Category Archives: Life & Death

NXIVM — THE CRAZY SEX CULT OF KEITH RANIERE

It sounds like something in a bizarre novel plot that struggles to suspend disbelief, but it’s true crime at is weirdest. NXIVM (pronounced nex-eee-ehm) was a real-life “wellness” organization run by Keith Raniere, a Svengali leader who conned thousands of people in a self-help pyramid scheme. At its heart, NXIVM held a secret society that manipulated intelligent women into being sex-slaves with Keith Raniere’s initials branded into their flesh.

This week, a New York court sentenced Keith Raniere to 120 years imprisonment for sex offenses, human trafficking, forced labor, racketeering, and other felony convictions. Clare Bronfman, the billionaire heiress to the Seagrams liquor fortune, got 6 ½ years for bankrolling the operation to a tune of over $140 million. Co-conspirators Sara Bronfman, Alison Mack, Kathy Russell, Nancy Salzman, and her daughter Lauren Salzman have pleaded guilty to related sex and conspiracy charges. They’re awaiting sentences and they, too, face length penitentiary terms for ruining the lives of many innocent young women who only wanted wellness in their world.

How can this happen? How can women like billionaires, Hollywood actresses, Ph.D. holders, and even Mexican President Vincente Fox’s daughter get sucked into such a crazy cult? How could they allow themselves to be turned into submissive sex slaves and willingly be branded at the pubic line with a cauterizing gun after turning over millions of dollars to a perverted conman?

The answer isn’t easy. And, it didn’t happen overnight. It seems the root of this madness lies in a lack of personal esteem and the possible profound psychological effects of neuro-linguistic programming compounded with hypnosis. In other words, brainwashing by preying on female insecurities. Here’s a look at how NXIVM was structured and who Keith Raniere really is.

NXIVM Structure

It’s best to let NXIVM explain what they purported to be… on the surface. Keith Raniere and Nancy Salzman formed the organization in 1998 as a mostly women-to-women group of high achievers who wanted to take their entrepreneurial performance to the next level. Fraud implications started in 2003 when Forbes Magazine did an expose on Raniere and  NXIVM.

NXIVM crashed in 2018 when Raniere and his hold-out supporters fled to Mexico and were arrested on U.S. warrants. At the time, the NXIVM website was still up and I quickly copied their propaganda. This is what they offered:

WHAT IS NXIVM? — NXIVM is a community guided by humanitarian principles that seek to empower people and answer important questions about what it means to be human. The NXIVM philosophy is expressed through a series of companies and initiatives, all of which were designed to broaden the way we currently think about problems, and to help create solutions for a kinder, more sustainable, ethical world. With unique tools that facilitate success, both internally and externally, NXIVM helps people realize the potential that exists within them.

“Alone we can do so little; together we can do so much.”  ~ Helen Keller

Society, government, religion, family—all human systems are made up of people. Large-scale change must therefore find its root in the individual. If we are to create a noble civilization, this transformation must begin by looking inward.

NXIVM is a new ethical understanding that allows you to create an internal framework that reflects your best self, and offers the resources to manifest that vision into a reality. It allows you to explore your most fundamental nature and begin to redirect your power of creation, a power that we all possess in a very human sense. The NXIVM philosophy is expressed through its various companies, their contributions, and, most importantly, the individuals who work together to create a better world.

By the time NXIVM was rolling in the early 2000s, it had attracted thousands of acolytes who spent millions of dollars on the promise of life-transforming exposure. Executive Success Programs (ESP) formed NXIVM’s shell with specialized, invite-only, sub-groups available for the chosen ones. One spin-off was JNESS, and this is what they presented:

WHO WE ARE — Our JNESS is our highly personal version of being a woman; it is an affirmation of our independent life-journey with its lessons, tragedies, and magnificence. No two women are the same. Each of us has a unique, powerful, secret-self, formed from our experiences in life. No one set of words can quite quantify us, and no collection of rules can categorize us. JNESS in general, is the personal work of empowered women in this world.

Organized JNESS is the journey to find more depth and meaning in our lives connecting us with our personal wisdom through bonded groups of friends, inspired by essential questions, and the sharing of many. Through the workings of Jness, we find more of ourselves and reunite with parts lost to fear or social ignorance.

