logo
Texas executes 'sadistic killer' Moises Mendoza for 20-year-old woman's murder

Texas executes 'sadistic killer' Moises Mendoza for 20-year-old woman's murder

Yahoo20-05-2025
Texas has executed Sandoval Mendoza, a rapist and killer described by one prosecutor as one of the most "violent, sadistic men" he'd ever encountered."
Mendoza, 40, was executed by lethal injection for the murder of 20-year-old Rachelle O'Neil Tolleson on March 18, 2004, in Farmersville, Texas, just northeast of Dallas. Mendoza is the third inmate executed in Texas this year and the 13th in the nation. He was pronounced dead at 6:40 p.m. CT.
At the time of her death, Tolleson was a new mother to her 6-month-old daughter Avery.
Mendoza used his last words to apologize to Tolleson's family.
"I am sorry for having robbed you of Rachelle's life," he said. "To Avery ... I robbed you of a mother. I'm sorry for that. I know nothing that I could ever say or do would ever make up for that. I want you to know I am sincere. I apologize."
He addressed his family members by telling them he loves them and is with them.
"I'm well and at peace. You know that I'm well and everything is love," he said, according to the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.
Mendoza's case gained a sort of notoriety in the years since the murder. In 2006, it was featured in the 10th season of "Forensic Files" and in 2008, the Investigation Discovery series "Solved" highlighted the case.
Here's what to know about Mendoza's execution, including more about who his victim was.
'I turned into the devil': More about Texas death row inmate Moises Mendoza
In the early hours of March 18, 2004, Rachelle O'Neil Tolleson was at home with her 6-month-old daughter Avery in Farmersville, a small town about 40 miles northeast of Dallas. Tolleson and Avery lived there alone, as Rachelle was in the middle of a divorce with her then-husband Andrew Tolleson.
Mendoza told police he let himself inside Tolleson's house through a back door that night, per court documents. The two left to get a pack of cigarettes, leaving baby Avery at home.
Mendoza drove a little while before he began to choke Tolleson in his vehicle "for no reason," he said, according to court documents. He then drove the two to a field near his house, where he raped her before choking her again, court documents say.
Mendoza then dragged Tolleson out of his truck and choked her again until he thought she was dead, Mendoza told police. To make sure, he "poked her throat" with a knife. Mendoza left her body in the field, where it remained for a few days before he was interviewed by police about Tolleson's disappearance, court records say.
Paranoid, Mendoza wrapped Tolleson's body in a tarp and moved it to his cousin's land in a more remote area, just a few miles east of Farmersville. He then dumped the body in a "dug-out pit" and set it on fire to "destroy the fingerprints," he told police, The Courier Gazette reports.
"I don't know what happened to me at that moment. I turned into the devil and after I did something that I thought was in a dream," Mendoza wrote in a letter to his parents, as published by The Courier-Gazette.
A man searching for arrowheads found Tolleson's charred body a few days after Mendoza moved it, the newspaper reported.
Mendoza was convicted of murder and sentenced to death.
Pam and Mark O'Neil, Tolleson's parents, described their daughter as a doting mother to Avery, according to court proceedings and archived stories.
"She wanted more than anything in life to watch her baby take her first steps, say her first word, and she'll never get to hear her daughter call her Mommy," Pam O'Neil told Mendoza during his sentencing, per The Courier-Gazette. She later said in the 2006 "Forensic Files" episode that Avery was Tolleson's "oxygen."
O'Neil said that she and Avery frequently watched home videos of Tolleson, including Avery's first and only Christmas with her mother, and looked through scrapbooks that Tolleson and O'Neil made together.
"I don't think we'll ever heal. I don't think a mother ever truly heals from the loss of a child,' she told The Courier-Gazette in 2005. "I can't believe my grandbaby will grow up without a mother."
The O'Neils did not immediately respond to requests to speak about their late daughter, but Mark has recognized Tolleson in several public Facebook posts over the years.
In 2021, Mark shared a photo of Tolleson from her wedding day on Facebook.
"Happy birthday to my beautiful daughter in heaven," he wrote. "I love you and miss you every day, baby girl."
Neighbors described Mendoza as "hard-working" but said he changed as he got older, recounting a "violent argument" when he pinned down his mother and sister in their front yard, as previously reported by The Courier-Gazette.
Mendoza graduated high school, where he did "fairly well," court documents state. He received a few high school scholarships and completed about nine months of heating and air-conditioning training upon graduating.
In 2003, Mendoza was arrested for his involvement in two aggravated robberies on the Dallas College Richland Campus, according to The Courier-Gazette reporting. It was while he was out on bail for one of these robberies that Tolleson went missing, the 2006 "Forensic Files" episode explains.
For much of their upbringing in northern Texas, Mendoza and Tolleson were actually in the same grade school classes, Tolleson's mother explained in "Forensic Files." And the Friday before Tolleson's murder, Mendoza had been at Tolleson's house for a party of about 15 people, court documents say.
Clinical psychologist Mark Vigen described Mendoza as "immature" and "psychologically under-developed," claiming that Mendoza enjoyed getting away with "being sneaky" and got angry when others criticized him, court documents say.
During Mendoza's sentencing, former Collin County First Assistant District Attorney Greg Davis described Mendoza as "one of the most violent, sadistic men" he'd ever helped convict.
Contributing: Amanda Lee Myers, USA TODAY
Greta Cross is a national trending reporter at USA TODAY. Story idea? Email her at gcross@usatoday.com.
(This story was updated to include video.)
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Moises Mendoza, a 'sadistic killer,' executed in Texas
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Accomplice of ‘Candy Man' killer breaks silence about chilling role in murders
Accomplice of ‘Candy Man' killer breaks silence about chilling role in murders

