Johnny Witt Florida Execution

Johnny Witt - Florida

Johnny Witt was executed by the State of Florida for the sexual assault and murder of an eleven year old boy. According to court documents Johnny Witt and Gary Tillman would kidnap eleven year old Jonathan Kushner. The boy would be sexually assaulted and murdered. Johnny Witt would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Johnny Witt would be executed by way of the electric chair on March 6, 1985. Gary Tillman was sentenced to life in prison.

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Johnny Paul Witt, once told by his father that he would ″never amount to anything,″ was put to death Wednesday in Florida’s electric chair for killing, sexually abusing and mutilating an 11-year-old boy.

Witt, 42, convicted for the fatal assault on the son of a University of South Florida professor, died at 7:10 a.m., despite clemency pleas by his mother who said it was unfair to execute him since a co-defendant received a life term.

When asked if he had any last words, Witt mumbled, ″No, I don’t have any″ as he chewed on his lip.

A dark mask was lowered over his shaved head and a hooded executioner, who was paid $150, pulled the switch that sent 2,000 volts through Witt’s body. The inmate jerked upward and the color faded slowly from his balled hands after the surge hit.

Witt was condemned for the murder of Jonathan Mark Kushner, who was riding his bicycle to a convenience store to buy candy when he was attacked Oct. 28, 1973.

Witt was the second killer executed in the state this year and the 12th man put to death in Florida’s electric chair since 1979. Witt became the 39th inmate executed in the nation since capital punishment was reinstated by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1976.

″The crime for which Mr. Witt was convicted a decade ago was a particularly brutal murder of a young child,″ said Gov. Bob Graham. ″Mr. Witt has paid with his own life for the innocent life he took so viciously.″

Witt’s mother, Dorothy Witt of Knoxville, Tenn., spent four hours with her son Tuesday night and left the Florida State Prison near Starke just hours before the execution.

She repeatedly had written to the governor and other officials seeking a reprieve for her son, saying he shouldn’t die when co-defendant Gary Tillman was given a life sentence for pleading guilty and testifying against Witt.

She said Witt was unhappy for much of his life and had been told by his father that ″he was no good and would never amount to anything.″

As a boy, Witt sang solos in church, she said.

Witt requested no final meal but was given an omelet, which he ″kind of nibbled at,″ before being taken from his holding cell to the nearby oak electric chair, said Department of Corrections spokesman Vernon Bradford.

Late Tuesday, the U.S. Supreme Court voted 5-3 to reject an emergency appeal aimed at temporarily sparing Witt’s life.

As Witt was led into the death chamber at 6:58 a.m., he looked through a window scanning the faces of the witnesses on the other side of a wall. He sighed heavily when strapped into the chair.

Among the witnesses were Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Detectives Gary Gainey and Rocky Rodriguez, who investigated the crime.

The young victim was pedaling to a convenience store near the family home when he was knocked from his bike, bound and gagged and driven to an orange grove. He was gagged so tightly that he smothered. According to court records, when the men opened the trunk and found the boy dead, the killers sexually abused and mutilated his body.

Witt’s wife, Donna, reported to police that her husband had confessed to killing the boy.

Another murderer, William Middleton Jr., also had been scheduled to die Wednesday morning but received a federal court stay Tuesday. Two other death row inmates are scheduled to die March 19

https://apnews.com/article/a07d388ae0a71c4c177afd47fddd5088

James Raulerson Florida Execution

James Raulerson florida

James Raulerson was executed by the State of Florida for the murder of a police officer. According to court documents James Raulerson was in the middle of a robbery when police officers arrived. A gun fight ensued and in the process James Raulerson would strike an officer causing his death. James Raulerson would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. James Raulerson would be executed by way of the electric chair on January 30 1985

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Police killer James David Raulerson was electrocuted Wednesday as his victim’s father looked on to fulfill a graveside vow and 50 officers, including the slain policeman’s partner, stood vigil outside.

James David Raulerson, 33, was pronounced dead at 7:11 a.m., becoming the 11th Florida inmate and the 37th nationwide to die since the U.S. Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976. His was the fifth execution in the country this year.

″I made a promise at my son’s graveside that I would watch his killer die,″ said Jack Stewart, whose 23-year-old son, Michael, was killed during a Jacksonville restaurant robbery in April 1975.

″It wasn’t a pleasant thing,″ Stewart said. ″I didn’t come here out of hatred. This will put some of it to rest, but it won’t bring my son back.″

About 50 police officers from Jacksonville, some wearing T-shirts saying ″Raulerson Make My Day″ and ″Crank Up Old Sparky,″ stood in a pasture across from Florida State Prison. Some cheered when they learned Raulerson was dead, and applause erupted when the hearse rolled by.

