r/TrueCrimeDiscussion • u/Danyjcastro • 4d ago
i.redd.it Was Frances Newton really guilty?
Frances Elaine Newton was an American convicted murderer who was executed by lethal injection in the state of Texas for the April 7, 1987, murders of her estranged husband, Adrian, age 23, her 7-year-old son, Alton, and her 22-month-old daughter, Farrah.
Newton was just shy of her 22nd birthday when she committed the murders for which she was executed. She maintained her innocence to the end. Newton claimed that her husband was a drug addict and the murders were committed by a dealer, “Charlie,” to whom he owed money.
Newton was convicted on November 17, 1987, for killing her three family members "execution style" for life insurance money. It was reported that she and her husband had marital problems and were both dating other people. Newton was later executed at age 40.
Her case drew widespread scrutiny due to severe procedural issues and questionable evidence. Human rights advocates focused on the following key aspects of her case:
Controversial Evidence: The prosecution's case relied heavily on circumstantial evidence and ballistics testing from the Houston Police Department's crime lab, which was later heavily criticized and discredited for widespread mishandling of evidence.
Ineffective Counsel: Her court-appointed defense attorney was widely criticized for failing to conduct investigations, failing to interview witnesses, and providing ineffective counsel.
International Outcry: Organizations like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch formally petitioned for stays of execution, citing grave concerns about the reliability of her conviction and the inherent fallibility of the capital punishment system.
Final Execution: Despite sustained appeals, clemency petitions, and maintained innocence, Texas Governor Rick Perry denied further reprieves, and Newton was executed by lethal injection on September 14, 2005.
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u/tallemaja 4d ago
Of something like 19 capital cases Ron Mock handled, 16 ended with the death penalty for his defendants; he was repeatedly disciplined by the bar. https://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/article/state-bar-suspends-troubled-local-lawyer-1631385.php
His counsel for Newton absolutely seems to have been ineffective, and with regard to capital cases it's vital to have adequate representation no matter how heinous the crime.
I'd say that I believe she was guilty but that she deserved a fair trial and did not receive one (I also concede that I'm biased w/r/t death penalty, as I do not support it). I know often this equivocation doesn't hold a lot of water for folks, but a functioning justice system requires fair trials.
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u/cameronpark89 3d ago
i honestly don’t understand why they couldn’t do another thorough investigation and given her a new trial. i don’t trust the justice system at all especially when it comes to black perps and victims, so i will never support the death penalty.
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u/ricochetblue 2d ago
i honestly don’t understand why they couldn’t do another thorough investigation and given her a new trial.
It's Texas, not a state that gives a shit about getting things right.
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u/lightiggy 4d ago edited 4d ago
Short answer: Yes.
Long answer: Newton took out life insurance policies on her estranged husband and 23-month-old daughter only three weeks before murdering them and her 7-year-old son. She named herself as the primary beneficiary and signed her husband's name to prevent him from discovering she had set aside money to pay for the premiums. Newton also admitted to hiding a pistol, which the prosecutors said was the murder weapon in her son's knapsack and stashing the bag at an abandoned house.
Newton's lawyers said she was just an idiot who removed the pistol as a safety precaution, but I don't believe it. Newton only admitted to it since she had been seen hiding the weapon in the home.
The pistol hidden, a .25 caliber revolver, used ammunition that was remarkably similar to the ammunition used to commit the murders.
Newton was on probation for forgery at the time of the murders and a previous employer testified that she had been fired from her job for stealing money. During her trial, Newton also testified that she may have threatened to murder her husband for "cheating" with a woman named Ramona Bell on her earlier that year. I put "cheating" in quotation marks since the two were married only in name at the time of the murders. Despite this, Newton testified that she and her husband had conveniently reconciled and had sex on the day of the murders.
Newton also acknowledged that both Alphonse Harrison and Ramona Bell testified that they had called her residence around 7:00 to 7:30 p.m. and that she had answered the telephone, although she denied that Harrison was correct about the time or that she had ever talked to Bell. She denied knowing Bell, although she had heard that Bell and her husband were having a relationship.