Ronald Lott Oklahoma Execution

Ronald Lott - Oklahoma

Ronald Lott was executed by the State of Oklahoma for the sexual assault and murders of two elderly women. According to court documents Ronald Lott would sexually assault and murder the first woman in 1986 and the second woman in 1987. DNA would tie Ronald Lott to both murders. Ronald Lott would be convicted and sentenced to death. Ronald Lott would be executed by lethal injection on December 10, 2013

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Oklahoma on Tuesday executed a man convicted of raping and murdering two elderly women in the 1980s, while Missouri appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court to be allowed to proceed with an execution hours later. 

Ronald Clinton Lott, 53, was pronounced dead at 6:06 p.m. (7:06 EST) after a lethal injection at a state prison in Oklahoma, state Department of Corrections spokesman Jerry Massie said.

Lott was the 37th person executed in the United States this year, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

Lott was convicted of raping and killing Anna Laura Fowler, 83, in 1986 and Zelma Cutler, 90, in 1987 in their Oklahoma City homes after DNA evidence linked him to the crimes.

He made no final statement, Massie said.

“Ronald Lott was sentenced to death by a jury of his peers for the heinous and unconscionable acts he committed against Anna and Zelma in their homes,” Attorney General Scott Pruitt said in a statement.

According to Oklahoma criminal appeals court records, evidence presented at trial suggested Lott attacked the women and sat on their chests, breaking their ribs. Both had numerous bruises and were asphyxiated.

Another man, Robert Lee Miller Jr., had originally confessed to the rape and murder of the two women and served 11 years, seven on death row, before DNA evidence led authorities to Lott. Miller was released in 1998.

Lott was the fifth man executed in Oklahoma in 2013. The state is also scheduled to execute Johnny Dale Black, 48, on December 17 for his conviction in the 1998 stabbing death of Ringling, Oklahoma, horse trainer Bill Pogue.

In Missouri, state officials asked the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday night to lift a federal appeals court stay and allow them to proceed with the execution of Allen Nicklasson, which is scheduled for early Wednesday.

Nicklasson, 41, is arguing that his lawyers were ineffective. An Eighth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals panel on Monday stayed his execution and the full Eighth Circuit on Tuesday denied a Missouri request to rehear the decision.

Nicklasson was found guilty of murder for the August 1994 shooting of motorist Richard Drummond, who stopped on a highway to help Nicklasson and two others whose car had broken down.

The three had stolen guns and ammunition in a home burglary before their vehicle broke down. When Drummond stopped to offer them a ride, the men abducted him, took him to a wooded area and shot him in the head, according to court records.

One of the men, Dennis Skillicorn, was executed in 2009. The third person, Tim DeGraffenreid, who was 17 at the time, pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and received a reduced sentence.

Nicklasson and Skillicorn were also convicted of killing an Arizona couple while on the run after killing Drummond.

Nicklasson had been scheduled to die October 23, but Missouri Governor Jay Nixon halted the execution due to broad criticism over the state’s planned use of the drug propofol, widely used as an anesthetic in medical procedures.

The case is one of many caught up in a national debate over what drugs can or should be used for executions, as capital punishment opponents pressure pharmaceutical companies to cut off supplies of drugs for executions.

Missouri in November used pentobarbital, a short-acting barbiturate, mixed by a compounding pharmacy to execute serial killer Joseph Paul Franklin

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/oklahoma-executes-man-convicted-killing-two-women-missouri-execution-stayed-flna2d11724181

Jerry Martin Texas Death Row

jerry martin texas

Jerry Martin was executed by the State of Texas for the murder of a correctional officer during a prison escape. According to court documents Jerry Martin was serving a fifty year sentence for attempted murder when he and John Falk would overpower a correctional guard and seize the officers weapon. During the escape correctional officer Susan Canfield would be critically injured when the horse she was on was hit by the stolen pickup that the two inmates were in. Jerry Martin and John Falk would be arrested hours after the escape. Jerry Martin and John Falk were both convicted and sentenced to death. John Falk remains on Texas death row. Jerry Martin waived all of his appeals and was executed by lethal injection on December 13, 2013

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Texas executed by lethal injection on Tuesday a man convicted of slamming a pickup truck into a mounted correctional officer in a prison escape attempt in 2007, knocking her off the horse and killing her.

