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Donald Ray
WALLACE Jr.
Classification: Mass murderer
Characteristics:
Robbery
Number of victims: 4
Date of murders:
January 14,
1980
Date of birth:
September 3,
1957
Victims profile: Patrick Gilligan
W/M/30; Teresa Gilligan W/F/30; Lisa Gilligan W/F/5;
Gregory Gilligan W/M/4
Method of murder:
Shooting (handgun)
Location: Vandenburgh County, Indiana, USA
Status:
Executed
by lethal injection in Indiana on March 10,
2005
As attested by the admission of Wallace to friends after the fact,
after burglarizing the home of Ralph Hendricks, he "got greedy" and
decided to break into the house next door.
However, when he did so, he was surprised to find the family inside.
Patrick and Teresa Gilligan and their two children, aged 4 and 5,
were confronted by Wallace with a gun. All four were tied up and
shot in the head.
Wallace would say to friends later that he shot Mr. Gilligan because
he was "giving him trouble"; he shot Mrs. Gilligan because she was
screaming and he "had to shut her up"; and he shot the children
because he "could not let the children grow up with the trauma of
not having parents."
Wallace then took guns, a CB, a scanner, and other property, all of
which was later recovered from or traced to Wallace.
Wallace was found incompetent and confined in a mental hospital for
almost 2 years prior to trial. His IQ was measured at 130. In the
weeks before his execution Wallace admitted that he had "faked"
mental illness, and that he had in fact committed the murders.
Citations:
Direct Appeal: Wallace v. State, 486 N.E.2d 445 (Ind. December 6, 1985)
Conviction Affirmed 5-0 DP Affirmed 3-2
Pivarnik Opinion; Givan, Shepard concur;Debruler and Prentice dissent.
Wallace v. Indiana, 106 S. Ct. 3311 (1986) (Cert. denied)
PCR:
PCR Petition filed 12-03-86. PCR denied 09-04-87 by Special Judge
Robert Brown. Wallace v. State, 553 N.E.2d 456 (Ind. 1990)
(Appeal of PCR denial by Judge Robert Brown)
Affirmed 3-2; Pivarnik Opinion; Givan, Shepard concur; Debruler,
Dickson dissent. Wallace v. Indiana, 111 S. Ct. 2250 (1991) (Cert. denied)
Wallace v. State, 640 N.E.2d 374 (Ind. 1994)
(Appeal of 2nd PCR denial by Judge Dexter Bolin, Summary Judgment to
State)
Affirmed 5-0; Givan Opinion; Shepard, Dickson, Debruler, Sullivan
concur. Wallace v. Indiana, 115 S. Ct. 1972 (1995) (Cert. denied)
Habeas:
Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus filed 09-06-95 in U.S. District
Court, Southern District of Indiana.
Writ denied 11-14-02 by U.S. District Court Judge Sarah Evans Barker.
Wallace v. Davis, ___ F.Supp.2d ___ (S.D.
Ind. November 14, 2002).
(Order of Judge Sarah Evans Barker of the U.S. District Court for the
Southern District of Indiana denying the Habeas Corpus Petition of
Donald Ray Wallace, which had been pending for more than 7 years, an
unconscionable delay that is left unexplained by the Court.)
Wallace v. Davis, 362 F.3d 914 (7th Cir.
March 26, 2004).
(Appeal of denial of Habeas Writ by Judge Sarah Evans Barker)
Affirmed 3-0; Circuit Judge Frank H. Easterbrook, Judge Joel M. Flaum,
Judge Anne Claire Williams.
Final Meal:
He ate his last meal Tuesday night: filet mignon, baked potato, soup
and chocolate truffle cake from a local Damon's Grill.
Final Words:
"I hope everyone can find peace with this."
ClarkProsecutor.org
WALLACE, DONALD
RAY, JR. # 16
ON DEATH ROW SINCE 10-21-82
DOB: 09-03-1957
DOC#: 7114 White Male
Vigo County Circuit Court Judge Hugh D. McQuillan
Venued from Vanderburgh County
Prosecutor: Stanley M. Levco,
Robert J. Pigman
Defense: William G. Smock
Date of Murder: January 14, 1980
Victim(s): Patrick Gilligan
W/M/30; Teresa Gilligan W/F/30; Lisa Gilligan W/F/5; Gregory
Gilligan W/M/4 (No relationship to Wallace)
Method of Murder: shooting with
handgun
Summary: As attested by the
admission of Wallace to friends after the fact, after burglarizing
the home of Ralph Hendricks, he "got greedy" and decided to break
into the house next door.
However, when he did so, he was surprised to find
the family inside. Patrick and Teresa Gilligan and their two
children, aged 4 and 5, were confronted by Wallace with a gun. All
four were tied up and shot in the head.
Wallace would say to friends later that he shot
Mr. Gilligan because he was "giving him trouble"; he shot Mrs.
Gilligan because she was screaming and he "had to shut her up"; and
he shot the children because he "could not let the children grow up
with the trauma of not having parents."
Wallace then took guns, a CB, a scanner, and
other property, all of which was later recovered from or traced to
Wallace. (Wallace was found incompetent and confined in a mental
hospital for almost 2 years prior to trial)
Conviction: Murder (4 counts)
Sentencing: October 21, 1982 (Death
Sentence)
Aggravating Circumstances: b (1)
Burglary; b(8) 4 murders
Man put to death for killing 4 in 1980; Victims'
survivors pray, remember Evansville family
By Theodore Kim and
Dan McFeely - Indianapolis Star
March 10, 2005
MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. -- A quarter-century after he
murdered an Evansville family of four during a botched burglary
attempt, Donald Ray Wallace Jr. was executed by lethal injection.
Wallace, 47, was pronounced dead at 1:23 a.m. EST today at the
Indiana State Prison, said Javairya Ahmed, a Department of
Correction spokeswoman. "I hope everyone can find peace with this,"
Wallace said, according to Ahmed. After the execution, Wallace's
attorney, Sarah Nagy, read a statement from his family: "Killing Don
by the state has only created more pain and helped continue the
cycle of hate and violence."
From 8:30 a.m. to about 4:30 p.m., Wallace
visited with two friends, said prison spokesman Barry L. Nothstine.
After a shower, he was led to a room next to the execution chamber.
Wallace declined the chance to meet with a spiritual adviser, saying
he preferred to be alone, Nothstine said. He ate his last meal
Tuesday night: filet mignon, baked potato, soup and chocolate
truffle cake from a local Damon's Grill, Ahmed said. Wallace
selected nine people to witness his execution, Nothstine said.
Outside, about 15 death penalty opponents had
gathered to protest. Marti Pizzini, 64, Michigan City, a member of
the Duneland Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty, brought candles,
leaflets, a few tables and some noisemakers. "I'm not very religious,
but I believe you do not solve the problem of violence with more
violence," said Pizzini, who said she has attended 10 execution
protests.
In Evansville, meanwhile, relatives of Wallace's
victims — Patrick and Theresa Gilligan and their two children —
gathered for a prayer service at St. Theresa Catholic Church, where
the Gilligans were married. During the 40-minute service, the priest
who notified family members of the killings led a rosary. Diana
Harrington, of Louisville, Ky., the sister of Theresa Gilligan, told
about 200 who attended that Theresa and Pat Gilligan would have
appreciated the turnout and that their "children with their
wonderful manners and beautiful smiles would have welcomed you all."
Several in the church cried and dabbed their eyes.
In January 1980, the Gilligans returned to their
home to find Wallace, who had just been released from prison, police
said. Wallace, in what he later called a "frenzied blur," killed the
couple and Lisa, 5, and Gregory, 4, according to police and
Wallace's own letters. He was sentenced to death in October 1982.
In a recent interview with WTHR (Channel 13), The
Indianapolis Star's news-gathering partner, Wallace said he panicked
during the burglary and had no intention of embarking on a horrific
killing spree. Rather, the murders were a "moment of utter madness,
" he said. "I wish I could take it back, but I can't. I can't change
the past."
Wallace had instructed his Indianapolis attorney,
Sarah Nagy, not to submit a request for clemency. Nagy said earlier
this week that she thought Wallace had "resigned himself to the
ultimate penalty." Wallace and his attorneys also reached an
agreement to avoid a post-execution autopsy, a standard procedure
meant to provide evidence that the person put to death was not
abused and did not suffer needlessly.
Gov. Mitch Daniels reviewed
Wallace's case at least twice, including Wednesday. Daniels, a
Republican, has said he has moral misgivings about capital
punishment but supports the death penalty in "the most heinous
cases." State law allows the governor broad powers to grant clemency
to those on Death Row. Wallace's execution is Indiana's 12th since
the U.S. Supreme Court reinstated capital punishment in 1977.
In July, then-Gov. Joe Kernan reduced the
sentence of Darnell Williams, who killed a Gary couple in 1986. It
marked the first time in nearly a half-century that an Indiana
governor spared the life of a convicted killer. In January, Kernan,
a Democrat, spared the life of an Indianapolis man, Michael Daniels,
convicted of murdering a minister during a robbery attempt. Gov.
Daniels spent Wednesday night at the official governor's residence,
4750 N. Meridian St.; it has a hotline to the State Prison.
Five protesters had gathered on the sidewalk
outside the residence by 11 p.m.; two more stood on the other side
of Meridian Street. Karen Burkhart, of the local chapter of Amnesty
International, carried a sign declaring: "Execution is not the
solution." Referring to the death sentences Kernan commuted, she
said "the reason he stopped them was because he thought there were
some major questions about how death penalty cases were handled by
the courts. We want Gov. Daniels to take the same approach."
Ed
Towne, a retired Christian Theological Seminary professor, also
showed up for the protest. "When you have a man in custody, you
don't have to kill him in order to protect society from him," Towne
said. Daniels could face other clemency decisions this year. On
April 21, the state is scheduled to execute William J. Benefiel, 48,
for torturing and killing an 18-year-old Terre Haute woman in 1987.
Outside the sprawling, chain-linked State Prison,
death penalty opponents braved a bitterly cold wind off Lake
Michigan that kept many of them in their idling cars until the time
for the execution drew near. Rows of satellite TV trucks from
stations in South Bend, Evansville and Indianapolis lined a parking
lot across from the prison entrance just hours before Wallace's
scheduled death.
Robert Dhoore, 64, South Bend, braved the elements
long enough to carry two signs over to a small folding chair to
claim his spot for a rally. A veteran protester at state executions,
Dhoore came prepared. "I've got my two sets of pants, two
sweatshirts. And I got a pail in the car just in case," he said.
There are no public restrooms outside the prison.
But the protests go on anyway along Hitchcock
Road, the two-lane street alongside the sprawling State Prison
property. On this night, it was crowded with traffic. A few cars
honked as they drove by. Dhoore, a Catholic who attends church on
the campus of the University of Notre Dame, is eager to share the
message on his well-worn signs, one of which begins: "We are called
to love our enemies." "What more can I say?" said Dhoore. "I do not
believe in the death penalty for any reason at any time. It's gotta
stop."
It was not a sentiment shared by Mark Hamner, 37,
an Indianapolis Police Department officer who drove to the prison
with fellow officers Patrick Snyder, 30, and Chris Cooper, 34. They
set up a camping stove on a card table and cooked hamburgers and
beans for dinner. "We came up here to protest the protesters,"
Hamner said. "Most of the time, it's the protesters that get the
press. We are here to show that the majority of this state does
favor the death penalty."
At one point, three anti-execution protesters
approached the officers and started a spirited but cordial debate.
"How are we going to be more safe by killing this man?" asked Sean
Napier, 40, a Michigan City hotel manager. "His next victim will be
safe," offered Snyder. "Do you sleep well at night?" asked Pizzini,
of the Duneland Coalition. "I sleep like a baby," Snyder replied. "And
I will sleep well tonight."
Indiana Executes Killer of Four
Reuters News
March 10, 2005
MICHIGAN CITY (Reuters) - A man who killed two
small children and their parents during a burglary 25 years ago was
executed by the state of Indiana on Thursday. Donald Wallace, 47,
was pronounced dead at 1:23 a.m. EST following an injection of
lethal chemicals at the Indiana State Prison in Michigan City, a
spokesman said. It was the ninth execution in the United States this
year and the 953rd since the country brought back capital punishment
in 1976.
Wallace was convicted of killing Patrick Gilligan
and his wife Teresa, both 30, as well as their children Lisa, 5, and
Gregory, 4, on Jan. 14, 1980. All were tied up and shot in the head.
Police said Wallace had burglarized a house in Evansville, Indiana,
on the night of the crime and decided to break into a neighboring
home, where he encountered the Gilligan family.
