Bret Hartman Ohio Execution

bret hartman ohio

Bret Hartman was executed by the State of Ohio for the brutal murder of a woman. According to court documents Bret Hartman would brutally stab to death Winda Snipes who had her throat slit and her hands were cut off. Bret Hartman would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

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Brett Hartmann is dead.

After 15 years of failed appeals, the condemned Akron man was strapped to a gurney Tuesday morning at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility.

“I’m good. Let’s roll,” he said in his final words as a dose of lethal drugs were shot into his system.

He smiled and gave a thumbs up to his sister as she watched the execution through a glass window.

Sixteen minutes later, at 10:34 a.m., Hartmann was declared dead.

He maintained his innocence since his 1997 conviction for the slaying of Winda Snipes, 46, who lived in Akron’s Highland Square neighborhood.

In a statement released after the execution, Hartmann’s family, which includes a daughter and sister, said they hope the death serves as a “wake up call to the flaws in our legal system.” Prosecutors have always said there was “overwhelming” evidence of his guilt

“After numerous appeals and stays of execution, the state of Ohio carried out Brett Hartmann’s death sentence,” Summit County Prosecutor Sherri Bevan Walsh said in a news release. “The evidence was overwhelming that he brutally stabbed and mutilated Winda Snipes. Hopefully, Winda’s friends and family can now start the healing process.”

Hartmann’s sister Diane Morretti and a friend, John McClure, witnessed the execution. Hartmann appeared to smile broadly at his sister as he was dying. He eventually turned away from the window and closed his eyes.

Minutes into the execution, he spoke to prison Warden Donald Morgan.

“This is not going to defeat me,” Hartmann said, according to the Associated Press. Morgan did not respond.

In a 25-minute phone call Monday night with a Beacon Journal reporter, Hartmann, 38, said he was relieved to finally learn his fate in the face of his pending appeals. For several weeks, his future was uncertain due to his appeals to obtain more DNA testing on crime-scene evidence.

‘It’s my time,’ convict says

He said he was disappointed, but not surprised, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to stop his execution Monday evening. Twice before, in 2009 and 2011, Hartmann was given a stay

“It’s the road I got to walk,” he said. “It’s my time. It’s hard, especially for my family. But it’s not overwhelming for me. I’ve just never had any luck.”

He said he had no desire to spend the rest of his life in prison and was hoping to win a second trial and secure additional DNA testing. He said his family knows he is innocent, and he hopes the search for Snipes’ true killer continues.

“I think we’re lucky on death row because we have an out,” Hartmann said. “It’s a harsh structure in prison, but at least we’re not in for 50 to 60 years. Death row is its own little enigma. We are in our own little world.

“But being locked up and away from family, it’s tough. I’m tired of fighting and no one listening. I’m tired of begging for money [and tired] of prison. So, there’s some relief.”

Hartmann’s years of appeals ended about 6 p.m. Monday, when his attorneys told him the U.S. Supreme Court declined to intervene. He was convicted of aggravated murder and kidnapping in 1997.

“It’s all over and I’m relieved,” said Jacqueline Brown of Doylestown. She served as the only witness on Snipes’ behalf.

Snipes’ mother is in poor health and was unable to attend, Brown said.

“It’s a shame he died so peacefully. There’s no doubt he did it. No doubt at all,” she said.

Snipes and Hartmann had been involved in what he called a casual sexual relationship for several months before her death.

Hartmann, then 23, told police he was with Snipes the night before her death and the two drank alcohol and had sex. He said he left her South Highland Avenue apartment and returned about 14 hours later to find her dead.

Snipes was stabbed more than 130 times. Her hands were severed. She was not raped, authorities said.

Alibi in slaying

Instead of calling 911 immediately after finding Snipes’ body, Hartmann said he panicked, fearing he would be blamed for the murder because of their sexual encounter the previous day. He said he walked to a bar and got drunk. He then went back to the apartment and removed evidence of his visit and returned home.

Later that night and even more intoxicated, he reported the murder during a series of anonymous 911 calls and waited around the Highland Square neighborhood.

Eventually, he talked to officers at the scene and became a suspect. Detectives went to Hartmann’s apartment and found a bloody T-shirt stashed behind his bed. They also found Snipes’ jewelry.

Hartmann said he had left the T-shirt at Snipes’ apartment the night before and took it along with other items to conceal his visit, not his guilt.

“I made a lot of bad decisions that night, and I’m paying the price now,” Hartmann said in the phone call to a Beacon Journal reporter. “I was drunk and stupid, basically.”

