Posted in

The Final 24 Hours of Michael James Perry | Youngest Death Row Execution in Texas (Last Meal & Word)

The Final 24 Hours of Michael James Perry | Youngest Death Row Execution in Texas (Last Meal & Word) 

Tick. The clock on the wall of the Huntsville Death House reads 11:47 p.m. In just 18 hours and 13 minutes, the state of Texas will kill Michael James Perry. Tick. He knows this because he’s been counting. Not just the hours or the minutes, but everything. The number of concrete blocks in his cell wall, 8:47.

The number of fluorescent bulbs buzzing overhead, 12. The number of meals he has left to eat. Three. The number of breaths he might take before they strap him to that gurnie and pump poison into his veins. Maybe 20,000 if he’s lucky. Tick. Michael sits on the edge of his steel cot.

 Hands folded in his lap like he’s praying. Though he stopped believing in God sometime around year six of his death row sentence, his hands are shaking. Not from fear, he tells himself, but from the cold. The death house is always cold, kept at a steady 65° so the bodies don’t decompose too fast after the killing is done. These hands, small hands, even for a 28-year-old man.

His adoptive mother used to say he had artists hands, long, delicate fingers that should have been holding paint brushes instead of shotguns. She used to hold these hands when he was scared during thunderstorms. Back when he was still young enough to be scared of things that couldn’t actually hurt him.

 Now these hands shake as they count down his final hours on Earth. Tick. Down the hall. Three other condemned men wait in their own concrete boxes for their own appointment with death. Cell 9 houses Roberto Martinez, who’s been here for 23 years and has given up hope that his appeals will ever work. Cell 11 holds Danny Williams, who arrived just 6 months ago and still cries himself to sleep every night.

 Cell 15 is empty. Its former occupant, Tommy Lee Jackson, took his final walk just two weeks ago, screaming Bible verses all the way to the gurnie. But Michael is different from all of them. Michael is special, though not in any way he wants to be. At 28 years old, Michael James Perry is about to become one of the youngest people executed in Texas in decades.

 More than that, he’s about to set a record for speed. Just 8 years and 7 months from conviction to execution. Most death row inmates wait 20, 30, even 40 years before the state gets around to killing them. Michael’s case moved through the courts like lightning, as if the whole system couldn’t wait to be rid of him. Tick. Why the rush? Maybe it’s because his crimes were so brutal, so senseless that even hardened death penalty lawyers couldn’t find much to say in his defense.

 Maybe it’s because Michael himself seemed to invite his own destruction, laughing during his trial while victims families wept, smirking at crime scene photos that made seasoned detectives sick to their stomachs. Or maybe it’s just bad luck. Wrong place, wrong time, wrong jury, wrong judge, wrong everything. Tick.

 The guard’s radio crackles in the hallway. Death watch initiated on inmate Perry. Michael James. TDCJ number 999444. Subject appears calm. No incidents to report. The condemned not Michael. Not even prisoner. Just condemned inmate. As if reducing him to a clinical term makes tomorrow’s killing easier to stomach for everyone involved.

 The guards, the warden, the doctor who will pronounce him dead, the witnesses who will watch it happen. They all sleep better at night when they think of him as just a condemned inmate. Not a human being with a mother who still loves him despite everything he’s done. Tick. But Michael doesn’t feel like a condemned inmate tonight.

 He feels like exactly what he is. A scared kid trapped in a man’s body, wearing stateisssued white clothes that hang loose on his shrinking frame. Eight years of death row food and constant stress have hollowed out his cheeks, turned his once bright eyes into dark pools that seem to hold entire conversations with ghosts.

The ghosts of Sandra Stoddler, Adam Stoddler, and Jeremy Richardson follow him everywhere now. Not in a supernatural way. Michael doesn’t believe in that stuff anymore, but in the way that guilt follows you when you’re finally sober enough and scared enough to understand what you’ve really done.

 Sandra Stoddler, 50 years old, a nurse who worked night shifts at Montgomery County Hospital, taking care of sick people when the rest of the world was sleeping. She had kind eyes and gentle hands and a weakness for helping troubled teenagers who reminded her of the son she was trying to raise, right? She made the fatal mistake of showing mercy to Michael when he was just another lost boy looking for someone to blame for his problems. Adam Stotler, 16 years old.

Sandra’s son, a good kid who played baseball and made decent grades and never gave his mother much trouble. He had his father’s dark hair and his mother’s trusting nature. On the night he died, he was trying to help what he thought was an injured stranger. He died because he inherited his mother’s kindness.

 And kindness is a dangerous thing in a world full of people like Michael Perry. Jeremy Richardson, 18 years old. Adam’s best friend, a quiet boy who dreamed of becoming a mechanic and opening his own auto shop someday. He was good with his hands and had a girlfriend who loved him and parents who were proud of him. He died because he was loyal to his friend because he couldn’t let Adam go alone to help someone in trouble. Tick.

 Three lives gone. Snuffed out in a few seconds of shotgun blasts on a cold October night in 2001. All because Michael wanted Sandra’s red Camaro and didn’t want to work for the money to buy his own. A car. A stupid shiny red car that probably wasn’t even worth $10,000. That’s what three human lives were traded for.

 Less money than some people spend on a vacation. Tick. Michael closes his eyes and tries to remember what he was thinking that night. He tries to remember the moment when stealing a car became acceptable. When threatening an innocent woman seemed reasonable, when pulling the trigger felt like the right thing to do, but he can’t remember.

