Lucas, who was best known for making bogus confessions that
prompted law officers nationwide to clear hundreds of unsolved
killings, was found dead in his bed at the Ellis I prison unit, the
Texas Department of Criminal Justice said.
The one-eyed ex-drifter, who was in his mid-60s, was narrowly
saved from execution in 1998 when then-Gov. George W. Bush commuted
a death sentence to life in prison because of flimsy evidence in
his capital case.
Lucas body was found shortly before 11 p.m. CST Monday, said
department spokesman Larry Fitzgerald. He said the death appeared
to be from natural causes.
History of Heart Problems
Lucas had a history of heart problems and had been previously
hospitalized. His body was taken to the Huntsville Funeral Home,
Fitzgerald said, where it will be determined whether there are
relatives who want to claim the remains.
Although physical evidence linked Lucas to only two murders, his
confession spree prompted authorities to clear their books of more
than 600 unsolved killings. Many never were reopened.
In 1999, Lucas told reporters he had become fascinated by Rafael
Resendez-Ramirez, the fugitive authorities had connected with at
least eight slayings in Texas, Kentucky and Illinois.
'I Made the Police Look Stupid'
Hes really playing cat-and-mouse with the FBI, Henry Lee
Lucas told the Houston Chronicle at the time. I follow his case
on the TV. ... Id like to meet him.
If this was 1983, Lucas said, Id claim these murders,
too. ... I made the police look stupid. I was out to wreck Texas
law enforcement.
Fitzgerald said that Lucas had been in state custody since 1985
and spent most of his time working as a sewing machine operator in
a garment factory that produces trousers for correctional officers
uniforms.
He spent all of his time running the sewing machine, he
said. He was our best. 
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