Murderpedia has thousands of hours of work behind it. To keep creating
new content, we kindly appreciate any donation you can give to help
the Murderpedia project stay alive. We have many
plans and enthusiasm
to keep expanding and making Murderpedia a better site, but we really
need your help for this. Thank you very much in advance.
Jeffery Lynn
WILLIAMS
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Rape - Robbery
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder:
October 26,
1994
Date of arrest:
4 days after
Date of birth:
October 15,
1971
Victim profile: Barbara
Jackson Pullins (female, 31)
Method of murder: Strangulation with a telephone cord
Location: Harris County, Texas, USA
Status:
Executed
by lethal injection in Texas on June 26, 2002
Summary:
Williams, a ninth-grade dropout who lived in an adjacent apartment
complex, forced his way into the residence of Barbara Pullins at
knifepoint, then raped and strangled her with the cord of an iron
she had been using.
He first tried unsuccessfully to suffocate the
school bus driver by placing a plastic bag over her head. The
evidence also showed he touched her body repeatedly with a lighted
cigarette to make sure she was dead, then tried to burn the corpse.
After attacking Barbara Pullins, he entered the
bedroom of her daughter and awakened her by strangling her with his
hands. Nine year old Jamie Jackson was raped, beaten, and left to
die. When she awoke, she discovered her mother's lifeless on the
living room floor, then ran to her grandmother's apartment nearby.
Williams had stolen Pullins' car and some other
items before leaving the apartment. The car was found near Jeffery
Williams' residence. Her purse and keys, her television and a video
recorder were found inside his home. His thumbprint and palmprint
were found in her apartment.
In a videotaped statement, Williams confessed to
police that he broke into the home intending just to commit theft,
then "just went off." Jamie positively identified Williams as her
attacker at trial.
Williams had 4 prior convictions since 1989 for
Auto Theft and one prior conviction for Aggravated Assault for
shooting a man who tried to chase him after a Theft. He was paroled
from prison 7 months before the murder. It took the jury only 23
minutes to return a death sentence.
Final Meal:
Six pieces of fried chicken, French fries, six rolls, Tin Roof ice
cream, strawberry soda, and chocolate cake.
Final Words:
"The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want." After completing the
entire 23rd Psalm, Williams said, "Amen." The "Amen" was echoed by
his mother, aunt, uncle and two friends who were on hand as personal
witnesses. Williams was silent for a few moments as the dose of
chemicals that ended his life was started, then said, "Lord, I thank
you for all the good things you've given me. Bless my family."
ClarkProsecutor.org
Texas Attorney General
Media Advisory
Tuesday, June 25, 2002 - Jeffery
Lynn Williams Scheduled to be Executed.
AUSTIN - Texas Attorney General John Cornyn
offers the following information on Jeffery Lynn Williams, who is
scheduled to be executed after 6 p.m. on Wednesday, June 26, 2002.
On May 5, 1995, Jeffery Lynn Williams was
sentenced to death for the capital murder of Barbara Jackson Pullins
during a robbery, which occurred in Houston, Texas, on Oct. 26,
1994.
A summary of the evidence presented at trial follows.
FACTS OF THE CRIME
On the evening of Oct. 26, 1994, a male intruder
awakened nine-year-old Jamie Jackson by strangling her with his
hands. The man stopped choking Jamie and ordered her to take off her
clothes.
When Jamie told him that she would not let him rape her, he
struck her in the mouth. The intruder then raped the young girl and
threatened, "If you tell anybody, I'll kill you." He then stole
several items from the bedroom and left the apartment.
After she heard the intruder leave, Jamie crept
into the living room where she found her mother, Barbara Jackson
Pullins, lying motionless on the floor. When she couldn't get a
response from her mother, Jamie ran to her grandmother's nearby
apartment for help.
When Houston police officers arrived at the
apartment, they found Pullins dead on her living room floor. She was
found wearing only a pair of panties, and her feet had been bound
together by a telephone cord.
Pullins also suffered several burn
injuries, and officers observed a number of burnt paper towels
scattered around the room.
Police discovered blood on the kitchen
floor and in the kitchen sink, and a smoldering cigarette on the
stove. They also collected an unidentified palm print and thumb
print from the kitchen sink and the bedroom door.
An autopsy of Pullins' body revealed that she
died as a result of asphyxia due to strangulation. Medical examiners
also discovered second and third degree burns to Pullins' jaw, neck,
upper-torso, belly, arm, hand, thighs, and ankles.
