Texas Plans To Execute a Mom for Killing Her 2-Year-Old, but the Case Has Numerous Problems
The district attorney who put Melissa Lucio away is now behind bars himself.

After 14 years in solitary confinement, Melissa Lucio will be put to death in Texas next month for murdering her 2-year-old daughter. Many independent observers think Lucio was wrongly convicted, and she is behind bars for a reason that resembles a moment in the Salem witch trials.
Accused of being a "dreadful wizard" in Salem, Massachusetts, in 1692, Reverend George Burroughs was said to have bitten several girls. To prove it, according to William James Malone in the New York State Dental Association's newsletter, the reverend's "mouth was pried open and the prosecution compared his teeth with the teeth marks left on the bodies of several injured girls present in the courtroom."
The ostensible match helped send Burroughs to the gallows. Two decades after his death, he was exonerated.
Three hundred years later, in 2007, Lucio and her family—one husband, 12 kids—were getting ready to move. Her youngest daughter, age two, tragically fell down the stairs. Over the course of two days she grew lethargic, barely ate, and eventually became unresponsive.
The family called 911, but the paramedics could not revive the girl. She was pronounced dead at the hospital. Within three hours of the daughter's death, police arrested Lucio.
Following a lengthy and intense interrogation, which involved Lucio being forced to spank a doll harder and harder at the interrogator's urging ("I wouldn't pound on her," Lucio protested), Lucio still maintained her innocence. But finally, she admitted, "I don't know what you want me to say…I guess I did it. I guess I did it."
At her trial in Cameron County, she was defended by Peter Gilman, who neglected to explain a few things, including that Lucio had confessed under duress and that sometimes people give false confessions. In fact, one out of every four cases of wrongful convictions overturned by the Innocence Project has involved a false confession.
The state had interviewed Lucio's other children on video; they all said their mom had never abused them, and one of the kids had even seen their sister fall down the stairs. Gilman never put the kids on the stand, but it's possible he was never given access to the videos.
When the medical examiner testified that the child's bruises were due to abuse, Gilman failed to probe whether there might have been other causes, including the fall. Nor did he present a pathologist for the defense to explain that what can sound like scientific proof is often subjective.
For instance, the examiner said that one mark on the girl was definitely a bite, made by an adult, and it must have been very painful when inflicted.
"That is so prejudicial and completely lacking in scientific basis," Vanessa Potkin, director of special litigation at the Innocence Project, tells Reason.
In fact, the science behind bite marks has been so thoroughly debunked since Lucio's case that the state of Texas has issued a moratorium on bite mark analysis in court.
The problem with many seemingly scientific pronouncements on things like bruise, bite, arson, and ballistic analysis, is that "often there are no standard protocols governing forensic practice in a given discipline." That's according to the National Academy of Sciences in a 2009 report, "Strengthening Forensic Science in the United States: A Path Forward."
"And even when protocols are in place," the report added, "they are often vague and not enforced."
With the exception of DNA analysis, the report concluded, "The simple reality is that the interpretation of forensic evidence is not always based on scientific studies to determine its validity. This is a serious problem."
Lucio appealed and lost. The case then went to a three judge panel on the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. Unanimously, they determined that Lucio had indeed been prevented from presenting a full and meaningful defense, and ordered a retrial.
At that point, the state of Texas asked that the full appeals court—17 judges—hear the case. A majority concurred that Lucio should get a retrial. But here it gets a little wonky, so Potkin walked me through it: The panel also ruled that, as a federal court, they had to show deference to the state court in this particular matter, so they had to uphold the conviction.
There is another disturbing wrinkle here. Three, in fact.
First, after the trial, Lucio's lawyer—Gilman—was hired by the district attorney, Armando Villalobos. This means, in the words of a motion recently filed by Lucio's appeals team, Gilman now has "dual loyalty" to the defense and to the prosecutor.
His duty to the D.A.'s office "denies Ms. Lucio due process, by preventing her from obtaining un-conflicted cooperation from Mr. Gilman as she investigates whether DA Villalobos suppressed exculpatory or mitigating evidence at the time of the trial."
