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William

Branham and the Transvestite Murderer


In 1963, William Branham took a trip to the desert in Arizona that is fundamental in both cult
history and cult theology. The results of that trip have been debated for decades, and his cult
following has been programmed to believe that seven angels parted the heavens after an alleged
supernatural experience in the wilderness. According to Branhams recorded sermons, the trip
was a result of a vision in which he saw five angels. This event was supposed to have happened
during javelina season in Arizona, which was between March 1 and March 10 according to the
State of Arizona.
But before the hunt, Branham mentions an event that is grossly overlooked in Message history.
It was so significant to William Branham that he claimed the humane society gave him an
Oscar for his performance. Branham left the state of Arizona to visit Houston, Texas, where a
familiar face was sitting on death row and awaiting execution.
I was going hunting with a friend, not knowing what was going to happen. And someone called me,
the one that criticized me about that picture of the Angel of the Lord, the one that took it. I had to go
to Houston about his son, for he was going in the death row and was going to be killed in a few days.
And he met me in there and throwed his arms around me, said, "Think, the very man that I criticized
comes to save my only son!" The humane society give me what they call an oscar, or whatever you
want to call it, for saving a life. Then we went back, I went up in the mountain to hunt.
Branham, 65-0725E

There's a boy who had done a murder. He done something wrong. Well, I was called on a case,
the other day, you know, this over here in Texas. I got a little certificate from them the other day,
"Saving a life," it said. We went over there for that little Ayers. That man that taken the picture
of the Angel of the Lord, who, that night over there at Houston, and criticized me and said
everything in the world about me. Throwed his arms around me, hugged me, said, "Just think,
Brother Branham, the very man that I said was hyp-... practicing hypnosis, has come to save my
son from the electric chair." That's right. I talked there before them all. And what did the
governor do? Pardoned it.
- Branham, 63-0428
Leslie Douglas Ashley and Carolyn Lima were tried and convicted of murder in the Texas State
court. During a three-party sexual orgy, Ashley and Lima killed a man in the real estate
business. Ashley was the stepson of Mr. James Ayers that Branham mentions on tape. Ayers
was one of the photographers who took a photograph of William Branham in the Houston
Coliseum that has also made cult history. Born to Sylvia Kipperman Ayers, Leslie Ashley was
actually Mr. Ayers stepson, not his son. The other photographer, Ted Kipperman, was related to
the murderers mother.

The state's testimony shows that when officers of the City of Houston arrived at a vacant lot to
extinguish a fire on the night of February 6, 1961, they discovered a burning, almost nude male
body, later identified as that of the deceased. An autopsy revealed that gasoline had been poured
on the body and ignited after the deceased had been killed as a result of being shot six times with
a .22 caliber pistol.
- LESLIE DOUGLAS ASHLEY AND CAROLYN LIMA v. STATE TEXAS (06/20/62)
Appellant Lima, an admitted prostitute, and Appellant Ashley,
an admitted homosexual, both testified and in open court
admitted killing the deceased but contended that they did so in
self defense and in defense of each other.
The appellants testified that they were living together in
December of 1960 when Lima met the deceased and began
having paid sexual relations with him about once a week.
Ashley first met the deceased while disguised as a woman, but
later was introduced as Lima's brother. The deceased
subsequently suggested that Ashley be a part of a perverted, three-way act of sexual deviation,
and on February 6, the appellants went to deceased's office to engage in these acts with him.
While discussing these sordid matters, deceased lightly stuck both appellants with his "bayonet",
and when deceased proposed that he and Ashley engage in acts of sodomy he became very angry
and cursed when Ashley refused. The deceased and Lima then partially disrobed and had been
committing sodomy on each other when the deceased started "getting rough" and tearing at her
private parts. When Lima began crying out Ashley intervened and deceased started hitting and

choking him. During their struggle Ashley got the pistol out of Lima's purse and fired one shot
before dropping it. Deceased grabbed the "bayonet" and started swinging it at the appellants, but
Lima managed to grab the pistol and fire the remaining five shots which felled the deceased.
- LESLIE DOUGLAS ASHLEY AND CAROLYN LIMA v. STATE TEXAS (06/20/62)
Though the petition would not be successful, William Branham travelled to Houston, Texas to
draw crowds that would sign a petition to the State of Texas to keep Ashley from the death
penalty. On March 4th, he preached An Absolute for those children facing death.

And the other day, when I had arrangements made for something else, another place, and I
knew that those children were facing death, I thought, "If something would happen to those
children, I would never forgive myself," of not coming here to give my opinion and doing all that
I could, to help this mother and father, and of these children, and to do all that I could for the
saving of their lives.
- Branham, 63-0304 - A Absolute

On the 17th of that same month, Branham returned to his home church in Jeffersonville, Indiana
and explained his trip to Houston.

