Texarkana Gazette

‘Tourniquet Killer’ to die today in Texas

- By Michael Grazczyk

HUNTSVILLE, Texas—A Houston-area sex offender who was convicted of killing a young woman and confessed to three more strangling deaths is set for lethal injection in Texas tonight in what would be the first U.S. execution of 2018.

The Harris County District Attorney’s office dubbed Anthony Allen Shore the “Tourniquet Killer” because of how he ended his victims’ lives, using a stick to tightly twist a cord around their necks.

“Anthony Shore is the worst of the worst,” Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg said. “He’s a serial killer. He took pleasure in his victims’ suffering. He’s appropriat­e for the death penalty.”

Shore was condemned for the slaying of 21-year-old Maria del Carmen Estrada, who disappeare­d as she walked to work early on April 16, 1992. Her strangled body was later found dumped in the drive-thru lane of a Houston Dairy Queen.

The slaying went unsolved for more than a decade until a tiny particle collected from beneath her fingernail matched the DNA of Shore, by then a convicted sex offender whose DNA had been added to a state database. When police arrested Shore, the former tow truck driver, phone company repairman and parttime musician confessed to killing Estrada and three others: Laurie Tremblay, 15, whose body was found beside a trash bin outside a Houston restaurant in 1986; Diana Rebollar, 9, who was abducted while walking to a neighborho­od grocery store in 1994; and Dana Sanchez, 16, who disappeare­d in 1995 while hitchhikin­g to her boyfriend’s home in Houston. All were Hispanic. At least three of them had been sexually assaulted.

A Harris County jury convicted Shore in 2004 of capital murder in the killing of Estrada. After hearing four days of prosecutio­n evidence on the three other slayings and hearing from three women who testified Shore raped them, the jury recommende­d the death penalty.

Attorneys said Shore’s appeals have been exhausted. The U.S. Supreme Court has refused to review his case.

“We’ve made the best arguments we can,” attorney Knox Nunnally said Tuesday.

A bizarre scheme hatched by a fellow inmate temporaril­y halted Shore’s execution, which had been set for Oct. 18.

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