On this date, January 26, 1996, a child killer, John Albert Taylor was executed by the firing squad in Utah. I got the information from Wikipedia.
Utah State Prison mug shot
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Born
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June 6,
1959
Ogden, Utah, USA |
Died
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January 26,
1996 (aged 36)
Draper, Utah, USA |
Conviction(s)
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Carrying a
concealed weapon, burglary – 1977, Florida
Sexual assault, murder – December 1989, Utah |
Penalty
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Execution
by firing squad
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Conviction
status
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Executed at
Utah State Prison on January 26, 1996
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Parents
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Albert
Taylor
Gaylene Taylor |
John Albert Taylor (June 6, 1959 – January 26, 1996) was an American who
was convicted of burglary and carrying a concealed weapon in the state of
Florida, and sexual assault and murder in the state of Utah. Taylor's own
sister tipped off police in June 1989 after 11-year-old Charla King was found
raped and strangled to death in Washington Terrace, Utah. His fingerprints were
found at the crime scene, which was located in an apartment complex where he
had been staying. In December 1989, Taylor was sentenced to death and placed on
death row at Utah State Prison.
Taylor
gave up appealing his sentence after his request for retrial was rejected by
the Utah Supreme Court. He became the second person to be executed by firing
squad in the United States (after Gary Gilmore) since the death penalty was
reinstated in 1976. Taylor said he chose this method of execution to embarrass
the state of Utah. On January 26, 1996, the day of Taylor's execution,
legislation was introduced in the Utah House of Representatives to eliminate
the firing squad. In 2004, the state of Utah withdrew the firing squad as a
method of execution, leaving lethal injection as the only remaining option.
Background
John
Albert Taylor was born in Ogden, Utah to Albert and Gaylene Taylor, who
separated during his infancy. He moved several times during his youth,
including a move to Colorado at the age of nine, when he was told that his
father had died. According to Taylor, he was raised in Florida, where he was
abused as a child and became involved in drugs by his teens. Taylor stated that
he did not get along with his stepfather, a Vietnam veteran, or his mother:
"But she could never control me. My mother had a lot of animosity toward
my father. They alienated me for a long time. I was the whipping post." At
the age of 13, he stabbed his stepfather. According to court records, he
repeatedly raped his sister Laurie during his teens, assaulted other young
girls, and was committed to a sex offender program. In 1974, Taylor moved back
to Ogden to live with his grandmother, but soon returned to Florida.
In
1977, Taylor was arrested in Florida and charged with burglary and carrying a
concealed weapon after he was caught with a stolen gun. He was convicted and
imprisoned until December 1981, when he was released on parole. In March 1982,
he was arrested in Fort Lauderdale, Florida for armed burglary, armed robbery,
and sexual assault. He had been diagnosed at the age of 17 as "a
remorseless pedophile." He was acquitted of the charges in September 1982,
but was sentenced to 15 additional years in prison for parole violations. In
1989, Taylor was released and departed for Utah to be with his sisters and
biological father, who he discovered was still alive.
From all I saw, my father was a good man. But while I was growing up, I was told so many stories about him that I've come to learn were all lies. My father was being painted a villain when he really wasn't one. I've come to learn that the real villain was my mother.—John Albert Taylor, March 7, 1992
Death
of Charla King
At
around 3:20 p.m. on June 23, 1989, Sherron King returned from work to her
apartment in Washington Terrace, Utah to find the body of her daughter Charla
in the bedroom with a nightgown wrapped around her head and panties stuffed in
her mouth. After calling the police, she was instructed to perform
cardiopulmonary resuscitation and discovered that Charla had been strangled to
death with a telephone cord. Charla's foster grandmother Bertha Poster stated
that she had dropped Charla off at the apartment at about 1:30 p.m. after
visiting the mall. Charla had been planning to celebrate her 12th birthday at
an amusement park on the next day.
Arrest
On
June 25, a tipster, who was later revealed to be Taylor's sister Laurie Galli,
contacted Washington Terrace Police officer Marcia Gathercole with information
connected to the murder. Taylor's fingerprints were found on a telephone in the
King residence and matched to records provided by authorities in Fort
Lauderdale. He was arrested at about 9 p.m. on June 28 at the home of his
half-sister Tresa Taylor in Ogden, Utah and charged with first-degree murder
the next morning. Taylor had arrived from Florida four days before the murder
and had been staying with another sister in the same apartment complex.
