Executed June 12, 2000 by Lethal Injection in Texas
W / M / 39 - 48 Sybil Mares Denis
Evidence was also presented that Mason had confined Melinda Mason with a gun at an athletic club on September 16, 1991, two weeks prior to the murders of Brock and Dennis. This led to a five hour armed standoff with police.
Citations:
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Texas Department of Criminal Justice - Executed Offenders (Thomas Wayne Mason)
Texas Department of Criminal Justice
MEDIA ADVISORY: THOMAS WAYNE MASON SCHEDULED TO BE EXECUTED
AUSTIN - Texas Attorney General John Cornyn offers the following information on Thomas Wayne Mason who is scheduled to be executed after 6 p.m., Monday, June 12th:
Thomas Wayne Mason was convicted of murdering Marsha Brock and Sybil Mares Dennis, the mother and grandmother respectively, of his estranged wife, Melinda Mason. Thomas Wayne Mason was convicted and sentenced to death for the two murders in 1992.
FACTS OF THE CRIME
Evidence presented at trial showed that on Oct. 2, 1991, Mason traveled from his home in Tennessee, stopped at an East Texas pawn shop, and bought a twelve-gauge shotgun and three boxes of buckshot ammunition. On the federal firearms form he listed 113 Robinwood Street, Whitehouse, Texas, as his address. This was the residence at which Marsha Brock and Sybil Mares Dennis resided. Mason told the owner of another pawn shop that he needed a shotgun to hunt with, and that he was only going to use the gun one time.
That afternoon, Mason watched Robinwood Street from a "Chicken and Burgers" restaurant a block or two away from Brock's and Dennis' residence, waiting for Brock to come home from work. Rebecca Foshee, who was working at "Chicken and Burgers" that day, testified that at some point she saw Mason leave hurriedly, drive over a grassy area, run a stop sign, and drive down Robinwood Street. Shortly after Brock arrived at her home, Mason entered the house and shot her once in the head at close range. Evidence showed that Brock's skull was blown apart. Skull fragments and brain matter were recovered from several parts of the house. Mason then moved on to his next victim. Dennis was attempting to call for help when Mason began shooting her. His first shot into Dennis blew through her right forearm and entered her chest, knocking her to the ground. He then closed in on her and fired another round into her side.
Taresa Awtry, a dispatcher with the Whitehouse Police Department, testified that at 4:22 p.m. she received a 911 hang-up and called the number back, at which time she heard an elderly woman scream, "Help me. Help me. Help me." Awtry stated she then heard a loud bang or crash and a man say, "Hang up the phone!" She then heard the phone being dropped and a woman moaning and whimpering, and the line went dead. Awtry dispatched officer Jim Gill to the Robinwood residence, where he discovered the bodies of Brock and Dennis. Gill testified that as he approached the residence, he recalled that a "Check-in-Passing" (CIP) had been issued on the residence which instructed officers on patrol to routinely drive by and check the house. The CIP was issued on Aug. 14, 1991, after Brock reported that Mason had threatened to burn down the house.
Shortly after the murders, Mason called his nephew, Eddie Mason, and admitted killing Melinda's mother and grandmother. The following day, Oct. 3rd, Mason returned to Tennessee, called his daughter Tabitha, and admitted killing Brock and Dennis. He explained to Tabitha that he had used a twelve-gauge shotgun to murder her step-grandmother and step-great-grandmother. He also told her during this conversation that he wanted to kill Gary Brock, Susan Brock, and Mares Dennis, relatives of Melinda's with whom she had lived for a short time after her separation from Mason.
Later, on Oct. 3rd, Buck Mason called Steve Bartlett, another cousin of Mason's, who was a Memphis, Tennessee police officer. Buck explained that Mason was at his house and that Mason wanted to turn himself in to the police for the murders. Bartlett was instructed to come over immediately and come alone. Bartlett was informed that Mason had murdered two persons in Texas with a shotgun and was believed to still be in possession of the shotgun. Also he was informed that the homicide division of the Memphis Police Department was looking for Mason. Bartlett was directed by Buck to meet him in the pasture behind his house.