Hartmann said his greatest regret is not being around for his daughter, whom he met for the first time this year. The 20-year-old Akron woman was unaware he was her father until her mother broke the news in the summer. Hartmann and the woman’s mother had a relationship early in the 1990s.

A paternity test confirmed the inmate’s parentage. The woman visited Hartmann at the death house Monday night.

“She cried outside in the hall, but she held up pretty good during our visit. It’s pretty hard for her,” he said.

During the phone call, Hartmann joked often, even about his cremation. He said his remains probably would wind up in a box in some family member’s basement. He marveled at the size of his special meal, which included steak, shrimp and a baked potato.

“What else are you going to do?” he said. “Sometimes, all you can do is laugh.”

https://www.beaconjournal.com/story/news/local/2012/11/14/ohio-executes-brett-hartmann-in/10501297007/

Donald Palmer Ohio Execution

donald palmer ohio

Donald Palmer was executed by the State of Ohio for the murders of two strangers. According to court documents Donald Palmer would shoot and kill Charles Sponhaltz and Steven Vargo following a minor traffic accident. Donald Palmer would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Donald Palmer would be executed by lethal injection on September 20 2012

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An Ohio death-row inmate used his last words today to repeatedly apologize to the family members of his two victims, telling them that he hopes they can let their pain die with him.

Donald Palmer, 47, was executed at the state prison in Lucasville in southern Ohio about 23 years after he shot and killed two men he didn’t know along a rural Ohio road in 1989.

“I want you to know I’ve carried you in my heart for years and years,” Palmer told six women in the room who are the widows, daughters and a niece of the men he killed. “I’m so sorry for what I took from you …I hope your pain and hurt die with me today.”

Palmer also told the women that he knows the pain of losing a parent, a sibling and a child, and that he wished his execution could bring their loved ones back to them.

“I know it can’t,” he said. “I pray that you have good lives now. I’m sorry.”

His time of death was 10:35 a.m.

Palmer was convicted of fatally shooting Charles Sponhaltz and Steven Vargo in the head along a Belmont County road in eastern Ohio on May 8, 1989.

Palmer didn’t know the men, who were both married fathers.

Palmer’s Columbus attorney, David Stebbins, said Wednesday that Palmer was sorry for the murders and never got the chance to apologize to the men’s families.

“He has always accepted responsibility for this and wants the families of his victims to have justice,” said Stebbins, who had planned to be among the witnesses to the execution

Palmer had decided not to request mercy from the Ohio Parole Board, which can recommend clemency for a condemned inmate to the governor.

Belmont County prosecutor Christopher Berhalter told the board the execution should proceed because Palmer’s guilt is undisputed and because of the brutality of the crimes.

According to court records, Palmer told police that he and co-defendant Edward Hill were driving from Columbus to the Belmont County home of a man who had dated Palmer’s ex-wife and Hill’s sister.

As they were driving back and forth in front of the home, Sponhaltz — who was keeping an eye on the house — lightly hit the back of their pickup with his own truck and yelled at them: “What in the hell are you trying to prove?” according to the records.

Donald Palmer then shot Sponhaltz twice in the head.

Vargo, a passing driver, stopped and asked “What the hell did you guys do,” Palmer told police, according to the records. Palmer then shot Vargo twice in the head.

Sponhaltz’s body was dumped in a field; Vargo’s was left on the road.

Hill, 46, was convicted for his role in the crimes and sentenced to 35 years to life in prison.

Valerie Vargo Jolliffee, 51, Vargo’s widow, told The Associated Press that she was planning to attend Palmer’s execution because he ruined her life.

She said that she and Vargo fell in love at first sight and had been married just two months when he was killed.

“I was looking forward to growing old with him,” she said. “I just can’t wait until it’s over. And it won’t be over until they put him to death.”

Sponholtz’s widow, two daughters and his brother also were expected to watch the execution.

Corrections officials say that Palmer asked that his last meal include a chipped ham and Velveeta cheese sandwich, ranch-flavored Doritos, peanut M&Ms, hazelnut ice cream, cheese cake and soda.

Ten Ohio inmates, including Palmer, are scheduled for execution through March 2014. Palmer will be the second this year if the execution goes forward.

https://www.cleveland.com/metro/2012/09/ohio_executes_donald_palmer_fo.html

Mark Wiles Ohio Execution

Mark Wayne Wiles - Ohio

Mark Wiles was executed by the State of Ohio for the murder of a teenage boy. According to court documents Mark Wiles was employed by the victims family in the past. Wiles would return a year later and watch the family leave. Mark Wiles would break into the home and would find fifteen year old Mark Kilma home who would be stabbed to death by Wiles. Mark Wiles would be executed by lethal injection on April 12 2012

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Ohio on Wednesday executed a man for fatally stabbing the 15-year-old son of his former employers during a 1985 farmhouse burglary, marking the state’s first execution in six months.

