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Thread: Gary F. Green - Texas Execution - March 7, 2023

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    Gary F. Green - Texas Execution - March 7, 2023




    Gary F. Green


    Green’s last mugshot before execution


    Testimony to begin in death penalty trial of man accused of killing woman, daughter in Oak Cliff

    Testimony is expected to begin today in the death penalty trial of a man whose stepsons talked him out of killing them after police say he stabbed their mother to death, killed their 6-year-old sister and showed the boys their bodies.

    If a Dallas County jury convicts 39-year-old Gary Green of capital murder, jurors must decide whether to impose a death sentence or send him to prison for life without parole.

    Green is accused of killing his estranged wife, Lovetta Armstead, and her daughter in September 2009 – the same month that Armstead sought to have their marriage annulled. Armstead's family has said she hesitated to end the relationship even though it wasn't good for her.

    Armstead and Green married in June 2009 but had begun living together a year or two earlier, family members have said.

    On Sept. 10, 2009, Armstead filed documents seeking an annulment of their marriage, checking two boxes on a form to explain why: "One or both of the parties" were "under duress, fraudulently induced or forced to marry" and "did not possess the mental capacity to enter into marriage."

    Green moved out, but according to family members, he told Armstead that his parole officer was going to check on him at the home the day of the slayings. Green persuaded her to let him spend the day at the brick house in the 3800 block of Morning Springs Trail in central Oak Cliff.

    About 5:30 p.m., Armstead dropped off her sons, then 9 and 12, at church. Dallas police say after she returned home, he stabbed her to death. Police say he also killed her daughter, Jazzmen Montgomery.

    About 8 p.m., Green picked up the boys and brought them home. He stabbed the 9-year-old in the torso, then forced both boys to a rear bedroom where he showed them the bodies of their mother and sister.

    Green "told the children he would allow them to live" and left, according to police documents.

    Green left in his wife's car and called his mother, who told him to turn himself in. Green did so and confessed to the slayings in a videotaped statement, police documents say.

    Green was paroled in 2000 after spending 10 years in prison for aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon. He also spent time in jail, accused of failing to pay child support.

    Armstead worked part time for Dallas ISD. Green is not the father of the three children.

    http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcont...1.3331184.html

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    Prosecutor describes 'abject horror' committed by Dallas man accused of killing his wife and her young daughter

    Testimony is underway in the death-penalty case of Gary Green, accused of killing his wife and her young daughter, then showing the bodies to his two young stepsons.

    Dallas County prosecutors said in opening statements that the trial would lay out for jurors "the abject horror choreographed by Gary Green."

    If convicted of capital murder, Green, 39, will face the death penalty or life in prison without parole.

    Prosecutor Andy Beach said Green stabbed his wife 28 times in the bathroom of their South Oak Cliff home in September 2009. The attack was so violent, Beach said, that when one knife broke, Green would grab another.

    Beach said the wife, Lovetta Armstead, fought back as her 6-year-old daughter lay watching on her bed, bound with duct tape.

    Armstead managed to grab the knife and stab Green twice behind his shoulder. They were superficial wounds.

    But her stab wounds were too much and she died "a slow, painful agonizing death," Beach said.

    Green then grabbed the girl and drowned her in the bathtub. He would later tell police that "it was so bad, I had to turn away."

    The murders took place shortly after Armstead sought to have her marriage to Green annulled. They'd been wed in June 2009 after living together for a year or two, relatives of the woman said.

    On the annulment documents, Armstead checked two boxes to explain why the marriage should be dissolved: One or both of parties were "under duress, fraudulently induced or forced to marry," and "did not possess the mental capacity to enter into marriage."

    Green had moved out by the day of the killings, but, according to family members, he told Armstead that his parole officer was going to check on him at their home the day of the slayings. Green persuaded her to let him spend the day at their brick house in the 3800 block of Morning Springs Trail in Dallas.

    About 5:30 p.m., Armstead dropped off her sons, then 9 and 12, at church. Dallas police say it was after she returned home that Green killed her and the 6-year-old, Jazzmen Montgomery.