 It’s like trying to recall a dream from someone else’s sleep. The Michael who committed those murders feels like a different person entirely. Someone angry and desperate and high on drugs and convinced that the whole world owed him something. This Michael, the one sitting in this death cell counting down his final hours, claims he’s different now.

 Claims he’s found peace, found forgiveness, found some kind of understanding about life and death and the meaning of it all. But is he really different? Or is he just scared? Tick. The truth is, Michael isn’t sure anymore. Eight years in solitary confinement gives a man too much time to think, too much time to replay the worst moments of his life over and over again.

Sometimes he thinks he’s genuinely sorry for what he did. Other times he thinks he’s just sorry he got caught. Sometimes he believes his own claims of innocence, that his codefendant, Jason Berquette, was the real killer, that Michael was just in the wrong place at the wrong time with the wrong friend.

 Other times, late at night, when the guards aren’t listening, Michael whispers confessions to the concrete walls, admitting things he’s never admitted to anyone else. The guards have heard him talking to himself. They’ve written it down in reports that his lawyers will never see. The condemned appears to be experiencing guilt over his crimes, they write.

 The condemned shows signs of mental deterioration due to impending execution. But which Michael is the real one? The laughing teenager who mocked grieving families during his trial? The repentant convict who claims to have found God in his cell? The scared boy who still has nightmares about the sound Sandra made when the shotgun blast knocked her backward into the laundry room wall.

Tick. Tomorrow morning, none of it will matter. Tomorrow morning, Michael will eat his last meal. Three bacon, egg, and cheese omelet. three chicken and cheese enchiladas, three sodas that he probably won’t finish because his stomach will be too twisted with fear to hold much food. Tomorrow afternoon, his adoptive mother, Sandra Perry, will visit him one last time, sitting across from him, separated by thick glass.

 Both of them crying as they try to say goodbye to a relationship that started 28 years ago when she brought home a baby who needed love and ended up destroying everything she held dear. Tomorrow evening at exactly 6:00 p.m., Michael will take his final walk. 30 feet from his death cell to the execution chamber. The longest and shortest walk of his life. Tick.

He’ll lie down on a gurnie that’s been used to kill 543 men before him. He’ll feel the needle slide into his arm, carrying chemicals with names he can’t pronounce, but effects he understands perfectly. First, the sedative, making him drowsy and peaceful. Then the paralytic, stopping his ability to move or speak or breathe.

 Finally, the potassium chloride, stopping his heart forever. The whole process takes about 15 minutes from the first injection to the final heartbeat. 15 minutes to end a life that took 28 years to build in 8 years to tear apart. Tick. Outside his cell, Texas sleeps. Somewhere in that darkness, Sandra Stoddler’s daughter is probably lying awake, too, thinking about tomorrow, wondering if watching her mother’s killer die will feel like justice or just another kind of violence.

 Somewhere else, Jason Burr sits in his own prison cell, serving a life sentence for the same crimes that will cost Michael his life tomorrow. Jason will probably live to be an old man, will maybe even get parrolled someday when he’s gray and harmless and no longer a threat to anyone. Why did Michael get death while Jason got life? Both men killed.

 Both men destroyed families. Both men shattered the peace of a quiet suburban neighborhood on a night when three innocent people should have lived to see another sunrise. The answer is complicated and simple at the same time. Jason showed remorse. Jason’s father came to court and cried and took responsibility for failing his son.

Jason convinced a jury that he was more than just a killer, that he was a human being who had made terrible choices but might someday deserve a second chance. Michael laughed. Tick. That’s what it comes down to really. Michael laughed when he should have cried, smiled when he should have begged for forgiveness, acted like the murders were a joke when he should have treated them like the tragedy they were.

 Some people say Michael was just young and stupid, that his behavior during the trial was a defense mechanism, a way of protecting himself from the overwhelming reality of what he had done. Others say his laughter revealed his true nature, that of a cold-blooded killer who felt no guilt about ending three innocent lives. Tomorrow, the state of Texas will give its final answer to that question.

Tomorrow the people of Texas will decide that Michael James Perry’s life isn’t worth saving. That some crimes are so horrible that the only appropriate punishment is death. >> Guided and haunting. >> Tick. But tonight in this cold concrete cell, Michael is still alive, >> still breathing, still thinking, still counting down the hours until he isn’t anymore. 18 hours and 3 minutes now.

Tick, tick, tick. The countdown has begun. To understand how Michael James Perry ended up on death row, you have to go back to the beginning. Back to when he was just a baby who needed love. Michael was born in 1982 in Houston, Texas. His real parents didn’t want him. They gave him away before he could even walk or talk. We don’t know why.

 Maybe they were too young. Maybe they were on drugs. Maybe they just couldn’t handle a baby. But baby Michael got lucky. Or so everyone thought. Carlton and Sandra Perry were good people. They had been trying to have kids for years, but it never happened. When they heard about a baby boy who needed a home, they said yes right away.

 Carlton worked as an engineer. Sandra stayed home to take care of Michael. They lived in a nice neighborhood in Houston with good schools and safe streets. They went to church every Sunday. They had money for toys and clothes and everything a little boy could want. For the first few years, everything seemed fine.

 Michael was a cute kid with big eyes and a sweet smile. He learned to walk and talk just like other kids. Sandra would dress him up for church and show him off to the other ladies. Carlton taught him to throw a baseball in the backyard. But something was wrong. It started small. When Michael was 4 years old, he would have huge tantrums over tiny things.

