Kathy E <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:


Judy Buenoano filled 13 years on death row writing letters and
crocheting blankets and baby clothes. As the clock ticks down to her
execution Monday, she waits in a cell a few feet from the electric    
chair.

She seems a paradox: either a doting mother or a ruthless ``black
widow'' who drowned her 19-year-old paraplegic son, poisoned her husband
with arsenic and tried to kill her fiance -- first with pills, then a
car bomb. She might even have been the cause of her son's paralysis, and
is suspected in yet another poisoning death.

If her execution is carried out -- on what would have been her son's
37th birthday -- Ms. Buenoano, 54, will be the first woman executed in
Florida since 1848, when a freed slave was hanged for killing her
master.

Florida executed two killers on successive days last week. Ms.
Buenoano's execution was to be followed by the electrocution Tuesday of
Daniel Remeta, who killed a convenience store clerk in Ocala and was
linked to four other killings in a 1985 rampage that reached into     
Texas, Arkansas and Kansas.

Pensacola prosecutor Russell Edgar, who gave Ms. Buenoano the name that
has dogged her to this day, described her as a scheming, cold-blooded
killer.

``She's like a black widow -- she feeds off her mates and her young,''
Edgar said last week, repeating comments he made at her trial for her
son's 1980 drowning.

She collected about $240,000 in insurance money from the deaths of her
husband, son and a boyfriend in Colorado.

``It does appear the motive was twisted greed,'' Edgar said.

Ms. Buenoano's husband of nine years, Air Force Sgt. James Goodyear, was
37 when he died of arsenic poisoning in 1971. That was just three months
after he returned from a year's tour in Vietnam.

Her partially paralyzed son, Michael Goodyear, 19, was wearing leg and
arm braces when his mother pushed him out of a canoe in the East River
near Pensacola in 1980.

But suspicions weren't aroused until after a 1983 car  bombing in
downtown Pensacola. Her fiance, John Gentry, survived the bombing and
told detectives she had given him ``vitamins'' that made him sick.

She was sentenced to 12 years for the bombing, and Gentry's tale started
investigators on the path that led to discovery of her other crimes.

In 1984, Ms. Buenoano was convicted of killing her son and sentenced to
life. And the next year, she was convicted of killing her husband and
condemned to death.

On top of those convictions, she was suspected but never charged in the
1978 arsenic death of Bobby Joe Morris, a boyfriend in Trinidad, Colo.

She continues to deny any role in the deaths of Morris and her husband.
And in television interviews in the past week, Ms. Buenoano said her
son's death was a terrible accident, not murder.

``I suffered over it and I feel responsible for his death. ... It was an
accident,'' she told NBC.

Edgar said she gave four different versions of how Michael died: a snake
fell into their canoe and it overturned; the canoe hit a log; he was
decapitated by a  boat propeller; he died as a result of Army chemical
warfare.

``It wasn't an accident. The guy was paralyzed,'' Edgar said. ``He had
15 pounds of braces on his legs without a life jacket. He was taken up
the river in a canoe and basically pitched out.''

Authorities also believe she was responsible for more than Michael's
drowning. His crippling illness had developed after he returned home
from the Army, and an autopsy eventually found traces of arsenic.

``She put that boy through a lot before she killed him,'' said Pensacola
detective Ted Chamberlain. ``She poisoned him to make him paraplegic.
And then the guy ain't home from the hospital for 24 hours before she  
drowns him.''

Chamberlain plans to witness the execution. ``A person this cruel really
needs to get what she deserves,'' he said.

The Florida Supreme Court last week dismissed Ms. Buenoano's appeal.

`If they would allow me, I would pull the switch myself,'' bombing
survivor Gentry told Fox News. ``There are people that are so evil that
they really don't need to be amongst civilized people. She preyed upon
people that loved her.''

But Ms. Buenoano's daughter, Kimberly Hawkins, 30, a waitress in
Navarre, steadfastly believes in her innocence.

``She did things with us,'' she has told The Associated Press. ``She
worked a lot ... but she always made time for us.''

Only two women have been executed in the United States since the U.S.
Supreme Court lifted its ban on capital punishment in 1976. North
Carolina executed Velma Barfield in 1984 for poisoning her boyfriend;
Texas executed Karla Faye Tucker on Feb. 3 for hacking a man and woman
to death with a pickax. Barfield and Tucker died by injection.
--
Kathy E
"I can only please one person a day, today is NOT your day, and tomorrow
isn't looking too good for you either"
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