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Tony Lee WALKER
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics: Rape - Robbery - Drugs
Number of victims: 3
Date of murders: 1978 / 1992
Date
of arrest:
May 24,
1992
Date of birth:
April 15,
1966
Victims profile: ??? /
Willie Simons, 82, and his wife, Virginia Simmons, 66
Method of murder:
Beating with
a piece of a railroad
tie
Location: Morris County, Texas, USA
Status:
Executed
by lethal injection in Texas on September 10,
2002
Summary:
After a night of of smoking crack cocaine, Walker walked to the home
of a neighborhood acquaintance, 82 year old Willie Simmons and 66
year old Virginia Simmons.
He picked up a big stick on the railroad tracks
and knocked on the door. He identified himself to Mrs. Simmons, who
opened the door. Mr. Simmons was standing by the kitchen door with
his back turned.
When Mr. Simmons turned around, Walker hit him in
the back of the head with the stick, which broke, then hit him two
more times. He then pulled him into the bedroom, grabbed Mrs.
Simmons, and told her to pull her gown up. He tied Mr. Simmons'
hands and feet with an electric cord, then raped Mrs. Simmons.
Walker started thinking that if he did not kill
them, they would call the police. After looking at them for about 10
minutes, Walker hit them both in the head repeatedly.
Blood was
coming out of their mouths and, as Walker watched, they both gasped
for air. Walker then went to the kitchen, got a beer, sat down and
drank it.
Afterward, he dragged Mrs. Simmons into the
living room to attempt to sexually assault her again, even though
she was dead. Walker stole $95 from Mr. Simmons wallet, tried to
clean up the scene, and left out the back door.
The next day, police found Walker's blood-soaked
clothes in a hole behind his house. After the police confronted him,
Walker confessed to the crime.
Walker's confession was supported by
forensic evidence presented at trial demonstrating that the blood on
his clothes was of the same type as the victims. The evidence also
revealed that Walker's sperm was found on Mrs. Simmons.
Walker was previously convicted of murder in 1978
and was paroled on early release in 1980.
Final Meal:
French fries, five pieces of fried chicken, and three Dr. Peppers.
Final Words:
Walker expressed love to two pen pals in Europe. "And to my family,
nothing." With his last statement finished, the lethal injection was
started. Walker then began reciting the Lord's Prayer. When he
reached the words, "Thy kingdom come," he stopped and said, "Help
me, chaplain."
ClarkProsecutor.org
Texas Attorney General
Media Advisory
Thursday, Sept. 5, 2002
Tony
Lee Walker Scheduled to be Executed.
AUSTIN - Texas Attorney General John Cornyn
offers the following information on Tony Lee Walker, who is
scheduled to be executed after 6 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 10, 2002.
On Nov. 17, 1993, Tony Lee Walker was sentenced
to die for the capital murder of 66-year-old Virginia Simmons in
Daingerfield, Texas, on May 23, 1992. Walker also murdered Simmons'
81-year-old husband Willie "Bo" Simmons.
A summary of the evidence presented at trial
follows:
FACTS OF THE CRIME
On May 23, 1992, at 12:30 a.m., James Cornelius
and Tony Walker were riding in Cornelius' car. The two were in
possession of rock cocaine, which they both smoked. Cornelius let
Walker out of the car and he started walking toward his house.
Walker, who was an acquaintance of the Simmons, wanted beer and
money for more drugs. He decided to go over to the Simmons' house,
which was nearby. On the way, Walker picked up a big stick on a
railroad track.
When he got to the house, Walker knocked on the door
and heard Mr. Simmons ask, "Who is it?" Walker identified himself,
and Mr. Simmons opened the door and let him in.
Once inside, Walker
told Mr. Simmons he wanted a beer. Mr. Simmons went to the kitchen,
got a beer, and brought it back to Walker. Walker gave him 50 cents
for the beer and then left.
Walker walked in the woods and drank the beer. He
found another stick and went back to the Simmons' house. Walker put
the stick behind him and knocked on the door. Mr. Simmons asked who
was there, and Walker told him "Roger."
