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Carol S. Vance was a former district attorney of Harris County (Houston), Texas, who served in that office from 1966 to 1979, and a former board member of the Texas Board of Criminal Justice, which governs the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. Vance was born in 1933.
For a period Vance was a resident of the Westbury area of Houston.[1] In 1992, Governor of Texas Ann Richards named Vance as the head of the Texas Board of Criminal Justice.[2]
Vance attended Houston public schools and graduated from the law school at the University of Texas in Austin. He served as Harris County assistant district attorney in 1958, shortly after graduating from law school, first under Dan Walton and then under Frank Briscoe.[citation needed]
He was appointed by Governor of Texas John Connally to fill the vacated district attorney’s spot when Frank Briscoe resigned to run for Congress in 1966 (Briscoe lost to Republican George H. W. Bush). At age 32, he became the second-youngest district attorney in Harris County history (only 21-year-old Peter Gray, chosen in 1842, was younger). He ran in the next election and won the position in his own right.[citation needed]
Vance served as district attorney from 1966 until resigning in 1979. He was unopposed in each of his elections.[citation needed]
Vance died on June 24, 2022, at the age of 88.[3]
Trials
editSome of the trials Vance was involved in, either as prosecutor or as district attorney, include the Elmer Wayne Henley/Houston mass murder case, the Joan Robinson Hill/John Hill murder cases, the Deep Throat v. Vance Supreme Court case, the Texas Supreme Court Justice Don Yarbrough impeachment case, the Lee Otis Johnson marijuana possession case, the Texas Southern University riot prosecutions, and the District Judge Garth Bates case.
Honors
editVance served as president of the National District Attorneys Association and the Texas District and County Attorneys Association. He was selected as a fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers.
In the 1990s, Vance asked state officials to implement the first Christian faith-based prison program at the Jester II Unit, a prison in Fort Bend County, Texas. State officials began to implement the program in 1996.[4] The prison was renamed the Carol S. Vance Unit after Vance.[5]
Vance retired as an employee from the law partnership Bracewell & Giuliani. In 2010 the book Boomtown DA, written by Vance, was published by Whitecaps Media. The book, using first person narration, begins with the Elmer Wayne Henley prosecution and roughly chronologically goes through Vance's terms from 1966 to 1979. Mary Flood of the Houston Chronicle stated "it appears a comfortable and engaging read".[6]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Vance, Carol S. Boomtown DA. Whitecaps Media, 2010. 3. ISBN 978-0-9826353-1-5 .
- ^ "Richards picks new chairman for criminal justice board." Fort Worth Star-Telegram. October 15, 1992. 26 Texas. Retrieved on July 30, 2010.
- ^ "Former Harris County DA Carol Vance dead at 88." Houston Chronicle. June 26, 2022. Retrieved on May 16, 2023.
- ^ Staff and Wire Reports. "Prison unit has new name." Houston Chronicle. Wednesday September 15, 1999. A26. Retrieved on May 9, 2010.
- ^ Reavis, Dick J. "Convict HEAVEN New faith-based prison unit appears to be a success." San Antonio Express-News. September 1, 2001. Religion 7B. Retrieved on July 30, 2010. "Named after a longtime Harris County district attorney"
- ^ Flood, Mary. "Boomtown DA Carol Vance writes the book." Houston Chronicle. April 23, 2010. Retrieved on July 30, 2010.
External links
edit- "Bracewell Alum Carol S. Vance Receives Recognition from the Texas Bar Foundation." Bracewell & Giuliani
- "Vance wins Houston Bar volunteer award." Houston Business Journal. Tuesday January 4, 2011.
- Connelly, Richard. "Carol Vance: Former DA Cancels Book-Signing Appearance; Death-Penalty Foes Claim Victory." Houston Press. Tuesday September 7, 2010.