    Green then showered in the same tub where he'd killed the little girl, put on church clothes, and left to pick up his two stepsons at church.

    About 8 p.m., Green picked up the boys and brought them home. After telling the older boy to take a bath, he called the younger brother into the kitchen, according to investigators. Green grabbed the boy and began cutting on his neck with a knife. But it was the dull side if the blade.

    Green stabbed the boy in the abdomen, and the boy called for his older brother.

    Somehow, Beach said, the boys did what their mother could not and convinced Green not to kill them.

    "Gary, we love you," Beach quoted the boys as saying. "You don't need to kill us. We're too young to die."

    But Green did show them the bodies of their mother and sister before he left.

    "I killed you mom because I loved her to death," Beach said Green told the boys. Green said he killed their sister because she would tell what happened.

    In his brief opening remarks, Green's defense attorney, Paul Johnson, asked jurors not to make up their minds until they hear all the evidence.

    According to police documents, Green left the home in his wife's car and called his mother, who told him to turn himself in.

    He did so and confessed to the slayings in a videotaped statement, police said.

    Green was paroled in 2000 after spending 10 years in prison for aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon. He also spent time in jail, accused of failing to pay child support.

    Armstead worked part-time for the Dallas Independent School District. Green was not the father of her three children.

    http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcont...1c9ff7ba4.html

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    Boys testify how stepfather forced them to see slain mother, sister

    Two brothers tearfully recounted for a Dallas County jury Tuesday how their stepfather forced them to look at the dead bodies of their slain mother and little sister.

    The boys' emotional testimony came in the capital murder trial of Gary Green, 39, where they also told jurors that they persuaded their mother's husband not to kill them, too. Green is accused of killing Lovetta Armstead and her 6-year-old daughter, Jazzmen Montgomery, at their south Oak Cliff home in September 2009.

    As they see their mother lying on the floor, "we just fall on our knees and start crying," the older boy, now 13, told jurors.

    Armstead was killed shortly after informing Green that she wanted to annul their marriage just months after the wedding, according to police. Green had moved out, but he persuaded Armstead to let him spend the day at the house.

    If convicted, Green would face the death penalty or life in prison without parole.

    The attack on Armstead was so violent, said prosecutors Andy Beach, Heath Harris, Josh Healy and Jennifer Bennett, that one knife broke and Green grabbed another.

    Armstead also grabbed a knife and stabbed Green twice behind his shoulder.

    But her stab wounds were too much and she died "a slow, painful, agonizing death," Beach said.

    Green then grabbed the girl and drowned her in the bathtub, prosecutors said. He would later tell police that "it was so bad, I had to turn away."

    He showered in the same tub and went to pick his stepsons up from church. When they got home, he held the brothers at knifepoint and stabbed the youngest one in the abdomen.

    Somehow, Beach said, the boys did what their mother could not and persuaded Green not to kill them. The youngest brother did all the talking. His older brother testified that he was too scared.

    "We're too little to die," the younger brother, now 10, testified he told Green. "We won't tell anybody about it."

    They also told Green that they loved him.

    After Green told the boys he would spare their lives, he told them he had something to show them. He took them into the bedroom and showed them their dead mother.

    "I killed your mom because I loved her to death," Beach said Green told the boys.

    They then saw the body of their sister face down on the bloody floor of the bathroom. Her hands were bound behind her back with duct tape.

    The older boy said Green ordered him to retrieve his pills, forcing him to walk through the blood that covered the bathroom floor.

    Green then left, he said, after making the boys hug him and promise not to call the police until he was gone.

    The boys testified Green told them he was going to kill himself.

    "You know how I told you to say, 'See you later' and never 'Bye?' " the older quoted Green as saying.

    "Well, this is goodbye."

    Bursting into tears

    The younger brother was seated at the witness stand during a break and smiled while talking to attorneys. But he burst into tears when Green entered the courtroom from a jail cell.

    When prosecutors couldn't calm him, he was ushered from the courtroom. The boy returned minutes later, armed with pockets full of candy.

