Tag Archives: serial killer

UPDATE TO A K A SERIAL KILLER

The State of Texas did the right thing. After what felt like ten years grief, flashbacks, frustration (but was only a few months; not that the flashbacks and nightmares have ever completely stopped), I received the call from Victim Services on Friday: Parole denied for Lyle Richard Brummett, serial killer. He will be incarcerated at least until 2014, when he will be up for review again. It’s a long story, not a pleasant one. Instead of repeating it here, I am reposting the original post from a couple of weeks ago, and also, the update in today’s (5.21.12) Austin Statesman. You can read it below, or here.

Parole denied for man convicted of 1970s murders in Austin, Kerrville

A man convicted of killing women in Austin and Kerrville in the 1970s has been denied parole a month after state officials sent his victims’ family members letters with conflicting statements about whether or not he would be released.

Lyle Richard Brummett, who is serving two life sentences for murders he committed in 1975 and 1976, will not be eligible for parole again until 2014, officials with the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles said Monday. A board panel reached its decision Friday, a week after interviewing several people who knew or were related to the women Brummett killed.

The news came as a relief to Jesse Sublett, an Austin musician and author who was dating 22-year-old Dianne Roberts when she was killed by Brummett in August 1976.

“It’s absolutely, absolutely good news,” Sublett said Monday of the board’s decision. “Considering how we went from him being released to him being kept in, we’ll take it.”

In March, Sublett and others received letters from the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. One letter said that Brummett would be paroled, but the last said the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles had flagged Brummett for “special review.”

A spokeswoman for the board said a panel interviewed Brummett and voted to release him into treatment but then realized he did not qualify for it.

“They apologized for their errors the first time,” said Sublett, who traveled to Angleton, which is south of Houston, on May 11 to make the case that Brummett should not be released. Sublett said he was joined by Roberts’ father and the brother of Beth Pearson, who was killed in Kerrville by Brummett in 1975.

Sublett found Roberts dead in the apartment they shared in South Austin. When police apprehended Brummett, he told them that he had killed two other young women in Kerrville — Pearson and 18-year-old Carol Ann London. Brummett was eventually convicted of killing Roberts and London. He has been in prison for decades, and while he has come up for parole before, he has always been denied.

When Sublett learned that Brummett may be released, he said he became extremely fearful that the convicted killer — now 55 — could hurt someone else.

“I’d like (Brummett) to stay in prison for the rest of his life,” Sublett said. “If not, I’d really like him to stay there another 10 or 20 years, until he’s old and slow when he gets out.”

Contact Patrick George at 445-3548

Thanks to all of you who wrote letters protesting the possible parole of this offender. Thanks also to those of you who expressed your support in other ways.

THE ORIGINAL POST, FROM EARLIER IN MAY>>>>>>>A K A SERIAL KILLER

The Texas board of pardons and paroles cannot make up their minds about whether or not to release the serial rapist and serial murderer, Lyle Richard Brummett (a k a Lyle Richard, Richard Stone, etc.), who murdered my longtime girlfriend, Dianne Roberts, in 1976, and was also convicted for his role in the murders of at least two other women in Kerrville in 1975. I’ve had trouble sleeping at night for a long time now. It hasn’t helped to get conflicting letters from Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ). First they said he had been denied parole. Then they said “accepted.” Then they said he’s under “special review.”

The grim facts have weighed heavily on me for 36 years now. But on the plus side, at least I’m alive. So it’s my duty, in a way, to spread the word about this individual and his path of destruction. I’ve written about this before, in my book Never the Same Again, in great detail. I’d rather you read about it there than to have to write another word about it. You can buy the book at BookPeople in Austin, or from me or Amazon, print version or ebook. I wrote about it for New York Times Magazine in 2001 and also in Texas Monthly.
You can also read about this dread situation in today’s Austin-American Statesman which gives a short, simplified version of the story.

