Federal Death Row List Of Inmates

Federal Death Row

Federal Death Row is located at the United States Penitentiary in Terre Haute Indiana. It can be applied across all States and Territories yet it is rarely used. All of the executions that have been carried out at USP Terre Haute by lethal injection.

Update 2024 – President Biden would commute the majority of the inmates on Federal Death Row to life in prison. The only three that he did not were Dylann Roof, Robert Bowers and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. The rest were resentenced to life in prison without parole

List Of Federal Death Row Inmates

Shannon Agofsky Federal Death Row

Billy Jerome Allen Federal Death Row

Aquilia Barnette Federal Death Row

Brandon Basham Federal Death Row

Anthony Battle Federal Death Row

Robert Bolden Federal Death Row Robert Bolden dies of natural causes November 2021

Robert Bowers Federal Death Row

Meier Brown Federal Death Row

Carlos Caro Federal Death Row

Wesley Coonce Federal Death Row

Brandon Council Federal Death Row

Christopher Cramer Federal Death Row

Len Davis Federal Death Row

Joseph Duncan Federal Death Row * Joseph Duncan died on March 28, 2018 from cancer

Edward Fields Federal Death Row

Sherman Fields Federal Death Row

Marvin Gabrion Federal Death Row

Edgar Garcia Federal Death Row

Thomas Hager Federal Death Row

Charles Hall Federal Death Row

Richard Jackson Federal Death Row

Daryl Lawrence Federal Death Row

Kenneth Lighty Federal Death Row

Ronald Mikos Federal Death Row

Julius Robinson Federal Death Row

Alfonso Rodriguez Federal Death Row

Dylann Roof Federal Death Row

David Runyon Federal Death Row

Gary Sampson Federal Death Row

Ricardo Sanchez Federal Death Row

Thomas Sanders Federal Death Row

Kaboni Savage Federal Death Row

Rejon Taylor Federal Death Row

Daniel Troya Federal Death Row

Alejandro Umana Federal Death Row

David Detrich Arizona Death Row

david detrich arizona death row

David Detrich was sentenced to death by the State of Arizona for the murder of a woman. According to court documents David Detrich and Alan Charlton would pick up a woman who was hitchhiking. The woman and the men would pick up $75 worth of cocaine and drove to the woman’s home. David Detrich became upset due to the poor quality of the cocaine. Detrich would force the woman back into the car and while Alan Charlton drove the woman would be sexually assaulted in the back of the vehicle before being stabbed to death. David Detrich would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Arizona Death Row Inmate List

David Detrich 2021 Information

ASPC Florence, Central Unit
PO Box 8200
DAVID S. DETRICH 083703
Florence, AZ 85132
United States

David Detrich More News

On the evening of November 4, 1989, David Detrich and codefendant Charlton traveled to Tucson from Benson, Arizona. They picked up the victim, a 38-year-old female, who was hitchhiking somewhere in the Tucson area. Charlton then drove Detrich and the victim, a known drug addict, to a residential location where they bought $75 worth of cocaine. They went to the victim’s home and the victim went into a bedroom and returned with a hypodermic syringe. Detrich became extremely angry when he realized that the cocaine was “bad” and could not be intravenously injected. He threatened the victim and blamed her for the poor quality of cocaine. Detrich demanded that the victim have sex with him, but the victim ignored him and pretended to sleep. Detrich then placed a knife to her throat and continued to threaten her and demanded sex. While holding her at knife point, Detrich forced the victim into Charlton’s car and told Charlton to drive out of town. Detrich raped the victim in the front seat and stabbed her numerous times before slitting her throat.

David Detrich Other News

On November 4, 1989, defendant and a co-worker, Alan Charlton, drove Charlton’s car from Benson to Tucson. In Tucson, defendant and Charlton picked up the victim, E.S., a hitchhiker, hoping she might help them find some cocaine. With the victim’s assistance, the three purchased some cocaine and then drove to the victim’s home. There was evidence that all three were drinking excessively throughout the evening.

At the victim’s home, defendant became incensed when he discovered he had purchased “bad drugs.” According to Charlton and other witnesses at the scene (the victim’s daughters and a friend), defendant directed his anger at the victim, claiming she now “owed” him. One witness overheard defendant threaten to kill the victim. Another witness overheard defendant tell the victim that they “were going to have sex … [and that] they can either do it … right there or they will do it his way, and they don’t want to do it his way.” At trial, Charlton acknowledged that defendant was so enraged at the time that he “might not have known what he was doing.”

While several people ran for help, defendant forced the victim into Charlton’s car and with Charlton driving the three fled before the police arrived. An eyewitness confirmed that defendant held the victim at knifepoint until they left.

