Eugene Broxton

Last updated
Eugene Broxton
Born
Eugene Alvin Broxton

(1955-02-27) February 27, 1955 (age 69)
Louisiana, U.S.
Conviction(s) Capital murder
Criminal penalty Death
Details
Victims1–5 [1]
Span of crimes
June 1986 May 1991
CountryUnited States
State(s) Texas
Date apprehended
May 18, 1991
Imprisoned at Allan B. Polunsky Unit, West Livingston, Texas

Eugene Alvin Broxton (born February 27, 1955) is an American murderer and suspected serial killer. Convicted and sentenced to death for the May 1991 murder of a woman in Channelview, Texas, Broxton is also the sole suspect in four other murders for which he has never been convicted but remains the sole suspect. [2]

Contents

Crimes

With an extensive criminal record in both his native Louisiana and Texas, Broxton's first major crime occurred on June 3, 1986, when he fired two shots at Pasadena police officer Walt Hays while fleeing from a robbery. Hays survived and then arrested his assailant in an apartment complex shortly afterward. [2] For this, Broxton was convicted on charges of aggravated robbery and attempted murder, for which he was given a 13-year sentence. He was paroled in 1990. [2]

After his release, Broxton began using drugs, developing a heavy drug addiction that drove him to rob and sometimes kill his prospective victims. On April 6, 1991, he broke into the northeastern Houston apartment of 46-year-old Gary Wayne Stuckwisch, whom he stabbed to death. [3] After stealing all of the man's valuables, Broxton stole his car but abandoned it the very next day. Thirteen days later, Broxton abducted 59-year-old TV guide salesman Gordon John Miller in an area between Federal Road and the I-10. In front of witnesses, Broxton stabbed Miller to death before fleeing in his truck. Five days later, he attempted to attack a man named Elbert Madden, who survived the assault. [3]

On May 2, Broxton was arrested in Pasadena for stealing a $20 radio from a Walmart in east Houston. While this was considered a violation of his parole that should've sent him to prison, Broxton was instead fined and released due to the crime being considered a petty offense, prison overcrowding, and investigators' inability to locate his parole officer at the time. [3] Four days later, Broxton broke into the home of 64-year-old one-legged retiree Albert Krigger, whom he strangled to death before allegedly pawning a diamond ring belonging to the victim. [2] On May 10, Broxton returned to the same Walmart he had been arrested for stealing the radio and proceeded to abduct 65-year-old Gary Leon Andrews at gunpoint. He then drove with Andrews to a remote area, where, after robbing Andrews, he shot him in the mouth and stabbed him in the stomach. [3] Despite his serious injuries, Andrews survived the ordeal. [3]

On May 16, Broxton traveled to Channelview, spotting the motel room where two newlyweds from Louisiana, 23-year-old Waylon and 20-year-old Sheila Dockens, were residing. [2] Posing as a motel employee, Broxton was allowed access into the room, after which he bound, gagged, pistol-whipped, and then shot them with his .44 Magnum before stealing $800 and leaving them for dead. Sheila, who had injuries to the chest and arms, died; Waylon, who was shot in the head, survived. [2]

Broxton is also suspected to have murdered 42-year-old Larry Smith during the Channelview crime spree. [4]

Arrest, trials and appeals

Two days after his attack on the Dockens couple, Broxton was arrested by police officers in Houston, who had been looking for him after they had found his fingerprints in the apartment and car of Stuckwisch. [3] He was charged with three capital murders and two attempted capital murders, and put before a jury trial in Harris County. Waylon Dockens, who by this point still had a bullet lodged in his neck, testified at his trial, positively identifying him as the man who had attacked him and killed his wife. [2] The following year, Broxton was found guilty of the Dockens murder and sentenced to death following a two-hour deliberation by the jury. The charges in the other murders were dropped, and since Broxton was given the death sentence, prosecutors indicated they wouldn't try him for the rest. [2]

Over the following years, Broxton unsuccessfully tried to appeal his convictions to the Court of Criminal Appeals on several occasions, arguing under the double jeopardy clause that juries shouldn't have been notified of his other suspected murders by the prosecutors at the hearings for the Dockens killing. [5] [6] [7] His requests were denied multiple times until 2000, when a Harris County federal judge ruled that race-based testimony should be considered inadmissible. [8] As the attorney general presiding over his original 1992 trial, John Comyn, had allowed a psychologist who claimed that race should play a factor in sentencing testify, the Supreme Court of Texas ruled that Broxton, along with four other convicts, should be granted new hearings. [8] In 2003, Broxton was brought before a new jury trial but was found guilty and resentenced to death a second time. [9]

Status

As of February 2024, Eugene Broxton remains on death row at the Allan B. Polunsky Unit, awaiting execution.

