Pablo Torre Finds Out - Watching the Dallas Cowboys on Death Row (PTFO Peabody Award Finalist)
Episode Date: May 13, 2025This episode was recently honored as a unanimous finalist for the prestigious Peabody Awards. But it's been 26 years since he was sentenced to death, and Charles Flores still maintains his innocence �...�� while talking trash, playing fantasy football and making enchiladas on game day. Last fall, correspondent David Fleming visited Inmate No. 999299 at a notorious supermax prison in Texas, to learn about life when there isn't always next year.• Learn more about the case of Charles Floreshttps://www.freecharlesflores.com/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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All right. So hi, this is Pablo, by the way, this is not an ad. This is me actually trying to explain why it is that the episode you've clicked on today is going to be the episode you're going to hear.
And the reason that I'm bringing you today's episode is not because when we ran it in November, it resulted in a Peabody nomination and all that, you know, very gratifying good stuff.
The reason I'm bringing you this episode today is because the story of Charles Flores, the subject of this.
episode just became a lot more urgent. Yesterday, May 12th, 2025, the Texas Attorney General's
office sent a letter to the trial court in the case of Charles Flores requesting that the judge
set an imminent execution date for Charles. His lawyer is going to file an opposition statement,
but what she advises us is that it is quite likely that the legal fight of Charles Flores, the
man you're about to meet here, has reached its end. And so we're going to advise you here and then
at the end of the episode to please visit free charlesflores.com. Because my hope is that when you
listen to his story, you'll know exactly why it is that we wanted to make sure that you heard it.
So much of living under a death sentence is the unknown. You know, we're sent here. We were convicted
and sent us to death and sent to death row to have our lives taken from us,
to be executed, you know, to be legally murdered.
And that's pretty heavy, man.
Dave Fleming, time is of the essence with this episode in lots of very real ways.
Thank you for being here.
My pleasure, as always.
This one started, as many great things do,
with a website I had never heard about.
It started with me coming across a website, a database,
where you can read the final last statements of every prisoner
that's been executed by the state of Texas.
Me being me, I went down that rabbit hole, started reading them.
It is a gut-wrenching, awful, exhausting experience.
the very basic premise of there's a publicly available website
that records the last things that every executed prisoner on death row
in the state of Texas says.
You're mesmerized, right?
You can't stop scrolling.
This is William Prince Davis, prisoner number 614.
He was executed on September 4th, 1999.
His last statement was, quote,
I just thank the Lord for all that he has done for me,
that is all.
That is all I have to say,
Warden.
Oh, and I would just like to say,
in closing,
what about those cowboys?
What's staggering
is that that guy,
the guy you just quoted,
William Prince Davis,
is not alone.
No, no, there's a shockingly
large amount
of death row prisoners
who use that final opportunity
to shout out their favorite sports teams.
John Burke's,
inmate number 949.
His last statement says, quote,
the Raiders are going all the way, y'all.
Y'all pray for me and it's going to be all right.
That's it.
And it's time to roll up out of here.
It's going down.
Let's get it over with.
That's it.
June 14th, 2000.
And so this is obviously the most remarkable proof of the power of sports that I'd ever
encountered.
Just that alone.
This very basic fact, you're about to die, killed by the state,
And you want everybody to know that the last thing you cared about was the Dallas Cowboys.
I think your initial reaction was the same as mine, which is just sports means too much.
This is crazy.
Why wouldn't you talk about the victim or your families or regrets or anything like that?
You're going to shout out the Cowboys?
It's like, what does sports really mean to people?
Right.
And also, therefore, what's it even like to love sports on death row?
How do they even have access to sports?
How can they be Cowboys fans and Raiders fans?
Are they arguing about Dak Prescott?
Right.
Are they playing fantasy football?
Are they, is their trash talk?
Is that dangerous?
And so with these curiosities in mind, and with me immediately, immediately just saying, okay, this is assigned.
Who do you decide to reach out to?
There are websites, there are databases where they will connect you to be a pen pal to people in prison,
especially to people on death row who are exceptionally isolated usually.
You get to look at their bio, sort of what their crime was when they were put in prison,
what are their interests?
And, you know, I came across a guy who had potential.
He was a lifelong Cowboys fan, grew up in Fort Worth.
As dad was in the Air Force, they had a family ritual of going to church every Sunday
and then coming home and sitting down in front of the TV to watch the cowboys.