According to Charlton, who was the state’s key witness at trial, defendant held the knife to the victim’s throat while they were driving, and began “humping” her. Charlton testified that he looked over at one point and saw that the victim’s throat was slit from ear to ear. He also recalled that the victim made a gurgling response when defendant interrogated her about the name of the drug dealer. Although Charlton could not remember much of a struggle (he claims he was in and out of a drunken “blackout”), it was later determined that the victim had been stabbed *382 40 times. The half-naked corpse was found several days later in the desert on the out-skirts of Tucson.

Soon thereafter, the police arrested Charlton and defendant. Defendant’s first trial ended in a mistrial when a witness for the prosecution mentioned that defendant had invoked his rights at one point in the investigation. After a second trial, defendant was convicted of first degree murder and kidnapping. He was acquitted of sexual assault, but convicted of the lesser included offense of sexual abuse.

https://law.justia.com/cases/arizona/supreme-court/1994/cr-91-0071-ap-2.html

Donald Delahanty Arizona Death Row

Donald Delahanty arizona death row

Donald Delahanty was sentenced to death by the State of Arizona for the murder of a police officer. According to court documents Donald Delahanty was a passenger in a car that was pulled over by Officer David Uribe and when the Officer walked up to the car Delahanty would lean over the driver and shoot the Officer multiple times causing his death. Donald Delahanty was arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Arizona Death Row Inmate List

Donald Delahanty 2021 Information

ASPC Florence, Central Unit
PO Box 8200
DONALD D. DELAHANTY 242703
Florence, AZ 85132
United States

Donald Delahanty More News

On May 10, 2005, Officer David Uribe – a 22-year veteran of the Phoenix Police Force, conducted a license plate check on a vehicle while driving on I-17. The result of the check indicated the vehicle was stolen. He pulled the vehicle over near the intersection of Cactus Road and 31st Avenue. Delahanty was in the passenger seat; Christopher Wilson was the driver, and a third man was sitting in the back seat. According to testimony presented at trial, Wilson handed his gun to Delahanty in an effort to conceal it from Officer Uribe. Officer Uribe then came to the driver’s window and asked Wilson to turn the car off and also for his driver’s license. Delahanty instantly lunged over Wilson and shot Officer Uribe three times, striking him in the head, face, and neck. Wilson sped away and the three men abandoned the vehicle a few blocks down the road. Delahanty and Wilson were arrested two days later. Wilson plead guilty to second-degree murder and testified against Delahanty at trial.

Donald Delahanty Other News

On May 10, 2005, Delahanty shot Phoenix Police Officer David Uribe three times in the head and neck, killing him.   Officer Uribe, driving a marked patrol car, had stopped a car driven by Christopher Wilson.   Delahanty was in the front passenger seat of the car and John Armendariz sat in the back seat.   As Wilson sped from the scene, Delahanty said “I just shot a cop”;  “we got to burn the car.”   After Wilson stopped the car, Delahanty unsuccessfully attempted to destroy it by shooting its gas tank.

¶ 3 Delahanty and Wilson were charged with first degree murder.   Wilson pleaded guilty to second degree murder and testified against Delahanty.   While awaiting trial, Delahanty sent letters to a girlfriend seeking to have Wilson and Wilson’s mother killed.

¶ 4 After conviction, Delahanty and the State waived a jury trial on aggravation.   The trial judge found that Delahanty had been convicted of serious offenses committed on the same occasion as the homicide, A.R.S. § 13–751(F)(2), and that the victim was a peace officer killed while performing official duties, A.R.S. § 13–751(F)(10).

¶ 5 Shortly after the penalty phase began, Delahanty sought to waive presentation of mitigation.   The trial judge appointed Dr. Bruce Kushner, a psychologist, to determine whether Delahanty was competent to do so.   After receiving Dr. Kushner’s report, the court concluded that Delahanty had knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waived his right to present mitigation.   The jury subsequently determined that Delahanty should be sentenced to death.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/az-supreme-court/1562914.html

John Cruz Arizona Death Row

john cruz arizona death row

John Cruz was sentenced to death by the State of Arizona for the murder of a police officer. According to court documents John Cruz was involved in a hit and run accident and when tracked down by police Cruz would sneak off and was followed by Officer Patrick Hardesty. During the chase John Cruz would shoot and kill Officer Patrick Hardesty. John Cruz was arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Arizona Death Row Inmate List

John Cruz 2021 Information

ASPC Florence, Central Unit
PO Box 8200
JOHN M. CRUZ 194940
Florence, AZ 85132
United States

John Cruz More News

On May 26, 2003, Cruz murdered Officer Patrick Hardesty, an on-duty law enforcement officer with the Tucson Police Department. Officer Hardesty had responded to a traffic collision in which Cruz’s vehicle struck another vehicle. Cruz fled the scene and Officer Hardesty and other officers located him inside a nearby apartment. Cruz told the Officers that his name was Frank White and led the Officers to a vehicle parked outside the apartment complex to get identification. Instead of producing his identification, Cruz escaped, sneaking through a hole in a fence right next to the apartments. Officer Hardesty began chasing Cruz on foot while another officer ran back to his police car and drove in the direction that Officer Hardesty was chasing Cruz. Cruz shot and killed Officer Hardesty before the other officers arrived. Cruz fired four shots, including shots to the head and adbomen, from point-blank range.

