Alabama set to execute 83-year-old
convicted bomber
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[April 19, 2018]
(Reuters) - Alabama is set on
Thursday to execute an 83-year-old convicted pipe-bomb killer who could
be the oldest person put to death in the modern era of U.S. capital
punishment.
The execution of Walter Moody is planned for 6 p.m. at the William C.
Holman Correctional Facility in Atmore. It would be the eighth this year
in the United States.
If the execution is carried out, Moody would replace John Nixon, who was
77 when put to death in December 2005 in Mississippi, as the oldest
person executed since the U.S. Supreme Court reinstated the death
penalty in 1976, according to the Death Penalty Information Center,
which monitors U.S. capital punishment.
Moody was convicted of mailing a bomb in 1989 that killed U.S. Circuit
Court Judge Robert Vance, 58, and another that killed Georgia civil
rights attorney Robert Robinson.
Prosecutors have said Moody sent the bomb to the judge in anger over a
1972 bomb conviction that Moody felt derailed his career and sent
another to the civil rights lawyer to confuse investigators.
Moody, who has spent more than 20 years on death row, has maintained his
innocence and his lawyers have not yet used his age in appeals seeking
to halt the execution. He has applied for clemency at the state level.
As of Wednesday afternoon, there were no appeals registered in the
federal court system, online records showed.
Age and poor health were major factors in a botched execution in Alabama
earlier this year when the state tried to put to death Doyle Hamm, 61,
who had terminal cancer and severely compromised veins.
The execution was called off while Hamm was on a death chamber gurney
and medical staff could not place a line for the lethal injection.
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Death row inmate and convicted pipe bomb killer Walter Moody,
scheduled to be executed at the William C. Holman Correctional
Facility in Atmore, Alabama, U.S. on April 19, 2018, is seen in this
undated Alabama Department of Corrections photo. Alabama Department
of Corrections/Handout via REUTERS
Lawyers for Hamm called on the state not to try to execute him again and
reached a settlement with Alabama in March that a legal source said
would keep him out of the death chamber.
(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz in Austin, Texas; Additional reporting by
David Beasley in Atlanta; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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