Eventually, Virginia Simmons
let Walker into the house. Mr. Simmons was standing by the kitchen
door with his back turned. When Mr. Simmons turned around, Walker
hit him in the back of the head with the stick, which broke. He hit
Mr. Simmons in the head again and the stick broke again.
Walker then
grabbed a walking cane and hit Mr. Simmons a third time. The cane
also broke. Mrs. Simmons yelled, "Hey, you want to get shot?" Walker
opened the front door and got another stick he had left on the porch.
He hit Mrs. Simmons with it and she fell on her bed.
Mr. Simmons was still standing up when Walker
grabbed him by the hand, pulled him into the bedroom, and told him
to lay down on the floor by the bed.
Walker then grabbed Mrs.
Simmons and told her to pull her gown up. He tied Mr. Simmons' hands
and feet with an electric cord, a belt, and a foam shoulder sling.
Walker asked the Simmons if they would tell the police about this,
and Mr. Simmons responded that he would not because they had been
robbed before. Walker then raped Mrs. Simmons. He noticed that Mrs.
Simmons' head was bleeding at the time.
After raping Mrs. Simmons, Walker laid her on the
floor by her husband's feet. She was nude and curled up. Walker
started thinking that if he did not kill them, they would call the
police. After looking at them for about 10 minutes, Walker hit them
both in the head repeatedly.
Blood was coming out of their mouths
and, as Walker watched, they both gasped for air. Walker then went
to the kitchen, got a beer, sat down and drank it. Afterward, he
dragged Mrs. Simmons into the living room to attempt to sexually
assault her again, even though she was dead. Then, he got another
beer from the kitchen and drank it.
Next, Walker found Mr. Simmons' wallet in Mr.
Simmons' back pocket, took the money out, and counted it.
There was
about $95 in the wallet, which Walker put in his pocket. Walker then
began looking for items that he might be able to sell for money, but
went to the kitchen and drank another beer.
After that, he untied Mr.
Simmons and began to collect the belts, the electric cord, the
sticks, the cane, and the beer cans. He put the items in a pillow
case, and then tried to wipe his fingerprints off of anything he
thought he touched.
Walker was naked and his clothes were covered
with blood, so he found a pair of Mr. Simmons' pants and a t-shirt
and put them on. Walker went to the front door, opened it, and
noticed that the Simmons' neighbors were awake. Consequently, he
closed the front door, locked it, and walked out the back door.
The following day, the police found Walker's
blood-soaked clothes in a hole behind his house. After the police
confronted him, Walker agreed to go to the Morris County courthouse
to answer questions.
While at the courthouse, Walker confessed to
the crime. Walker's confession was supported by forensic evidence
presented at trial demonstrating that the blood on his clothes was
of the same type as the victims. The evidence also revealed that
Walker's sperm was found on Mrs. Simmons.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On June 30, 1992, Walker was indicted in the
276th Judicial District Court of Morris County, Texas, for the
capital offense of murdering Virginia Simmons while in the course of
committing and attempting to commit aggravated sexual assault.
After
Walker pleaded not guilty, a jury found him guilty of the capital
offense on Nov. 15, 1993. On Nov. 17, 1993, after a separate
punishment hearing, the court assessed Walker's punishment at death.
Walker's conviction and sentence were
automatically appealed to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, which
affirmed in an unpublished opinion on Oct. 30, 1996. Walker
petitioned the Supreme Court of the United States for writ of
certiorari, but the Court denied the writ on Oct. 6, 1997.
Walker filed a state application for writ of
habeas corpus in the trial court on Aug. 4, 1997. The trial court
subsequently entered findings of fact and conclusions of law
recommending that Walker's application be denied. With the exception
of three of the court's findings, the Court of Criminal Appeals
adopted the findings and conclusions of the trial court and denied
the application in an unpublished order on Sept. 30, 1998.
Walker then filed a federal habeas petition in
the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas,
Beaumont Division, on March 22, 1999. The federal district court
denied habeas relief on Dec. 8, 2000.