Bartlett testified that as he approached Buck's property, it was very dark, so he drove toward the pasture with his brights on. He made a U-turn and saw Buck emerge from the pasture. Bartlett testified that he was nervous about meeting Buck in the pasture and walking through the darkness toward the house. As Buck and Bartlett approached the front door of the house, Thomas Wayne Mason came outside with Eric Mason, Buck's oldest son, to whom he had also admitted the murders. Bartlett took Thomas Wayne Mason back to Memphis. While paperwork was being completed on his arrest, Mason commented, "I don't know what the big deal is, over just getting rid of a mother-in-law" and laughed.
The shotgun was retrieved from the pasture, along with a bag of clothing belonging to Mason. Blood scrapings subsequently taken from the shotgun matched the blood types of both Marsha Brock and Sybil Mares Dennis. Ballistics tests run on the spent shotgun casings found near the victims, two near Dennis' body and one near Brock's body, showed that the casings were fired from the shotgun purchased at the East Texas pawn shop on Oct. 2, 1991. In addition to this evidence, testimony was heard from Mason's daughter Tabitha, that five days prior to the murders Mason told her that he wanted to kill Brock, and then said, "No, I really don't want to kill her. I just want to cripple her, because I want her to remember me for the rest of her life--the rest of my life." Tabitha testified that later, while in jail, Mason said, "I'm glad they're gone."
Evidence was also presented that Mason was involved in an armed standoff with police on Sept. 16, 1991, two weeks prior to the murders of Brock and Dennis.
Eleanor Leggett, an instructor at the Mansfield Business School where Melinda Mason attended classes, testified that on Sept. 16th she observed police officers and a SWAT team in the parking lot in front of the Lake June Athletic Club, next to the business school from about 8:00 a.m. to about 2:00 p.m. She testified that she saw police officers escort Thomas Wayne Mason out of the building, and that she saw Melinda crying, very upset, and incoherent.
Kathy Gravely, a student at the Mansfield Business School, then testified that she was sitting with Melinda Mason on the steps "to the spa, which is right next door to the school." Gravely heard Melinda scream. Gravely turned and saw Thomas Wayne Mason beside them with a gun. Gravely testified that, after Mason confronted Melinda with a gun, Melinda fled into the spa with Mason in pursuit.
Todd Stewart, a police officer who was dispatched to the athletic club, testified that Mason was holding Melinda in a room in the athletic club and would not release her. He testified that reports were that Mason was armed, and that when he spoke with Mason at the door in an attempt to get Mason to come out, Mason stated that everybody had to leave or someone was going to get hurt. Stewart also testified that he heard female screams from inside the room in which Mason was holding Melinda. Finally, police officer David Johnson testified at length about the stand-off. He stated that evidence seized from Mason included a Colt .380 semi-automatic handgun, 55 rounds of ammunition, three loaded clips, and other loose ammunition. He described the scene in which 20 police units, a SWAT team, and media personnel were involved.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Mason was charged by indictment in Smith County, Texas, with the capital murder of murdering more than one individual during the same criminal transaction. Mason was tried before a jury upon a plea of not guilty. The jury found him guilty on June 26, 1992. Following a separate punishment hearing, the jury sentenced Mason to death.
Mason appealed his conviction and sentence to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, which affirmed the conviction and sentence on June 14, 1995. The United States Supreme Court denied Mason's petition for writ of certiorari on Nov.13, 1995. Mason then filed an application for a state writ of habeas corpus with the convicting court on July 24, 1997.