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Accomplice of ‘Candy Man' killer breaks silence about chilling role in murders

Elmer Wayne Henley Jr. was a 15-year-old gas station worker when he became an accomplice to the "Candy Man" serial killer. Now 69, Henley is serving a life sentence for his part in helping Texas murderer Dean Corll lure young victims to be tortured and killed during the '70s. Henley is speaking out in a new Investigation Discovery (ID) true-crime documentary, "The Serial Killer's Apprentice." In the film, Henley has candid conversations with renowned forensic psychologist Katherine Ramsland, who studied his case. According to the network, this is the first time in decades Henley is speaking out in great detail about the killings. Tylenol Murders Suspect Gave Eerie Final Interview Before Death Ramsland told Fox News Digital she believes Henley is remorseful for the crimes he committed. "When Wayne looks back — and he doesn't like to — he's horrified," said Ramsland. "When we started talking, he would have nightmares. He suffered from PTSD for some time after he first went to prison. He hates that he was a part of this. He hates that this is what his life has come to. He doesn't want to be identified as a person who is a part of a serial murder team, even though he was." Read On The Fox News App "I told the FBI … he's not really a serial killer because he didn't have the motivating drive for me," Ramsland said. "He just participated in it. So, technically, yes, he killed more than two people, but he didn't want to." According to Ramsland, Henley grew up in a broken home in Texas. His grandmother raised him after his abusive father abandoned the family. At 14, he began working at a gas station to support his mother, who was struggling to make ends meet while raising his three younger brothers. Henley skipped school one day to smoke marijuana when he met David Brooks, an older teen who appeared to have plenty of money without a job. "He thought, 'How is that possible? Cut me in on this,'" said Ramsland. "Brooks introduces him to his neighbor, Dean Corll, who then tells him about an arrangement." Follow The Fox True Crime Team On X Corll was a Houston electrical company worker and former candy store owner who was known for handing out sweets to children. When Brooks brought a curious Henley over to Corll's home, the "Candy Man," as known by locals, made an offer. "[He] tells him, 'We pick up boys who are hitchhikers and have no place to go, and we [send] them to California. They become pool boys for some rich family. They make out great, and we get paid for it. It's a way for you to make $200,'" Ramsland explained. "That's a lot of money for a kid, a 15-year-old who's making peanuts at a part-time job at a gas station. And it sounded like nobody was getting hurt. This is Corll's way to reel Wayne in. To Wayne, it just sounded like everybody wins." WATCH: FOX NATION DOCUMENTARY HIGHLIGHTS SERIAL KILLER'S MYSTERIOUS AMAZON REVIEWS Henley told Corll his mother knew where he was, and Ramsland believes that move saved him from being a victim. After earning Corll's trust, Henley, who was eager to make money fast, picked up a young hitchhiker. "Corll kills [the hitchhiker], not in front of [Wayne], but he told him, 'That guy died, and you were a part of that, and now you have to do what I say.' Wayne could have gone to the police, but he thought, 'Who's going to believe me, a kid against an adult? And I don't even know where this body is. I don't even know what he did. I didn't witness it. I can't lead them anywhere.' "Corll also said there was this syndicate of traffickers who were watching all the time," Ramsland added. "If anything happened to them, they would come for Wayne. … He didn't think he had a way out." Between 1970 and 1973, young boys and teens mysteriously vanished across Houston Heights, the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children [NCMEC] revealed. Despite growing numbers of missing reports made by parents, the disappearances were often brushed off by police as runaways. No one suspected the horrors the "Candy Man" was committing behind closed doors. "Dean Corll was a sadist," Ramsland said. "He looked for kids to torture. He is one of the worst in terms of what he did. Sometimes he would keep them for two or three days, torturing them. He had this torture board that had holes drilled into it. He would put two kids on the board and have them fight each other. "One time, it had two best friends. He said, 'Whoever wins will survive.' It wasn't true. But having two kids fight with each other to try to save their own lives, that's sadistic. He would torture his victims physically and psychologically. And it endured for a while. Sign Up To Get The True Crime Newsletter "He was a predator," she said. "But he used the face of being a completely normal nice guy, a big brother who was helpful to everyone. He lived a double life that fooled a lot of people." Corll tortured, raped and killed at least 28 boys and young men between the ages of 13 and 20. Many of the bodies were then buried in remote locations. According to NCMEC, Henley and Brooks, who knew some of the victims as friends, were responsible for luring many of Corll's victims into his home under false promises of fun. The outlet noted that Henley later reported to police that Corll paid them $200 for each victim. Henley told Ramsland that after Corll killed his captives, he made him wear their clothing. The reign of terror came to an end in August 1973. GET REAL-TIME UPDATES DIRECTLY ON THE True Crime Hub "Wayne brought a girl over with another kid," said Ramsland. "Corll had bound all of them and said he was going to kill them all. Wayne persuaded him to let him go and said he would help. … When Corll laid the gun down and went after the boy, the girl said something to Wayne like, "Aren't you going to do something about this?'" It was Corll who taught Henley how to shoot. And when Corll came charging at him, Henley killed the 33-year-old with his gun. Later that day, a shaken Henley led police to the bodies of the victims. Over three days, investigators found 16 bodies wrapped in plastic or sheets and buried in a mass grave. Most of the bodies were badly decomposed, and their identities were obscured by time and the elements, The Associated Press reported. The outlet noted that the conditions of the bodies showed traces of suffering. Over the years, investigators were able to identify known victims. Henley quickly admitted direct involvement in six of the killings and said he struggled with his actions but feared being killed by Corll. Henley and Brooks received life sentences. Brooks died in 2020 of complications from COVID-19. Ramsland said that, based on her numerous conversations and letters with Henley, she assessed him as both a victim and a perpetrator. It's something that needs to be studied more because "we're going to see more of it," she argued. "I don't put [a person like this] on any level like the victims who were tortured and killed," Ramsland stressed. "By no means is he that kind of victim. But victims come in all varieties, and I don't think you can deny that." Ramsland believes Henley continues to be haunted by his actions. "He wanted to be a minister," she said. "He doesn't know what to think of himself."Original article source: Accomplice of 'Candy Man' killer breaks silence about chilling role in murders