"I hope everyone can find peace with this,"
Wallace said in final words before his execution. In a recent
television interview Wallace expressed regret and blamed the crime
on drugs, saying the incident was "like a dream ... I can't tell you
why (it happened). I've asked myself a million times why. I don't
know why."
Wallace spent two years in a mental hospital
after the crime but was then declared fit to stand trial. He had
refused to let his lawyer file a clemency petition with Indiana Gov.
Mitch Daniels. For his last meal, Wallace ate steak, baked potato,
french fries, cheese sticks, a fried onion, and a piece of chocolate
cake, the spokesman said.
EXECUTED: Donald Ray Wallace Jr.
His death ends
nightmare that began 25 years ago
By Bryan Corbin and Maureen
Hayden - Evansville Courier-Press
March 10, 2005
MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. - Shackled to a gurney with a
needle in his arm, Donald Ray Wallace Jr. could turn his head to
face his witnesses. Staring through the miniblinds and into the
execution chamber, his witnesses heard a short, simple statement: "I
hope everyone can find peace with this." He then signaled to his
executioners, as required by an agreement to not autopsy his body.
He was ready to die. It took only minutes for the
lethal mix of chemicals to flow into his vein, paralyzing his lungs
and stopping his heart. He was pronounced dead at 12:23 a.m. today.
He was 47. Prison officials said he cooperated fully with his
execution.
On Wallace's last day, he visited with two
spiritual advisers. They could have remained with him, but he asked
them to leave at 4:30 p.m. He then showered, put on a new set of
prison clothes and was ushered into a holding cell next to the
execution chamber. Then, according to the prison's spokesman, he
relaxed by watching television. He could have made phone calls until
10 p.m. He didn't. He ate nothing for dinner.
On Tuesday evening, he
had a "special meal" ordered from a local restaurant. He dined on
filet mignon, baked potato, soup and cake and washed it down with a
glass of water. While Wallace rested in his holding cell late
Wednesday, three execution teams made preparations: one to shackle
him to a gurney and wheel him into the execution chamber, a second
to hook up an IV, and the final team to start the lethal drip.
Wallace is the first person from Vanderburgh
County to die by execution since the death penalty was reinstated in
1977. Nine people, who were not identified, witnessed his execution.
His sister, Kathleen Wallace Mason, was expected to be a witness.
His father, Donald Ray Wallace Sr., was not. His parents divorced
when he was 5, and his mother could not be located for the
execution. Wallace, sentenced to die for the 1980 murders of the
Patrick Gilligan family, barred his attorneys from asking Indiana
Gov. Mitch Daniels for clemency. His attorneys had a 48-page
clemency request, but they never filed it. Daniels' staff, however,
obtained a copy, said spokeswoman Jane Jankowski.
Two phones were inside the execution chamber -
one to the governor's hot line and one to the court. They never
rang. The clemency request cited Wallace's troubled childhood and an
adolescence riddled with crime and drugs. Wallace was 22 and
recently released from prison in 1980 when he killed Theresa and
Patrick Gilligan, both 30, and their two children, Lisa, 5, and
Gregory, 4.
After spending 23 years fighting his death
sentence, Wallace declared he was ready to die. "I'm relieved it's
almost over. The hard part will be seeing friends and loved ones at
the end," Wallace said in one of a series of letters sent to the
Evansville Courier & Press late last year. "The dying part is easy.
I am so tired of doing time."
In his letters, Wallace acknowledged that many
will take glee in his execution, but he tried to defuse that. "They
will never know how much I await death as if it were Christmas
morning and I a kid," he wrote. He said prison rehabilitated him; he
argued that he was no longer the "deranged dope-fiend" who killed
the Gilligan family. "I had no true center," Wallace said of his
youth. "No moral center. No spiritual center. Not even a rational
center. I was hollow... I didn't have a clue where I was." He
described death row as a "place for penitent reflection," which
promoted "redemption in ways ordinary prison cannot."
He conceded there would be skeptics. "It's hard
to explain to people who haven't suffered a lot of emotional pain at
the hands of others how it is natural to get a mask that conceals
any sign of pain ... Soon you wear that mask all the time. But when
normal people see that ... they say, 'Look at that: No remorse at
all!' It suggests to them that you are a heartless sociopath. But
trust me, 'I sentence you to death' affects you."
Donald Ray Wallace Executed
By Kerry Corum
and Stephanie Silvey - 14wfie.com
March 10, 2005
UPDATE: Stefanie Silvey wraps-up the Wallace
story for us from the Indiana State Prison in Michigan City. After
spending more than half his life on death row, one of Indiana's most
notorious killers paid for the 1980 murders of the Patrick Gilligan
family, with his own life. Donald Ray Wallace was pronounced dead at
12:23 Thursday morning, his last words were, "I hope everyone can
find peace with this." The process started shortly after midnight,
when he was wheeled in on a gurney. The witnesses left visibly upset,
but said he was ready for this and that he looked at it as an early
parole. This, after being on death row for more than 23 years.
UPDATE: A man who killed an Evansville family,and
then spent 23 years on death row, has been executed at the Indiana
State Prison. With groups of supporters and opponents of the death
penalty waiting outside the prison, Donald Ray Wallace was put to
death by chemical injection shortly after 12:00 Thursday morning. He
is the 84th person executed by the state of Indiana since 1897, and
the 12th since the death penalty was reinstated in 1977.
Wallace was convicted in 1982 of killing Theresa
Gilligan, her husband, Patrick, and their two young children during
a robbery at their home. He exhausted all his appeals, even to the
US Supreme Court, and decided not to ask Governor Mitch Daniels for
clemency. A Department of Correction spokesman says Wallace's final
statement was, "I hope everyone can find peace with this."
He was
injected with the lethal chemicals and was pronounced dead at 12:23
Thursday morning. Later, his lawyer read a statement outside the
prison, saying the execution "only created more pain and continued
the cycle of hate and violence." Attorney Sarah Nagy says, in spite
of the execution, it was Wallace's wish that healing may finally
come to everyone affected by the murders. Wallace spent much of his
final day visiting with friends. He had a final meal of filet mignon,
baked potato and cake on Tuesday.
Previously: Donald Ray Wallace has been executed
for the murders of the Patrick Gilligan family in Evansville in
1980. Michigan City State Prison officials report that the
47-year-old Wallace died as the result of lethal injection at 12:23
am CST Thursday. Wallace's last words were, "I hope everyone can
find peace with this."
Shortly after the execution, two of Wallace's
family members spoke with the media. Shannon Wallace said, "In
killing Don, the state has only created more pain, and continued the
cycle of hate and violence. Don felt this way, and so do we."
Kathleen Wallace added, "In spite of this, it was his wish that
peace and healing may finally come to all those affected by this
case, and everyone who was touched by his life." Newswatch's
Stefanie Silvey is at the prison and will provide live reports on
Newswatch Sunrise and throughout the day Thursday. Come back to this
site for updates as they become available.
Gilligan Family Remembered on Eve of
Execution
By Ben Jackey
March 10, 2005
At a prayer service at St. Theresa Catholic
Church Wednesday evening, Theresa Gilligan's sister Diana Harrington
said a question had lingered in her head for some time.What would
they do on this night? The next question, what would her sister
want? The answer was a celebration of the lives before they were
taken January 14, 1980.
A time for healing comes 25 years later. Diana
Harrington says, "It is now time to bind and soothe the wounds that
have been present for so long. I don't think you can put closure on
four people dying. I think this was the starting of the healing.
Healing for a family, and a community."
Some at this prayer vigil were distant
acquaintances. Theresa Gilligan's sister Diana says the anguish of
the deaths of Theresa, Pat, Lisa and Greg go beyond family ties.
Harrington says, "This was the starting of the healing for the
Evansville community. It was a start of healing for us."
Twenty five years ago, their funerals were held
here. Now, it's not their deaths, but their lives that are
remembered. Ted Harrington says, "We wanted the focus to be on the
family, and the tragedy itself, rather than what may happen later."
Patrick Gilligan's sister, Sue Hern says, "Let us not forget to pray
for one Donald Wallace, whose life has been forever crossed with
ours, that he might find forgiveness for his sins." It was the
presence of God that was invoked through song and prayer, but
forever in these hearts will be the presence of four lives cut
tragically short. Diana Harrington says, "They're here. I've felt
them for so many years. They're always with me. They'll always be
here."
Wallace says he's ready; 'The dying part is easy.
I am so tired of doing time
By Bryan Corbin and Maureen Hayden -
Evansville Courier
March 10, 2005
MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. - The execution of Donald Ray
Wallace Jr. appeared imminent just minutes before midnight Wednesday,
as his court-appointed attorneys abandoned 11th- hour pleas to spare
the killer's life. "It's over; it's done with; the execution will go
on as planned," said Alan Friedman of the Midwest Center for Justice.
"That's what he wants."
The 47-year-old Wallace, sentenced to die for the
1980 murders of the Patrick Gilligan family, barred his attorneys
from asking Gov. Mitch Daniels for clemency. "We respect that
request," said Friedman, a Chicago attorney appointed to represent
Wallace. "He's at peace. He's told us he's ready to die."
The execution was scheduled to begin after
midnight inside the Indiana State Prison's death chamber in Michigan
City. At press time, prison officials had not started administering
the lethal combination of chemicals. Outside the prison walls, death-penalty
opponents protested Wallace's execution while journalists waited
inside the prison's administration building for official word of
Wallace's death. His attorneys had a 48-page clemency request, but
they never filed it. Daniels' staff, however, obtained a copy, said
spokeswoman Jane Jankowski.
Under Indiana law, Daniels has the authority to
halt the execution. He planned to spend Wednesday evening at the
official residence, equipped with a "hot line" to the death chamber.
The clemency request cites Wallace's troubled childhood and an
adolescence riddled with crime and drug use. Wallace was 22 and
recently released from prison when he killed Theresa and Patrick
Gilligan, both 30, and their two children, Lisa, 5, and Gregory, 4.
After spending 23 years fighting his death
sentence with a battery of legal appeals, hunger strikes and a
prison-hostage standoff, Wallace declared he was ready to die after
the U.S. Supreme Court rejected one of his final appeals last year.
"I'm relieved it's almost over. The hard part will be seeing friends
and loved ones at the end," Wallace said in one of a series of
letters sent to the Evansville Courier & Press late last year. "And
even those from whom I've been long estranged will probably come see
me for an awkward and stressful visit. The dying part is easy. I am
so tired of doing time."
Wallace has not seen his biological mother since
he was a teenager. Wallace's father, Donald "Wally" Wallace Sr.,
said this week that family members have been unable to locate
Wallace's mother.
Wallace likened life on death row to punishment
inflicted by a sadist. "Sadists designed these places and sadists
love to hear how much people suffer in them," Wallace wrote,
describing spending 23 of 24 hours a day locked up in solitary. In
his letters, Wallace acknowledged that he'd built up a quarter-century
of ill will in the Evansville community, in part for refusing to
confess. He speculated that many would take glee in his execution,
but he sought to diffuse that. "They will never know how much I
await death as if it were Christmas morning and I a kid," he wrote.
He said prison rehabilitated him. He argued that
he was no longer the "deranged dope-fiend" who killed the Gilligan
family. "I had no true center," Wallace wrote of his youth. "No
moral center. No spiritual center. Not even a rational center. I was
hollow. I was a mass of complexes and emotional reactions to my life.
I'd wandered so far out past the frontiers of normality that I
didn't have a clue where I was." He described death row as a "place
for penitent reflection." "Death row, where we are supposed to rot
as the unredeemable condemned, actually promotes redemption in ways
ordinary prison cannot," he wrote. He conceded there would be
skeptics.
"It's hard to explain to people who haven't
suffered a lot of emotional pain at the hands of others how it is
natural to get a mask that conceals any sign of pain ... Soon you
wear that mask all the time. But when normal people see that ...
they say, 'Look at that: No remorse at all!' It suggests to them
that you are a heartless sociopath. But trust me, 'I sentence you to
death' affects you."
ProDeathPenalty.com
A quarter-century after he murdered an Evansville
family of four during a botched burglary attempt, Donald Ray Wallace
Jr. was executed by lethal injection. Wallace, 47, was pronounced
dead at 1:23 a.m. EST today at the Indiana State Prison, said
Javairya Ahmed, a Department of Correction spokeswoman. "I hope
everyone can find peace with this," Wallace said, according to Ahmed.
After the execution, Wallace's attorney, Sarah Nagy, read a
statement from his family: "Killing Don by the state has only
created more pain and helped continue the cycle of hate and violence."
From 8:30 a.m. to about 4:30 p.m., Wallace
visited with two friends, said prison spokesman Barry L. Nothstine.
After a shower, he was led to a room next to the execution chamber.
