The man who pulled the trigger and ended Officer Gaddis' life was Edgar Tamayo, 26. Last month, 20 years and one day after the crime, he finally went to the death chamber.
You may be thinking 20 years is an awful long time from conviction to execution for a cop killer in Texas, which is very proactive when it comes to capital punishment. And you'd be right to think so.
The Tamayo death sentence has been one of the most convoluted executions in Texas history. Here's the rub. Tamayo was a Mexican national who was illegally in the United States. And UN treaty law involving consular notification was not properly followed after his arrest.
So in addition to being a cause for the usual anti-death penalty attorneys, Tamayo had Mexican government officials in his corner. They claimed that even though the Mexican Consulate in Houston was notified 10 days before trial that the notification was too late to satisfy the requirement of the UN treaty and also too late to have any effect on the outcome of the trial. Specifically, the Mexican government believes that a more prompt notification of the consulate would have given Mexican officials more time to find witnesses that might have testified on Tamayo's behalf during the penalty phase of the trial.
One thing is clear: Those witnesses would not have been testifying that Tamayo was a gentle and loving soul. Prior to murdering Gaddis, he served time in California for robbery and parole violations. Instead, what Tamayo's supporters argue is that he was too mentally retarded to execute.