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Robert Fratta execution: Cop-turned-killer scheduled to die tonight for 1994 murder of wife

The Missouri City cop paid $1,000 to have Farah Fratta killed because of a messy divorce, bitter child custody battle and money from a life insurance policy.

Michelle Homer

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Published: 4:09 PM CST January 6, 2023
Updated: 1:18 PM CST January 10, 2023

An ex-Missouri City cop who paid a teenage hitman to murder his estranged wife in 1994 is scheduled to be executed tonight, more than 28 years later.

During two capital murder trials, prosecutors said Robert Fratta gave the 18-year-old triggerman $1,000 to kill Farah Fratta, the mother of his three children.

The video above originally aired on Nov. 10, 1994, the day after Farah Fratta was murdered. 

Prosecutors painted Robert Fratta as a sexual deviant who was motivated by a messy divorce, a bitter custody battle and money from an insurance policy. 

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NOW ON KHOU 11+: Hear the 911 call from a neighbor the night Farah Fratta was killed and see the police interrogation video of Robert Fratta the following day.  Get KHOU 11+ for free on Roku and FireTV

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In 1996, it took jurors less than an hour to convict Fratta and they sentenced him to death. He showed no emotion but family members from both sides wept.

After the trial, Farah's father, Lex Baquer, said it had been especially hard on the couple's children.

"The young girl, she still asks for her mother. 'Mommy, I love you, Mommy. I miss you, Mommy,'" Lex said. "'I know you're in heaven, and someday when I die, I will meet you in heaven.'"  

"I cannot wait for the day when I see him laying on that table, waiting to get the injection. That will be justice for me," Farah's mom, Betty Baquer, said after the first trial. 

Justice would be a long time coming for Farah Fratta's loved ones. Thirteen years after she was killed, her husband's conviction was overturned because of inadmissible evidence. 

During a 2009 retrial, the couple's children -- who were then young adults -- testified against their father, and Fratta was convicted and sentenced to death again. 

Now 65, after 26 years on death row, a judge finally scheduled his execution date. On Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court denied a request to stop the execution.

Some family members will be in Huntsville to finally see justice, but it came too late for Farah Fratta's father, who died in 2018. KHOU 11 reporter Grace White will also be there as a media witness and will have a live update at 10 p.m.

WARNING: Contains graphic content and language

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