Roderick Nunley Missouri Execution

Roderick Nunley - Missouri photos

Roderick Nunley was executed by the State of Missouri for the murder of a fifteen year old girl. According to court documents Roderick Nunley and Michael Taylor would abduct the victim fifteen year old Ann Harrison as she stood at the end of the driveway waiting for a school bus. The teenager would be sexually assaulted and murdered. Roderick Nunley would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Roderick Nunley would be executed by lethal injection on September 1, 2015. Michael Taylor was executed in 2014

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 Roderick Nunley has become the sixth death row inmate executed in Missouri this year.

He was put to death by lethal injection Tuesday at the Eastern Reception, Diagnostic and Correctional Center in Bonne Terre for the 1989 murder of 15-year-old Ann Harrison.

Nunley’s lethal injection began at 8:58 p.m., and he was pronounced dead at 9:09 p.m., according to the Missouri Department of Corrections.

Spokesman Mike O’Connell said Nunley’s last meal consisted of a steak, shrimp, chicken strips, salad, and a slice of cheesecake. Nunley did not provide a final statement.

O’Connell also said Nunley declined to use a sedative before being given pentobarbital, the drug used for executions in Missouri, and that there were no complications.

Ann Harrison’s family did not provide a statement after the execution, which was witnessed by an uncle and two family friends.

Corrections Director George Lombardi read a prepared statement from Gov. Jay Nixon:

Tonight, as we remember Ann Harrison, our thoughts and prayers are again with Bob and Janel Harrison, and the other members of Ann’s family. The acts of violence that took this 15 year old who was full of life and promise away from her loved ones can never make sense to us. The two men who were found guilty of Ann’s kidnapping, rape and murder have now had their sentences carried out. But even as there is judicial closure tonight, we know that a Missouri family will always miss and grieve the young woman who has been gone for more than 26 years. We grieve with them. So, I ask that Missourians join me in keeping the family of Ann Harrison in their thoughts and prayers tonight.

Attorney General Chris Koster also issued a brief statement:

“Roderick Nunley murdered 15-year-old Ann Harrison in 1989, pled guilty, and was sentenced to death. Despite openly admitting his guilt to the court, it has taken 25 years to get him to the execution chamber. Nunley’s case offers a textbook example showing why society is so frustrated with a system that has become too cumbersome.”

Pete Edlund is a retired Kansas City police officer who led the investigation into Harrison’s death.

“I’m just glad that justice, 25 years later, is finally served,” Edlund said.  “It’s a sad commentary on the system that people who have committed violent vicious crimes don’t receive just punishment in a timely manner.”

Nunley’s attorney, Jennifer Herndon, has not responded yet to requests for comments.

Updated 9/1/2015, 8:02 p.m. — A second request for a stay of execution, a writ of habeus corpus, for Roderick Nunley has been denied by the U.S. Supreme Court.

Within minutes, Gov. Jay Nixon denied Nunley’s request for clemency:

After deliberate consideration of its merits and the facts of this case, I have denied this petition. As Governor, this is a power and a process I do not take lightly. Each instance involves a very specific set of facts, which must be considered on its own. On the morning of March 22, 1989, 15-year-old Ann Harrison was waiting for the school bus at the end of the driveway of her Raytown home when she was abducted, raped, and then stabbed to death by Roderick Nunley and Michael Taylor. The capital punishment sentence given to Taylor for his role in these brutal crimes was carried out last year. Nunley also pleaded guilty to these heinous crimes and was sentenced to death. My decision today upholds this appropriate sentence. I ask that Missourians remember Ann Harrison at this time and keep her parents, Bob and Janel Harrison, and the Harrison family in your thoughts and prayers. 

Updated 9/1/2015, 5:43 p.m. — The U.S. Supreme Court has denied a stay of execution for Roderick Nunley, who’s scheduled to die by lethal injection at Missouri’s Bonne Terre prison as early as 6 p.m. tonight.

Nunley was sentenced to death for the 1989 murder of 15-year-old Ann Harrison in the Kansas City area.

This is a developing story and we’ll have more details as they come in.

Original story

Pending a stay or clemency, Roderick Nunley will become the sixth death row inmate executed in Missouri this year and the 18th since the state resumed executions in November 2013.