Accomplice of ‘Candy Man' killer breaks silence about chilling role in murders
Accomplice of ‘Candy Man' killer breaks silence about chilling role in murders

Fox News

time9 hours ago

  • Fox News

Accomplice of ‘Candy Man' killer breaks silence about chilling role in murders

Elmer Wayne Henley Jr. was a 15-year-old gas station worker when he became an accomplice to the "Candy Man" serial killer. Now 69, Henley is serving a life sentence for his part in helping Texas murderer Dean Corll lure young victims to be tortured and killed during the '70s. Henley is speaking out in a new Investigation Discovery (ID) true-crime documentary, "The Serial Killer's Apprentice." In the film, Henley has candid conversations with renowned forensic psychologist Katherine Ramsland, who studied his case. According to the network, this is the first time in decades Henley is speaking out in great detail about the killings. Ramsland told Fox News Digital she believes Henley is remorseful for the crimes he committed. "When Wayne looks back — and he doesn't like to — he's horrified," said Ramsland. "When we started talking, he would have nightmares. He suffered from PTSD for some time after he first went to prison. He hates that he was a part of this. He hates that this is what his life has come to. He doesn't want to be identified as a person who is a part of a serial murder team, even though he was." "I told the FBI … he's not really a serial killer because he didn't have the motivating drive for me," Ramsland said. "He just participated in it. So, technically, yes, he killed more than two people, but he didn't want to." According to Ramsland, Henley grew up in a broken home in Texas. His grandmother raised him after his abusive father abandoned the family. At 14, he began working at a gas station to support his mother, who was struggling to make ends meet while raising his three younger brothers. Henley skipped school one day to smoke marijuana when he met David Brooks, an older teen who appeared to have plenty of money without a job. "He thought, 'How is that possible? Cut me in on this,'" said Ramsland. "Brooks introduces him to his neighbor, Dean Corll, who then tells him about an arrangement." Corll was a Houston electrical company worker and former candy store owner who was known for handing out sweets to children. When Brooks brought a curious Henley over to Corll's home, the "Candy Man," as known by locals, made an offer. "[He] tells him, 'We pick up boys who are hitchhikers and have no place to go, and we [send] them to California. They become pool boys for some rich family. They make out great, and we get paid for it. It's a way for you to make $200,'" Ramsland explained. "That's a lot of money for a kid, a 15-year-old who's making peanuts at a part-time job at a gas station. And it sounded like nobody was getting hurt. This is Corll's way to reel Wayne in. To Wayne, it just sounded like everybody wins." WATCH: FOX NATION DOCUMENTARY HIGHLIGHTS SERIAL KILLER'S MYSTERIOUS AMAZON REVIEWS Henley told Corll his mother knew where he was, and Ramsland believes that move saved him from being a victim. After earning Corll's trust, Henley, who was eager to make money fast, picked up a young hitchhiker. "Corll kills [the hitchhiker], not in front of [Wayne], but he told him, 'That guy died, and you were a part of that, and now you have to do what I say.' Wayne could have gone to the police, but he thought, 'Who's going to believe me, a kid against an adult? And I don't even know where this body is. I don't even know what he did. I didn't witness it. I can't lead them anywhere.' "Corll also said there was this syndicate of traffickers who were watching all the time," Ramsland added. "If anything happened to them, they would come for Wayne. … He didn't think he had a way out." Between 1970 and 1973, young boys and teens mysteriously vanished across Houston Heights, the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children [NCMEC] revealed. Despite growing numbers of missing reports made by parents, the disappearances were often brushed off by police as