Miami Herald

Texas executes man for ’93 murder

- BY MICHAEL GRACZYK

HUNTSVILLE, Texas — A man convicted of gunning down his former commonlaw wife and her brother more than two decades ago in Houston has been put to death by lethal injection.

Willie Trottie’s execution Wednesday was carried out about 90 minutes after the U.S. Supreme Court rejected his last-day appeals. He had contended he had poor legal help at his trial and questioned the potency of the execution drug.

Trottie repeatedly expressed love to witnesses — both people he selected and relatives of his victims, Barbara and Titus Canada — and several times asked for forgivenes­s as he was about to be executed.

“I love you all,” he said. “I’m going home, going to be with the Lord . . . Find it in your hearts to forgive me. I’m sorry.”

As the lethal dose of the powerful sedative pentobarbi­tal took effect, he closed his eyes and breathed quietly. After about eight breaths, he opened his mouth to exhale, then closed it. There was no further movement.

Trottie, 45, was pronounced dead at 6:35 p.m. CDT — 22 minutes after the injection began.

His was the eighth lethal injection this year in Texas, and the first in the nation’s most active death penalty state since recent executions went awry in Oklahoma and Arizona. Unlike those states, where a drug combinatio­n is used for capital punishment, Texas uses a single lethal dose of pentobarbi­tal.

He became the second death row inmate executed in the U.S. on Wednesday. Earl Ringo Jr. received a lethal injection just after midnight in Missouri for a 1998 robbery and double murder.

After Trottie’s execution, relatives of his victims released a statement saying they were relieved justice was “finally served all these years later.”

“It’s time for our family to end this chapter and be able to move on,” the statement read.

Trottie had acknowledg­ed shooting Barbara Canada, 24, and her brother, Titus Canada, 28, at their parents’ home in Houston. But Trottie said the May 1993 shootings were accidental and in self-defense, and not worthy of a death sentence.

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