John Evans Alabama Execution

John Evans - Alabama

John Evans was executed by the State of Alabama for a murder committed during a robbery. According to court documents John Evans and Wayne Ritter went on a crime spree that lasted for months that included numerous armed robberies and kidnappings. John Evans and Wayne Ritter crime spree ended with the murder of  Edward Nassar, a pawn store owner. John Evans attempted to plead guilty to all charges however Alabama prosecutors wanted the death penalty. In the end John Evans would be sentenced to death. However his execution by way of the electric chair did not go well as it took three additional jolts of electricity before he died on April 22, 1983

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Ten hours before being led into a small room to witness the execution of John Louis Evans III, I learned my wife was pregnant with our first child, and in that brief span of time my notions of life and death became something abruptly personal – beautifully and horribly.


There is still a nagging regret that my joy over the impending birth was blurred by the chilling sight of Evans’ chest rhythmically rising and falling after what was supposed to be an instantaneously lethal dose of electricity.


And now a week after the fact, questions linger about whether Evans still felt anything after that first bolt of electricity ripped into his shaved skull.


Three reporters and the two witnesses Evans asked to attend his execution were searched at Holman Prison on April 22 and then ushered through a raging thunderstorm to a back door.


After a short walk along a hall lined by prison guards, we were in the observation room. Beyond a window was Evans, strapped around his legs, chest, arms and abdomen to the bright yellow electric chair. The leather straps pulled his shoulders back into an awkward and uncomfortable final position.


Eaglelike. That’s how he looked, with shaved head and sharp, handsome nose and chin.


But Evans’ face was pure calm. His pale blue eyes stared straight ahead, blinking occasionally. He had said he was prepared to die. If that wasn’t true, his face didn’t betray him.


Inside the red brick death chamber with Evans, attired in a white button-up prison smock and white socks, were Holman Warden J. D. White and two uniformed guards.


White, standing directly in front of Evans, read the death warrant. That was supposed to take three minutes, but it seemed much shorter — perhaps because I was intent on committing the scene to memory. No paper or pen was allowed the media witnesses.


Evans, 33, a drifter from Beaumont, Texas, convicted of killing a Mobile Ala. pawnbroker, had asked that his final statement remain private. But when the warrant was read and it was Evans’ turn to speak, Prison Chaplain Martin Weber, one of nine men in the small observation room, began to quote the condemned man’s last words.


“He’s saying, ‘I have no malice for anyone, no hatred for anyone,’” Weber, apparently knowing what Evans intended to say, whispered to the witnesses. Prison Commissioner Fred Smith turned and shook finger as if scolding a child, and Weber fell silent.


One of Evan’s final wishes had been violated.


Evans’ words weren’t audible to the spectators, but he delivered them in unrushed sentences and even smiled once before the guards attached the electrode-filled skullcap to his head.


Evans’ head was made snug to the chair with a chin strap and black belt across the forehead. His causal expression disappeared behind a black veil.


Smith opened a telephone line to Gov. George Wallace in Montgomery.


I folded my arms across my chest and told myself I was ready. A man I love and respect had witnessed an electrocution as a young reporter. He had given me a novelist’s description of an electric chair execution, along with the warning, “It’ll be loud and it will stink.”


At the instant White pulled the switch and sent 1,900 volts burning into Evans, who clenched his fists and arched his body rigidly into the restraining straps, the folly of being prepared was gone.


A moment later, as spark and flame crackled around Evans’ head and shaved, razor-nicked left leg, white smoke seeped from beneath the veil and curled from his head and leg.


Midway through the surge of electricity, his body quivered and then fell back into the chair as the current ended.


We thought that was it – bad enough, but expected and bearable.


Two doctors filed out the witness room to examine the body and pronounce Evans dead.


The prison doctor, dressed in a blue surgical costume and tan loafers with tassels, placed a stethoscope to the smock, turned and nodded — the natural signal for “Yes, he’s dead.”


But the nod meant he had found a heartbeat. The other doctor confirmed the gruesome discovery.


They and the warden walked from the death chamber, and a guard reattached the power lines to the chair and the electrode that fell away when a leg strap burned through.


Evans’ chest rose against the straps the first time. It rose evenly once, twice, maybe again.


A stream of saliva ran down the front of the white prison smock.


