former allegiance to white supremacist prison
gangs, is the first of nine Texas inmates already set to die this
year, including four in January. Texas, the nation's most active
capital punishment state, carried out 23 executions in 2004.
Porter already was in prison, serving a 45-year
term for the 1995 fatal shooting of a transient in Denton County,
when he killed fellow inmate Rudy Delgado in 2000. Court records
show Porter smuggled a rock into his cell at the Texas Department of
Criminal Justice Telford Unit near Texarkana, stuffed it in a
pillowcase and used it to beat Delgado, who was serving a 15-year
term for sexually assaulting a child in Dallas County. "Dude was a
homosexual," Porter said of Delgado, 40. He "asked me several times
if that was something I might dig. One day, frustration started
eating on me, like a little old black shroud covering my eyes. I'm
going to kill someone. "I guess at that time I just lost all my cool
and didn't care anymore."
By the time prison officers broke up the attack,
Delgado's head had been battered with the rock and by kicks from
Porter, and he had been stabbed in the neck. "Porter stomped the man
until his face could not be recognized as being that of a human,"
said James Elliott, the assistant district attorney in Bowie County
who prosecuted Porter. "And I'm not exaggerating that one bit."
Porter said while he had no regrets at the time,
he now believes he was "wrong to judge" his victim. "It wasn't my
place to re-punish him for something he was already punished for,"
Porter said. "I'm sorry it happened. That's all I can say."
Porter v. State,
Not Reported in S.W.3d (Tex.Crim.App. Apr 09, 2003)
Defendant was convicted in the trial court, Bowie
County, of capital murder and sentenced to death. On direct appeal,
the Court of Criminal Appeals, Womack, J., held that: (1) evidence
that defendant ingested seizure medication prior to making
confession did not render confession involuntary; (2) probative
value of Polaroid pictures and videotape of crime scene was not
outweighed by danger of unfair prejudice; (3) trial counsel's
performance was not deficient for failure to exercise five
peremptory challenges in opposition to defendant's wishes; and (4)
trial court did not err by granting State's challenge for cause to
vacillating venireperson. Affirmed.
WOMACK, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous
Court.
Appellant was convicted in March 2001 of capital
murder. Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.03(a). Pursuant to the jury's
answers to the special issues set forth in Texas Code of Criminal
Procedure article 37.071 sections 2(b) and 2(e), the trial judge
sentenced appellant to death. Art. 37.071 § 2(g). Direct appeal to
this Court is automatic. Art. 37.071 § 2(h). We affirm.