Nunley was sentenced to death for the 1999 kidnapping, rape and murder of 15-year-old Ann Harrison in Kansas City. He was charged along with Michael Taylor, who was executed last year.

According to police reports and court documents, Nunley and Taylor had been using cocaine the night of March 21, 1989, and then stole a car during the early morning hours of March 22.  They saw Ann Harrison standing in her driveway waiting on a school bus. When they pulled up to her, Taylor grabbed her, pulling her inside the car.

Nunley then drove to his mother’s house in Grandview, a suburb of Kansas City, where Harrison was taken blindfolded into the basement. He said in court that Taylor raped Harrison while he did nothing to prevent it, and that they both later agreed to kill her to prevent her from testifying against them in court.

Harrison was stabbed multiple times and left in the trunk of the stolen car to die. Both the car and her body were discovered three days later in a nearby neighborhood.

Nunley pleaded guilty to first-degree murder in 1991, in the hopes of receiving a life sentence, but after a three-day sentencing hearing he was sentenced to death.

In 1994, Nunley filed a motion to withdraw his guilty plea, which was rejected. His attorneys had argued that he suffered from a “dependent personality disorder” and that his judgment was impaired due to his cocaine use when Harrison was murdered. They also accused the Jackson County prosecutor’s office of having a track record of racial discrimination when pursuing the death penalty in cases where the defendant was African American and the victim was white.

Late Friday, the Missouri Supreme Court rejected Nunley’s request to withdraw the execution warrant, and a motion on Monday to reconsider that decision was also rejected.

Meanwhile, Nunley’s attorney, Jennifer Herndon, has filed another appeal based on the state’s refusal to disclose where it gets its execution drug, although that maneuver failed to halt other executions carried out in Missouri this year. The Marshall Project, which has put forth several articles critical of the death penalty, recently had an article that was critical of Herndon.

Nunley’s window of execution is scheduled to begin at 6 p.m. Tuesday night.

https://news.stlpublicradio.org/government-politics-issues/2015-09-01/missouri-executes-roderick-nunley-for-1989-murder

David Zink Missouri Execution

David Zink photos

David Zink was executed by the State of Missouri for the kidnapping, sexual assault and murder of a nineteen year old woman. According to court documents David ZinK would kidnap Amanda Morton by hitting her vehicle with his car. When the woman got out of the vehicle David Zink would grab her and bring her to a motel where she was sexually assaulted. Amanda Norton was later brought to a cemetery where she would be tied to a tree and murdered. David Zink would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. Zink would be executed by lethal injection on July 14, 2015 by lethal injection

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A Missouri inmate who killed a 19-year-old woman in 2001 after sexually attacking her and tying her to a cemetery tree was put to death Tuesday evening, after the U.S. Supreme Court and the state’s governor declined to block his execution.

The U.S. Supreme Court denied all appeals from 55-year-old inmate David Zink and Gov. Jay Nixon denied a clemency request.

Zink was executed by lethal injection at 7:33 p.m., he was declared dead at 7:41 p.m., according to the Missouri Department of Corrections.

“The horror and fear 19-year-old Amanda Morton must have felt after being kidnapped by David Zink that July night is truly unimaginable,” Attorney General Chris Koster made the following statement following the execution. “David Zink callously took a young woman’s life, and it is fitting he pay by losing his own.”

Zinks last meal was a cheeseburger, french fries, cheesecake and a soft drink, official said.

In a final statement, Zink said:

“I can’t imagine the pain and anguish one experiences when they learn that someone has killed a loved one, and I offer my sincerest apology to Amanda Morton’s family and friends for my actions. I hope my execution brings them the peace and satisfaction they seek.I also have to apologize to the second set of victims, my family and friends, that had the unfortunate circumstance of developing emotions which will now cause them pain and suffering upon my execution. I kept my promise to fight this case for their benefit, and although unsuccessful to prevent the execution, we have been successful in exposing some serious flaws that offend the basic concept of the American Justice System.For those who remain on death row, understand that everyone is going to die. Statistically speaking, we have a much easier death than most, so I encourage you to embrace it and celebrate our true liberation before society figures it out and condemns us to life without parole and we too will die a lingering death.”

