Huntsville, Texas - Capital murder defendant Suzanne Basso was scheduled to be executed Wednesday for the killing of a mentally-impaired man. If her appeals fail, she would become only the 14th woman executed in the US since the Supreme Court allowed the death penalty to resume in 1976.
Basso, 59, was scheduled to be put to death for the 1998 for the torture slaying of 59-year-old Louis “Buddy” Musso near Houston. Basso's lawyer argued that she is not mentally competent enough to face execution because she suffers from delusions, and that the state statute governing competency was unconstitutionally flawed. He also challenged the legality of a medical examiner's testimony.
While executions of women are rare - Basso's would be just the fifth in Texas since 1976 - nearly 1,400 male inmates have been put to death in the US since the death penalty resumed, 505 of them in Texas.
A state judge last month ruled that Basso had a history of fabricating stories about herself, sought attention and manipulated psychological tests. One psychiatrist indicated additional testing over an extended period of time “would provide a more reliable evaluation,” attorney Winston Cochran said in a federal court filing.
“Why rush to judgment on Basso?” he asked, seeking a punishment delay that was refused Monday by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals and a federal judge.
He took his appeals Tuesday to the 5th US Circuit Court of Appeals, one step short of the Supreme Court.
Colleen Barnett, who prosecuted Basso more than 15 years ago, said there was no certainty which Suzanne Basso would appear when she showed up for court.
“She would pretend to be different things,” recalled. “One setting she would pretend to be blind. One setting she would pretend she couldn't walk. One setting she had the voice of a little girl.
“I don't know how to describe her.”
At the competency hearing, Basso testified from a hospital bed wheeled into a Houston courtroom and talked about a snake smuggled into a prison hospital in an attempt to kill her. Cochran said a degenerative disease has left her paralyzed. Basso contended her paralysis was the result of a jail beating years ago.
At the hearing, she acknowledged representations about her background -that she was a triplet, worked in the New York governor's office, had a relationship with former Gov. Nelson Rockefeller - were untrue. She originally was from the Albany and Schenectady areas of upstate New York.
At her trial, Basso was portrayed as the ringleader of a group of people who fatally tortured Musso to steal his money. Musso, who was mentally impaired but cared for himself, had met either Basso or her son at a church carnival in New Jersey. He left there to move in with her in Jacinto City, just east of Houston.
“She lured him to Texas with the idea they'd get married,” Barnett said.
Evidence showed that she already was married, made herself the beneficiary of insurance policies purchased for Musso and took over his Social Security pension benefits.
Five others, including Basso's son, also were convicted for Musso's death. Prosecutors sought the death penalty only for Basso.
Court documents detailed extensive abuse Musso endured days before his body was found in a ditch by a jogger.
He'd been bathed in a solution of bleach and pine cleaner and scrubbed with a wire brush. An autopsy showed he had at least 17
cuts to his head, 28 cuts and cigarette burns on his back, bruises all over his body, a skull fracture, a fractured bone in his neck, 14 broken ribs and two dislocated vertebrae.
“It was just horrible, horrible, horrible,” Barnett said. “When you talk about the death penalty, what the death penalty was made for, it was for a case like this.”
Basso told police in a written statement that she drove Musso's body to the dump site.
She became a suspect after reporting Musso missing in an apparent attempt to distance herself from his slaying once his body was discovered.
None of the eight other women on Texas death row has an execution date.
Sapa-AP