You know, you just kind of knew right away it was like,
okay, this guy is a legit sports fan.
But how does one arrange an interview, Flem, with somebody on death row?
We correspond back and forth over several weeks.
I would say about half a dozen emails in.
This guy just said, well, if you're so interested,
in talking, why don't you just come to Texas and we'll talk in person?
And so the prison warden okays this, the inmate in question, okays it, his attorney, okays it,
and then all it's left is for us to be like, do we really want to send one of our correspondence
to a Supermax prison?
Yes, and the next thing I know, I'm on a plane to Texas.
And so I do need to establish just who it is exactly that we sent you to go and visit with,
because the inmate in question is somebody that we have.
had to collectively and exhaustively research and figure out why exactly this man had been
sentenced to death by the state of Texas. So who is he? What is his name?
His name is Charles Flores. In 1999, at the age of 29, he was sentenced to death for his
role in a burglary in the town of Farmers Branch, Texas, which is near Irving, which is
actually where the cowboys, their whole facility is. Yes, it's their headquarters.
During this burglary, a 64-year-old woman named Betty Black was killed, and Charles was then convicted
for being an accomplice to that murder, which was part of the burglary. He was then sentenced to
death row, where he has been for the last 25 years, and the default in Texas is solitary confinement
for death row prisoners for up to 23 hours a day.
And I do think we just got to clarify this,
because he's in solitary in a supermax prison,
has been for a quarter century now,
but he was an accomplice to a murder,
not the actual killer, we're saying.
He was not the gunman and has never accused of being the gunman.
There is no DNA evidence linking him to the crime whatsoever.
Charles has always maintained his innocence,
and he's actually provided an,
an alibi for the night of the burglary and the murder.
But that's not even the craziest part of this whole story.
The craziest part is that the actual gunman, Richard Childs,
he pled guilty immediately.
He served 17 years of a 35-year sentence.
And as we speak right now, he is free and out of prison.
He's a free man.
He was actually released in 2016
right about the same time
that Charles got his execution date
from the state of Texas.
Charles Flores got that execution date
because of something in Texas
that I want to briefly explain here,
which is called the law of parties.
Which is to say,
if you are an accomplice to a murder,
you are going to be sentenced,
treated as if you are also a murderer.
Right. If you are part of a felony,
it's like everybody pulled the trigger.
So this is where a show
that otherwise enjoys diving,
deep into the worlds of, say, athlete-branded weed or celebrity family feud, for instance,
should probably explain the bizarre details of why Charles Flores was not executed, as scheduled,
on June 2, 2016, and why the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals finally granted him that stay of execution,
just six days before that date.
Because all of this has to do with the eyewitness testimony that,
led to the capital murder conviction of Charles Flores in the first place.
You see, the eyewitness in question was the victim's neighbor.
And what she reported seeing on the night of the burglary was a car with two men driving up to the house across the street.
The driver, she easily identified as the aforementioned and eventually admitted gunman, Richard Childs,
a white dude with long dark hair.
As for the passenger, what this neighbor recalled was that he was also,
white with long, dark hair.
So tell me what is it to remember about the incident that did?
Offhand, you can remember that?
And first thing I remember is when I looked out in the window,
and I saw a car pulled up into the driveway.
I remember it was a BW bug, and I remember seeing two guys get out,
and I remember looking at the passenger.
as he got out and remembering his dark hair,
but basically the same as the drivers.
But Charles Flores, a local drug dealer who was one of the police's main suspects,
absolutely did not look like that, as you'll see.
In fact, this neighbor failed to pick Flores out of a lineup.
And what happened next was something that I didn't even know was a real thing
until I started studying this case,
which was that the neighbor then submitted
to a long-standing practice
that has been around since the 1950s,
known as forensic hypnosis.
Have you ever seen a documentary film,
like on TV, like the...
with the Animal Kingdom show or, you know...
What we're going to do is,
is when we get you into a deep state of hypnosis,
we're going to take you to a theater.
It's going to be your...
your own private theater.
And basically what it is, you're going to be seeing the documentary.
You're going to be seeing the film of the events that occurred on that day, on that morning.
Okay.
Forensic hypnosis is basically what it sounds like.
Police investigators hypnotize victims and witnesses so that they can relax,
ostensibly, and then recall traumatic events with an even greater clarity.