Examiners
concluded that one burn appeared to have been caused by an iron;
other burns were caused by a lit cigarette and by burning paper
towels.
They also discovered that Pullins' fingers had been burned
to where one of the fingernails had become charred. The burns all
appeared to have been inflicted after Pullins' death in an attempt
to destroy evidence.
Shortly after arriving at the scene,
investigators began to interview residents of Pullins' apartment
complex. During the interviews, they located a woman named Patricia
Allen, who was an acquaintance of Jeffery Lynn Williams.
Allen
related that earlier that evening, Williams had come to her
apartment and was acting in a very unusual manner. After pacing the
floor of Allen's apartment for about 20 minutes, Williams indicated
that he was going to the store to buy cigarettes.
Allen was able to
direct police to an adjacent apartment complex where Williams lived,
but police did not get an answer when they knocked on Williams' door.
Police also discovered that Pullins' car was missing. They soon
located the car parked in Williams' apartment complex.
The following day, police received a Crime
Stopper's tip that Williams had committed the homicide. As a result,
the police arranged for a photo array in which Jamie identified a
photograph of Williams as her attacker. Police also obtained a set
of Williams' fingerprints for comparison with the palm and thumb
print found inside Pullins' apartment. Both prints matched Williams.
After Houston police obtained search and arrest
warrants, they returned to Williams' apartment and placed him under
arrest. Investigators searched the residence and found a number of
items that had been stolen from Pullins' apartment, including
Pullins' purse and keys, a jacket, telephone, VCR, television, and a
pistol.
Williams was then transported to the police
station where he gave a series of three videotaped statements. In
his final statement, Williams indicated that he had gone to Pullins'
apartment to steal some money, but claimed that he did not plan to
kill her.
Williams stated that he forced his way inside with a knife
and cut Pullins during a brief struggle. He then forced Pullins to
disrobe and tied her feet together with a phone cord. After starting
to rape the victim, Williams stopped because he did not "get
anything out of it."
Williams recalled that he then tied Pullins up
again, shared a cigarette with her and talked to her. Williams
stated that he "just went off," placed a plastic bag over Pullins'
head and strangled her to death with the cord from an iron. Williams
then burned her body. Williams also admitted to having strangled,
raped and injured nine-year-old Jamie.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
March 9, 1995 - A grand jury indicted Williams in
the 174th Judicial District Court of Harris County, Texas, for the
offense of capital murder. The indictment charged Williams with
murdering Barbara Pullins during the course of a robbery.
May 2, 1995 - A jury convicted Williams of
capital murder.
May 5, 1995 - Following a separate punishment
hearing, Williams was sentenced to death.
December 18, 1996 - The Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals affirmed Williams' conviction and sentence.
January 29, 1997 - The Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals denied rehearing.
March 3, 1998 - Williams filed an application for
writ of habeas corpus with the trial court.
November 3, 1999 - The Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals denied habeas relief in an unpublished order.
January 27, 2000 - Williams filed a petition for
writ of habeas corpus with the United States District Court.
April 5, 2001 - The federal district court denied
Williams habeas relief and refused a certificate of appealability.
January 4, 2002 - The United States Court of
Appeals for the Fifth Circuit affirmed the denial of federal habeas
relief.
February 12, 2002 - The state trial court signed
an order setting Williams' execution for Wednesday, June 26, 2002.
March 30, 2002 - Williams filed a petition for
writ of certiorari with the United States Supreme Court.
June 10, 2002 - The United States Supreme Court
denied Williams' petition for writ of certiorari.
PRIOR CRIMINAL HISTORY
During Williams' state capital murder trial, the
prosecution presented the following evidence of Williams' lengthy
criminal history.
April 28, 1989 - At age 17, Williams was
adjudicated as an adult for the first time. He pleaded guilty to the
felony offense of auto theft based on an incident that occurred on
March 31, 1989. He was placed on probation, ordered to pay a $400
fine and ordered to spend 30 days in the Harris County Jail.
June 12, 1989 - Williams and another man crashed
a pair of stolen vehicles into a ditch. A nearby resident named
Sivco Volchev saw the two men emerge from the wrecked vehicles and
initially tried to ask if they needed help. However, Volchev quickly
realized that the cars had been stolen. He then told a neighbor to
call police and set out in his own car to find the two men. When he
pulled up next to Williams, Williams pulled a gun on him. Volchev
sped away but Williams fired a shot which struck and flattened his
rear tire.
