During the appeals process, Massey fought to have his trial transcripts reviewed, claiming that he had been found guilty of only one count of capital murder and should not therefore be eligible for the death penalty. He issued statements to online Web sites to the effect that his attorney was incompetent and "was trying to get me killed by default."

The case went to the appeals court on 24 separate counts of trial error. These were thrown out on the grounds that the submitted record was inaccurate and incomplete.
Massey gave interviews from prison, telling a reporter from the Ennis Daily News that he had changed. "As we grow, we change. I have a lot of anger about the stupid mistakes I made and at the same time I recognize anger is just an emotion." (There is no explanation as to why this indicates that he's no longer a danger.)
Then it was over. All of his appeals were exhausted and none had worked.

"I do not know any of y'all and that is unfortunate, because I would like to apologize to each and every one of you individually. I can't imagine what I've taken from you. I want you to know I did do it. I'm sorry for what I have done. I want you to know that Christina did not suffer as much as you think she did. I know you guys want to know where the rest of her remains are. I put her remains in the Trinity River."
Then he turned to his parents and grandmother and said to them: "All of this pain has brought us closer together and all of this suffering that we have been through brought us closer to the Lord, and in the end that is what counts. Tonight I dance on the streets of gold. Let those without sin cast the first stone."
As the lethal drug was injected, Massey recited a biblical verse. He gasped slightly and eight minutes later, at 6:20 p.m., he was pronounced dead. Jason Eric Massey was just twenty-eight years old.

"It's impossible to assign a motive to a case like this," said Clay Strange in an interview. "I think he did it because it was pleasurable to himhe's as evil as anybody I've ever encountered. I've met a lot of people meaner, but no one more evil."
He was only twenty when he committed these crimes. How did he become so depraved? Cox includes numerous entries from Massey's repetitive death journals in Born Bad, but he does not offer much in the way of insight. Let's examine the influences and circumstances.




