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| Patrick Murphy Jr
(AP) |
Patrick Henry Murphy Jr., was born in Dallas, Texas, on October
31, 1961, making him 39 years old at the time of his escape from the
John Connally Unit. The former construction worker had done a
stint in the U.S. Army, but was dishonorably discharged because he
kept going AWOL. Although he had occasionally gotten into
trouble while growing up in the Dallas area, it was difficult to
picture, at least in 1978, the skinny high school boy with the
Beatles haircut and the peach-fuzz mustache as a rapist. To
those who knew him he just seemed like a normal, occasionally
mischievous sophomore. But by 1984 that is exactly what the
brown-haired, blue-eyed young white man had become: a rapist.
Slightly built at 5’7” tall and weighing in at less than 160
pounds, Murphy did not appear to be the rapist type, if there is, in
fact, such a type who wantonly attacks a woman. But that’s
what he did on a night in 1984 after selecting his victim, a
23-year-old divorced woman that he knew from high school and who was
living with her mother.
It began as a simple burglary, but turned really ugly when the
young woman was awakened by a noise. When she got up to
investigate, she saw a man in the living room of her mother’s
home. His face was covered. When Murphy realized that he
had been seen, he grabbed the woman and held a knife to her throat.
“Keep your eyes shut and be quiet, or something might
happen,” Murphy said.
Fearing for her life, the young woman submitted to Murphy’s
demands and allowed him to cover her head with a pillowcase.
He then cut off her nightgown with the knife and raped her.
Afterward, when she was certain that her assailant had left the
premises, the young woman woke up her mother and tearfully told her
that she had been raped.
They called the police and reported the attack, and the woman
assured the police that she would recognize her assailant’s voice
if she heard it again. She thought she knew the man’s voice,
and was able to eventually put the cops onto Murphy. After his
arrest, she positively identified his voice from a “voice lineup.”
At his trial, a jury was carefully questioned about whether they
could make a fair judgment based on voice identification. When
all parties were satisfied and a jury was seated, tearful testimony
from the victim was presented as she explained the burglary and
subsequent rape. Afterwards, jurors only deliberated for a few
hours before convicting Murphy of aggravated sexual assault with a
deadly weapon and burglary. The judge sentenced him to 50
years in prison.
The fact that Murphy had used a pillowcase to cover his
victim’s head was immediately familiar to the cops, and prompted
the investigators probing the prison break to speculate that the
pillowcases used in the escape to cover those victims’ faces may
have been Murphy’s touch.
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