"I’ve hurt a lot of people and a lot of people have hurt me. I
love ya’ll so much. Life don’t end here it goes on forever. I’ve
had to learn lessons in life the hard way. One day there won’t
be a need to hurt people," Pruett was quoted as saying in his
last statement by the criminal justice department.
About an hour before the scheduled execution, the Supreme Court
said it rejected Pruett's petition. It did not provide a reason.
Pruett, sent to prison as a teenager and serving a 99-year
sentence as an accessory to a murder committed by his father,
was convicted of killing prison guard Daniel Nagle by stabbing
him repeatedly with a shank.
The Nagle family said in a statement released by the department:
"Though it has been over 18 years since he was taken from us, we
still miss Daniel every day and the execution will in no way
minimize our loss."
Prosecutors said he murdered the corrections officer because
Nagle had reprimanded him for carrying a sandwich into the
recreation yard. Torn pieces of the disciplinary report on
Pruett were found near Nagle's body.
"No witnesses testified they observed the attack, and no
physical evidence connected Robert Pruett to the murder,"
Pruett's lawyers wrote in their petition to the Supreme Court
filed on Tuesday.
They said Pruett, who has maintained his innocence, was
convicted on the unreliable testimony of prison informants and
that neither Pruett's fingerprints nor DNA material were found
on the torn report. Lawyers had also asked the state to release
the shank and Nagle's clothes for DNA testing after inconclusive
tests took place in 2000.
In a legal filing with the Supreme Court, the state of Texas
said: "Pruett has raised nothing new that casts any doubt on his
guilt."
(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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