After conducting an evidentiary hearing, the convicting court recommended that relief be denied. On Feb. 21, 1998, the Court of Criminal Appeals adopted the trial court's findings and denied relief. In April 1998, Mason filed a federal petition for writ of habeas corpus in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, Texarkana Division. The district court denied relief on Feb. 16, 1999, and later denied Mason permission to appeal. The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit similarly denied Mason permission to appeal on Dec. 3, 1999, and denied Mason's motion for rehearing on Feb. 2, 2000. Mason then filed a petition for writ of certiorari to the United States Supreme Court, but it was rejected by the court clerk because it was missing an attachment. Mason's attorney was directed to re-file the petition with the attachment but has not done so yet.
PRIOR CRIMINAL HISTORY
At the punishment phase of trial, the State introduced additional evidence regarding the hostage situation two weeks before the murders. Melinda Mason testified that Mason held a gun to her face and told her he was going to kill her, then himself, but he wanted to make love to her first. Over the five-and-a-half hours in which Mason held her hostage, Mason forced her into sex acts with him. During the ordeal, Mason repeatedly told her he would kill her. Melinda Mason eventually convinced him to let her go by promising to reconcile with him. During their marriage, Thomas Wayne Mason beat her and threatened to kill her, and prevented Melinda Mason from seeing her family.
Mason's first wife, Billie Jones, described experiences similar to that suffered by Melinda Mason. Jones testified that Mason beat her throughout their marriage, even when she was pregnant. Mason also prevented Jones from seeing her family. At some point in 1973, Jones took the couple's daughter, Tabitha, and moved in with her parents. Mason attempted to reconcile with Jones and, when she refused his offer, Mason pulled a gun and took Tabitha. Mason returned, with Tabitha, about two weeks later. When Jones would not go out to see him, Mason left and returned, without Tabitha, a couple hours later. Mason kicked in the back door to the home and pulled a phone out of the wall. Mason opened fire in the house, but was shot by Jones' uncle. Jones saw Mason and Tabitha a few months later, and again refused to return to the marriage. She did not see her daughter again for 14 years
A judge has set a June 12 execution date for death-row inmate Thomas Wayne Mason, convicted of the shotgun slayings of his estranged wife's mother and grandmother. Mason said after his sentencing Thursday that "everybody is going to die someday. It ain't no big deal. It's being lied on that matters."
Mason, 47, contends the case against him was fabricated. He was found guilty in 1992 of shooting to death Marsha Yvonne Brock and Sybil Mares Dennis on Oct. 2, 1991. Mason's former wife, who left him shortly before he shot her mother and grandmother, told the Tyler Morning Telegraph that she plans to watch his execution. "He's getting off so easy," Melinda Mason said. "He shot 2 people in cold blood." She said the killings were in revenge for their breakup.
He bought the 12-gauge shotgun used to kill Brock, 55, and Dennis, 80, from a Tyler pawn shop, prosecutors said. Whitehouse police responded to the women's home after a dispatcher received a 911 hang-up call. When the dispatcher called the number back, she heard a woman screaming, "Help me, help me, help me." Then she heard a loud bang, a male voice and a woman whimpering before the phone went dead. Police found the body of Dennis in a back bedroom of the home, her right arm nearly severed and a broken telephone at her feet. Three times the frantic voice on the telephone screamed at the 911 operator: "Help me!" The dispatcher at the Whitehouse Police Department then heard a loud noise and a man's voice yelling, "Hang up the phone." The woman moaned and whimpered. The line went dead. Responding to the call, police found the bodies of 2 women.
Mason, a former Dallas construction worker, refused to stand for the judge during his sentencing Thursday and shouted an objection during the hearing. Joseph Bailey, Mason's appeals attorney, said he is requesting that the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals reconsider its March denial of his petition for a new trial. Bailey said he wants a psychologist to examine Mason, who has mailed him three boxes of "incoherent" letters full of scribbles and underlines. District Judge Cynthia Kent denied his request. The judge has had Mason examined several times and said she believes he is competent.
