Harry Mitts Jr., 61, was scheduled to die Wednesday at the state prison in Lucasville after years of acknowledging his crimes and saying he's repented.
Mitts was convicted of aggravated murder and attempted murder in the rampage against random neighbors and responding police officers.
He was on constant watch headed into the 10 a.m. execution after two recent high-profile prison suicides in the state. With his execution, Ohio's valid supply of the execution drug pentobarbital was also set to expire. Officials expect to announce the state's new procedure next month.
With clemency denied and his legal appeals exhausted, Mitts has been concentrating on spiritual matters during what are expected to be his final days, attorney Jeff Kelleher said Tuesday.
"He is more concerned with the higher power right now than what those like myself or the state might or might not do," Kelleher said.
The prisons department said Mitts visited with his attorneys, a friend and a spiritual adviser Tuesday evening.
Mitts has said he's repented for the crimes committed during his drunken racially charged rampage. His criminal record was minimal before and since.
Wearing what witnesses described as yellow goggles and wielding a gun with a laser sight and later other weapons, Mitts first shouted racial epithets and killed a neighbor's black boyfriend, John Bryant, and then shot and killed white Garfield Heights police Sgt. Dennis Glivar as he responded to the scene. Mitts also shot and wounded two other police officers.
Mitts told the Ohio Parole Board he had drunk heavily because he was distraught over his divorce and had likely shot Bryant to draw police to his home in hopes they would shoot and kill Mitts. He said he wasn't a racist and didn't remember directing racial slurs at Bryant before shooting him. He said he couldn't say why he didn't shoot two white neighbors he encountered ahead of Bryant.
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The current Garfield Heights police chief, Bob Sackett, told the panel during an August hearing that Mitts' denial of his racial motivation was an insult to Bryant's family.
"Nothing Mitts said or did on the night of the crime suggested that Mitts did in fact want to die at the police's hands or that he was not in control of his own actions," he told the board. "Mitts murdered two men in cold blood, one because of the color of his skin, one because of the uniform he wore."
Among a patchwork of actions that day, Mitts called and threatened the husband of his ex-wife, then-Grand River Police Chief Jonathon Salerno, saying he at one time intended to kill him, too. Salerno said Mitts was an aggressive person who hated blacks and the police.
Prosecutors said that, with the murders, multiple shootings and additional death threats carried out that day, Mitts "exhibited complete disregard for the lives of officers and innocent bystanders at the scene."
"That further tragedy did not result from the bedlam that Mitts created on August 14, 1994, is in many respects a miracle," a clemency report said.
His pleas for mercy were denied by the Ohio Parole Board and Republican Gov. John Kasich.
Mitts, at his clemency hearing, said he had found God in prison. After his conviction, he spoke of receiving a Bible from Glivar's mother and sister and a letter expressing their forgiveness and urging him to seek repentance.
[Associated
Press; By JULIE CARR SMYTH]
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