Man who killed 9-year-old girl executed

AZ carries out execution


Photographer: KNXV
Copyright 2011 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Advertisement

Posted: 06/30/2011

FLORENCE, AZ - Arizona executed a death-row inmate Thursday for molesting and fatally bludgeoning a 9-year-old girl in a case that spread fear through Flagstaff and the rest of the state.

Richard Lynn Bible, 49, received a lethal injection at the state prison in Florence and died at 11:11 a.m. He always maintained his innocence during his more than two decades on death row, but investigators said evidence in the case was overwhelming.

Bible was convicted of kidnapping and killing Jennifer Wilson, of Yuma, while she was on vacation with her family in Flagstaff in June 1988. She had been riding her bike and spoke with her mother only moments before she disappeared.

Hikers found her naked, decomposing body three weeks after she went missing. Her hands were tied behind her back with her own shoelace, and her underwear was in a nearby tree. After investigators collected evidence and cleared the scene, her hysterical father insisted on carrying her in a body bag to a waiting helicopter.

Bible did not look at any of the approximately 50 people witnessing the execution, who included about 20 of Jennifer's family members. He appeared to be scared, taking several swallows and fidgeting before the execution.

His last words were: "I'd like to thank my family, my lawyers -- love ‘em all, and everything's OK. That's it."

Jennifer's family held each other during the process. Her father, Rich Wilson, stared at Bible intently, and after he was declared dead, nodded his head once as tears formed.

Bible was executed after failing to win any of his appeals, most recently motions in an appeals court and the U.S. Supreme Court that sought a delay for DNA testing on hairs used as evidence in his trial. Arizona's clemency board also denied a reprieve or commutation Monday after one board member called him "the worst of the worst."

He became the 90th inmate executed by Arizona since 1910, and the 25th to die by injection since the state changed its execution method in 1992. Before then, 28 inmates had been hanged and 37 were killed with lethal gas.

Jennifer's parents have fought for Bible to be put to death since his conviction, arguing that they're not seeking revenge, only justice for what they lost.

"I know that if Jennifer had the opportunity to choose life or death, she would have chosen to live," her mother, Nancy Wilson, said through tears at Bible's clemency hearing Monday. "That evil creature abducted, brutally raped and brutally murdered our precious 9-year-old daughter Jennifer. He should not be allowed to breathe beyond 11 o'clock Thursday morning."

Rich Wilson, wrote a letter in 1990 to the judge in Bible's case before sentencing, saying that "without reservation before Almighty God, I ask you to sentence Ricky Bible to death."

He wrote how his other three children were haunted by their
sister's murder, with his oldest daughter Michele repeatedly pleading for a miracle to bring Jennifer home.

Bible had said that he can't prove himself innocent because he didn't get a fair trial.

Prosecutors were "looking for an overkill and they had no one else to blame this crime on," he told a probation officer in 1990. "I didn't kill her. The real killer is still out there."

Bible was born in Flagstaff in January 1962 and was the second oldest of four children. His father worked at a natural gas company, his mother was a homemaker, and Bible said he was not abused.

Before Jennifer's murder, Bible had an extensive criminal history, including serving six years in prison for raping his 17-year-old cousin in 1981. That crime occurred in the same area where Jennifer was killed.

Bible said that after he was released from prison in 1987, he wanted to settle down, get married and stay out of trouble. He dated a woman with a 9-month-old son, and the two had plans for Bible to become the boy's adoptive father. But the relationship ended after the son was taken away by the state Child Protective Services, and Bible turned to drugs and heavy drinking.

Bible's attorney, Daniel Maynard, told the clemency board Monday that the execution shouldn't move forward until hairs found on Jennifer's T-shirt are tested.

He also insinuated that items including vodka bottles and cigars found with Jennifer's body, which matched items in Bible's car, could have been planted by police. Hundreds of people searching for the girl over a three-week period likely would have seen them if they had been there the whole time, Maynard said.

Gerry Blair of the Coconino County sheriff's office, who investigated Jennifer's killing, told the clemency board that when Bible was arrested on the day of Jennifer's disappearance, blood on his shirt matched the girl's. The blood was in a pattern that indicated it was caused by a bludgeoning, Blair said.

Additionally, hair found at the crime scene matched hair on Bible's jacket, and in his wallet and vehicle. Blair said it was pulled and cut from Jennifer's scalp in a unique way that a forensic analyst could not duplicate

until he used a pocket knife that Bible had when he was arrested.

Investigators at the time didn't think DNA testing of the hair would further the case, Blair said.

"There's just so many pieces of this puzzle, and the only story they tell is that indeed Richard Bible killed Jennifer Wilson," Blair said.

Many people in Arizona still remember where they were the day Jennifer was found dead, said Blair, who plans to be a witness to Bible's execution.

"It did have a big impact on the state and also a big impact on Flagstaff and a big impact on Yuma," he said Wednesday. "It caused a lot of people in Flagstaff to rethink how safe their children were."

Blair planned to be at the execution, his first, to support any of Jennifer's family members who will be there, and for a small sense of closure for himself.

"This case was that thing of being in the wrong place at the wrong time, and through no fault of the child and no fault of the parents, this horrific thing happened to her," he said. "This is the case I wanted to see to its finality."

In a presentencing report in 1990, a probation officer wrote that no penalty "can rectify the indignity suffered by the victim's family or the citizens of Arizona."

"What was once a happy and prosperous family has been left an empty and grieving shell of its past," wrote Robert Tomten. "What brought about this change was not only the death of a loved one, but the violent and heinous manner that this loved one was prematurely taken from them.

"In cases such as this, it is not only the family but the community as well as society as a whole who are indeed the true victims," he said. "The victim in this offense is beyond pain, the living will grieve forever."

Associated Press

  • Comments
  • Marketplace
advertisement

Did You Hear?


  1. What? Tracking students using microchips

    What? Tracking students using microchips

    A school district in San Antonio has just unveiled plans to test out a new microchip system that will track students.

  2. Huh? Bike-riding Darth Vader robs bank

    Huh? Bike-riding Darth Vader robs bank

    The force was with employees an Ohio bank on Wednesday when a man wearing a Darth Vader mask robbed the place at gunpoint.

    • PHOTOS: AARP's sexiest men over 50

      PHOTOS: AARP's sexiest men over 50

      Who says older men can't be sexy? AARP just came out with its list of Sexiest Men Over 50 and the list is not just based on looks. Check out who made the list!

      • Stay Connected