Relax.
This is a section that you're peeling on the bodily feet,
I want you to imagine it now shooting up through your ankle,
and empty thousands of your legs,
feeling more and more relaxed.
I want you to imagine the stress, the ceiling,
just moving in and out of your leg, your calves.
According to a 2020 Dallas Morning News investigation,
police in Texas had used hypnosis in this way,
nearly 1,800 times over the past 40 years.
So this woman comes out of hypnosis.
They draw a composite sketch.
It looks like the guy who actually pulled the trigger
and admitted pulling the trigger.
Skinny, white, long hair.
Charles is heavy set, Hispanic,
and he had a buzz cut at the time.
But Charles Flores, again, was one of the main suspects.
And over the following year, as this case proceeded,
something else happened.
His actual mugshot
got plastered in newspapers
all across the state.
So it wasn't until 13 months later
in a court
when the woman said,
oh yeah, there he is.
That's who she pointed out
as being at the scene of the crime.
And so the thing that spared Charles Flores
in 2016,
six days before that scheduled execution date,
and after more than a decade,
by the way, of exhaustive appeals here,
was a groundbreaking new law,
a Texas statute passed in 2013,
known as the junk science law.
Now, in recent decades, as you might imagine,
the credibility of forensic hypnosis
have been called into serious scientific question.
Evidence has shown that police hypnosis
often distorts witness memories
and leads to false convictions
and 27 other states at last count,
have banned the practice for this reason.
And yet, while Charles Flores did get granted that stay of execution,
as well as a new evidentiary hearing in 2018,
relief still was ultimately denied.
Prosecutors claim that the eyewitness testimony in question
wouldn't have mattered anyway because they had other evidence,
placing him at the scene of the crime,
and the Innocence Project subsequently filed multiple amicus briefs
in support of Flores.
His lawyers, meanwhile,
requested that the case be tried federally
before the Supreme Court,
and that request, as of January
2021, was denied
as well.
So, from a purely
legal perspective,
this is where the story
of Charles Flores stops.
But for us,
of course,
it's where our story
begins.
He was in to
some some bad stuff and he admits that.
What we're saying is it's very clear that at the very least,
he doesn't deserve to be on death row or in solitary confinement for 23 hours a day
for a quarter century.
All of which is to say that the case of Charles Flores is this case that is a larger window
onto capital punishment as an institution in the United States still today.
But I also recognize that it wasn't exactly the easiest
assignment for a reporter to receive.
Yeah, I had to go to the Polonski unit in Livingston, Texas, which is a notorious prison,
always ranked as one of the most dangerous, worst prisons in the world.
There are all kinds of hoops that you have to go through, right?
You have to submit to a background check.
You have to agree to all these restrictions.
You are allowed exactly one hour of rolling cameras.
you have to submit a list of every piece of equipment down to pen and paper.
So I was kind of freaking the fuck out
and wondering why I couldn't go to the family feud
or smoke celebrity weed.
Like, how did I get this assignment?
So the Polensky Unit in Livingston, Texas,
where you're visiting Charles Flores,
how does one get into prison?
Where this really got real for me was when, right before we arrived,
They reminded us nobody can wear white.
And that's because that's what the death row inmates wear.
They're required to wear white.
And so you step in and the first thing that happens in this guard shack,
you get a big boy search.
Not a TSA.
No, this is a thorough search.
I look to my right and I just happened to see the open closet
where they keep all the guns,
hundreds of guns and shotguns,
in case something happens at the prison.
You make it through that.
You're still not in the prison yet.
You come out and you are now between the fences.
And it's perfectly aligned with the gun towers
because they need to have a clean shot
if someone makes it through that fence.
What is the noise that you're hearing?
It's the people inside screaming at each other,
yelling everything under the sun.
That's really when you're like,
Man, is it too late to turn back?
And then the strangest thing happened.
The room that they took us to to interview Charles
is where families go.
And so you turn after this giant steel door closes
and you're like, what am I doing?
You turn, you go into the room
and the walls are painted with cartoon characters.
And I'm staring at Cookie Monster,
my little pony, SpongeBob's,
square pants. And I'm like, wow, we really are down a rabbit hole. And so as you're waiting there
where Charles Flores' family would have waited, what are you expecting? I'm starting to get
into my thoughts, right? And it's starting to spiral. And then Charles comes in.