“God, he’s trying to signal them,” I thought.


I had been told a body might continue to jerk after taking a massive electric charge. I strained to figure out if this was convulsive movement in Evans’ strap-crossed chest, and concluded absolutely not. This was too measured. Just slow deep breathing.


Turning to another witness, I said, “He survived.” He nodded.


Behind us, Russell Canan, the lawyer who 90 minutes earlier lost a battle to win Evans a reprieve, stared resolutely ahead.


Spark and flame again accompanied the onset of the second charge. But this time, for a grim second, the veil slipped a fraction of an inch on the left side, giving the impression it was burning though and would fall away – exposing the face I’d noted was handsome minutes earlier.


Almost in unison a kind of shuddering grunt came from the witnesses, but the mask stayed in place.


When the second charge subsided the doctors re-examined Evans and again it was clear they found a pulsating heart. Smith knocked on the viewing room window for a clue to Evans’ state. Deputy Warden Ron Jones turned and shook his head.


From the back of the room, Canan suddenly, urgently blurted: “Commissioner, I ask for clemency. This cruel and unusual punishment.”


Smith, his back to Canan, did not respond or even indicate he had heard the plea, which Canan repeated, begging that the request be relayed to Wallace.


The commissioner then conveyed the appeal for clemency, but before a reply came from the governor’s office in Montgomery, the third charge was administered.


Again, Evans’ head and leg smoldered. His fists, which clenched with the first jolt, remained locked on the chair’s arms.


The doctors went back for the third time and Canan begged for clemency “in case they have to do it again.”


Smith, eyes welling, communicated the message. His voice broke.


I thought Canan had snapped. Surely he didn’t want Evans unstrapped at this point. I was convinced things were out of hand and was not sure the chair, for whatever reason, was capable of killing Evans. But surely the only thing worse than proceeding was stopping.


I seriously thought they would have to bring in a gun and shoot Evans in the chair.


Smith signaled White out of the death chamber as the doctors again listened for a heartbeat. The warden cracked the door to the witness room and heard Smith order: “Hold everything. They’re asking for clemency.”


Moments later, with things spiraling faster out of control, word came back from Wallace.


“The governor will not interfere. Proceed,” Smith said.


Almost simultaneously a witness to my right said, “He’s dead.”


Cold as it sounds, it was welcome news. Evans’ ordeal was over. And for the time being, so was the ordeal, however great or small, of those picked to watch him die.

https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Execution_of_John_Louis_Evans_May_4,_1983:_First_Person_Account

Willie Smith Alabama Execution

willie smith execution

Willie Smith was executed by the State of Alabama for the kidnapping and murder of a woman. According to court documents Willie Smith would kidnap the victim Sharma Johnson who was brought to an ATM and forced to make a withdrawl. Willie Smith would murder Sharma Johnson by shooting her in a cemetery. Willie Smith would be executed by lethal injection on October 21 2012

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Alabama carried out its first execution since March 2020 Thursday night as 52-year-old Willie B. Smith III was executed by lethal injection. Attorney General Steve Marshall said Smith’s time of death was 9:47 p.m.

Smith was convicted of kidnapping and murder in the 1991 killing of 22-year-old Sharma Johnson in Birmingham. According to court documents, Smith took Johnson from an ATM location at gunpoint, robbed her of $80 and shot her execution-style in a cemetery.

Leaders from across Alabama issued statements following the execution Thursday night.

Gov. Kay Ivey:

“Sharma Ruth Johnson was abducted at gunpoint, threatened while in the trunk of the car, terrorized, assaulted, and ultimately, Willie B. Smith, III brutally killed her. In that final moment of this young lady’s short life, Mr. Smith, after learning Ms. Johnson was related to a law enforcement officer, made the choice to put a shotgun to her head, stealing this woman’s future.

“Even after these heinous crimes were committed, Mr. Smith made the choice to burn the vehicle to hide his fingerprints. He knew full well he was doing wrong. This was an absolutely horrendous act against Ms. Johnson. It is also an attack on our men and women in blue.

“In dealing with this unimaginable and tragic loss, her loved ones have endured years of Mr. Smith attempting to avoid due punishment and then a delayed execution earlier this year. Mr. Smith had more time on death row than Ms. Johnson had in this life.