Jurors in western Missouri’s St. Clair County deliberated 90 minutes in 2004 before convicting Zink and recommending a death sentence for the killing of Amanda Morton. Authorities said Zink abducted her after hitting her car from behind on an Interstate 44 exit ramp a mile from her Strafford home. Morton was driving home after visiting a friend.

Police found Morton’s Chevrolet Cavalier abandoned on the ramp with the keys in the ignition, the engine running and the headlights and hazard lights on. Her purse, credit card and medication were found inside the vehicle.

Just months before the slaying, David Zink had been released from a Texas prison after serving 20 years on rape, abduction and escape charges. Fearing that his drunken fender-bender with Morton could violate his parole and send him back to prison, Zink initially abducted Morton, taking her to a motel. That site’s manager later saw a televised news report about Morton’s disappearance, recognized her as the woman who had checked in with Zink, and gave investigators Zink’s name and license plate number from motel registration.

David Zink, after being arrested at his parents’ home, led authorities to Morton’s buried body in a cemetery, confessing matter-of-factly and at times laughing on videotape that he had tied her to a tree there and told her to look up. When the bewildered Morton begrudgingly glanced skyward, Zink said, he snapped her neck.

Worried that Morton might regain consciousness, David Zink admitted, he used a knife to sever her spinal cord at the neck and covered her body with leaves before retrieving from his home a shovel he used to bury her.

“If I think that you’re going to pose a threat to my freedom, it is set in my mind I want to eliminate you,” Zink says in his videotaped confession.

An autopsy later showed that Morton had eight broken ribs and 50 to 100 blunt-force injuries. Morton also had been sexually assaulted, with DNA evidence linked to Zink found on her body.

Missouri has executed five men this year and 16 since November 2013. Only Texas has executed more inmates over that span

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/missouri-killer-david-zink-executed-after-court-governor-refuse-intervene-n392246

Richard Strong Missouri Execution

Richard Strong - Missouri

Richard Strong was executed by the State of Missouri for a double murder. According to court documents Richard Strong would stab to death Eva Washington and her daughter, Zandrea Thomas. When police were investigating a 911 call where a neighbor heard Eva screaming Richard Strong would be arrested at the scene and admitted to the murders. Richard Strong would be convicted and sentenced to death. Richard Strong would be executed by lethal injection on June 10, 2015

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Missouri man who killed his girlfriend and her two-year-old daughter with a butcher knife has been put to death.

Richard Strong, 47, was executed at the state prison in Bonne Terre for the deaths of Eva Washington and her daughter, Zandrea Thomas, more than 14 years ago. He was the fourth man to die by injection in Missouri this year and the 16th since November 2013. Only Texas has executed more inmates over that span.

The bodies of Washington and her daughter were found in October 2000 in Washington’s apartment in the St Louis suburb of St Ann. A large butcher knife was found on a bed next to a pool of blood. Strong and Washington’s daughter together, three-month-old Alyshia Strong, was also on the bed but wasn’t harmed.

St Ann police received an emergency call from Washington’s apartment on 23 October 2000, during which a scream was heard. Officers headed to the apartment, where Strong met them outside. He initially told them Washington was sleeping, then said she had gone to work.

Officers saw blood stains on his hand, at which point Strong tried to run. When they caught him, he admitted to the killings. Inside, police found the bodies and the unharmed three-month-old.

Strong’s attorney, Jennifer Herndon, said Strong and Washington both had a history of mental illness and frequently argued.

“He just snapped,” Herndon said. “It was just sort of a powder keg waiting to explode. It wasn’t a healthy relationship.”

Alyshia Strong was taken in by Strong’s mother. Despite the killings, she grew close to her father, frequently visiting him in prison. A clemency request to governor Jay Nixon relied heavily on Alyshia’s words describing the importance of her father in her life.

“l know some people probably wonder how I can have a relationship with my father given that he killed my mother, but we are very close,” Alyshia, now 14, wrote.

“I understand that my father needs to face consequences and to pay for what he did, but I do not think it is right for me to lose my father as part of the punishment,” she added.

On Monday, in an interview with the Associated Press, she said, “I’ve never been angry with my dad and I’ve learned to forgive.”

Strong’s fate was sealed when Nixon declined the clemency request and the US supreme court refused to intervene. The defence had asked the court to halt the execution because Strong was mentally ill, suffering from severe depression.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/jun/09/missouri-death-row-richard-strong

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