 If Sandra told him he couldn’t have candy, he would scream for hours. Not just cry, scream like someone was hurting him. At first, Carlton and Sandra thought this was normal. All kids throw fits, right? But Michael’s fits were different. He would throw toys across the room. He would hit Sandra when she tried to calm him down.

 Once he broke a window because she said no to McDonald’s. When Michael started school, things got worse. His kindergarten teacher, Mrs. Johnson, called home after the first week. Michael couldn’t sit still in class. When she asked him to color inside the lines, he threw his crayon at another kid. When she put him in timeout, he knocked over his chair and called her a bad word that 5-year-olds shouldn’t know.

 Sandra picked him up from school that day, feeling embarrassed and confused. This wasn’t the sweet boy she tucked into bed every night. This was like a different kid. The problems kept growing. In first grade, Michael bit a classmate so hard he drew blood. In second grade, he threw a desk at his teacher. By third grade, the school was calling Sandra almost every day.

“We think Michael might need special help.” The principal told her, “Have you thought about seeing a doctor?” Sandra and Carlton tried everything. They took Michael to pediatricians who said he might have ADHD. They tried putting him on pills to calm him down, but the pills made him sleepy and angry at the same time.

 They took him to therapist who asked him to draw pictures and talk about his feelings. Michael would sit there and draw violent pictures, people getting hurt, houses on fire, animals with big teeth. When the therapist asked him why, he would just shrug and say, “I don’t know.” They tried child psychologists who said Michael had attachment issues because he was adopted.

 They said maybe he was angry about being given away by his real parents even though he was too young to remember them. Sandra would cry after these appointments. “What did we do wrong?” she would ask Carlton. “We love him. We give him everything. But love wasn’t enough.” By the time Michael was 10, he was seeing a new doctor every few months.

 The doctors gave him different pills and different labels. ADHD, oppositional defiant disorder, conduct disorder. Each new label came with new pills and new hopes that maybe this time they could fix him. Nothing worked. Michael got bigger and stronger. But his anger got bigger, too. When he was 11, he punched a hole in his bedroom wall because Sandra told him to clean his room.

 When he was 12, he stole money from her purse to buy candy. When she confronted him about it, he looked her right in the eyes and lied. The lying became constant. Michael would lie about small things, whether he brushed his teeth, whether he did his homework, but he would also lie about big things. He told his teacher that Carlton hit him, which wasn’t true.

 He told neighbors that Sandra didn’t feed him, also not true. Sandra felt like she was walking on eggshells in her own house. She never knew which Michael she would get. The sweet boy who still sometimes cuddled with her on the couch or the angry stranger who seemed to hate everything and everyone. The church tried to help.

 Pastor Williams would talk to Michael about God and Jesus and being good. For a while, Michael seemed interested. He would sit quietly during sermons and even volunteered to help with the Sunday school kids. But then the church had to ask him to stop volunteering. Some of the younger kids complained that Michael scared them.

 One little girl said Michael told her that bad things happen to kids who didn’t listen to their parents. Carlton started working longer hours. It was easier than coming home to another fight, another broken dish, another call from school. Sandra felt alone and tired. She had dreamed of being a mother, but this wasn’t what she had imagined.

 When Michael turned 13, Sandra found drugs in his backpack, just marijuana, but it was still drugs. When she confronted him, he didn’t deny it. He just looked at her with empty eyes and said, “So what? Everyone does it.” That was the first time Sandra wondered if they were losing him completely.

 Michael started running away. The first time he was gone for 6 hours. Sandra called the police, searched the neighborhood, and cried until she was sick. He came home around midnight, dirty and hungry, but he wouldn’t say where he had been. The second time, he was gone for 2 days. The police found him at a friend’s house, a kid whose parents worked all the time and didn’t pay attention to what their son was doing.

 By 14, Michael was running away once a month. He would disappear for days at a time, staying with friends or sleeping in parks or abandoned buildings. Each time he came back, he was a little bit harder, a little bit more distant. Sandra would beg him to tell her what was wrong. “Just talk to me,” she would say. “I’m your mother. I love you.

” But Michael would just shrug and go to his room. He had learned that words like love and family didn’t mean much when you felt broken inside. At 15, Michael stole his first car. It belonged to a neighbor, Mrs. Garcia, who lived three houses down. She was an old lady who was always nice to Michael, who would wave at him when he walked by and sometimes gave him cookies when he helped her carry groceries.

Michael took her car on a Tuesday morning while she was at the grocery store. He didn’t even know how to drive very well, but he got in and drove around Houston for hours, feeling powerful and free for the first time in his life. When the police caught him, Mrs. Garcia was heartbroken. Not just because her car was stolen, but because it was Michael who did it.

 The boy she had been kind to. The boy she thought she knew. That night, Sandra sat in the police station waiting room and realized something terrible. She didn’t recognize her own son anymore. The sweet little boy she had adopted was gone. replaced by someone angry and empty and capable of hurting people who cared about him.

Michael spent three months in juvenile detention for stealing the car. When he came home, he was different again, harder, quieter, more dangerous. He had learned things in juvie that nice middle-class kids from good families weren’t supposed to know. Sandra tried to reach him. She would make his favorite meals and ask about his day.