However, on Feb. 9, 2001, the
district court granted Walker permission to appeal with regard to
one claim: whether Walker's counsel was ineffective in making an
incorrect argument concerning the law of "reasonable doubt."
Thereafter, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
rejected that claim and affirmed the district court's judgment on
Aug. 7, 2001. Walker subsequently petitioned the Supreme Court for
certiorari review. The Court denied the petition on May 20, 2002.
PRIOR CRIMINAL HISTORY
During trial, the State proved that Walker had
been convicted of first degree murder on March 21, 1978, in Criminal
District Court No. 2, of Dallas County, Texas. Walker received a
five-year sentence for the crime, and was discharged on early
release on May, 8, 1980.
ProDeathPenalty.com
UPDATE: In a brief final statement, Tony Lee
Walker said goodbye to a friends in Europe and said "I love you and
will never forget you. And to my family," he said, choking back
tears, "nothing."
In a written statement, Walker said he was sorry
for the crime and asked the victim's family if they "can find it in
their hearts to forgive me, but if not I will understand."
Richard Townsend, the former Morris County district attorney who prosecuted
Walker said, "If you're going to confess to murder, that's probably
bad enough but when you put the details in that he did, that's what
got him the death penalty. He talked about doing things like
sexually assaulting the elderly woman, then getting a beer in the
kitchen and drinking a beer and trying to sexually assault her again
when she was dead. He went into detail that made him look like a
monster."
The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles rejected a
commutation request by a 17-0 vote. No 11th-hour appeals were filed
in the courts. "There are simply no meritorious issues we could urge
in good faith," his lawyer, Buck Files Jr., said. "After five years
and nine or 10 months, I have no more rabbits to pull out of the hat."
Files said he had hoped to spend time with Walker on Tuesday and
offered to arrange transportation for Walker's wife to visit her
husband in prison in the hours before his lethal injection but
Walker declined to see either of them. "As he put it, he didn't see
any point to it," Files said.
At his trial, Walker disputed his
confession, testifying other men with him were responsible for the
slayings although he did not deny the rape. Evidence, however,
showed Walker was alone. "He gave the worst confession I ever read,
easily nailing himself to the wall, admitting not only the murder,
but went into details," Townsend said.
Walker also was convicted in
1978 of a murder in Dallas, where he was with others pulling a store
robbery where a person was killed. He received a five-year prison
term but was discharged on early release after serving a little more
than two years.
Tony Lee Walker
Txexecutions.org
Tony Lee Walker, 46, was executed by lethal
injection on 10 September in Huntsville, Texas for killing a
neighbor couple.
On 23 May 1992, James Cornelius and Tony Walker
were riding in Cornelius' car and smoking crack cocaine after
midnight.
At 12:30 a.m., Cornelius let Walker, then 36, out of the
car and he started walking toward his house. According to his later
confession, Walker picked up a big stick -- a piece of a railroad
tie about the size of a baseball bat -- off the ground.
Instead of
going to his house, he decided to go to the home of Willie "Bo"
Simmons, 81, and his wife, Virginia, 66. Walker knocked on the front
door. From behind the door, Mr. Simmons asked, "Who is it?" After
Walker identified himself, Simmons let him in. Walker asked Simmons
for a beer, which he obtained for him from the kitchen. Walker gave
Simmons 50 cents for the beer and then left.
Walker walked around in the woods nearby and
drank the beer. He then picked up another club-sized stick and went
back to the Simmons' house. He left one of the clubs by the front
door and held the other behind his back. He knocked on the door, and
Mrs. Simmons let him in. Walker then began beating Mr. Simmons on
the head with his club.
After the stick broke twice, Walker grabbed
a walking cane and hit Mr. Simmons a third time. The cane also broke.
He then picked up his other club from the front porch, went into the
bedroom, and hit Mrs. Simmons, who fell on the bed.
He went back to
the living room and pulled Mr. Simmons, who was dazed but still
standing, into the bedroom. Walker told Mr. Simmons to lie on the
floor and then he tied his hands and feet with an electric cord and
other items in the room. He then raped Mrs. Simmons.
After raping Virginia Simmons, Walker laid her on
the floor, nude, next to her husband. For the next ten minutes, he
looked at them and considered what he was going to do.