Wallace declined the chance to meet with a spiritual adviser, saying
he preferred to be alone, Nothstine said. Wallace selected nine
people to witness his execution, Nothstine said. Outside, about 15
death penalty opponents had gathered to protest. Marti Pizzini, 64,
Michigan City, a member of the Duneland Coalition to Abolish the
Death Penalty, brought candles, leaflets, a few tables and some
noisemakers.
"I'm not very religious, but I believe you do not
solve the problem of violence with more violence," said Pizzini, who
said she has attended 10 execution protests. In Evansville,
meanwhile, relatives of Wallace's victims — Patrick and Theresa
Gilligan and their two children — gathered for a prayer service at
St. Theresa Catholic Church, where the Gilligans were married.
During the 40-minute service, the priest who notified family members
of the killings led a rosary. Diana Harrington, of Louisville, Ky.,
the sister of Theresa Gilligan, told about 200 who attended that
Theresa and Pat Gilligan would have appreciated the turnout and that
their "children with their wonderful manners and beautiful smiles
would have welcomed you all." Several in the church cried and dabbed
their eyes.
In January 1980, the Gilligans returned to their
home to find Wallace, who had just been released from prison, police
said. Wallace, in what he later called a "frenzied blur," killed the
couple and Lisa, 5, and Gregory, 4, according to police and
Wallace's own letters. He was sentenced to death in October 1982. In
a recent interview with a local television channel, Wallace said he
panicked during the burglary and had no intention of embarking on a
horrific killing spree. Rather, the murders were a "moment of utter
madness, " he said. "I wish I could take it back, but I can't. I
can't change the past."
Wallace had instructed his Indianapolis attorney,
Sarah Nagy, not to submit a request for clemency. Nagy said earlier
this week that she thought Wallace had "resigned himself to the
ultimate penalty." Wallace and his attorneys also reached an
agreement to avoid a post-execution autopsy, a standard procedure
meant to provide evidence that the person put to death was not
abused and did not suffer needlessly. Gov. Mitch Daniels reviewed
Wallace's case at least twice, including Wednesday. Daniels, a
Republican, has said he has moral misgivings about capital
punishment but supports the death penalty in "the most heinous
cases." State law allows the governor broad powers to grant clemency
to those on Death Row.
In July, then-Gov. Joe Kernan reduced the
sentence of Darnell Williams, who killed a Gary couple in 1986. It
marked the first time in nearly a half-century that an Indiana
governor spared the life of a convicted killer. In January, Kernan,
a Democrat, spared the life of an Indianapolis man, Michael Daniels,
convicted of murdering a minister during a robbery attempt. Gov.
Daniels spent Wednesday night at the official governor's residence;
it has a hotline to the State Prison. Five protesters had gathered
on the sidewalk outside the residence by 11 p.m.; two more stood on
the other side of Meridian Street.
Outside the sprawling, chain-linked State Prison,
death penalty opponents braved a bitterly cold wind off Lake
Michigan that kept many of them in their idling cars until the time
for the execution drew near. Rows of satellite TV trucks from
stations in South Bend, Evansville and Indianapolis lined a parking
lot across from the prison entrance just hours before Wallace's
scheduled death.
Robert Dhoore, 64, South Bend, braved the elements
long enough to carry two signs over to a small folding chair to
claim his spot for a rally. A veteran protester at state executions,
Dhoore came prepared. "I've got my two sets of pants, two
sweatshirts. And I got a pail in the car just in case," he said.
There are no public restrooms outside the prison. Dhoore, a Catholic
who attends church on the campus of the University of Notre Dame, is
eager to share the message on his well-worn signs, one of which
begins: "We are called to love our enemies." "What more can I say?"
said Dhoore. "I do not believe in the death penalty for any reason
at any time. It's gotta stop."
It was not a sentiment shared by Mark Hamner, 37,
an Indianapolis Police Department officer who drove to the prison
with fellow officers Patrick Snyder, 30, and Chris Cooper, 34. They
set up a camping stove on a card table and cooked hamburgers and
beans for dinner. "We came up here to protest the protesters,"
Hamner said. "Most of the time, it's the protesters that get the
press. We are here to show that the majority of this state does
favor the death penalty."
At one point, three anti-execution
protesters approached the officers and started a spirited but
cordial debate. "How are we going to be more safe by killing this
man?" asked Sean Napier, 40, a Michigan City hotel manager. "His
next victim will be safe," offered Snyder. "Do you sleep well at
night?" asked one protester. "I sleep like a baby," Snyder replied.
"And I will sleep well tonight."
National Coalition to Abolish
the Death Penalty
Donald Ray Wallace, Indiana - March 10, 2005
The state of Indiana is scheduled to execute
Donald Ray Wallace March 10 for the murders of Patrick, Teresa,
Lisa, and Gregory Gilligan in 1980 in Vigo County. He killed the
family after burglarizing their home unaware that the family was in
the house.
At the sentencing phase of Wallace’s trial, the
judge found there were three aggravating factors that made Wallace
eligible for the death penalty. First, Wallace had committed the
murders while he was burglarizing the Gilligan home. Second, Wallace
had committed multiple murders. Third, Wallace, then 22, had
committed the murders while on parole from a prior felony unrelated
to the Gilligan case.
But in the years since Wallace was convicted
of the murders, that felony conviction was overturned, along with a
second felony conviction on Wallace’s record. The state of Indiana
is required to weigh the aggravating factors against any mitigating
ones in order to determine whether the death sentence should be
given. On appeal, Wallace’s attorneys requested his death sentence
be overturned because it was not determined through the weighing of
accurate aggravating factors. At least two circuit judges dissented
from the denial of Wallace’s petition for a rehearing.
There is reason to believe that Wallace was not
able to assist his counsel at trial in his own defense due, at least
in part, to his mental state and difficult childhood. The defense
attorney at trial did not inform the jury of the defendant’s
difficult childhood. Court records indicate Wallace was not
cooperative in helping his attorney in gathering mitigating
evidence.
Wallace told the state judge that his counsel “did in fact
approach me and try to develop all these sources that they are
prepared to present and uh – which at the time I forbid them to do
that, I repeatedly forbidden it. Finally he acceded to my wishes.”
Wallace was confined to a mental hospital for nearly two years and
declared incompetent for trial after the crimes were committed.
Then, a state judge found Wallace competent, concluding Wallace was
faking incompetence. Therefore, he was permitted to make major
decisions about his defense.
State records show Wallace suffered extreme
emotional disturbance from a very young age and a experienced a
loveless and insecure childhood. His teenage parents divorced when
he was four and his mother left him in the care of his father who
did not seem to love or parent him. His mother eventually left town.
At one point in Wallace’s youth he recalls playing with his
grandfather’s gun until his grandmother instructed his grandfather
to take it from him. Wallace’s grandfather took the gun from him and
drove away committing suicide immediately afterward. By age 11,
Wallace was living at the Evansville Psychiatric Children’s Center.
It was the first of a handful of institutions in which he would live
for the next ten years. At the age of 14, Wallace was sent to a
medium-maximum juvenile security prison where he says he learned to
become a criminal and to exhibit violence in order to gain respect
from others.
Wallace, who has spent more than 23 years on
death row, maintains he is reformed and is not the same young man he
was when he entered prison. Likewise, his attorney is convinced of
his reform. Since entering death row, he has reinvented himself
through “thousands of days and nights” in deep self-examination and
devoted study of religion and philosophy. He has taught himself
Greek, Arabic, and Latin studied Buddhism and other religions and
says he has become a man of peace.
Even after 23 years of going through the trial
and appeals process, Wallace has yet to have a jury weigh his
accurate and complete aggravating and mitigating factors in order to
determine whether a death sentence is appropriate. Furthermore, the
man whom Indiana is now trying to execute is very different from the
young man who committed the crimes. Please take a moment to write
Governor Mitch Daniels asking that he commute Wallace’s sentence.
Donald Ray Wallace: Indiana's Dead Man Walking
By Kerry Corum - 14wfie.com
March 9, 2005
UPDATE: A man convicted of killing an Evansville
family, will become the subject of Indiana's first state execution
in almost two years. But his victims' family wants to remember those
he killed. Diana Harrington says her sister, Theresa Gilligan, was a
loving mother to five-year-old Lisa and four-year-old Gregory, and
that Patrick Gilligan was a good husband and always humorous. She
says the last 25 years without them have been "unbearable," because
the media constantly gives Wallace all the attention - not his
victims.
Harrington, and the rest of the Gilligan family,
is inviting the public to a prayer service Wednesday night, to focus
on the loss of a family - not their killer. The service is set for
6:00 Wednesday evening, at St Theresa Catholic Church. Wallace,
meanwhile, is scheduled to die by chemical injection at midnight
Wednesday night, for murdering the family while burglarizing their
Evansville home in 1980. Reporter Stefanie Silvey is in Michigan
City, covering that end of the story. You can catch her live reports
beginning on Newswatch at 5:00, and right here at 14wfie.com.
UPDATE: The defense attorney for Donald Ray
Wallace says she has a 40-page clemency request - but Wallace won't
let her file it. Because of that, attorney Sarah Nagy says there's
nothing she can do to stop Wallace's execution by lethal injection,
scheduled for just after midnight Thursday morning. Nagy says
Wallace is capable, competent and clear in his wishes. Wallace was
convicted in the 1980 shooting deaths of the Patrick Gilligan family
in their Vanderburgh County home. Newswatch will be in Michigan City
to cover the execution.
Previously: A woman whose sister was murdered by
Donald Ray Wallace, is planning a prayer vigil for his victims, on
the eve of his execution. Diana Harrington, Theresa Gilligan's
sister, says Theresa and Patrick Gilligan and their young children
Lisa and Gregory will be the focus of the prayer service - not
Wallace. It will take place a few hours before Wallace's execution
on Wednesday.
The vigil site will be the Evansville church
where the couple was married, and where their funerals were held in
January 1980. Wallace, 47-years-old, is scheduled to die by lethal
injection early Thursday at the Indiana State Prison in Michigan
City. Wallace had been released from prison two months before he
tied up and shot the family to death when they crashed his burglary
attempt at their Evansville home.
Remember the Gilligans
The Issue: Donald Ray
Wallace Jr. will be executed after midnight. Our View: It's right to
think about the victims of his crime
Evansville Courier
March 9, 2005
Shortly after midnight today, Donald Ray Wallace
Jr. will be put to death for a crime so cruel and barbaric that few
of us will ever forget it. On the night of Jan. 14, 1980, Wallace,
in a burglary gone bad, shot and killed Patrick Gilligan, his wife,
Theresa, and their two children, Lisa, 5, and Gregory, 4, in their
North Side home. And Thursday morning, for his crime, Wallace will
be executed by the state.
In recent months, as his appeals ran out and his
execution neared, Wallace's name, his confessions, his thoughts have
dominated news about the case. Tonight, however, our thoughts will
be with the Gilligans and their surviving family members and friends.
At 6 p.m. today at St. Theresa Catholic Church in Evansville, a
prayer service will be held in remembrance of the Gilligans, who
were married at the church. Theresa's sister, Diana Harrington, said
she plans to talk about the victims of the crime. "I can't stress
enough how much this is not about him," she said in a Saturday story
by Courier & Press staff writer Maureen Hayden. "It's about Theresa
and Patrick and Lisa and Gregory and about remembering all the
victims of violence." That is as it should be.
In recent years we have come to oppose the death
penalty in Indiana for a number of reasons, among them the
possibility that innocent people might be put to death. That is not
the case with Wallace. After years of denying his guilt, and
offering up conflicting versions of what happened, Wallace recently
confessed to the crime in a television interview.
A little more than six hours after the start of
the prayer vigil for the Gilligans, Wallace will be put to death by
lethal injection at the Indiana State Prison in Michigan City. And
with that act, a horrid chapter in Evansville history will be closed,
finally.
Wallace agrees to conditions for no autopsy
By Maureen Hayden - Evansville Courier
March 9, 2005
To avoid an autopsy, Donald Ray Wallace Jr. will
have to signal to his executioners and allow his body to be examined
after his death.
If Wallace abides by the terms of an out-of-court
agreement reached Tuesday, an autopsy will not be required after the
execution early Thursday. The agreement, signed by Wallace, also
gives permission to prison personnel to take post-execution
photographs of his body and to take blood, tissue and urine samples,
if needed, to determine the cause of death was lethal injection.
Two of Wallace's attorneys, Sarah Nagy of
Indianapolis and Gary Germann, an Evansville native who now
practices law in Portage, Ind., reached the deal with the state. "I
think it was a very fair agreement," Germann said. Under the
agreement, the Indiana Department of Correction is prohibited from
asking for an autopsy on Wallace's body, if all conditions of the
agreement are met.