She would offer to take him shopping or to the movies. But Michael would just eat his food in silence and disappear into his room. At 16, he was arrested for breaking into houses. At 17, he was caught selling drugs at school. Each time, Sandra and Carlton would bail him out, hire lawyers, and hope that maybe this time would be the wakeup call he needed.

 But Michael was already too far gone. The system had failed him. the schools, the doctors, the therapists, even his loving parents. Or maybe he had failed the system. It was hard to tell anymore. By the time Michael turned 18, Sandra knew she was living with a stranger. A young man who looked like her son, but felt like a threat. Someone who could smile and hug her one minute, then steal from her the next.

 She still loved him. That was the horrible part. Even after everything, even after all the lies and the stealing and the fear, Sandra Perry still loved the little boy she had rocked to sleep years ago. But love wasn’t enough to save Michael from what he was becoming. And what he was becoming would soon destroy three innocent lives and change everything forever.

 Sandra Stoddler never expected to die. She thought kindness was armor. At 50, with neat graying hair and hands, always busy helping others, she worked the long night shifts as a nurse at Montgomery County Hospital. While some nurses retreated to the desk, Sandra walked wards, sat with scared men awaiting surgery, and held the hands of lonely women whose families were far away.

 “That’s just Sandra,” co-workers said. “She can’t help herself. She had always been that way, rescuing stray animals as a child, tutoring teens, and finally finding a calling where caring too much was needed. She lived in Bentwater, a gated Montgomery County neighborhood of manicured lawns, guards, and cameras. Her son, Adam, was 16 in 2001.

 Quiet, thoughtful, a decent student, and a baseball player. He had his father’s dark hair, his mother’s kind eyes, and a talent for helping neighbors without fanfare. Adam’s friends filled the house on weekends, video games, pool laughter, and Sandra left sandwiches on the counter and soaked in the noise she loved.

 One of Adam’s best friends was Jeremy Richardson, 18 and polite, a good influence who dreamed of opening an auto shop. Sandra treated him like a second son. Neighbors saw her as the smiling nurse who decorated the street at holidays and baked cookies for new families. But Sandra had a soft spot for troubled kids, those from broken homes, those a drift.

 She let friends of her son stay when they had nowhere else to go, lent rides and money, and forgave promises not always kept. Mom, you’re too trusting, Adam warned. She believed in second chances. That is how Michael Perry entered her life. Sometime in 2000, during a troubled stretch, Michael connected to Adam’s circle, was welcomed into Sandra’s home.

 She fed him, let him sleep on the couch, treated him with a kindness he likely had not felt elsewhere. To Sandra, this was decency. To Michael, her trust marked opportunity. Sandra owned a red Camaro, the one indulgence she bought for her 50th birthday. It sat gleaming in the driveway, a small emblem of joy. She loved to drive at night with the windows down.

 In October 2001, Sandra’s life unfolded as always. She worked long shifts, comforted dying patients, and returned home to tend her garden and listened to Adam talk about school. On October 23rd, she stayed late to sue the patients family and went home tired, content. She had no idea that two desperate teenagers were planning to steal her car or that her generosity had placed her in their sights.

 She slept in the safety of bentwater, surrounded by the life she had built, believing in the goodness of people. In less than 24 hours, that belief would cost her everything. The last normal day of Sandra Stoddler’s life was October 23rd, 2001. A day of care, of routine, of love. The next day, she would not wake up.

 Her death would later prompt questions about safety, mercy, and the cost of trusting others. Questions Bentwater residents would not soon forget. October 24th, 2001, a Wednesday night that started like any other in the quiet suburbs of Montgomery County, Texas. Sandra Stoddler had just finished her dinner and was getting ready for another night shift at the hospital.

 She kissed her son Adam goodbye and told him not to stay up too late playing video games. Adam was planning to hang out with his friend Jeremy Richardson, maybe watch a movie or just talk about girls in school. Neither Sandra nor Adam had any idea that two desperate young men were driving toward their neighborhood with a shotgun and a plan that was about to destroy their family forever.

Michael Perry and Jason Berquette had spent the day getting high and psyching themselves up for what they called a simple robbery. They had been talking about Sandra’s red Camaro for weeks, dreaming about the money they could get from selling it. But as the drugs wore off and reality set in, their simple plan was about to become something much darker.

 The Bentwater subdivision where Sandra lived was the kind of place where people moved to feel safe. There were security guards at the entrance, cameras on every corner, and gates that were supposed to keep out people like Michael and Jason. But security cameras can’t stop desperation, and gates can’t keep out people who have nothing left to lose.

 Michael knew Sandra’s address because he had been to her house before, back when she was trying to help him get his life together. He remembered where she kept her spare key. He remembered the layout of her house. He remembered that red Camaro sitting in the driveway like a shiny prize. Around 8:00 p.m., Michael and Jason drove into Bentwater in a borrowed pickup truck.

 They parked a few blocks away from Sandra’s house and walked through the neighborhood, trying to look casual. Jason was nervous, sweating despite the cool evening air. Michael seemed excited like he was looking forward to what was about to happen. Remember, nobody gets hurt,” Jason whispered as they approached Sandra’s house.

 “We just take the car and leave.” Michael nodded, but something in his eyes made Jason’s stomach turn. There was a hunger there, a darkness that went beyond just wanting money. Sandra’s house was a nice two-story home with a well-kept lawn and security lights that came on when anyone walked up the driveway. The red Camaro sat in the driveway exactly where Michael remembered it.

