New evidence presented halts execution of East Texas man sentenced by District Judge Bascom Bentley. (Source: KETK)
Anderson County, TX:
In 2003, District Judge Bascom Bentley sentenced Robert Roberson to death for the shaken-baby syndrome of his 2-year-old daughter Nikki Curtis. However, Judge Bentley had secretly authorized the child's maternal grandparents, Larry and Verna Bowman, to take her off life support prior to charging Roberson with capital murder. Roberson was arrested the same night Bentley signed the arrest warrant and before little Nikki Curtis' autopsy. Bascom Bentley was NOT the sitting 3rd District Court judge where the criminal case was filed, nor is there legal documentation the case was transferred to him. In typical corrupt East Texas fashion, Roberson's case was assigned to Bentley's docket, along with the family law matter of Nikki Curtis, despite three other available district judges without conflicts of interest. The risk of a remand or an outright dismal on a technicality wasn't even considered when Bascom Bentley named himself executioner. A small town judge's bloated ego outweighed a little girl getting justice.
What did Nikki Curtis die from? Quite a different set of facts than those presented during Robert Roberson's trial and post-conviction. Roberson's current execution date is set for Oct. 16. He is represented by Austin attorney Gretchen Sween.
“Anderson County Judge Bascom Bentley, who presided over Mr. Roberson’s trial, is the person who gave the Bowmans permission to authorize removing Nikki from life-sustaining care
contrary to Texas law.The Anderson County District Judge [Bascom Bentley] never disclosed that he is the one who authorized circumventing Robert’s parental rights and violating Texas law so that Nikki’s removal from life support could be hastened—and then her father was charged with capital murder.
Read the latest Texas Court of Criminal Appeals brief re. Robert Roberson, Anderson County, et al.
Playing God, Judge, and Jury
District Judge Bascom Bentley was not only known for his colorful courtroom outbursts and tantrums when facts came out he didn't previously approve of, but for his notorious judicial overreach. Defendants who were friends and relatives of the court received slap on the wrist probation for such crimes as embezzling hundreds of thousands of dollars. If a felony case didn't suit him, Bentley would delegate it down to the misdemeanor County Court at Law judge for adjudication, also in violation of Texas law. Regardless of cut-and-dried ethics complaints, then Attorney General Greg Abbott never intervened, and the State Commission of Judicial Conduct never issued a reprimand. Local media championed Judge Bentley as a "hammer" on crime, while covering up the early release of sex offenders groomed for jury duty in his courtroom.
Cherokee County Court at Law Judge Craig Fletcher signs felony sex offender release order for District Judge Bascom Bentley "by permission." (Source: Jacksonville Progress)
Judge Bentley's egregious judicial errors over the years were rubber-stamped by his East Texas colleagues at the appellate level, giving him credence to rule however his mood swung. The fix would be in before the morning flapjacks made it off the skillet. This won the hearts and minds of several prominent Texas Republican leaders back in the day, including former Governor George W. Bush. Nothing warmed their cockles like bending the Rule of Law out of shape on a whim and getting away with it. They were just stupid enough to believe they were always doing the right thing. All Bentley had to do to execute a prisoner was take a baby off life support.
As a footnote, Robert Roberson has been granted a reprieve pending a review by the trial and appellate courts.
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