June 30, 1989 - Williams pleaded guilty to the
felony offenses of aggravated assault and theft of a motor vehicle
based on the incident involving Volchev. Williams was sentenced to
seven years imprisonment in the Texas Department of Corrections on
each offense to be served concurrently. Williams' prior probation
from his April 1989 conviction was also revoked, and he was
sentenced to four years confinement in that case.
January 30, 1990 - Williams was paroled from the
Texas Department of Corrections.
June 27, 1990 - Williams pleaded guilty to the
felony offense of unauthorized use of a motor vehicle committed on
April 27, 1990. He was sentenced to 10 years confinement in the
Texas Department of Corrections.
April 26, 1991 - Williams was paroled from the
Texas Department of Corrections.
July 15, 1991 - Williams pleaded guilty to the
felony offense of auto theft committed on June 22, 1991. He was
sentenced to 25 years confinement in the Texas Department of
Corrections.
March 11, 1994 - Williams was paroled from the
Texas Department of Corrections.
ProDeathPenalty.com
A prayerful parolee with a penchant for stealing
cars was executed on Wednesday evening for the rape-slaying of a
Houston woman in an attack where the victim's 9-year-old daughter
also was raped and beaten. The girl's testimony helped send Jeffrey
Lynn Williams to death row.
Strapped to the death chamber gurney, Williams,
30, recited the 23rd Psalm. As the drugs began flowing, Jeffery
Williams added, "I thank you Lord for all good things you have given
me. Bless my family." Then he gurgled and gasped, before slipping
into unconsciousness.
He was pronounced dead at 6:17 p.m., 8 minutes
after the lethal dose began. "If a guy set out to kill like he
killed, a guy shouldn't die that easy," Barbara Pullins' brother,
Willie Collins, said after watching Williams' execution. "I was
looking forward to it, like any other family member should. "I'm at
ease. I had to wait eight years for this here." Willie Collins said
he'd tell his niece, now 16 and too young according to prison rules
to be an execution witness, that "justice was served for her mother
at 6:17."
From the witness stand, the girl pointed to the
three-time convict as the man who woke her Oct. 26, 1994, by choking
her in her bed and then punching her in the head as she struggled. "If
you tell anybody, I'll kill you," evidence showed he told her. After
Williams left, the girl found the lifeless body of her 31-year-old
mother. Unable to awaken her mother, the girl went to her
grandmother's apartment nearby and police were summoned.
"You hate to have to put the daughter through
that but it also is necessary in order for the jury to know what
happened and you get the conviction," Harris County Assistant
District Attorney Lyn McClellan said this week, recalling the girl's
testimony.
Evidence showed Jeffery Williams, a ninth-grade
dropout who lived in an adjacent apartment complex, forced his way
into Barbara Pullins' place at knifepoint, then raped and strangled
her with the cord of an iron she had been using. The strangulation
came after he unsuccessfully tried to suffocate the school bus
driver by placing a plastic bag over her head.
The evidence also showed he touched her body
repeatedly with a lighted cigarette to make sure she was dead, then
tried to burn the corpse. After attacking Barbara Pullins, he moved
on to the daughter, then stole Pullins' car and some items from the
apartment.
The car was found near Jeffery Williams'
residence. Her purse and keys, her television and a video recorder
were found inside his home. His thumbprint and palmprint were found
in her apartment. He confessed to police that he "just went off."
When Jeffery Williams was 17, he picked up his
first felony auto theft conviction and a 30-day jail term. Two
months later, he was sentenced to seven years in prison for
aggravated assault and another auto theft, but was paroled after
only 4 months in January 1990.
By the following year, he was back in prison with
a 10-year term for auto theft, but was on parole within nine months.
It took less than four months for him to receive 25 years for yet
another auto theft. He was paroled about 2 years later in March
1994. The killing occurred seven months later.
Defense lawyers at his capital murder trial said
Jeffery Williams was the product of a miserable childhood and a
victim of physical and sexual abuse. Prosecutors pointed out that
during one of his prison terms, he had to be removed from duties as
a hog butcher because he liked it too much.
A Harris County jury deliberated for 23 minutes
before returning with a death sentence. "You're not going to see a
lot of protestations about him receiving the death penalty except
for people who protest every death penalty case," McClellan said. "There's
no issues on guilt-innocence, there's no issues on mental
retardation or competency or anything else."
Texas Execution Information
Center by David Carson
Txexecutions.org
Jeffrey Lynn Williams, 30, was executed by lethal
injection on 26 June in Huntsville, Texas for the rape, murder, and
robbery of a woman in her apartment.