 All the windows in the house were dark, except for a few rooms where Sandra was getting ready for work. The original plan was simple. Jason would ring the front doorbell and ask to use the phone, saying his car had broken down. While Sandra was distracted, Michael would sneak around back with the shotgun and force her to give them the car keys.

 They would tie her up, take the car, and be gone before anyone knew what happened. But plans like that never work the way desperate people think they will. Jason rang the doorbell at 8:47 p.m. Sandra came to the door wearing her nurse’s uniform, getting ready to leave for her night shift. She looked through the peepphole and saw a young man who looked scared and helpless.

 “Please, ma’am,” Jason said when Sandra cracked open the door, keeping the chain lock fastened. “My car broke down a few blocks away. Could I use your phone to call my dad?” Sandra hesitated. Her neighborhood was safe, but you could never be too careful. But Jason looked so young and scared, and Sandra had always been the type of person who helped others when they needed it.

 “Hold on,” Sandra said. “Let me get my phone and bring it out to you.” “That wasn’t part of the plan. Jason was supposed to get inside the house.” He looked around nervously, knowing that Michael was hiding in the garage with a loaded shotgun, waiting for Jason to let him in through the back door. Ma’am, it’s kind of cold out here, Jason said, trying to sound pitiful.

 Could I maybe just step inside for a minute? Sandra looked at this young man through her door chain and made a decision that would cost her everything. She had helped troubled kids before. This boy looked cold and scared and harmless. What could it hurt to let him use the phone inside? Sandra unhooked the chain and opened the door.

 As soon as Jason stepped inside, everything went wrong. Sandra started to close the door behind him, but Jason grabbed it and held it open. She looked confused, then scared. “What are you doing?” Sandra asked. Before Jason could answer, Michael appeared at the back door with the shotgun in his hands. He had been hiding in the garage, waiting for his chance to get inside.

 When he heard Sandra talking to Jason at the front door, he broke through the back door and entered the house. Sandra heard the noise and turned around. When she saw Michael with the gun, she started to scream. “Shut up!” Michael yelled, pointing the shotgun at her chest. “Give us your car keys and nobody gets hurt.” But Sandra was already hurt.

 She was terrified, confused, trapped in her own home by two strangers with a gun. She was thinking about her son, Adam, wondering if he was safe, wondering if she would ever see him again. “The keys are in my purse,” Sandra said, her voice shaking. “Please, just take them and go. I won’t call the police. I promise.” But Michael wasn’t interested in quick and simple anymore.

 Something had changed in his face when he saw Sandra’s fear. He liked it. He was feeding off her terror in a way that made Jason sick to his stomach. Where’s your son? Michael demanded. He’s not here. Sandra lied, trying to protect Adam. He’s at a friend’s house. Michael didn’t believe her. He forced Sandra to walk through the house at gunpoint, checking every room.

 When they didn’t find Adam, Michael seemed disappointed. For the next hour, Michael held Sandra hostage in her own home while Jason stood by the door, shaking and wishing he had never agreed to this plan. Michael made Sandra empty out her purse and give them all her cash, about $200. He made her write down her credit card PIN numbers.

 He talked about tying her up in the closet so they could get away clean. But then something changed. Maybe Michael realized that Sandra could identify them to the police. Maybe he had always planned to kill her and was just waiting for the right moment. Maybe the drugs and the power and the gun in his hands made him feel like God. At 9:52 p.m.

, Michael Perry shot Sandra Startler twice in the chest with a 12- gauge shotgun. The blast was deafening in the small laundry room where he cornered her. Sandra fell backward, blood spreading across her nurse’s uniform, her kind eyes wide with shock and pain. She tried to say something. Maybe she was praying. Maybe she was asking why.

 Maybe she was thinking about Adam. But no words came out. Jason screamed. He hadn’t expected this. He had thought they were just going to rob her, take the car, maybe rough her up a little. He had never signed up for murder. “What did you do?” Jason yelled at Michael. “You said nobody would get hurt.” But Michael was already moving, already thinking about the next problem.

Sandra was dead, but they still didn’t have the car keys, and her son might come home any minute. Michael searched Sandra’s body and found the keys to the red Camaro. He also found her credit cards and cell phone. For a moment, he stood over Sandra’s body with a strange smile on his face, like he was proud of what he had done.

“Help me move her,” Michael told Jason. Jason couldn’t move. He was staring at Sandra’s body, at the blood spreading across the floor, at the woman who had just been trying to help a stranger and was now dead because of it. I can’t, Jason whispered. I can’t do this. You’re in this now, Michael said coldly. Help me or go to prison with me.

So Jason helped. They wrapped Sandra’s body in bed sheets from her own linen closet. They carried her out to the pickup truck and drove her to Crater Lake, a remote area near Grangerland, Texas. They dumped her body in the dark water and watched it disappear beneath the surface. Sandra Stoddler, the kind nurse who worked night shifts to help sick people, was gone.

 But the night of horror was far from over. But when they got back to Sandra’s house around 11 p.m., they discovered a terrible problem. The keys Michael had taken from Sandra’s purse were house keys, not car keys. The red Camaro was still sitting in the driveway, shiny and beautiful and completely useless to them. Where are the car keys? Jason asked, panic rising in his voice.

 Michael was furious. They had just murdered an innocent woman, and they didn’t even get what they came for. All that blood, all that risk, and they still had no car, and no real money. That’s when they saw headlights turning into the driveway. Adam Stoler was coming home in his Isuzu Rodeo with his best friend, Jeremy Richardson.