He then began
beating them both in the head repeatedly, until they were both dead.
After this, he went to the kitchen, got another beer, and drank it.
He then dragged Mrs. Simmons' body into the living room and
attempted to have sexual intercourse with it. He then drank another
beer.
Next, Walker took Willie Simmons' wallet from his
back pocket, took out the money, counted it, and put the $95 in his
pocket. He also started looking for items that he might be able to
sell. He then drank another beer. After that, he began to clean up
the crime scene.
He untied Mr. Simmons and put the electrical cord,
sticks, beer cans, and other items he had used into a pillowcase. He
attempted to wipe his fingerprints off of anything he thought he
touched. Naked, he found some of Willie Simmons' clothes to put on
and picked his own bloody clothes up. Noticing that the neighbors
were stirring, he left through the back door.
Walker was arrested the next day after police
found his bloodstained clothes in the woods behind his house, in a
hole. At the courthouse, he gave the detailed confession described
above. He told police that he had been smoking crack cocaine on the
night of the murders and that he robbed the Simmons for money to buy
more cocaine.
Walker had a previous conviction for first-degree
murder. He was involved in a store robbery where someone was killed.
He began serving a 5-year prison sentence in 1978 and was discharged
after 2 years. He also had two prior convictions for burglary of a
vehicle. He was sentenced to 6 months' probation both times.
Walker pleaded not guilty at his trial. He
admitted to being at the crime scene and raping Virginia Simmons,
but he said that other men who were with him committed the murders.
The prosecution presented his clothes, which were soaked with blood
matching both victims, as evidence. The evidence also showed that
Walker's sperm was found on Virginia Simmons' body.
A jury convicted Walker of the capital murder of
Virginia Simmons in November 1993 and sentenced him to death. The
Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the conviction and sentence
in October 1996. All of his subsequent appeals in state and federal
court were denied. The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles denied his
clemency request by a 17-0 vote.
Walker did not give interviews while on death row.
However, he did correspond with an anti-death-penalty web site. One
of his letters may give a clue as to his choice of murder weapons.
Urging readers to buy his woodcraft items, such as clocks and
jewelry boxes, he wrote, "I have always been infatuated, working
with wood."
Other than two reporters, there were no witnesses
to Walker's execution, either for the prisoner or the victims. In a
written statement, he wrote, "I wish to tell the family how sorry I
am about what I done. I know that nothing I say will bring Mr. and
Mrs. Bo Simmons back. I ask that Linda and Gary [the couple's
children] and their family can find it in there [sic] hearts to
forgive me, but if not, I will understand, I am truly sorry." On the
execution gurney, Walker expressed love to two pen pals in Europe. "And
to my family," he said, choking back tears, "nothing." With his last
statement finished, the lethal injection was started. Walker then
began reciting the Lord's Prayer. When he reached the words, "Thy
kingdom come," he stopped and said, "Help me, chaplain."
The
chaplain continued saying the prayer as Walker gasped and sputtered
several times. When he stopped breathing, a tear rolled out of his
right eye, onto his cheek. He was pronounced dead at 6:16 p.m.
Convicted Killer Dies in Tears Saying the Lord's
Prayer
Houston Chronicle
AP - September 10, 2002
HUNTSVILLE -- A tear running down his face, a
northeast Texas man convicted of raping and fatally beating a 66-year-old
woman in an attack where her husband also was killed was executed
Tuesday evening.
In a brief final statement, Tony Lee Walker said
goodbye to a friend in Switzerland, who he identified as Diego, and
another in England, who he called Wild Flower. "I love you and will
never forget you," Walker said. "And to my family," he said, choking
back tears, "nothing."
As the drugs began flowing, Walker started saying
the Lord's Prayer, reaching the words "thy kingdom come" when he
stopped. He looked at a chaplain standing at his feet and said, "help
me, chaplain." The chaplain continued saying the prayer as Walker
gasped and sputtered several times.
