Robert Atworth was executed by the State of Texas for the murder of Thomas Carlson
According to court documents Robert Atworth would rob Thomas Carlson who would be stabbed and shot multiple times plus had his finger cut off to get at his ring
Robert Atworth would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death
Robert Atworth would be executed by lethal injection on December 14 1999
Robert Atworth Photos
Robert Atworth Case
Robert Ronald Atworth shot to death a man he met on the side of a road in April of 1995.
Thomas Carlson, 56, was found shot in the head, torso and groin, and stabbed in the abdomen and chin. His body had been dumped between two trash dumpsters behind a health club in Richardson, Texas. His wallet was missing and his little finger was severed in order to obtain his ring.
Atworth was arrested the next day when he was caught burglarizing a home in Garland, Texas. He was still driving Thomas’s car and had in his possession the 9mm gun Thomas was killed with and the pistol that Thomas carried for protection.
Kris Mosley and Kim Beyer won’t trek to Huntsville this week to watch their father’s killer be put to death. They say there’s no point. “I have worked so hard to move forward, and going down there would be a detour,” said Ms. Mosley, 36. “I don’t want to give him my time, my energy, my thoughts.”
Ms. Beyer, 39, added, “Him dying doesn’t help me one bit.” Thomas Carlson, a former senior insurance executive living with Ms. Mosley in Plano, was found shot to death between 2 trash bins behind a Richardson health club in 1995.
One of his pinkie fingers had been cut off, and he had knife wounds in his chest, which detectives said suggested torture.
Robert Ronald Atworth, who told police that his alter ego, “Nino,” had killed the 56-year-old man, is scheduled to be executed Tuesday.
Authorities said Atworth spotted his victim at an intersection and posed as an off-duty police officer while tapping at Mr. Carlson’s car window. Mr. Carlson was not feeling well and asked Atworth to call his daughter for heart medication, according to court testimony.
Mr. Carlson had been living with Kris, the youngest of his daughters, in Plano while he looked for a job. Kris Mosley thinks her father became ill as he drove home and was headed to a hospital when Atworth approached him on Campbell Road just west of North Central Expressway.
The sisters say they have survived the tragedy with support from family and therapy from a victim’s assistance program through the Richardson Police Department. “Dad would have wanted me to get past this,” Ms. Mosley said. “You can survive no matter what tragedy hits your life. There are positives. There are always things to be grateful for.”
Mr. Carlson’s family thinks he reached a greater peace in the last year of his life. He was looking inward and re-examining his faith as if “part of him was getting ready for something,” Ms. Mosley said.
Atworth requested in May that all appeals on his behalf be ended so his lethal injection could take place as soon as possible.
The request was granted by an appeals court after 2 psychiatrists found him competent, officials said. Toby Shook, the prosecutor who tried Atworth, said he thought the inmate was the 1st from Dallas County to make such a request.
The day after Mr. Carlson was slain, Garland police arrested Atworth while answering a burglary call in a residential back yard.
When officers found Atworth, he was carrying two guns and had Mr. Carlson’s wallet and credit cards. Mr. Carlson’s car was parked nearby, police said. He had gone to the Garland address to kill another man because of a drug deal gone bad, police said.
Mr. Carlson’s severed finger was found in Atworth’s freezer. “It was more of souvenir for him,” said Richardson Detective Dan White, who was assigned to the murder case and will witness the execution.
At one point in Atworth’s videotaped statement to police, he began speaking as if in a trance and identified himself as “Nino.”
Speaking as “Nino,” Atworth claimed self-defense as a motive and said he tampered with evidence to get caught. “He said he had fingers in jars all over the country. He said he had a mentor who trained him how to be killer,” Detective White said. “It was pretty freaky….,” he said. “The dual-personality act was unique.”
Wayne Huff, who represented Atworth at trial, said his client was difficult to defend. “He pretty much sealed his fate before we got appointed,” Mr. Huff said. Atworth’s family could not be reached for comment.
Detective White said he remembers Robert Atworth’s leers when he was sentenced to death in 1996. “He turned around and nodded and winked at me,” the officer said. “I thought, ‘Well, Bob, you got what you asked for.’ “