OUR STORY — Have you ever been with a closest friend, or friends, and desired to create something meaningful? Maybe even something bigger than just a simple project, or some self-serving goal? Possibly a group effort addressing a personal concern about the world where you see meaningful work needs to be done.

Take a minute to think about some of the most meaningful needs of society from your perspective: Is one of these needs world hunger? Or possibly more pressing is the issue of abuse of power in government?

Or maybe even more important is a war in a foreign country? Or you might focus upon difficulties closer to home, such as the lack of community in your community, or possibly some type of social prejudice? Or for some, just the simple lack of caring amongst friends and neighbors, is most disturbing. There are many, many other equally important challenges in the world but what is of primary concern is which issues are most important to you directly, personally.

On a spring day in 2006, in a car, driving down the highway, this was the topic of discussion amongst 3 dearest friends; Pam, Marianna, and Keith.

Keith offered an expertise in educational methodology along with a body of knowledge relating to the human dynamic. The most essential thing for both Pam and Marianna was their struggles as women in a world where woman’s values are distorted. Over the next few days, the initial codification for a new method of gender transformation, JNESS, was born, from the loving intent of 3 people, who desired to create something meaningful together, to make the world a better place.

Today, just 10 years later, JNESS has spread to over 17 locations and has touched women (and men) from all walks of life. With over 1000 hours of ever-expanding curriculum and methods of gender empowerment, JNESS is one of the most advanced and detailed paths of gender discovery in the world. It is, more importantly, a home community for many, many, compassionate, humanity-minded women of this era.

OUR FRIENDSHIPS — JNESS is an organization by-invitation, only.

Imagine having a group of women with whom you meet each week that you knew you could rely on because they show up for one another, no matter what. What might it be like to have friends committed to their growth and supporting the growth of those around them?  That is the intention of a JNESS friendship.

Friendships offer the opportunity for women to build a bond with one another as we journey through our unique curriculum.

*   *   *

Sounds enticing, doesn’t it? Well, JNESS was a grooming ground for something seriously sinister. There was a nucleus operating inside NXIVM—a secret sex sisterhood—called Dominus Obsequious Sororium (DOS) which is a Latin translation for “lord over the obedient female companions”. It was inside DOS where things really got nuts.

Alison Mack was Raniere’s chief recruiter for DOS. Raniere delegated Mack to identify women of influence within JNESS and bring them inside the inner DOS circle. In Mack’s words, “DOS is a bad-ass, if slightly unorthodox, feminist group meant to help women build discipline and overcome their intimacy issues”.

Alison Mack

Unorthodox is an understatement. DOS was specifically designed to provide sex slaves for Keith Raniere. The initiation required “collateral” to prove the woman’s conviction. This would be sexually-compromising pictures, videos of sex act performance, or something as sleazy as a letter on file that falsely accused the woman’s father of sexually molesting her.

Once indoctrinated inside DOS, the woman vowed to be completely subservient to Raniere. This included group-sex participation, pubic hair grooming requirements, and responding to text demands within sixty seconds or face corporal punishment by being strapped with a leather belt.

Complete DOS initiation required branding. In this procedure the indoctrinated was stripped naked and forcibly held on her back on a table. She was required to say, “Master, please brand me. It would be an honor.” Then, the submissive woman would sufferer excruciating pain while the initials “KR” were seared on her pubis.

Sarah Edmondson shows the brand she received as part of a secret sorority ritual while part of the self-help group Nxivm, in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, July 27, 2017. Edmondson, who has left the group, and other former followers of Keith Raniere, the leader of the group, said they were focusing on recovering. “There is no playbook for leaving a cult,” Edmondson said. (Ruth Fremson/The New York Times)

Note: Officially, thirteen women have come forward and showed their brands. There could be many more.

Who is Keith Raniere?

To somewhat understand the hard-to-believe story of NXIVM, JNESS and DOS, it’s necessary to look at who Keith Raniere really is. Again, it’s best to read how NXIVM portrayed him through their website propaganda. This is what they posted:

KEITH RANIERE — Keith Raniere has devoted his life to studying the complex issues that face our modern world, and to developing tools to enhance the human experience through community, social action, science, technology, and education.

Raniere has founded multiple companies focusing on increasing joy and ethics in the world. Under the NXIVM umbrella, he has developed a series of educational models that offer integrative solutions to complex subjects such as gender, relationships, childhood development, mind-body complex, compassionate ethics, and creative expression. These initiatives range from an award-winning performing arts company to an early childhood education that promotes cultural, linguistic, emotional, physical, and problem-solving potential.

