Georgia scheduled to execute man for
murdering sister-in-law
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[September 26, 2017]
By David Beasley
ATLANTA (Reuters) - Georgia is scheduled on
Tuesday to execute a man for the 1990 shotgun murder of his
sister-in-law, as lawyers for the inmate argue the lethal injection
should be halted because his conviction was tainted by a juror with
racist views.
Keith Tharpe, 59, who is black, is due to be executed at 7 p.m. at the
Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Center in Jackson for murdering
Jackie Freeman, the sister of his wife, Migrisus Tharpe.
The Georgia State Board of Pardons and Paroles on Monday denied a
request to stop the execution after lawyers for Tharpe said a white
juror in the case “possessed profoundly racist views” and repeatedly
used racial slurs during deliberations to describe Tharpe.
His lawyers also have filed a last-ditch motion with the U.S. Supreme
Court seeking to halt the execution due to what they argued was racial
bias on the part of the juror.
“After studying the Bible, I have wondered if black people even have
souls,” the juror told Tharpe’s lawyers in an affidavit a few years
after the trial, according to Tharpe’s appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court
filed on Saturday.
Two of the 12 members of the jury that convicted him in 1991 were black,
according to court records. The jury voted unanimously to sentence
Tharpe to death.
In the parole board petition requesting commutation of Tharpe’s sentence
to life without parole, his lawyers said he was a crack cocaine addict
with “limited intellectual abilities,” who now shows remorse for the
killing.
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Georgia deathrow inmate Keith Leroy Tharpe, who is scheduled to be
put to death on September 26, 2017, is seen in this undated photo.
Courtesy Georgia Department of Corrections/Handout via REUTERS
Tharpe was convicted of killing Freeman when he encountered her with
his wife as they drove to work. He blocked their car, took out a
shotgun and repeatedly shot Freeman, court records showed.
Tharpe then drove with his wife to nearby Macon where he planned to
force her to withdraw money from her bank. Inside the bank, she
called police, the records showed.
If the execution is carried out, Tharpe would be the 19th person put
to death in the United States this year and the second person in
Georgia, according to the Death Penalty Information Center, which
monitors U.S. capital punishment.
(Reporting by David Beasley; Writing by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by
Peter Cooney)
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