Prison officials routinely seek post-execution
autopsies to protect themselves against accusations that the inmate
was physically abused before death, and to provide evidence that the
lethal chemical cocktail caused the prisoner's death. Under Indiana
law, prison officials are obliged to minimize "cruel and unusual"
punishment in the administering of the death penalty. Wallace sought
to block an autopsy, citing moral and spiritual beliefs.
In an
affidavit filed with a court motion, Wallace cited 13 reasons for
objecting to the autopsy, and cited passages from the New Testament
that describe the body as God's temple that should not be destroyed.
According to the agreement, Nagy will be required to sign a sworn
statement after Wallace's death if the execution goes as planned.
The statement will read, "Mr. Wallace was alive minutes before his
execution and, at the end of my visit with him on the day preceding
his execution, he had not been abused or mistreated by any current
legal standard."
Wallace was sentenced to death for the 1980
murders of Theresa and Patrick Gilligan and their two small children.
The family members were shot execution-style in their North Side
home after surprising Wallace during a burglary.
Months ago, Wallace instructed his attorneys not
to file a clemency request asking the governor to commute his death
sentence to life in prison. But his court-appointed public defenders,
Alan Friedman and Carol Heise of the Midwest Center for Justice in
Chicago, prepared a 48-page clemency request, ready to file if
Wallace should change his mind.
Woman wants slain sister's family remembered as
execution nears
By Tom Coyne - Kentucky.com
AP - March 08, 2005
Diana Harrington wants the public to remember the
two young children and their parents killed 25 years ago as Indiana
nears its first state execution in 21 months, not the man who killed
them. She wants people to remember how her sister Theresa Gilligan
was a loving mother. She wants people to remember how Patrick
Gilligan was a great husband and humorous person who always had a
smile on his face. She wants people to remember the Gilligans'
children, 5-year-old Lisa and 4-year-old Gregory.
But Harrington doesn't want people to spend much
time thinking about Donald Ray Wallace Jr., the man who is scheduled
to die by chemical injection early Thursday for killing them while
burglarizing their Evansville home in 1980. "The last 25 years have
been unbearable," Harrington said. "Every time a newspaper article
has come out it's been all about Wallace."
That is why instead of traveling to the Indiana
State Prison in Michigan City on Wednesday, where Wallace will be
put to death shortly after midnight, she plans to attend a prayer
service at Evansville's St. Theresa Catholic Church, where Theresa
and Patrick Gilligan were married and where their funerals were held
in January 1980. "My place is to with the people who have supported
us for 25 years," Harrington said by telephone from her Louisville,
Ky., home. "There's so much hurt that is still out there, there's so
much anger that is still out there," she said. "Hopefully what we're
going to be able to do at the prayer service is to begin to heal and
start to remember the good memories and to start smiling again and
put the anger aside."
Harrington and her husband Ted were married just
10 days when her older sister's family was brutally murdered.
Authorities say Wallace shot Patrick Gilligan and beat him with a
barbell and shot Theresa twice. He tied the children with a vacuum
cord and shot them.
Wallace was sentenced to death on Oct. 21, 1982,
more than two years after the murders. Harrington said watching
Wallace go through court appeals over the years has been painful. "I
don't think if the execution had taken place a day after or 14 years
later or now, it's never going to really replace my family," she
said. "As far as closure goes, it's just going to be another
chapter."
Harrington said she's tired of hearing Wallace
say from prison he's a reformed man. "He hasn't done anything. The
only thing he's accomplished in the past 23 years is he's protested
for table rights, more TV privileges, more phone privileges, better
cell conditions, better food," she said. "My question for him is: if
you're such a changed person then why didn't you try to help anyone?
Even from death row he could have done something to let people know
how bad the life of crime was or how horrible death row was."
Wallace has exhausted his appeals and has not
sought clemency from Gov. Mitch Daniels. Indiana's most-recent state
execution was in June 2003, when Joseph Trueblood was put to death
for the 1988 murders of a Lafayette woman and her two young children.
He would become the 12th person executed by state officials since
Indiana's death penalty was reinstated in 1977.
Harrington said people didn't have to know her
sister or family to remember them on Wednesday. "All you have to do
is look in the mirror. It's everybody," she said. "You can imagine
it. You're 30 years old and you have two kids, that's the prime of
your life. So really all you have to look in the mirror and that's
who my family was."
Wallace executed after 23 years on death row
WKYT-TV
March 10, 2005
MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. -- The attorney for a man put
to death early Thursday for the 1980 slayings of an Evansville
couple and their two children said his family hoped his execution
would bring "peace and healing" to the victims' relatives. Donald
Ray Wallace, 47, died by chemical injection at 12:23 a.m. CST at the
Indiana State Prison after exhausting his appeals for his 1982 death
sentence.
In his final statement, Wallace, who did not seek
clemency from Gov. Mitch Daniels, said, "I hope everyone can find
peace with this."
Wallace was sentenced to death for the January
1980 killings of Theresa Gilligan, her husband, Patrick, and their
children, Lisa, 5, and Gregory, 4. He bound and shot the victims to
death after they surprised him as he burglarized their Evansville
home.
At a prayer service held Wednesday night at the
same Evansville church where the Gilligans wed, Theresa's sister,
Diana Harrington, told about 200 people that Theresa and Pat
Gilligan would have appreciated the turnout. She said the couple's "children
with their wonderful manners and beautiful smiles would have
welcomed you all." Several in the crowd dabbed their eyes as tears
ran down their faces. "Let us not forget to pray for Donald Wallace
whose life has become entwined with ours," said Susan Stern, one of
Patrick Gilligan's sisters.
Wallace's family issued a statement through his
attorney, Sarah Nagy, shortly after his death saying they oppose the
death penalty. "Don felt this way and so do we. In spite of this, it
was his wish that peace and healing may finally come to everyone
that has been affected by this case and everyone that's been touched
by his life," Nagy said. About two dozen people protested outside
the prison. Three Indianapolis police officers were on hand to show
their support of the death penalty.
Inside the prison, Wallace spent his final hours
relaxing and watching television, after earlier meeting with two
friends, prison officials said. Wallace's death ends a long-running
appeals process that went to the U.S. Supreme Court, which late last
year declined to hear the case. By state law, the governor can grant
clemency to any prisoner, with or without a formal request. Jane
Jankowski, a spokeswoman for Daniels, said Wednesday the governor
had reviewed the case but did not intervene.
Wallace is the 12th person executed by the state
of Indiana since the death penalty was reinstated in 1977. The last
person executed was Joseph Trueblood on June 13, 2003, for the 1988
murders of Susan Bowsher of Lafayette and her children, 2-year-old
Ashelyn Hughes and 1-year-old William E. Bowsher. Then-Gov. Joe
Kernan granted clemency last July to Darnell Williams, the first
time in 48 years that an Indiana governor granted clemency in a
capital case. Kernan said it would be unfair to execute Williams
when a mentally retarded accomplice got a life sentence. Kernan also
granted clemency in January to Michael Daniels, an Indianapolis man
convicted of murdering an Army minister in 1978.
A second execution is scheduled for this year.
Bill J. Benefiel, 48, is scheduled to be executed April 21 for the
1987 torture-slaying of Dolores Wells, 18, of Terre Haute.
Murder tale comes to end for prosecutor
23 years ago, Stan Levco helped get conviction
By Bill Engle - Pal-Item.com
March 10, 2005
Today's execution of Donald Ray Wallace Jr.,
closed a chapter in the professional life of the one man whose life
was intertwined with Wallace's. That man is Vanderburgh County
Prosecutor Stan Levco, who as deputy prosecutor tried Wallace in
1982 and was involved in about 10 appeals in the case.
"It's hard to believe it's over," Levco said from
an Indianapolis hotel today. He was Indianapolis today for any last-minute
stay of executions. "It has kind of a surreal quality to it," Levco
said. "I've been working on this case for roughly 24 years. This is
a case I've basically had all my professional life."
Levco said he was sad Wallace had been executed
but added that he believed in his heart that it was the right thing
to do. "I do have the sense that he deserved to be executed. It was
the right thing to do considering the crime he committed," Levco
said. "But I don't take any pleasure in it. "This is not a happy
occasion for me."
Levco said he prosecuted Wallace as a juvenile
when the 17-year-old Wallace stole a car in 1975. "I remember
walking him back to my office, just the two of us talking casually,"
Levco said. Then the two men's lives became entwined when Wallace
was arrested for the January 1980 murder of Patrick and Theresa
Gilligan and their two children, Lisa, 5, and Gregory, 4.
Eleven years ago, Wallace wrote Levco several
letters, including one lengthy, thoughtful, yet wildly ambiguous
letter. "There's nobody in my entire career who has written me a
letter like that," Levco said. "In essence, he said he didn't know
for sure if he was talking me out of the death penalty or what he
was doing. But, he wrote, there were just a lot of things he wanted
to say."
The letter haunted Levco, just as he has been
haunted by the case. "Again, it's hard to believe it's over. I've
been having that feeling for a year or two," he said. "I certainly
do have a sense of sadness. But it was passed time. It should have
happened years ago. "If I had the power to stop it -- and I have had
that power over the years -- I would not have," Levco said.
But there is no closure, no justice in this case
for Levco. "If justice was served, the Gilligans would be alive," he
said. "Still, in some small measure, the criminal justice system has
worked, however incredibly slowly.''
Levco said he has exchanged letters with Theresa
Gilligan's sister, Diana Harrington of Louisville, Ky., who spoke at
a prayer service remembering the victims in Evansville Wednesday.
"So it's over for me," Levco said. "But for the family, they will
never be over it. It will always be there. And maybe it will be for
me for a time. The last group I spoke to in Evansville I talked
about this case. The next group I talk to I will probably talk about
this case. "It's been there somewhere in my mind for the last 24
years."
Inside the story
Stan Levco, as a young deputy prosecutor,
convicted Donald Ray Wallace of slaying a family of four in
Evansville, corresponded with him from prison even as he fought his
appeals in court and, now, as Vanderburgh County's elected
prosecutor, awaited Wallace's execution, which occurred early today.
Levco was also a weekly columnist back then on
the editorial page of the now-defunct Evansville Press, which was
edited by Dale McConnaughay, current Viewpoints editor of the
Palladium-Item.
Patrick Gilligan's sister asks mourners to
forgive
By Maureen Hayden - Evansville Courier
March 10, 2005
Twenty-five years ago, Susan Stern was filled
with anger toward the man who shot her brother and killed his family.
Anger turned into hatred for the gunman who snuffed out four
innocent lives.
It took years of prayer before she could find a
way to forgive, but in the hours before the killer's execution, she
asked a crowded church of mourners to include him in their pleas to
God. "Let us not forget to pray for Donald Ray Wallace tonight,
whose life forever crossed with ours,'' said Stern in a tearful
request. "Let us pray that he'll find the forgiveness that only God
offers."
It was a painful request to make. Twenty-five
years ago, Wallace murdered Stern's only sibling, Patrick Gilligan,
along with Gilligan's wife, Theresa, and the couple's two young
children, Lisa and Gregory, in the family's North Side home. Yet
forgiveness was the theme of the prayer service at St. Theresa
Catholic Church, called A1 to remember the Gilligan family.
Stern echoed the prayers of Diana Harrington, the
sister of Theresa Gilligan. "It's time for healing," said
Harrington. "There have been many tears, heartaches and much
loneliness that have followed us through the years. We're all too
familiar with our tremendous loss." Moments before she spoke,
Harrington's sons, Sean, 24, and Ryan, 21, read a well-known passage
from the Old Testament which begins: "For everything there is a
season, and a time for every matter under heaven." Harrington and
her husband, Ted, asked those gathered at the church where the
Gilligan family's funeral service had been held to turn their tears
into laughter by remembering the Gilligans' lives.
"It's our memory of what made these people
important to us, of the shared love, laughter, kindness and triumphs
that preserve their life within us," said Ted Harrington, who
married his wife 10 days before the slayings. "It is a gift they
left us and one we should nurture and never forget." Those who came
to pray with the relatives of the victims shared poignant stories
before and after the hourlong service.
Among those who attended was
Vanderburgh Superior Court Judge Robert Pigman, who, as a young
deputy prosecutor, helped put Wallace on Indiana's death row. Pigman,
there with his wife, Debbie, recalled that one of their own children
was the same age as Gregory Gilligan, only 4. Leading the service
was the Rev. Ted Tempel, a former pastor at the church. Tempel
married Patrick and Theresa Gilligan in the church and baptized
their two children. It was Tempel who accompanied police to the home
of Theresa's parents, Dorothy and Larry Sahm, on the night of the
murders to deliver the news. Tempel choked back tears as he led
those at the service through the rosary, a recitation of prayers
that recalls the last hours of the life of Jesus, his death and
resurrection. Recalling the "Agony of the Garden" in which Jesus
pleads to God to spare his life, Tempel reminded mourners that Jesus
turned to God with his fears and tears, knowing that he alone could
save him. "In remembering our fears and tears we shed over the agony
of the Gilligans' deaths, we can turn to God again tonight for the
comfort we need," Tempel said.
