South Carolina inmate dies by lethal injection in state’s first
execution in 13 years
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[September 21, 2024]
By JEFFREY COLLINS
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — South Carolina put inmate Freddie Owens to death
Friday as the state restarted executions after an unintended 13-year
pause because prison officials couldn’t get the drugs needed for lethal
injections.
Owens was convicted of the 1997 killing of a Greenville convenience
store clerk during a robbery. While on trial, Owens killed a person
incarcerated at a county jail. His confession to that attack was read to
two different juries and a judge who all sentenced him to death.
Owens, 46, made no final statement. His last meal was two cheeseburgers,
french fries, well-done ribeye steak, six chicken wings, two strawberry
sodas and a slice of apple pie.
When the curtain to the death chamber opened, Owens was strapped to a
gurney, his arms stretched to his sides. After the drug was
administered, he said “bye” to his lawyer and she said “bye" to him.
He smiled slightly and his facial expression did not change much before
he appeared to lose consciousness after about a minute. Then his eyes
closed and he took several deep breaths. His breathing got shallower and
his face twitched for another four or five minutes before the movements
stopped.
A doctor came in and declared him dead a little over 10 minutes later at
6:55 p.m.
Owens' last-ditch appeals were repeatedly denied, including by a federal
court Friday morning. Owens also petitioned for a stay of execution from
the U.S. Supreme Court. South Carolina's governor and corrections
director swiftly filed a reply, stating the high court should reject
Owens' petition. The filing said nothing is exceptional about his case.
The high court denied the request shortly after the scheduled start time
of the execution.
His last chance to avoid death was for Republican South Carolina Gov.
Henry McMaster to commute his sentence to life in prison. McMaster
denied Owens' request as well, stating that he had “carefully reviewed
and thoughtfully considered” Owens' application for clemency.
First execution in 13 years
Owens may be the first of several people to die in the state's death
chamber at Broad River Correctional Institution. Five other people are
out of appeals, and the South Carolina Supreme Court has cleared the way
to hold an execution every five weeks.
South Carolina first tried to add the firing squad to restart executions
after its supply of lethal injection drugs expired and no company was
willing to publicly sell them more. But the state had to pass a shield
law keeping the drug supplier and much of the protocol for executions
secret to be able to reopen the death chamber.
To carry out executions, the state switched from a three-drug method to
a new protocol of using just the sedative pentobarbital. The new process
is similar to how the federal government kills people on death row,
state prison officials said.
South Carolina law allows condemned people to choose lethal injection,
the new firing squad or the electric chair built in 1912. Owens allowed
his lawyer to choose how he died, saying he felt if he made the choice
he would be a party to his own death, and his religious beliefs denounce
suicide.
Owens changed his name to Khalil Divine Black Sun Allah while in prison,
but court and prison records continue to refer to him as Owens.
The crimes
Owens was convicted of killing Irene Graves in 1999. Prosecutors said he
fired a shot into the head of the single mother of three who worked
three jobs when she said she couldn't open the store's safe.
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Rev. Hillary Taylor protests the planned execution of Freddie Eugene
Owens, 46, on Friday, Sept. 20, 2024, in Columbia, S.C. Owens is set
to be the first person to be executed in South Carolina in 13 years.
(AP Photo/Chris Carlson)
Hanging over his case was another killing: After his conviction, but
before he was sentenced in Graves’ killing, Owens fatally attacked
Christopher Lee, whom he was incarcerated with at a county jail.
Owens gave a detailed confession about how he stabbed Lee, burned
his eyes, choked and stomped him, ending by saying he did it
“because I was wrongly convicted of murder,” according to an
investigator's written account.
The confession was read to each jury and judge who went on to
sentence Owens to death. Owens had two different death sentences
overturned on appeal only to end up back on death row.
Owens was charged with murder in Lee's death but was never tried.
Prosecutors dropped the charges with the right to restore them in
2019 around the time Owens ran out of regular appeals.
Final appeals
In his final appeal, Owens' lawyers said prosecutors never presented
scientific evidence that Owens pulled the trigger when Graves was
killed and the chief evidence against him was a co-defendant who
pleaded guilty and testified that Owens was the killer.
Owens’ attorneys provided a sworn statement two days before the
execution from Steven Golden saying Owens was not in the store,
contradicting his trial testimony. Prosecutors said other friends of
Owens and his former girlfriend testified that he bragged about
killing the clerk.
Owens' lawyers also said he was just 19 when the killing happened
and that he had brain damage from physical and sexual violence while
in a juvenile prison.
“Mr. Owens’s childhood was marked by suffering on a scale that is
hard to comprehend. He spent his adulthood in prison for a crime
that he did not commit,” attorney Gerald “Bo” King said in a
statement following Owens’ execution. “The legal errors, hidden
deals, and false evidence that made tonight possible should shame us
all.”
South Carolinians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty held a vigil
outside the prison about 90 minutes before Owens was scheduled to
die.
South Carolina restarts the death penalty
South Carolina’s last execution was in May 2011. It took a decade of
wrangling in the Legislature — first adding the firing squad as a
method and later passing a shield law — to get capital punishment
restarted.
South Carolina has put 43 people to death since the death penalty
was restarted in the U.S. in 1976. In the early 2000s, it was
carrying out an average of three executions a year. Only nine states
have put more people to death.
Since the unintentional execution pause, South Carolina’s death row
population has dwindled. The state had 63 condemned people in early
2011. It now has 31 after Owens' death Friday. About 20 people have
been taken off death row and received different prison sentences
after successful appeals. Others have died of natural causes.
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