In October 1994, Williams, then 23, forced his
way into the apartment of Barbara Jackson Pullins. He cut her with a
knife in a brief struggle, then forced her to disrobe and raped her.
He then tied her feet together with a telephone cord and placed a
plastic bag over head, in an attempt to suffocate her. When that
failed, he strangled her with the cord from an iron. After burning
her body with a cigarette to make sure she was dead, Williams
attempted to set the body afire by igniting a roll of paper towels.
Williams then moved to a bedroom where he found
the victim's 9-year-old daughter, Jamie Jackson, sleeping. He
started strangling her with his hands, and she awoke. Williams then
ordered her to take off her clothes, struck her in the mouth, and
raped her. He told her, "If you tell anybody, I'll kill you." He
then stole several items from the apartment and drove off in Barbara
Pullins' car.
After she heard Williams leave, Jamie went into
the living room and found her mother lying motionless on the floor.
She then ran to her grandmother's apartment nearby.
Police investigators who arrived on the scene
found a neighbor in the apartment complex who said that an
acquaintance of hers, Jeffrey Williams, came over to her apartment.
He was there for about 20 minutes and acted in a very unusual manner,
pacing the floor. The neighbor, Patricia Allen, directed police to
the adjacent apartment complex where Williams lived. They found
Pullins' car there.
Police matched the fingerprints of Williams, who
had four prior felony convictions, with fingerprints taken from
Pullins' apartment. They also made a photo array in which Jackson
identified a photograph of Williams as her attacker. Williams was
arrested. Pullins' purse and keys and several items from her
apartment, including a VCR, television, and pistol, were in his
apartment.
Williams made a videotaped statement in which he
confessed to raping and murdering Barbara Pullins and raping Jamie
Jackson. He said that he went to the apartment to steal from Pullins,
but didn't plan to kill her. After he started to rape her, he
stopped, he said, because "I wasn't getting anything out of it." He
then started smoking a cigarette and talked with her and that was
when he "just went off" and killed her, he said.
Williams' first felony conviction was for auto
theft in April 1989, at age 17. He was placed on probation, ordered
to pay a $400 fine, and sentenced to 30 days in jail.
Within days of
getting out of jail, Williams stole another car and shot at a man
who tried to chase him. He was convicted of auto theft and
aggravated assault in June 1989 and received a 7-year sentence.
He served four months and was paroled in January 1990. In July 1990, he
returned to prison with a 10-year sentence for unauthorized use of a
motor vehicle.
He served nine months of that sentence and was
paroled in April 1991. In August 1991, he returned to prison with a
25-year sentence for auto theft.
He served 2½ years of that sentence
and was paroled in March 1994. (At the time, early parole was common
in Texas due to strict prison population caps imposed by U.S.
District Judge William Wayne Justice.)
Jackson testified against Williams at his capital
murder trial. The defense testified that Williams was a victim of
physical and sexual abuse as a child. A jury convicted him in May
1995 and sentenced him to death. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals
affirmed the conviction and sentence in December 1996. All of his
subsequent appeals in state and federal court were denied.
"The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want,"
Williams said from the death chamber. After he finished reciting the
23rd Psalm in its entirety, the lethal injection was started.
Williams then said, "I thank you Lord for all the good things you
have given me. Bless my family." He was pronounced dead at 6:17 p.m.
Canadian Coalition to Abolish
the Death Penalty
I was charged with the felony of capital murder.
The robbery and murder of Barbara J. Lullins, October 26, 1994 in
her apartment.
On May 5, 1995, the court read "punishment at
death by lethal injection". The Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed
the conviction in a public opinion delivered December 18, 1996.
Williams vs. State, 937 S.W. 2d 479 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996)
I entered a plea of not guilty, even by reason of
temporary insanity to the State appointed lawyers and solicitor.
My lack of memory failure, even shock which you
don't receive counsel of a valuable distinguishing, discreet doctor
in characterizing my history of hallucinations and nervous break-down
and forgetfulness which I claim it was the medication that caused
these problems, I soon abandoned a year ago after many side-effects.
I stand before the system struggling to stay
alive, yet strong. I have God to thank daily for watching over me as
I gain knowledge, hoping this system does not take me with swiftness
before I become aware of failures, the injustice situation they put
you in. Lack of knowledge can kill you. The issues of my case is
farther greater, issues that may save my life. I only know little of
the law, strategy that is produced wisely.