Jerry Martin, 43, was pronounced dead at 6:27 p.m. U.S. Central Time (0027 GMT on Wednesday) at a state prison in Huntsville, Texas, according to a spokesman for the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.

Before he was put to death, Martin told the victim’s family he was sorry and that he took full responsibility for her death, according to a statement released by the prison

“To my family, we’ve talked earlier and you know I’m at peace. God is the ultimate judge, he knows what happened,” he said before his execution, according to the prison statement.

Martin, who requested that there be no appeals of the execution, was serving a 50-year sentence for attempted murder and assault when he and a fellow inmate tried to escape from a prison detail doing farm work.

Martin took an officer’s weapon, ran to a parking lot and stole a Huntsville city truck. He was convicted of using the vehicle to kill Susan Canfield, 59, a correctional officer and a grandmother, the Texas Department of Criminal Justice said.

Jerry Martin became the 16th person executed by Texas in 2013, the most of any state this year, and the 36th person executed in the United States this year, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

Texas has executed 508 prisoners since the reinstatement of capital punishment by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1976, also the most of any U.S. state.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-execution-texas-idUSBRE9B304820131204

Joseph Franklin Missouri Execution

Joseph Franklin - Missouri

Joseph Franklin was executed by the State of Missouri for a murder that took place in 1977. According to court documents Joseph Franklin was a life long criminal who was responsible for a series of murders and attempted murders across the United States for two decades. Among the crimes that he was convicted of was six murders and a number of attempted murders. Joseph Franklin was responsible for the shooting that left Penthouse founder Larry Flynt paralyzed. The murder that Joseph Franklin was sentenced to death for in Missouri was that of Gerald Gordon who Franklin shot from a distance when he was leaving the Brith Sholom Kneseth Israel synagogue, two other individuals were injured in the attack. Joseph Franklin hoped that his violent actions would start a race war. Joseph Franklin would ultimately be sentenced to six life terms plus two death sentences. Joseph was executed by lethal injection on November 20 2013.

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Joseph Paul Franklin is unblinking and empty as he talks about his victims.

Do you know how many people you murdered? “I’d rather not mention it,” he says flatly.

By my count, it’s 22 people. “That’s approximately it.”

And those two young boys, just 13, 14 years old.

“Yeah, I regret the fact that I shot them now,” he replies.

Joseph Franklin has been away from the civilized world for more than 30 years, serving several life sentences behind bars.

We’re meeting at the Eastern Reception, Diagnostic and Correctional Center in Bonne Terre, Missouri, where he is on death row.

States scramble for lethal injection drugs

A glass partition separates us, and we’re speaking via a closed line telephone. The prison guard has put a wireless microphone on Joseph Franklin, who is shackled at the ankles, his wrists cuffed to the chain around his waist. Franklin’s hair is wild and alive, unlike his expressionless answers when he speaks about his murder victims.

This is one of the last interviews this serial killer will give.

“I felt like I was at war. The survival of the white race was at stake,” he says.Joseph Franklin compares himself to a U.S. soldier in Vietnam, trained to be a sniper in the war. The enemy, he explains, were Jews, blacks and especially interracial couples. “I consider it my mission, my three-year mission. Same length of time Jesus was on his mission, from the time he was 30 to 33.”

What was your mission? “To get a race war started.”

Joseph Franklin spent 1977 to 1980 trying to accomplish that goal, committing more than a dozen bank robberies in addition to the murders. He stalked his victims, usually finding a sniper’s nest yards away, looking down the scope of a high-powered rifle to kill his targets at will.

He explains his hate was bred from his origins and upbringing.

