February 11, 2009 10:16 PM
- Text
California Executes Vietnam Vet
(AP)
One day after his 50th birthday and all his court appeals were denied, Manuel Babbitt was put to death by at California's San Quentin prison by lethal injection at 3:37 a.m. EDT.
Babbitt was sentenced to death for killing Leah Schendel in 1980. He was convicted of breaking into her apartment and hammering her with punches that broke her dentures and split the skin on her forehead to the bone. Her frail heart gave out under the attack.
Babbitt said he didn't remember what happened that night, or the following evening when he attacked another woman, breaking off when a friend rushed to her aid.
The former Marine was turned in to police by his brother, Bill, whose suspicions were aroused after he found items stolen in the Schendel slaying in Manuel Babbitt's belongings.
Bill Babbitt and other family members deplore what Babbitt did but they don't believe he was in his right mind when he did it. They say he was flashing back to Vietnam.
Defenders said Babbitt, troubled by mental disease since his youth, cracked under the pressure of 77 days of shelling, misery and death in the siege of Khe Sanh.
Babbitt received a Purple Heart in prison for wounds suffered during that siege. The rare death row ceremony infuriated Mrs. Schendel's family, which demanded, and got, legislation banning another such presentation.
Babbitt was the seventh man executed since California resumed executions in 1992.
Babbitt was sentenced to death for killing Leah Schendel in 1980. He was convicted of breaking into her apartment and hammering her with punches that broke her dentures and split the skin on her forehead to the bone. Her frail heart gave out under the attack.
Babbitt said he didn't remember what happened that night, or the following evening when he attacked another woman, breaking off when a friend rushed to her aid.
The former Marine was turned in to police by his brother, Bill, whose suspicions were aroused after he found items stolen in the Schendel slaying in Manuel Babbitt's belongings.
Bill Babbitt and other family members deplore what Babbitt did but they don't believe he was in his right mind when he did it. They say he was flashing back to Vietnam.
Defenders said Babbitt, troubled by mental disease since his youth, cracked under the pressure of 77 days of shelling, misery and death in the siege of Khe Sanh.
Babbitt received a Purple Heart in prison for wounds suffered during that siege. The rare death row ceremony infuriated Mrs. Schendel's family, which demanded, and got, legislation banning another such presentation.
Babbitt was the seventh man executed since California resumed executions in 1992.
Latest Now in National
- Coroner in Ohio changes ruling in 1972 death
- APNewsBreak: Satellite spots tanks in Syrian city
- APNewsBreak: Satellite spots tanks in Syrian city
- Ill. Sen. Mark Kirk moved to stroke rehab center
- Comedian's BYU black history video goes viral
- Explosion at Fla. horse center kills worker, horse
- Explosion at Fla. horse center kills worker, horse
- Fight breaks out at a funeral in Phoenix
- Mom who threw tot in NY river can go home to India
- Schoolgirls excluded from Dallas movie screening
- Woman pleads guilty in NY newborn kidnap case
- Developer may open rival Philadelphia newspaper
- Developer may open rival Philadelphia newspaper
- Dad of NYC subway bomb plotter gets 4 ½ years
- Dispatcher on Powell call: Case a 'nightmare'
- Explosion at Fla. horse center kills worker, horse
- Serial killer's tip leads to remains of 2nd body
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook
on CBS News
- Man pleads guilty in NYC to harassing Ivanka Trump
- Mortenson asks judge to toss 'Three Cups' lawsuit
- Naomi Watts to star in Princess Diana biopic
- BCBG offers soothing start to NY Fashion Week
on Facebook
- Adele sings a cappella for Anderson Cooper
- Josh Powell had "incestuous" images on his home computer, authorities say
- Adele sings a cappella for Anderson Cooper
on CBS News