Hello, hello, can you hear me? Test in, test, in one, two, three. Can you hear me? Sound good?
Okay. Okay. And we sort of make eye contact.
We kind of say hello through the glass.
I've taken pictures in the past,
and it's usually better to put the phone down like this,
so you don't see that phone, like, right next to your ear.
Uh-huh.
So if you want, you can just let them both hang down.
Okay.
You guys want me to let the phones hang or leave them here?
And Charles kind of saves me because it's clear that he wants to talk football.
I looked at the Cowboys' schedule before we came over here.
And I noticed, okay, they played the Texans.
Is it like week?
I think it's 11.
Okay.
Week 11.
Week 11.
Yes.
Charles grew up big.
You can tell that from the clips that were watching.
Was an offensive and defensive linemen in middle school.
And the first thing he wants to talk about is the Cowboys Texans game on Monday night, of course.
So the way death row is, the population is it's.
there's more guys from the big cities, the big counties.
So there are more guys from Dallas and Houston than anywhere else.
So that makes for a lot more fans of both teams.
So on that day, football is the sport.
We wake up thinking about it.
You know, when the weekend starts, that's what we're talking about.
And especially like a big game like that, a big rivalry.
Because I don't know, man, it just seems like that because the Texans have been up and down a lot of times.
They seem to play the role of the little brother.
You know what I'm saying?
So they want to get, they want to beat the Cowboys.
You know, they don't beat nobody else.
They want to beat the Cowboys.
And I've been telling the guys the Texan fans, I'm like, you know, on that day, we're not going to be friends.
We're going to be rivals.
You know what I'm saying?
His cell, smaller than this studio, 9 by 12?
It's probably three of these booths wide.
Right.
One on this side and one on this side.
So it's about 9 foot.
Some of the death row cells are actually as small as 60 square feet,
and they are in there 23 hours a day without exception.
And the doors, they have this mesh.
where windows are supposed to be.
Okay.
We have two, three foot, I think it's four inches.
Openings in the door.
So we can stand at the door and we can talk.
You know, it's not like normal conversational tones,
but when we talk loud, we can hear each other.
And of course, everybody's hollering.
And when, you know, the kickoff starts
and they make a big play or, you know,
big tackle or something like that, people are hollering.
And, yeah, interacting.
So, yeah, it's really great.
He described the two vertical windows, thin windows with the mesh screen on that.
Yeah, those grates, those vertical grates.
Right, at the front of his cell.
And basically, they have to go there and sort of put an eye between the grate to see the community television that, by the way, just showed up a couple of years ago.
There are seven cells on the ground floor in a section, and then there's seven cells on two row.
right on the second story.
We call it one row and two row.
Okay.
And in that area, there's a TV.
It's a 35-inch TV, and it's from my cell.
It's probably from here to that back wall.
And one, two, three, four.
Four cells, for the most part, are able to watch it on one row by standing at the door.
So you stand at the door.
And you look through the great.
Yes, the great.
The great.
So, yeah, you know, when it's fourth and three or fourth and ten, third and ten, you know, believe me, you're up at the great.
And you're looking through that little diamond to make sure you can see, you know, whoever.
Okay, but that's four hours.
You're standing.
So some people stand.
Other people will make a makeshift chair.
How?
Okay, so like for me, I have quite a bit of legal documentation, legal paperwork, and I just have it in mesh nylon mesh bags.
And I've made a chair that's about this big.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And so I strategically put it at the door and I sit on it.
I'll sit on it.
But like I told you, when it's when the kickoff is going to happen or something, you know, you get up and you get close to the grade.
So you can see what's going on.
So yeah.
The fact that it's his legal papers that he's using to help him with his sports fandom, it's perfect.
It is quaint in a way.
Yeah.
In a way that almost makes me wonder, so we're in a Supermax prison.
Where is the shit talking?
Where is the conflict?
Where is all that?
I don't want to overstep or anything like that, but basically my question was,
trash talk could be dangerous, can it, in a prison?
I mean, it's like, I'm not going to trash talk anybody,
and he had a really interesting explanation for that.
I can remember last season in the playoffs, you know,
we thought the Cowboys were going to do good,
and then Green Bay showed up, and they didn't do good.
Got a dagger right through the heart of the Cowboys.
