Florida set to execute convicted murderer
of 11-year-old girl
Send a link to a friend
[July 10, 2014]
By Bill Cotterell
TALLAHASSEE (Reuters) - A Florida man who
confessed to the rape and murder of a child is scheduled to die by
lethal injection on Thursday, while another convicted murderer in
Georgia had his death sentence, also due to be carried out on Thursday,
commuted to life imprisonment.
|
Their cases follow a string of executions in the U.S. South last
month, including those of two other men in Florida and Georgia, in
the wake of a botched Oklahoma execution in April that sparked an
uproar among death penalty opponents.
Florida's Eddie Wayne Davis, 45, was sentenced to death in Florida
after he admitted to taking an 11-year-old girl from her mother’s
home, sexually assaulting and strangling her in 1994.
Davis confessed three times to the murder of Kimberly Waters, who
was found strangled in a dumpster. He was 25 years old at the time
of her killing, but his defense team claimed that he was mentally
still a juvenile.
The Georgia man, Tommy Lee Waldrip, was convicted of the 1991
shooting death of a man who had been scheduled to testify against
his son in an armed robbery trial.
Waldrip, 68, shot Keith Evans, then beat him to death and set his
truck on fire, according to trial testimony. Evans had worked as a
clerk in the store Waldrip’s son had allegedly robbed.
Both Davis and Waldrip lost court appeals this week seeking to halt
their executions. But the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles on
Wednesday granted Waldrip clemency and commuted his death sentence
to life without parole.
It was the fifth death sentence commuted by the Parole Board since
2002 and the first since April 2012.
[to top of second column] |
The board typically does not cite reasons for its decisions. Age
could have been a factor in the decision as Waldrip would have been
the oldest person to be executed in Georgia since the U.S. Supreme
Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976.
The Florida Supreme Court on Monday rejected Davis' claim that a
metabolic blood disorder known as porphyria might cause him to have
a painful reaction to midazolam, the first of three drugs used by
the state in executing convicted killers.
Davis would be the seventh person executed in Florida this year,
while Waldrip would have marked Georgia's second death row execution
of 2014.
(Reporting by Bill Cotterell in Tallahassee, Fla. and David Beasley
in Atlanta; Writing by Letitia Stein and David Adams; Editing by
Eric Walsh)
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|