Franklin’s birth name was James Clayton Vaughn and he was born in Mobile, Alabama. He grew up in poverty and lived a childhood of abuse, he says.

“My momma didn’t care about us,” he explains, saying it affected him emotionally and stunted his mental development. He says he was locked up and not allowed to play with other children. He claims he was fed such a poor diet that it affected his development. “I’ve always been least 10 years or more behind other people in their maturity,” he says.

He found a family and comfort in the white supremacy groups of the American South in the 1960s. Hitler’s autobiographical manifesto, “Mein Kampf,” moved him from hate to action. “I had this real strange feeling in my mind,” he says. “I’ve never felt that way about any other book that I read. It was something weird about that book.”

At 26, he changed his name to Joseph Paul Franklin. Joseph Paul in honor of Paul Joseph Goebbels, the Nazi minister of propaganda, and Franklin after Benjamin Franklin.

He tattooed the grim reaper into his right forearm as a “symbol of my mission,” he explains. He shows it to me, the ink now faded green blue, the image blurry and difficult to see. “It used to be blood there, red dots falling from it,” he points out. Franklin explains he asked the tattoo artist to draw the words “Helter Skelter” on his other arm in red, with blood dripping down. Helter Skelter references ’60s serial killer Charles Manson and his desire to start a race war from California. The tattoo artist refused, Franklin said, worried about law enforcement reprisal.

Joseph Franklin says he was obsessed with killing by example. “I figured once I started doing it and showed them how, other white supremacists would do the same thing.”

Do you think you’re a hero to those hate groups?

“Well that’s what they tell me,” he says, finally laughing. “I’d rather people like me than not like me, like most people. I’d rather be loved than hated.”

Even if they are hate groups? “Yeah, and they’re not the only ones who love me, though. There a lot of Jews who love me, too.”

It’s a preposterous notion, but I can’t resist delving further.

Why do the Jews love you? “When you commit a crime against a certain group of people, a bonding takes place. It seems like you belong to them,” he says.

Joseph Franklin is talking about the crime that put him on Missouri’s death row, the murder of Gerald Gordon. On October 8, 1977, Franklin was outside the Brith Sholom Kneseth Israel synagogue in St. Louis. Some 200 guests were leaving a bar mitzvah. Franklin had hammered 10-inch nails into a telephone pole to use as a makeshift gun rest for his hunting rifle. As the guests were leaving the synagogue, Franklin fired, killing Gordon in front of his wife and three children.

There would be other victims across the country.

Joseph Franklin was convicted of killing Alphonse Manning and Toni Schwean in Madison, Wisconsin, merely because they were an interracial couple.

Franklin confessed to police that college student Rebecca Bergstrom enraged him because she said on spring break, she once dated a Jamaican man. He shot her dead.

In Cincinnati, Joseph Franklin had been lying in wait for an interracial couple but 13-year-old Dante Evans and his cousin 14-year-old Darrell Lane came walking down the road. Franklin shot them both from his sniper’s nest, striking them twice to make sure the boys were dead.

Joseph Deters, who prosecuted the Cincinnati case said of Franklin, “He’s just a creep. There’s no other way to describe him. And what he did to those two kids because of the color of their skin is incomprehensible.”

Franklin also wanted to strike high-profile targets, stalking civil rights leader Vernon Jordan Jr. In Fort Wayne, Indiana, in 1980, Franklin sat outside Jordan’s hotel and waited. As Jordan returned from an event, Franklin shot him. Jordan was seriously injured but was not killed.

But Franklin hoped one of his biggest trophy killings would be Larry Flynt, publisher and founder of Hustler magazine. Flynt’s crime according to Franklin?

“I saw that interracial couple he had, photographed there, having sex,” he says. Franklin is referring to the December 1975 issue of Hustler that featured several photos of a black man with a white woman. “It just made me sick. I think whites marry with whites, blacks with blacks, Indians with Indians. Orientals with orientals. I threw the magazine down and thought, I’m gonna kill that guy.”