“The evidence in this case was overwhelming, and justice has been rightfully served. The carrying out of Mr. Smith’s sentence sends the message that the state of Alabama will not tolerate these murderous acts. I pray that the loved ones of Ms. Johnson can be closer to finding peace.”

Attorney General Steve Marshall:

“Justice has been served. Tonight, Willie Smith was put to death for the heinous crime he committed nearly three decades ago: the abduction and execution-style murder of an innocent young woman, Sharma Johnson.

“When a capital murderer is due to receive his just punishment, one always hears accusations of “cruel and unusual punishment,” with that term rarely used in a way that accords with its constitutional meaning — and absolutely never used in reference to the victim’s loved ones.

“The family of Sharma Johnson has had to wait 29 years, 11 months, and 25 days to see the sentence of Sharma’s murderer be carried out. Finally, the cruel and unusual punishment that has been inflicted upon them — a decades-long denial of justice — has come to an end.

“I ask the people of Alabama to join me in praying for Sharma’s family and friends, that they might now be able to find peace and closure.”

https://www.wvtm13.com/article/alabama-leaders-statements-on-execution-of-willie-b-smith-iii/38031292#

Andrew Lackey Alabama Execution

Andrew Lackey - Alabama

Andrew Lackey was executed by the State of Alabama for a murder committed during a robbery. According to court documents Andrew Lackey was attempting to rob 80-year-old Charles Newman, a World War II veteran inside of his home when the elderly man was shot and stabbed seventy years. Andrew Lackey would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Andrew Lackey would be executed by lethal injection on July 25, 2013

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Andrew Reid Lackey, a convicted killer who prisoners rights groups said was mentally ill, was executed Thursday evening in Atmore, Ala.

Lackey, 29, was convicted in 2008 of the slaying of 80-year-old Charles Newman, a World War II veteran Lackey was trying to rob. Newman was shot, stabbed 70 times and beaten in his Limestone County home on Halloween night 2005.

Lackey made the request last year to halt his appeals process and set a date for his execution, which was the first in Alabama since October 2011.

“He took the stand and explained to the judge why he wanted to be executed,” Limestone District Attorney Brian Jones said, of a hearing in 2012. “He said he was remorseful for what he’d done and wanted to go ahead and pay for his crime.”

The Equal Justice Initiative has said Lackey was mentally ill and recently attempted suicide, but there were no last-minute attempts to appeal the sentence of execution.

Four members of his family spent Lackey’s final day with him, and stayed to witness the execution. He asked for a last meal of turkey bologna, French fries and grilled cheese.

A curtain was drawn back on the witness room at 6 p.m. to reveal Lackey already strapped to a gurney. Lackey’s mother, father, brother and aunt were there, as well as two women and a man representing the victim’s family.

The warden at Holman Correctional Facililty asked if Lackey had anything to say.

“No sir, I don’t,” Lackey said.

Chaplain Chris Summers prayed with Lackey as corrections officers administered the lethal injection, and the curtain was closed at 6:15 p.m.

He was declared dead at 6:25 p.m.

https://www.upi.com/blog/2013/07/26/Alabama-executes-convicted-perhaps-mentally-ill-murderer/9141374855304/

Richard Kinder Teen Killer Kidnapping Murder

richard kinder photos

Richard Kinder was seventeen years old when he and David Duren would kidnap and murder a teen girl in 1983. According to court documents Richard Kinder and David Duren, 21, would kidnap sixteen year old  Kathleen Bedsole, and her date, Charles Leonard. The pair would be driven to a remote location where they would be bound and shot. Kathleen Bedsole would die from her injuries. David Duren would be sentenced to death and executed in 2000. Richard Kinder due to his age was sentenced to life without parole and this teen killer remains behind bars.

Richard Kinder 2023 Information

richard kinder 2021 photos
Race:W
Sex:M
Hair Color:BLOND / STRAWBERRY
Eye Color:BLUE
Height:5′ 11″
Weight:181
Birth Year:1965
CustodyMEDIUM

Inmate: KINDER, RICHARD DAVID

AIS: 00139063  

Institution: ST.CLAIR CORRECTIONAL FAC.

