Jan Brawner Mississippi Execution

jan brawner mississippi

Jan Brawner was executed by the State of Mississippi for the murders of four people. According to court documents Jan Brawner would go to his ex wives home and murdered her, their daughter and her parents. Jan Brawner would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Jan Brawner would be executed by lethal injection on June 12 2012

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Petitions to the United States supreme court for a stay of execution for Jan Michael Brawner were denied late Tuesday afternoon. And Brawner was put to death hours later.

Brawner was pronounced dead at 6:18 Tuesday night. He is convicted of killing his 3-year-old daughter, his ex-wife and her parents in 2001. Brawner later admitted to the crimes and apologized to family members seconds before the injection started Tuesday night.

According to Mississippi Department of Corrections Commissioner Chris Epps Brawner discussed the murders with him hours before he died Tuesday.

“He talked about killing the mother in law first and then secondly was his former wife and then he took his three-year old  and allowed her to watch television,” said Epps.  “He thought about what he had done and thought that she could identify him, so he went and killed her and then he waited on the father in law to come home and killed him.”

Brawner shot his ex-wife and her parents each three times. He shot his own daughter 2 times in the face.

Epps said Brawner did show remorse saying “I asked him was he ready  to go and he said he was prepared. And he said that he deserved to be executed for what he did.”

David Craft, who found his parents, sister and niece dead in their Tate County home in 2001 was the only family member who witnessed the execution.

Afterwards family members released a statement saying “man has a choice of good and evil. Michael choose evil while my family chose good.”

This is the fifth inmate executed in Mississippi this year.

https://www.wreg.com/news/convicted-killer-pronounced-dead-minutes-after-lethal-injection/

Richard Leavitt Idaho Execution

Richard Leavitt idaho

Richard Leavitt was executed by the State of Idaho for the sexual assault and murder of a woman. According to court documents Richard Leavitt would attack, sexually assault and stab to death Danette Elg. Richard Leavitt would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Richard Leavitt would be executed by lethal injection on June 12 2012

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Convicted killer Richard Leavitt was calm and spending what was expected to be his last full day alive meeting with his team of lawyers and a handful of approved visitors at his cell on Idaho’s death row, prison officials said Monday.

Leavitt, 53, is scheduled to be put to death this morning by lethal injection at Idaho Maximum Security Institution, south of Boise. He was convicted in 1985 for the brutal stabbing death of Danette Elg, a 31-year-old woman from Blackfoot.

Idaho Press-Tribune reporter John Funk is one of the designated witnesses to the execution.

Leavitt, along with members of his family, insists he didn’t commit the crime. But barring any last-minute reprieve from federal judges, Leavitt will be just the second Idaho inmate put to death in 17 years.

He was calm as he met with visitors and lawyers, state prisons spokesman Jeff Ray said. Leavitt declined to disclose the identity of his approved visitors. Ray said Leavitt will have baked chicken, french fries and milk for his last meal.

Today’s execution will be different in two ways from the execution last November of Paul Ezra Rhoades.

The state’s execution team will administer a single, lethal dose of pentobarbital, a drug used as a surgical sedative. Last fall, Rhoades was given a lethal injection of three chemicals.

If the execution goes forward, it will mark the first time state and media witnesses will view Idaho’s lethal injection process in its entirety. Last fall, witnesses were barred from seeing the execution team escort Rhoades into the chamber, strap him to a gurney and insert the IV catheters into his arms.

Prison officials had blocked that portion of the execution to protect the identity of the execution team members. But more than a dozen news organizations sued the state, alleging that the Idaho Department of Correction policy limiting access to an execution from start to finish violated the First Amendment and the public’s right to know.

The news groups, led by The Associated Press, sought to expand access to bring Idaho policies in line with a 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which ruled on a 2002 case that the public has a right to view executions in their entirety. The portion of the execution process blocked by Idaho prison officials has been subject to legal challenges by death row inmates nationwide, claiming the insertion of the catheters can be botched in a way that causes pain, other medical complications and raises questions about the dignity of the process

On Friday, a three-judge panel from the San Francisco-based court sided with the news groups and ordered IDOC to modify its policy.

The same federal appeals court on Monday rejected two requests by Leavitt’s team of lawyers to rehear appeals in his case.

Late Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court rejected a motion Leavitt filed seeking a stay of the execution.

https://www.idahopress.com/news/local/richard-leavitt-execution-set-today/article_c76ef884-b450-11e1-9ad2-001a4bcf887a.html

Henry Jackson Mississippi Execution

henry jackson mississippi

Henry Jackson was executed by the State of Mississippi for the murders of four children. According to court documents Henry Jackson would go to the home of the children’s grandmother in order to steal a safe. Before he would leave Henry Jackson would stab the four children aged 2 to 5 to death. Henry Jackson would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

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A Mississippi man convicted of killing his four young nieces and nephews in a 1990 stabbing rampage was executed Tuesday, despite pleas from his two sisters to spare the brother who killed their children.

Henry “Curtis” Jackson Jr. was pronounced dead at 6:13 p.m. CDT (7:13 p.m. ET) Tuesday after receiving an injection at the Mississippi State Penitentiary at Parchman, officials said.

