Virginia man facing execution draws
international support for clemency
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[July 06, 2017]
By Ian Simpson
(Reuters) - A Virginia inmate convicted of
killing two men during a 2006 escape from custody is set to be put to
death on Thursday in an execution that has drawn international pleas for
clemency on grounds that he is severely mentally ill.
William Morva, 35, is scheduled to die by lethal injection at 9 p.m. EDT
on Thursday (0100 GMT on Friday) at the Greensville Correctional Center
in Jarratt, Virginia.
Morva's lawyers are asking Governor Terry McAuliffe to commute his
sentence, arguing he suffers from delusional disorder, an illness akin
to schizophrenia. They say the jury that convicted him was given
incorrect information about his ailment and its severity.
Morva, who holds dual Hungarian-American citizenship, was being held in
the Montgomery County Jail on robbery charges when he was taken to a
hospital in August 2006 for minor injuries.
In an attempt to escape, he stole a gun from a deputy sheriff at the
hospital and shot an unarmed security guard to death. The next day,
before being recaptured, Morva shot a deputy sheriff who was searching
for him.
Dawn Davison, one of Morva's lawyers, said in a statement on Wednesday
that Morva's mental health had worsened because prison doctors had
refused to treat him. More than 34,000 people have petitioned McAuliffe
to spare his life, she said.
The Hungarian Embassy in Washington and the European Union have written
McAuliffe seeking clemency. United Nations human rights experts said
this week that Morva's original trial did not meet fair trial
safeguards.
Twenty Virginia state lawmakers sent a letter to McAuliffe, saying
Morva's sentence should be commuted to life in prison without parole.
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William Charles Morva is pictured in this undated handout photo
obtained by Reuters June 29, 2017. Virginia Department of
Corrections/Handout via REUTERS
The daughter of the slain deputy sent an email to media outlets
saying she had told McAuliffe she also supported sparing Morva's
life, the Charlottesville Daily Progress reported.
Brian Coy, a spokesman for the Democratic governor, said in an email
that the governor "takes a decision like this very seriously and
that he is careful reviewing all of the materials in this case."
The U.S. Supreme Court declined in February to hear Morva's appeal.
If carried out, Thursday's execution will be the 113th in Virginia
since the Supreme Court allowed resumption of the death penalty in
1976. That number would place Virginia second among states on the
U.S. executions list behind Texas, which has had 542, according to
the Death Penalty Information Center.
There have been 13 U.S. executions this year, the center said.
(Reporting by Ian Simpson in Washington; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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