Arkansas carries out first double
execution in U.S. since 2000
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[April 25, 2017]
By Steve Barnes
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (Reuters) - Arkansas
carried out back-to-back executions on Monday night, administering
lethal injections to two men convicted of rape and murder to become the
first U.S. state to put more than one inmate to death on the same day in
17 years.
Marcel Williams, 46, was pronounced dead at 10:33 CDT, a little more
than three hours after the execution of 52-year-old Jack Jones,
according to officials at Cummins Unit prison, about 75 miles southeast
of the state capital, Little Rock.
The two men were among eight that the state had initially planned to
execute over the course of 11 days this month, prompted by the impending
expiration date of the state's supplies of midazolam, a sedative used as
part of the three-drug protocol.
Four of those executions have been put on hold by court order.
Jones was convicted of raping and killing Mary Phillips, 34, in 1995 and
trying to murder her 11-year-old daughter. He also was convicted of rape
and murder in Florida.
Williams was convicted of the 1997 kidnapping, rape and murder of
22-year-old Stacy Errickson. He also abducted and raped two other women.
Governor Asa Hutchinson said he hoped the executions would bring closure
to the victim's families.
Williams' execution was temporarily put on hold just minutes before he
was scheduled to die by U.S. District Judge Kristine Baker in Little
Rock, after his lawyers raised concerns that Jones' execution had been
botched.
In a last-minute appeal, Williams' attorneys claimed Jones was still
moving more than five minutes after he received a sedative, midazolam,
that is supposed to render inmates unconscious.
That description did not appear to match initial observations from
reporters witnessing the execution. They described Jones' lips moving
after he finished his last words but said there were no signs of
distress, according to local media reports.
Officials said Williams was in the death chamber and on the gurney when
word of the stay arrived.
Baker lifted her order around an hour later after holding a brief
hearing on the matter, court filings showed.
In his final words, Jones apologized to the young girl he left for dead,
now a grown woman.
"I hope over time you could learn who I really am and I am not a
monster," he said, according to reporter witnesses.
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Inmate Marcel Williams is shown in this booking photo provided March
21, 2017. Courtesy Arkansas Department of Corrections/Handout via
REUTERS
Williams did not offer any last words, witnesses told local media.
They said he may have received more than one dose of midazolam and
that he was breathing heavily for a few minutes after the initial
injection.
The time between the first injection and the pronouncement of death
was 17 minutes, officials said.
The twin executions followed a flurry of unsuccessful appeals
earlier on Monday to the U.S. Supreme Court and the Arkansas Supreme
Court.
Both Jones and Williams had argued that their obesity put them at
heightened risk of pain due to the controversial midazolam, which
was previously used in botched executions in Oklahoma and Arizona.
The U.S. Supreme Court denied those claims without comment.
States with the death penalty have struggled to obtain enough lethal
injection drugs, including midazolam, as manufacturers and
distributors have increasingly refused to provide supplies for
capital punishment.
Jones was the second inmate executed in Arkansas since 2005, after
the state put Ledell Lee to death last week. Arkansas has scheduled
another execution on Thursday.
(Writing and additional reporting by Joseph Ax; Editing by Bill
Trott & Simon Cameron-Moore)
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