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At the prison gate, armed officers stand by as he's put in a van and secured to a seat for the roughly 45-mile trip to Huntsville that he says feels like a "90-mph drive." There are no side windows in the back of the van where Foster, accompanied by four officers, rides to the oldest prison in Texas. Only the back doors have windows. "It's like stepping back in time, dungeons and dragons," he said of entering through two gates at the back of the Huntsville Unit, more commonly known as the Walls Unit because of its 20-foot-high red brick walls. Prison officials then hustle him into the cell area adjacent to the death chamber. "Going inside, it's a little spooky. You can tell it's been there a while," he said. "Everything's polished, but still it's real old. You look down the row. History just screams at you. "It's almost like 'Hotel California,'" he said, referring to the song by The Eagles. "You can check out anytime, but you can't leave." Both times he's been there, most recently last September, he's been treated "like a human being," Foster said. Officers look at him but don't smile, he said. At one point, he saw someone walk by with a bulging envelope that he assumed contained the lethal injection drugs. At 4 p.m., during his first trip to the death house in January 2011, he was served a final meal. He'd asked for several items, including chicken. "It tasted so good," he said. "It actually had seasoning on it." Two hours later, at the start of a six-hour window when his execution could be carried out, he received the Supreme Court reprieve. Since then, inmates no longer get to make a final meal request. Procedures were changed after a state lawmaker complained that condemned inmates were taking advantage of the opportunity and that murder victims never get that chance. Foster was looking forward to nachos and chicken, the same food served to other inmates the day last year that he made his second trip to the death house, but he never received it. Instead, his attorney tearfully brought him news of another Supreme Court reprieve just before dinner time. He asked for a doggie bag but was refused. He was put back in the van and returned to death row. "I've already told the chaplain: Take the phone off the hook before 4 o'clock," he said, anticipating his next trip Tuesday. "I want to get that last meal."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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