He recalled the cornerstone of the Gilligans'
Christian faith. "We believe death was not the end of life for the
Gilligans."
Letters describe killer's mind-set
Donald Ray
Wallace Jr., who's due to be executed Thursday, says he went into
frenzy after family of 4 interrupted a burglary
By Richard D. Walton -
Evansville Courier
March 6, 2005
Convicted murderer Donald Ray Wallace Jr. faces
his death this week saying he's no monster, 25 years after he wiped
out an Evansville family in what he called "a frenzied blur."
In letters to a sibling of one of his victims,
Wallace graphically described how he bound and killed Theresa
Gilligan; her husband, Patrick; and their two young children. Five-year-old
Lisa and 4-year-old Gregory, who just returned from watching a
Charlie Brown TV special at their grandparents' house, were shot in
the back of their heads. "Neither of the children cried out,"
Wallace wrote to Diana Harrington, Theresa's sister.
Two weeks after the January 1980 murders of the
family, Harrington scrubbed blood from the walls of the death house.
Now, she awaits the 47-year-old Wallace's execution Thursday at the
Indiana State Prison at Michigan City with no sense of vengeance.
She doesn't hate Wallace. "I despise what he did," she said.
Barring a reprieve from Gov. Mitch Daniels, which
seems increasingly unlikely, Wallace will become the 12th person
executed in Indiana since the death penalty was restored in 1977.
He's been on Death Row for more than 22 years. Wallace would be the
first person put to death since Joseph Trueblood was executed in
June 2003 for the 1988 murders of a Tippecanoe County woman and her
two children.
As the end nears for Wallace, survivors and
authorities look back on his crime and try to understand the killer,
who many agree is among the brightest people they've known. "There
aren't very many people in the world who I can talk to about Plato's
'Republic' . . . and Pascal's theorem," said Sarah Nagy, Wallace's
lawyer. "I can have those types of discussions with Mr. Wallace."
Raised by neglectful parents, Wallace was in
counseling by age 10. A counselor warned about "serious emotional
problems which are expressed in hostile, aggressive behavior." At
13, Wallace was sniffing glue and smoking marijuana.
His killing spree was partly happenstance. The
Gilligans returned home as Wallace was inside burglarizing the
residence. In his correspondence with Harrington, Wallace said at
first he had no intention of harming the family, only to restrain
them so he could escape. Spotting a vacuum cleaner, he used the cord
to bind the victims. But Patrick Gilligan slipped the knot and came
after Wallace, the killer wrote. In the struggle for Wallace's
pistol, Gilligan was shot in the head. "Then everything else just
went to hell," Wallace wrote. "Everyone was shot within 10 seconds
after Patrick -- drugs, panic, insanity. . . . It all happened too
fast." Wallace, thinking he had missed Theresa with his first shot,
fired another bullet into her.
He later recalled in a letter that Theresa was
brave. "Her thoughts weren't for herself but only to comfort and
calm the children." Wallace said that after he shot Patrick Gilligan,
Theresa's husband fell to his hands and knees. Out of bullets,
Wallace looked around for another weapon to finish him off. "I was
already in an insane state of mind, and he moaned as if in great
pain," Wallace wrote. "And the sound of it was terrible, and I think
the only thought I held in my mind at the time was to stop the
terrible accusation in that sound. My eyes seized upon the weights."
Using a barbell, he bludgeoned Patrick Gilligan. After the rampage,
Wallace felt sick. "I was ill in a way I had never been ill before,"
he wrote.
Wallace's detailing of the crime was sought by
Harrington, who said she had been haunted for years by questions.
"Was Pat the first one? Was my sister? Did the kids go first? Did my
sister have to watch the kids (die)?" In a recent TV interview,
Wallace said he deserved to die, regretted the killings and was a
changed man from the 22-year-old who committed the murders. "I would
like people to know I'm rational," he told WTHR (Channel 13), The
Indianapolis Star's news-gathering partner. "I'm not a raving
maniac. I'm not hostile, that I'm not whatever you think a murderer
is supposed to be." He added, "You live and grow and mature, and for
the most part we become better people."
Nagy says she believes her client, who refused a
request from The Star for an interview, feels real shame and remorse.
Still, Wallace has fooled people before, said Vanderburgh County
Prosecutor Stan Levco, who as an assistant prosecutor made the case
against Wallace. Levco says he's been told Wallace has a near-genius
IQ. As the case went to trial, he said, Wallace managed to convince
a psychiatrist that Wallace was insane. Despite his intelligence --
Wallace once referred to reading a biblical passage in the original
Greek -- Levco says he believes Wallace's crime still warrants the
death penalty.
Against his lawyer's advice, Wallace has refused
to seek clemency from the governor. Daniels recently said that while
he has moral reservations about the death penalty, he believes it is
appropriate for the most extreme crimes in which guilt is clear. A
spokeswoman for the governor said Friday that Daniels has been
briefed on the Wallace case. Daniels declined to comment.
Wallace, in his letters to Harrington, has said
that he relives the tragedy. He called it "six shots that still ring
in my ears." To Harrington, who was married in the Gilligans' house
10 days before the murders, the killer's claims that he's a changed
man do nothing to ease the pain. "Too little, too late," she said.
Timeline for killer's final hours
Convicted killer Donald Ray Wallace Jr. is
scheduled to be executed early Thursday at the Indiana State Prison
in Michigan City. According to a prison spokesman, this is the plan
for Wallace's final hours:
• 8 a.m. (CST) Wednesday: Visitors who have been approved by Wallace
are allowed to see him.
• 4:30 p.m.: Visiting ends and Wallace is taken to the cell area. He
is given a set of clothes and takes a shower. Wallace then goes to a
room adjacent to the execution room, and the people he has named as
spiritual advisers are allowed in. A phone is available if Wallace
wants to make calls.
• 10 p.m.: The spiritual advisers leave.
• Midnight, the first of three execution teams enters the area. The
first team wheels a gurney into an empty room next to the execution
room. It retrieves Wallace and straps him onto the gurney. He is
handcuffed and shackled in leg irons. The gurney is taken into the
execution room and placed against the north wall. Its wheels are
locked. Replacing this group is the intravenous team. Catheters are
placed in Wallace's arm and a drip of saline solution is begun. A
project manager or an assistant reads the execution warrant. Wallace
is asked if he has any final statements. Someone picks up a phone.
It's a direct line to the prison command center, which is in contact
with the governor's office and the courts. The question is asked: Is
there a stay of execution? If the answer is no, the "proceed" order
is given and the injection team is activated. Three chemicals are
sequentially administered. The first is sodium pentothal, which
causes a deep sleep. The second is pancuronium bromide, which causes
paralysis of the diaphragm, lungs and muscles. The final drug is
potassium chloride, which stops the heart.
Wallace makes public confession
By Maureen
Hayden - Evansville Courier
March 2, 2005
For 25 years, convicted killer Donald Ray Wallace
Jr. has given life to an urban legend that someone else was
responsible for the 1980 murders of Patrick and Theresa Gilligan and
the couple's two young children. Now, with just days left to live,
Wallace, 47, has publicly confessed to the crime, saying he alone
shot and killed the Gilligan family. But he also says he didn't
intend to kill the family and "panicked" after he felt threatened by
Patrick Gilligan.
In the only media interview granted in the days
before his execution, Wallace says he tied up all four family
members when they came home while he was burglarizing their house. "What
happened that night was a moment of utter madness," Wallace told a
reporter with an Indianapolis television station.
"It was panic, because my original intention was
not to kill anyone, it was to get the situation under control, and
Patrick attacked, which I can't blame him for. I would, too, if I
were in his position. Once the shooting started, all hell broke
loose." Wallace's televised confession is similar to a private
confession he made 13 years ago to Diana Harrington, sister of
Theresa Gilligan, in which he confesses to killing her family.
In prior public statements, and in private
statements made to his family members and his attorneys, Wallace
said an unnamed accomplice broke into the Gilligan home and shot the
family while he was burglarizing a house next door. He also told his
family that he made up the confession he sent to Harrington in 1992.
Wallace has told a variety of stories about what
happened Jan. 14, 1980. In a polygraph exam Wallace took in 1987,
which he passed, he said Theresa and the children were already dead
when he walked into their home to check on his accomplice. Wallace
said Patrick Gilligan had been shot, but was not dead, so he struck
him in the head twice with a set of barbells.
Wallace's attorneys paid for the polygraph, but
never used it. In an interview with the Evansville Courier & Press
in 1987, Wallace told a similar story, insisting the unnamed
accomplice shot the Gilligans.
Wallace's story began to change in 1992, though,
after Harrington wrote him a letter on death row. His confession to
her was first reported by WEHT-News25 in 1996. Harrington told
Wallace she was haunted by thoughts of her sister begging for her
children's lives, and had imagined Lisa, 5, and Gregory, 4, had been
forced to watch their parents be murdered.
"As to how it (the murders) happened has always
been a mystery to me," Harrington wrote in her 1992 letter to
Wallace. "... I find it hard to piece together, that if he (Patrick)
was shot first, why he was hit with barbells afterwards. His death
was almost harder than Theresa's and the kids because of the closed
casket. I thought for years that since his body was unidentifiable
by facial recognition, he would eventually show up. I hoped that it
was another person, or that no one was in the casket. ..." Wallace
wrote back, in detail. He told Harrington that he'd tied up each
member of the family in an effort to control the situation.
"Just as that was completed, Patrick slipped his
bonds and attacked," Wallace wrote to Harrington. "I don't know if
he was extraordinarily brave, or if he didn't trust that his family
wouldn't be hurt, or both. In the struggle over the pistol, Patrick
was shot in the head and fell to his hands and knees. Then
everything else just went to hell. Everyone was shot within 10
seconds after Patrick ... drugs, panic, insanity ... it all happened
too fast to understand." Wallace again privately confessed to being
solely responsible for the crime in a letter he sent to a retired
Indiana University professor in May 2000. "The family whose house I
was burglarizing returned home through the only door opened,"
Wallace wrote. "Threat, strike. I went on autopilot. It was almost
like watching a horror film that some maniac had written ... I shot
them all."
Last Words
By Anne Ryder/Eyewitness News.
Evansville Courier
Michigan City, March 2 - Twenty-three years on
death row have given Donald Ray Wallace nothing but time, time to
consider how the kid in a cowboy hat became a pariah, how an evil
act is born and whether it ever dies, even when he does.
The house where it happened on Aspen Drive looks
much the same as it did 25 years ago. But the pain is still fresh. "It
was like yesterday," says Diana Harrington. 'When I remember Pat and
Theresa (Diana's sister) and the kids I remember them and there's
this glimmer of good memories and then it smacks you in the face of
what happened." A family of four, the Gilligans, were bound with
vacuum cleaner cord and murdered with six shots to the head and a
barbell by the man they caught burglarizing their home.
For 25 years Harrington has carried the burden of
wondering about the last moments of her sister, brother-in-law,
niece and nephew. "Did the children watch? Was my sister first? Was
there a lot of pain? It's like going to the dentist and the dentist
says its only going to hurt for a couple of seconds, those seconds
last for eternity." It didn't take long to find the killer, Donald
Ray Wallace, a 22-year-old drug addicted burglar with a violent past.
His arrogance and intellect made him a lightning rod. He has a near
genius IQ. "I think he's brilliant." Stan Levco prosecuted the case.
"Not one of the most intelligent murderers or intelligent criminals,
one of the most intelligent people. His words are perfect. He says
the perfect words."
"I'm on death row. All the machinery of the state
is grinding to kill me." Wallace's words are poetic, written in
letters from prison where he has now spent more than half his life.
"I watch birds fly over. Sometimes I can hear dogs barking and
children playing somewhere beyond our wall that terminates our rec
yard. And all these things are wondrous to behold." Wallace, now 47,
has never given an interview. This is his first and his last.
Why? "I would like people to know I'm rational.
I'm not a raving maniac. I'm not hostile, that I'm not whatever you
think a murderer is supposed to be."
Anne Ryder: Are you saying that here a new man
has grown?
Wallace: Yeah, I'm saying that. I was a dope
fiend. I had no moral center. I had no spiritual center. I had no
rational center. It's a simple fact of life. You live and grow and
mature and for the most part we become better people.
Wallace, for the first time publicly, is taking
full and sole responsibility for what happened on Aspen Drive
January 14, 1980.
Wallace: Who wants to be responsible for this?