My Habeas Corpus was denied. Grounds raised for
Relief Appeals: Ineffective assistance of counsel: 1) Failure to
obtain and present evidence of lesser included offenses. 2) Failure
to obtain a jury instruction authorizing conviction for lesser
included offenses. This is what stands in the Federal Court.
Although, Habeas Corpus Attorney, State appointed
Robin Norris claims, due to the lack of expertise and the
ineffectiveness of my first attorneys Ellis McCullough, Roland Moore
III and trial lawyers makes it difficult for anyone coming behind
them. They assist prosecuting attorney by fashion. Suppressed
information, police reports.
A party I attended, highly toxicated from the win
of a drinking contest. The 2nd leading investigator, Tom McCorvey,
knew me from my youth, jumped me, beat me and bit me in the back.
Children Protection of West Dallas in Houston took photos of the
abuse, took me home. I was 15 yrs. old or younger.
Trial Attorney failure. The list can go on. There
is evidence that is present to prove that I was wrongfully charged.
Even to the claim of innocence.
Williams Executed for 1994 Killing of Houston
Woman
By Mark Passwaters -
The Huntsville Item
June 26, 2002
Jeffery Lynn Williams, sentenced to death for the
1994 rape and murder of a Houston woman, was executed Wednesday
night in the death chamber of the Huntsville "Walls" Unit.
Williams, 30, was sentenced to death by a Harris
County jury for killing Barbara Jackson Pullins on the night of Oct.
26, 1994.
Though several members of Pullins' family were
present for his execution, Williams did not acknowledge them or
offer any remorse for his actions in his final statement. Instead,
Williams - with his head toward the ceiling and his eyes shut -
began his last statement with the phrase, "The Lord is my shepherd,
I shall not want." After completing the entire 23rd Psalm, Williams
said, "Amen." The "Amen" was echoed by his mother, aunt, uncle and
two friends who were on hand as personal witnesses.
Williams was silent for a few moments as the dose
of chemicals that ended his life was started at 6:09 p.m. Then he
said, "Lord, I thank you for all the good things you've given me.
Bless my family." Almost immediately after finishing his statement,
Williams gurgled and lost consciousness.
His mother, Veronica Green,
began sobbing loudly as an unidentified family friend tried to
comfort her. "He's with Jesus now," the woman told Green. "He won't
ever be isolated again." Williams was pronounced dead at 6:17 p.m.
As the family and media witnesses began to filter out of the room,
Anthony Williams, the man's uncle, lingered to take a final look at
his nephew's body.
Williams was given the death sentence after being
found guilty of killing Pullins by putting a plastic bag over her
head and strangling her with the cord of an iron. Williams - who
claimed he was temporarily insane - said he did not plan to kill
Pullins, but merely rob her. He said he forced his way into the
apartment, cut Pullins with a knife and forced her to strip. He said
he started to rape her, but stopped because he "wasn't getting
anything out of it." Williams then said he tied up Pullins, shared a
cigarette with her and talked to her. He then claimed he "just went
off," and killed her.
After killing Pullins, Williams then attacked her
sleeping 9-year-old daughter, Jamie Jackson. When Jackson started to
struggle, Williams stopped choking her, hit her in the mouth and
told her to strip. He then raped her. "If you tell anybody, I'll
kill you," Williams said as he left the apartment.
After he left the apartment, Jackson went to tell
her mother what had happened. She found her mother dead on the
living room floor, wearing only a pair of panties and her feet bound
by a telephone cord. Medical examiners later determined Pullins had
died of asphyxiation, but had a number of second- and third- degree
burns over her body. At least one of the burns appeared to have been
caused by an iron; the rest apparently were caused by a cigarette or
burning paper towels. The burns were inflicted after Pullins death
in an attempt to destroy evidence.
Police arrested Williams the next day, as a large
amount of evidence quickly appeared to link him to the crime.
Pullins' stolen car was found at Williams' apartment complex;
shortly afterward, a Crime Stoppers tip indicated Williams was the
man responsible for Pullins' death.
Armed with that information, police arranged for
Jackson to look at number of pictures to see if she could identify
the man who raped her. She quickly picked out Williams as the
assailant. After thumb and palm prints taken from the crime scene
were found to match Williams', he was taken into custody. A search
of his apartment discovered a number of items stolen from the
victim's apartment, including her purse and car keys.
Jackson was unable to attend Williams' execution,
but a number of Pullins' family members were witnesses. Two of her
brothers, her sister and cousin watched as he was put to death. "He
showed no remorse. He looked at us with a smile," said William
Collins, Pullins' brother. "But it doesn't trouble me now. Justice
has been served." Collins said he would tell his niece "justice was
served for her mom at 6:17."