John Cruz Other News

A Tucson jury has found John Montenegro Cruz guilty of first-degree murder in the shooting death of Tucson police officer Patrick Hardesty.  Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty.

Cruz showed very little emotion when the verdict was read Friday afternoon. It took jurors less than three hours to reach a guilty verdict. They deliberated for one hour Thursday and just over an hour Friday.

With 92 potential witnesses, and three weeks in the courtroom, jurors were convinced Cruz shot and killed Officer Hardesty.  Nobody actually saw the shooting, but prosecutors linked him to the murder weapon.

“It didn’t surprise me,” said Hardesty’s brother Ed.  “I expected the verdict. I sat through all the testimony. So there’s no doubt in my mind John Cruz is guilty.”

Other Tucson officers say they’re relieved, including the detective who was a key prosecution witness and the first person on the scene the day Hardesty died.

“Even with what they described as a mountain of evidence, there’s still in the back of your mind some concern the jury understands what happened that day, and they did,” said Det. Benjamin Waters.

Police Chief Richard Miranda praised prosecutors.  He also said the trial took its emotional toll on officers.  “It’s been almost two years since Patrick was killed and with time, your feelings get a little better in terms of him dying.  But the last few weeks with the trial, we had to relieve those emotions. We’ve all had flashbacks to that day. We all had to relive the burial.”

The trial now moves into the punishment phase.  Jurors will have to consider several factors in determining whether Cruz should get a death sentence.  The jury has already decided on one aggravating factor:  Officer Hardesty was gunned down in the line of duty.  The defense will present mitigating factors against a death sentence; it plans to call as many as 15 witnesses when the sentencing phase begins next Tuesday.  Those witnesses could include family, friends, and psychiatric experts. The defense will have to prove by a preponderance of the evidence — meaning more evidence than the prosecution — that Cruz does not deserve to die.

https://www.kold.com/story/2999817/cruz-found-guilty-of-killing-tpd-officer/

Leroy Cropper Arizona Death Row

leroy cropper arizona death row

Leroy Cropper was sentenced to death by the State of Arizona for a prison murder. According to court documents Leroy Cropper was upset with a correctional guard after his cell was searched and he was placed on lock down status due to contraband found in his cell. Leroy Cropper working with two other inmates, Eugene Long and Joshua Brice, made a plan to kill the Officer. Leroy Cropper was able to get his hands on a metal shank and get out of his cell with help from the other inmates. Cropper would sneak up behind Officer Lumley and stabbed him twice in the neck. Leroy Cropper would be convicted and sentenced to death.

Arizona Death Row Inmate List

Leroy Cropper 2021 Information

ASPC Eyman, Browning Unit
PO Box 3400
LEROY D. CROPPER 091432
Florence, AZ 85132
United States

Leroy Cropper More News

On March 7, 1997, Cropper murdered Arizona Department of Corrections Officer Brent W. Lumley, stabbing him in the throat. The murder took place at the Arizona Department of Corrections Perryville/San Juan Unit, where Cropper was an inmate. Cropper committed the murder in response to being “locked down” after Officer Lumley found a knife and other contraband in his cell.

Leroy Cropper Other News

On March 7, 1997, ADOC corrections officers at the Perryville State Prison in Goodyear, Arizona, discovered that some mops were missing from the Building 26 supply room.   Officers Brent Lumley and Deborah Landsperger began searching for the missing mops in the nearby cells.   They found no mops in the first cell searched, number 257, occupied by inmates Eugene Long and Bruce Howell.   The officers moved on to the adjacent cell, number 258, which held inmates Cropper and Lloyd Elkins.   While searching cell 258, Officers Lumley and Landsperger uncovered various contraband items, including a knife, tattooing equipment and a possible “hit” list.   While the officers conducted the search, Cropper repeatedly approached and entered the cell, yelling at the officers and complaining of the search.   The search obviously distressed Cropper, who believed the officers disrespected him and his property, and he became enraged because the searchers damaged a photograph of his mother.   After Officers Lumley and Landsperger finished their search, they placed Cropper and Elkins on “lockdown” status in their cell, whereby their cell door was locked from the master control panel in the control room and the two inmates were unable to leave.