On March 6, 1978, Franklin was almost successful. Flynt was in Lawrenceville, Georgia, facing charges of obscenity. As he returned to the courthouse, two shots struck Flynt. Flynt would barely survive, and he was paralyzed from the waist down.

In a strange turn, Larry Flynt has filed a last-minute legal motion with the American Civil Liberties Union to halt Franklin’s impending execution.

Do not confuse this with mercy, Flynt explained to me days before I would meet with Joseph Franklin. “The government has no business at all being in the business of killing people,” he said. Flynt is strongly anti-death penalty, pointing out the inmates on death row are “minorities and underprivileged people, not wealthy white kids.”

Flynt believes it’s “much more punishment to put somebody in prison for the rest of their lives than it is to snip their life out in a few seconds with a lethal injection.”

Flynt said he never thinks of Franklin or cares about him, it is merely on principle the publisher is fighting to spare his life.

When I bring up Flynt to Joseph Franklin, he breaks into a smile. “My old pal Larry!” he exclaims. “Tell him I appreciate that. Thanks.” He disagrees with Flynt, though, that the death penalty is less punishment than life in prison.

“It’s just not a system that operates according to the Bible. The scriptures tell us when someone repents, God forgives them. Everything is forgotten, once forgiven. But the state doesn’t think that way,” he says.

Franklin says he’s no longer dangerous nor a racist.

Do you feel any hate looking at me? I’m not white. “I have no feeling whatsoever, no hatred to you. Especially not a female. You know what I mean?”

But you shot plenty of women. “That’s true,” he nods, “you got a point. But I felt they were enemies of the white race.”

He’s different now, he says, after poring through reams of books in prison. He’s “cured his mental illness through education,” he claims.

Do you think something lies out there for you on the other side? “Yeah, but it’s not a burning hell because I’m serving the Lord, though. It’ll be the kingdom of heaven for me because I’ve repented.”

I think we’re just about out of time. “Well let’s not say that. Let’s just say we’re gonna part temporarily.”

Time is important to you now, isn’t it? “Yeah it has been for a long time now. Maybe we’ll meet again sometime.”

https://www.cnn.com/2013/11/18/justice/death-row-interview-joseph-paul-franklin/index.html

Jamie McCoskey Texas Execution

Jamie McCoskey

Jamie McCoskey was executed by the State of Texas for a sexual assault and murder. According t court documents Jamie McCoskey would break into a home where he would force the couple into a car then later murder the man and sexually assault the female. Jamie McCoskey would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Jamie McCoskey would be executed by lethal injection on November 13, 2013

Jamie McCoskey More News

A Texas man convicted of abducting a young Houston couple, raping the woman and fatally stabbing the man in 1991 was put to death Tuesday evening.

Jamie McCoskey, 49, already was on a form of probation when he was arrested for the slaying of 21-year-old Michael Dwyer, who had been stabbed nearly two dozen times, and the rape of Dwyer’s pregnant fiance. The couple had been abducted from their apartment.

Asked if he had any final statement, McCoskey replied: “The best time in my life is during this period. … I have been touched by an angel’s wings.”

He said that if he could, he would “change Dwyer’s parents’ suffering, because I know they are.”

During his brief comments, and as a tear ran down the side of his face just above a tattoo teardrop and below his right eye, McCoskey said he wanted “to say some things so bad.”

He said he appreciated people who had helped him, then turned his gaze toward Dwyer’s mother and stepfather, saying, “And if this takes the pain away, so be it.”

After telling the warden he was “ready to go,” McCoskey turned his head back toward the warden in the seconds before the lethal dose of pentobarbital began taking effect and said loudly: “Better not be no mix-up here. I don’t want no stay.”

McCoskey let out a loud laugh, then began taking deep breaths that became several snores.

He was pronounced dead at 6:44 p.m. CST, 19 minutes after the lethal drug began to be administered

Dwyer’s mother and stepfather declined to speak with reporters afterward.