 Michael and Jason hid in the shadows and watched as the two teenage boys got out of the car, laughing about something that had happened earlier that night. Adam was carrying a bag of chips and a soda. Jeremy was talking about a girl he liked at school. They had no idea that Adam’s mother was already dead, floating in a dark lake miles away.

Adam and Jeremy walked up to the front door and Adam used his key to let them into the house. They called out for Sandra. but got no answer. The boys figured she had already left for her night shift at the hospital. Michael’s mind was racing. These boys had seen them near the house. They could identify them to the police.

 And Adam probably knew where his mother kept the spare keys to the Camaro. We have to get rid of them, Michael whispered to Jason. No, Jason said, his voice shaking. No more killing. Let’s just take Adam’s car and get out of here. But Michael was already thinking of a plan. A sick, twisted plan that would lure the boys away from the house and into the woods where no one could hear them scream.

 Michael walked up to the front door and knocked. When Adam answered, Michael put on his most innocent face and pretended to be in trouble. Hey man, I’m sorry to bother you so late, Michael said. But I was driving with my friend out on Hona Egypt road and we crashed our car. My friend is hurt real bad, bleeding and everything.

Can you help us? We don’t have a cell phone. Adam was just like his mother, too kind and trusting for his own good. He could have said no. He could have called 911 instead. He could have stayed safe inside his house. But Adam wanted to help. Of course, Adam said, “Let me get my keys. Jeremy, come on.

 We need to help these guys. Jeremy Richardson, 18 years old with dreams of becoming a mechanic, followed his best friend out to the car. The two boys had no idea they were walking into a trap set by their mother’s killer. Michael and Jason got into Adam Zuzu Rodeo with the two teenagers. Michael directed them to drive toward Hanea Egypt Road, a dark, isolated area surrounded by thick woods.

He kept telling them to hurry that his friend was bleeding badly and might die. Adam drove as fast as he could, worried about this injured stranger he was trying to save. Jeremy sat in the back seat, asking questions about the accident and offering to call an ambulance when they got there. When they reached the wooded area, Michael told Adam to pull over.

 “He’s right through those trees,” Michael said, pointing into the darkness. All four young men got out of the car. Adam and Jeremy started walking toward the woods, looking for the injured person who didn’t exist. Michael and Jason followed behind them, and Michael was carrying the shotgun again. When they were deep enough in the woods that no one could see them from the road, Michael and Jason struck.

 Jason shot Jeremy Richardson first. The blast knocked the 18-year-old boy to the ground, and he died almost instantly. Jeremy never got to ask that girl to prom. He never got to open his auto shop. He never got to say goodbye to his family. Adam heard the gunshot and spun around. Confusion and terror on his face.

 He saw his friend’s body on the ground and realized that he had been tricked. He tried to run, but there was nowhere to go in the dark woods. Michael shot Adam Stoddler next. Sandra’s 16-year-old son, the good kid who just wanted to help someone in trouble, fell next to his best friend in the dirt and leaves. Two more innocent lives were over.

 Two more families would wake up tomorrow to the worst news they could ever imagine. Michael and Jason stood in the dark woods surrounded by the bodies of three people who had died because of their greed and desperation. The night that started as a simple car theft had become a triple murder. But they still had work to do. Michael and Jason drove back to Sandra’s house in Adam’s Isuzu Rodeo.

 Now they finally had access to the house and Michael searched until he found the keys to the red Camaro. They also took Sandra’s credit cards and anything else valuable they could find. The two killers cleaned themselves up in Sandra’s bathroom, washing the blood off their hands and clothes like they were getting ready for a date.

 Then they drove both cars, the red Camaro and Adam’s Isuzu, to a bar in Houston where they drank beer and acted like nothing had happened. For the next few days, Michael and Jason lived like kings. They used Sandra’s credit cards to buy gas, food, and drugs. Michael drove the red Camaro around Houston like he owned it, not caring who saw him.

 Security cameras at gas stations recorded him using Sandra’s credit cards, but Michael was too high and too stupid to realize he was creating evidence against himself. On October 28th, 2001, just 4 days after the murders, Michael’s arrogance finally caught up with him. A police officer tried to pull over the red Camaro for a routine traffic stop.

 Instead of stopping, Michael panicked and led police on a high-speed chase through the streets of Houston. The chase ended when Michael crashed the Camaro into a fence. Michael tried to run on foot, but the police caught him a few blocks away. When they searched him, they found Adam Stoddler’s wallet in his pocket.

 Michael had been carrying around a dead boy’s identification like a trophy. But Michael was smarter than the police realized, or maybe just luckier. When they arrested him, he gave them Adam’s name instead of his own. The police thought they had caught Adam Stoddler, not the person who had murdered Adam Stoddler.

 For several hours, Michael sat in jail pretending to be Adam. He probably would have gotten away with it, too. Except for one problem. People were looking for the real Adam Stoddler. Sandra’s co-workers had called the police when she didn’t show up for her shift at the hospital. When officers went to check on her at home, they found signs of a struggle in blood in the laundry room.

 Adam and Jeremy were reported missing by their families when they didn’t come home that night. A few days later, fishermen at Crater Lake found Sandra’s body floating in the water, wrapped in bed sheets from her own home. The police quickly realized that the young man they had in custody couldn’t be Adam Stoler because Adam Stoler was missing and possibly dead.