The second wrinkle is that Gilman's wife, Irma Gilman—who served as his paralegal during the Lucio trial—was also hired by Cameron County. She is now the court administrator for Judge Gabriela Garcia, who is presiding over Lucio's case and signed her death warrant.
If Garcia would recuse herself, as Lucio's lawyers have requested, Lucio's death warrant would be rescinded too.
On that issue, the current D.A., Luis Saenz, has promised a "timely response." He did not respond to a request for comment.
But wait: What happened to the former D.A., Villalobos, who put Lucio away?
That's wrinkle number three: He is serving a 13-year sentence in federal prison for bribery and extortion. He took $100,000 from defense attorneys to secure a favorable outcome in their cases.
Some questions do remain. A documentary about the case raised the possibility that the 2-year-old had been abused by one of Lucio's other daughters and that perhaps Lucio took the rap for her. In the meantime, it should be noted that Lucio, who was two months pregnant when arrested, gave birth to twin boys in prison while awaiting her trial. As her husband was serving four years for endangering a child—the 2-year-old who died—the twins were immediately put up for adoption.
So, in all, 13 children have grown up without their mother, who is behind bars, convicted in a case brought by a man now behind bars and defended by a man hired by the man now behind bars.
If nothing changes, she will die by lethal injection on April 27.
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the reason has to do with the Salem...
Something is missing here.
I was prepared for a patented Reason article where obvious guilt but questionable prosecution become a cause célèbre for an anti-death penalty screed. But nope, this appears to be a Grade A clusterfuck. If even half of this article is true I see reasonable doubt.
Yeah, I was expecting something different. Not sure how this case got so fucked up unless they had stronger evidence of abuse than this article wants to imply.
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Yes. I would like to thank Lenore Skenazy's doing some actual fucking journalism in this story.
The prioritization of actual guilt/innocence ahead of punishment makes the argument against this death penalty and the death penalty so much stronger.
My only gripe is:
The problem with many seemingly scientific pronouncements on things like bruise, bite, arson, and ballistic analysis, is that "often there are no standard protocols governing forensic practice in a given discipline."
I don't disagree with combating bad science but that's what's supposed to happen in a court room. Is an SOP for scientifically convicting someone of child abuse and sentencing them to death what you really want?
I don't disagree with combating bad science but that's what's supposed to happen in a court room.
Unfortunately, courts have forbidden challenging a lot of pseudo science. See the FBI Bullet Lead matching fraud. A lot of innocent people went to jail due to that fraud.
As a prosecutor I will grant you that there has been some awful "science" presented on behalf of the government over the years. As a former civil defense attorney I'd ask that you grant me that the amount of pseudo-science relied upon by the plaintiffs' bar dwarfs that used by the government.
Yes, the consequences in prosecution are significantly more severe, but hired gun experts span the entire ideological spectrum and courts have too often abandoned a gate keeper-role with the verbal wave of the hand "I'll allow it and the jury can decide how much weigh to afford their theory."
Contrary to the article quote - - there are standard protocols in every discipline, though they can vary. Being variable doesn't mean one is good and one is bad though. There is rarely one accepted path where no alternatives are acceptable. And as you said, they can all be challenged.
I don't dismiss Lenore's article, though I've given up on Reason "journalists" doing little more than writing skewed and predictable opinion pieces, and rarely ever including more than selective facts or doing an informed and accurate assessment of both sides.
Yep, my only quibble would be that comparing sizes between a child an adults bite does not seem to be the same as matching dental records to a bite. Size is a lot easier to determine than other specifics.
I would refer you to the quotation by Salted Nuts a page or two down. The examiner found evidence of multiple healed fractures, hair pulled out, and claimed that it was the worst child abuse they had ever seen.
With that glaring of an omission, I can't trust a word that is written here.
At this point, I think I'm going to have to stop reading anything written on the death penalty at this publication. Essentially every single story has omissions to the point of outright fabrication.
"At this point, I think I'm going to have to stop reading anything written on the death penalty at this publication. Essentially every single story has omissions to the point of outright fabrication."