Who wants to look in the mirror and say you did that, you know, you.
Ryder: How do you explain why, why this happened?
Wallace: What happened that night was a moment of
utter madness. It was panic, because my original intention was not
to kill anyone, it was to get the situation under control, and
Patrick attacked, which I can't blame him for. I would too if I were
in his position. Once the shooting started all hell broke loose.
Ryder: Why the kids? How do you kill kids?
Wallace: It was almost like watching a movie or
something, like I became completely disconnected from everything
that was going on. It's like a dream, or nightmare. I can't tell you
why. I've asked myself a million times why. I don't know. I can't
say why.
Ryder: Diana Harrington says his apology is
always an implied apology.
Wallace: If she wants it here, I do say that I am
eternally sorry for what I did to your family. I wish I could take
it back, but I can't. I can't change the past. This line from Omar
Khayam keeps coming back to me time and time again in my life.
Something to the effect of, "The hand of history having writ, moves
on, and all your tears can't call back one word of it.
Ryder: And you have shed tears?
Wallace: I have shed tears.
Ryder: Have you suffered?
Wallace: Yeah, I have suffered a lot, but I
wouldn't give my own back for anything because it's the suffering
that sort of leads you to truth.
In prison Wallace has read 4,000 books, learning
Greek, Latin and some Hebrew and Arabic.
Ryder: Where are you on God?
Wallace: I believe there's only one creator of
the universe. There's only one person that judges in the end. Only
one architect of all that is. Whatever you call him, I call him God.
And he calls death row his monastery.
Wallace: The person I was 25 years ago has long
since been dead. I got rid of him.
Ryder: You wrote, "Life is a pearl beyond price."
Wallace: I had to understand that to understand
what I had taken from the people I killed, and having come to that,
I'm ready to give my life now.
He sat on death row for so long because he
exhausted every appeal and with each new attorney came mounds of
evidence to wade through. It sat on one judge's desk seven years.
What happens to turn a kid in a cowboy hat into a
killer? Wallace has a genius IQ and some thoughts on the matter. He
says he's changed and wants to reach kids headed down his path
before he dies next week.
"I was a runaway train. I was waiting for the
wreck." Wallace is picking up the pieces of his life, just in time
to lose it. He'll die by lethal injection at the Indiana State
prison next week.
Wallace says he's just a shadow of the young man
who arrived in 1982; the arrogant, angry, drug addicted burglar who
murdered a family of four.
"It's just one moment, one crazy insane moment
that I wished for all these years I could take back."
January, 1980, Patrick and Teresa Gilligan,
five-year-old Lisa and four-year-old Greg surprised Wallace when
they arrived home during a burglary. He tied them in vacuum cleaner
cord and shot them execution style.
"You can't really put closure on such a tragedy
as this." Diana Harrington now wears her late sister's ring, the one
Wallace stole.
She and her husband Ted have moved from
Evansville, but, like the city, can't put the murder behind them.
"He asked why Evansville still thinks of him as a demon. Why
shouldn't they?"
"Imagine trying not to change in 25 years. You
can't do it. Life instructs you." In prison, Wallace has become a
scholar of philosophy, language and religious study.
Anne Ryder: What have you learned about yourself?
Wallace: I've learned that I don't want to hurt
anybody. I don't want to be superior to anyone. I don't want to do
any evil to anyone. There are two forces in life. On one hand you
have love and hope and on the other hand you have fear and mistrust.
Love and hope, they take chances. Love is brave. It wants to see
people redeemed. So if you believe in a loving God and a hateful
adversary, which one of those belongs to whom?
Ted Harrington calls Wallace "a mass murderer and
he needs to be remembered that way."
The Harrington's say Wallace never gave their
relatives a second chance.
"Theres only one person who will be able to judge
him," says Diana.
Ryder: People in Evansville say this man is a con
man, a manipulator, he has no conscience.
Wallace: That's convenient. They're getting ready
to kill me, so it would be better if that were the case. But as for
being a con man, to what end? What do I gain at this point? As I
leave this world, to anyone I've hurt, I am sorry for what pain I
caused you. This is sincere. It's absolute.
Wallace was in trouble early, a kid without a
rudder passed among his relatives, acting out by age 10. "If (I)
would have only once turned around and looked at the future and saw
how wide it was, then my life would have been completely different."
Ryder: Were you a monster?
Wallace: No, I became something pretty bad. I was
scared to death and fear is such a powerful thing. It can make you
cringe and paralyze you, but if you really go with it it becomes
like a war engine. It makes you really dangerous.
He cloaked himself in a tough guy mantra during a
stint in prison at age 17. "Don't think, don't try to talk your way
out of it. Strike hard, strike fast and don't stop till you win or
you're dead. That's the condition you find me in January 14, 1980
with this deadliness full of drugs. The result was probably
inevitable."
He says he's concerned about kids who are like he
was. "Even if just one person turns away from what happened to me,
good."
Ryder: Do you believe in hell and if not hell,
where does atonement come in?
Wallace: I just know I've done everything I can
here and now to try to atone for what I did and become a better
human being, and whatever befalls me (on) the other side, I leave
that to God.
"I'm just gonna miss him so much." His
half-sister Kathleen knows the burden of growing up Wallace in
Evansville. "There goes the murderer's sister. I will always love
him. I always have and I always will and I don't care what anyone
else things of him."
Wallace: That's one of the curious things about
the death penalty. When the state kills me you're doubling the
amount of misery.
Ryder: Have you thought about what you're going
to say?
Wallace: Yeah, I think that's part of why I'm
doing this interview too, so I can get all the saying out of the way
and just leave time for the dying.
But Wallace says he dies with a reverence for
what he truly stole that January night 25 years ago. "Life is an
incomprehensibly wonderful gift. No matter what happens. No matter
how bad things seem, is it not good to be alive?
And isn't every moment as good as a brand new
beginning if you want it to be?"
Wallace, after availing himself of 23 years of
appeals, is not seeking clemency.
Asked whether he deserves to die, he said, "I
leave that to God."
This murder still hits a nerve in Evansville.
Twenty-five years later there is much anger and pain.
The Gilligan's relatives will lead a prayer
service in Evansville the night of Wallace's execution. He is to die
at midnight the morning of March 10.
What happens to turn a kid in a cowboy hat into a
killer? Donald Ray Wallace junior has a genius I-Q and some thoughts
on the matter. He says he's changed and wants to reach kids headed
down his path before he dies next week. Eyewitness News reporter has
corresponded with him from seven for seven years from death row.
Wallace chooses to make his last words through this interview with
Eyewitness News. "I was a runaway train. I was waiting for the wreck"
says death row inmate Donald Ray Wallace. Donald Ray Wallace is
picking up the pieces of his life, just in time to lose it. He'll
die by lethal injection at the Indiana State prison next week.
Wallace says he's just a shadow of the young man who arrived in
1982--the arrogant, angry drug addicted burglar who murdered a
family of four. Wallace continues, "Its just one moment-one crazy
insane moment that I wished for all these years I could take back."
January, 1980. Patrick and Teresa Gilligan, 5 year old Lisa and 4
year old Greg surprised Wallace when they arrived home during a
burglary. He tied them in vacuum cleaner cord and shot them
execution style. "You can't really put closure on such a tragedy as
this" says the Diana Harrington the sister of one of the victims.
Diana Harrington now wears her late sister's ring, the one Wallace
stole. She and her husband Ted have moved from Evansville, but, like
the city, can't put the murder behind them. "He asked why Evansville
still thinks of him as a demon, why shouldn't they?" says Harrington.
"Imagine trying not to change in 25 years. You can't do it. Life
instructs you." Wallace reflects. In prison, Wallace has become a
scholar of philosophy, language and religious study. Anne Ryder:
What have your learned about yourself?
Wallace: I've learned that I don't want to hurt
anybody. I don't want to be superior to anyone. I don't want to do
any evil to anyone. There are two forces in life. On one hand you
have love and hope and on the other hand you have fear and mistrust.
Love and hope-they take chances. Love is brave. It wants to see
people redeemed. So if you believe in a loving god and a hateful
adversary, which one of those belongs to whom?
Ted Harrington the brother-in-law of the victims
says "He's a mass murderer and he needs to be remembered that way."
The Harrington's say Wallace never gave their relatives a second
chance. Diana: There's only one person who will be able to judge
him. People in Evansville say this man is a con man, a manipulator,
he has no conscnience. Wallace: That's convenient. They're getting
ready to kill me so it would be better if that were the case but as
for being a con man-to what end. What do I gain at this point.
As I leave this world, to anyone I've hurt, I am
sorry for what pain I caused you. This is sincere. Its absolute.
Wallace was in trouble early a kid without a rudder passed among his
relatives acting out by age 10. Wallace: If would have only once
turned around and looked at the future and saw how wide it was then
my life would have been completely different. Anner Ryder: Were you
a Monster?
Wallace:No I became something pretty bad. I was
scared to death and fear is such a powerful thing. It can make you
cringe and paralyze you but if you really go with it it becomes like
a war engine. It makes you really dangerous.
He cloaked himself in a tough guy mantra during a
stint in prison at age 17. Wallace: Don't think don't try to talk
your way out of it, strike hard, strike fast and don't stop till you
win or youre dead. That's the condition you find me in January 14th
1980 with this deadliness full of drugs. The result was probably
inevitable. He says he's concerned about kids who are like he was.
Wallace: Even if just one person turns away from what happened to
me-good. Anne Ryder: Do you believe in hell and if not hell where
does atonement come in?
Wallace: I just know I've done everything I can
here and now to try to atone for what I did and become a better
human being. And whatever befalls me the other side. I leave that to
God. Kathleen Wallace Mason, his half sister says, " I'm just gonna
miss him so much." His half sister Kathleen knows the burden of
growing up Wallace in Evansville. Kathleen Wallace: There goes the
murderer's sister. I will always love him. I always have and I
always will and I don't care what anyone else things of him.
Donald Ray Wallace: That's one of the curious
things about the death penalty. When the state kills me you're
doubling the amount of misery.
Anne Ryder: Have you thought about what you're
going to say?
Wallace: Yeah I think that's part of why I'm
doing this interview too so I can get all the saying out of the way
and just leave time for the dying.
But Wallace says he dies with a reverence for
what he truly stole that january night 25 years ago.
Wallace: Life is an incomprehensibly wonderful
gift. No matter what happens. No matter how bad things seem, is it
not good to be alive? And isn't every moment as good as a brand new
beginning if you want it to be?
Wallace after availing himself of 23 years of
appeals is not seeking clemency. He is schedule to die at 12:01 a-m
next Thursday.
Asked whether he deserves to die--he said--I
leave that to God.
The Harringtons will spend that evening at a
prayer service for the victims in Evansville.
Donald Ray Wallace
Evansville Courier
Sunday, March 6, 2005
After nearly 25 years of
public silence, the father of convicted killer Donald Ray Wallace Jr.
contacted the Evansville Courier & Press, wanting to express his
thoughts about the pending execution of his son. Here is a copy of
the letter written by Donald Ray Wallace Sr., to Courier & Press
reporter Maureen Hayden.
Dear Maureen:
I have wanted to write you for some time, and now
that I'm sitting in front of my computer I don't know where to start.
I have so many emotions running through me that it's unbelievable.
I have had many of my friends say to me that they
can't imagine what I'm going through. I tell them, —Just picture in
your mind that the state is going to kill one of your children this
week and that's about as close as you will ever come to knowing how
I feel.“
If it were not for God, my church family and
friends I would have succumbed to this tragedy long ago. There is no
one on this earth who feels more compassion for the Gilligan family
than I and my family. What my son did was a horrible crime, but my
son is my son and I love him like any parent would love their child.
I know what people would say to that: —It wasn't your family he
murdered. You don't know what the Gilligan family went through.“
Well, let me fill you in on a few things. In
1989, there was a young mother, her 3-year-old daughter and 1-year
old-son murdered in Mount Vernon, Ind. That young mother was my
niece. She and the babies spent a lot of time at our home. Those
babies had to watch their mother being raped and stabbed to death.
The house was then set on fire, when the firemen came inside they
found my niece, Stacy, laying on the floor with her son Jordan's
head laying on her shoulder. He died from smoke inhalation. Her
daughter Tea was lying on her bed, her little 3-year-old body was
burned beyond recognition. The fire was started under her bed.
Yes, I know what the Gilligan family has gone
through. The Harringtons think they will find closure with my son‘s
death but they won't. All they will find is that another life was
taken needlessly.
I know there are many people in the Evansville
area who can't wait to see Don executed and his soul burn in hell.
Well, sorry folks, Don gave his life over to the Lord Jesus Christ.