McCoskey became the 15th convicted killer executed this year in Texas, which carries out the death penalty more than any other state.

The U.S. Supreme Court earlier this year refused to review McCoskey’s case, and his attorneys filed no last-day appeals in the courts.

Evidence showed the couple had left the door of their apartment open while they were bringing home groceries and were confronted by the knife-wielding McCoskey exactly 22 years ago Wednesday.

He ordered them to their car, handcuffed Dwyer, drove around Houston and stopped at an abandoned ramshackle house where he raped the woman. She fled to a nearby home to seek help when she realized sounds she was hearing were of Dwyer being stabbed repeatedly.

Their car was found at an apartment complex where McCoskey once lived. Based on a description of the attacker, residents there identified McCoskey, whose 6-foot-7-inch height and square facial features had earned him the nickname “Lurch,” after the hulking Frankenstein-like servant to the fictional “Addams Family” television comedy of the 1960s.

His mother testified at his trial that McCoskey had an abusive childhood that led to behavioral problems. After stints in juvenile facilities, his offenses escalated as he reached adulthood.

Before reaching death row, he had a kidnapping conviction in Austin, assaults while in prison, marijuana possession busts and a jail term where records show he used a chisel to crack the skull of a fellow Harris County inmate.

He also was remembered for walking into the Houston courtroom the day after his capital murder conviction in 1992, grabbing a heavy oak chair and heaving it about 10 feet. It hit one prosecutor in the arm and grazed another before crashing into the jury box rail.

“That’s for lying in court!” McCoskey shouted at the prosecutors.

Jurors weren’t present yet and didn’t see the incident. Days later, they rejected defense arguments McCoskey was insane and mentally ill and decided he should be put to death. Prosecutors presented testimony McCoskey had an anti-social personality disorder but did know right from wrong.

“My only wish for Jamie is godspeed,” Jim Peacock, his lead defense lawyer, said. “And I hope whatever there is for him after this point is kinder to him than his past has been.

At least seven other Texas prisoners are set to die in the coming months, including one next month.

https://www.beaumontenterprise.com/news/article/Texas-executes-inmate-with-violent-past-4980125.php

Darius Kimbrough Florida Execution

Darius Kimbrough florida

Darius Kimbrough was executed by the State of Florida for the sexual assault and murder of Denise Collins. According to court documents Darius Kimbrough would break into the home of Denise Collins who was sexually assaulted and murdered. Darius Kimbrough was not arrested until he was convicted on another sexual assault and his DNA was tied back to the Denise Collins murder. Darius Kimbrough would be convicted and sentenced to death. Darius Kimbrough would be executed by lethal injection on November 12, 2013

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A man who killed and sexually assaulted an aspiring artist in central Florida has been executed.

The U.S. Supreme Court denied the final appeal of 40-year-old Darius Kimbrough Tuesday evening for the 1991 murder.

The high court denied his appeal about an hour before his scheduled 6 p.m. execution by lethal injection at Florida State Prison.

Kimbrough was sentenced to die for the slaying of 28-year-old Denise Collins, who was attacked while she slept in her Orlando apartment.

Kimbrough’s execution will be the second during which a new drug mix is used for the lethal injection.

https://www.wesh.com/article/convicted-killer-darius-kimbrough-executed/4429307

Darius Kimbrough Other News

A 40-year-old man convicted of raping and murdering an aspiring artist at her Orlando apartment 22 years ago, is scheduled to be executed Tuesday at a Florida state prison in Starke, reports CBS affiliate WKMG.

Darius Kimbrough was convicted of the murder of 28-year-old Denise Collins after an eyewitness account placed him at the woman’s apartment complex at the time of the crime.

In October 1991, Collins was found nude, moaning, covered in blood and barely conscious in her apartment’s bathroom. The sliding glass door to the second-floor balcony was partially open, and there were ladder impressions in the ground underneath the balcony.