When confronted with the evidence, Michael finally admitted who he really was. But he was released on bond under Adam’s name because the police paperwork was all mixed up. It was a mistake that would let a triple murderer walk free for several more weeks. Meanwhile, Jason Berquette had been arrested separately when police found him with items stolen from Sandra’s house.

 Unlike Michael, Jason couldn’t handle the pressure of being questioned by detectives. He broke down and confessed to being involved in the murders, but he tried to put all the blame on Michael. Michael planned everything. Jason told the police, “He’s the one who shot Sandra. He made me help him. I didn’t want to hurt anybody.

 But the evidence showed that Jason had pulled the trigger on both Jeremy and Adam. He was just as guilty as Michael, even if he tried to make himself sound like the victim. Over the next few weeks, police found the bodies of Jeremy Richardson and Adam Stoler in the woods off Hana Egypt Road, exactly where Jason said they would be.

Both boys had been shot with the same shotgun that killed Sandra. The evidence against Michael and Jason was overwhelming. Security camera footage, fingerprints, the stolen credit cards, the victim’s belongings, Jason’s confession. Everything pointed to their guilt. Three families had lost the people they loved most.

 Sandra Stoddler, the kind nurse who tried to help everyone. Adam Stoddler, the good son who died trying to help a stranger. Jeremy Richardson, the loyal friend who was in the wrong place at the wrong time. All for a red Camaro and a few hundred in cash. Michael Perry and Jason Berquette had traded three innocent lives for things that didn’t even matter.

 And now they would both pay the price for what they had done. But the question remained, would they both pay the same price? The trial of Michael James Perry and Jason Aaron Berquette began in February 2003 at the Montgomery County Courthouse in Conroe, Texas. Both young men were charged with capital murder, killing Sandra Stoddler during a robbery and murdering Adam Stoddler and Jeremy Richardson to cover up their crimes.

 The prosecutors made it clear from the beginning they wanted the death penalty for both killers. District Attorney Mike McDougall stood before the jury and painted a picture of two coldblooded murderers who had destroyed three innocent lives for nothing more than a car and some pocket money. The evidence was overwhelming. Security footage, fingerprints, stolen belongings, and Jason’s own confession.

But the two trials would play out very differently, and the results would shock everyone involved. Michael Perry’s trial came first, and from the moment he walked into that courtroom, he showed the world exactly who he really was. While prosecutors displayed graphic crime scene photos of Sandra Stoddler’s blood soaked laundry room, Michael smirked.

 When they played recordings of 911 calls from Sandra’s worried co-workers, Michael chuckled quietly to himself. When Jeremy Richardson’s mother took the stand to talk about her dead son’s dreams of becoming a mechanic, Michael actually laughed out loud. The jury couldn’t believe what they were seeing. Here was a young man who had brutally murdered three people, and he acted like it was all some kind of joke.

 Even his own defense lawyers looked embarrassed and disgusted by his behavior. “He shows absolutely no remorse,” one juror said later. “He acted like killing those people was the funniest thing in the world. Michael’s defense team tried to argue that he had been failed by the system, that his troubled childhood and mental health issues should be considered.

 They brought in experts who talked about his adoption trauma and his history of behavioral problems. But it didn’t matter. The jury had seen Michael laugh at the pain of grieving families. They had watched him treat the worst day of these people’s lives like entertainment. In their minds, Michael Perry was exactly the kind of person the death penalty was created for.

 After just two hours of deliberation, the jury found Michael guilty of capital murder. The sentencing phase took six more hours, but the result was never really in doubt. Michael James Perry was sentenced to death by lethal injection. Jason Burrett’s trial was completely different. Jason’s defense team had learned from Michael’s mistakes.

 They knew that showing remorse and humanity was the only way to save their client’s life. And Jason, unlike Michael, seemed to understand the gravity of what he had done. Jason sat quietly throughout his trial, often with tears in his eyes. When victim’s family members testified, he looked down at his hands in shame.

When crime scene photos were shown, he visibly flinched and turned away. But the real difference in Jason’s trial came when his father, Delbert Burr, took the stand. Delbert had been serving time in prison for his own violent crimes, but he was brought to the courthouse in shackles to testify for his son.

 What happened next was one of the most emotional moments anyone in that courtroom had ever witnessed. Delbert Burquette, a hard man who had spent years behind bars, broke down completely as he talked about his son. Tears streamed down his weathered face as he told the jury about his own failures as a father.

 I wasn’t there for Jason when he needed me. Delbert sobbed. I was in prison or I was drinking or I was hurting his mother. I failed him every single day of his life. This is my fault, not his. If you’re going to kill someone for what happened, kill me instead. Delbert talked about the violence in their home, about how he had beaten Jason’s mother in front of the boy, about how his own criminal behavior had shown Jason that violence was normal.

 He took full responsibility for turning his son into the kind of person who could commit murder. “Jason never had a chance,” Delbert said, his voice breaking. “I took that chance away from him before he was even old enough to understand. Please don’t kill my boy for the mistakes I made.” The courtroom was silent, except for the sound of Delbert’s sobs and the quiet crying of several jurors.

 Even the prosecutors seemed moved by this broken father’s desperate plea to save his son’s life. When the jury deliberated on Jason’s sentence, they had a much harder decision to make than Michael’s jury had faced. Jason had pulled the trigger on two of the victims, but he had shown genuine remorse.