I remember telling my father that whoever they arrested for this crime was history, and that was before my arrest.—John Albert Taylor, January 1996
Sherron
King moved out of the apartment complex on June 28. She was upset that the
neighbors who came forward as witnesses did nothing when they heard her
daughter screaming.
Murder
trial
On
November 27, 1989, the trial commenced under District Judge David Roth after
Taylor waived his right to a jury. Taylor testified on his own behalf that he
only entered the apartment in the act of burglary while no one was home,
leaving his fingerprints on the phone when he found money underneath it. Weber
County deputy attorney William Daines stated that Taylor previously denied
being in the apartment and that two witnesses placed him at the scene at the
time of the crime. Prison inmate Mike Gallegos testified that he had a brief
conversation in which Taylor told him that he killed a girl by accident. Duane
Moyes and James Gaskill of the Weber State College crime laboratory testified
that the person who cut the telephone cord with a knife and wrapped it around
the neck of the victim was likely the same as the one who left behind
fingerprints on the phone. Lab director Gaskill stated that the prints, three
of which were matched to fingers on Taylor's left hand, were the only evidence
that placed Taylor at the crime scene. Gaskill said there was no evidence in
the apartment to indicate a burglary took place or that any other person was
connected to the murder.
On
December 5, 1989, Judge Roth found Taylor guilty of murder and sexual assault.
During the penalty phase of Taylor's trial, his half-sister Leslie Beale
traveled from Florida to testify about his harsh treatment under his stepfather
and the three years that Taylor spent in a sex offender program at a Florida
mental institution. On December 19, Taylor became the first convict in 40 years
to be sent to death row by a Weber County court. Roth said that the facts of the
case outweighed any mitigating circumstances. Taylor's father Albert attended
most of his son's court proceedings until he died of heart failure on October
8, 1990. Taylor said he was not permitted to attend his father's funeral.
Appeals
The
case was automatically appealed to the Utah Supreme Court, which upheld
Taylor's conviction and sentence in October 1991. Taylor's execution was
initially scheduled for January 15, 1992. The date was rescheduled to June 24
when Taylor's attorney Martin Gravis requested to withdraw from the case. On
June 17, Judge Roth granted a stay of execution after Taylor's new defense
attorney Ron Yengich requested more time to prepare an appeal. At issue was a
new 1992 law in Utah that established the sentence of life imprisonment without
parole.
While
incarcerated at Utah State Prison, Taylor kept busy in an effort to overcome
his claustrophobia and boredom. He earned his high school diploma and studied
to be a paralegal until his educational grant money ran out.
In
October 1995, Taylor decided to end further appeals after the Utah Supreme
Court rejected his argument that his legal counsel was ineffective. He fired
defense attorney Ed Brass, stating: "If I don't fight for my appeal, I
don't need an attorney." Taylor said he was prepared to die partly because
of his failing health, including an enlarged heart, bleeding ulcers, and
swollen legs and feet.
I don't want to die alone in my cell.—John Albert Taylor, December 1995
Judge
Roth ordered Taylor to choose a method of execution. Taylor chose to be
executed by firing squad to make the process more difficult for Utah state
officials. In an interview with the Deseret News, he stated: "I
didn't commit the murder, and I'm not going to submit to letting them kill me
on that table." Regarding the option of lethal injection, Taylor said,
"I don't want to go flipping around like a fish out of water on that
table."
To be strapped to a table and injected full of drugs leaves me with a feeling of helplessness; because I am innocent of the crime for which I was convicted of. Anyway, if my execution is carried out, it will be a murder. Granted, it may be legally sanctioned, but, nonetheless, murder it will be, and the firing squad is my way of showing that point; and because of the cost and the inconvenience it will cause the state because they are not really prepared for an execution by firing squad.—John Albert Taylor, January 21, 1992
Execution
When
Taylor ordered a last meal of pizzas "with everything," some law
enforcement veterans recalled that the same request was made by Barton Kay
Kirkham, the last man to be hanged in Utah. Like Taylor, Kirkham had selected
his method of execution with the goal of inconveniencing the state. On January
25, 1996, Taylor spent his final evening sharing his pizza with his uncle
Gordon Lee while joined by former attorney Ed Brass and Catholic priest Reyes
Rodriguez, who administered the Last Rites. Taylor, whose stomach had been
doing "flip-flops" earlier in the day, requested antacid medication
and declined deputy warden Wally Schulsen's offer for more pizza, soda, and
coffee. He gave his glasses to warden Hank Galetka and said, "There is no
need for them." Taylor refused an offer to be sedated before his
execution, but was allowed his first cigarette in six years.