He has asked God's forgiveness and received it. My Bible says that
God is faithful and just to forgive sin when asked for with
humility.
I have never seen Don more at peace than he is
right now. He knows that when the state kills him, he will reside in
the house of the Lord forever, praise God.
Christians will understand what I just said.
People with hate in their heart will not. You see, while half of the
community was wanting to see him executed the other half was praying
for his soul. I guess we'll have to call it a draw.
He will be executed, but prayer saved his soul
from the eternal damnation of hell. Christians don't condone what he
did but they prayed for his soul, that's what Christian' do. You see,
you can't hate someone you‘re praying for.
My son and two daughters decided that I should
not attend the execution. They didn't think I could stand to watch
my son die. I agreed with them, I don't think I could watch it
either. I can't even imagine in my wildest imagination why so many
people want to watch my son die. That's the last thing in the world
I would want to do, is to watch another human die. All these people
are as sick as the ones committing the crimes.
Sincerely, Donald Ray Wallace, Sr.
Wallace 'at peace' awaiting death
By Maureen
Hayden
- Evansville Courier
February 9, 2005
With 30 days to go until the eve of his execution,
death row inmate Donald Ray Wallace Jr. has told state prison
officials he's "at peace" with his coming death.
Prison officials began meeting with Wallace, 47,
this week to start planning the logistics of how he'll spend the
final weeks, days and hours of his life, scheduled to end shortly
after midnight on March 10. "He says he's more at peace with himself
than ever before,'' said Barry Nothstine, a spokesman for the
Indiana State Prison, where Wallace was recently transported. "He
says he's ready."
The Indiana State Prison, in Michigan City,
houses the death chamber. Wallace was sentenced to death 23 years
ago for the 1980 murders of Theresa and Patrick Gilligan and their
two children, Lisa, 5, and Gregory, 4. Until his appeals ran out
last month, he'd kept death at bay.
Since 2003, Wallace and the state's 23 other
death row inmates have been housed at the nearby Maximum Control
Facility in Westville, while the Michigan City death row housing
undergoes a $4.5 million renovation. Wallace was recently
transported back to Michigan City, alone, after the Indiana Supreme
Court set his execution date early last week.
Wallace now lives in a single-person cell, about
15 feet by 9 feet, isolated from the prison's general population. A
prison counselor visits him daily, a guard stands outside his cell
24 hours a day and prison officials, including Nothstine, have begun
near-daily visits to work out the logistics of Wallace's last days.
Among the tasks Wallace must complete in coming days is the
selection of up to 10 people who will witness his execution, and a
list of family and friends who may visit him daily up until the day
before his scheduled execution. The names of the witnesses and
visitors will remain confidential, Nothstine said. Wallace may also
select a spiritual adviser to be with him in his final hours, and
may plan the menu of his choice for his last "special meal" that
will be served March 8, shared with up to 10 people and paid for by
taxpayers. He can select food from one of four restaurants near the
prison; the only thing banned from the meal is alcohol.
In 1995, Indiana moved from a "last meal" to a "special
meal," served two days before the execution. Offenders had told
prison officials they weren't hungry in the 24 hours before their
death, and some health officials also raised concerns about allowing
prisoners to eat heavy meals just hours before their executions,
because it could increase the chance the condemned could choke or
gag when the first of three chemicals, sodium pentathol, an
anesthetic agent, is injected. Wallace also has been bombarded with
media requests in recent weeks, and may grant interviews up until
seven days before his execution, Nothstine said.
Wallace v. State,
486 N.E.2d 445 (Ind. December 6, 1985)
Defendant was convicted before the Vigo Circuit
Court, Hugh D. McQuillan, J., of four counts of murder and was
sentenced to death, and defendant appealed. The Supreme Court,
Pivarnik, J., held that: (1) although defendant, initially found not
competent to stand trial, was restrained under procedures for
involuntary civil commitment the court had authority to institute
fourth competency hearing on motion of the State; (2) evidence of
uncharged offenses did not mandate mistrial; (3) alleged discovery
violation by the State was not prejudicial; (4) one victim's mother
was not a "victim" for purpose of victim statement requirement of
presentence report; and (5) death penalty was not arbitrarily or
capriciously applied. Affirmed and remanded. DeBruler, J., concurs
in result and dissents with separate opinion, in which Prentice, J.,
concurs.
PIVARNIK, Justice.
Defendant-Appellant Donald Ray Wallace, Jr., was found guilty by a
jury in the Vigo Circuit Court of four Counts of Murder. The death
penalty was sought on grounds that the killings were knowingly done
in commission of a burglary and that Defendant had killed more than
one person. The jury found Defendant guilty and recommended the
death penalty in all four cases. The trial court judge subsequently
agreed with the findings of the jury and sentenced Defendant to
death. Nine issues are presented for our consideration in this
Direct Appeal as follows:
1. Rulings by the trial court in regard to
Defendant's competency to stand trial; 2. Denial of motion for
change of venue from the judge; 3. Permitting a state witness to
testify when that witness was incompetent; 4. Denial of motions for
mistrial following references in the testimony to Defendant's past
criminal record; 5. Alleged improper search and seizure of items
from automobile driven by Defendant; 6. Denial of Defendant's
request to have certain questions asked of police officer witnesses;
7. Alleged improper testimony of rebuttal witness; 8. Error in
presentence report; 9. Constitutional infirmity of Indiana's Death
Penalty Statute.
The facts tend to show that on January 14, 1980,
Indiana State Trooper, Thomas Snyder, was called to the home of
Ralph Hendricks which had been reported burglarized. In connection
with the investigation, Trooper Snyder went to the Gilligans' house,
next to Hendricks' house, to inquire whether the residents therein
might have seen or heard anything unusual.
The window to the
Gilligans' back door was broken. Snyder checked inside the house and
discovered four dead bodies in the family room. They were Patrick
and Teresa Gilligan and their two children, ages four and five. Mrs.
Gilligan had her hands tied behind her, and the two children were
tied together. Coroner, David Wilson, M.D., testified that the cause
of all four deaths, as listed on the inquests, was brain damage from
gunshot wounds.
The evidence also showed that Defendant Donald
Ray Wallace, Jr., was seen driving a blue Plymouth automobile on the
night in question. This automobile belonged to Richard Milligan.
Milligan and Milligan's girlfriend, Debbie Durham, were known to
have committed several prior burglaries using this same automobile.
However, Richard Milligan was in jail on burglary charges this
particular night. Witnesses recalled seeing this automobile in the
neighborhood about the time the murders occurred. Donna Madison was
at the home of her sister, Debbie Durham, the night in question.
Earlier that evening she witnessed Wallace driving the blue Plymouth.
Between 7:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m., Wallace returned to Debbie's home,
and Donna heard him ask for matches. He found a cigarette lighter,
and Donna saw him in the backyard burning the jacket he had been
carrying over his shoulder upon arrival. Neighbor Sherry Grayson saw
a fire at the same time and saw a man with shoulder length hair,
which was characteristic of Wallace, standing by it.
Officer John
Crosser recovered the remains of the jacket and other items found on
the ground. Among these items were a set of wedding rings without
stones in them and some fragments of glass. State Police Specialist
Oliver examined the glass and found the pieces fit into a pattern
matching the hole in Gilligans' window. On the evening in question,
Defendant Wallace and Debbie Durham had Carl Durham take pictures of
them with many of the items taken from the Gilligan and Hendrick
residences. The pictures, also showing money and pistols connected
with these burglaries, were admitted into evidence.
Debbie Durham gave Serologist William Kune the
blue jeans worn by Wallace the night of the crime, upon which Kune
found type AB human blood. Wallace had blood type O, but Mrs.
Gilligan and one of the children had blood type AB. Kune also found
type B blood on a brown cotton glove, identified as one of a set
Wallace wore while burglarizing homes. Mr. Gilligan had type B
blood.
William Madison, brother of Debbie and Donna,
came to Debbie Durham's home the evening in question and saw the
Defendant come in. Defendant, wearing a gun in a holster, showed
William Madison a briefcase with a couple of guns in it. Defendant
also had in his possession a CB, a police scanner, and some rings.
That same night Defendant attempted to sell to Randy Rhinehart some
guns, a CB, and a scanner. Several witnesses testified that Debbie
Durham displayed to them pieces of jewelry, which were later traced
to the Gilligans.
Debbie gave one of the rings to Officer O'Risky.
It was identified by Dorothy Sahm, Teresa Gilligan's mother, as
belonging to Teresa. A jeweler that had sized the ring and kept
pictures of it also identified it as belonging to Teresa. There was
a great deal of property in addition to that recited above which was
found in Wallace's and *450 Durham's possession and which was traced
to the Gilligans. Much of the property recovered that night was also
traced to the Hendricks' residence. Entry was gained in both of the
homes by putting tape on the window and then breaking it in, in a
manner that reduced the sound of breaking glass. Wallace and
Milligan were known to gain entry for purposes of burglary in this
manner.
Friends of Defendant, Mark Boyles and Anita
Hoeche, testified they received a phone call on January 15th from
Defendant who said he was in trouble and in need of a ride. While
riding in the car, Defendant told them he had gotten too greedy the
night before. He said he had broken into one house and never should
have gone to the next house because he got caught there. He told
them after he got caught a man in the house was giving him trouble,
and he had to tie up the entire family.
He said the little girl was
crying and screaming, and it was bothering him. He felt he could not
let the children grow up with the trauma of not having parents, and
he did not "want to see the kids went [sic] through the tragedy of
seeing their parents being killed," so he killed them also. (Record
at 5083.) He said the woman was screaming, and he had to shut her
up. Later that night Defendant, while hiding in the attic of
Hoeche's house, was arrested.
Wallace's statements coincided with those given
by Debbie Durham. Debbie Durham testified that when Wallace visited
her on January 14th, around 9:30 p.m., he immediately took his
clothes off and gave them to her so he could change. On his blue
jeans there was a piece of fleshy-whitish-red matter. Debbie asked
what it was, and Wallace stated it had to be a piece of brain
because he had shot the residents, who had caught him, in the head.
He told her a man had come in from the garage and surprised him.
They struggled, and Wallace made him bring in the rest of the family.
He said he tied up the man, made the woman tie up the children, and
then Wallace tied her up. He shot the man in the head after possibly
breaking the man's neck in the struggle. He said he then shot the
woman twice. The children were crying for the mother, so he shot
each one of them once. He said he shot the adults because they could
identify him.
Defendant raises several issues concerning his
mental competency to stand trial. Four hearings were held before the
trial judge found Defendant was competent to understand the
proceedings and assist his counsel in his defense. Defendant claims
the trial judge's finding was error. The first hearing was
instituted by the trial judge during a pretrial motion because the
judge detected in Defendant's demeanor reasonable grounds to believe
that he lacked competency to proceed.
The court notified the parties
of his concern and then appointed two psychiatrists, Dr. Larry Davis
and Dr. John Kooiker, to examine Defendant. Their subsequent reports
stated their opinions that Defendant was incompetent to proceed with
trial because he was suffering from acute paranoid schizophrenia.
At a hearing held in May, 1980, the doctors
described elaborate delusions expressed by Defendant of plots
against him. He had told the doctors about his belief that the CIA
and Masons were attempting to place him before a firing squad to
prevent his release of secret matters, including information on the
Iranian hostage situation.
He expressed concern about others
plotting against him, including his attorney and court personnel. He
imagined radio-listening devices were planted in his cell and in the
room where the psychiatrists interviewed him. He expressed suspicion
of the psychiatrists and of all those with whom he came in contact.
The appointed doctors concluded Defendant was unable to assist
counsel at the time or to participate in and understand the trial
proceedings. Each stated Defendant's apparent condition would be
very difficult to feign. The State's two witnesses, Defendant's
cellmate and a member of the Sheriff's department, testified
Defendant displayed these *451 mannerisms only at selective times,
the implication being Defendant was feigning the psychosis. After
taking the matter under advisement, the judge found, in a May, 1980
Order, that Defendant was incompetent to stand trial. In that Order
the judge stated that despite evidence to the contrary, his decision
was based on an overwhelming evidence of incompetency given by the
doctors.
Later, pursuant to Ind.Code § 35-36-3-3 (Burns
Repl.1985), the Superintendent of Logansport State Hospital
certified to the court that Defendant had now attained competency to
stand trial. His certification was based upon a Dr. Matheu's
opinion. However, the hearing scheduled pursuant to this
certification was continued when Drs. Davis and Kooiker opined that
Defendant needed further evaluation and treatment. After several
ensuing months of treatment with Thorazine, Dr. Kooiker reported
that Defendant had become oriented with time, place, and person.
Both psychiatrists considered Defendant competent at this point to
stand trial.