After Walker stopped breathing,
a tear ran out of his right eye and down the side of his face. He
was pronounced dead at 6:16 p.m., eight minutes after the drugs
began flowing. In a written statement, Walker said he was sorry for
the crime and asked the victim's family if they "can find it in
their hearts to forgive me, but if not I will understand."
Walker, 36, was high on crack cocaine and armed
with pieces of railroad tie about the size of a baseball bat when he
clubbed Virginia Simmons and her husband, Willie "Bo" Simmons, 81,
at their Daingerfield home the night of May 23, 1992. Walker lived
nearby and knew the victims. He confessed to police a couple of days
later after his bloody shirt and other items from the crime scene
were found in a wooded area between his home and the Simmons' home.
Walker, condemned for the woman's death, was the
24th person to be put to death in Texas this year and the first of
five scheduled to die this month. "If you're going to confess to
murder, that's probably bad enough, but when you put the details in
that he did, that's what got him the death penalty," said Richard
Townsend, the former Morris County district attorney who prosecuted
Walker. "He talked about doing things like sexually assaulting the
elderly woman, then getting a beer in the kitchen and drinking a
beer and trying to sexually assault her again when she was dead. "He
went into detail that made him look like a monster."
The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles rejected a
commutation request by a 17-0 vote. No 11th-hour appeals were filed
in the courts. "There are simply no meritorious issues we could urge
in good faith," his lawyer, Buck Files Jr., said. "After five years
and nine or 10 months, I have no more rabbits to pull out of the
hat."
Files said he had hoped to spend time with Walker
on Tuesday and offered to arrange transportation for Walker's wife
to visit her husband in prison in the hours before his lethal
injection, but Walker declined to see either of them. "As he put it,
he didn't see any point to it," Files said.
Evidence showed that earlier on the evening of
the killings, Walker was at the Simmons' house to purchase a beer
and paid the couple 50 cents for it. When he returned, Bo Simmons
let him in, presumably because he wanted another beer. Daingerfield
was a dry community and the Simmons' house was a place he knew he
could get a drink, authorities said. In the attack, the wood ties
broke from the force of the blows. Evidence showed he then grabbed a
walking cane, which also broke, to continue the attack.
At his trial, Walker disputed his confession,
testifying other men with him were responsible for the slayings
although he did not deny the rape. Evidence, however, showed Walker
was alone. "He gave the worst confession I ever read, easily nailing
himself to the wall," Townsend said. On an anti-death penalty Web
site, Walker, who refused to speak with reporters in the weeks
before his scheduled punishment, wrote to a supporter in 1998 urging
people purchase his wood craft products, such as clocks and jewelry
boxes. "I have always been infatuated, working with wood," he said
in the letter.
Walker also was convicted in 1978 of a murder in
Dallas, where he was with others pulling a store robbery where a
person was killed. He received a five-year prison term but was
discharged on early release after serving a little more than two
years.
Man Executed for 1992 Double Murder
By Mark
Passwaters - The Huntsville Item
September 11, 2002
A Morris County man convicted of a pair of 1992
murders was executed yesterday evening in the death chamber of the
Huntsville "Walls" Unit. Tony Lee Walker, 46, had received his death
sentence for the murders of 81-year-old Bo Simmons and his 66-year-old
wife Virginia on May 23, 1992. Walker beat the two to death with a
railroad tie for the $95 he found in Bo Simmons' wallet.
Attendance for Walker's execution was sparse,
with no witnesses from the family of the victims or from Walker's
family. The only media representatives were from the Associated
Press and The Huntsville Item. Walker, clad in a light blue dress
shirt and dark blue slacks, was not covered by a sheet as is
customary for most executions. He struggled with his emotions during
his final statement, which he began at 6:07 p.m.
After thanking
friends in Switzerland and Great Britain, Walker became emotional
when speaking of his family. "And to my family..." he said before
breaking into a sob. After composing himself, he said to "Walls"
warden Neill Hodges, "That's all."