The other day I was called to Houston, Texas, to try to get a pardon I gathered some people
together to preach a message to get people there to sign a pardon ofof this young fellow and
young girl, you know, that got in that trouble (I guess you've read about it in the paper) and that
was Mr. Ayers' step son.
- Branham, 63-0317M
In June of 1963, a rehearing was denied. Evidence was clear, the transvestite living with the
prostitute killed their victim in his own real estate office:
The facts upon which the appellants base their claim for a new trial in the Texas State Court are
not seriously in dispute. The appellants were tried for the murder of a real estate man in. The
city of Houston, whose killing they admitted, after, or during, a three-party sexual orgy in the
office of the deceased. Appellant Ashley was a homosexual and transvestite (he frequently
dressed in women's clothes for the purpose of attracting men). Appellant Carolyn Lima was a
seventeen year old prostitute, who had been living with Ashley. Both of them had been
supported by their earnings in prostitution.
- U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit - 319 F.2d 80 (5th Cir. 1963) June 25, 1963
Leslie Ashley finally made a successful appeal. In 1965 after Carolyn Lima was freed, Ashley
made an appeal pleading insanity. His defense was successful, and he was sent to a minimum
security mental institution, from which he quickly escaped. Disguised as Bobo the Clown in a
travelling carnival, Leslie would evade the FBI for over six months.
In April 6, 1965, Leslie Douglas Ashley made the FBIs top ten most wanted fugitives.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FBI_Ten_Most_Wanted_Fugitives_by_year,_1965#Leslie_Dougla
s_Ashley

After several people signed the petition, Leslie Ashley changed his name to Leslie Elaine Perez
and went on to have a sex change operation. Many newspaper articles and books were published
to describe the horrific tale of sex, murder, and transition. One such book, Dangerous Games,
was published in 1993 by author Robert Bentley. Two reviews of the book summarize the gory
tale:
From Publishers Weekly:
In this unusual story, engagingly told by screenwriter Bentley, Leslie Douglas Ashley met
Carolyn Lima at a lesbian bar in Houston. In February 1961, soon after moving in together, the
pair, who had turned to prostitution, were charged with fatally shooting a customer named Fred
A. Tones, leaving his burned body in a vacant lot. A legal battle and media circus ensued. Ashley
was sentenced to death; Lima was imprisoned and eventually released. Ashley's verdict was
overturned because the prosecutor improperly hid psychiatric records. Ashley was sent to a
mental hospital, escaped and was captured six months later. After serving five years in prison, he
was released and underwent a sex-change operation, becoming Leslie
Elaine Perez. In a stranger than fiction twist, she became politically
active in Houston's chapter of ACT-UP. Photos not seen by PW.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Kirkus Reviews:
A startling portrayal of life at the frayed edges of the American Dream-of drag shows, transvestite hustlers, teenage hookers, flophouses--and
murder most foul. Free-lance writer Bentley centers his narrative on
Leslie Douglas Ashley, a flamboyant drag performer who in the early
60's fled Houston for Manhattan. Failing to make it in the Gotham
clubs, Ashley, still in drag, took to the streets as a prostitute. Returning
to Texas, he encountered Carolyn Ann Lima, a slightly retarded 17year-old hooker. The two joined forces, servicing clients from schoolboys to traveling salesmen.
One of the pair's johns was a local real-estate agent who--according to their later testimony-became threatening during an assignation. Lima pumped six rounds into the man, then helped
Ashley drag the body to a nearby vacant lot, where they set it on fire. Taking their victim's car,
the two set out for Manhattan, pausing briefly in New Orleans during Mardi Gras. Picked up in
N.Y.C. on a minor charge, Ashley and Lima were returned to Texas on murder charges. Ashley
was condemned to death, despite an insanity defense; Lima plea- bargained and received time.
During an appeal, it became clear that the prosecution had withheld evidence regarding Ashley's
mental condition, and, after a new sanity hearing, the transvestite was put in a mental institution.
Ashley was eventually pardoned; today, after a sex-change operation, she's politically active as a
spokesperson for ACT UP--although Bentley indicates that her abrasive personality goes
unappreciated even by that organization. An engrossing look at a shadowy area of American life-and the dark underbelly of the Reagan years. (Eight pages of photographs) -- Copyright 1993,
Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
At first, we questioned whether or not William Branham, a traveling evangelist and cult leader,
could have successfully persuaded the Texas government to stay the execution. Though today's

cult would claim "divine intervention" even in the case of a homosexual transvestite murderer
who later had a sex-change operation, a normal (not programmed) person can realize that this
cannot legally be accomplished unless there was a petition accepted or criminal activity ensued.
After reviewing the series of events surrounding the transvestite and prostitute, we are now
starting to believe that there was a thread of truth to Branham's claim. It is starting to appear as
though he was involved, and that there is a strong possibility of criminal activity.
The two were not released by petition in March of 1963. On March 29, 1963 when the US court
of appeals held the transvestite and prostitute from the electric chair, there was no governors
pardon. Their escape was due to foul play: someone withheld evidence during their initial trial.
"The two escaped the chair March 29, 1963 when U. S. Court of Appeals at New Orleans ruled
evidence had been withheld. They were granted new trials. The Lima woman received the five
year sentence. Ashley, a female impersonator, was adjudged insane and ordered committed to a
state hospital in San Antonio. He escaped last winter and is still at large."
https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=861&dat=19650404&id=cLRjAAAAIBAJ&sjid=coE
MAAAAIBAJ&pg=7068,530146&hl=en
William Branham took credit for saving the life of a transvestite murderer. Was he involved in
criminal activity? Did he convince officials to withhold evidence?
When one examines all of the evidence that is now made available through the Digital Media Act
and accessible court records, it is evident that there is more to this story than meets the eye. At
minimum, there is ample evidence to overturn Branham's supernatural claims in Arizona that
have created today's cult -- he was in Houston, TX at the time supporting a transvestite murderer.
But when one takes the time to study this information, there are many more questions to be asked
than just simply a tall-tale about a cloud.
References:
LESLIE DOUGLAS ASHLEY AND CAROLYN LIMA v. STATE TEXAS (06/20/62)
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit - 319 F.2d 80 (5th Cir. 1963) June 25, 1963
Mike Vance, Murder & Mayhem in Houston
Bently, Dangerous Games
Independent Film: Burn, Baby, Burn: The Carolyn Lima Story

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