File photo used only for illustrative purpose
John Battaglia, a 62-year-old man has killed his two young
daughters while the girls’ mother listened on the phone and heard the
gunshots and her children’s screams.According to a report by Yahoo News UK, after the shooting, he went
to a bar with his girlfriend and was arrested shortly afterward at a
tattoo parlour where he was getting rose tattoos to remember his dead
daughters, court documents showed.
The incident happened in Dallas, Texas, in 2001.
John Battaglia had been divorced from his wife, Mary Jean Pearl, for about a year when he fatally shot their two daughters, Mary Faith, then 9 years old, and Liberty, 6, prosecutors said.
At the time of the shooting, Pearl was seeking to have him arrested for violating a protective order by threatening her.
According to court documents, shortly before Battaglia was
scheduled to host his daughters for a regular dinner, a police officer
informed him by phone he needed to surrender for violating his
probation.
The officer asked him to turn himself in so that police would not
have to take him into custody while he was with his daughters, court
documents showed.
After the girls arrived at his apartment, he left a message on his
wife’s phone. When she called back, he put the phone on speaker and
demanded that his wife speak with daughter Mary Faith.
The daughter then asked: “Mommy, why do you want Daddy to go to jail?” and could be heard a few seconds later saying: “No, Daddy, please don’t, don’t do it.”
Then the mother heard gunshots and screams. Battaglia shouted an obscenity at her on the phone, the documents showed.
Pearl called 911 and police found the dead girls in Battaglia’s apartment. Both had been shot multiple times.
He is scheduled to be executed on Thursday (today).
Battaglia, a former accountant, is set to be put to death by lethal
injection at the state’s death chamber in Huntsville at 6 p.m local
time. It would be the third execution this year in the United States,
all in Texas.
Lawyers for Battaglia launched a last-minute appeal with the U.S.
Supreme Court to spare his life, arguing he suffers from severe mental
illness and his “perception of reality may be so distorted that he is
incompetent to be executed.”
They said three experts who examined him found he has “delusional
disorder of the persecutory type,” and was mentally incompetent for
execution.
Lawyers for Texas contend Battaglia understands what he has done,
is competent to be executed and used his intelligence to deceive the
experts.
It took a jury about 20 minutes to convict him.
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