A woman convicted of torturing and killing a mentally impaired man
she lured to Texas with the promise of marriage was put to death
Wednesday evening in a rare execution of a female prisoner.
The lethal injection of Suzanne Basso, 59, made her only the 14th
woman executed in the U.S. since the Supreme Court in 1976 allowed
capital punishment to resume. Almost 1,400 men have been put to death
during that time.
She appeared to be holding back tears, then smiled at two friends
watching through a nearby window. She mouthed a brief word to them and
nodded.As the drug took effect, she began to snore and was pronounced dead 11 minutes later.
She was sentenced to die for the 1998 slaying of 59-year-old Louis
"Buddy" Musso, whose battered and lacerated body, washed with bleach and
scoured with a wire brush, was found in a ditch outside Houston.
Prosecutors said Basso had made herself the beneficiary of Musso's
insurance policies and took over his Social Security benefits after
luring him from New Jersey.
The execution, the second this year in Texas, came about an hour
after the Supreme Court rejected a last-day appeal from Basso's attorney
who argued she was not mentally competent.
About 60 women are on death row in the U.S., making up about 2
percent of the 3,100 condemned inmates. Texas, the nation's busiest
death-penalty state, now has executed five women and 505 men.
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