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On the night of Oct. 20, 1983, Kathy Bedsole had a date with her boyfriend, Chuck Leonard. It was nearly Halloween, and the pair, both 16, were planning to go to a haunted house in Trussville, a town northeast of their homes in Birmingham, Alabama. Leonard picked up Bedsole at 9 p.m. Before she left, her father, Anthony Bedsole, gave her $40. She was going to a football game with friends the next day, and he wanted to make sure she had cash to pay for her ticket and food. 

On the east side of Birmingham, David Duren and Richard Kinder had devised a plan for the night: They were going to rob something or someone. In need of cash to buy marijuana, Duren, who was four years older than 17-year-old Kinder, suggested that they rob a Mrs. Winner’s fast food restaurant. Kinder was in.

Duren had a different idea, though, as they came upon an Oldsmobile sitting on the side of the road. Duren told Kinder that they would steal the car and any occupants would go into the trunk. Duren, who was armed with a gun, and Kinder, who was holding a knife, approached the window of the car; Leonard and Bedsole were inside. Unable to find the haunted house, and with Bedsole’s 11 p.m. curfew approaching, the couple had turned back for Birmingham. 

Duren ordered them to get into the trunk. He and Kinder then drove the Oldsmobile to the Mrs. Winner’s drive-through. When the cashier saw Duren flash his gun at the window, she screamed that the restaurant was being robbed. Spooked, Duren and Kinder sped away. “We had to get rid of them because they seen us and identified us,” Kinder later recalled of Duren’s next words to him, referring to Bedsole and Leonard. Kinder protested; the pair wouldn’t be able to identify them, he said, and he and Duren should just leave them in the trunk. Kinder later recalled that Duren told him he wouldn’t shoot Bedsole because she hadn’t seen him. Following Duren’s instructions, Kinder then proceeded to tie the pair up with a rope and remove the $40 from Bedsole’s purse. He got back into the car and started the ignition. Five shots rang out. “You didn’t shoot them, did you?” Kinder remembered asking.

Kinder and Duren were arrested that night and charged with capital murder. Bedsole had died, while Leonard survived and made his way to a nearby porch. A woman, seeing Leonard, alerted police. 

Jefferson County Juvenile Court Judge Sandra Storm transferred Kinder to adult criminal court, where then-Jefferson County District Attorney John DeCarlo sought the death penalty for both men. He was running for election at the time of the 1984 trial, on a tough-on-crime platform. At the end of an emotional trial, the jury recommended that Kinder be sentenced to die. 

Alabama law at that time allowed a judge to overrule the jury’s recommendation, a practice abolished in 2017. Many judges used that authority to overrule life sentences and send people to death row. But Judge James Hard, citing testimony from Leonard, Duren, and Kinder, determined that Kinder had played a minor role in the killing. Lead investigator Detective Eddie White was of the same opinion; he testified that Kinder was telling the truth about his role in the crime. Hard overruled the jury’s recommendation, and sentenced him to life without the possibility of parole—the only alternative punishment available under state law. 

Duren, on the other hand, received the death penalty and was executed in 2000. In an affidavit, Duren’s attorney said that for years after the crime, until his death, Duren maintained that none of the plans for that night were made by Kinder. He said he never told Kinder he was going to shoot Bedsole and Leonard.

Like 2,800 other people in the United States, sentenced as children to life without parole, Kinder was facing death in prison. Then, in a series of landmark decisions, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that children must be sentenced differently. 

In its 2012 decision in Miller v. Alabama, the court held that juvenile life without parole sentences were unconstitutional, except for rare circumstances. To support her opinion, Justice Elena Kagan cited Graham v. Florida—another juvenile life without parole case—writing that each state “must provide ‘some meaningful opportunity to obtain release based on demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation.’” Four years later, the court ruled in Montgomery v. Louisiana that its decision in Miller applied retroactively, to cases before 2012. Kinder would have a chance at freedom. 

At a July 2017 resentencing hearing—33 years since Kinder’s sentencing—Jefferson County Circuit Court Judge Teresa Pulliam heard from Kinder and other witnesses. He had gotten clean, they said, earned his college degree, and moved into the prison’s faith-based honors dorm. He had married a volunteer he met at the Jefferson County Jail while he awaited trial. In his years at St. Clair Correctional Facility, he had one minor disciplinary infraction. “I hope the victims of my crime will find it in their hearts to forgive me,” he said, reading a letter he had written. “I know that must be a very difficult thing to do.” 