Forty-nine-year-old Mark Wiles died by lethal injection at 10:42 a.m., ending an unofficial moratorium on the death penalty that occurred while the state and a federal judge wrangled over Ohio’s lethal injection procedures. It was the 47th execution since Ohio resumed putting inmates to death in 1999.

Wiles, looking haggard with a sparse, cropped gray beard and shaven head, stared at witnesses for a few moments when he entered the death chamber. A few minutes later, strapped to the gurney and IV lines inserted into his arms, he raised his head and looked at witnesses again.

“Since this needs to be happening, truly I pray that my dying brings some solace and closure to the Klima family and their loved ones,” he said.

He also thanked his family for their love and support.

“Finally, the state of Ohio should not be in the business of killing its citizens,” Wiles concluded, reading a statement that the warden held over his head. “May God bless us all that fall short.”

Wiles’ stomach rose and fell several times and his head moved slightly, then his mouth fell open and he lay still for several minutes before he was pronounced dead.

John Craig, a cousin of Wiles’ victim Mark Klima and a witness of the execution, appeared briefly before reporters to respond to Wiles’ last words

“It’s my opinion that Mark Wiles gave up his citizenship to Ohio when he murdered my cousin and became an inmate, more or less a condemned man,” Craig said.

Wiles, who dropped his final appeal last week, told the Ohio Parole Board that he wasn’t sure he deserved mercy but he was requesting clemency because he had to. Both the parole board and Gov. John Kasich denied Wiles’ request.

Wiles’ defense team had argued he should be spared because he confessed to the crime, showed remorse and had a good prison record.

Records show that Wiles surprised 15-year-old Mark Klima during a burglary at his family’s farmhouse and stabbed him repeatedly with a kitchen knife until he stopped moving.

Wiles could easily have escaped the farmhouse after Klima surprised him but instead chose to stab the teen repeatedly, Portage County Prosecutor Victor Vigluicci told the parole board.

A report to the parole board said Wiles had suffered a head injury in a bar 12 days before the slaying in Rootstown in northeast Ohio, and a doctor testified that tests indicate he may have an injury to part of the brain that regulates impulse control. Another doctor agreed that Wiles has a brain injury and said he also has a substance-abuse problem and personality disorder.

The parole board earlier this month ruled unanimously that Wiles’ execution should proceed because he exploited the kindness of the family, for whom Wiles had been a farmhand, and because his remorse doesn’t outweigh the brutality of the crime.

Wiles paced back and forth and was emotional and anxious in his last minutes in his cell a few steps from the death chamber, prisons spokeswoman JoEllen Smith said. The inmate spent the night on the phone, listening to the radio and writing letters, Smith said. He and two sisters and a brother-in-law cried during emotional visits Wednesday morning, and he also said the rosary with his spiritual adviser, a Roman Catholic priest who works at Ohio’s death row in Chillicothe.

Wiles did not sleep since arriving at the death house Tuesday morning about 9:45 a.m., Smith said.

“He did have a few brief moments where he became emotional upon his arrival, but his overall demeanor has remained the same, which is respectful, cooperative and compliant with our staff,” Smith said.

For his special meal Tuesday night, Wiles requested a large pizza with pepperoni and extra cheese, hot sauce, a garden salad with ranch dressing, a large bag of Cheetos, a whole cheesecake, fresh strawberries, vanilla wafers and Sprite, Smith said.

Ohio’s most recent execution delays stem from inmates’ lawsuits over how well executioners perform their duties.

U.S. District Court Judge Gregory Frost sided with inmates last summer and postponed executions while the state updated its procedures.

In November, Frost allowed Ohio to put Reginald Brooks to death for killing his three sons in 1982. In the process, executioners deviated slightly from their written execution plan.

The changes were minor but angered Frost, who had made his impatience with even slight changes clear. He once again put executions on hold.

Two weeks ago, after a weeklong trial over the latest procedures, Frost said the state had narrowly demonstrated it was serious about following its rules. He warned prison officials to get it right the next time.

The state has a review process in place that allows prisons director Gary Mohr to oversee the details and procedures of the execution policy.

Before the execution, Mohr said he was “absolutely confident” in the state’s ability to carry out the procedure properly.