He founded Executive Success Programs, Inc. (ESP) in 1998 with Nancy Salzman, one of the world’s top trainers in personal and professional development, seeking to advance ethics, humanity, and critical thinking on an individual and global scale. One of the cornerstones of ESP is Rational Inquiry®, Raniere’s patent-pending technology that provides a scientific process for achieving peak human performance. Most recently, these tools successfully have been applied to treating neurobiological disorders with unprecedented results. In partnership with the Ethical Science Foundation, several people have been helped to overcome severe cases of Tourettes Syndrome, with plans to study the potential on other conditions.

Some of his most passionate and purposeful work can be seen in the peace movement he founded in Mexico, where gang violence, corruption, and poverty are at crisis levels. InLaK’ech (an expression that translates to “you are the other me”) has been credited with initiatives that promote community, inspire leadership within small villages, and provide systems to disable violence and stop perpetrators. He sees the struggles faced by the Mexican people as a metaphor for the world and hopes to inspire the possibility for peace.

The Truth About Keith Raniere

That’s an appealing spiel the NXIVM website spelled out. The truth, however, is much different. Keith Raniere is a deviate conman if there ever was one. Here’s a factual profile on what this guy is all about.

Keith Allen Raniere was born in 1960 to an ad-salesman father and an alcoholic mother who was a ballroom dancing instructor. They separated when Raniere was eight, and he was mostly raised by his father who boasted to everyone who would listen that his son was a genius. It seems Raniere believed this and took on a lifetime with that persona.

Raniere was no scholar with a 200+ IQ like he porported to desciples. He achieved a 2.26 GPA (C- equivalent) college diploma majoring in physics and had a fascination with science fiction. He was heavily influenced by Isaac Asimov’s Second Foundation that centered on mind control. He also dabbled in Amway and a few other network marketing ventures before starting his own multi-level company called Consumers’ Buyline Inc.. It achieved a large following before federal regulators shut it down as an illegal pyramid scheme. Ranier was fined $40,000 of which he paid $6,000.

Raniere reinvented himself in the MLM culture with a vitamin company called National Health Network. Through this, he met Nancy Salzman who was a registered nurse and a certified hypnotherapist. They turned their combined focus on the emerging personal wellness field and lucrative business coaching opportunities. Together, they were like fire and gasoline—or two volatile chemicals mixed up in a mad scientist’s lab—and NXIVM was conceived.

Keith Raniere was shaped by a lot of factors. Many are the usual suspects when it comes to mind control—Hubbard (Scientology), Rand (Objectivism), Blavatsky (Theosophy), Freud (Psychoanalysis), Steiner (Anthrosophy), Crowley (OTO), Korzybski (General Semantics), Erhard (EST), Erickson (Eriksonian Hypnosis), Bandler & Grinder (Neuro-Linguistic Programming) as well as Tony Robbins, Rosicrucianism, and Freemasonry. Raniere also took acting and judo lessons.

Ranier was no genius as he held out to be. He was basically a shiftless slacker who slept most of the day, didn’t own a car or have a driver’s license, mooched off friends for meals, and couch-surfed according to who would have him. Even when the NXIVM cash started rolling in, he didn’t purchase material goods. Keith Raniere was in it for two things—power and sex.

I’m not going to go into the sexual details. There’s plenty online if you’re curious, and some of it sheds light about how crazy Ranier’s sex cult was. What’s baffling about this case is the mind-frame these duped women were in when they submitted to Kieth Raniere’s brand.

Rolling Stone Magazine took on the story in late 2019 after Raniere’s convictions but before his sentencing. In How NXIVM Was the Ultimate Wellness Scam, the writer quotes one of Raniere’s former girlfriends, Barbara Bouchey, who said, “The women who were willing to sacrifice so much for Raniere, only to get so little in return, had one trait in common. They were what I would call weak-willed women. They were smart, they were sensitive, they were caring. But were they confident? No. Raniere went out of his way to surround himself with women who were successful by societal standards—privileged, attractive, well-educated—but who did not have the financial independence nor street smarts to assert themselves and their own autonomy.”

