AP/ October 11, 2012, 1:52 AM

Texas executes inmate convicted of killing 12-year-old girl

Undated file photo provided in June 2010 by Texas Department of Criminal Justice shows Jonathan Green

Undated file photo provided in June 2010 by Texas Department of Criminal Justice shows Jonathan Green / AP Photo/Texas Department of Criminal Justice, File

HUNTSVILLE, Texas A Texas man whose lawyers argued was mentally ill and incompetent for execution was put to death Wednesday evening for killing a 12-year-old girl more than a decade ago.

Jonathan Green, 44, received a lethal injection after the U.S. Supreme Court rejected last-day appeals to spare him. A judge earlier this week stopped the punishment, but an appeals court overturned the reprieve. Then 11th-hour appeals delayed the punishment nearly five hours past the initial 6 p.m. execution time and as the midnight expiration of the death warrant neared.

Asked by the warden if he had a statement from the death chamber gurney, Green shook his head and replied, "No."

But seconds later he changed his mind, saying: "I'm an innocent man. I never killed anyone. Y'all are killing an innocent man."

He then looked down and said his left arm, where one of the needles carrying the lethal drug was inserted, and said, "It's hurting me bad." But almost immediately he began snoring loudly. The sounds stopped after about six breaths.

Green was pronounced dead 18 minutes later at 10:45 p.m.

Green was condemned for the abduction, rape and strangling of Christina Neal, whose body was found at his home in 2000 about a month after she was reported missing. Her family lived across a highway from Green in Dobbin, about 45 miles northwest of Houston.

Christina's parents were among people to watch Green die. They declined to speak with reporters following the execution.

Green's lethal injection is the 10th this year in Texas and the first of four scheduled for this month in the nation's most active death penalty state.

Green's attorneys argued his hallucinations made him ineligible for the death penalty and said a state competency hearing for him two years ago was unfair.

That led to a reprieve from a federal district judge in Houston. But the Texas attorney general's office persuaded the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to overturn that ruling and lift the stay of execution late Tuesday.

Green's lawyer, James Rytting, said his client hallucinated about the "ongoing spiritual warfare between two sets of voices representing good and evil."

The appeals court found the procedures at Green's competency hearing were not improper, that no Supreme Court precedents were violated and that it was reasonable to find Green competent for the death penalty.

Green told a psychiatrist who examined him before the competency hearing that he didn't and couldn't have killed Christina, that false evidence was used against him and that he understood a murder conviction could result in him receiving an injection that would kill him.

Supreme Court guidance says mental illness can't disqualify someone from execution if they understand the sentence and reasons for the punishment, the state lawyers argued.

Green had declined to speak with reporters as his execution date neared.

Investigators questioned Green at least twice in the days following Christina's disappearance 12 years ago. His wallet was found in some woods near clothing and jewelry that belonged to Christina, but authorities found nothing else of significance at the time. A few weeks later, a tip from a neighbor about an unusually large burn pile behind his ramshackle home brought them back again.

While Green had been cooperative, he grew testy and ordered them off his property when an FBI agent looking at the fire site detected the smell of a decaying body and inserted a metal probe into a patch of disturbed earth. They returned hours later with a search warrant and a dog trained to detect human remains.

The dog led officers to the girl's body, stuffed inside a laundry bag in the home and wedged into a corner behind a piece of furniture. Green contended someone else had placed the body there and that he was being set up.

Evidence at his trial indicated he had tried to burn the body, buried it in a shallow grave, then removed it when detectives left to obtain the search warrant. DNA from her remains tied him to the slaying. A carpet fiber from her panties found in the woods was traced to a carpet in his home.

Two years ago, Green came within about four hours of execution before the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals stopped the punishment amid similar arguments he was too delusional and too mentally ill to be put to death.

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
10 Comments Add a Comment
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KDC75056 says:
I just wish criminals of this nature were subjected to the same vile, tortuous fear that their victims encountered the day they crossed their killer's evil path.
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walkthetalk says:
Maybe Texas should charge little money and become the end of Line Company, for the wimp states that can't do them, but want to keep them out of the prison law libary. I don't know if deters crime or not, but for sure, the folks that go through the Texas End of Line Co., are one and out!
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JMNYC says:
This type of crime with the violation, suffering and murder of a child should result in hanging. Less heinous killings should result in the firing squad. The lethal injection should then be reserved for killings without cruelty, suffering, torture, etc. this would finally serve as the deterrent that liberals claim the death penalty is missing.

And no, the above would not serve as cruel and unusual punishment it would be appropriate. What this pos did to the girl is cruel, unusual and evil.
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Chiperoni says:
Too bad they gave up fryin people this dude is a rapist killer for sure
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WJBradley says:
Good for Texas. He should have been executed 30 days after conviction but at least the job got done. May all those who prey on children follow quickly and receive no more mercy than they have given their victims and their families.
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askagain says:
Now this guy can request mental health care in the next world. He is no longer society's problem. Delusional or otherwise, justice was served.
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wennd2834 says:
My son with autism answers Yes to everything, just sayin. The evidence appears to be strong here, but it happened "more than a decade ago." There are people in NC as we speak who are getting out of prison after falsely being accused YEARS ago. Makes you wonder.
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USA-is-Back replies:
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no, actually, it doesn't make you wonder. if i really tried, i could believe one person up another person for a crime. but what i cannot do is believe a person didn't realize there was a 12 year old girl's body decaying in his living room for a month.
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Finonymous says:
Another dead child killer. Good riddance!!!!
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miramar87 says:
Oh, Dear God, either this man went to his grave remorseless and f^(&3d or he is an innocent man, or he went to the grave protecting someone else.
Personally, I think he is f^(&3d. And if he died protecting someone else, that person's Karma is really dark, for a very long time.
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