¶ 3 Through his cell door and a common vent between cells 257 and 258, Cropper spoke to several fellow inmates about his plan to kill Officer Lumley.   Inmates Eugene Long and Joshua Brice agreed to help and retrieved an eight-inch steel carving knife buried in one of the Building 26 yards.   Using two fly-swatters attached to one another, Long passed Cropper the knife through the vent between the two cells.   The inmates in cell 257 then passed a right-handed glove through the vent to Cropper.   Cropper removed a lace from one of his shoes and wrapped it around the knife handle to provide a better grip.

¶ 4 Cropper needed to find a way out of his cell.   An inmate is able to leave a locked cell if a fellow inmate “spins the lock” to his cell door.   This lock picking procedure, performed manually on the cell door lock from outside the cell, bypasses the control room’s electronic lock command.   Howell and another inmate, Arthur Zamie, successfully opened the door, and then looked for Officers Lumley and Landsperger.   Howell and Long returned to Cropper’s cell and told him that Lumley was in the control room, with the door unlocked.

¶ 5 Cropper left his cell, walked down the hall and entered the control room.   Cropper snuck up behind Officer Lumley and thrust the knife into his neck, partially pulled it out, then pushed it in a second time from another direction.   By the time Cropper finished, Lumley suffered a total of six stab wounds.   Cropper left the control room, leaving the knife protruding from his victim’s neck.

¶ 6 Cropper ran back to his cell from the control room and found the cell door locked.   He tried to enter another locked cell and eventually reached cell 257, where he found the door unlocked.   As he entered, he told Howell, who was inside cell 257, “I got him.”

¶ 7 Cropper’s clothes were covered with blood.   He removed his sweatshirt and undershirt and threw them into Howell’s trash can.   He tore off a name tag sewn on the collar of his shirt and flushed it down Howell’s toilet.

¶ 8 Cropper returned to his cell after an unidentified inmate spun the cell door lock.   Cropper’s cellmate Elkins helped him wipe away the blood on his body.   Cropper also soaked his pants and shoes in a mixture of water and laundry detergent to clean off the blood.

¶ 9 Meanwhile, Howell gathered the bloody clothes from his trash can and placed them inside a garbage bag, which he threw onto the Building 26 roof.   Howell then wiped blood from the door knob to Cropper’s cell with one of his socks.   DNA tests showed that the blood recovered from Cropper’s shoes, underwear and the glove was consistent with Lumley’s blood.

¶ 10 On April 14, 1997, a grand jury indicted Cropper for first degree murder and other counts related to Officer Lumley’s death.   On May 4, 1999, Cropper pled guilty to all counts.   The State filed its list of aggravating factors on May 13, 1999, indicating it would seek to prove the murder was committed (1) in an especially cruel, heinous or depraved manner, A.R.S. section 13-703.F.6, and (2) while the defendant was an ADOC inmate, A.R.S. section 13-703.F.7.

¶ 11 On December 12, 1999, while in the custody of the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office awaiting the Lumley murder sentencing proceeding, Cropper stabbed a fellow inmate, Antoin Jones, for which he faced an aggravated assault charge.   During a telephone conference on December 15, 1999, the State asked the trial court to continue the upcoming capital aggravation/mitigation hearing pending the outcome of the aggravated assault case.   The prosecutor advised the court and Cropper’s attorney that the State would seek to prove a prior serious conviction aggravating circumstance under A.R.S. section 13-703.F.2 if Cropper was convicted of aggravated assault.   On April 11, 2000, at the opening of the initial capital aggravation/mitigation hearing, the prosecutor again told the court, Cropper and his attorney that the State would use an aggravated assault conviction as an aggravating circumstance.   On April 18, 2000, the court granted the State’s motion to continue the hearing pending the outcome of Cropper’s aggravated assault case.   Cropper pled guilty to one count of aggravated assault for the Jones stabbing on June 22, 2000.

¶ 12 Following the close of the aggravation/mitigation hearing on October 13, 2000, the trial court found that the State had established three aggravating circumstances.   In its special verdict dated November 3, 2000, the court found (1) Cropper had been convicted of a prior serious offense, A.R.S. section 13-703.F.2;  (2) Cropper committed the murder in an especially cruel manner, A.R.S. section 13-703.F.6;  and (3) Cropper committed the crime while in the custody of the ADOC, A.R.S. section 13-703.F.7.3 The court also found two mitigating circumstances:  (1) Cropper had a strong relationship with certain members of his family and (2) he felt and expressed remorse for Officer Lumley’s death.   After considering the aggravating and mitigating circumstances, the court concluded that the mitigating circumstances were not “sufficiently substantial to call for leniency.”  A.R.S. § 13-703.E. The court sentenced Cropper to death.   This appeal followed.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/az-supreme-court/1261009.html