Alabama carries out nation’s third nitrogen gas execution on a man for a
hitchhiker's killing
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[November 22, 2024]
By KIM CHANDLER
ATMORE, Ala. (AP) — An Alabama man convicted in the 1994 killing of a
hitchhiker cursed at the prison warden and made obscene gestures with
his hands shortly before he was put to death Thursday evening in the
nation’s third execution using nitrogen gas.
Carey Dale Grayson, 50, was executed at the William C. Holman
Correctional Facility in southern Alabama. He was one of four teenagers
convicted of killing Vickie DeBlieux, 37, as she hitchhiked through the
state on the way to her mother’s home in Louisiana. The woman was
attacked, beaten and thrown off a cliff.
Alabama began using nitrogen gas earlier this year to carry out some
executions. The method involves placing a respirator gas mask over the
face to replace breathable air with pure nitrogen gas, causing death by
lack of oxygen.
Alabama Corrections Commissioner John Q. Hamm said the nitrogen flowed
for 15 minutes and an electrocardiogram showed Grayson no longer had a
heartbeat about 10 minutes after the gas began flowing.
Like two others previously executed by nitrogen, Grayson shook at times
before taking a periodic series of gasping breaths.
The victim's daughter told reporters afterward that her mother had her
future stolen from her. But she also spoke out against the decision to
execute Grayson and “murdering inmates under the guise of justice.”
The curtains to the execution room were opened shortly after 6 p.m.
Strapped to a gurney with a blue-rimmed gas mask on his face, Grayson
responded with an obscenity when the warden asked if he had any final
words. Prison officials turned off the microphone. Grayson appeared to
speak toward the witness room where state officials were present, but
his words could not be heard. He raised both middle fingers at the start
of the execution.
It was unclear when the gas began flowing. Grayson rocked his head,
shook and pulled against the gurney restraints. He clenched his fist and
appeared to struggle to try to gesture again. His sheet-wrapped legs
lifted off the gurney into the air at 6:14 p.m. He took a periodic
series of more than a dozen gasping breaths for several minutes. He
appeared to stop breathing at 6:21 p.m., and then the curtains to the
viewing room were closed at 6:27 p.m.
Grayson was pronounced dead at 6:33 p.m.
DeBlieux’s mutilated body was found at the bottom of a bluff near
Odenville, Alabama, on Feb. 26, 1994. She was hitchhiking from
Chattanooga, Tennessee, to her mother’s home in West Monroe, Louisiana,
when the four teens offered her a ride. Prosecutors said the teens took
her to a wooded area and attacked and beat her. They returned to
mutilate her body.
A medical examiner testified that her face was so fractured that she was
identified by an earlier X-ray of her spine. Investigators said the
teens were identified as suspects after one of them showed a friend one
of DeBlieux’s severed fingers and boasted about the killing.
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A demonstrator holds a sign during a protest outside the Capitol in
Montgomery, Ala., on Monday, Nov. 18, 2024, against a scheduled
execution in Alabama using nitrogen gas. (Kim Chandler/Associated
Press)
DeBlieux’s daughter Jodi Haley spoke with reporters at the media
center on prison property after the execution. Haley was 12 when her
mother was killed, She said her mother had her life and future
stolen from her.
"She was unique. She was spontaneous. She was wild. She was funny.
She was gorgeous to boot,” Haley said of her mother.
She said Grayson was abused in every possible way in his youth but
“society failed this man as a child, and my family suffered because
of it.”
“Murdering inmates under the guise of justice needs to stop,” she
said, adding that "no one should have the right to take a person's
possibilities, days, and life."
Gov. Kay Ivey said afterward she was praying for the victim’s loved
ones to find closure and healing.
“Some thirty years ago, Vicki DeBlieux’s journey to her mother’s
house and ultimately, her life, were horrifically cut short because
of Carey Grayson and three other men," Ivey said in a statement.
“She sensed something was wrong, attempted to escape, but instead,
was brutally tortured and murdered.”
Grayson's crimes "were heinous, unimaginable, without an ounce of
regard for human life and just unexplainably mean. An execution by
nitrogen hypoxia (bears) no comparison to the death and
dismemberment Ms. DeBlieux experienced,” she added.
Grayson was the only one of the four teenagers who faced a death
sentence since the other teens were under 18 at the time of the
killing. Grayson was 19.
The execution was carried out hours after the U.S. Supreme Court
turned down Grayson’s request for a stay. His final appeals had
focused on a call for more scrutiny of the nitrogen gas method. His
lawyers argued the execution method causes “conscious suffocation”
and that the first two nitrogen executions did not result in swift
unconsciousness and death as the state had promised.
Hamm said he thought some of Grayson's initial movements were “all
show” but maintained other movements exhibited by Grayson and the
two others executed by nitrogen gas were expected involuntary
movements, including the breathing at the end.
No state other than Alabama has used nitrogen hypoxia to carry out a
death sentence. In 2018, Alabama became the third state — along with
Oklahoma and Mississippi — to authorize the use of nitrogen gas to
execute prisoners.
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