I'm already there. I've learned that any thing of value in the body of the article will be mentioned in the comments.
Along with a whole lot of what should have been included in the article.
Something was clearly missing. Even Texas doesn’t hand out the death penalty to mothers unless the circumstances of abuse are egregious.
To be sure I have this clearly...
Her defense attorney engaged in business with the DA AFTER the case? And this was the same case for the wife, also hired AFTER the case?
And the wife working as an administrative clerk for a judge that has subsequently handled the case - was she actually in a position to influence later decisions, or just a functionary moving wheels in the middle?
And the corrupt DA was prosecuted for taking bribes to secure favorable outcomes for defense... and hired her defense attorney after... is presumed to have unjustly rigged this trial against a defendant?
You had me at "coerced testimony" and "kid fell down stairs," but everything after that could use some critical though.
Hired after the case...with the job offer during or before the case.
I hate these yellow journalism tactics but they've become so ubiquitous that they are hard to spot because they don't stand out anymore. They are part of the expected landscape.
They fall into the same category as "includes an ingredient used in antifreeze" [um, er, water? Propylene glycol?] Guilt by insinuation is for lazy or shady fake journalists who don't have the balls to even state the accusation they want you to assume is true. If she has an accusation, then come out and make it or at least get statements from those involved and give them a chance to refute your Cliffs Notes summary hit job.
Bottom line, I have no idea about this case and don't care. But shame on Reason for allowing this kind of drek writing. Has anyone on staff actually ever gotten both sides of a story or attempted to write a balanced article?
You want the convicted extortionist DA’s side of the story? I’d say all his wins should be retried.
Yes, that would be a good person to interview for this article. But... It was specifically noted he took bribes from the DEFENSE. If you want to retry his suspect cases, you would be challenging the state's losses.
Was Melissa reachable at prison for an interview? Also, what has her husband been doing since?
So far as I can tell, this article is entirely devoid of primary sources.
And now I wish I hadn't checked more.
Hang the bitch.
"With the exception of DNA analysis . . . "
Um, DNA analysis cannot even distinguish male from female any more, how can it be correct on anything?
Eh, does it matter? A birthing person is only a clump of cells after all.
simple way to ensure a mistake is not made.
Texas. 'Nuff said.
Democrat DA & County. 'Nuff said.
13 children
13? 13 kids? 13?!?
At some point, you need to stop shitting out kids. No one is Super Parent. You only have so much attention, so much time, so many resources. Elon Musk is the richest man on the planet and even he stopped at single digits.
This probably could have all been avoided if she insisted her equally irresponsible husband slap a rubber on.
You haven't spent much time down south, or below the border, I take it?
Given all the incels and single female lawyers, someone has to produce the next generation.
Worth noting that the mother didn't take the child to the doctor in time because she feared the doctor would see signs of (past) severe child abuse. No, not a proper death penalty case (if any are), but hardly a case of nothing...
"because she feared the doctor would see signs of (past) severe child abuse".
Where did THAT come from? I don't see a reference to child abuse in any of the linked articles, or in this article.
CB
Divine Revelation is the source of all True Belief™
"I don't see a reference to child abuse in any of the linked articles, or in this article."
There are ways to find related information that the writer did not mention or link...
Holy fuck. Reason, you pathetic rag.
How about checking the fucking court documents?
"The condition of Mariah's body indicated that she had been severely abused. There were bruises in various stages of healing covering her body, there were bite marks on her back, (2) one of her arms had been broken probably about two to seven weeks before her death, and she was missing portions of her hair where it had been pulled out by the roots. The emergency room physician (Vargas) testified that this was the "absolute worst" case of child abuse that he had seen in his 30 years of practice."
"(The chief forensic pathologist for Cameron and Hidalgo Counties) testified that Mariah suffered "multiple contusions" to her head area and that "blunt force head trauma . . . basically means, beat about the head with something-an object, a hand, a fist, or slammed." Farley testified that these injuries would not have been caused by falling down some stairs and that this was the most severe case of child abuse she had ever seen."
https://law.justia.com/cases/texas/court-of-criminal-appeals/2011/21496.html
Literally, typed "Melissa Lucio dead child" into Brave. First page of results. Argh.