“We have more documentation on this than anything in my 38 years that I’ve been in this business,” Mohr said. “It’s the most documented execution in the United States of America.”

https://www.cleveland.com/metro/2012/04/ohio_to_execute_man_in_1983_po.html

Harry Mitts Ohio Execution

Harry Mitts - Ohio

Harry Mitts was executed by the State of Ohio for a double murder. According to court documents Harry Mitts would shoot and kill the first victim when he was walking across the parking lot. During the police search for the gunman Harry Mitts would fire several shots through the door striking and killing a police officer. Harry Mitts would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Harry Mitts would be executed by lethal injection on September 25, 2013

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Garfield Heights killer Harry Mitts Jr. was executed Wednesday after spending nearly two decades on death row for gunning down his neighbor and a police officer.

A lethal injection stopped Mitts’ heart at 10:39 a.m.

Mitts, 61, was sentenced to death in November 1994 after a full-bore firefight at his apartment complex that left neighbor John Bryant and Garfield Heights Police Sgt. Dennis Glivar dead.

Harry Mitts used his last words to ask for forgiveness and encourage the victims’ families to find salvation in Jesus Christ.

“I’m so sorry for taking your loved ones’ lives,” Mitts said with tears in his eyes. “I had no business doing what I did and I’ve been carrying that burden with me for 19 years.

“Please don’t carry that hatred for me with you in your hearts.”

Mitts’ lethal injection lasted nearly 35 minutes.

At 10:05 a.m., corrections officers walked a calm Mitts into the death chamber, where he was strapped to a steel bed and hooked up to lines that would deliver deadly chemicals.

After his final words, Mitts stared at the ceiling while authorities in another room delivered the injection.

Harry Mitts closed his eyes and took increasingly labored breaths. About a minute later, he began to snore.

The snoring soon stopped and Mitts’ breathing gradually slowed. His face turned blue by the time he took his last peaceful gasp.

Harry Mitts is the last person to be put to death in Ohio using the drug pentobarbital. The state’s supply of pentobarbital was expected to run out with Mitts’ executions today. Department of Rehabilitation and Correction will announce by Oct. 4 how it will respond, according to spokeswoman Ricky Seyfang

“I know its wrong, but I still have hatred for him,” said Bryant’s sister Johnnal after the execution.

Glivar’s widow Debbie said she would never forgive Mitts.

Mitts’ friend Gary Hopkins joined ministers Edward Jenkins and Lucian Piaskowiak on the inmate’s side of the witness room.

All of the witnesses watched in silence as Mitts slipped away.

Harry Mitts began his hours-long rampage on the evening of Aug. 14, 1994 by firing a laser-sighted round into Bryant’s chest as Bryant and his girlfriend were returning home from grocery shopping.

Bryant, who was black, and his girlfriend, who was white, were walking from the parking lot to their apartment when Mitts approached the couple.

He raised his gun, uttered racial slurs and shot 28-year-old Bryant point blank. Against Mitts’ orders, neighbors carried Bryant to a second-floor apartment and waited for help to arrive.

Harry Mitts then walked away, randomly firing his weapon, and prepared for the imminent police response. Mitts hoped for a suicide by cop, according to Ohio Parole Board documents.

Harry Mitts fired eight to 10 rounds at the first patrol car to approach the complex and then fled to his first-floor apartment.

Glivar and Kaiser arrived soon after and located Bryant, who bled out before they arrived. The officers returned downstairs to ensure the building was safe for paramedics to enter.

That is when Mitts, who clenched a .44 Magnum in one fist and a 9 mm pistol in the other, sprung open his apartment door and let loose a volley of gunfire.

Glivar, 44, was shot seven times. Bullets ripped through his heart, lung, liver, kidney and stomach. He collapsed near the door, dropped his shotgun and died within minutes.

Kaiser was shot in the chest and hand but managed to force Mitts to retreat by firing in the killer’s direction. Kaiser then took cover upstairs and kept watch on Mitts’ apartment.

“We didn’t even know he lived there,” Kaiser said Tuesday. “He was just waiting for us. Maybe he was looking through his peephole. He took us by surprise.”

Kaiser tried to talk Mitts into surrendering. Mitts refused.

“The only way we’re going to end this is if you kill me,” Mitts shouted, according to clemency documents. “You have to come down. You have to do your job and you have to kill me.”

Minutes later, Maple Heights Police Officer John Mackey arrived at the complex and helped Kaiser rescue tenants upstairs by guiding them down a ladder propped against a back window.

Mackey and Kaiser then took positions outside Mitts apartment while the gunman fired sporadic shots using Glivar’s dropped shotgun and weapons from his home arsenal.

At one point, Mitts was able to pick out Mackey’s location by the sound of the officer’s voice carrying through the hallway.

Harry Mitts fired through a wall and hit Mackey.

