McKee Responds to Stay of Scheduled Execution of Randall Wayne Mays

Randall Wayne Mays
Randall Wayne Mays

Several news outlets reported yesterday that the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals stopped the scheduled execution of Randall Wayne Mays. Mays was set to be executed Wednesday for the 2007 shooting deaths of Henderson County Sheriff’s Deputies Tony Ogburn and Paul Habelt.

I asked Henderson County District Attorney R. Scott McKee for a statement on the ruling. He responded with the following, which also does a good job of explaining just what the ruling means:

(Monday’s) order by the Court of Criminal Appeals in Austin (CCA) is disappointing for the family and friends of Paul, Tony and Kevin, as well as the entire law enforcement community.

In Texas and the United States, the law holds that it is unconstitutional to execute a person who does not know why they are to be executed and that the execution is imminent. We believe that Mays is fully competent.

Although the court in Austin issued a stay, they have not overturned Judge Tarrance’s ruling from February 27th that held Mays had not raised substantial doubt of his competency to be executed.

In its order (Monday), the CCA simply stated it needed more time to consider the arguments and briefs of the State and Mays’s attorneys in Austin. One could certainly speculate that Mays’s attorneys made the tactical decision to wait mere weeks before the scheduled execution in order to put the court against the wall with a tight timeline.

At this point the CCA can do one of two things: uphold Judge Tarrance’s findings and ask him to set a new execution date, or reverse his findings and remand the case back to him.

If the latter happens, the court would appoint at least two independent experts to evaluate Mays for his competency to be executed. After the evaluations, another hearing would then be had and Judge Tarrance would have to rule again. And of course, the CCA would review that ruling.

I certainly believe and argued in our brief to the CCA that Judge Tarrance, and not the judges in Austin, is in the best position to evaluate Mays’s competency claims. Judge Tarrance was the trial judge and has handled this case fairly, correctly and efficiently for the past eight years. We certainly hope and advocate for the CCA to uphold his ruling and allow Judge Tarrance to set another execution date.

2 thoughts on “McKee Responds to Stay of Scheduled Execution of Randall Wayne Mays”

  1. Execute Now. In old days a trial was followed promptly by short ride on fast horse then long swing on strong rope. Today justice long delayed by armies of lawyers placing criminal above needs of many victims of a crime!!
    Many lawyers need stick their heads in buckets of horse manure.

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