Toni Natalie, another ex-girlfriend, said, “While the women in Raniere’s inner circle were all extremely bright, they tended to lack substantive family ties, and all were insecure and damaged in some fundamental way, making them easier to control. He convinces you that your successes are not your own. Your successes are only because he exists.”

Wellness industry expert and author, Jessica Knoll, wrote an op-ed for the New York Times just before the judge gave Raniere his 120 years. It went internet-viral and probably offended some when Knoll stated, “The wellness industry is a function of the patriarchal beauty standard under which women either punish themselves to become smaller or are punished for failing to comply. When you have to deprive, punish, and isolate yourself to look ‘good,’ it is impossible to feel good.

Knoll notes, “Wellness isn’t about being freer or stronger. It isn’t about loosening the shackles of oppression and throwing them to the wind. It’s about slipping them onto our wrists and letting someone else tighten the screws. It’s about powerlessness. It’s about surrender. It’s about love, and pain, and letting people tell us we don’t know the difference. That’s the stark truth of the wellness industry and the brutal truth about the condition of womanhood in general, which is that so many of us hate ourselves so intensely and so often that there is no limit to the amount of pain we are willing to endure to change that.

The Rolling Stone closed their story with this summation that you may or may not agree with:

Keith Raniere was wrong about a lot of things. He was right about one, though. Many women are raised to believe that their ability to solve all of their problems is directly correlated with their proximity to a man. And when you are raised to believe that men carry with them the solutions to all of your problems, it isn’t so much of a stretch to conclude that this could mean any man—that one with the ring, or that one with the job offer, or that one with the soft patient voice and the floppy hair and a seemingly endless supply of crewneck sweaters, who looks at you like you are his breakfast and tells you, in a soft, patient voice, that breaking you down is the only way for you to become stronger.

WOULD YOU BE A GOOD POLICE INTERROGATOR?

Interrogation. Just the word elicits your vision of forcible confinement in a hot and windowless room, shoved in a wooden chair with one leg shorter than others, a bright light from a bare bulb burning over your head, and hulking forms of trench-coated detectives firing hardboiled questions in your face. The truth is different. A lot different. There’s a high skill involved in getting useful information from people, and not everyone is cut out for the job. Are you? Would you be a good police interrogator?

To start, drop the “interrogation” word. It’s not correct to say “interrogation” in today’s professional police procedures. The right terms are “interview” and “dialogue exchange”. And, they’re more applicable because the vast majority of police-civilian interactions are respectful interchanges of relevant information.

I’ve spent a good part of my life talking to people and getting information. I learned long ago that you get more bees with honey than you do with vinegar. I also learned you slide a lot further on bullshit than you do on gravel. I made those principles the core of my information-gathering days. I also practiced another fundamental rule. That’s that the best interrogators interviewers are the best listeners.

Where’s this going? I subscribe to Psychology Today. I recently read a piece by Mary Ellen O’Toole, Ph.D. in her regular column Criminal Minds where she set out ten questions with graded responses to her Are You A Good Listener Test. Dr. Mary Ellen O’Toole was a senior profiler at the FBI’s Behavioral Analysis Unit and author of Dangerous Instincts: How Gut Feelings Betray Us. Here’s her short ten-question exam to see if you would be a good police interrogator. Sorry… police interviewer.

ARE YOU A GOOD LISTENER TEST

1. Typically, how emotional (frightened, insecure, angry, etc.) do I get when I am attempting to interview someone? (Rate this on a scale of 1-3)

1 = very emotional
2 = nonemotional and detached
3 = I remain interested and tempered

2. Typically, how often do I interrupt?

1 = several times during a conversation
2 = just once or twice during a conversation
3 = almost never

3. Do I say things like “What? You have got to be kidding me,” – or- “That reminds me of the time I…” – or – “You think that’s bad, let me tell you about…”

1 = frequently
2 = sometimes
3 = rarely

4. Do I roll my eyes, put my head down, shake my head back and forth, throw myself back in my chair, turn away, get up and walk away, show signs of anger or threatening behavior, or otherwise display that I am not paying attention or do not like what the other person is saying?

1 = frequently
2 = sometimes
3 = rarely

5. Do I fidget until people stop talking and then immediately respond without considering what they’ve said?

1= frequently
2 = sometimes
3 = rarely

6. Do I let my mind wander to all the other things on my “to do” list and keep thinking that I just don’t have the time for this?

