Andre Cole Missouri Execution

Andre Cole - Missouri

Andre Cole was executed by the State of Missouri for the stabbing death of his ex wife friend. According to court documents Andre Cole went over to his ex wifes home and found the victim Anthony Curtis to death.Apparently Andre Cole had gone over to the woman’s home to confront his ex wife and became enraged when he saw Anthony Curtis present. Andre Cole would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Andre Cole would be executed by lethal injection on April 15, 2015

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Missouri has carried out its third execution of the year.

Andre Cole died by lethal injection at the Eastern Reception, Diagnostic and Correctional Center in Bonne Terre. The execution began at 10:15 p.m., and he was pronounced dead at 10:24 p.m

Pentobarbital was again the drug used for the procedure, according to Department of Corrections spokesman Mike O’Connell. He says there were no complications during the execution, and that Cole chose not to use any pain-relieving drugs beforehand.

Cole was convicted of the 1998 stabbing death of Anthony Curtis, who was visiting Cole’s ex-wife, Terri, at the time of the killing. According to court documents, Cole was behind on child support payments and a payroll withholding order had been sent to his employer. Upon learning the news, Cole was quoted as telling his co-workers, “Before I give her another dime I’ll kill the bitch.”

On Aug. 21, 1998, Cole became enraged after the first payroll deduction appeared on his check stub. He went to his ex-wife’s house, got inside after throwing a tire iron through a glass doorway and was confronted by Curtis. Cole then stabbed him several times and also stabbed Terri repeatedly. Curtis died, while Terri survived.

Andre Cole fled Missouri after the attack, but returned 33 days later and turned himself in to police in St. Louis. DNA evidence confirmed the presence of Cole’s blood at the scene, along with the blood from Curtis and Terri on the murder weapon.

Andre Cole did not provide a final statement, but according to the Associated Press he nodded at relatives who blew kisses to him just before he was executed. He also turned down the traditional last meal and instead received Tuesday’s regular tray meal of a turkey and bologna sandwich, a cookie and fruit punch.

Meanwhile, a group of activists, including several African-American leaders and the members of the ACLU, had asked Nixon to postpone the execution and appoint a panel to study the exclusion of black jurors from death penalty cases.  Cole, who was black, was convicted by an all-white jury

https://news.stlpublicradio.org/government-politics-issues/2015-04-14/missouri-executes-andre-cole-for-1998-stabbing-death

Cecil Clayton Missouri Execution

Cecil Clayton - Missouri photos

Cecil Clayton was executed by the State of Missouri for the murder of a police officer. According to court documents Cecil Clayton was having an argument with his wife and when the police showed up to investigate Clayton would shoot and kill sheriff’s deputy Chris Castetter. Cecil Clayton was arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. The argument against executing Cecil Clayton was that he was missing part of his frontal lobe due to a work place accident in the early 1970’s. Cecil Clayton would be executed by lethal injection on March 17, 2015

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Missouri cop killer Cecil Clayton was executed Tuesday night after the U.S. Supreme Court rejected arguments he should be spared because he was missing a piece of his brain.

Clayton, who at 74 was the state’s oldest death-row prisoner, was pronounced dead at 9:21 pm CT, eight minutes after his lethal injection was administered, prison officials said in a statement.

“They brought me up here to execute me,” he said in his final statement.

Clayton was convicted of murdering sheriff’s deputy Chris Castetter after a domestic disturbance in 1996. His case drew extra attention because of his brain injury, the result of a 1972 sawmill accident that forced doctors to remove one-fifth of his frontal lobe. His lawyers contended the damage not only sparked a massive personality change that may have turned him into a killer, but also rendered him mentally incompetent and therefore ineligible for capital punishment.

“Cecil Clayton had — literally — a hole in his head,” his attorney, Elizabeth Unger Carlyle, said in a statement after the execution. “Executing him without a hearing violated the Constitution, Missouri law and basic human dignity.

“He suffered from severe mental illness and dementia related to his age and multiple brain injuries,” she added. “The world will not be a safer place because Mr. Clayton has been executed.”