The bloody gun battle ended hours later when a SWAT team shot tear gas into Mitts’ apartment and subdued the wounded triggerman.

Mitts was charged with the aggravated murders of Bryant and Glivar, and the attempted murders of Kaiser and Mackey.

Three months later, the man with no previous criminal record was sentenced to death.

Authorities found thousands of rounds of ammunition in Mitts’ home and a bumper sticker that read: “Gun control means hitting what you aim at.”

The Ohio Parole Board said Mitts’ deadly confrontation is “clearly among the worst of the worst capital cases.”

Mitts began to tailspin in the weeks leading to the massacre. He began stalking his ex wife and her new husband, and admitted he thought about assassinating the man

Prosecutors argued Mitts’ attack was racially motivated, but defense attorneys contended Mitts killed Bryant only to lure police.

Last week, Gov. John Kasich denied Mitts clemency, siding with the parole board’s unanimous recommendation to carry out the death sentence.

Mitts told the parole board in August he found God while incarcerated at the Cuyahoga County Jail and looked forward to living “in perpetuity with Jesus Christ” after his execution

https://www.cleveland.com/metro/2013/09/harry_mitts_jr_executed.html

Frederick Treesh Ohio Execution

Frederick Treesh - Ohio

Frederick Treesh was executed by the State of Ohio for the murder of security guard. According to court documents Frederick Treesh was on a multi state crime spree which would end with the shooting death of Henry Dupree in Eastlake on Aug. 27, 1994. Frederick Treesh was also suspected of killing another man in Michigan however he was not charged. Frederick Treesh would be executed by lethal injection on March 6, 2013.

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A man who fatally shot an adult bookstore security guard in 1994 at the end of a multistate crime spree was executed today.

Frederick Treesh received a single powerful dose of pentobarbital and was pronounced dead at 10:37 by Donald Morgan, warden of the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in Lucasville.

Treesh was sentenced to die for killing Henry Dupree in Eastlake on Aug. 27, 1994.

Treesh, in a last statement, apologized for the death of Dupree, but said he wouldn’t say he was sorry to family members of a video store clerk killed in Michigan who were witnessing the execution.

“I’ve never been tried, I’ve never been charged,” he said.

After a few more comments he said, “If you want me murdered, just say it.”

Treesh was the 50th inmate put to death by the state since it resumed executions in 1999.

Gov. John Kasich denied Treesh clemency last week, following the recommendation of the state parole board, which ruled unanimously last month that the evidence showed Dupree was seated when shot and hadn’t shown any sign of being a threat to Treesh. The board also said Treesh’s decision to shoot a clerk in the face as he left the store suggests Treesh’s “murderous intent” when coming to the store.

Treesh and his co-defendant “gratuitously brutalized, humiliated and killed innocent people, most of whom, like Dupree, posed no real or perceived threat to them,” the board said.

Prosecutors say Treesh, 48, and the co-defendant robbed banks and businesses, committed sexual assaults, stole cars, committed carjackings and shot someone to death in a Michigan robbery during a spree that also took them to Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota and Wisconsin.

Treesh’s attorneys described him as a cocaine addict who was high during the robbery and is deeply sorry for what happened.

“Hindsight, regret and remorse cannot turn back the clock and cannot return Mr. Dupree’s life,” they said in a petition for clemency. “What Fred can do and has tried to do is to help prevent others from making the same mistakes he did” by teaching them to avoid drugs.

His lawyers also alleged Treesh’s rights were violated during a prolonged interrogation as he was coming down from a drug high, which contributed to his death sentence. They also say Treesh suffers from health problems, including a seizure disorder, that raise concerns Ohio’s lethal injection process would cause him suffering amounting to cruel and unusual punishment.

Prosecutors contend Treesh intentionally murdered Dupree and tried to kill others, including police officers in pursuit.

“Treesh has never taken responsibility for his actions,” Lake County Prosecutor Charles Coulson wrote. “Treesh still claims ‘the cocaine made him do it.’ ”

Coulson also noted that courts previously determined Treesh’s constitutional rights weren’t violated.

Treesh declined to be interviewed by the parole board.

The parole board cited Treesh’s refusal to be interviewed as evidence he has not grown or improved as a person in prison

Treesh’s prison behavior is indicative of “a self-indulgent, petulant and immature individual,” the board said.

He was never prosecuted for the crimes in the other states, according to the Ohio Attorney General’s Office.

Ohio’s most recent execution was in November, when the state put to death Brett Hartman for the 1997 stabbing and dismemberment of an Akron woman.

https://www.cleveland.com/metro/2013/03/ohio_executes_frederick_treesh.html