Ernest Knighton Louisiana Execution

Ernest Knighton Louisiana execution

Ernest Knighton was executed by the State of Louisiana for a murder committed during a robbery. According to court documents Ernest Knighton would cause the death of a gas station manager during a robbery. Ernest Knighton would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Ernest Knighton would be executed by way of the electric chair on October 30, 1984

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Convicted killers were executed within seven minutes of each other in Texas and Louisiana early today, one reciting the 23rd Psalm on his way to the electric chair for killing a gas station owner and the other saying goodbye to his death row friends.

‘I’m going home,’ Earnest Knighton, 38, said moments before he was electrocuted at 12:17 a.m. CST in ‘Gruesome Gertie,’ the inmates’ name for the electric chair at the state prison in Angola, La.

Seven minutes later and 235 miles away in Huntsville, Texas, Thomas Andy Barefoot, 39, an oilfield roughneck who said God had promised to spare him, was pronounced dead from a lethal injection.

‘I’m sorry for everything I’ve done to anybody,’ Barefoot said.

After being injected Barefoot turned to a reporter who witnessed the execution and asked her to say farewell to his friends on death row.

‘… tell all my friends hello,’ he said. ‘You know who they are. Charlie Bass, David Powell …’

At that point Barefoot broke off with a choke and a gasp and he let out three short, sharp, soft cries and died.

Knighton and Barefoot became the 27th and 28th people executed since the Supreme Court lifted the ban on the death penalty eight years ago. Attorneys for a woman on North Carolina’s death row filed appeals Monday to prevent her from becoming the first woman executed in 22 years on Friday.

The Supreme Court and other courts rejected last-minute appeals Monday from both Barefoot and Knighton and the governors of Louisiana and Texas refused to intervene.

Knighton’s lawyers claimed he was drug-crazed when he killed Ralph Shell of Bossier City, La., during a March 17, 1981, robbery that netted $300.

Barefoot, convicted in the 1978 shooting death of Carl LeVin, a Harker Heights, Texas, police officer, had received four stays of execution. His attorneys argued psychiatric testimony used in the punishment phase was obtained illegally and important information was suppressed.

As he was led down the long corridor to the death chamber, Knighton recited the 23rd Psalm, raising his voice as he crossed the threshold, saying, ‘Surely I will dwell in the house of the Lord forever.’

In a written statement, he apologized for his crime but spoke out against his punishment, saying, ‘You don’t teach respect for life by killing. I urge you not to kill anyone else.’

Barefoot asked for forgiveness and said he held no grudges.

‘I’ve been praying all day for Carl LeVin’s wife to drive the bitterness from her heart because that bitterness in her heart will send her to hell,’ Barefoot said as he was strapped to a table prior to injection

‘I want everybody to know I hold nothing against them. I forgive them all. I hope everybody I’ve done anything wrong to will forgive me.’

Small groups of protesters gathered outside both prisons.

A crowd of mostly students from nearby Sam Houston State University cheered and waved placards ridiculing Barefoot outside the prison in Huntsville. One woman carried a 4-foot-long mock syringe.

About 30 people protesting the death penalty met outside Angola State Penitentiary. The were met by a handful of demonstrators in favor of the death penalty. Both stood quietly facing each other across the road into the prison.

In North Carolina, attorneys for Margie Velma Barfield filed an emergency appeal with the Supreme Court to stop her Friday execution.

The 52-year-old grandmother admitted poisoning her mother and three others, but has said she was addicted to drugs and did not know what she was doing.

https://www.upi.com/Archives/1984/10/30/Killers-executed-in-Louisiana-and-Texas/5829467960400/

Robert Willie Louisiana Execution

robert willie louisiana

Robert Willie was executed by the State of Louisiana for the sexual assault and murder of a woman. According to court documents Robert Willie and Joseph Vaccaro would kidnap eighteen year old Faith Hathaway who would be sexually assaulted and killed. Three days later the two men would attack a young couple, sexually assault the female and shot the male. The male would survive his injuries however he would be paralyzed. Robert Willie and Joseph Vaccaro would be arrested, Robert Willie would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. The book and movie Dead Man Walking is based on the relationship between Robert Willie and Sister Helen Prejean.

Robert Willie More News

Robert Lee Willie, who raped and killed an 18-year-old Mandevile woman, was executed Friday morning after telling the victim’s parents, “I hope you get some relief from my death.”