Missouri had argued that medical experts found Clayton understood why he was being executed and that meant he was competent to face the needle. They maintained that his intellectual deficits had to be present before he turned 18 to let him escape execution and that he waited too long to raise his claim.

Castetter’s brother said in a statement that he had no doubt Cecil Clayton was in his right mind.

“We know this execution isn’t going to bring Chris back,” he said. “But it destroys an evil person that would otherwise be walking this earth.”

Clayton’s 11th-hour appeals delayed his execution for several hours. But ultimately, none of the U.S. Supreme Court justices accepted his claims arguments for a stay based on his brain injury.

Four justices from the liberal wing did say they would have granted a stay based on his claim that Missouri’s secrecy-shrouded process for obtaining the lethal dose of pentobarbital could lead to an unconstitutional death.

Gov. Jay Nixon also denied him clemency in the final minutes, saying he agreed with the state’s assessment that Cecil Clayton was competent.

“This crime was brutal and there exists no question of Clayton’s guilt,” he said in a statement.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/missouri-executes-cecil-clayton-missing-part-brain-n325081

Walter Storey Missouri Execution

Walter Storey - Missouri photos

Walter Storey was executed by the State of Missouri for a murder committed in 1990. According to court documents Walter Storey would break into the victims, Jill Frey, home and would attack the school teacher so brutally that when he slit her throat he damaged her spine. Walter Storey would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Walter Storey was executed on February 10, 2015

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Missouri executed a man early Wednesday who was convicted of a brutal home-invasion murder 24 years ago, after a divided U.S. Supreme Court declined to stop his lethal injection just because the state won’t reveal where it got the deadly chemicals.

Walter Storey, 47, was on death row for the 1990 beating and stabbing death of a neighbor whose home he broke into so he could steal money for beer. He was pronounced dead at 12:01 a.m., officials said. His last meal was a cheeseburger and fries.

Victim Jill Frey’s brother, Jeff Frey, said in a statement that it had taken too long for Storey to be punished.

“Why do we continue to allow the argument about the secretive process of obtaining and using lethal injection drugs? Is it because this process might cause a brutal murderer to suffer a painful death? What is a painful death?” he wrote.

“What is cruel and unusual punishment? Is it a twitch of a finger? Is it a squinting of an eyelid? Is it a curling of a savage killer’s toes, or maybe violent tremors of the body for several minutes?

“Or is cruel and unusual punishment when a man breaks into a woman’s home in the middle of the night while she is in bed, proceeds to brutally beat and assault her, break six ribs, hit her in the face and head 12 times suffering injuries to her forehead, nose, cheek, scalp, lips, tongue and even her eyelid torn off?

“She had defensive wounds to her arms and hands, abrasions to her knee, a six-inch stab wound to the abdomen, and four internal impact injuries to her head all before she lost consciousness!

In Storey’s appeal, defense lawyers argued that Missouri’s refusal to disclose which compounding pharmacy supplied the killer dose of pentobarbital for his execution could lead to a death so painful it would violate his constitutional rights.

Storey’s legal team also objected to Missouri’s use of the drug midazolam as a sedative before the execution.

The high court voted 5-4 to let Storey’s execution go ahead. Last month, the justices agreed to hear an appeal out of Oklahoma that argues midazolam is not a strong enough anesthetic to use in lethal injections. Executions are on hold in three states as a result.

Midazolam came under scrutiny in the wake of several problematic executions last year.

https://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/lethal-injection/missouri-executes-walter-storey-1990-break-in-murder-n304111

Earl Forrest Missouri Execution

Earl Forrest - Missouri execution photos

Earl Forrest was executed by the State of Missouri for three murders. According to court documents Earl Forrest went over to the first two victims home demanding they buy a mobile home from him. When an argument broke out Earl Forrest would shoot and kill Harriet “Tottie” Smith and Michael Wells. When police attempted to arrest him Earl Forrest would shoot and kill Dent County Deputy JoAnn Barnes. Earl Forrest would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Earl Forrest would be executed by lethal injection on May 11 2016

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A man who killed two people in a drug dispute and a sheriff’s deputy in a subsequent shootout was put to death Wednesday in what could be Missouri’s last execution for some time.