Stewart’s partner, James English, hung his head as the signal was given that Raulerson was dead. Tears filled in his eyes.

″This is a great day,″ said English, now an active officer in the sheriff’s department. ″I feel relieved. It’s been a long time coming.″

About two dozen death penalty opponents held lighted candles and sang softly nearby.

Stewart died when he and English entered a restaurant after a robbery was reported. English was wounded, and Raulerson’s cousin, Jerry Tant, was killed in the gunfire.

In a final statement he read from a white piece of paper, Raulerson blamed English for Stewart’s death.

″I am sorry you are made a murderer through the state, Mr. Dugger,″ Raulerson said, referring to prison Superintendent Richard Dugger. ″James English killed Michael Stewart and used Stewart’s gun to murder my cousin. I am sorry for you for taking life. My family knows I love them and I love you.″

Ballistics tests showed that bullets from Raulerson’s pistol killed Stewart.

After declining a steak-and-eggs breakfast, Raulerson was steered into the death chamber at 6:58 a.m. He winked to his attorney, Stephen Bright, but turned his eyes away from Stewart after a brief glance.

A mask was lowered over Raulerson’s clean-shaven head and a hooded executioner, paid $150 for the job, delivered 2,000 volts. The prisoner jerked upward in the chair, his hands clenching into fists and turning purple.

Gov. Bob Graham signed a third death warrant for Raulerson Jan. 3, and late Tuesday, the U.S. Supreme Court rejected Raulerson’s appeals.

Raulerson, who learned through television news reports that he’d lost his last appeal, spent his final evening visiting his mother and stepfather, other family members, a minister and his attorney.

Another inmate scheduled to be executed Wednesday was granted an indefinite stay Tuesday by a federal appeals court. Two other convicted killers are scheduled to die next week in Florida.

https://apnews.com/article/28345cb945ad17ce58c8b3a8274fd217

Anthony Antone Florida Execution

Anthony Antone florida execution

Anthony Antone was executed by the State of Florida for a murder for hire. According to court documents Anthony Antone and another man were paid by Mob boss Victor Acosta to murder a private detective . Anthony Antone would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Victor Acosta and the man who allegedly pulled the trigger would both commit suicide after being arrested. Anthony Antone would be executed by way of the electric chair on January 26, 1984

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Anthony Antone, Florida’s oldest condemned prisoner, prepared calmly for death as his attorneys awaited word Monday on two-last minute appeals that could halt the execution scheduled for 7 a.m. EST Tuesday.

U.S. District Judge George Carr rejected a stay of execution in Tampa earlier Monday, and Antone’s attorneys immediately took their case to the 11th U.S. Court of Appeals in Atlanta, which still had not ruled late Monday night

The execution was expected to take place at 7 a.m. EST Tuesday unless a stay was issued by the Atlanta court or by the Supreme Court, at which the attorneys readied a plea. There was no indication when the two courts would rule.

Antone, 66, was convicted of being the go-between in the hired murder of former Tampa vice squad Sgt. Richard Cloud in 1975.

If executed, he would be the 12th man put to death since the Supreme Court lifted its ban on capital punishment in 1976, and the third in Florida. The last man to die in Florida’s electric chair was Robert Sullivan, executed Nov. 30, 1983.

Antone was scheduled to die in the electric chair Feb. 2 1982, but was granted a stay by the 11th Circuit Court of Appeal in Atlanta the day before.

Carr had ruled three days earlier he found no merit to Antone’s appeal, but then granted a temporary stay as a precautionary measure.

Carr ruled Monday the four points cited by defense attorney Tom McCoun were invalid because McCoun had raised the same arguments two years before, and Carr had rejected them.

Antone said at at jailhouse news conference Monday he was prepared to die.

‘I don’t fear death. As far as I’m concerned, death is merely discarding the vehicle and life goes on,’ Antone told reporters at Florida State Prison.

Wearing a blue prison uniforms and faded yellow T-shirt, the self-proclaimed metaphysicist also insisted he was innocentof the gangland-style slaying.

‘I didn’t kill anyone. Everyone knows that. There are people here who raped and killed and the government saw fit to give them life (terms),’ he said. ‘They know who (the real killer) is — law enforcement and the prosecutor — They know who it is but I don’t want to say.’

‘Being a Sicilian, They put a stigma on me of being associated with the Mafia. I have nothing to do with the Mafia,’ he said. ‘I was just a guy knocking a living, working with air conditioners.’

