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Inset left: Natalia Cornelio (Que Onda Magazine/TikTok). Inset right: Ronald Haskell (Texas Department of Criminal Justice). Background: The residence where Haskell murdered six members of a family in 2014 near Spring, Tex. (Google Maps).
A Harris County judge in Texas has recently faced censure for her questionable conduct during proceedings related to a prominent capital murder case. This case revolves around Ronald Haskell, who, in July 2014, committed a heinous act by shooting seven members of the Stay family in their Houston-area home while allegedly searching for his ex-wife. This tragic event resulted in the execution-style deaths of six family members, leaving only one survivor. Among the victims were his ex-sister-in-law, her husband, and four of their children, while his ex-wife was not present at the time.
Ronald Haskell was sent to death row in Texas by October 2019, although the date for his execution remains unconfirmed. Fast forward to June 2024, when Judge Natalia Cornelio of the 351st Criminal District Court signed off on a bench warrant. This warrant initiated the process of transferring Haskell to a “private medical facility” for an MRI, according to the public reprimand issued by the State Commission on Judicial Conduct.
However, the commission highlighted that the warrant included a reference to a non-existent court date, which was one of Judge Cornelio’s attempts to obscure Haskell’s movements from the public eye. A closer look at the bench warrant itself hinted at these irregularities. It stated: “The case is set on the court docket for July 22, 2024, at 12:00 a.m. in the Harris County District Court listed above,” suggesting a deliberate attempt to mislead.
In June 2024, 351st Criminal District Court Judge Natalia Cornelio signed a bench warrant that was used to start the process of transporting Haskell to a “private medical facility” for an MRI, according to a public reprimand issued by the State Commission on Judicial Conduct.
The warrant, however, contained a reference to a court date that did not exist — and, according to the commission, this was the first of Cornelio”s efforts to shield Haskell’s movements from public knowledge.
The information on the bench warrant itself might have been a clue. The document read, in relevant part: “The case is set on the court docket for July 22, 2024, at 12:00 a.m. in the Harris County District Court listed above.”
Of that would-be midnight hearing, the ethics board notes: “[N]o court proceeding was scheduled in State of Texas v. Ronald Lee Haskell.”
It was the survivor of the massacre that initiated proceedings. The survivor herself received a notification about Haskell’s transfer from a public system that monitors and alerts about such developments.
In August, prosecutors moved to subpoena Haskell’s transportation logs, according to the public reprimand’s statement of facts.
Haskell, in response, moved to quash the state’s subpoena. And luckily for him, the judge overseeing the case was Cornelio herself.
On Sept. 12, 2024, Haskell moved to stop the state from looking into his movements. On Sept. 14, 2024, the judge granted the motion “and quashed the subpoena without affording the State an opportunity to be heard,” according to the reprimand issued by the ethics board.
In October 2024, the Harris County District Attorney’s Office, a bit fed up, filed a motion to recuse Cornelio from Haskell’s case.
That motion accused the judge of issuing “a bench warrant for Haskell to be transported for a court setting knowing the information to be false.” The DA’s office also accused Cornelio of issuing “ex parte travel orders in a ‘cloak and dagger’ manner that prevented the State from challenging her actions” and of quashing the DA’s “subpoena seeking information about the matter without affording the State an opportunity to be heard.” Additionally, the DA’s office accused Cornelio of exhibiting a “high degree of favoritism” toward Haskell.
In December 2024, the ethics board was apprised of the allegations against the judge, according to the reprimand.
In January of this year, following a series of hearing on the allegations against her, Cornelio was taken off the Haskell case.
The misconduct investigation went on throughout the year. The commission notes that during her appearances before the commission, the judge “did not dispute any” of the findings of fact.
The judge did, however, offer something of a defense.
“Judge Cornelio acknowledged the Bench Warrant contained inaccurate information about a nonexistent court appearance,” the reprimand reads. “Cornelio explained her staff used a standard electronic form for the Bench Warrant and, as is a common practice in Harris County, identified a docket setting even though the defendant was not going to appear in court. Judge Cornelio admitted she ‘should have been more careful about the details of the form [she] was signing’ and that it was ultimately her responsibility to ensure the Bench Warrant did not contain misleading information.”
Cornelio, for her part, also admittedly said she granted the motion to quash on a weekend without affording the state an opportunity to be heard — but insisted she no longer issues rulings without a hearing involving the parties to a case, or without making sure the parties have agreed to a ruling absent a hearing.
The commission determined Cornelio violated three canons of the judicial ethics code and one section of the Texas Constitution by “performing her judicial duties with bias, and manifesting by words or conduct bias in the performance of her judicial duties towards Haskell when she signed and issued the Bench Warrant knowing it contained false information about a nonexistent court appearance” and by “failing to afford the State an opportunity to be heard.
“Cornelio’s failures in the foregoing respects constituted willful and persistent conduct that is clearly inconsistent with the proper performance of her judicial duties and cast public discredit on the judiciary and on the administration of justice,” the commission summarized.