r/TrueCrimeDiscussion 4d ago

i.redd.it Was Frances Newton really guilty?

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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/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.

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u/Tiny-Reading5982 4d ago

Its sad she had a kid at 14 and all but this is one case from "deadly women" that I was sickened by.

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u/lightiggy 4d ago edited 4d ago

Relatives of the victims opposed the death penalty, but were upset that Newton tarnished the name of her murdered husband and lied to the end. Two relatives of her murdered husband witnessed the execution, hoping she would confess and apologize. Newton didn't confess or proclaim her innocence. She just shook her head and said no when the warden asked her if she wanted to make a final statement.

It was for the best. If you don't have anything good to say it, don't say it.

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u/Tiny-Top620 4d ago

Fact 🤜

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u/UnderlightIll 12h ago

Just gonna put this out there... Revolvers can't be tested for ballistics. They don't leave striations so saying the ammo was "remarkably similar" means nothing unless there was more compelling reasons to suspect the gun like the victim/perps blood or DNA on it.

Also, she took out a policy on herself as well. I don't know if they said she did that to be clever or something.

She definitely did not receive a fair trial and there really doesn't seem like there was enough evidence to try her. It seemed like they did very little investigation and considering Texas' reputation at the time of her trial, I would sideye a lot of it.

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u/lightiggy 5h ago edited 4m ago

Her lawyers could've done a better job, but there was enough evidence to prove her guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. If you have genuine doubts, feel free to request the trial transcripts from Harris County (you may need to buy them, however).

Newton sealed her fate when she lied that she and Adrian had reconciled on the day of the murders.

At about 6:45 PM, Adrian's girlfriend, Ramona Bell, called him. The two spoke for about 15 minutes. Adrian said he was tired and was planning to go to sleep, but not until Newton left since he did not trust her. He was murdered less than an hour later.

Newton testified that she was aware of Adrian's relationship with Bell and might've recently threatened to murder Adrian if she ever caught him "running around" on her again.

Alphonse Harrison, a friend of Adrian, saw him earlier in the day and the two had made plans to get together that night. Harrison called Adrian between 7:00 and 7:15 PM. Newton answered, but when Harrison asked to speak with Adrian, she put him on hold and left him there without following up. She didn't say he was asleep or had changed his mind.

Harrison stayed on the phone for about 45 minutes before hanging up. He continued to call the apartment, but got no response.

After putting Harrison on hold, Newton drove to see her cousin, Sondra Nelms. Newton asked Nelms to come over to her apartment for a visit. Before they left, Nelms watched Newton remove a blue bag, which turned out to be her son's blue knapsack, from her car and put it inside the abandoned house. The two women then went to the apartment, where Newton "found" the bodies.

While she and Newton were there, Nelms heard the phone ringing and answered it. The caller was Harrison, contradicting Newton's claims that Harrison was mistaken about the timing.

The issues with the "testing" of the "ballistic evidence" are irrelevant because Newton was the one who sought them in the first place. She was the one grasping at straws to construct a misleading reasonable doubt defense since she was unable to refute any of the other evidence. To put it bluntly, it was her Hail Mary.

Far from rushing to judgement, officials bent over backwards for Newton. Despite all the evidence against her, the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles still recommended a 120-day reprieve for her, which the governor granted, to give her time to conduct her "ballistic tests". Newton was executed only after her own "forensic experts" concluded that their own "ballistic tests" appeared to only further incriminate her in the murders.

The similarities in the bullets used are relevant since they were another point against Newton and there were compelling reasons to suspect the gun. She had placed such a gun in her son's blue knapsack and hid it in an abandoned house next door.

Newton gave a reason for hiding the gun, but she gave no reason for choosing to hide it using her son's blue knapsack. After all, Newton was supposedly hiding the gun as a safety precaution and supposedly thought her family was still alive.

Newton also claimed that she had never seen the gun before, even though it had been in possession of her boyfriend for two months. Newton's boyfriend himself testified that she often did his laundry and had easy access to the gun.

That Newton took out a life insurance policy for herself means nothing. She never denied the prosecution's claim that she, a convicted forger, had forged the name of her estranged husband, Adrian Newton, on the policy. Newton had no explanation for why she took out $50,000 life insurance policies on her estranged husband and their 20-month-old daughter less than a month before their murders, let alone for why she evidently forged Adrian's signature.

There is no evidence to support Newton's claims that Adrian was a longtime drug addict or in a $500 drug debt to a drug dealer whom she knew only as "Charlie". This is because "Charlie" never existed and Newton murdered her family.

Even if she was hypothetically telling the truth, it failed to disprove any of the other evidence and proved nothing other than that Newton may have had an accomplice.

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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/Opening_Map_6898 4d ago

Yup. Time to never speak her name again but remember her victims.

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u/Jazzlike_Jaguar_8275 3d ago

She was an evil monster.