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מי יחיה ומי ימות: Execution Of Allegedly Jewish Man In Texas Halted Over Claim Judge Was Anti-Semitic


A Jewish death row inmate who was part of the “Texas 7” gang of escaped prisoners and faced execution in less than a week has won a reprieve after claiming the former judge at his trial was anti-Semitic and frequently used racial slurs.

The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals on Friday granted a stay of execution of Randy Halprin who was scheduled for October 10. His lawyers had found several people who said that ex-Dallas County Judge Vickers Cunningham who oversaw Halprin’s murder conviction had regularly used racist language.

Cunningham declined to comment about the case on Friday.

The former judge faced allegations of bigotry last year after telling the Dallas Morning News he has a living trust that rewards his children for marrying straight, white Christians. Cunningham was running for county commissioner at the time, and he lost the Republican runoff days later.

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Amanda Tackett, who worked for Cunningham’s campaign for district attorney in 2006, told the newspaper that Cunningham repeatedly used racial slurs. Cunningham told Tackett he wanted to return the county to a place where people didn’t have to worry about Jews and other minorities, she said.

Halprin was among the inmates who escaped from a South Texas prison in 2000 and committed numerous robberies, including one in which a suburban Dallas police officer was fatally shot.

He has maintained that he never fired a weapon in the December 2000 shooting of 29-year-old Irving police officer Aubrey Hawkins. Halprin was convicted under Texas’ law of parties, in which a person can be held responsible for another individual’s crime if he or she assisted or attempted to help in the commission of that crime.

Cunningham oversaw the death sentences of Halprin and other members of the gang.

(Sources: NY Times / CBS)



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