The man convicted of their shooting deaths 8.5 years ago, Thomas Wayne Mason, 48, is set to die by lethal injection. "He was upset with his ex-wife and decided to take it out on her mother and grandmother," said Jack Skeen, the district attorney who prosecuted Mason. Mason, the estranged husband of Brock's daughter, Melinda Mason, was arrested the day after the Oct. 2, 1991, slayings. A shotgun was recovered in a pasture and blood scrapings on the weapon matched the blood of the victims. 2 weeks before the shootings, Mason took his estranged wife hostage and held her for 5.5 hours at gunpoint, according to testimony at his trial. In a recent death row interview, the former drywall installer denied any role in the slayings. "It didn't happen. I never shot at nobody," he said. "The government is conspiring to murder me."
Texas Execution Information Center
Thomas Wayne Mason, 48, was executed by lethal injection on 12 June in Huntsville, Texas for the murder of his mother-in-law and her mother.
Prosecutors believe that Mason was upset about his separation from his wife when he showed up at the home of Marsha Yvonne Brock, 55, with a 12-gague shotgun in October 1991. Brock called 911 and screamed "Help me!" three times before Mason shot her and Sybil Mares Dennis, 80, in the head at close range.
Mason was arrested the next day in Tennessee after telling a nephew and a daughter about the shootings. "I don't know what the big deal is, over just getting rid of a mother-in-law," he told officers.
Two months earlier, police had placed Brock's home under surveillance after she reported that Mason had threatened to burn it down. At his trial, Mason testified that two weeks before the shooting, he took his estranged wife, Melinda Mason, hostage and held her for 5½ hours at gunpoint.
Later, Mason denied killing the two women and denied having talked about their murders to anyone. In a bitter last statement, he blamed Smith County District Attorney Jack Skeen for his conviction and the failure of his appeals. "He did everything but make sure I got a fair trial to prove I was innocent." He called his trial defense lawyer a "sellout" and accused him of conspiring with Skeen. "Jack Skeen can laugh all he wants, like he's the big hero after this is over with," Mason said. "Who's getting the last laugh? The guy who got away."
As the drugs began taking effect, Mason blurted out, "This stuff has a bad taste to it." He was pronounced dead at 6:24 p.m.
HUNTSVILLE, Texas (AP) — An East Texas man who blamed a government conspiracy for framing him in the shotgun slayings of his estranged wife's mother and grandmother was executed Monday evening. Thomas Wayne Mason, 48, received a lethal injection for the killings 81/2 years ago of Marsha Brock, 55, and her 80-year-old mother, Sybil Dennis.
In a bitter last statement, Mason blamed Smith County prosecutors for orchestrating his conviction and for the failure of his appeals.
“They did everything but make sure I got a fair trial to prove I was innocent,” Mason, staring straight at the death chamber ceiling, said.
He complained that his trial record was altered and that his “sellout lawyer” worked with the district attorney, Jack Skeen, to conspire against him in the courts.
“Jack Skeen can laugh all he wants like he's the big hero after this is over with,” Mason said. “Who's getting the last laugh? The guy who got away.”
Mason was the 20th Texas inmate executed this year and the first of three set to die this week.
As the drugs began taking effect, he blurted out: “This stuff has a bad taste to it.”
Then he gasped twice and sputtered, then slipped into unconsciousness. He was pronounced dead seven minutes later at 6:24 p.m. CDT.
His estranged wife, Melinda Mason, and Skeen were among the witnesses who watched through a window a few feet away. He never turned toward the witnesses and never acknowledged their presence.
“He's had the same comments for the last eight years,” Skeen said later. “State judges and federal judges have heard them and found them totally groundless.”
“It's been the longest 81/2 years, I'm so glad he's had justice served to him,” Melinda Mason said, her voice cracking. “My mom ... my grandmother can rest in peace. I don't have to face the fear of this man hurting me any more.” Mason met with friends and relatives earlier Monday but made no last meal request. The U.S. Supreme Court turned down his final appeal Monday afternoon.