However, at the second hearing Defendant appeared
too heavily sedated from the medication. The psychiatrists testified
that Defendant's dosage of psychotic medication could be modified
such that he would maintain competency, but not experience the
sedative side-effects. Over Defendant's objection, the court ruled
that Defendant's competency depended upon an adjustment in his
medication, and ordered Defendant back to Wishard Hospital for
further treatment.
However, by the next and third hearing on January
16, 1981, Drs. Kooiker, Davis, and Moore opined Defendant was
incompetent to proceed with trial. All three psychiatrists testified
Defendant was again suffering from symptoms of schizophrenia and
that the suggested modified treatment from the previous hearing had
failed. One of the psychiatrists characterized Defendant as a
chronic liar, but the general consensus of the doctors was that
Defendant was not feigning the psychosis. Dr. Moore testified that
if Defendant was faking, he was "one of the best damn actors he had
ever seen." (Record at 114.) Once again, the court found Defendant
incompetent to stand trial and ordered him committed under Ind.Code
§ 16-14-9.1-10 (Burns Repl.1983).
Seven months later, in February, 1982, the State
moved for another competency hearing, informing the court it could
produce evidence that Defendant had been faking his psychosis. The
court indicated he would hold another hearing, stating he had
suspected Defendant had been feigning his mental illness. On June
16, 1982, over Defendant's objection, another competency hearing was
held.
The State produced at the hearing several
witnesses and documentary evidence purporting to show Defendant
feigned his mental illness from the beginning. More specifically,
the State introduced letters Defendant had written to Debbie, his
girlfriend, during the time between his arrest and the first
pretrial court appearance at which his competency was put in issue.
These letters indicated a full understanding of what he was doing
and were intended to show he purposefully feigned incompetency to
delay his trial and frustrate the State's attempt to have him
sentenced to death.
In the letters he discusses Debbie's loyalty to
him, their sex lives, and his feelings toward his attorney. He wrote
he had a higher I.Q. than his attorney and so was planning to hire
an attorney from San Francisco with the assistance of his uncle. His
uncle would furnish the money for an attorney with the reputation
for gaining acquittals for persons charged with murder. He said he
was studying from materials furnished to him by a friend who was a
professor from a local law school. His studies concentrated on
suppression of evidence and the art of cross-examination.
He indicated he was becoming very well informed on these subjects so
that he would be in a position to attack the State in court and
frustrate their case. Defendant also told Debbie, who was in jail on
a burglary charge herself, that she would not have to worry if she
went to the Women's Prison because he had connections in the prison
that would get her special consideration.
He expressed in the letters a knowledge of the
legal system and the procedures he was facing and would face in his
desire to undermine the system. Notably, no reference is made to the
delusions which convinced his psychiatrist of his incompetency
except in the last letter written just before the first pre-trial
hearing. This letter was written in his psychotic style, referring
to the secret service and Masons being after him. The trial judge
suspected it was written in preparation for the upcoming hearing and
fit into Defendant's plan to launch his incompetency plan.
A former jailmate of Defendant testified that
sometime in February or March, 1980, Defendant told him he was using
the Masons story to get out of going to trial and stated Defendant
would act psychotic only when non-prisoners were present. Two
jailmates from Vigo County, Lofston and St. John testified that
during 1980 Defendant would act perfectly normal unless the doctors
were around. Defendant told him he was fooling the psychiatrist by
telling them he was collaberating with the Germans. Lofston
testified that sometimes the Defendant would give his medication to
Lofston and other inmates, which would make them drowsy. St. John
testified Defendant told him he was pretending to be crazy to evade
trial. Defendant told St. John he saved up his medication for a
hearing so he would be extremely drowsy in the courtroom.
Several of the staff members from Logansport
State Hospital, where Defendant had been for most of the preceding
two years, testified in the same manner. Robert Cosgray testified
that when Defendant first came to the hospital he acted psychotic
but shortly thereafter admitted to Cosgray that he was feigning his
mental illness. Defendant later denied this statement and told
Cosgray that it was Cosgray's word against his. He said he would
rather spend his life in the hospital than go to the electric chair.
William Hardesty testified Defendant exhibited his psychosis early
in 1980, but later Defendant told Hardesty that he liked to "beat
people at their own game." (Record at 1770.) Further, Defendant told
Hardesty that the longer he drags this out the less chance the State
had of convicting him. (Record at 1770.)
Others at Logansport, James
Campbell, Deborah Illes, Wilma McLaughlin, Richard Younce, and
William Conn, each testified that during the two years of
Defendant's hospitalization they saw Defendant's alleged psychotic
delusions manifested very rarely. He appeared to have psychotic
delusions perhaps once or twice, and then only when Dr. Keating was
present or about to enter the room. Several of the staff members
stated that Defendant gave them a contrasting impression; he was a
sharp pool and card player.
There were also letters introduced into evidence
from Defendant's friend, Cathy Kellams. He had written her from
September, 1980 to March, 1981. The letters reveal no psychotic
symptoms and include only a discussion of an upcoming hearing on
"this insanity shit." (Record at 1677.) Kellams testified that she
also received one letter from Defendant in which he threatened her
if she testified against him, but she stated she did not have the
letter and could not produce it. After hearing all of this evidence,
the trial court concluded that Defendant was faking his psychosis
and that he was in fact competent to stand trial. Defendant later
asked the trial court to order that all of his medication be
withdrawn from him, but the trial court found this to be a medical
matter and denied the motion.
* * *
This Court must now decide whether the death
penalty is appropriate considering the nature of this offense and
the character of the offender. At the commencement of the sentencing
hearing the court recited for the jury the possible aggravating and
mitigating factors. Following trial, the jury recommended the death
penalty.
The court then found that the State had proved
beyond a reasonable doubt the aggravating factors provided for in
Ind.Code § 35-50-2-9 (Burns Repl.1985), that each of the murders was
committed during the perpetration of a burglary, and that Defendant
had murdered more than once. Although the court did not list each
possible mitigating factor and dispose of it, he found that there
were absolutely no mitigating factors to be weighed against the
aggravating ones.
The trial court's findings are amply supported by
the record. As to its finding that no mitigating factors existed,
the presentence report as well as the evidence at trial showed
Defendant had a significant criminal history. Although evidence was
adduced at sentencing that Defendant suffered from an insecure and
loveless childhood, there was no evidence that he suffered from
extreme mental disturbance.
The evidence was clear that the four
victims in no way participated in or consented to Defendant's
conduct. Although Defendant attempted to show that an accomplice
committed the murders while he was committing a burglary in a
neighboring house, the evidence to the contrary is overwhelming.
There was substantial evidence that Defendant committed these acts
without the aid of anyone else and that he was not under someone
else's domination. *464
All circumstances further showed that
Defendant appreciated the wrongfulness of his act, demonstrated by
his detailing the deed to many others, his expressions that he was
clever enough to and had "beat the system," and his having his
picture taken with items from the Gilligan and Hendricks homes for
the purpose of sending them to his friends in prison. He not only
appreciated the wrongfulness of his acts but showed no remorse and,
furthermore, considered his acts creditable accomplishments. There
is overwhelming evidence here sufficient to convict this defendant
of these crimes beyond a reasonable doubt and to prove the
aggravating factors beyond a reasonable doubt. No reasonable person
could find that the death penalty in this case was arbitrarily or
capriciously applied or that it is unreasonable or inappropriate. We
therefore affirm the trial court in all things, including the
imposition of the death penalty. This cause is remanded to the trial
court for the purpose of setting a date for the death penalty to be
carried out. GIVAN, C.J., and SHEPARD, J., concur.
DeBRULER, J., concurs in result and dissents with
separate opinion in which PRENTICE, J., concurs.
Wallace v. State,
553 N.E.2d 456 (Ind. 1990)
Defendant, previously convicted of four counts of
murder, appealed from an order of the Vigo County Circuit Court,
Robert Howard Brown, J., which denied postconviction relief. The
Supreme Court, Pivarnik, J., held that: (1) postconviction judge did
not abuse his discretion in allowing hybrid representation at
defendant's insistence; (2) court did not abuse its discretion in
denying appointment of social psychologist to determine whether
informing jurors of their advisory role in death penalty sentencing
scheme was likely to diminish their sense of responsibility for
penalty recommendation; (3) court's refusal to qualify attorney as
expert on subject of ineffective assistance of counsel in capital
cases did not prejudice defendant; (4) jury instructions were not
improper; and (5) defendant was not denied effective assistance of
counsel. Affirmed. DeBruler, J., concurred in part and dissented in
part, and filed opinion in which Dickson, J., concurred.
Wallace v. State,
640 N.E.2d 374 (Ind. 1994)
After petitioner's murder conviction was affirmed
on direct appeal, 486 N.E.2d 445, and denial of first petition for
postconviction relief was affirmed, 553 N.E.2d 456, petitioner
sought postconviction relief for a second time. The Vigo Circuit
Court, Dexter L. Bolin, Jr., J., denied petition, and petitioner
appealed. The Supreme Court, Givan, J., held that: (1) all matters
except competency of postconviction counsel were adjudicated in
direct appeal or during proceedings on first petition, and (2)
counsel was not ineffective. Affirmed. DeBruler and Sullivan, JJ.,
concurred in result and filed separate opinions.
Wallace v. Davis,
362 F.3d 914 (7th Cir. March 26, 2004). (Habeas)
Background: After defendants' state convictions
for murder and imposition of the death sentence were affirmed on
appeal, 486 N.E.2d 445, and defendant's bids for collateral relief
were rejected by state court, 553 N.E.2d 456, 640 N.E.2d 374,
defendant petitioned for federal writ of habeas corpus. The United
States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, 2002 WL
31572002,, J., denied petition, and defendant appealed.
Holdings: The Court of Appeals, Easterbrook,
Circuit Judge, held that:
(1) sentencing court's listing of defendant's prior arrests and
convictions in the court's written explanation for imposing the
death sentence was not error, and
(2) counsel's alleged failure to present more mitigating evidence at
defendant's sentencing did not amount to ineffective assistance of
counsel. Affirmed. Williams, Circuit Judge, concurred and filed
opinion.
* * *
The written explanation for the sentence does
mention criminal history but clearly separates this from the
aggravating factors. The judge made thirteen numbered findings. Five
are pertinent, and we reproduce them:
2. The aggravating circumstances alleged were: A.
That the Defendant committed the murder of each victim by
intentionally killing the victims while committing or attempting to
commit Burglary. (I.C.35-50-2-9(b)(1). [The statutory references in
the sentencing judge's findings are to the 1979 version of Indiana's
Code, which was in effect at the time of his murders.]
B. That the Defendant committed three other
murders, regardless of whether or not the Defendant had been
convicted of the other murders, in three instances in each count. (I.C.35-50-2-9(b)(8)).
* * *
8. The Court finds that the State has proved
beyond a reasonable doubt that two aggravating circumstances exist
that warrant the imposition of the death penalty:
A. That the Defendant, Donald Ray Wallace, Jr.,
murdered Patrick Gilligan, Theresa Gilligan, Lisa Gilligan and
Gregory Gilligan while committing the crime of Burglary on the 14th
day of January, 1980, in Vanderburgh County, State of Indiana.
(I.C.35-50-2-9(b)(1)).
B. That the Defendant, Donald Ray Wallace, Jr.,
murdered Patrick Gilligan, and then murdered Theresa Gilligan, Lisa
Gilligan and Gregory Gilligan; that the Defendant, Donald Ray
Wallace, Jr., murdered, in order, after the murder of Patrick
Gilligan, Theresa Gilligan, Lisa Gilligan and Gregory Gilligan. (I.C.35-50-2-9(b)(8)).
* * *
10. That the aggravating circumstances set forth
in paragraph eight above outweigh any mitigating circumstances
offered under I.C. 35-50-2-9(c)(7).
11. The Court has considered the Jury's
recommendation to impose the death penalty, and bases the sentence
here given on the same standard as required of the Jury, that being
that:
A. The State has presented beyond a reasonable
doubt that two of the aggravating circumstances exist with the
murders of Patrick Gilligan, Theresa Gilligan, Lisa Gilligan and
Gregory Gilligan within I.C. 35-50-2-9(b)(1) , and I.C.
35-50-2-9(b)(8) all as set forth in paragraph eight; and
B. That any mitigating circumstances that exist
within I.C. 35-50-2- 9(c)(7) are out-weighed by the aggravating
circumstances;
12. In addition to the requirements of I.C.
35-50-2-9, this Court further finds: A. That Donald Ray Wallace, Jr.
has recently violated the conditions of parole [by killing the
Gilligan family while on parole from a prior sentence] .... B. That
Donald Ray Wallace, Jr. had a long history of serious criminal
conduct [list with 26 entries follows].
It is hard to see how the judge could have been
clearer.