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Death sentence restored for bank robber convicted of killing his best friend, his friend's fiancée and their 3 children

A federal appeals court on Monday restored the death sentence of a bank robber convicted of killing his best friend, his friend's fiancée and their three children.

In a 32-page opinion, a three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned a lower court ruling that would have freed Ronald Jeffery Prible Jr. if the state did not retry Prible within six months. The panel ruled Prible, 50, failed to raise issues sufficiently compelling to discredit his conviction and sentence.

A Harris County jury condemned Prible to death row in 2002 for killing Esteban "Steve″ Herrera; Herrera's fiancée, Nilda Tirado; Tirado's 7-year-old daughter Rachel Elizabeth Cumpian; Herrera's 7-year-old daughter Valerie; and the couple's 22-month-old daughter Jade Herrera in 1999.

Testimony from the two-week trial showed Prible shot Herrera, then raped and shot Tirado before setting her body on fire to hide DNA evidence. The children died from smoke inhalation from the resulting fire.

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Ronald Prible Texas Department of Criminal Justice

Herrera, described as Prible's best friend and partner in crime, allegedly robbed banks with Prible and used the money to buy and sell drugs. The men wanted to make enough money to open a topless club.

However, prosecutors said Prible turned on Herrera after accusing him of stealing $250,000.

In 2020, a federal judge ordered prosecutors to bring new proceedings against Prible after his lawyers argued that prosecutors suppressed evidence and improperly handled testimony from jailhouse informants, UPI reported.

Defense lawyers argued prosecutors coached informants to speak against Prible, and that his cellmate, Michael Beckcom, said Prible confessed to the killings because Beckcon had received "promises of relief" from investigators, the news agency reported.

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