1 = frequently
2 = sometimes
3 = rarely

7. Do I wait until the nanosecond when the speaker goes to take a breath to pounce on him or her with my opinions?

1 = frequently
2 = sometimes
3 = rarely

8. Do I hijack the conversation? For instance by saying something like, “Look we’ve been over this a million times. Your ideas are just not going to work. This is what we are going to do.”

1 = frequently
2 = sometimes
3 = rarely

9. I reflect the person’s thoughts and feelings back to the person I am listening to.

1 = rarely
2 = sometimes
3 = frequently

10. I ask open-ended questions to encourage the other person to talk.

1 = rarely
2 = sometimes
3 = frequently

Total Score = ______

The higher the score – the better your listening skills tend to be and the better interrogator interviewer you would be. Note: This is not a scientific test and has not been validated or otherwise vetted. These opinions are those of Dr. O’Toole and do not represent the views of the FBI.

My experience is that the key to successful information gathering is simply listening to what’s being said. Does it make sense? Does it fit? Does it make you ask more questions? Or does what’s being said to you satisfy what you’re after?

Let me know in the comments how you made out on the test!

LAST STATEMENTS FROM THE TEXAS DEATH ROW CHAMBER

When it comes to capital punishment, the State of Texas leads the execution pack. Texas has the highest death row inmate count in the US and carries out the most lethal injections in the country. The Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) administers their state’s death sentence mandate and maintains an informative website with transparent statistics. Part of the TDCJ site are last statement quotes from the condemned after they’re strapped to the gurney and wait to die from a needle.

It sounds macabre (or downright weird) to spend the afternoon paging through the TDCJ Death Row site and reading last words of people about to die. However, I found it fascinating how folks who were about to meet their maker thought. I’ll introduce you to some of these doomed inmates, tell you what they did, and let you read verbatim quotes as they were about to expire. But first, let me tell you what brought this on.

A few years ago, I had business in Austin, Texas and was on my way to the airport to fly back to Canada. There, along the side of Route 183, was this gigantic electronic billboard with information by the TDCJ of how many executions had been done since capital punishment was reinstated in 1974. It included the next scheduled date of a state-sanctioned killing.

“Now there’s something you won’t see up in Canada.” I pointed at the sign and said to the taxi driver. “What?” The cabbie sounded puzzled. “Y’all don’t execute felons up there?” I shook my head. “No, but we probably should. I can think of a few names for the list.”

I never forgot this experience and, from time to time, I check in with the TDCJ Death Row website to see how they’re making out in the Lone Star State. I did that today, and I surfed the “Recent Executions” page and read some of the “Last Statements”. I thought it might make a good blog post that fits with my tagline “Provoking Thoughts on Life, Death, and Writing”. It also might trigger a few unsubscribers to my mailing list.

Here are a few felons who appeared in the Texas death row chamber – including what they did to get there and what they said going out.

Abel Revill Ochoa shot and killed his wife and two daughters, aged 7 years and 9 months. He also killed his parents-in-law in an unspeakable manor. Last Statement: “Yes sir. I would like to thank God, my dad, my Lord Jesus savior for saving me and changing my life. I want to thank you for forgiving me. Thank you, Warden.

Michael Riley beat two defenseless women to death with a baseball bat and then performed necrophilia on their bloody corpses. Last Statement: “I’m ready. I told you years ago that I was ready. Synnova, tell everyone I got full on Chicken and Pork Chops. Rodney, take care of my mom. To the fellas on the row, stay strong. Renee, I love you baby. Fleetwood is up out of here. I’m ready, Warden.

Larry Swearingen strangled a 19-year-old girl with a black electrical cord. Last Statement: “Lord forgive them. They don’t know what they are doing.”

Billy Wayne Coble shot his estranged wife’s parents and brother dead, then stole their car and kidnapped his wife after tying their four kids to a bed. This ended in a wild car chase with the police where the getaway car was wrecked but the wife and Coble survived. Last Statement: “Yes Sir, that will be five Dollars. I love you, I love you, and I love you. Mike, I love you. Where’s Nelley at? I love you. That will be five dollars. Take Care.”