So believe me, the Texan fans were letting us have it.
They were letting us have it, and they were talking trash, and they were laughing at us.
And, you know, they kept showing Dak, and he was like a deer in the headlight.
I'm just so mad I could cut.
It just is like the same thing keeps happening.
And believe me, the next week, when the Texans lost against the Ravens, I gave them the blues.
Is that scary?
I mean, you're talking trash with, you could be talking trash with some pretty bad dudes, right?
That's the thing about the death penalty, so difficult, is that we're not the worst.
that we've ever done. Are you the worst thing that you've ever done? Because I know you've done
something that you, when you think about you cringe, we all have. Every human being that's alive
has done something like that. So that's what they're here for. But that's not the person that I know.
I'm not that person, right? And so for the most part, you know, guys, guys are pretty,
pretty calm, you know, pretty, pretty low-key. And so there's not a lot of,
friction on death row. Now, general population, it's different. And when there's a bunch of guys
together, and then it gets personal. Because somebody, you know, somebody starts talking trash,
and they put it out, but they can't take it in. And then they get angry. And then once you get
angry, well, then you'll say something that you shouldn't say, and they'll start fighting.
So, yeah, there is that element, but I think that's out there in the free world, too.
No, the perspective that Charles is offering here about how death row is not exactly what you'd presume it to be.
It is sort of juxtaposed against the way that he as a Cowboys fan is exactly what I presumed him to be.
Guy who's still complaining about Dak Prescott.
Right.
It was kind of like, it was like he's just classic Cowboys fan, almost more so, almost more pure.
It raises other questions to be about like, okay, the rituals of Charles Flores.
and his fellow cowboys and football fans on death row, game day.
What's that like?
It's kind of like what we're just talking about it.
It's like every other fan, right?
There's a whole ritual.
So we get up, you know, I'll get up about 8 o'clock.
And because it's a big day, we'll make a feast.
And we make stuff out of the items that we can buy at the commissary.
And so it might be nachos or it might be.
tacos or special, like Super Bowl or something, we'll do enchiladas.
And is that something you guys are like, okay, what are we going to eat?
Yes, okay.
Yes, because this has to be planned.
We go to commissary two times a month.
Okay.
So you got to buy the stuff a month before to make sure you have everything that you're
going to need on that day.
If it's enchiladas, are you cooking those in your cell?
Everything that's made is pre-cooked.
So you buy items.
beef tips and gravy.
Summer sausages are also used.
Chicken chili.
And all these things are pre-cooked.
So they come in little like plastics pouches.
And it's an intricate process.
We have to put all these things in cleaned out plastic chip bags.
And we heat them up.
What we cook in is a hot pot.
It's, which essentially looks like, um, uh, water, an electric water kettle, which heats up the water, right?
Yeah.
So everything is heated up in water in a plastic bag.
And, and the, uh, the trick is knowing how to mix everything and warm it up together to make the insulide is good.
Okay.
And so I've been here, I've been here for a while and, and yeah, I can, I can cook pretty good.
That's why I'm fat.
He's as proud of the food and the tailgate, right, as any Georgia Bulldog fan, as any LSU tailgator.
Oh, it's the pride of someone with a chili recipe that they are bragging about on a Sunday morning.
Right.
That's an incredible thing to be on death row.
And it's like, oh my God, there's no difference.
It's right up there in the most predictable brags by any NFL fan along with,
check out how my fantasy team is doing.
Oh, we went there.
How did you guys even draft players, though?
Or how do you, is it all through the window?
Mostly it was week to week.
So depending on the matchups, you would make a new lineup.
You understand?
Okay.
Tom Brady's playing whoever, so you're starting Tom Brady.
And if it's a two-quarterback league, you know, whoever else it might be, you know, and Rogers, right?
Right.
And then, and so, Zequel Elliott has a good.
good matchup. So you're going to start him. And then, you know, you're mixing and matching. You're
mixing and matching. Okay. And so there wasn't no need to get together and have a draft. But what you
would have to do is turn in your team because there's a, there's a commissioner that's running it.
And he's the one that's going to get the, get each team, and then he's going to create what we
called Master Sheets.
So there's a deadline.
You got to turn them in by, you know, Friday at noon,
slide the stuff out from the cells to the day rooms.
And then those guys would get the stuff and give it to another day room.