Collins said he never considered not attending
Williams' execution. "I was looking forward to it, as any family
member should," he said. "I'm at ease, and I think the whole
family's at ease. I went through eight years to get here." Collins
noted his sister's birthday would have been next week. "I believe
she got a birthday gift a week early," said Reginald Ellis, Pullins'
cousin.
Both men indicated they would liked to have seen
the man who killed their relative suffer more than he did. "I'm
going to say it like this: If a guy set out to kill the way he did,
he shouldn't die that easy," Collins said after a moment's
hesitation. "I still feel he got off easy," Ellis said.
Three-Time Convict Executed for 1994 Rape-Slaying
By Michael Graczyk - The Dallas
Morning News
June 26, 2002
HUNTSVILLE, Texas (AP) - A prayerful parolee
with a penchant for stealing cars was executed on Wednesday evening
for the rape-slaying of a Houston woman in an attack where the
victim's 9-year-old daughter also was raped and beaten.
The girl's testimony helped send Jeffrey Lynn Williams to death row.
Strapped to the death chamber gurney, Williams, 30, recited the 23rd
Psalm.
"The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want," he said, reciting the
verses, ending with "I shall dwell in the house of the Lord forever
and ever. Amen. Amen."
As the drugs began flowing, Jeffery Williams added, "I thank you
Lord for all good things you have given me. Bless my family."
Then he gurgled and gasped, before slipping into unconsciousness. He
was pronounced dead at 6:17 p.m., 8 minutes after the lethal dose
began.
Jeffery Williams was the 18th Texas inmate to die this year and the
second in as many days.
Last year, 17 condemned prisoners were put to death in Texas.
"If a guy set out to kill like he killed, a guy shouldn't die that
easy," Barbara Pullins' brother, Willie Collins, said after watching
Williams' execution. "I was looking forward to it, like any other
family member should. "I'm at ease. I had to wait eight years for
this here."
Willie Collins said he'd tell his niece, now 16 and too young
according to prison rules to be an execution witness, that "justice
was served for her mother at 6:17."
From the witness stand, the girl pointed to the three-time convict
as the man who woke her Oct. 26, 1994, by choking her in her bed and
then punching her in the head as she struggled.
"If you tell anybody, I'll kill you," evidence showed he told her.
After Williams left, the girl found the lifeless body of her 31-year-old
mother. Unable to awaken her mother, the girl went to her
grandmother's apartment nearby and police were summoned.
"You hate to have to put the daughter through that but it also is
necessary in order for the jury to know what happened and you get
the conviction," Harris County Assistant District Attorney Lyn
McClellan said this week, recalling the girl's testimony.
Evidence showed Jeffery Williams, a ninth-grade dropout who lived in
an adjacent apartment complex, forced his way into Barbara Pullins'
place at knifepoint, then raped and strangled her with the cord of
an iron she had been using. The strangulation came after he
unsuccessfully tried to suffocate the school bus driver by placing a
plastic bag over her head.
The evidence also showed he touched her body repeatedly with a
lighted cigarette to make sure she was dead, then tried to burn the
corpse. After attacking Barbara Pullins, he moved on to the daughter,
then stole Pullins' car and some items from the apartment.
The car was found near Jeffery Williams' residence. Her purse and
keys, her television and a video recorder were found inside his home.
His thumbprint and palmprint were found in her apartment. He
confessed to police that he "just went off."
When Jeffery Williams was 17, he picked up his first felony auto
theft conviction and a 30-day jail term.
Two months later, he was sentenced to seven years in prison for
aggravated assault and another auto theft, but was paroled after
only 4 months in January 1990.
By the following year, he was back in prison with a 10-year term for
auto theft, but was on parole within nine months. It took less than
four months for him to receive 25 years for yet another auto theft.
He was paroled about 2 years later in March 1994. The killing
occurred seven months later.
Defense lawyers at his capital murder trial said Jeffery Williams
was the product of a miserable childhood and a victim of physical
and sexual abuse. Prosecutors pointed out that during one of his
prison terms, he had to be removed from duties as a hog utcher
because he liked it too much.
A Harris County jury deliberated for 23 minutes before returning
with a death sentence.
"You're not going to see a lot of protestations about him receiving
the death penalty except for people who protest every death penalty
case," McClellan said.
"There's no issues on guilt-innocence, there's no issues on mental
retardation or competency or anything else."