The basic situation now is this: The families of the victims of Brummett’s violent rampages who are on the notification list of Victims Services (a division of TDCJ) receive letters each time this convicted, confessed murderer is under consideration for parole. In 1977 he confessed and was convicted of two murders and sentenced to two life terms, concurrent. This arrangement was part of a plea bargain. Committing murder during the process of rape and other serious crimes is a capital offense. In 1976, when Brummett was apprehended, the death penalty was in the process of being reinstated in Texas. The supreme court had approved the capital punishment provisions in Texas and other states, but a few legal hurdles remained. Brummett wisely decided to confess to his crimes and confess, which helped resolve the cases in Kerrville, which had gone unsolved for almost a year’s time. Brummett implicated another individual in two of the Kerrville cases, the murders of Beth Vallance Pearson and Carol London, both teenagers.

Dianne Roberts 1974

In September 1975, Brummett was released from jail in Kerrville after being charged with the rape of one teenager there. That same day, Brummett and an accomplice took two teenage girls to a rocky pasture outside of town and murdered them. In November Brummett was charged with yet another rape in Kerrville. He moved to Austin, changed his name, got married. He was charged with several other crimes, including credit card fraud. His wife was pregnant. He was slated for a July 1976 trial in the rape indictments, but his lawyer obtained a continuance. Thus, in August 1976, he was free. Free to go out drinking with an old friend of mine. The pair came by the South Austin house I shared with Dianne Roberts, my first love, a beautiful, gentle, artistic poet named Dianne Roberts, from Houston, Texas. We met during my first few weeks in college. My friend had briefly rented a room from us. He would come by periodically to pick up some of his things, since he didn’t have a permanent place at the time. The two drinkers came by, visited with Dianne for a while, and learned that I was away playing a gig in San Antonio. Later that night, Brummett came back, broke in and murdered Dianne. The next day, August 16, 1976, I came home, excited about how well the gig had gone. I called for her, went looking for her, and found her where Brummett had discarded her body. I went into shock. Everything moved in slow motion for a long time. It was difficult even to dial the phone to call the police. When they came, the cops were pretty weirded out by our rock n roll pad, with its strange art and objects. Apparently they had me pegged for the prime suspect. Many, many hours later, after being fingerprinted and questioned, I remembered our roommate’s strange friend. I told the detectives about him and they paid him a visit.

So… like I said, I don’t want to write about this. The facts are, Brummett could well have been one of the first capital punishment cases executed after the lifting of the death penalty moratorium. His attorneys at the time convinced him that his life at least would be spared if he cooperated and confessed to the lesser charges (rape trials are always difficult, and even more difficult when the victims are dead; and in the Kerr County cases, the remains were scattered bones; Brummett also confessed to at least one other murder in Kerrville where the remains could not be located).

Listen, if you know me, you know I am mostly a happy, positive guy. I’m happily married to Lois Richwine, a strong, creative, imaginative, beautiful person. We have a great son. We have a pretty great life. So I’m not dragging this thing around the town square like the rotting corpse of some beast I killed in the forest, trying to get attention and acclamation. This is just one of those terrible things that is part of the architecture of my life. Most of that architecture is very good. Then there’s this rotten part. We just have to deal with it.

So now we wait until the May 11 meeting with the parole board. The decision on whether this individual will be let loose to walk among us and our children is up to them, apparently. It’s already very difficult to sleep. I hope they make the right decision and leave him in jail for at least a couple more decades.

What you can do. Contact Victim Services. Send a fax (512/452-0825) or email them. Here is the email address: victim.svc@tdcj.state.tx.us and use the subject line: URGENT PAROLE PROTEST. Put this identifier at the top of your message: Lyle Brummett TDCJ ID: 00267843. It is VERY IMPORTANT that you include his TDCJ ID, so just do it. If you want to copy and paste the background info below, do so. But make sure you state your opinion clearly by saying “Please DO NOT release Lyle Brummett.” If you are a relative or friend of one of the victims, it helps to describe the ongoing loss to the family and community, the awful damage done by this individual’s crimes, and the ongoing threat to the community if he is released.