    As the younger boy testified, he glanced constantly at Green, who sat quietly and stared ahead throughout the day's testimony. The boy said he once cared for Green, telling jurors, "I loved him to death."

    '5 lives taken today'

    Earlier Tuesday, prosecutors introduced three letters that the couple exchanged on the day of the murders.

    In the first message, written on notebook paper, Armstead asked Green to move out of their home: "I know you love me and I love you but it's time we part."

    In the second, she voiced regrets at allowing Green back into her life.

    In the final letter, Green said he planned to kill Armstead, her three children and himself. The letter showed to jurors was typed. The original was covered in blood and found on Armstead's bed.

    "You asked to see the monster so here is the monster you made me!" he wrote. There "will be 5 lives taken today me being the 5th!"

    At one point in his final letter to Armstead, Green reflected on his fate.

    "I pray that the Lord allows my soul to enter Heaven," he wrote. "If not I will burn in Hell forever."

    In brief opening remarks, Green's defense attorneys, Paul Johnson, Kobby Warren and Brady Wyatt asked jurors not to make up their minds until they hear all the evidence.

    Testimony is expected to resume today.

    http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcont...1.3341502.html

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    On tape, man says he killed to keep his family together

    Confessing to Dallas police after the brutal slayings of his wife and her 6-year-old daughter, Gary Green said he felt betrayed when Lovetta Armstead asked for a divorce.

    After only a few months of marriage, he decided he couldn't live without her.

    "My original plan was to kill all of us," he said in the videotaped confession shown to jurors at his capital murder trial Wednesday. That way, he added, "in the afterlife we all could be a happy family."

    Armstead and her daughter, Jazzmen Montgomery, were found dead in their south Oak Cliff home in September 2009. The woman was stabbed repeatedly, and the girl was tied up and drowned in the bathtub.

    If convicted, Green faces the death penalty or life in prison without parole.

    The prosecution rested its case Wednesday. The trial is expected to continue today.

    Green's attorneys have asked jurors not to make up their minds until they hear all the evidence.

    Homicide Detective Robert Quirk, who interviewed Green during the confession, testified Wednesday. He said investigators found Jazzmen in the bathroom and Armstead face down in the bedroom.

    She'd been stabbed more than two dozen times, and signs of a struggle were apparent.

    "Frankly, it was a bloody mess," Quirk said.

    Green told police that he tied up the girl in her bedroom and then took her to the master bedroom. He attacked Armstead in the bathroom, he said, stabbing her "about 30 times," though not all at once.

    At one point, prosecutors say, Armstead grabbed a toilet tank lid and tried to hit Green. She also grabbed a knife and stabbed him in the shoulder, though the wounds were superficial.

    "When she stabbed me, I backed up off her," Green said.

    Jazzmen was tied up during the fight. Afterward, he took her into the bloody bathroom, Green said in the taped interview.

    "I killed her in the bathtub," he told police.

    Armstead's two boys testified a day earlier that Green showed them the bodies but spared them when they pleaded for their lives.

    Green, 39, said he put tape over Jazzmen's mouth to prevent her from doing the same.

    Covered in blood, he showered in the same bathroom, changed clothes and picked up the boys from church, Green told the detective.

    After showing the boys their mother, Green changed clothes again and left them at the house, he told police. He then took 20 to 30 pills in hopes that he would "just go to sleep."

    But his family found him at a friend's house a day later and persuaded him to turn himself in.

    Police Sgt. Kevin Kirchdorfer accompanied Green to Parkland Memorial Hospital, where he was treated for the overdose.

    On the way, the sergeant testified, Green complained that he couldn't get the images of his wife and her child out of his head.

    "I didn't really want to do anything to anybody," he said in his taped interview.

    http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcont...1.33317e7.html

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    Jury deliberates for less than 20 minutes before convicting man of killing wife, her daughter

    Dallas County jurors took less than 20 minutes Thursday to convict a man of capital murder for killing his estranged wife and her 6-year-old daughter last fall.