Clad in a red prison jumpsuit as he lay strapped to a gurney, Jackson was asked if he wanted to make a statement.

“No, I don’t,” he responded as family members sat somberly in a nearby witness room.

Jackson’s sister, Glenda Kuyoro, stifled a sob when she walked into the witness room earlier and saw her brother on the gurney. Jackson’s eyes were closed when the witnesses arrived and he never looked in the direction of his family.

Earlier, the 47-year-old inmate had spent the day receiving relatives, including one of the sisters whose two children were slain and who survived the stabbing attack. The slain children ranged from 2 to 5 and were killed as Jackson reportedly was trying to steal his mother’s safe while she was away at church, court records showed.

Jackson was the fourth person executed this year in the state and the 19th person executed in the nation. 

He did not request a last meal and ate none of the standard dinner offered to him, corrections officials said. He also declined a sedative ahead of the execution. 


Late Tuesday afternoon, Republican Gov. Phil Bryant declined to stop the execution though he said he was “deeply touched” by requests for clemency from the sisters and his brother-in-law.

In Mississippi, the governor has the sole authority to grant clemency and can also commute death sentences to life in prison.

“There is no question that Mr. Jackson committed these heinous crimes, and there is no clear and convincing evidence that compels me to grant clemency,” Bryant said.

His statement added: “One of these sisters was a stabbing victim, and both of the sisters are mothers of the murdered children. However, as governor, I have the duty to see that justice is carried out.”

Corrections Commissioner Chris Epps said at a penitentiary briefing earlier Tuesday that the inmate acknowledged the crime and was talkative as he received relatives. Visitors included his sister Regina Jackson, who was stabbed five times and survived the attack that killed her two daughters and two nephews.

Regina Jackson had met with the governor Monday and pleaded for her brother’s life. She also wrote Bryant a letter last month saying she “just can’t take any more killing.”

“As a mother who lost two babies, all I’m asking is that you not make me go through the killing of my brother,” she wrote.


Kuyoro and her husband, Andrew, also had asked Bryant to spare the inmate in a letter dated May 15.

“We are the victims in this case, and we are begging you not to let Curtis be killed. You can keep him in Parchman forever, but please don’t put our family through this horrible execution,” the Kuyoros had written earlier.

After the execution Regina Jackson, who was one of the witnesses, said: “I forgave my brother. I love my brother … God says we got to forgive in order for Him to forgive us.”

The attack took place Nov. 1, 1990, at Jackson’s mother’s home in the Delta region.

The mother was at church that day, and Regina Jackson was there with her two daughters and four nieces and nephews. Her two daughters and two nephews were stabbed to death, records showed. Another niece was so severely injured that she was a paraplegic until her recent death.

Jackson has said he doesn’t remember stabbing the children, but there was testimony at his September 1991 trial that he cut the phone line before going in the house, then demanded money and began the attack, according to the court record.

Regina Jackson testified at trial that she lapsed in and out of consciousness after being tied up and stabbed in the neck, but she could hear her brother dragging a safe down a hall. The noise awoke 5-year-old Dominique, one of her daughters.

“Regina testified that Jackson called Dominique to him, told her that he loved her, stabbed her, and tossed her body to the floor,” according to the court record. “Jackson returned to Regina, stabbing her in the neck and twisting the knife, at which point she pretended to be dead until she heard him leave.”

Henry Jackson subsequently surrendered to police. He was convicted of four counts of capital murder at trial and sentenced to death.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/mississippi-executes-killer-who-fatally-stabbed-4-his-nieces-nephews-flna815885

Michael Bascum Selsor Oklahoma Execution

Michael Bascum Selsor

Michael Bascum Selsor was executed by the State of Oklahoma for the murder of a store clerk during a robbery. According to court documents Michael Bascum Selsor and his accomplice would rob a series of stores and in the process Selsor would shoot and kill Clayton Chandler. Michael Bascum Selsor would be sentenced to death and would be executed by lethal injection on May 1 2012

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An Oklahoma man convicted of murdering a Tulsa convenience store manager almost 37 years ago was executed by lethal injection Tuesday.
Michael Bascum Selsor, 57, was pronounced dead at 6:06 p.m. Tuesday at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary. 
Selsor’s execution ends more than 3 decades of legal proceedings in which Selsor was twice convicted of 1st-degree murder and sentenced to die for the Sept. 15, 1975, shooting death of Clayton Chandler.
 “My son, my sister, I love you till I see you again next time,” Selsor said. “I’ll be waiting at the gates of heaven for you. I hope the rest of you make it there as well.”

He didn’t address Chandler’s relatives, some of whom were watching him.

He breathed heavily a couple of times, and then stopped. The clanging did, too. He was pronounced dead at 6:06 p.m.

