Wood and Daniel Earl "Danny" Reneau were frequent customers at their local Texaco convenience store in Kerrville, Texas, where they had befriended the assistant manager, William "Bill" Bunker, and clerk Kriss Lee Keeran. The four of them had discussed staging a robbery after the holiday period to split the proceeds four ways.[11] Bunker had given Reneau and Wood inside information about the store’s safe and surveillance recording equipment and instructions on how to enter the office from the back door. According to a police report, Bunker could have prevented the death of Keeran, yet he was never charged as a party to the crime despite his role in the conspiracy to defraud the store.[12]
In the early hours of January 2, 1996, Reneau and Wood drove to the Texaco station. When they learned that Keeran had backed out and locked the back door, they abandoned the plan and returned home. Later that morning, Reneau and Wood set off for Devine, Texas, to return Wood’s brother’s truck. Before leaving Kerrville, they stopped at the Texaco station, where Wood stayed in the truck. As Reneau entered the store, he pointed a gun at Keeran and told him to go to the back office. When Keeran didn’t cooperate, Reneau fatally shot him in the face.[13][14] Upon hearing the shot, Wood got out of the truck and entered the store, where Reneau ordered him at gunpoint to assist him.[15][16] The safe and cash box contained approximately $11,350 in cash and checks.[17]
Daniel Reneau
Wood met co-defendant, Daniel Earl "Danny" Reneau, in 1995. Reneau had up until that point spent most of his life in psychiatric hospitals and would later be diagnosed with severe personality disorder.[18] Wood had not been engaged in criminal activity before meeting Reneau. At Reneau's trial, the State recognized that his presence was the impetus for Wood's involvement,[19] and two State witnesses who had participated in burglaries with Reneau both testified that they too had been threatened at gunpoint by him.[20]
Reneau admitted to being the shooter in the murder of Kriss Keeran and was executed in 2002.[21]
Criminal case
Arrest
Wood and Reneau were both arrested on the same day of the murder. Wood led police to the murder weapon, which Reneau had thrown from the truck in Val Verde County.[22] Wood was interrogated by police without counsel present. He gave two statements, which he later revoked, claiming they were involuntary due to being intoxicated and sleep-deprived at the time of questioning. Both uncounseled statements were played for the jury during the guilt/innocence phase of his trial.[23]
Pretrial and mental incompetency
At Wood’s pretrial, the court heard that he had no prior felonies and no history of violent crime prior to associating with Reneau. Following a competency hearing, the jury found Wood incompetent to stand trial based on the testimony of his counsel and a neuropsychologist, who stated that his delusional and paranoid thought processes affected his ability to grasp the risks of conviction and rationally aid in his defense.[24]
Wood was committed to the Texas Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation at Vernon State Hospital, where he was assessed on factors unrelated to the issues raised at his competency hearing and thus received no treatment. He was discharged a couple of weeks after being admitted and was found competent at a second competency hearing, despite a neuropsychologist's testimony that Wood’s irrationality and inability to communicate effectively with his counsel had remained unchanged.[25]
Trial and conviction
At Wood’s trial, his counsel sought to present one expert witness and two supporting witnesses, which the State objected to on relevance and hearsay grounds, despite having previously found the same witness’s testimony to be credible at Reneau’s trial. The court sustained the objections, and thus no defense was presented to the jury, and Wood was subsequently found guilty of capital murder.[26]
Following the guilty verdict, Wood suffered a mental breakdown and requested to discharge his counsel and represent himself, which was denied by the court on mental competency grounds. Wood then directed his counsel not to act on his behalf during the remainder of the trial, which resulted in the absence of cross-examination of the State’s witnesses, oral arguments, and mitigating evidence.[27] Wood’s counsel stated on record that they considered his directives a gesture of suicide but did not request a mid-trial competency determination.[28]
The State took inconsistent positions in Wood’s and Reneau’s respective trials as to who plotted and led the crime.[29] It also presented the expert testimony of discredited psychiatrist Dr. James Grigson, also known as "Dr. Death". Based on a hypothetical question and without having evaluated Wood, he testified that Wood posed a future threat to society. Unbeknownst to the jury, Grigson had been expelled from the American Psychiatric Association and the Texas Society of Psychiatric Physicians three years prior for ethical violations in his court testimonies.[30]
Wood was sentenced to death for capital murder under the Texas law of parties on March 2, 1998.[31]
Post-conviction
Scheduled executions
Wood was scheduled for execution on August 21, 2008. Chief United States District Judge Orlando Luis Garcia granted Wood a last-minute stay and appointed counsel and a mental health expert to assist Wood in his claim of incompetency on the grounds of his delusional thought processes. Wood's request for assistance had previously been denied by the state trial court.[32] After an evidentiary hearing, Garcia concluded that the evidence presented was insufficient to support Wood’s claim of incompetence, and thus his stay of execution was lifted.[33]
Wood has filed multiple appeals and habeas applications, all of which have been denied.[36] Wood’s clemency petitions have been supported by thousands of members of the public, media outlets, religious leaders, and Texas legislators.[37][38]