    Jurors will begin hearing evidence in the punishment phase of the trial Monday and could sentence 39-year-old Gary Green to death for stabbing Lovetta Armstead and then drowning her daughter, Jazzmen Montgomery.

    Green confessed to the brutal killings at their south Oak Cliff home in September 2009. He also forced Armstead's two sons, then 9 and 12, to view the corpses after they persuaded Green not to kill them. He stabbed the youngest boy in the abdomen but he survived.

    In a videotaped confession shown to the jury, Green said he initially planned to commit suicide after killing his wife and her three kids so that "in the afterlife we all could be a happy family."

    Members of the victims' family declined to comment before the trial ends.

    In closing arguments, both the prosecution and the defense told jurors they expected a "swift" guilty verdict.

    "There's really no issue in dispute," defense attorney Paul Johnson told jurors, saying that he expected them to find his client guilty before hearing his case to spare Green's life.

    The defense called no witnesses before the jury began its deliberations. But Johnson and Green's other attorneys, Kobby Warren and Brady Wyatt, have hinted while questioning witnesses that Green has mental issues. No evidence of that has been presented.

    Prosecutors Heath Harris, Jennifer Bennett, Andy Beach and Josh Healy told jurors during closing arguments to imagine the horrors Armstead and Jazzmen experienced as Green killed them.

    "Can you even imagine that hour she spent fighting for her life?" Bennett said about Armstead, who knew her daughter was watching as Green stabbed her 28 times.

    Then, of Jazzmen, Bennett asked jurors: "What was she thinking when her little head was held under the water?"

    Jurors looked horrified as Harris tore off a piece of silver duct tape during his remarks and placed it over Jazzmen's mouth in a photo of the girl. He then wrapped it around the photo to demonstrate how Green bound her arms and legs.

    The duct tape screeched as Harris pulled it from the roll, leaving those in the silent courtroom to imagine Jazzmen heard the same sounds as Green covered her mouth and bound her hands and legs.

    "You're offended?" Harris said, holding up the picture. "This is just a photo."

    http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcont...1.332b19a.html

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    Killer's grandmother, mother testify that mental illness runs in family

    Defense attorneys for a man who killed his wife and her 6-year-old daughter began making their case Wednesday to persuade jurors to spare his life.

    The same jury that found Gary Green guilty of capital murder last week for stabbing Lovetta Armstead to death and drowning Jazzmen Montgomery will decide whether he gets the death penalty. Green, 39, killed them in September 2009 shortly after Armstead tried to end their relationship.

    Armstead's sons – 9 and 12 – persuaded Green not to kill them, although he stabbed the younger boy in the abdomen.

    Green's mother and maternal grandmother testified that their family has a history of mental illness – both diagnosed and undiagnosed – and that it's something their family doesn't like to talk about.

    Green's mental problems appear to be the cornerstone of his defense, but psychiatrists who interviewed Green have not yet testified about what type of mental illness they believe he has.

    Green's grandmother Bertha Curry, who is on several medications for mental illness, testified that her grandson never seemed normal and that she told her daughter he needed professional help. Her daughter disagreed, Curry testified.

    Curry – called by defense attorneys Paul Johnson, Brady Wyatt and Kobby Warren – said that as a child, Green once bit the head off a snake. She also said he didn't like to be around people because they would laugh at him for talking to the voices he heard.

    "He acted different from the other kids," said Curry.

    Prosecutors Andy Beach, Josh Healy, Jennifer Bennett and Heath Harris pointed out that Green was at times able to have long-term, nonviolent relationships with women, although he did stab a high school girlfriend when she broke up with him and assaulted another girlfriend when she was pregnant.

    Green's mother, Mary Sampson, also tearfully recounted for jurors how she found out about the murders and how she persuaded Green to turn himself in to police.

    Sampson said Dallas officers came to the door within hours of the slayings and searched her home for Green. He wasn't there, so Sampson called her son.

    "He sounded like he had been under anesthesia ... or in a deep sleep," she said.