Background: On August 16, 1976 Lyle Brummett broke into the home of Dianne Roberts, and raped and strangled her. It should have been a death penalty case, but there was no death penalty at the time. When arrested in 1976 he quickly confessed to his role in the rape and murder of two Kerrville girls a year earlier. Brummett confessed on the night of September 17, 1975, he and his accomplice picked up two girls in downtown Kerrville, Carol Ann London (18) and Elizabeth Pearson (15). The girls had car trouble. Brummett and his accomplice drove both girls to a deserted pasture a few miles outside of Kerrville and raped and murdered them. They strangled the girls, and then bashed their heads with rocks and sticks. They drove a short way down I-10 and ditched the girl’s clothes and underwear, which were found a few days later. On the day of the murder, Brummett had just been released on bail from Kerr County jail on a rape charge committed September 2nd, and then on November 16th he raped another girl in Kerrville. Brummett was arrested on another unrelated rape and murder of another young woman in Austin.

Brummett pled guilty and was given two life sentences, to be served concurrently.

That’s it.

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TOUGH BABY IN YOUR HANDS WILL NEVER BE THE SAME AGAIN

Now out as an eBook, cover art by Mona Pitts

PUBLISHING NEWS:
TOUGH BABY, my second Martin Fender novel, originally published by Viking Penguin in 1990, is now available in the Amazon Kindle store here for your Kindle, iPhone, iPad and other digital devices. We have a stunning cover, I think, featuring a photo by Mona Pitts of Neon Beige photography (the model is Jana).

As you may know, Rock Critic Murders (also in the Amazon Kindle store) and also, as an enhanced iBook for the iPad here, with music, video, and dozens of photos) was the first in the Martin Fender series, which stars the blues bass player Martin Fender, a wisecracking dude in the hardboiled private eye tradition, and his Italian girlfriend, Ladonna DiMascio, along with a cast of Austin music scene regulars, some of whom are wholly fictional, and some of whom are only lightly fictionalized real characters. The plot finds Martin coming home from a grueling road trip with his band, whose members immediately get into trouble with the law, their girlfriends and a gang of biker chicks. Martin himself ends up being dosed with tranquilizer at a party and wakes up with a terrible hangover, accused of attempted murder. The weapon used in the crime: His Fender bass. Payola, perversion and the usual random chaos and mayhem stir the gumbo full of urgent blues music, smoky clubs and quirky characters. You’ll dig it.

JAMES ELLROY DUG IT ENOUGH TO SAY:

“TOUGH BABY IS A HARROWING NOVEL OF THE JIVE, DECADENT WORLD OF ROCK N’ ROLL. MURDER, TWISTED SEX, PAYOLA-A REAL DEGENERATE MILIEU GULLY REALIZED. MARTIN FENDER IS A GREAT, UNIQUE, HARDBOILED HERO AND TOUGH BABY ILLUMINATES A WORLD RARELY SEEN WITH POISE, CLASS AND PRECISION.

SPEAKING OF JAMES ELLROY, ALSO NOW OUT:

Includes a chapter by me titled "Dead Women Owned His Soul"

New book from University of Mississippi Press, Conversations with James Ellroy, edited by Steven Powell, which includes a chapter by my terrible self on Ellroy titled, “Dead Women Owned His Soul.” Written for the Chronicle in early 1997. Ironically, later that year, I was diagnosed with Stage 4 throat cancer and, facing 4% chance of survival, took Ellroy’s advice and began to write about my own spectral past, including the murder of my girlfriend, Dianne Roberts by a serial killer in 1976, in my memoir, Never the Same Again.

Memoir now in the Amazon Kindle store

NEVER THE SAME AGAIN is always available in print form at Austin’s BOOKPEOPLE, and is now available in Amazon’s Kindle Store here.

JAMES ELLROY said of NEVER THE SAME AGAIN:

“Never the Same Again is a harrowing, wrenching, spellbinding work of great candor and soul. Read it, think with it, dig it.”


