Thomas Cullen Davis (born September 22, 1933, Fort Worth, Texas) is an American oil heir and member of a prominent oil family. Davis is best known for standing trial, and being acquitted, twice in the 1970s, first for the murders of two people at the home of his estranged wife Priscilla on August 2, 1976 and the second two years later for conspiring to murder the judge in his divorce proceedings against Priscilla. At the time of his first trial, Davis was the wealthiest man to have stood trial for murder in the United States. The prosecution alleged in his murder trial that he forced his 12-year-old step-daughter Andrea Wilborn into the basement of Davis' Stonegate Mansion, making her kneel before shooting her dead, and also shot Priscilla's live-in boyfriend Stan Farr, a former basketball star at nearby Texas Christian University. A Texas jury found him not guilty of the murders. The girl was the daughter of his second wife, whom he was in the process of divorcing.
Video T. Cullen Davis
Life and murder trial
Thomas Cullen Davis was born on September 22, 1933, in Fort Worth. His wealth, which at the time of the trial was estimated at over $100 million ($430 million today), was inherited from his father who founded KenDavis Industries International, Inc. Davis had a reputation in Fort Worth society circles for displays of bad temper and general "creepiness", according to female associates. Davis' second marriage was to Priscilla Lee Childers. They were married on August 29, 1968, only hours after the death of his father. It was her third marriage, and she had one daughter, Andrea Wilborn, from her second marriage.
In 1972, Davis spent $6 million ($35 million today) to build Stonegate Mansion, a five-bedroom, 11-bath mansion with an indoor pool and a 2,000-square-foot (190 m2) master bedroom. In its prime, the luxurious, contemporary home of courtyards, tunnels and balconies at 4100 Mockingbird Lane was decorated with more than 100 oil paintings. The mansion was designed by Albert S. Komatsu and Associates.
Davis and Childers separated in 1974 and both began dating other people openly. On August 2, 1976, shortly after a judge had granted a considerable increase in the support Davis had to pay Childers, an intruder entered Stonegate Mansion and killed 12-year-old Andrea, who was home alone after returning from a Bible study. The body of Andrea would later be found in the basement, apparently shot execution-style. When Childers and her then-boyfriend, Stan Farr, returned home, both were shot. Farr died at the scene. Childers staggered from the house being pursued by the killer as two family friends, Beverly Bass and Gus Gavrel, Jr., drove up to the mansion. The killer shot Gavrel, paralyzing him for life.
Childers identified Davis to police, saying he had shot her and Farr, wearing no disguise except a wig. Gavrel said he was shot after his companion recognized the gunman as Davis and called him by name. Police arrested Davis at the home he shared with his then-girlfriend, and future third wife, Karen Master.
Davis was only tried for the murder of Andrea. His defense concentrated on the personal life of Childers during the two years she had been separated from Davis before the murders. Davis was found not guilty by a Texas jury. Davis was defended by famous Texas defense attorney Richard "Racehorse" Haynes. Of the trial, prosecutor Tim Curry said, "We were out-bought and out-thought".
Maps T. Cullen Davis
Other trials
In related civil litigation concerning Wilborn's death following the murder trial, Davis prevailed and was held not liable for her death. The children of Stan Farr later sued Davis for wrongful death and received a $250,000 out of court settlement.
In 1978, Davis was arrested again, this time for allegedly hiring a hitman to murder both Priscilla Davis and the judge overseeing their ongoing divorce litigation. The case largely hinged on a tape-recorded conversation between Davis and an undercover employee posing as a hitman for hire which was recorded in the parking lot of the Denny's restaurant where Davis was arrested. In the recording, Davis was alleged to have asked the undercover employee to murder his wife. The trial of Texas v. Cullen T. Davis was one of the first uses of forensic discourse analysis on tape-recorded evidence in a legal setting in the United States. A discourse analyst testified that Davis' words in the tape did not constitute solicitation of murder, and after a lengthy trial Davis was acquitted a second time.
Later life
According to truTV, Davis lost most of his oil fortune in the recession of the 1980s, and eventually declared bankruptcy. Cullen and Karen Davis sold their home and 300-acre (120 ha) property to a real estate developer in 1984. Davis continues to live in the Fort Worth area, while his wife Karen died of organ failure on September 22, 2016. Davis in later life became a born-again Christian, and at one point worked with controversial televangelist James Robison.
Priscilla Lee Childers died of breast cancer on February 19, 2001, still adamantly insisting on Davis' guilt.
In books and television
In books, the case has been addressed in:
- Blood Will Tell: The Murder Trials of T. Cullen Davis, written by Gary Cartwright and published by Harcourt in 1979
- Texas Justice, also written by Gary Cartwright
- Texas vs. Davis, written by Mike Cochran
- The case was covered in a chapter of Creating Language Crimes by Roger Shuy, a linguistics professor who was a witness for the defence in the murder-for-hire case.
On television, the case has been profiled on:
- Texas Justice, a the 1995 TV movie based on the Gary Cartwright book of the same name, starring Peter Strauss and Heather Locklear
- TruTV's Dominick Dunne's Power, Privilege and Justice - Oil, Money, and Mystery
- A&E's American Justice
- Investigation Discovery's Behind Mansion Walls, the sixth episode of the first season
- WFAA's McCaa Profiles
- CBS's 48 Hours in an episode titled "Murder in the Mansion".
References
Source of article : Wikipedia