runaways. No one suspected the horrors the "Candy Man" was committing behind closed doors. "Dean Corll was a sadist," Ramsland said. "He looked for kids to torture. He is one of the worst in terms of what he did. Sometimes he would keep them for two or three days, torturing them. He had this torture board that had holes drilled into it. He would put two kids on the board and have them fight each other. "One time, it had two best friends. He said, 'Whoever wins will survive.' It wasn't true. But having two kids fight with each other to try to save their own lives, that's sadistic. He would torture his victims physically and psychologically. And it endured for a while. "He was a predator," she said. "But he used the face of being a completely normal nice guy, a big brother who was helpful to everyone. He lived a double life that fooled a lot of people." Corll tortured, raped and killed at least 28 boys and young men between the ages of 13 and 20. Many of the bodies were then buried in remote locations. According to NCMEC, Henley and Brooks, who knew some of the victims as friends, were responsible for luring many of Corll's victims into his home under false promises of fun. The outlet noted that Henley later reported to police that Corll paid them $200 for each victim. Henley told Ramsland that after Corll killed his captives, he made him wear their clothing. The reign of terror came to an end in August 1973. GET REAL-TIME UPDATES DIRECTLY ON THE TRUE CRIME HUB "Wayne brought a girl over with another kid," said Ramsland. "Corll had bound all of them and said he was going to kill them all. Wayne persuaded him to let him go and said he would help. … When Corll laid the gun down and went after the boy, the girl said something to Wayne like, "Aren't you going to do something about this?'" It was Corll who taught Henley how to shoot. And when Corll came charging at him, Henley killed the 33-year-old with his gun. Later that day, a shaken Henley led police to the bodies of the victims. Over three days, investigators found 16 bodies wrapped in plastic or sheets and buried in a mass grave. Most of the bodies were badly decomposed, and their identities were obscured by time and the elements, The Associated Press reported. The outlet noted that the conditions of the bodies showed traces of suffering. Over the years, investigators were able to identify known victims. Henley quickly admitted direct involvement in six of the killings and said he struggled with his actions but feared being killed by Corll. Henley and Brooks received life sentences. Brooks died in 2020 of complications from COVID-19. Ramsland said that, based on her numerous conversations and letters with Henley, she assessed him as both a victim and a perpetrator. It's something that needs to be studied more because "we're going to see more of it," she argued. "I don't put [a person like this] on any level like the victims who were tortured and killed," Ramsland stressed. "By no means is he that kind of victim. But victims come in all varieties, and I don't think you can deny that." Ramsland believes Henley continues to be haunted by his actions. "He wanted to be a minister," she said. "He doesn't know what to think of himself."

Highland Park reports "swan-derful" rescue along Route 41
Highland Park reports "swan-derful" rescue along Route 41

CBS News

time6 days ago

  • CBS News

Highland Park reports "swan-derful" rescue along Route 41

Highland Park officials reported a "swan-derful" rescue along Route 41 on Monday. According to the city, the north suburban officers responded to a call for two swans blocking a lane of traffic during the morning commute. The Highland Park Police Department safely removed the swans from the roadway and returned them to their owner. It is not clear where the swans escaped from, and the owner has not been identified. In photos shared by the city, responding officer Mendoza is seen carrying a swan on the roadway. The city credits the officer and a caller with keeping the "beautiful birds safe."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store