On April 12, 2024, Judge Arturo Nelson signed an Agreed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law sub­mit­ted by the pros­e­cu­tion and defense stat­ing that Melissa Lucio (pic­tured) was not giv­en access to favor­able infor­ma­tion in the prosecution’s pos­ses­sion at the time of tri­al. The acknowl­edge­ment of this con­sti­tu­tion­al error result­ed in Judge Nelson’s rec­om­men­da­tion to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (TCCA) that Ms. Lucio’s con­vic­tion and death sen­tence be over­turned. The rul­ing marks the lat­est chap­ter in a saga that saw Ms. Lucio nar­row­ly avoid an exe­cu­tion date in 2022 fol­low­ing a high­ly pub­li­cized clemen­cy cam­paign over con­cerns she had been wrongfully convicted.

Ms. Lucio was con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to death for the death of her 2‑year-old daugh­ter in 2008 but has always main­tained her daugh­ter died of com­pli­ca­tions relat­ing to fall. Ms. Lucio says she false­ly con­fessed after five hours of intense police inter­ro­ga­tion on the evening her daugh­ter died. Attorneys for Ms. Lucio recent­ly pre­sent­ed expert opin­ion that her daugh­ter was not mur­dered, but rather suc­cumbed to head trau­ma from the acci­den­tal fall two days pri­or to her death. Judge Nelson ulti­mate­ly deter­mined that Ms. Lucio met her bur­den of proof, by a pre­pon­der­ance of the evi­dence, that she would not have been con­vict­ed in light of the sup­pressed evi­dence.” The TCCA will now have the final say about whether Ms. Lucio’s con­vic­tion will be set aside.

A week before Judge Nelson’s find­ings were entered, Cameron County District Attorney Luis Saenz and Innocence Project attor­ney Vanessa Potkin released a joint state­ment about the Agreed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law they sub­mit­ted in January 2023. Under Texas pro­ce­dure the tri­al court must make a rec­om­men­da­tion to the CCA which is the only court that can vacate a con­vic­tion,” the state­ment explained. We are hope­ful Melissa’s case will be resolved,” the state­ment added. Jordan Steiker, the Director of University of Texas Law School’s Capital Punishment Center called this agree­ment excep­tion­al­ly rare,” as both the pros­e­cu­tion and defense con­curred that pros­e­cu­to­r­i­al mis­con­duct occurred dur­ing Ms. Lucio’s trial.

Just two days before her sched­uled exe­cu­tion in April 2022, the TCCA ruled that four claims filed by Ms. Lucio’s attor­neys met the require­ments to grant a stay of exe­cu­tion. In its opin­ion, the TCCA asked the Cameron County court to review these four issues, includ­ing whether pros­e­cu­tors failed to turn over favor­able evi­dence that was mate­r­i­al to the out­come of her tri­al. The Agreed Findings focused on the ques­tion about mate­r­i­al evi­dence, par­tic­u­lar­ly evi­dence indi­cat­ing that one of Ms. Lucio’s oth­er chil­dren saw the child fall and that reports from Child Protective Services indi­cate her chil­dren told offi­cials she was not abu­sive to any of them. Additional evi­dence indi­cates that Ms. Lucio’s chil­dren told CPS that she was wor­ried about her daugh­ter after the fall and cared great­ly for her before she died. At the time of Ms. Lucio’s tri­al, her attor­neys did not have full copies of these reports, only sum­maries that did not include this favorable evidence.

In a state­ment from Ms. Lucio’s sons and daugh­ter-in-law, her fam­i­ly thanked her legal team for their hard work to bring the truth to light and to D.A. Saenz for tak­ing anoth­er look at [their] mother’s case and rec­og­niz­ing that she did not receive a fair tri­al and her con­vic­tion should be over­turned.” Acknowledging that evi­dence was with­held in their mother’s case, her fam­i­ly hope[s] and pray[s] the Court of Criminal Appeals will agree with the District Attorney, the defense, and Judge Nelson and our moth­er can come home to her fam­i­ly. It’s been 17 years that we have been with­out her. We love her and miss her and can’t wait to hug her.

Citation Guide
Sources

Mark Reagan, Melissa Lucio death penal­ty case head­ed back to Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, myRGV​.com, April 15, 2024; William Melhado, State dis­trict judge rec­om­mends over­turn­ing Melissa Lucio’s death sen­tence, Texas Tribune, April 152024.

See Judge Nelson’s order, here.

See Agreed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, here.