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wah Mee massacre</span> 1983 robbery and mass murder in Seattle, Washington

The Wah Mee massacre was a mass shooting that occurred during the night of February 18–19, 1983, in the Wah Mee gambling club at the Louisa Hotel in Seattle, Washington, United States. Fourteen people were bound, robbed and shot by three gunmen, 22-year-old Kwan Fai "Willie" Mak, 20-year old Keung Kin "Benjamin" Ng and 25-year-old Wai Chiu "Tony" Ng. Thirteen of the victims died, but 61-year-old Wai Yok Chin, a former U.S. Navy sailor and Pai Gow dealer at the Wah Mee, survived to testify against the three in the separate high-profile trials held between 1983 and 1985.

Shaka Sankofa was a Texas death-row inmate who was sentenced to death at the age of 17 for the murder of 53-year-old Bobby Grant Lambert in Houston, Texas, on May 13, 1981. He was executed by lethal injection on June 22, 2000, in Huntsville, Texas.

On May 22, 1995, 16-year-old Jimmy Farris, the son of a Los Angeles Police Department officer, was stabbed to death. Farris and his friend, Michael McLoren, were next to a clubhouse-type fort in McLoren's backyard. Four acquaintances of Farris and McLoren jumped the chainlink fence and approached the fort. There was a fight inside the fort. Farris and McLoren went into the house, bleeding from stab wounds, while the other four climbed back over the fence and left. Farris died before paramedics arrived. McLoren was airlifted to UCLA Medical Center.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mark Goudeau</span> American serial killer and rapist on death row

Mark Goudeau is an American serial killer, kidnapper, thief and rapist. Goudeau terrorized victims in the Phoenix metro area between August 2005 and June 2006; coincidentally, Goudeau was active at the same time as two other Phoenix serial killers, jointly known as the "Serial Shooters.”

This is a list of notable overturned convictions in the United States.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murders of Channon Christian and Christopher Newsom</span> 2007 carjacking, rape, and murder of a couple in Knoxville, Tennessee

Channon Gail Christian, aged 21, and Hugh Christopher Newsom Jr., aged 23, were from Knoxville, Tennessee, United States. They were kidnapped on the evening of January 6, 2007, when Christian's vehicle was carjacked. The couple were taken to a rental house. Both of them were raped, tortured, and murdered. Four males and one female were arrested, charged, and convicted in the case. In 2007, a grand jury indicted Letalvis Darnell Cobbins, Lemaricus Devall Davidson, George Geovonni Thomas, and Vanessa Lynn Coleman on counts of kidnapping, robbery, rape, and murder. Also in 2007, Eric DeWayne Boyd was indicted by a federal grand jury of being an accessory to a carjacking, resulting in serious bodily injury to another person and misprision of a felony. In 2018, Boyd was indicted on state-level charges of kidnapping, robbery, rape, and murder.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Paul Dennis Reid</span> American serial killer

Paul Dennis Reid Jr., known as The Fast Food Killer, was an American serial killer, convicted and sentenced to death for seven murders during three fast-food restaurant robberies in Metropolitan Nashville, Tennessee and Clarksville, Tennessee between the months of February and April 1997. At the time of the murders, Reid lived with roommate Brian Fozzard at a boarding house, and he was on parole from a 1983 conviction in Texas on charges relating to the aggravated armed robbery of a Houston steakhouse. He had served seven years of a 20-year sentence, and was paroled in 1990. Originally from Richland Hills, Texas, a suburb of Fort Worth, Reid went to Nashville to pursue a career as a country music singer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Donald Leroy Evans</span> American serial killer

Donald Leroy Evans was an American serial killer who murdered at least three people from 1985 to 1991. He was known for confessing to killing victims at parks and rest areas across more than twenty U.S. states.

Graham v. Florida, 560 U.S. 48 (2010), was a decision by the Supreme Court of the United States holding that juvenile offenders cannot be sentenced to life imprisonment without parole for non-homicide offenses.