Antone was convicted of being the middle man between mobster Victor Acosta, hit-man Benjamin Gilford and getaway car driver Ellis Haskew. Gilford admitted shooting Cloud and committed suicide in jail the day before he was to be sentenced.

Acosta committed suicide in jail before he could be brought to trial. Haskew negotiated a plea agreement in which he testified against Gilford and Antone in return for a 35-year prison sentence.

Asked how he wanted to be remembered, Antone said, ‘My relatives will know how to remember me — as a loving person. I never hurt anybody. I’ll sleep fine tonight. I feel good about my life.’

Antone has spent his time on death row reading books on metaphysics and the occult, and said ‘I have no fear of death. I want to get it over with and go on to the next’ life.

But he said he was concerned the 2,300-volt jolt from the electric chair will expel his ‘astral counterpart’ abruptly from his body, rather than gradually as he believes necessary.

At the Tampa hearing, McCoun contended he had additional new evidence which would warrant an evidentiary hearing and said he had been ineffective in his legal assistance when he took over the appeal of Antone’s conviction

‘I was a volunteer counsel and I didn’t have sufficient time to go out an find witnesses who might come in and testify,’ McCoun said of the sentencing phase do the trial.

‘I had never had any contact with Mr. Antone until I went into that hearing. I was ineffective in a legal sense because of the inablility to find witnesses. I failed Mr. Antone

https://www.upi.com/Archives/1984/01/23/Anthony-Antone-Floridas-oldest-condemned-prisoner-prepared-calmly-for/9433443682000/

Arthur Goode Florida Execution

arthur goode florida execution

Arthur Goode was executed by the State of Florida for the sexual assault and murder of a nine year old boy. According to court documents Arthur Goode had been arrested and convicted of molesting two children however he was sent to a State mental hospital. Arthur Goode would flee from the hospital and soon after would sexually assault and murder nine year old Jason VerDow. Before he could be arrested Arthur Goode would kidnap another boy who he brought to Washington DC. While in Washington Goode would kidnap another boy who he later murdered. Arthur Goode would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Arthur Goode would be executed by way of the electric chair on April 5 1984

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Arthur Frederick Goode III, the former Hyattsville resident convicted of killing a small boy in Florida and another in Fairfax County, died in the electric chair in Florida State Prison yesterday after tearfully apologizing to his parents and expressing remorse for what he had done.

Goode, 30, received the death penalty for the murder of 9-year-old Jason Verdow of Cape Coral, Fla., in 1976. Ten days after committing the crime, he raped and killed 10-year-old Kenneth Dawson of Falls Church, for which he received a life sentence in Virginia.

Goode had said in interviews and letters to the parents of his victims that he was proud he killed the boys and would continue to molest and kill if he were released. But as he was strapped into the electric chair at the state prison in Starke, his tone became somber

“I want to apologize to my parents,” he said, his voice trailing off and tears welling in his eyes. “I have remorse for the two boys I murdered. It’s difficult for me to show it.”

Goode was executed less than six hours after Elmo Patrick Sonnier, 35, was electrocuted in Angola, La., for the November 1977 killing of two teen-aged sweethearts abducted from a lovers’ lane.

Yesterday was the first time two persons have been executed on the same day since the Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976. Goode was the 18th person executed in the United States since 1976 and the seventh person executed this year.

Michael Dawson, whose son’s body was found March 20, 1976, in a wooded area near Tysons Corner, had requested “a front-row seat” at Goode’s execution but was turned down by Florida officials.

Dawson learned of Goode’s death at 7:30 yesterday morning while listening to the radio at his Falls Church home. He spoke with the superintendent of Florida State Prison, Richard Dugger, a few hours later.

“He told me it probably would have done me more harm than good to have been down there to witness it,” Dawson said. “But I don’t know. I lost something. I don’t have the words to express it, the hurt, but I feel a little bit better this morning.

“At least I won’t have to hear his mouth and see his mouth anymore running on the television,” Dawson said.

At the time of his conviction in Virginia, the state did not impose the death penalty. It has subsequently been reinstated.

The fathers of the couple killed in Louisiana were permitted to witness the execution of Sonnier at Angola State Prison.

Just before a black hood was pulled over his head, Sonnier turned to Godfrey Bourque, father of Loretta Bourque, 18, and to Lloyd LeBlanc, father of David LeBlanc, 16, and, staring at LeBlanc, said: “Mr. LeBlanc, I can understand the way you feel.

“I have no hatred in my heart,” Sonnier continued. “As I leave this world . . . I ask to have your forgiveness.” LeBlanc nodded and said “yes.”

Lawyers worked until almost the hour of execution for both men trying to get the sentences stayed, but the Supreme Court rejected last-minute bids for each.