The woman was rushed to a hospital where she died the next day. Detectives found semen on her sheets and pubic hairs in her bed and in a towel.

A neighbor in Collins’ Orlando complex told detectives he had seen a man near Collins’ apartment near a ladder by the apartment’s balcony, and the neighbor later identified then-19-year-old Kimbrough as the man, in a picture lineup. A maintenance man at the complex also said Kimbrough had watched him putting away a ladder in the complex around the time of the murder. Kimbrough was charged with the first-degree murder, sexual assault and burglary almost a year later. He was found guilty at his 1994 trial, during which experts testified that blood and semen samples taken from Collins’ bed were compatible with Kimbrough’s DNA.

More than two decades after Collins’ death, Kimbrough is about to be executed.

“He lived 22 years too long and too well and he’s going to go out clean and easy, and he doesn’t deserve it,” said Diane Stewart, Collins’ mother, in a recent telephone interview. “She didn’t go out that way, and he doesn’t deserve what he’s getting. He should go out the way she did. That’s how we feel.”

Stewart, who lives in New Jersey, said she planned to attend the execution with Collins’ sister.

Kimbrough’s attorneys are appealing the active death warrant. In previous appeals, his defense attorneys have said the evidence was circumstantial and that the neighbor who placed Kimbrough by Collins’ apartment balcony was elderly and had memory lapses.

Darius Kimbrough says he had ineffective legal representation at his trial and that his attorney didn’t hire a mental health professional to evaluate him.

Kimbrough’s attorneys had blamed Collins’ former boyfriend for the crimes. He had beaten her previously, they said, and he had a key to her apartment. That evidence was excluded from his trial, and Kimbrough’s attorneys argued it should have been allowed to be introduced to jurors.

Gary Boodhoo, who was Collins’ former boyfriend, described the defense attorneys’ allegations as ludicrous.

“It was devastating. I was suffering a loss. Everyone was suffering a loss,” said Boodhoo, a video game designer in San Francisco. “I thought it was hateful and hurtful.”

Defense attorneys also said a juror didn’t reveal that his fiancee was employed at the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, whose crime lab analyst testified at the trial, and that the DNA testing used to convict Kimbrough was faulty.

“The defendant was denied his right to a fair and impartial jury by prejudicial pretrial publicity, by lack of a change of venue, by failure to sequester the jury and by events in the courtroom during trial,” Kimbrough’s post-conviction attorney Robert Strain said in a recent filing. Strain didn’t return a phone call from the Associated Press.

A month after Kimbrough was convicted of first-degree murder, but before he was sentenced, court officials learned that three jurors had read a newspaper article about the victim. Kimbrough’s attorneys asked for a mistrial for the penalty phase and a separate jury was picked to decide a sentence. Jurors recommended death by a vote of 11-1.

Collins was an aspiring artist at the time of her death. She went to high school in Titusville and attended colleges in Boston. She got a job at Kinko’s in Orlando after earning a fine arts degree, but she wanted to be a graphic artist. She loved cats and was “big-hearted,” said her mother.

“She had a very pleasing personality. She was outgoing and laid-back,” Stewart said. “She was very pretty, a very attractive girl.”

Collins spent her last evening listening to CDs at a friend’s apartment along with other friends, including Boodhoo. She returned to her apartment at night, and detectives believe she was attacked sometime between midnight and 4 a.m. the next day.

Medical examiner testified at trial that Collins had a fractured jaw. The cause of death was ruled hemorrhaging and brain injury from blunt injury to the face. There were tears and swelling around her vagina, according to the medical examiner’s report.

Boodhoo recalled Collins as a loving person who did work in painting, drawing and collages.

“There was such a beauty to her work, her personality, her relationship with others,” Boodhoo said. “I’m just glad he’s going to die … I couldn’t be happier about it. He’s the worst kind of human being there is.”

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/darius-kimbrough-convicted-of-raping-and-killing-orlando-woman-denise-collins-scheduled-to-be-executed/