MICHAEL CONNELLY (Concrete Blonde, Lincoln Lawyer) said:

“Never the Same Again is an important work. Jesse Sublett’s pursuit of his dreams — undaunted by societal standards of success and failure — is the true chronicle of a generation. Making choices, taking chances and then facing the consequences, however bizarre and unexpected they may be, Sublett takes us on a ride through life that is crazy, funny, and sometimes deeply tragic, but ultimately, an inspiring and always highly readable survivor’s tale.”


JOE NICK PATOSKI (Stevie Ray Vaughan: Caught in the Crossroads, Selena, Willie Nelson An Epic Life) said:

“Jesse Sublett is one of the few of my generation to actually run the thread through the eye of the needle and be able to tell me what it’s like. He defined punk in Austin, Texas, the future Live Music Capital of the World, when everyone else was still trying to figure out how to walk properly in cowboy boots so they could get next to Willie. By the time newcomers bearing guitars, drums and big ideas started flooding the city to cash in on its music scene, he’d ditched his axe and his band the Skunks for a typewriter, and, using Austin and music as his canvas, painted a picture as black as any Lou Reed ditty as a rock and roll crime writer, living vicariously through his character, Martin Fender. When that turned boring, he wrote scripts and screenplays, playing on his vast knowledge of Texas and the American West. Then he got cancer right at the cusp of forty–the trendsetter was once again get ‘way ahead of the curve–and has written about the Big C and the inevitability of aging and death in a manner far more chilling and dark than any bad ass Skunks’ rant, his novels, or any of his retellings of the how the west was really settled. It’s powerful stuff, mainly because he keeps reminding me, he’s one of us. He just got here quicker than we did. Reading is believing.”


MARGARET MOSER, rock critic, said:

“On a cold and otherwise unremarkable Austin night in February 1978, something happened in a campus-area club called Raul’s. The first punk show was scheduled, featuring the debut of a band called The Skunks.
 Bassist and lead singer Jesse Sublett was handsome and erudite, brimming with piss and vinegar. His vision of the band as an apolitical garage-rock trio manifested during the punk explosion. Its attitude and energy fueled his desire to make rock ‘n roll that mattered, a dream that came true at Raul’s: The Skunks, quite literally, helped put the cosmic cowboy kingdom of Austin on the rock & roll map.
 That evening was a turning point in Austin’s musical history. Dozens of bands came in The Skunks’ wake. The sounds and scenes shifted from punk to New Wave to hardcore to cow punk and back but always The Skunks blasted away with unrestrained defiance. They were the premiere recording and touring band of the first wave of Raul’s bands and their music still pulses with the lifeblood of that era. The authentic sound and skull-rattling vibrancy of their music, however, was never successfully documented on vinyl, however, making the recent discovery of two dusty cassettes (one in Sublett’s closet, the other in that of friend, photographer and long-time fan, Glenn Chase) a chance to address that gap in the band’s permanent legacy for posterity and, not inconsequentially, in a digital format.
 The Skunks’ classic lineup was well in place by the time these Back Room and Max’s Kansas City shows were recorded. Sublett and original Skunks drummer Billy Blackmon hit a groove when guitarist Jon Dee Graham joined in early 1979, evident in every track. Its 15 potent songs of love, angst, and other matters of the young heart form a gloriously exuberant soundtrack from the days when rock ‘n roll could save the world with three chords and a lotta volume.”


KATHY VALENTINE (Go-Go’s) said:

“Jesse was a great help to me in my formative rocker years. As a 16 year old struggling musician, I was enthralled to meet a real live rock guy who looked just like he stepped out of the Faces or the Stones. He was so damn good-looking he scared and intimidated me. He was already living the life I had only dreamed of so far. By befriending me and accepting me, Jesse gave me the fuel to keep the idea lit. He supported my first feeble attempts at becoming a pop star, turned me on to Lou Reed and the New York Dolls, tried to make me appreciate Patti Smith, showed me how to play the riff in “Shake Appeal” by Iggy Pop, and helped launch my first credible band, the Violators. 
Jesse also inspired my early songwriting a lot. He was one of the few musician pals I had who was actually and prolifically writing his own songs instead of only banging out covers. His songs were clever; the humor and intelligence in the lyrics reminded me that you don’t have to be Elvis Costello or Ray Davies to write great, cool songs.
 Jesse and I stayed in touch over the years, and after the Go-Go’s broke up, he participated in my first identity crisis band, the World’s Cutest Killers. It was LOTS of fun, and we almost got a record deal, but then we didn’t. The songs we wrote together during that period have provided material to plunder for almost a decade now. I still call Jesse up periodically and say, “Hey, Jesse, remember that tune we wrote? I’m thinking of reworking it…”
When Jesse got cancer, he was unknowingly taking on another inspiring role model job. If I ever have to go through a similar experience I only hope that I would do so with the grace, courage and humor that he showed me during the whole ordeal. My admiration and respect for Jesse is very nearly boundless — as a songwriter, as a musician, as a story and essay writer who actually found and writes with his own voice, and above all–as a human. The way he has pursued his passions and interests have made his life an excellent example of how to get by in the world with style and substance.”


RICHARD LINKLATER (director Slacker, Dazed & Confused, etc.) said:

“Jesse’s odyssey of growing up in a small Texas town with a head full of big ideas, and his relentless drive to take them in the direction of his artistic intuition, is a moving story that captures an important cultural moment. Having grown up in Huntsville, Texas, I can really relate. Surviving the horrible murder of his girlfriend in 1976, and going from punk rock to fatherhood, his story becomes a universal one, and he makes it sing with authenticity.”


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Filed under Books & other writing by Jesse Sublett, NOIR & TRUE CRIME

A K A SERIAL KILLER

The Texas board of pardons and paroles cannot make up their minds about whether or not to release the serial rapist and serial murderer, Lyle Richard Brummett (a k a Lyle Richard, Richard Stone, etc.), who murdered my longtime girlfriend, Dianne Roberts, in 1976, and was also convicted for his role in the murders of at least two other women in Kerrville in 1975. I’ve had trouble sleeping at night for a long time now. It hasn’t helped to get conflicting letters from Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ). First they said he had been denied parole. Then they said “accepted.” Then they said he’s under “special review.”

The grim facts have weighed heavily on me for 36 years now. But on the plus side, at least I’m alive. So it’s my duty, in a way, to spread the word about this individual and his path of destruction. I’ve written about this before, in my book Never the Same Again, in great detail. I’d rather you read about it there than to have to write another word about it. You can buy the book at BookPeople in Austin, or from me or Amazon, print version or ebook. I wrote about it for New York Times Magazine in 2001 and also in Texas Monthly.
You can also read about this dread situation in today’s Austin-American Statesman which gives a short, simplified version of the story.

The basic situation now is this: The families of the victims of Brummett’s violent rampages who are on the notification list of Victims Services (a division of TDCJ) receive letters each time this convicted, confessed murderer is under consideration for parole. In 1977 he confessed and was convicted of two murders and sentenced to two life terms, concurrent. This arrangement was part of a plea bargain. Committing murder during the process of rape and other serious crimes is a capital offense. In 1976, when Brummett was apprehended, the death penalty was in the process of being reinstated in Texas. The supreme court had approved the capital punishment provisions in Texas and other states, but a few legal hurdles remained. Brummett wisely decided to confess to his crimes and confess, which helped resolve the cases in Kerrville, which had gone unsolved for almost a year’s time. Brummett implicated another individual in two of the Kerrville cases, the murders of Beth Vallance Pearson and Carol London, both teenagers.