    "I asked him what was wrong," she said. "He told me he just wanted to go to sleep and never wake up."

    Sampson said she and another son drove to pick up Green and try to persuade him to go to the police.

    "I gave him a hug and told him he needed to get in the truck," she said. Sampson said her son was chain-smoking, and she had a hard time understanding him, possibly because he had taken a number of Benadryl and Tylenol.

    They then drove him to the police station, where he was arrested.

    Testimony is expected to continue today before State District Judge Andy Chatham.

    http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcont...y.1ddc38a.html

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    Man who killed wife, stepdaughter has mental illness, psychologist testifies in Dallas

    A psychologist testified Thursday that a 39-year-old man who killed his wife and her 6-year-old daughter suffers from a mental illness that causes him to experience paranoid delusions.

    Gilbert Martinez told jurors who will decide whether Gary Green is sent to death row that Green, 39, suffers from schizoaffective disorder bipolar type and wrongly believes that people are trying to hurt him.

    Martinez clarified that he was not saying that the illness made Green murder his wife and stepdaughter. Martinez testified for the defense in a bid to persuade jurors to give Green a sentence of life without parole.

    Green stabbed Lovetta Armstead to death and then drowned Jazzmen Montgomery in September 2009 shortly after Armstead tried to end their relationship. Armstead's sons – 9 and 12 – persuaded Green not to kill them. He did stab the youngest one in the abdomen.

    Martinez said that Green has an IQ of 78, which is low, but not low enough to indicate mental retardation.

    Prison tests show Green's IQ to be 105, prosecutor Andy Beach said while cross-examining Martinez.

    Prison records also show that in the 1990s, Green told prison officials that he was contemplating suicide, had insomnia and was pondering joining the French Foreign Legion.

    Green has previously been sent to prison for stabbing his high school girlfriend and robbery.

    Green's younger brother, Nysasno Carter, also testified Thursday. He told jurors that he has thought Green has an undiagnosed mental illness "ever since I was little."

    Carter said that he tried to talk to their mother about getting Green help but she "kind of brushed me off."

    Carter said Green often talked about having nothing to live for. He also said his brother heard demons.

    Shortly before the murders, Green checked himself into a mental hospital for about five days, but then asked to be released, according to testimony.

    Carter said that while he visited Green in jail, Green told him that Armstead appeared to him while Green was sitting on his bed.

    Carter said Green told him that Armstead said "that she forgive him."

    Closing arguments are expected today before state District Judge Andy Chatham. Jurors will be sequestered if they do not reach a verdict by the end of the day.

    http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcont...1.4b3bfe8.html

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    Jury deliberating fate of man convicted of killing his wife, her daughter

    The jury in the capital murder case of Gary Green is now deliberating his fate.

    The same jury that convicted Green, 39, of killing his wife and her 6-year-old daughter last year, is now deciding whether he should be executed for the crimes or receive life without parole.

    A psychologist testified Thursday that Green suffers from a mental illness that causes him to experience paranoid delusions.

    Gilbert Martinez told jurors that Green suffers from schizoaffective disorder bipolar type and wrongly believes that people are trying to hurt him.

    Martinez clarified that he was not saying that the illness made Green murder his wife and stepdaughter. Martinez testified for the defense in a bid to persuade jurors to give Green a sentence of life without parole.

    Green stabbed Lovetta Armstead to death and then drowned Jazzmen Montgomery in September 2009 shortly after Armstead tried to end their relationship. Armstead's sons – 9 and 12 – persuaded Green not to kill them. He did stab the youngest one in the abdomen.

    Martinez said that Green has an IQ of 78, which is low, but not low enough to indicate mental retardation.

    Prison tests show Green's IQ to be 105, prosecutor Andy Beach said while cross-examining Martinez.

    Prison records also show that in the 1990s, Green told prison officials that he was contemplating suicide, had insomnia and was pondering joining the French Foreign Legion.

    Green has previously been sent to prison for stabbing his high school girlfriend and robbery.

    Green's younger brother, Nysasno Carter, also testified Thursday. He told jurors that he has thought Green has an undiagnosed mental illness "ever since I was little."