As the fatal dose began to flow at 6:08 p.m.,
Walker began to recite the Lord's Prayer. He reached the phrase, "Thy
kingdom come" before being overcome by emotion. Addressing Texas
Department of Criminal Justice chaplain Richard Lopez, Walker said,
"Help me, Chaplain." Lopez continued the prayer as Walker gasped and
lost consciousness, shedding a tear as his eyes shut. He was
pronounced dead at 6:16 p.m. In a final written statement, Walker
asked for forgiveness from the Simmons family. "I wish to tell the
family how sorry I am about what I done," he wrote. "I know that
nothing I say will bring Mr. and Mrs. Bo Simmons back. I ask that
Linda and Gary (the Simmons' children) and their family can find it
in there (sic) hearts to forgive me, but if not I will understand, I
am truly sorry."
Walker, who had served two years for a previous
murder conviction before being released in the early 1980's, was an
acquaintance of the Simmons'. He forced his way into their house --
located in Daingerfield -- on the early morning hours of May 23 in
an attempt to steal beer and to get money to by crack cocaine. After
entering the house, Walker attacked Bo Simmons, striking him on the
head hard enough to break two railroad ties taken from a nearby
track and Simmons' cane.
Walker then took both of his victims into their
bedroom, where he restrained Bo Simmons and proceeded to rape his
wife. After leaving the bedroom to drink a beer, Walker returned and
beat the two to death. After drinking another beer and attempting to
rape Virginia Simmons' corpse, Walker changed out of his blood-soaked
clothes and walked out of the front door of the house, locking it
behind him.
Walker was arrested the next day, with his blood-covered
clothes discovered in a small hole behind his house. He confessed to
the killings during his initial interrogation by Morris County
authorities, but later recanted. He was found guilty of the killing
of Virginia Simmons -- the state only filed a single capital murder
count -- on Nov. 15, 1993, and was sentenced to death two days later.
Lifespark Movement Against the
Death Penalty
The following extract is a taken form a letter
written on 30th August, 1998 by Tony Lee Walker #999082, Death Row
inmate in Ellis One Unit, Huntsville, Texas, to his penfriend in
Switzerland. He is 43 years old and has been on Death Row since
1993.
Hello again! It's your friend Big Tuck. I pray
life is treating you well! I'm feeling pretty good. I guess being
over fourty does has its up and down. It is Sunday afternoon, I've
been thinking about the Internet deal. So I was just laying around
after cleanning my box out, getting rid of some junk which took
about 2 minutes, smile. I also was reading a writ my lawyer sent me
that was being sent to the Court of Criminal Appeal from the State
of Texas. Well as you know the State, they do whatever it takes to
convince the courts and Supreme Court to carry out the execution,
everything the State said, the judge granted for them! But you can
expect that anyway! It's a onesided thing! It takes time for these
things, a ruling, just thought I let you know... So time is still
lingering you would say!
Well I've been thinking and thinking about that
Internet deal, about what to say. Diego, I will say this : any idea
you have will be the most welcome, so how about this :
"Hello from Texas, Death Row USA. My name is Mr.
Tony Lee Walker, my number is 999082. I am one of the over 400
inmates housed here at Ellis One, in Huntsville, Texas, awaiting to
be put to death by lethal injection. I will also add that I'm not
just sitting around, waiting to die. Since I arrived here at Ellis
One, I picked up a hobby making jewelry boxes and clocks. I have
always been infatuated, working with wood. I'm told that Death Row
Arts & Crafts are sold for high dollars but mine are not. My crafts
are at a set price. I'm just trying to make ends meet. These
beautiful crafts are all hand made and are one of a kind! They will
be cherished for all years to come. A lovely present! A beautiful
gift for all ages! Ordering one or many of my crafts items will help
me. Please order now. Thank you and God bless us all!"
Diego, I can't wait to get this shown on the road,
hoping for good results, so keep your fingers crossed!
Well being in solitary has its advantages. I get
to stay up all night and sleep all day. Say I've been wondering what
kind of program do you watch over there on TV? I'm ordering a book
from the library, maybe something about Switzerland. Well Diego, as
you know all good things must come to an end, so I will close my
letter but never my friendship. May God bless you always. My best
wishes. Tell your mother and sister hello for me, thank you Diego,
man, you are truely a blessing to me and a good friend.