Houston Chronicle

Execution date is set for ‘Texas 7’ prisoner

Man who killed lawman in 2000 says judge was racist, ant-Semitic

- By Keri Blakinger STAFF WRITER

A “Texas Seven” escapee who filed an appeal alleging his trial judge was racist and anti-Semitic is now scheduled for execution this year, despite two pending legal claims winding through the courts.

Dallas County Judge Lela Mays on July 3 approved an Oct. 10 death date for Randy Halprin, a Jewish prisoner who in May accused ex-Judge Vickers Cunningham of routinely using obscenity-laced language and racial slurs to describe Jewish and minority defendants.

“In case after case, the U.S. Supreme Court has clearly and consistent­ly enforced defendants’ constituti­onal right to a judge free of bias,” defense attorney Tivon Schardl said Monday in a statement. “Yet, Mr. Halprin’s trial judge, who presided over the death penalty trial, made critical decisions about what evidence the jury would hear, and sentenced Mr. Halprin to die, was biased against Mr. Halprin, referring to him as a ‘f **** n’ Jew’ and a ‘G ***** n k**e.’”

Now 41, Halprin was originally sent to death row for his role in a 2000 prison escape and crime spree that left dead Irving police Officer Aubrey Hawkins. That December, Halprin and six other men took hostages and broke out of the Connally Unit south of San Antonio.

They stole a prison van, then switched it out for a getaway vehicle and fled to Houston, where they pulled off two robberies to stock up on supplies, guns and money. Afterward, they drove toward Dallas, hoping to get away from the search teams hunting for them.

On Christmas Eve, the escapees held up an Oshman’s sporting goods store in Irving, and Hawkins was the first officer who responded to the call. In a chaotic scene, five of the men started firing at the lawman.

When it was over, Hawkins lay dead in the parking lot, shot 11 times and dragged 10 feet by an SUV as the panicked prisoners fled with $70,000 and 44 guns.

Some of the men admitted to to their roles, but Halprin has consistent­ly maintained that he never fired a shot and that he didn’t even want to bring a gun. Still, he and the other five survivors — one man killed himself before he could be captured — were sentenced to die under the controvers­ial law of parties, a Texas statute that holds non-shooters as criminally responsibl­e as triggermen.

After more than 15 years spent fighting his conviction and sentence, Halprin’s legal team learned of Cunningham’s alleged bias last year when he admitted to the Dallas Morning News that he’d set up a living trust that rewarded his children if they married a fellow white Christian.

“I strongly support traditiona­l family values,” he told the paper in a video interview during his 2018 campaign for county commission­er. “If you marry a person of the opposite sex that’s Caucasian, that’s Christian, they will get a distributi­on.”

He lost the Republican runoff by 25 votes. Afterward, defense investigat­ors began interviewi­ng people who knew him to find out more about his views toward Jewish people and minorities.

“If someone were actually African American he would call them (N-word) and their first name,” childhood friend Tammy McKinney recounted. “It was his signature way of talking about people of color.”

Aside from Halprin, only one other Texas 7 prisoner who’d been sentenced to die — Patrick Murphy —is still alive on death row. The others have all been executed.

 ?? Vernon Bryant / Staff photograph­er ?? Death row inmate Randy Halprin, shown in 2003, has been scheduled for execution on Oct. 10 despite two pending legal claims. The killer says his trial judge, Vickers Cunningham, left, is a racist.
Vernon Bryant / Staff photograph­er Death row inmate Randy Halprin, shown in 2003, has been scheduled for execution on Oct. 10 despite two pending legal claims. The killer says his trial judge, Vickers Cunningham, left, is a racist.
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