Bryan Wolfe Executed For Bertha Lemell Murder

Bryan Wolfe was executed by the State of Texas for the murder of Bertha Lemell

According to court documents Bryan Wolfe would break into the home of eighty four year old Bertha Lemell. The elderly woman would be stabbed to death and her home would be robbed

Bryan Wolfe would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Bryan Wolfe would be executed by lethal injection on May 18 2005

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When Was Bryan Wolfe Executed

Bryan Wolfe was executed on May 18 2005

Bryan Wolfe Case

A twice-convicted robber from Louisiana was headed to the Texas death chamber Wednesday evening for the fatal stabbing of his children’s 84-year-old babysitter during a robbery.

Bryan Wolfe, 44, was on parole from Louisiana and had fled a work-release program when he was arrested for the 1992 slaying of Bertha Lemell at the woman’s home in Beaumont. She had been stabbed 26 times. Around $40 was believed taken from the woman’s change purse, which also had contained some black-eyed peas she carried for good luck.

Wolfe’s lethal injection would be the seventh this year in Texas, the nation’s most active death penalty state. Another execution was set for Thursday. The U.S. Supreme Court this week refused to review Wolfe’s case, and no late legal efforts to block the punishment were attempted. “There’s really nothing we can do,” said his appeals lawyer, Michael Jamail. Earlier appeals contended Wolfe’s court-appointed trial lawyer was incompetent and ill-prepared to address the then relatively new DNA technology authorities used to link Wolfe to the killing.

Wolfe, from Houma, La., was seen in Lemell’s neighborhood shortly before and after the slaying, according to court documents. When he was picked up by police two days later, he had deep cuts on his right hand. He said they were from a broken beer bottle. Authorities believed he cut himself with the knife while he was stabbing the woman. DNA from blood samples on a door knob, the floor and towels at Lemell’s house, plus on the black coin purse and a knife found at the scene, matched Wolfe’s DNA.

Wolfe had been to prison after confessing to an armed robbery in Louisiana while serving in the Army in 1983, then another robbery in Houma in 1989. He blamed marijuana and cocaine for his crimes. He was released from a Louisiana prison in 1991 after one year of a three-year sentence. Court records showed he absconded from a work-release center. Less than three months later, Lemell was killed. She had been watching his two children while his wife worked.

“He didn’t have a very good past, and it was just a truly despicable crime,” said Ed Shettle, the Jefferson County assistant district attorney who prosecuted Wolfe. “If you are going to steal something, money from somebody who knows you and you don’t want to get caught, what are you going to do? You are going to murder them. And that’s what he did.”

Leo Lemell, the slain woman’s 80-year-old cousin, said the years since Wolfe was given the death penalty have been difficult. “It always frustrates you when something runs on and on and on,” he said. “They need to get it over with one way or another.”

http://www.dentonrc.com/s/dws/dn/latestnews/stories/051905dntexexce.bdc251d2.html

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