Willie, 26, who was pronounced dead at 12:15 a.m., became the sixth Louisiana man executed in the past 13 months, and the 32nd nationwide since executions resumed in 1977.

Vern and Elizabeth Harvey, the stepfather and mother of murder victim Faith Hathaway, were among eight people witnessing the execution. The Harveys have been vocal supporters of the death penalty and have demonstrated in support of capital punishment at other executions.

The Harveys did not move or show emotion as Willie spoke to them.

But within a half-hour after the execution, a smiling Vern Harvey poured a drink for himself and his wife in their van parked outside the state penitentiary’s main gate.

“Do you want to dance?” he asked a reporter. “First thing I’m gonna do is have a drink, then go home and get some rest.”

Willie, who had said earlier that he was not afraid of the electric chair, was led into the death chamber just after midnight. He was wearing jeans, a white sweatshirt, and white slippers; and was escorted by six guards.

“I would just like to say Mr. and Mrs. Harvey that I hope you get some relief from my death,” he said. “Killing people is wrong. That’s why you’ve put me to death. It makes no difference whether it’s citizens, countries, or governments. Killing is wrong.”

He was strapped into the chair and a hood was placed over his head.

Then, he asked Angola State Penitentiary Warden Frank Blackburn to remove the hood, and he winked at Sister Helen Prejean of New Orleans, his spiritual advisor.

Prejean was praying, and said, “Forgive those who collaborate.”

At 12:07, Willie was jolted by 2,000 volts of electricity for 10 seconds, and then 500 volts for 20 seconds. The sequence was repeated.

West Feliciana Parish Coroner Alfred Gould examined Willie at 12:13 and pronounced him dead at 12:15.

On his last day, Willie visited with his mother, Elizabeth Oalman of Covington, four brothers, and Prejean.

Blackburn said that Willie was served the last meal he requested — fried fish, oysters and shrimp — as well as some french fries and a salad.

Blackburn said Willie’s mood before the execution was “quiet and somber … appropriate to the occasion. He doesn’t seem scared, but he’s not lighthearted.”

Outside the prison, Hathaway’s sister, Lizabeth, 14, demonstrated for the death penalty along with a half-dozen members of Parents of Murdered Children, a group the family founded.

Death penalty opponents did not demonstrate at Angola, as they have in the past, but staged a vigil outside the Governor’s Mansion in Baton Rouge. As they prayed, tourists took photos of the governor’s 40-foot Christmas tree.

Before the execution, Vern Harvey said he regretted that Willie would not feel much pain from the electrocution.

“It’s going to be quick for him. I’d rather it would be a lot slower. I think he deserves the painful death she had.”

Willie sometimes said he’s sorry for his crimes, but couldn’t understand “why everybody keeps bringing it up.” He said Harvey shouldn’t dwell on the murder.

“It’s like he’s a glutton for punishment over her death,” Willie said.

In interviews last week, Willie recounted his life of drugs, booze, and violence in remorseless terms, and said he was not afraid to die.

“Electric chair don’t worry me, man,” he said. “I have a lot of pride, I don’t run from nothing.”

Willie said he and a friend, Joseph Jesse Vaccaro, were “loaded” at 4:30 a.m. May 28, 1980, when they say Hathaway walking alongside Mandevile road. Hathaway was returning from a celebration on the night before she was scheduled to enter the Army.

Willie and Vaccaro blindfolded her, raped her, and drove her to a remote section of Washington Parish.

“She just kept saying, ‘I won’t identify y’all or nothing,'” Willie said. “She kept saying ‘Don’t hurt me.'”

Willie and Vaccaro offer different accounts of the stabbing that ensued, blaming each other for the 17 knife wounds that took Hathaway’s life.

Willie said Vaccaro, unexpectedly began stabbing Hathaway and that he helped by holding her hands. But Vaccaro, who was sentenced to life imprisonment for his role in the murder, said at trial that “Willie jugged her and jugged her until she begged us to kill her.”

Eight days later, Willie and Vaccaro kidnapped a Madisonville couple from a wooded lovers’ lane and drove them to Alabama. They raped the 16-year-old girl, and then stabbed and shot her boyfriend, 20-year-old Mark Brewster, leaving him tied to a tree.

Brewster survived, but is paralyzed from the waist down, At trial, Willie mocked the victims by blowing kisses at the woman he raped and drawing his finger across his throat in a menacing fashion when Brewster took the stand.

After his conviction for Hathaway’s murder, Willie pleaded guilty to the 1978 killing of Dennis Hemby near Covington. Willie said he and his cousin, Perry Wayne Taylor, beat and drowned Hemby and stole $10,000 worth of marijuana from him.