Robert Moreno Ramos murdered his wife and children, aged 3 and 4, by bludgeoning them with a blunt object. He hid the bodies under the floor and had a new woman move in three days later. When the smell started, she suspected something and called the police. Last Statement: “I am thankful for the humane treatment that I was given here at the 2 prisons that I was at. I am getting my gold watch that it took the Governor 30 years to forge. Thank you God, Lord send me a chariot. I’m ready.”

Juan Edward Costello cold-bloodedly shot a 19-year-old male during a robbery. Last Statement: “To everyone that has been there for me you know who you are.  Love y’all.  See y’all on the other side. That’s it.”

Troy Clark beat a woman, drowned her in a bathtub, and then dumped her body in a rural Texas ditch. She was found five months later. Last Statement: “I’m not the one that killed Christina, so whatever makes ya’ll happy.  I love ya’ll. I’ll see you on the other side. Ya’ll be good. OK Warden, I’m ready.”

Erick Daniel Davila crashed a Houston birthday party and shot a mother and her five-year-old daughter. Last Statement: “Yes, I would like to say nephew it burns, huh. You know I might have lost the fight but I’m still a soldier. I still love you all. To my supporters and family y’all hold it down. Ten Toes down right. That’s all.”

Rosendo Rodriguez III sexually assaulted and killed a pregnant  woman, cut her up and removed the fetus, then stashed the severed remains in a suitcase buried in a park. Last Statement: “The medical examiner and the chief nurse were engaged in numerous false illegal acts. They tried to cover up that thousands were wrongfully convicted by Matt Powell, district attorney. This needs to be brought to justice. I call upon the FBI to investigate Matt Powell and the Lubbock County Medical Examiner. Lastly, I was born and raised Catholic and it was not lost upon me that this is Holy Week and last Sunday was Palm Sunday. Yesterday was my birthday. Today is the day I join my God and father. The state may have my body but not my soul. In order to save my brothers on death row I call upon Pope Francis and all the people of the world. Lastly, I want everyone to boycott every single business in the state of Texas until all the businesses are pressed to stop the death penalty. With that Lord I commend my spirit. Warden, I am ready to join my father.”

William Rayford beat, strangled, and stabbed a woman to death then threw her body in a creek. The woman’s 11 and 14-year-old sons watched the crime. Last Statement: “First, I would like to praise my Lord Jesus Christ. I ask for forgiveness to the Thomas Family for my past choices I made.  Carol did not deserve for what I’ve done.  I’ve asked God to forgive me.  Please find it in your hearts to forgive me.  I’m sorry it has been bothering me for a long time.  So I now pray and I will keep you all in my prayers.  I hope you find it in your heart to forgive me.  I’m sorry. To my supporters Daniel, brother Charlie, Steve and all who stood by me, thank you.  By no means am I happy for what I’ve done.  I have asked the Lord to forgive me.  Please tell everyone I’m certain I left off some names.  Tell the kids I’m sorry for being a disappointment.  Thank you. God bless.  I’m ready, Warden.”

Anthony Allen Shore was a Texas serial killer who was caught for four sex-killings. Last Statement: “I will die with a clear conscience.  I made my peace. There is no others. I would like to wish a Happy Birthday to Barbara Carrol, today is her birthday. God bless everybody until we meet again. I am ready, Warden.”

Ruben Ramirez Cardenas was convicted of kidnapping a 16-year-old girl from her bedroom and taking her by vehicle to a remote location where he raped and beat her to death. Last Statement: “I will not and cannot apologize for someone else’s crime, but, I will be back for justice!  You can count on that!

Robert Lynn Pruett was serving a life sentence for murder when he beat a correctional officer to death. Last Statement: “I’m ready to go but I’ll be back. Nighty night everybody, nighty night everybody. I’m done, Warden.”

Taichin Preyor stalked his ex-girlfriend, broke into her home, and fatally stabbed her. Last Statement: “I’d like to say, ‘Justice has never advanced by taking a life… by Coretta Scott King’. That’s it.”

Terry Edwards was a Texas career criminal who got the death sentence for shooting two clerks during a robbery. Last Statement: “I made peace with God. I hope y’all make peace with this.”

Barney Ronald Fuller got in a dispute with his neighbors, so he shot them. Last Statement: “I don’t have anything to say, you can proceed Warden Jones.”

Coy Westbrook was paroled and invited to his ex-wife’s home. Drinking ensued and the ex disappeared with two men who Coy found her having sex with. He shot the ménage-a-trois as well as three other men at the house. Last Statement: “I have no bad sentiment towards anyone.  I can understand your outrage and why you are mad at me.”