“I think of a cold-blooded, vicious, premeditated killer who got mad at his ex-wife, came to Tyler and bought a shotgun at a pawn shop, went down to Whitehouse south of Tyler to a little restaurant, sat there and had lunch and waited for his ex-wife's mother to drive by, then followed her home,” said Skeen.
According to court documents, Dennis called 911 to report the impending carnage, screaming “Help me!” three times. The dispatcher at the Whitehouse Police Department then heard a bang or crash, and a man's voice ordering: “Hang up the phone.” The woman moaned and whimpered as the line went dead. “We know from the physical evidence at the scene, he chased (Brock) into the house,” Skeen said. “By the time he got to the living room, he blew the back of her head out with a shotgun.” Then he approached Dennis, on the phone, Skeen said.
“Mason shot her and almost blew her arm off,” Skeen said. “She fell on the floor and he walked up and executed her with a shotgun blast to her side.”
The telephone call generated an address on the dispatcher's screen but by the time officers arrived, Mason was gone, en route to Tennessee, where he was arrested the next day after telling a nephew and a daughter about the shootings.
The shotgun was recovered in a pasture and blood scrapings on the weapon matched the blood of the victims. Shell casings found at the scene also matched the weapon. “I don't know what the big deal is, over just getting rid of a mother-in-law,” Mason told officers.
In a recent death row interview, however, the drywall installer denied any role in the slayings and denied telling anyone about his involvement. “It didn't happen,” he insisted. “I never shot at nobody. “There are no documents of any of this stuff because it didn't happen. The government is conspiring to murder me.”
Two weeks before the shootings, Mason took his estranged wife hostage and held her for 51/2 hours at gunpoint and forced her to perform sex acts, testimony at his trial showed.
His first wife also testified that he beat her, pulled a gun once and opened fire in the house, then was wounded in an exchange of gunfire with another relative.
Another convicted killer, John Burks, was set to die Wednesday for the fatal shooting of a Waco tortilla store owner during a 1989 robbery.
On Thursday, convicted murderer Paul Nuncio was set to follow him to the death chamber for the 1995 rape and strangling of a 61-year-old Plainview woman during a burglary of her home.
45th murderer executed in U.S. in 2000
643rd murderer executed in U.S. since 1976
20th murderer executed in Texas in 2000
219th murderer executed in Texas since 1976
(Race/Sex/Age at Murder-Execution)
Birth
(Race/Sex/Age at Murder)
Murder
Murder
to Murderer
Sentence
Thomas Wayne Mason
Marsha Yvonne Brock
W / F / 55
W / F / 80
Grandmother-in-law
07-14-92
Summary:
On October 2, 1991, Mason traveled from his home in Tennessee, stopped at an East Texas pawn shop, and bought a twelve-gauge shotgun and three boxes of buckshot ammunition. On the federal firearms form he listed 113 Robinwood Street, Whitehouse, Texas, as his address. This was the residence at which Marsha Brock and Sybil Mares Dennis resided. Brock and Dennis were the mother and grandmother of Mason's estranged wife. Mason then went to the home and waited outside for Marsha Brock to return from her work. Shortly after Brock arrived, Mason entered the house and shot her once in the head at close range. Dennis was attempting to call for help when Mason began shooting her. His first shot into Dennis blew through her right forearm and entered her chest, knocking her to the ground. He then closed in on her and fired another round into her side. A dispatcher with the Whitehouse Police Department, testified that at 4:22 p.m. she received a 911 hang-up and called the number back, at which time she heard an elderly woman scream, "Help me. Help me. Help me." Awtry stated she then heard a loud bang or crash and a man say, "Hang up the phone!" She then heard the phone being dropped and a woman moaning and whimpering, and the line went dead. Mason had previously threatened to burn the house down and police were advised to drive by to check on the residents from time to time. Shortly after the murders, Mason called several relatives and admitted that he had committed the murders. Following his arrest, Mason laughed: "I don't know what the big deal is, over just getting rid of a mother-in-law."