Thanks for sharing this... seems pretty open & shut that this was a homicide.
I can’t speak to this case but in 1996, one of my neighbors in Rowlett, Texas, Darlie Routier, murdered two of her three children. She blamed some mysterious intruder but her story quickly fell apart and, eventually, she was convicted of double homicide and sentenced to death. She is still cooling her heals on death row getting ‘three hots and a cot’ while my son, who played with her murdered children, is pushing 40. Can we execute the legacy murderers before we worry about cases that happened a decade or two later! Just saying.
Sorry. Communist Anarchist™ candidate Spike Pinhead's recent LP plank calls for freelance Vigilantes to administer death sentences. Anarchist™ theory, however demands repeal of all laws against arson and murder along with territorial boundaries and other icky things like Constitutions. Manifesto income taxes will continue to force you to house and feed murderers on the off chance some might chance to be of the Anarchist™ persuasion.
Rule #1 for Reason articles like that: they almost certainly don't tell you the whole story, if the author isn't outright lying.
Sad that everyone here and rightfully so, is skeptical that Reason would actually write an objective non biased piece of reporting. I assumed I'd do a five minute search and find more than enough evidence to conclude the sentence should be imposed. But this is the worst case of injustice I have ever read about; and I've read dozens of cases pursued by the Innocence Project that make you want to reverse the sentence or better yet, impose it on some corrupt DA or cop who put the victim on death row. Based on the facts that 90% of everyone looking at them do not (or cannot seriously) dispute, Governor Abbot needs to pardon this woman, period, end of story.
Hey OBL, you got some competition here!
From Wikipedia:
Since you missed my references to the case above, here is the court record again.
https://law.justia.com/cases/texas/court-of-criminal-appeals/2011/21496.html
And, to be absolutely clear on why I want to see the bitch hang:
"The condition of Mariah's body indicated that she had been severely abused. There were bruises in various stages of healing covering her body, there were bite marks on her back, (2) one of her arms had been broken probably about two to seven weeks before her death, and she was missing portions of her hair where it had been pulled out by the roots. The emergency room physician (Vargas) testified that this was the "absolute worst" case of child abuse that he had seen in his 30 years of practice."
"(The chief forensic pathologist for Cameron and Hidalgo Counties) testified that Mariah suffered "multiple contusions" to her head area and that "blunt force head trauma . . . basically means, beat about the head with something-an object, a hand, a fist, or slammed." Farley testified that these injuries would not have been caused by falling down some stairs and that this was the most severe case of child abuse she had ever seen."
Girl-bullying Texas Republicans are not going to be sidetracked by facts, forensics, criminal criminal prosecutors or confessions under torture. Greg Babbitt's nazis have finally got their claws into a non-Aryan "baby-killer" and will not rest until her head on a pike is dancing around a bonfire of Beatles albums and Richard Dawkins books.
Hank, has your Objectivist enthusiasm for abortion finally metastasized into a general fondness for child murder?
Jeez, execute this broad before she breeds again...
In the name of equity, we need to execute more womyn!
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13 kids- A lot I would say. There were 11 kids at the time. It’s still a lot to keep an eye on. They say the little girl was abused bad. I understand that everyone wants to blame the mother. Has anyone talked to the other kids to see what they all have to say. Could the injuries on the little girl be done by her siblings. There have been cases where the siblings has been the one doing the abuse. I understand that the parents have the responsibility to stop it. This woman should not be put to death for a crime that hasn’t been properly assessed. She should get another trial.There should be a better job done this time. Before killing a person. She’s been already serving time. The father of the little girl served how much time? 2 years! This is pathetic . And the whole Salem crap. That should not even be mentioned when it comes to this case. It’s got nothing to do with it!
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"If Garcia would recuse herself, as Lucio's lawyers have requested, Lucio's death warrant would be rescinded too."
Grammar check, for God's sake do a simple grammar check!