Texas Executes Lester Bower, State's Oldest Prisoner on Death Row
Lester Bower Jr., 67, was convicted in 1983.
-- The oldest prisoner on death row in Texas was executed tonight.
Lester Bower Jr. received a lethal dose of pentobarbital for killing four people in an airplane hangar on a ranch about 60 miles from Dallas in 1983. He was executed hours after the U.S. Supreme Court rejected an appeal from his lawyers.
"Much has been said about this case,” he said while strapped to the death chamber gurney. “Much has been written about this case. Not all if it has been the truth. But the time for discerning truth is over and it's time to move on.”
The Associated Press reported Bower snored quietly half a dozen times after receiving the injection and then stopped moving. He was pronounced dead 18 minutes later.
Bower, 67, has maintained his innocence, saying the men were alive when he left after buying an airplane. Prosecutors said he wanted to buy the airplane from one of the men, but in an attempt to hide the purchase from his wife, he went to the hangar and stole it.
Bower initially lied to his wife and investigators. He later admitted that he had been to the ranch where the four victims -- Bob Tate, Philip Good, Jerry Brown and Ronald Mayes -- were found. Good was a sheriff's deputy and Mayes was a former police officer.
Parts of the plane were later found in his home and he was unable to produce a receipt for the airplane.
Bower is the eighth inmate in Texas to be executed this year.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.