And then that guy would tell the commissioner, hey, man, I've got these teams out here.
And then he would make his way out there with what we call a fishing line.
And it's essentially like a long string that he'll slide.
to the day room and he pulled him back in.
And then the same way, he would pass out the master sheets.
You know?
And it's the same thing.
I have never felt worse about forgetting to check my lineup.
That is what it takes to play fantasy football on death row.
I always thought that fishing thing was in movies.
That part.
Right.
Right.
It's real.
It's real.
And they're not using it for anything nefarious.
They're using it to submit their fantasy football lineup.
Yeah.
The nefarious part is that they're playing apparently in a two-quarter
back league.
He's like, what do you guys doing?
I've been here literally 25 years.
Before, there was no TV.
So it was all sports talk radio.
And it was mostly AM.
When you'd get the station, you would hope it stays in.
So that's where we would get our sports update.
Because when you play fantasy football,
If you don't know what's going on, you're just donating.
You just don't, you know what I'm saying?
You just might as well just give your money away.
You know, we would have to wait on the newspaper.
You got to wait on the newspaper to get the stats.
Because, you know, you don't have the stats.
You know, nowadays, I know that as soon as the games are played,
the stats are online.
Right, right.
But, man, no, man, you know, people would be waiting for the newspaper.
And then the commissioner, he would add it up because everything has to be official, right?
Everybody's agreed that he...
I have so many more questions about just like,
what's a scoring system, like waiver wire.
It's easy to get lost.
Again, in this familiar minutia of what it's like to just be a football fan.
Right.
And just enjoying this conversation, one fantasy football player to another,
and you sort of get lost in that.
You forget where you are.
And then there's this gut punch.
What happened to your league?
Slowly but surely, the guys that have played,
the guys that played, they've just been pushed out of existence.
They've been executed.
They're gone.
You know, and that's just a reality of being on death row.
That's a reality of being sentenced to death.
It gets to the point where him saying the most obvious thing that we all knew heading in
is now the thing that is most jarring.
The conversation kind of lured us into, oh, we're all the same.
This is all the same.
It's like, no, we're not.
His has one very dreadful, awful difference.
So give me the scouting report on Charles Flores, the football player.
You know, one of the things in our early emails that we exchanged was this memory he had
of springing the game-winning touchdown with a great block when he was in eighth grade.
And he mentioned that writing about that little detail of his football career still gave him chills.
40 years later.
The other detail that he added that I loved was he wore 79
in honor of Harvey Martin, the cowboy great.
And so his family, then, this is a football family we're describing.
We were fans.
We used to watch at home.
Of course, we watched when I was little.
It was a ritual.
Go to church, come home, gather around the TV,
root on the cowboys.
I was real close with my family.
I might have lived
separate. But on the weekend, I'm going to Mom and Dad's House.
Just being with them and we would watch football all the time.
That deep connection to the Cowboys, it sort of, it continued once Charles was put on
on death row. That was one of the main things that we would talk about. The Cowboys is this,
the Cowboys that. They continued to watch the football games at home. And so it was the same
thing. Back then, I would wake up early and I would start a letter. And a lot of times, I would
leave it. I would say half of what I wanted to say, and then the game would be going. And then after
the game, I would have comments. And oftentimes, I would be writing my mom and my dad, and they would
be writing me at the same time. And I remember that I was writing them, you know, at 4 o'clock.
And then I would see that mom started this letter at 4 o'clock.
And so that was like the synchronicity of it all, right?
And yeah, man, you know, it was special.
There's nothing like that.
So, so like I said, I think fandom is part of family, too,
because it's part of that bond that we have.
Talking to your family about the Cowboys through letter writing
is such a,
I it's just a sad
it's a sad thing to do
for a quarter century
and counting phlegm
it gets sadder because he's been there so long now
both his parents that ritual is gone now
because both of his parents have passed away
and as you listen to Charles
you understand that with his parents gone
that's just made sports
all the more important to Charles
and his survival on death row
so much of living under this
sentences is the unknown.
You know, we're sent here.
We were convicted and sentenced to death and sent to death row to have our lives taken from us,
to be executed, you know, to be legally murdered.
And that's pretty heavy, man.
You hang your hopes on appeal courts and on things that,
might happen that will allow you to have a reversal in your conviction or your sentence
and maybe get out of the situation. So, you know, that's pretty stressful. And some guys can't take it.
