Texas man set to be executed for the 2004 strangling and stabbing death of a young mother
A Texas man is facing execution for the strangling and stabbing death of a young North Texas mother more than 20 years ago

A Texas man is facing execution Wednesday for the strangling and stabbing death of a young North Texas mother more than 20 years ago.
Moises Sandoval Mendoza was condemned for the March 2004 killing of 20-year-old Rachelle OāNeil Tolleson. Prosecutors say Mendoza took Tolleson from her home in Farmersville, leaving her 6-month-old daughter alone. The infant was found cold and wet but safe the next day by Tollesonās mother. Tollesonās body was found six days later near a creek.
Mendoza, 41, was scheduled to receive a lethal injection Wednesday evening at the state penitentiary in Huntsville.
Evidence in Mendozaās case showed he also burned Tollesonās body to hide his fingerprints. Dental records were used to identify her, according to investigators.
Mendozaās lawyers have asked the U.S. Supreme Court to stop the scheduled execution after lower courts previously rejected his petitions for a stay. The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles on Monday denied Mendozaās request to commute his death sentence to a lesser penalty.
In their petition before the Supreme Court, Mendozaās attorneys said he was prevented by lower courts from arguing that he had been denied effective assistance of counsel earlier in the appeals process.
Mendozaās lawyers allege that a previous appeals attorney, as well as his trial lawyer, had failed to challenge critical testimony by a detention officer, Robert Hinton. That testimony was used by prosecutors to persuade jurors that Mendoza would be a future danger to society ā a legal finding needed to secure a death sentence in Texas.
Mendozaās lawyers allege the officer, who worked in the county jail where the inmate was being held after his arrest, gave false testimony that Mendoza had started a fight with another inmate. Mendozaās lawyers say the other inmate now claims in an affidavit that he believed detention officers wanted him to start the fight, and he was later rewarded for it.
āThere is no doubt the jury was listening. During its deliberations, the jury specifically asked about Mendozaās ācriminal acts while in jail,ā including the āassault on other inmate,āā Mendozaās lawyers said in their petition to the Supreme Court. āAs evidenced by the juryās notes, there is a reasonable probability that trial counselās error in failing to investigate Hintonās testimony affected the result.ā
But the Texas Attorney Generalās Office told the Supreme Court that Mendozaās claim of ineffective assistance of counsel has already been found by a lower federal court to be āmeritless and insubstantial.ā
Even if the detention officerās testimony were eliminated, the jury heard substantial evidence regarding Mendozaās future dangerousness and his long history of violence, especially against women, including physically attacking his mother and sister and sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl, according to the attorney generalās office.
āFinally, given the extreme delay in this two-decade-old case, the public interest weighs heavily against a stay. The State and crime victims have a āpowerful and legitimate interest in punishing the guilty,āā the attorney generalās office said in its petition.
Authorities said that in the days before the killing, Mendoza had attended a party at Tollesonās home in Farmersville, about 45 miles (72 kilometers) northeast of Dallas. On the day her body was found, Mendoza told a friend about the killing. The friend called police and Mendoza was arrested.
Mendoza confessed to police but couldnāt give detectives a reason for his actions, authorities said. He told investigators he repeatedly choked Tolleson, sexually assaulted her and dragged her body to a field, where he choked her again and then stabbed her in the throat. He later moved her body to a more remote location and burned it.
If the execution is carried out, Mendoza would be the third inmate put to death this year in Texas, historically the nationās busiest capital punishment state, and the 13th in the U.S.
On Thursday, Alabama planned to execute James Osgood for the 2010 rape and murder of a woman.
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