Richard Matheson killed a man for no other reason than to watch him die. Last Statement:  “I am alright with this, you have to live and die by the choices that we make. I have made mine. I am ready.”

Raphael Holiday burned three kids to death in their Madison County home. Two were step-children and one was his own 1-year-old daughter. Last Statement: “Yes, I would like to thank all of my supporters and loved ones. I love you, love y’all, always going to be with y’all. Thank you, Warden.”

Licho Escamilla shot and killed a Texas cop. Last Statement: “From California to New York thank you for all of your support. Pope Francis, God’s children has asked the State of Texas to switch my death sentence to life in prison. But the State of Texas has refused to listen to God’s children, they will have to take that up with God. Let everyone know it’s not over. Keep your head up, keep your faith in God. That’s it, Warden.”

Lester Bower was a Texas hit-man for a Columbian drug cartel. He was convicted on multiple gangland murders. Last Statement: “Much has been written about my case, not all of it has been the truth. But the time is over and now it is time to move on. I want to thank my attorneys for all that they have done. The have afforded me the last quarter of a century. I would like to thank my wife, my daughters, family and friends for unwavering support, and all of the letters and well wishes over the years. Now it is time to pass on. I have fought the good fight, I held the faith. I am not going to say goodbye. I will simply say until we meet again. Thank you, Warden.”

Charles Derrick broke into his ex-girlfriend’s place and strangled a man who was visiting her. He waited till the girlfriend and her mother arrived and he killed them, too. Last Statement: “I’m ready to go home.”

Manuel Garza shot a police officer with the officer’s own service handgun. Last Statement: “Thank you for being here. I am sorry for all of the pain that I have caused my family, friends, and extended family. Especially to the Police Officers, I know you probably hate me. What happened between me and Rocky happened too fast. I didn’t know what happened. I wish y’all peace and love. I hope you have found God just like I have. God bless y’all. I will see you on the other side. I love you.

Donald Newbury escaped from prison where he was serving firearms and robbery convictions. Newbury shot a police officer who responded to another hold-up Newbury was pulling. Last Statement: “Each new indignity defeats only the body… pampering the spirit with obscure merit. That’s it.

Robert Ladd robbed and hammer-murdered a 39-year-old woman while he was out on mandatory supervision by the TDCJ. Last Statement: “A revenge death won’t get you anything. Let’s ride.”

Cleve Foster sexually assaulted and shot a 28-year-old-woman. He dumped her body in a drainage ditch where pipe-layers found it months later. Last Statement: “Warden, I am looking to leave this place on wings of a homesick angel. Ready to go home to meet my maker.”

Cary D. Kerr was convicted by a Texas jury for raping a woman and throwing her out of a moving vehicle that caused her death. Last Statement: “I am an innocent man. Never trust a court-appointed attorney. I am ready, Warden. Check that DNA, check Scott. Here we go. Lord Jesus, Jesus.”

Roy Pippin maintained his innocence till the end. A Texas jury convicted Pippin of multiple murders to cover his company financial embezzlement. Last Statement: “Yes sir, I charge the people of the jury. Trial Judge, the Prosecutor that cheated to get this conviction. I charge each and every one of you with the murder of an innocent man. All the way to the CCA, Federal Court, 5th Circuit, and Supreme Court. You will answer to your Maker when God has found out that you executed an innocent man. May God have mercy on you. If my murder makes it easier for everyone else let the forgiveness please be a part of the healing. Go ahead Warden, murder me.

Douglas Roberts kidnapped, robbed, and murdered a man in San Antonio then ran over him with a car to crush the evidence before phoning the police to report a dead body. Last Statement: “Yes sir, Warden. Okay, I’ve been hanging around this popsicle stand way too long. Before I leave, I want to tell you all. When I die, bury me deep, lay two speakers at my feet, put some headphones on my head and rock and roll me when I’m dead. I’ll see you in Heaven someday. That’s all, Warden.”

Suzanne Basso was a nasty piece of work. She sucked a mentally-handicapped man into a marriage proposal and took a life insurance policy on him. Then, she beat him to death with a belt, a bat, steel-toed boots, and her bare hands. Last Statement: *Quote from TDCJ – This offender declined to make a last statement.*