You know, some guys lose their mind. I had a friend of mine. He called him Big G. He was from Oak Cliff in Dallas.
And we called him Big G for a reason. He was like 6'5, about 300 pounds. It looked like he could play
offensive tackle for the Cowboys.
Great guy. One day he told me, he says, man,
he says, what if we got it wrong?
He says, what if the crazy dudes
are normal because they can't cope?
And we're the crazy people
because we are able to adapt and accept this insanity.
And, you know, I've never forgot that.
Because that would be, that's a normal,
a normal reaction would be to go.
Yeah, lose your damn mind that they're going to kill you.
Right.
And that you're going to sit around for 10 or 15 years until they do it.
And so sports for me, especially football, it takes me out of this place.
When the game is on, I'm at the stadium.
I'm not in this place.
I'm not here.
I'm not under that death sentence.
I'm not worried about, oh, man, are they going to set me an execution day?
Oh, man, are they going to deny my appeals?
You know?
because that's real.
That's real there.
You're being locked up.
You know, this notion of sports as an escape,
I don't know of a more vivid manifestation of that promise
than what Charles is describing there.
The way I interpreted what he was saying was
he lives in a way where 24 hours a day,
seven days a week, someone's trying to kill him.
That's the white noise of his life.
he doesn't know when it's going to happen
but that's the stress that he lives under
and so the line about how
maybe the crazy ones
are the ones who continue to live on death row
and the same ones are the ones
who check out by committing suicide
I mean if there's a better way
to explain the insanity and the pressure
that they live under
I haven't read it
no and there is this one statistic
that I do want to just read to you
for the record, because at least eight death row prisoners at Polanski, where Charles Flores is,
whereas Fantasy Football League is, at least eight of those inmates have committed suicide in the last 20 years.
It's just amazing that one day, two of these prisoners were talking and they were like,
maybe we're the crazy ones because we've adapted to live like this.
Right, because we can smile while talking about our favorite sports.
Yeah, we can survive in this situation. It's stunning.
All of this reminds me now of why we got into this story in the first place, right?
This website, this database of last words said by people who were about to be executed.
Yeah, that was the whole point of this exercise, right?
Is to find out why someone would love sports that much that they would include it in their last words.
And before even leaving on this assignment, I shared this database with an anthropologist in Chicago.
Her name is Dr. Shannon Lee Daughty.
And she is an expert in death rituals.
And I just wanted to get her opinion on it.
And I really, at this point, asked her in almost a flippant way about get a load of these death row inmates who are using their last words for sports shoutouts.
She immediately connected it to this concept called social death.
There was a historian of African American history called Orlando Paso'clock.
And he came up with this fascinating, powerful idea called social death. And he argued that slaves and
certain other kinds of people, inmates of concentration camps, they experience social death,
where their body is alive, but they're so cut off violently from meaningful social connections
and relationships and meaningful groups that they experience social death. What's really interesting,
to me about this example is that they're trying to overcome the social death and maybe they're
succeeding by saying, no, I belong to a group and they take that moment right before they're
executed to reassert themselves as socially alive. And I think that's fascinated and powerful.
It's empowering to them to do that. What did Charles have to say about that in specific?
I wanted to go get Charles' opinion and his thoughts on his own last.
words. Yes. But it turns out he and his attorney, you know, they don't want him to be seen as somebody
who is contemplating being executed. They don't want to concede that he's going to have to give
his last words at all. This is where you should know that Charles Flores has exhausted all of his
known legal avenues for petitions and appeals. His attorney, Gretchen Sweene, told us, quote,
in order to bring new claims, we would need new evidence sufficient to convince a court to reopen the case, an exceedingly high burden.
End quote.
But there is another change that I think is worth you knowing about.
Because on September 1st, 2023, the Texas state legislature enacted a new bill, a bill that Governor Greg Abbott, by the way, had vetoed in 2021.
But Texas Senate Bill No. 338, citing an alarming amount of unreliable eyewitness identification testimony,
officially prohibits any future testimony gleaned from forensic hypnosis as admissible evidence in a criminal trial,
which is a dramatic but not retroactive change, meaning it does not help Charles Flores,
who is waiting,
as we speak for a new execution date,
a date that could be announced at any moment now.
