Orlando Hall: Arkansas man who buried Texas teen girl alive after gang-rape to be executed on November 19
An Arkansas man, Orlando Hall, who raped, kidnapped, and killed a Texas teenager in 1994, has been scheduled for execution in November, the Justice Department announced on Wednesday, September 30. Hall was arrested in 1994 along with five others, who according to prosecutors kidnapped 16-year-old Lisa Rene from her home in Arlington, Texas, and eventually gang-raped and killed her.
The group of men reportedly abducted the teen to get revenge on her two brothers for a botched $5,000 marijuana deal. The men had reportedly traveled to Arlington to confront the brothers but they only found the men's sister at home and kidnapped her at gunpoint. Rene, over the following two days, was taken to an Arkansas hotel, where she was gang-raped. The men later took the teen to a park where they bludgeoned her with a shovel and buried her alive.
Although all the five men involved in the brutal case were arrested and charged for Rene's murder, it was just Hall and one other, Bruce Webster, who faced capital punishment by the federal government. The other three suspects in the case were instead permitted to sign plea deals for their prison time in exchange for testifying against Hall and Webster. Those three men have been released from prison after they served their sentences.
Hall, after being 25 years on death row, is now scheduled to be executed by lethal injection next month on November 19 at a federal prison in Terre Haute, Indiana. Hall's attorneys, Marcia A Widder and Robert C Owen, however, have condemned the federal government's attempt to execute the 49-year-old. In a joint statement to MEA WorldWide (MEAWW), the attorneys said that their client's trial was unfair because he was sentenced by an "all-White jury."
"Orlando Hall, a Black man, was sentenced to death by an all-White jury. Mr Hall has never denied the role he played in the tragic death of Lisa Rene. But the jury that sentenced him to death did not know key facts about his background, and the path toward personal redemption that Mr Hall has followed in prison shows that he is not among the ‘worst of the worst’ for whom the death penalty is properly reserved," the statement said.
“The proceedings that led to Mr Hall’s death sentence were marked by racial bias and incompetent lawyering. During jury selection, the prosecution team enlisted the help of a former state prosecutor known for keeping Black citizens from serving on criminal juries. With his help, an all-White jury was seated to decide Mr Hall’s fate," the statement continued. "In the years since Mr Hall’s trial, the US Supreme Court has expressly found that this very prosecutor, in a trial that preceded Mr Hall’s, discriminated against Black potential jurors on account of their race and then lied under oath in an attempt to conceal his racist conduct. In this way, Mr Hall’s case also reflects the significant and troubling racial disparities in the operation of the federal death penalty, in which 60% of those currently on federal death row are people of color, including 45% who are Black."
"Indeed, just this year the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, the only tribunal ever to meaningfully consider Mr Hall’s claims of racial injustice, concluded that Mr Hall was sentenced to death in violation of the 'most basic human right' of equality before the law," the attorneys added.
If the execution goes as scheduled, Hall would be the eighth person to have been executed this year.