Goode had treated his crimes cavalierly almost from the moment he was arrested, taunting the parents of his victims, conducting his own defense for the Florida killing, abusing his parents, who insisted that he was insane and worked tirelessly to prevent his execution, and frequently appearing on television as a self-styled expert on child molesters.

Prison officials said Goode wrote 10 to 15 letters a day, mostly to public officials and members of the news media because he was forbidden years ago to continue writing to the parents of his victims.

The Washington Post has received continuous correspondence from him since he was first arrested in Fairfax County in March 1976. His final letter to the Post is dated “3-29-84” and reads in its entirety: “Dear Editor, The Washington Post, Wash, D.C. Very Urgent! My ‘execution’ is scheduled for next week (4-5-84) and I demand it be carried out! Please arrange to come ‘interview’ me immediately. Sincerely Arthur F. Goode III 038781.”

As recently as Wednesday at a prison news conference, Goode had said he had no remorse for the killings, demanded to be executed and said his final wish was to have sex with a little boy.

Prison officials said that after Goode spoke with his parents for the last time just after midnight, he seemed to realize that, in Superintendent Dugger’s words, “This time there would be no last-minute stay. I think until then he really thought there would be.”

At 4:45 a.m. yesterday Goode ate a final meal of steak, baked potato, buttered cauliflower and broccoli, half a gallon of ice cream, and a dozen chocolate chip cookies.

“He ate with gusto,” said prison spokesman Vernon Bradford.

Dugger led Goode to the electric chair and held a microphone to carry his last words to 12 witnesses.

“I’m very upset,” Goode said as he was strapped into the chair. “I don’t know what to say, really. How much time do I have?”

Dugger did not answer, and Goode then issued his apology.

A black gag was placed across his mouth and a hood was dropped over his face, and at 7:03 a current of 2,000 volts was sent through his body. His body jolted, his fists clenched, and then his body relaxed. He was pronounced dead at 7:08.

A funeral home in Florida said Goode’s body would be sent to Hyattsville for burial. Goode is survived by his father and mother, who live in Pine Island, Fla., and three older sisters.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1984/04/06/repentant-goode-executed-in-florida/c9ce2ab5-cd69-4c6a-8271-41efb4b60e21/

James Adams Florida Execution

james adams

James Adams was executed by the State of Florida for the murder of a man during a robbery. According to court documents James Adams had escaped from a Florida prison where he was serving a 99 year sentence for rape when he attempted to rob Edgar Brown who he would beat to death with a fireplace poker. James Adams would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

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Urging other death row inmates to ”keep on fighting,” James Adams died in the electric chair today for murdering a rancher, becoming the first black executed in Florida in 20 years.

Mr. Adams, 47 years old, who had maintained his innocence and charged that race played a part in his convictions, was pronounced dead at 7:11 A.M. The United States Supreme Court, voting 5 to 4, cleared the way for his execution Wednesday night by overruling a lower court that granted a stay so it could review whether Florida’s death penalty laws were racially discriminatory.

The stocky, muscular man told reporters earlier he ”wouldn’t hesitate to walk like a man” to his death. He did just that.

‘I Have Only Love’

”To all the men on death row, keep on fighting because it is wrong and immoral,” Mr. Adams said after being strapped into the chair where four others have died since 1979. ”I have no animosity toward anyone. I only have love.”

Mr. Adams was convicted of the murder of Edgar Brown of Fort Pierce, a prominent rancher and former St. Lucie County sheriff’s deputy. Mr. Brown was beaten to death with a poker in a robbery at his home on Nov. 12, 1973, and a witness said he had seen Mr. Adams running from the scene.

At the time, Mr. Adams was an fugitive from Tennessee, where he had served 10 years of a 99-year sentence for rape.

In an interview Tuesday, Mr. Adams said he was ”railroaded” in each crime because he was a poor black and the victims were white.

But Gov. Bob Graham, who signed Mr. Adams’s death warrant, said there was no reason to grant a reprieve as requested by defense attorneys and opponents of the death penalty.

Al Brown, the victim’s son, said: ”I don’t care what they do to him. I have mixed feelings about the whole thing.” ‘A Terrible Mistake’

The family of James Adams, one of 14 children of parents who were sharecroppers, insisted the wrong man was executed. ”He has never killed anyone and Governor Graham is making a terrible mistake,” relatives said in a statement distributed in Tallahassee.

The Rev. Ernie Brunelle, a Roman Catholic priest from Gainesville, who was among 30 death penalty opponents outside Florida State Prison, said, ”The fact he was tried by a male, all- white jury, that means a great deal.” About 50 others protested at the Capitol in Tallahassee.