Dianne Roberts 1974

In September 1975, Brummett was released from jail in Kerrville after being charged with the rape of one teenager there. That same day, Brummett and an accomplice took two teenage girls to a rocky pasture outside of town and murdered them. In November Brummett was charged with yet another rape in Kerrville. He moved to Austin, changed his name, got married. He was charged with several other crimes, including credit card fraud. His wife was pregnant. He was slated for a July 1976 trial in the rape indictments, but his lawyer obtained a continuance. Thus, in August 1976, he was free. Free to go out drinking with an old friend of mine. The pair came by the South Austin house I shared with Dianne Roberts, my first love, a beautiful, gentle, artistic poet named Dianne Roberts, from Houston, Texas. We met during my first few weeks in college. My friend had briefly rented a room from us. He would come by periodically to pick up some of his things, since he didn’t have a permanent place at the time. The two drinkers came by, visited with Dianne for a while, and learned that I was away playing a gig in San Antonio. Later that night, Brummett came back, broke in and murdered Dianne. The next day, August 16, 1976, I came home, excited about how well the gig had gone. I called for her, went looking for her, and found her where Brummett had discarded her body. I went into shock. Everything moved in slow motion for a long time. It was difficult even to dial the phone to call the police. When they came, the cops were pretty weirded out by our rock n roll pad, with its strange art and objects. Apparently they had me pegged for the prime suspect. Many, many hours later, after being fingerprinted and questioned, I remembered our roommate’s strange friend. I told the detectives about him and they paid him a visit.

So… like I said, I don’t want to write about this. The facts are, Brummett could well have been one of the first capital punishment cases executed after the lifting of the death penalty moratorium. His attorneys at the time convinced him that his life at least would be spared if he cooperated and confessed to the lesser charges (rape trials are always difficult, and even more difficult when the victims are dead; and in the Kerr County cases, the remains were scattered bones; Brummett also confessed to at least one other murder in Kerrville where the remains could not be located).

Listen, if you know me, you know I am mostly a happy, positive guy. I’m happily married to Lois Richwine, a strong, creative, imaginative, beautiful person. We have a great son. We have a pretty great life. So I’m not dragging this thing around the town square like the rotting corpse of some beast I killed in the forest, trying to get attention and acclamation. This is just one of those terrible things that is part of the architecture of my life. Most of that architecture is very good. Then there’s this rotten part. We just have to deal with it.

So now we wait until the May 11 meeting with the parole board. The decision on whether this individual will be let loose to walk among us and our children is up to them, apparently. It’s already very difficult to sleep. I hope they make the right decision and leave him in jail for at least a couple more decades.

What you can do. Contact Victim Services. Send a fax (512/452-0825) or email them. Here is the email address: victim.svc@tdcj.state.tx.us and use the subject line: URGENT PAROLE PROTEST. Put this identifier at the top of your message: Lyle Brummett TDCJ ID: 00267843. It is VERY IMPORTANT that you include his TDCJ ID, so just do it. If you want to copy and paste the background info below, do so. But make sure you state your opinion clearly by saying “Please DO NOT release Lyle Brummett.” If you are a relative or friend of one of the victims, it helps to describe the ongoing loss to the family and community, the awful damage done by this individual’s crimes, and the ongoing threat to the community if he is released.

Background: On August 16, 1976 Lyle Brummett broke into the home of Dianne Roberts, and raped and strangled her. It should have been a death penalty case, but there was no death penalty at the time. When arrested in 1976 he quickly confessed to his role in the rape and murder of two Kerrville girls a year earlier. Brummett confessed on the night of September 17, 1975, he and his accomplice picked up two girls in downtown Kerrville, Carol Ann London (18) and Elizabeth Pearson (15). The girls had car trouble. Brummett and his accomplice drove both girls to a deserted pasture a few miles outside of Kerrville and raped and murdered them. They strangled the girls, and then bashed their heads with rocks and sticks. They drove a short way down I-10 and ditched the girl’s clothes and underwear, which were found a few days later. On the day of the murder, Brummett had just been released on bail from Kerr County jail on a rape charge committed September 2nd, and then on November 16th he raped another girl in Kerrville. Brummett was arrested on another unrelated rape and murder of another young woman in Austin.

Brummett pled guilty and was given two life sentences, to be served concurrently.

That’s it.

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Filed under NOIR & TRUE CRIME