Taylor plead guilty to manslaughter and is serving a 21-year-sentence.

Willie was also given six life sentences stemming from those crimes.

John Willie, 53, the condemned man’s father, served 27 years at Angola for cattle theft, aggravated battery, and manslaughter. He said that his son and Vaccaro both deserve to die.

“I believe more in capital punishment than those people on the juries,” he said. “I’d like to pull the switch myself or shoot them down.”

Wiring of chair account retracted

The father of convicted murderer Robert Lee Willie said Thursday he did not wire the electric chair at the state penitentiary at Angola in which his son was to be executed early Friday.

John Willie retracted an earlier account in which he claimed to have wired the chair when he was an inmate electrician in 1982. That claim was published in an article Thursday in The Times-Picayune/The States Item.

Angola Warden Frank Blackburn said Thursday the chair was wired before 1982 and that Willie was not an electrician and did no work on it. An inmate would not have been used for the job, Blackburn said.

Willie, responding to Blackburn’s statement, said that while he was an inmate at the prison in 1982 he watched electricians work on the chair, but did none of the work himself.

https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/angel/articles/timespicayune1228.html

Vincenzo Randazzo Teen Killer Murders Elderly Man

Vincenzo Randazzo photos

Vincenzo Randazzo who was a sixteen year old from Louisiana who would beat to death an elderly man. According to court documents Vincenzo Randazzo would do odd jobs for an elderly couple and one day the teen killer would beat Phillip Lynch with a hammer and would attack his wife when she tried to attempted to stop him. Phillip Lynch would die from his injuries six weeks later. Vincenzo Randazzo would be sentenced to life in prison without parole

Vincenzo Randazzo 2023 Information

Custody Status Date Jun 18, 2019 07:33 AM CDT

Custody Status In Custody

Custody Detail Louisiana State Penitentiary

LOCATION Louisiana State Penitentiary

17544 Tunica Trace Angola, LA 70712

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 A teenager that killed an 89-year-old man with a hammer and injured his wife as she tried to save his life has pleaded guilty to first-degree murder.

Vincenzo “Jake” Randazzo was in court Monday and withdrew his not guilty plea for the attack. He pleaded guilty to killing Phillip Lynch and the attempted murder of his wife Anita Lynch, 70, in 2017.

The judge sentenced him to life for the murder and 25 years for attempted murder. The sentences will run concurrently.

The teen did odd jobs for the couple, who reportedly grew to call Randazzo a friend.

https://www.fox8live.com/2018/12/03/teen-hammer-attacker-sentenced-life-prison/

Vincenzo Randazzo FAQ

Vincenzo Randazzo Now

Vincenzo Randazzo is currently incarcerated at the Louisiana State Prison

Vincenzo Randazzo Release Date

Vincenzo Randazzo is serving a life sentence

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A Jefferson Parish teenager was sentenced to life in prison Monday for killing an elderly neighbor with a hammer and injuring the man’s wife at their Kenner home, but he will be eligible for possible parole in 25 years as part of a plea agreement with prosecutors.

Jefferson Parish District Attorney Paul Connick’s office had originally sought to prosecute Vincenzo “Jake” Randazzo, who was 16 at the time of the attack, as an adult and to seek a punishment of life in prison without the possibility of parole.

In an agreement with the Public Defenders Office, prosecutors agreed to allow Randazzo, now 17, to be eligible for parole after 25 years.

Judge Scott Schlegel, of 24th Judicial District Court in Gretna, accepted Randazzo’s pleas of guilty to first-degree murder and attempted second-degree murder for killing Phillip Lynch Sr., 89, and injuring his wife, Anita Lynch, 70.

Paul Fleming, his public defender, said his client is remorseful and “regrets what happened.” 

Randazzo went to the Lynches’ Woodlake subdivision home on July 9, 2017, and attacked Phillip Lynch with a hammer before injuring Anita Lynch when she tried to help. Anita Lynch suffered skull fractures, while her husband died of his injuries three weeks later in a hospital.

Authorities said Randazzo had become angry with his family after a shoplifting incident and went to see the Lynches, whom he knew, asking for a ride to Baton Rouge. When Phillip Lynch refused, Randazzo grabbed a hammer and attacked them, then stole the couple’s car and drove to Baton Rouge, where he was arrested.

