THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT Copyright (c) 1996, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: Wednesday, July 17, 1996 TAG: 9607170408 SECTION: LOCAL PAGE: B2 EDITION: FINAL SOURCE: BY LAURA LAFAY, STAFF WRITER LENGTH: 70 lines
Barring intervention by the U.S. Supreme Court or Gov. George F. Allen, a New York man convicted of killing his male lover in Bedford County will die tonight by lethal injection.
Joseph John Savino III, 37, a native of Mt. Vernon, N.Y., pleaded guilty to capital murder in the 1988 killing of Thomas McWaters, another New York man who moved to Virginia after buying a farm in Bedford County in 1985. Savino moved in with McWaters in 1988 when he was paroled to Virginia after serving six years for robbery in a New York prison.
Savino had known McWaters for seven years. The two had ``a domestic relationship,'' according to court documents.
That relationship went sour, according to Savino.
Although the 64-year-old McWaters supported him and gave him money, Savino said in an interview this week, he also hounded him for sex and routinely threatened to have his parole revoked if he didn't comply. In an effort to avoid McWaters, Savino said, he began spending time in Roanoke, shooting cocaine with friends.
``McWaters was painted by the prosecutor at Joe's sentencing as simply wanting Joe to be happy,'' Savino's lawyer, Gerald T. Zerkin, said Tuesday. ``That's clearly nonsense. This case was about sexual obsession and the power and the control that McWaters attempted to exert over Joe.''
The situation came to a head on Nov. 29, 1988, when McWaters was found bludgeoned to death in the home he shared with Savino. The following day, police arrested Savino in Roanoke. In April 1989, he pleaded guilty to capital murder and was sentenced to death.
In subsequent appeals, Savino and his lawyers have argued that police improperly badgered Savino into confessing to the killing even though he had repeatedly asked for a lawyer and refused to waive his Miranda rights.
In addition, they have claimed, Savino got ineffective assistance from his lawyers because they made no efforts to suppress his confession, allowed him to plead guilty without sufficient knowledge of the consequences, and failed to tell him that his state of acute cocaine psychosis on the night of the murder could have been a defense.
Savino grew up in an Italian neighborhood in Mt. Vernon, N.Y., raised by his mother, a beautician. He attended Catholic school from kindergarten through 8th grade. From the beginning, he said, he and a group of other boys were sexually molested by several priests at the school. Many of those boys grew up to die of heroin overdoses or go to prison.
``They really wreaked a lot of havoc on my town, those priests,'' said Savino, a former heroin addict. ``I mean, all these people are dead.''
As he got older and began to get into trouble, Savino said, the priests were afraid to discipline him for fear he would tell on them. They began to pay him to keep his mouth shut. Meanwhile, he began to trade sex for money with men outside of school.
At 21, after spending two years in prison, Savino met McWaters when the older man gave him a job. As the relationship progressed, Savino said, he became addicted to heroin. McWaters began paying him for sex, and Savino used the money to support his habit.
``I needed money, so I started tricking with him for money,'' Savino said. ``But it was important to him to think that I wasn't doing it for the money. It was important for him to believe that we were in a relationship. Like it wasn't a relationship. Like he wasn't just paying for it.''
Bishop Walter Sullivan visited Savino's cell in the death house at the Greensville Correctional Center Tuesday and said Mass.
``I received the sacrament, and I was forgiven for all my sins and anointed with oil,'' said Savino. ``It was very comforting. Just the ceremony of it reminds me of home.''
Savino is scheduled to be executed at 9 p.m. in the death chamber at Greensville.
KEYWORDS: DEATH ROW CAPITAL PUNISHMENT by CNB