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Posted on Wed, Jan. 15, 2003

Man who fatally shot 5-year-old executed

Associated Press

A Corpus Christi man, who said he didn't mean to kill a 5-year-old girl as she was curled up on her family's couch watching "Sleeping Beauty," was executed Wednesday night.

John Baltazar had no final statement. Once the drugs began flowing, his eyes partially closed and his lips closed tightly. He took deep breaths and then gasped for air before his mouth fell open and he was pronounced dead at 6:16 p.m., eight minutes after the lethal dose began.

Relatives of Adriana Marines witnessed the execution.

A stoic Arturo Marines comforted his wife, Matilda, as she and her sister, Dalinda Cuellar, sobbed as the death occurred.

Marines said his daughter's 1997 death was no accident.

"He pretty much knew what he was doing," Marines said earlier. "He kicked the door in and just started shooting. He was executioner. He was judge and jury for my daughter all in one evening."

Baltazar's execution was the second of the year.

Baltazar, 30, said he remembers shooting Arturo Marines, but had no idea he shot Marines' daughter or his 10-year-old niece, Vanessa Marines. Adriana died from two bullet wounds to her head. Vanessa survived a gunshot to her chest.

"I didn't intentionally nor knowingly kill this child," Baltazar said last week from death row. "It was accidental."

Baltazar said he was drunk and looking for Arturo Marines' brother-in-law, Narciso "Ted" Cuellar, who had moved out of the family's home a week earlier. Cuellar had previously been sleeping on the couch where his two young nieces nestled on the night of Sept. 27, 1997, to watch the movie.

Baltazar said he had gotten a call informing him that Cuellar had beaten his mother.

"I've never been very good with controlling my anger, but if Ted were to beat my mom again, I would try and go whip on (him) again," he said.

Baltazar, who was paroled from prison just two months before the shootings, said he feels bad about killing Adriana Marines and wounding her cousin, but said he doesn't regret shooting Arturo Marines.

"He jumped up and he was in my face," Baltazar said. "That's why he got shot."

Arturo Marines says Baltazar turned his family's life "inside out."

"I don't believe shooting innocent children, or for that matter, anybody, is an accident," he said. "Why couldn't you go after who you were really looking for instead of destroying an innocent family the way you did?"

Baltazar said he didn't know the answer to that question.

"I've been locked up most of my life," Baltazar said. "There ain't too much I can say about it."

Before the shootings, Baltazar had pleaded guilty in 1994 to a felony burglary charge and a felony unauthorized use of a motor vehicle charge. In 1992, he also had served time for two earlier burglary charges.

Between 1989 and 1993, Baltazar pleaded either guilty or no contest to 10 misdemeanor charges, including four charges of marijuana possession, three charges of evading detention and a theft charge.

"I already knew that if I was found guilty that I was going to death row, simply because of my prior convictions," Baltazar said of the jury's guilty verdict and the death sentence it later handed down on March 11, 1998. "You can't find someone not to be a continuing threat to society with the record that I have."

Last year, Texas executed 33 people. Baltazar was the 291st person executed since Texas reinstated the death penalty in 1982.

The execution was the second in as many nights. Samuel Gallamore, 31, was executed Tuesday night for the beating and stabbing deaths of a partially paralyzed woman, her husband and daughter in Kerr County in 1992.

Baltazar said he wasn't afraid to die but thought his crime wasn't one he should be paying for with his life.

"I'm not one to sidestep or shy away from my actions," he said. "Every thing I have ever been down for, if I'm guilty, I admit to my guilt. But I don't think being put to death for an accidental killing is right."

Arturo Marines, meanwhile, says he hopes Baltazar's punishment will finally help his family to heal.

"I'm just glad it is going to be over," he said. "Hopefully after this, everyone can go on with their lives.

"This is the end of the book."


Texas killer of 5-year-old girl executed

From United Press International
Published 1/15/2003 8:32 PM


HUNTSVILLE, Texas, Jan. 15 (UPI) -- A Texas killer was executed Wednesday for shooting a 5-year-old girl to death in a 1997 spree ignited by the beating of his mother.

John Baltazar, 30, was pronounced dead at 6:16 p.m. after receiving a lethal injection for the murder of Adriana Marines at her Corpus Christi home.

Baltazar offered no final statement before his death.

Baltazar was out to avenge the beating of his mother by her boyfriend, according to court records. The boyfriend was known to stay at his sister's house and Baltazar went there, kicked down the door, and shot up the couch where he usually slept.

Adriana Marines was sleeping on the couch and she was hit twice in the head. Her 10-year-old sister, Vanessa, and the sister's husband, Jose Arturo Marines, 19, were each shot twice but they survived. The boyfriend was not in the house.

Batazar was arrested based on a description given by Vanessa and other witnesses. Police also matched a footprint from the home to a pair of Baltazar's shoes.

Batazar was the second convicted killer executed this year in Texas and the 291st put to death since the state restored the death penalty in 1982.

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