 His father’s testimony had painted a picture of a young man who had been damaged by years of abuse and neglect. After hours of debate, two jurors held out against the death penalty. They couldn’t bring themselves to execute someone whose childhood had been destroyed by the very person who was now begging for his life. Jason Briquette was sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole after 40 years.

 The different sentences created a controversy that would last for years. Both men had committed the same crimes, but Michael would die while Jason would eventually have a chance at freedom. Some people thought it was unfair. Others believed that Jason’s remorse and terrible childhood had earned him a second chance that Michael didn’t deserve.

 Michael Perry was sent to the Palinsky unit in Livingston, Texas, home to the state’s male death row inmates. His world became a 6×10 ft concrete cell where he would spend 23 hours a day in complete isolation. For 8 years, Michael lived in that cell, filing appeals and writing letters to anyone who would listen. Some days he claimed innocence, insisting that Jason had been the real killer.

 Other days he talked about finding God and being sorry for what he had done. A few people believed him. Others thought he was still playing games, still trying to manipulate his way out of the consequences of his actions. In 2010, German filmmaker Verer Herzog came to interview Michael for a documentary about death row.

 During that interview, Michael seemed calm and peaceful, very different from the laughing young man who had mocked his victim’s families during his trial. “I didn’t kill anyone,” Michael told Herzog, looking directly into the camera with sincere eyes. But by then, it didn’t matter what Michael said. His appeals had been exhausted. The courts had ruled.

 The state of Texas had set his execution date for July 1st, 2010. July 1st, 2010, the final day. Michael Perry woke up in his death watch cell at 5:00 a.m. knowing he would not live to see another sunrise. At 28 years old, he was about to become one of the youngest people executed in modern Texas history. The morning routine was exactly the same as it had been described in his case files.

 A simple breakfast he barely touched, a final shower, a clean white uniform instead of his usual prison clothes. At 12:30 p.m., his adoptive mother, Sandra Perry, came to visit him one last time. They sat on opposite sides of thick glass, speaking through phones, both of them crying. For 30 minutes, Michael wasn’t the death row inmate who had laughed during his trial.

He was just her little boy, the troubled child she had tried so hard to save. When the visit ended, Sandra Perry walked away from her son for the last time, knowing she would never touch him again, never hear his voice again, never have another chance to tell him she loved him.

 At 3:30 p.m., Michael’s final meal arrived. Three bacon, egg, and cheese omelets, three chicken, and cheese enchiladas, and three sodas, Pepsi, Coca-Cola, and Dr. Pepper. He ate slowly, savoring each bite, trying to make his last taste of food last as long as possible. As the sun began to set over the Texas prison system, four correctional officers came to Michael’s cell. It was time for the final walk.

Michael Perry stood up calmly and allowed himself to be handcuffed. He walked the 30 ft from his cell to the death chamber without resistance, his head held high, his face peaceful. The execution chamber was painted pale green and kept ice cold by air conditioning. Michael climbed onto the gurnie by himself and allowed the officers to strap him down.

 IV lines were inserted into both arms, ready to carry the deadly chemicals into his bloodstream. Through the observation windows, two groups of people watched and waited. On one side sat Michael’s mother and aunt, holding hands and praying quietly. On the other side sat family members of Sandra Stoddler, the woman whose kindness had cost her everything.

 At exactly 6:00 p.m., the warden leaned down close to Michael’s face and spoke the words that have been spoken to hundreds of condemned inmates. Do you have any final words? Michael Perry turned his head toward the glass windows and spoke his final words to the world. I want everyone to know what happened here. this atrocity.

 You are forgiven by me. He turned toward his mother’s window, tears rolling down his cheeks. Mom, I love you. Dad, I’m coming home. His adoptive father had died a few weeks earlier, and Michael believed he was about to be reunited with him. At 6:02 p.m., the lethal injection began to flow through the IV lines.

 First came the sedative, making Michael’s eyes flutter and his breathing slow. Then came the paralytic agent, stopping his ability to move or speak. Finally came the potassium chloride, stopping his heart forever. Michael James Perry was pronounced dead at 6:17 p.m. on July 1st, 2010. He was 28 years old.

 Outside the prison walls, there were no crowds, no protesters, no celebrations. Just another quiet Texas evening and another name added to the long list of people who had paid the ultimate price for their crimes. For Sandra Stoddler’s family, watching Michael die didn’t bring the peace they had hoped for. Going in, I thought it would be worse.

Sandra’s daughter told reporters afterward, “I felt sorry for the family. It’s not a good day for anybody. For Michael’s mother, the execution marked the end of a journey that had begun 28 years earlier when she adopted a baby boy who needed love. Despite everything he had done, despite all the pain he had caused, she had never stopped being his mother.

 Three people died in Montgomery County in 2001 because of greed and drugs and desperation. 9 years later, a fourth life ended in Huntsville because the state of Texas believed some crimes deserve the ultimate punishment. Whether Michael Perry deserved to die is a question that still divides people today. What isn’t debatable is that four families were forever changed by the events that began on October 24th, 2001, when two desperate young men decided that a red Camaro was worth more than human life.

Some stories don’t have happy endings. Some mistakes can’t be forgiven or forgotten. Some choices once made can never be taken back. This is the story of Michael James Perry, a broken boy who became a killer and who died still claiming that he was innocent of the crimes that put him on death row. Whether you believe him or not, he’s gone now.

 And Sandra Stoddler, Adam Stoddler, and Jeremy Richardson are still dead. That’s the only truth that really matters.