All of which is why I was also wondering
how this unthinkable degree of uncertainty,
of injustice, might logically impact the patience
of a long-suffering Cowboys fan
when it comes to the thing he loves the most.
There's a saying there's always next year.
Yes.
But for you, the future is uncertain.
Yes.
There isn't always next year, I guess.
I've thought.
I've thought about that.
I'm like, man, will I ever see the Cowboys win in the Super Bowl?
Because that's my thing.
I think that we might have to wait until Patrick Mahomes goes to another team or something.
Okay, nobody beat him.
Do you have a prediction?
Yeah, yeah, this is their year.
No matter what.
Every year is their year.
And one of these years are going to get.
get it done.
So if you predict it every year,
eventually you'll be right.
Well, you got to believe, bro.
You got to believe, huh?
You got to believe.
And so given that mix that you just heard
of totally sincere hope,
of longing, cut with a
resigned familiarity
bordering on sarcasm,
we did want to find out
more about how Charles Flores
viewed the opportunity
more broadly to have his last
words memorialized for all time on that database,
even if he very understandably did not want to personally preview
his own final communication on earth.
One of the first things that you and I talked about
was the trend of inmates
shouting out their teams with their last words.
And it seemed like that was something you,
you could understand, right, because of the connection to sports?
That situation, I don't think nobody ever understand it until you are there
an experience in that.
But I've tried to think about it and I've tried to say, well, man, why would somebody say that?
And I think it is that.
I think it might be a last grab it.
Hey, I'm still part of, if nothing else, I'm still part of this family.
I'm still relevant in the fact that even with, as I'm being ushered out of this life, this reality,
I'm still a Cowboy fan.
And I'm going to declare it at the very end with, you know, reminding the world of what tribe I was from.
I'm still human.
Even though you're taking my life like an animal, I'm still human.
I have a soul.
That's deep, man.
That's profound.
I mean, Charles, again, gives John.
the most incredible answer.
It's the sort of thing you just want to sit with for a while.
Yep.
You know.
Unfortunately, we had reached the end of our hour,
and they were very strict about it.
I got a 10-minute warning.
And so here we are just sort of...
The clock again ticking on this.
Yes, exactly.
And now we're packing up,
and he has to wait for a guard then to recuff him,
hand back the wireless mic,
and take him back.
to his 23 hours of of isolation.
And so we can't talk anymore,
but Charles is sitting there watching us pack up.
And that was as close as we all came to getting emotional
and even crying because the look on Charles' face,
and I know he was trying to hide this,
was just a look of like, you guys get to leave.
He's imagining that we get to leave.
The look on his face is easily one of the saddest things,
that I've ever experienced on this job in 30 years.
And it got to the point where I couldn't look at him anymore
because you just feel so helpless
and you just feel so much empathy
for this other human being and the situation that he's in.
In the strangest place, under the worst conditions,
through sports, we've kind of bridged this disconnect.
And trying to face that moment again,
I went back and listened to the tapes
And I realize that as my mic is cut, Charles is still live.
And so you can hear him.
Were you listening?
No.
Oh, you aren't?
You should have been listening.
Oh, I'll be doing paperwork.
I'll get ready for tomorrow.
He's talking to the guard that comes to escort him back,
and he's wondering how the interview went and talking about the cowboys.
They're actually from these.
So one of them is a Cleveland Brown fan.
But I was telling him, what it is.
I'm like, man, look.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, you know, like, man, look, this is Texan territory?
Yeah.
Oh.
And you can hear him physically exchanging our microphone for the clinking and clanking of the handcuffs.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
All excensurized.
Okay, good deal.
And then I will let things.
Okay, yeah, let him know.
So come pick up the movie star.
Thank you for me.
And that is another really sort of profound moment of
It's over.
We all have to go back to our normal lives.
Dave Fleming, thank you for taking this trip,
accepting this assignment and reporting this story.
Pablo was my pleasure, and I'm glad we went.
Since we taped this episode,
Dave Fleming, you should know,
has continued to trade emails with Charles Flores.
his new pen pal.
And Charles, for his part,
wants the PTF audience to know
that he has now made peace
with the fact that this year
is not the year,
officially,
for his Dallas Cowboys.
And that more information
on his case can be found
at free charlesflores.
Dot com.
This has been Pablo Torre
finds out a Metal Arc Media production.
And I'll talk to you next time.