In addition to its brutality, the attack stunned the community because Randazzo and the Lynches had rather improbably grown close. Randazzo had once stolen a gun from their home, and after his father found out and made him return it, he had begun doing odd jobs for the elderly couple as a form of informal community service.

https://www.nola.com/news/courts/article_9c265ce0-13db-50f8-9ee2-975784e5f5c1.html

Louisiana Death Row Inmate List

louisiana death row

The male death row is at the Louisiana State Penitentiary in West Feliciana Parish. The female death row is at Louisiana Correctional Institute for Women in St. Gabriel. Louisiana primary method of execution is lethal injection.

Louisiana Death Row Inmate List – Women

Antoinette Frank

Louisiana Death Row Inmate List – Men

The Louisiana Department Of Corrections does not maintain a death row inmate roster

Len Davis Federal Death Row

len davis 1

Len Davis was a former New Orleans police officer who was sentenced to death for arranging the murder of a witness set to testify against him. According to court documents Len Davis was under investigation by the Internal Affairs for the murder of a young man who he thought was a witness to an officer involved shooting. When Len Davis learned that someone had witnessed the murder he conspired with another man to murder the witness, Kim Groves. Len Dias was convicted on both murders and sentenced to death. The death sentence became Federal due to being found guilty of two Federal Civil Rights charges. Len Davis remains on Federal Death Row

Federal Death Row Inmate List

Len Davis 2021 Information

Register Number: 24325-034
Age: 56
Race: Black
Sex: Male
Located at: Terre Haute USP
Release Date: DEATH SENT

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A federal appeals court on Friday turned down a request for a new hearing from a former New Orleans police officer facing execution after orchestrating the 1994 murder of a woman who filed a brutality case against him.

In theory, Len Davis finds himself one step closer to receiving the federal death penalty which was handed to him following his conviction in the killing of Kim Groves. But he can appeal Friday’s decision from a three-judge panel to the full federal 5th Circuit and then to the U.S. Supreme Court, meaning it could be years before his case concludes.

U.S. Circuit Judges Priscilla Owen, Don Willett and Andrew Oldham rejected arguments that the question of Davis’ guilt deserved to be revisited because the government withheld key exculpatory evidence, jurors were biased, and he did not have competent legal representation at his trial.

An attorney for Davis, Sarah Ottinger, said Saturday that she and her client are exploring their legal options going forward. 

Groves’ slaying marked the nadir for the reputation of the New Orleans Police Department, which that year stood watch over a city that registered its all-time in high in killings: 424.

Federal agents at the time were investigating Davis because they suspected he and other officers had been paid to protect drug dealers. Amid that probe, Groves went to NOPD’s internal affairs division and reported having seen Davis pistol-whip a teenager.

Within a day, Davis had been tipped off about the complaint and arranged for drug dealer Paul Hardy to execute Groves roughly a block away from her home in the Lower 9th Ward. The plot to murder Groves was captured on FBI phone taps meant to expose the protection racket to which Davis had been linked, but agents were unable to prevent Hardy from killing the mother of three.

Davis and Hardy each received death sentences after they were convicted in 1996 of violating Groves’ civil rights. A third man linked to the killing, Damon Causey, received a life sentence after being convicted of hiding the handgun used to murder Groves.

Hardy’s capital punishment was vacated after U.S. District Judge Ginger Berrigan deemed him intellectually disabled. Davis’ initial death sentence had also been vacated at one point. But he received a second death sentence in 2005.

Davis, now 56, has since exhausted his appeals and is now undergoing the complex post-conviction appellate process.

The latest twist in Davis’ case comes a little more than a month after the federal Bureau of Prisons executed three federal prisoners. The carrying out of those death sentences followed a decision from President Donald Trump’s administration to end a 17-year hiatus of federal executions.

Ottinger said she was concerned that prosecutors’ insistence on carrying out the death penalty on Davis meant her client, who is Black, stood to become “the only person ever killed by the government under Reconstruction era civil rights statutes enacted to protect Black people from brutality perpetrated by White police.”

Ottinger added, “It is in the case involving the Black police officer that the government persists in seeking the ultimate punishment of death.”

The city of New Orleans in 2018 agreed to pay Groves’ children $1.5 million to settle a civil lawsuit her family filed following the killing. Groves’ family at one point had asked President George W. Bush’s administration to halt its efforts to execute Davis so that the criminal case wouldn’t drag out any longer.

https://www.nola.com/news/crime_police/article_24407022-e4b0-11ea-9a55-5b447b6b68ec.html