Gail F. Shollar (1957–1992) was a 35-year-old Piscataway, NJ mother who was raped and murdered after being carjacked from the Middlesex Shopping Mall in South Plainfield, NJ. She was one of the first people in New Jersey to be a victim of carjacking. The first known carjacking in the United States had only occurred the previous year in Detroit with the murder of Ruth Wahl.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of Antonio Santiago</span> Murder of an infant during an attempted robbery

One-year-old Antonio Santiago was murdered on March 21, 2013, during an attempted robbery in Brunswick, Georgia, United States. As Santiago and his mother, Sherry West, were returning home from the post office, they were confronted by two youths, 15-year-old Dominique Lang and 17-year-old De'Marquise Elkins. Elkins, who had previously shot another victim he tried to rob, pointed a gun at West and demanded money. When she did not comply he fired two .22-caliber bullets, one of which grazed her head, and the other of which went through her leg. He then shot Santiago in the face, killing him. The murder received national as well as international attention due to the victim's young age.

James Jerold Koedatich is an American serial killer who kidnapped and murdered two young women within a two-weeks span in Morris County, New Jersey, in late 1982. Following his arrest, he was tried, convicted, and sentenced to death, but was resentenced to life in prison in 1990. Prior to the murders, Koedatich murdered his roommate in Florida, for which he served eleven years in prison, and while in prison he killed his cellmate, but that was ruled to be self-defense.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Darnell Keith Washington</span> American murderer on death row

Darnell Keith Washington is an American convicted murderer, robber, and carjacker. In 2012, he escaped from the Glen Helen Rehabilitation Center where he was awaiting trial for armed robbery, later joining his wife in a crime spree consisting of multiple robberies, carjackings, the shooting of a police deputy, and the murder of a retired school teacher. Upon their arrest, Washington was convicted and sentenced to death.

Michael Eugene Sharp was an American serial killer who abducted and killed two women and one girl in West Texas in 1982, but is thought to be responsible for at least two further murders. Convicted for two of the killings and sentenced to death for one of them, Sharp was executed in 1997.

Donald Arthur Piper is an American murderer and suspected serial killer convicted of killing two women in hotels around West Des Moines and Clive, Iowa in 1993 and 1997, but is considered a suspect in four other killings. For his confirmed crimes, Piper was convicted and sentenced to two life terms.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">James Ray Cable</span> American serial killer

James Ray Cable was an American serial killer. Originally convicted in 1990 for kidnapping and torturing a teenage girl, he was later linked via DNA to the murders of three women in across Kentucky between 1982 and 1989. He was subsequently charged with these crimes, but died while awaiting trial in 2013.

William Perry Jackson is an American serial killer who, together with two accomplices, killed five people during robberies in Washington and Oregon from May to August 1980. Convicted and sentenced to multiple life terms in separate trials, in addition to another sentence for escaping from prison, he is currently serving his sentences in an Oregon prison.

John Price Hayter Jr. was an American serial killer. A lifelong criminal, he was convicted of killing a fellow prisoner and two women on three separate occasions from 1953 to 1986 in Texas and Florida. Sentenced to multiple life terms, he died while behind bars for his Florida convictions.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kevin Haley</span> American murderer and suspected serial killer

Kevin Bernard Haley is an American murderer, rapist, burglar and suspected serial killer who, together with his older brother Reginald, committed a series of violent crimes in the Los Angeles area from 1982 to 1984, resulting in at least two murders. Suspected in a total of eight murders, Kevin Haley was convicted of two counts of murder in separate trials, receiving death sentences on each count.

Keith Gibson is an American serial killer who murdered between two and six people in Delaware and Pennsylvania from January to June 2021, less than a month after being paroled from serving time for a manslaughter conviction dating back to 2008.

References

  1. "Broxton, Eugene". Texas Department of Criminal Justice.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Broxton Sentenced to Death In Robbery-Slaying". Tyler Morning Telegraph. May 7, 1992.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Parolee Slipped Through System After Arrest During Crime Spree". Tyler Morning Telegraph. May 27, 1991.
  4. Wallace, Randy (January 23, 2017). "Condemned serial killer yet to get execution date after 25 years on death row". KRIV. Retrieved February 20, 2024.
  5. "Court Rules Against Convicted Murderer". Tyler Morning Telegraph. November 17, 1994.
  6. "Court of appeals upholds 3 death sentences". The Daily Texan. October 5, 1995.
  7. Mike Crissey (October 28, 1999). "Court upholds four death sentences". The Daily News.
  8. 1 2 "Judge rules against Harris County in race-based testimony case". The Orange Leader. September 24, 2000.
  9. "Man sentenced to death for second time". Brazosport Facts. November 16, 2003.