Earl Forrest, 66, died by injection for the December 2002 deaths of Harriett Smith, Michael Wells and Dent County Sheriff’s Deputy Joann Barnes. He was pronounced dead at 7:18 p.m. CDT, according to the Missouri Department of Corrections.

Forrest’s fate was sealed hours before his punishment when the U.S. Supreme Court refused to halt the execution and Democratic Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon turned down a clemency request

Court documents showed Forrest had been drinking when he went to Smith’s home in the southern Missouri town of Salem and demanded that she fulfill her promise to buy a lawn mower and mobile home for him in exchange for introducing her to a source for methamphetamine. Wells was visiting Smith at the time. An argument ensued, and Forrest shot Wells in the face. He shot Smith six times and took a lockbox full of meth valued at $25,000.

When police converged on Forrest’s home, he shot Barnes and Dent County Sheriff Bob Wofford, according to court documents. Earl Forrest was shot in the face in the exchange of gunfire. He then put some meth in his mouth, crawled to the door and yelled, “I surrender. We need help. People down.”

Forrest’s girlfriend, Angela Gamblin, also was shot in the burst of gunfire. She and Wofford survived, along with Forrest.

Missouri has been one of the most prolific states for executions in recent years, second only to Texas. With the execution of Forrest, the state has put 19 men to death since November 2013, including six inmates last year. Forrest was the first in 2016.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/missouri-man-executed-for-killing-deputy-2-others/

Mark Christeson Missouri Execution

Mark Christeson execution photos

Mark Christeson was executed by the State of Missouri for the murders of a woman and two children. According to court documents Mark Christeson would strangle a woman and would drown a two children during a robbery. Mark Christeson would be executed by lethal injection on January 31, 2017

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Updated Jan. 31, 9:34 p.m.  The state of Missouri has carried out its first execution since May of 2016.

According to a statement from the Department of Corrections, Mark Christeson’s lethal injection began at 6:57 p.m., and he was pronounced dead at 7:05 p.m.

Christeson’s final meal was a bacon cheeseburger, fries, a slice of pecan pie, and a soda. When asked if he had a final statement, he said, “to let my family know I love them with all my heart and I’m more than blessed to have them in my life…and thank God for such an amazing family.”

“It will be 19 years ago tomorrow that Susan Brouk and her two young children were brutally murdered,” attorney general Josh Hawley said in a written statement. “My heart and prayers are with the victims’ loved ones. I hope that their families find solace in the judgment carried out tonight.”

Anne Precythe, acting DOC director, read a statement from governor Eric Greitens after Christeson’s execution:

“Tonight, as we remember Susan, Adrian, and Kyle Brouk, our thoughts and prayers are again with their family members and loved ones. The acts of violence that took this 36-year-old mother, her 12-year-old daughter, and her nine-year-old boy were unspeakably cruel. “Susan was a single mother whose life revolved around her children. Adrian was a seventh grader who did well in school and played volleyball. She hoped to one day be a veterinarian or a teacher. Kyle was only nine. He played soccer and dreamed of being an Army officer. They were a loving family, living a quiet life in a rural community. Their hopes and dreams were taken away by these evil crimes. “The man who was found guilty by a jury of raping and murdering Susan and murdering her two beloved children, Kyle and Adrian, has now had his sentence carried out. We know that a Missouri family will always miss and grieve the young mother and her two children who have been gone for nearly 20 years. Tonight, we grieve with them. “The process of justice on this matter has now reached its conclusion. We pray for comfort and healing for the families and friends whose lives have been deeply affected by these unspeakable crimes, so that they may find closure and peace. I ask that Missourians join me in keeping the family of Susan, Adrian, and Kyle Brouk in their thoughts and prayers tonight.

