Killer of Alabama policeman seeks
execution reprieve due to memory loss
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[January 25, 2018]
By David Beasley
(Reuters) - Attorneys for an Alabama man
convicted of murdering a police officer in 1985 are asking the U.S.
Supreme Court to halt his execution on Thursday because they said
several strokes had left him unable to remember committing the crime.
Vernon Madison, 67, has spent more than three decades on death row for
killing Mobile police officer Julius Schulte. His lethal injection would
be the second in the United States this year if carried out at 6 p.m.
CST at the William C. Holman Correctional Facility in Atmore.
In an appeal this week to the U.S. Supreme Court, Madison's lawyers said
he should not be executed because he is legally blind, cannot walk
without assistance and is unable to recall the murder or understand his
punishment.
“His mind and body are failing,” lawyers wrote in the petition seeking a
stay.
The court has not yet ruled.

In 2016, the Atlanta-based 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that
Madison was no longer legally eligible to be executed because of his
memory loss.
But the U.S. Supreme Court in November reversed that decision, saying
court precedent had not established “that a prisoner is incompetent to
be executed because of a failure to remember his commission of the
crime.”
Madison’s attorneys have asked justices to reconsider the case. They
said in their petition that the state failed to disclose that a
court-appointed psychologist who evaluated the inmate was addicted to
narcotics and had been suspended from his practice for forging
prescriptions, making his findings invalid.
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Vernon Madison, one of Alabama's longest-serving death row inmates,
appears in a booking photo provided by the Alabama Department of
Corrections. Alabama Department of Corrections/Handout via
REUTERS/File Photo

Lawyers for Alabama argue that Madison's own expert witness has
testified that he understands what he was tried for and “the meaning
of a death sentence.”
According to court records, Madison killed Schulte during a domestic
dispute that Madison was having with his girlfriend.
Madison appeared to leave his girlfriend's home after retrieving his
belongings, but then crept up behind Schulte as he sat in his patrol
car and shot him twice in the back of the head with a .32-caliber
pistol.
Madison, who is black, was sentenced to death in 1994 in his third
trial after his first two convictions were thrown out on appeal for
racial discrimination in jury selection and other prosecutorial
misconduct.
(Reporting by David Beasley in Atlanta; Editing by Colleen Jenkins
and Peter Cooney)
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