The 55-year-old Chandler was shot 8 times during an armed robbery in which the thieves got away with a little more than $500. Michael Bascum Selsor, and Richard Dodson, were arrested a week after Chandler’s death in Santa Barbara, Calif., where their car with Oklahoma tags had been spotted.
Selsor was originally convicted and sentenced to death following a 1976 trial, in which Dodson was a co-defendant. Later that year, the U.S. Supreme Court invalidated Oklahoma’s mandatory death penalty statute. The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals modified Selsor’s sentence to life in prison without parole.
Michael Bascum Selsor, initiated a new round of appeals challenging his conviction and in April 1996, the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals threw out Selsor’s murder conviction, as well as two related convictions.
In 1998, Selsor was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to death following a retrial. The same jury recommended Selsor serve a life term as an accessory to Dodson’s shooting of Chandler’s co-worker, Ina Louise Morris, who survived multiple gunshot wounds. The jury also imposed a 20-year term for armed robbery.
On April 16, the Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board voted 4-1 against commuting Selsor’s death penalty to life in prison without parole.
The U.S. Supreme Court rejected his request for a stay of execution Friday. Defense attorneys had argued that executing Michael Bascum Selsor after he has been in prison for almost 2 generations lacked any deterrent value and would “amount to cruel and unusual punishment” in violation of his constitutional rights under the Eighth Amendment.
Dodson, now 71, was convicted of robbery and shooting with intent to kill and is serving a prison sentence of 50 to 199 years. Dodson is imprisoned in the Davis Correctional Facility in Holdenville and has a parole hearing scheduled for November 2013, according to Department of Corrections records.
Selsor becomes the 3rd condemned inmate to be put to death this year in Oklahoma and the 99th overall since the state resumed capital punishment in 1990. Only Texas (482) and Virginia (109) have executed more inmates since the death penalty was re-legalized in the USA on July 2, 1976.
Selsor becomes the 18th condemned inmate to be put to death this year in the USA and the 1295th overall since the nation resumed executions on January 17, 1977.

https://www.uticaod.com/story/news/2012/05/02/soil-tests-show-47-homes/8831904007/

Thomas Kemp Arizona Execution

Thomas Kemp - Arizona

Thomas Kemp was executed by the State of Arizona for the kidnapping and murder of a college student. According to court documents Thomas Kemp and his accomplice would kidnap college student Hector Juarez who would later be robbed and murdered. Thomas Kemp accomplice Jeffrey Logan would later go to the police. Jeffrey Logan would be sentenced to life in prison and Thomas Kemp would be sentenced to death. Thomas Kemp would be executed by lethal injection on April 25 2012

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Arizona’s most notorious death row inmates past and present have incredible stories. 

“I don’t show any mercy, and I am certainly not here to plead for mercy.” These are the words of Thomas Kemp at his clemency hearing. Kemp was a man with no regrets for taking life and no regrets for having his life taken

On July 11, 1992, college student Hector Juarez was awakened around 11:15 p.m. when his fiancée returned from work to their apartment in Tucson. Juarez was hungry and went to a fast food restaurant down the street. After Juarez had not returned for a while, his fiancée went looking for him, finding his car in the parking lot of a Jack in the Box. The car smelled of fast food and was unlocked, but Juarez was nowhere around.

Three days earlier, Kemp had met up with former prison inmate Jeffrey Logan, who recently escaped from a California “honor farm.”  On July 11, the two went to a pawn shop where Logan bought a hand gun. Later that night, they saw an opportunity to get some quick cash when they saw Juarez in the restaurant parking lot and abducted him. 

The pair forced Juarez to withdraw $200 from an ATM, and then drove him to the Silverbell Mine near Marana, where they stripped him of his clothes before shooting him twice in the head.  They tried using Juarez’s ATM card again, but when it was refused they drove to Flagstaff, sold their vehicle, and used the money to buy another gun.

While in Flagstaff, they met a couple traveling from California to Kansas and kidnapped them, driving them to Durango, Colo. While in a motel there, Kemp forced the male victim to disrobe and sexually assaulted him. They forced the couple to continue driving with them to Denver, where the couple escaped and Logan left Kemp. Logan turned himself in to Denver police and told them of Juarez’s murder.

Logan assisted Tucson police in finding the body, and later that same day Kemp was found and arrested at a homeless shelter in Tucson.

After being told that Logan was already in custody and was cooperating with police, Kemp told officers, “I guess my life is over now.”

Logan was tried first, convicted and sentenced to life in prison.

While waiting for his trial, Kemp told corrections officials that he was in protective custody because the person he killed was Hispanic, the Hispanics in the jail were after him because they thought the crime was racially motivated, and the whites would not protect him

Kemp was convicted on June 7, 1993 and at his sentencing, he told the judge that he should have killed Logan when he had the chance, but as far as killing Juarez he had no regrets. “The so-called victim was not an American citizen and, therefore, was beneath my contempt,” he then referred to Juarez using a racial slur. “If more of them ended up dead, the rest of them would soon learn to stay in Mexico where they belong.”

Kemp was sentenced to death on July 9, 1993.

Kemp refused to plead for mercy at his clemency hearing, telling the board, “I don’t show any mercy, and I am certainly not here to plead for mercy…I spit on the law and all those who serve it.”

Kemp was executed four years ago April 25, 2012. No one from his family or the victim’s family attended.  

https://www.abc15.com/news/crime/death-row-diaries-thomas-kemp-shows-no-regret-in-killing-of-tucson-man