Harley Brouk, the half-sister of Adrian and Kyle, also prepared a statement:

“Almost 19 years ago to the day my brother and sister were taken from us, this is the day that we finally get justice for them. I know that they are watching over us and they’re happy for all of us. There’s not a day that goes by that I do not miss them and I wish that they were here. “Now we have justice and we can all move forward through this tragedy the rest of the way. I was only five when they were taken from me but it has impacted my life entirely. I never got to have that special bond with my brother or sister that every kid wishes for. “Kyle was nine and Adrian was 12. They never got to fully live out their lives and go through college and high school and figure out what it is they wanted to do in this world. “But now that they are above us, watching over us, I know I have the world’s greatest guardian angels anybody could ask for. “This is a sad day, a happy day and a day that I will never forget.”

‘Justice was absolutely not served’

Christeson was put to death despite the substance of his state case never being heard by a federal court, according to attorney Joseph Perkovich. He said they never had the financial capacity to fully evaluate his mental capacity, for starters.

“We, as his attorneys, who came into the case less than three years, have never had resources to have medical professionals examine him, so we don’t know the full extent of his limitations,” he said. “We can observe them as lay people, and we have – we’ve talked to people who’ve known him over the years in prison and outside of it – but because the courts deprived the resources to actually get at these fundamental questions about his capacity, that was never done.”

On October 12 of last year, while Perkovich and fellow attorney Jennifer Merrigan were challenging that move, the Missouri Supreme Court set Christeson’s execution date for January 31. He said from that point there seemed to be a rush to have him put to death.

“Here we had three different issues, four issues in total, granted to be heard for briefing and argument, and almost instantly that process was compressed to the point of distorting it,” Perkovich said. “(It) led to the court holding onto the case…so that they could then rule against Mr. Christeson and stay on schedule, so that the powers that be who thought it was important to have this execution go forward could stay on schedule.”

In Missouri’s response to the appeal for a stay of execution, attorney general Josh Hawley argued that Christeson was not hampered by any “putative mental incapacity.”

“Christeson was able to carry out normal everyday functions,” Hawley said. “He was able to respond to prison conduct violation allegations, identify a witness, request an attorney for a grievance, and provide his own version of events.”

Updated Jan. 31, 6:19 p.m.   Governor Eric Greitens has denied Mark Christeson’s request for clemency.

He issued a written statement, which reads in part:

“As Governor, clemency is a power and a process I take seriously. I have thoughtfully considered the facts of this case. I have done a comprehensive review of the request from Mr. Christeson. After deliberate consideration, I deny clemency. My decision today upholds the decision handed down by the jury and upheld by both state and federal courts.

“As preparations are made to carry out the sentence, I ask that Missourians remember Susan Brouk, Adrian Brouk, and Kyle Brouk at this time and keep their family members and loved ones in your thoughts and prayers. May god bless them and their families.”

Updated Jan. 31, 5:53 p.m.  Barring clemency from governor Eric Greitens, Mark Christeson will become the first death row inmate executed in Missouri since last May.

The U.S. Supreme Court has denied Christeson’s appeal for a stay, and a separate appeal for his case to be sent back to a lower court. A spokesperson for the High Court said that Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg would have granted the stay.

Updated Jan. 30 with Christeson’s appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court –Missouri death row inmate Mark Christeson is appealing his pending execution to the United States Supreme Court.

He’s scheduled to die by lethal injection during the 24-hour window that begins at 6:00 p.m. Tuesday.

In filings to the nation’s high court Monday afternoon, Christeson’s attorney, Jennifer Merrigan, argues that a stay of execution is warranted due to evidence of “attorney misconduct,” stating that the attorneys from his first trial missed a deadline for a federal appeal in 2005.

In addition to the stay, Merrigan argues that a new federal judge should be assigned to re-hear the case. She also says Christeson was incapable of understanding his legal rights during his original trial because he is “severely mentally impaired.”

One decision initially went in his favor in December, in which he was granted an additional hearing into his mental capacity. But the state of Missouri requested, and was granted, an expedited schedule for the hearing and filings ahead of time, in order to meet the January 31 execution date.

That hearing took place on January 20th, and a federal judge ruled against Christeson.

https://news.stlpublicradio.org/government-politics-issues/2017-01-30/missouri-executes-mark-christeson-for-1998-triple-slayings