Bedsole’s father Anthony and her sister, Susan Harris, testified that they wanted Kinder to stay in prison for the rest of his life. In an interview with The Appeal, Anthony said the investigating officers told him shortly after the crime occurred that Kinder had pushed Duren into shooting his daughter and Leonard, a narrative later refuted in court testimony and affidavits. “Deep down I thought that was wrong that the Supreme Court said to retry him,” he said of Kinder’s resentencing. “We thought it was over and we were trying to live our lives.”

But Pulliam determined that there was “uncontradicted evidence” that Kinder had worked to better himself, even while believing that he would spend the rest of his life at St. Clair. “A ‘potential for rehabilitation’ has been clearly proven here,” she wrote in her July 2017 order. 

Now eligible for parole, Kinder, then 52, appeared before the board a year later. Board members heard the story of Kinder’s transformation, as Pulliam had. If he were granted release, Kinder planned to go live with his wife in her home outside Huntsville. He hoped to get a job with a moving company. 

Once again, Anthony Bedsole said he wanted Richard Kinder to stay in prison. So did Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall. In a letter to the board, Marshall wrote, “An early release would defeat the retribution purposes of the State’s penal system and would undermine the overall goal of incarceration.” 

The parole board denied Kinder’s application on the spot. Alabama does not require the board to issue a written decision explaining itself. Kinder’s attorney, Richard Jaffe, who also represented him at his capital murder trial in 1984, was distraught. “If there’s anyone that deserves parole, it’s this kid,” he told The Appeal. “It’s an unbelievable story of redemption

https://theappeal.org/alabama-life-without-parole-denied-freedom-supreme-court/

Richard Kinder FAQ

Richard Kinder 2021

Richard Kinder is currently incarcerated at the St. Clair Correctional Facility

Richard Kinder Release Date

Richard Kinder is serving a life without parole sentence

David Duren Execution

David Duren was executed in 2000

Michael Lewis Alabama Death Row

michael lewis

Michael Lewis was sentenced to death and remains on Alabama Death Row for the murder of Timothy John Kaye. According to court documents Michael Free was involved in an argument with the victim that turned violent. Michael Lewis would help Michael Free take the victim to a remote location where he was fatally shot and killed. Michael Lewis would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Michael Free was originally sentenced to death however it was later commuted to life without parole.

Michael Lewis 2021 Information

Inmate: LEWIS, MICHAEL JEROME
AIS: 0000Z698
  
Institution: HOLMAN PRISON

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attorney for a man convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death 11 years ago believes prison inmates could have information that will help him land a new trial.

Ab Powell, attorney for Michael Jerome Lewis, asked a local judge on Monday to allow the testimony of three inmates currently housed at various prisons around the state.

Lewis is seeking a new trial for several reasons, including ineffective counsel during the trial. An evidentiary hearing to determine if a new trial is warranted is set for Aug. 19 in front of Judge PB McLaughlin and Lewis is seeking those inmates’ testimony during that hearing.

Lewis was convicted in 2003 for the 1997 murder of Timothy John Kaye. Another man, James Anthony Free, was also convicted and sentenced to death. According to court records, Lewis, Free, Kaye and another person went to Lewis’s mobile home in Houston County. Free and Kaye became involved in an altercation, which resulted in Free beating Kaye in the head with his fist and a beer bottle.

At some point, Lewis also became involved in the altercation. Free and Lewis then started arguing over who would shoot Kaye. The badly-beaten Kaye was subsequently shot twice in the head. Kaye was placed in the back of his pick-up truck and taken across the state line into Holmes County, Florida. Lewis and Free then threw Kaye’s body from a bridge on Highway 2 into the Choctawhatchee River. Lewis and Free later returned to Houston County, in Kaye’s truck, drove the truck to a field alongside Sonny Mixon Road, and set it on fire.

Powell argued Monday that Free told several inmates he acted alone in the murder.

State prosecutor Jon Hayden argued the motion to allow the inmates to testify during the Aug. 19 evidentiary hearing should not be granted because the testimony amounts to hearsay.

McLaughlin is expected to rule today.

https://dothaneagle.com/news/crime_court/man-sentenced-to-death-for-1997-killing-seeks-new-trial/article_276e6286-1c11-11e4-a193-0017a43b2370.html