On Tuesday evening, Garcia Glenn White, 61, was executed at the Texas state penitentiary in Huntsville for the brutal 1989 stabbing deaths of 16-year-old twin sisters Annette and Bernette Edwards, as well as their mother, Bonita Edwards. White’s death followed a series of legal appeals, all of which were rejected, including a final appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.
White apologizes before execution
White, who was the sixth inmate executed in the United States in just 11 days, apologized to those present before receiving the lethal injection. Addressing the witnesses, he expressed remorse for his crimes. “I would like to apologize for all the wrong I have done, and for the pain I’ve caused,” White said from the death chamber. He accepted full responsibility for the murders, stating his regret and offering prayers for the prison staff, officers, and his fellow inmates.
In his final moments, White recited the hymn, “I Trust in God,” singing several verses, and urged his loved ones to continue “pushing forward” and “loving one another.” He thanked the prison staff for their humane treatment before the lethal dose of pentobarbital was administered.
Crime and investigation
The grisly murders took place more than 30 years ago in the Edwards family’s Houston apartment. According to court records, White had visited the apartment to smoke crack with Bonita Edwards. When the twin girls emerged from their bedroom to investigate a commotion, White attacked them. Testimony revealed that White broke down the locked door of the girls’ room to carry out the stabbings. The case went unsolved for nearly six years until White confessed after being arrested for the 1995 killing of grocery store owner Hai Van Pham during a robbery. In his confession, White also admitted to killing Greta Williams in 1989.
Legal battles and appeals
White’s lawyers fought until the last moment to halt the execution, but their efforts were ultimately unsuccessful. His defense team had petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to stay the execution, citing claims that White was intellectually disabled—a condition that the Supreme Court ruled in 2002 bars executions. However, the court rejected White’s appeal without comment, and the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles denied his final bids for clemency.
White’s legal team argued that new evidence, including DNA suggesting the involvement of another person at the crime scene and claims of a cocaine-induced psychotic episode at the time of the killings, warranted further review.
Additionally, they contended that Texas’ top criminal court had not given due consideration to White’s alleged intellectual disability. Despite these arguments, lower courts had previously ruled against his appeals, and the execution proceeded as scheduled. One of White’s attorneys, Patrick McCann, stated that his client had spent his time in prison working “to be a better human being.”
Closure for victims’ families
Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg, who witnessed the execution, acknowledged the long road to justice, lamenting the decades it took to carry out the jury’s death sentence. “The suffering of surviving [victims’] family members is just unspeakable,” Ogg said. “At least it’s over.” For the families of the victims, White’s execution closes a painful chapter in a case that spanned more than three decades. White was pronounced dead at 6:56 p.m., 17 minutes after the lethal injection was administered.
Garcia Glenn White’s crimes extended beyond the 1989 murders of the Edwards family. In addition to the killings of the twins and their mother, White was tied to the deaths of Pham and Williams. His legacy is one of violence and tragedy, a stark reminder of the long shadow cast by unresolved cases and the devastating impact on the victims’ families.
As Texas continues to lead the nation in capital punishment, White’s execution brings the state’s total to six in just 11 days, a sobering statistic amid ongoing debates over the death penalty and criminal justice reform.