Five
police officers, who volunteered to carry out the execution, were each paid
$300. The shooters used identical Winchester Model 94 rifles. One prison
official selected each rifle at random from a table and handed them to another
prison official sitting in a small room, out of sight. The second prison
official would then load the rifle, and return it to the table. Four of the
rifles were loaded with live ammunition. One was secretly loaded with a wax
bullet so that none of the officers would be certain that they fired a deadly
shot. The non-lethal cartridge was tested to ensure that the report and recoil
was difficult to distinguish from a real cartridge.
Media
coverage
Taylor
was executed by firing squad in a warehouse at Utah State Prison at
12:03 a.m. on January 26, 1996.
Over
168 news and television crews from around the world were on hand to report the
execution, which was set up inside a warehouse at Utah State Prison in Draper.
Nine media witnesses were allowed to record the actual event. Actor and
activist Mike Farrell appeared as a commentator for the American Civil
Liberties Union in opposition to the death penalty. Elliott King, the uncle of
Charla King, was the sole member of the victim's family to arrive as a witness
and expressed that he had no sympathy for Taylor. Sister Helen Prejean, the
author of Dead Man Walking, wrote Taylor a letter that was delivered
right before his execution.
Death
Shortly
before midnight, Taylor was led into the execution chamber and strapped to a
chair 17 feet away from the shooters with a hood covering his head. Multiple
bright lights covered Taylor. Sandbags were arranged behind him to prevent any
ricochets. The captain walked down the aisle, tapping each shooter on the
shoulder to check to see if they were ready. At 12:03 a.m. Mountain Standard
Time on January 26, 1996, every shooter fired at the count of five and the
white cloth target on Taylor's chest flew off. His chest moved upward and his
left hand tightened into a fist. His grip gradually loosened and his head fell
back. A doctor checked Taylor's neck for a pulse and cut two holes in his hood
to check for a pupillary light reflex. Taylor was declared dead at 12:07 a.m.
and became the 49th person to be executed in the state of Utah since 1852.
I would like to say for my family and my friends — as the poem was written, 'Remember me, but let me go.'—Final statement of John Albert Taylor, 12:01 a.m., January 26, 1996
Aftermath
After
an autopsy, Taylor's remains were cremated and shipped to his uncle Gordon Lee
in Oregon. The Salt Lake County Sheriff's Office said it would specify homicide
as the cause of death on Taylor's death certificate because the execution met
the state's definition of "intentional death by another hand."
However, Utah state law exempts the actions of executioners from prosecution. A
commemorative pin was created to recognize the staff who had participated in
the execution. Eight hours after Taylor's execution, Utah State Representative
Sheryl Allen first introduced a bill to eliminate the firing squad, and later
succeeded in passing HB180, which removed the right of the condemned to choose
their method of execution after February 2004.
If they choose the firing squad, it's one last magnificent manipulation of the system to bring attention to themselves... It's time for Utah to do away with the firing squad.—Sheryl Allen, Utah House of Representatives, January 21, 2004
MY
THOUGHTS:
John
Albert Taylor can be added on to my list of those executed by the firing squad.
These include Gary Gilmore, Amrozi, Imam Samudra, Ali Ghufron, Al Rashidi and Anton Dostler.
He
will also join the list of those executed pedophiles like Martin Link, Al
Rashidi, Westley Allan Dodd and Mamoru Takuma who all have now been terminated
from the face of the earth. I totally denounce Sheryl Allen’s idea that Utah
should do away with the firing squad, whether it attracts attention or not, I
do not want these killers to die a painless death like lethal injection.
I just don't understand why states don't have the death penalty anymore. Murder/rape? Cutting people up. These creeps need to be be put in the ground.
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