    Carter said that he tried to talk to their mother about getting Green help but she "kind of brushed me off."

    Carter said Green often talked about having nothing to live for. He also said his brother heard demons.

    Shortly before the murders, Green checked himself into a mental hospital for about five days, but then asked to be released, according to testimony.

    Carter said that while he visited Green in jail, Green told him that Armstead appeared to him while Green was sitting on his bed.

    Carter said Green told him that Armstead said "that she forgive him."

    Closing arguments are expected today before state District Judge Andy Chatham. Jurors will be sequestered if they do not reach a verdict by the end of the day.

    http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcont...1.4b3bfe8.html

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    Killer of woman, child in Oak Cliff gets death penalty

    Moments after a Dallas County jury sentenced Gary Green to death for fatally stabbing his wife Lovetta Armstead and drowning her 6-year-old daughter, the woman's two sons spoke to him in stirring victim impact statements that moved even veteran courtroom bailiffs to tears.

    "Hey, Gary," the youngest boy said cheerily as he peered out from the witness stand Friday at a stone-faced Green, who had also stabbed him in the stomach on that night in September 2009 after asking the boys – now 10 and 13 – why he should let them live.

    "I loved you and thought you would never betray me like this. To me, you were my father, and I loved you like my own father. But I'm not going to let you take over my life. And I do hope that you suffer."

    His older brother followed him to the stand and immediately issued a challenge to the man who killed his mother and sister Jazzmen.

    "Gary Green, I want you to look me in the eye right here, right now and listen to what I have to say to you. You are nothing but a coward. You take other people's lives to make your own life better. I hope you feel pain like my mother and my sister. And I hope you die."

    Green, 39, never looked at the boys as they spoke, or showed any emotion to the packed courtroom. He also didn't look a few minutes later when Dallas County prosecutors played a 33-second video of Jazzmen that caused audible sobbing throughout the courtroom. After the video, the girl's father, Ray Montgomery, addressed his daughter's killer.

    "I hope you know how much you destroyed our lives, all because of your wrongdoing," Montgomery said. "You took my world when you took her life. All I wanted to hear from you was to say, 'I'm sorry,' or own up to what you did to my daughter. But you couldn't even do that."

    Outside the courtroom, Montgomery said that the trial and having the chance to address Green had given him some closure. He noted that evidence in the trial showed others had been assaulted by Green in the past, including a woman he choked unconscious while she was pregnant with his child. He said the guilty verdict and death sentence were for them, too.

    "I feel my daughter and her mother got justice served," said Montgomery, 30. "But not just justice for them, but for all the other victims that this man has hurt."

    Testimony in the case showed that Green was upset because Armstead wanted to leave him. On Sept. 21, 2009, Green hogtied Jazzmen with duct tape and a telephone cord, then carried her into her mother's bedroom. There, Green used several knives – breaking two – to stab Armstead 28 times, all in front of her child.

    Then he filled a bathtub with water and drowned the bound child. He went and picked up the boys from church and brought them home. He then made them hug and kiss the lifeless body of their mother.

    Defense attorneys Paul Johnson, Kobby Warren and Brady Wyatt presented evidence showing that Green suffers from schizoaffective disorder, bipolar, which makes him wrongly believe that people are trying to hurt him.

    "We tried to show the mental issues that we believed were an integral part of his life," Johnson said. "Obviously, the jury didn't agree with us. We're disappointed, but we don't quarrel with the verdict."

    But prosecutors Andy Beach and Josh Healey said that it wasn't mental illness that drove Green to kill, but a selfish rage. And that rage, they said, is why he needed the death sentence.

    "Gary Green is not a monster," Beach told jurors during Friday's closing arguments. "He's capable of monstrous conduct, but he's not a monster. He gets mad, he gets jealous, and then he gets violent. Wherever he is, Gary Green will always be a threat."

    http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcont...y.3b59aa8.html

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    Oral arguments on direct appeal are set for March 21, 2012 before the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals.

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