Slava Novorossiya

Slava Novorossiya
Showing posts with label Double Murders. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Double Murders. Show all posts

Thursday, January 27, 2022

Donald Grant executed in Oklahoma for the murders of Brenda Mcelyea and Suzette Smith (January 27, 2022)

   

Donald Grant executed for the 1998 murders of Brenda Mcelyea and Suzette Smith

[PHOTO SOURCE: https://theblackwallsttimes.com/2021/11/29/ok-cadp-seeks-to-spare-mentally-ill-death-row-prisoner-donald-anthony-grant-from-execution/]

 

           On this date, January 27, 2022, Donald Anthony Grant was executed by lethal injection in Oklahoma. He was convicted of murdering two hotel workers, Brenda Mcelyea and Suzette Smith in 1998.

   

Show them no mercy for you shall receive none! - Aragorn II Elessar

[PHOTO SOURCE: https://victimsfamiliesforthedeathpenalty.blogspot.com/2021/07/justice-for-louisa-jespersen.html]


Oklahoma executes man for 2001 slayings of 2 hotel workers

28 January 2022, 11:46

5 min read

McALESTER, Okla. -- Oklahoma executed a man Thursday for the brutal slayings of two hotel workers during a robbery in 2001.

Donald Grant, 46, received a lethal injection at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester and was declared dead at 10:16 a.m. It was the first execution in the U.S. in 2022 and the third in Oklahoma since the state resumed lethal injections in October following a nearly seven-year hiatus.

“Yo, God, I got this," Grant said while lying strapped to the gurney, delivering his disjointed last words for two minutes. “No medication. I didn't take nothing. Brooklyn for life."

Grant at one point began chanting unintelligibly.

Even after Grant was told his two minutes to deliver his last words had ended and the microphone inside the execution chamber was turned off, Grant continued to speak to about seven witnesses who attended the execution on his behalf.

A few minutes later, Grant's eyelids began to droop and he appeared to be sleeping. After a doctor entered the room to conduct a consciousness check, rubbing his sternum and calling his name, Grant could be heard snoring as a prison official declared him unconscious at 10:09 p.m. He appeared to stop breathing about two minutes later.

  

Brenda Mcelyea and Suzette Smith

[PHOTO SOURCE: https://www.newsbreak.com/news/2497876752910/execution-of-donald-grant-described-as-peaceful-and-uneventful]


Shirl Pilcher, the sister of one of Grant's victims, Brenda McElyea, said her family felt that justice had been served.

“Although Donald Grant's execution does not bring Brenda back, it allows us all to finally move forward knowing justice was served," Pilcher said after witnessing his execution.

Grant had asked a federal judge to temporarily halt his execution, arguing that he should be reinstated as a plaintiff in a separate lawsuit challenging Oklahoma’s three-drug lethal injection protocol as presenting a risk of unconstitutional pain and suffering. But both a federal judge and a three-judge panel of the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver previously denied that request. The U.S. Supreme Court denied Grant’s request on Wednesday.

Several Oklahoma death row inmates with pending execution dates have sought to delay their executions after John Grant convulsed on the gurney and vomited after receiving the first dose of midazolam, a sedative, during his October execution.

John Grant's execution was the state's first since problems with the state's lethal injection protocols in 2014 and 2015 led to a de facto moratorium. Richard Glossip was just hours away from being executed in September 2015 when prison officials realized they received the wrong lethal drug. It was later learned the same wrong drug had been used to execute an inmate in January 2015.

The drug mix-ups followed a botched execution in April 2014 in which inmate Clayton Lockett struggled on a gurney before dying 43 minutes into his lethal injection — and after the state’s prisons chief ordered executioners to stop.

During a clemency hearing in November, Donald Grant admitted killing Brenda McElyea and Felicia Suzette Smith so that there would be no witnesses to his robbery of the Del City hotel. Court records show both women were shot and stabbed, and Smith was also bludgeoned. Prosecutors say both women also begged him to spare their lives before he killed them.

During November's hearing, he expressed “deep, sincere remorse” and apologized for the killings, but the state’s Pardon and Parole Board voted 4-1 against recommending clemency.

“I can't change that," he said of the crime while speaking to the board. “If I could, I would, but I can't change that."

Two of Donald Grant's attorneys, Susan Otto and Emma Rolls from the federal public defender's office, argued that he was mentally ill and had suffered brain damage that made him a candidate for mercy. They also discussed Grant’s childhood growing up in a New York City housing project during the crack epidemic of the 1980s, a time when he was frequently beaten and members of his family experienced alcoholism, drug addiction and mental illness.

  

If the criminal taking of a human life does not merit forfeiture of one's own life, then what value have we placed on the life taken? - Pat Buchanan

[PHOTO SOURCE: https://quozio.com/quote/5hvg8xggccvn/1318/if-the-criminal-taking-of-a-human-life-does-not-merit]

http://victimsfamiliesforthedeathpenalty.blogspot.com/2015/11/pat-buchanan-on-sanctity-of-life-pro.html

Article: http://victimsfamiliesforthedeathpenalty.blogspot.com/2015/11/scalia-v-pope-whos-right-on-death.html


But the board also heard from members of McElyea's family, who tearfully urged them to reject clemency for him.

Pilcher, McElyea’s sister, recalled the pain she experienced when she had to tell their father that McElyea had been killed.

“I had to call my dad and tell him his daughter, his baby girl, was dead,” Pilcher said. “I had never seen him cry, but that night I heard him weep and it broke my heart.”

The U.S. Supreme Court considered Thursday whether to let Alabama execute a death row inmate who claims an intellectual disability combined with the state’s inattention cost him a chance to avoid lethal injection. The state executed Matthew Reeves, 43, by lethal injection Thursday night.

———

This story has been corrected to show the correct spelling of Shirl Pilcher's last name.

INTERNET SOURCE: https://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/oklahoma-prepares-execute-man-2001-hotel-slayings-82502532

  

Shirl Filcher (pictured center), the sister of one of Grant's victims, Brenda McElyea, said her family felt that justice had been served.


‘Although Donald Grant's execution does not bring Brenda back, it allows us all to finally move forward knowing justice was served,' Filcher said after witnessing his execution. 'There was a time that there was doubt that justice would ever be served, and now there is none.'

“Today marks 20 years, six months, nine days and just minutes since Brenda McElyea was taken from this world by Donald Grant, but today, justice was served,” Filcher said. 

'Brenda's father Walter McElyea's dying wish was for justice to be served, and although he did not live to see it, I know he is rejoicing today.' 

'[Now] we can move forward, and the memories of the murder, the trial and the years spent waiting can be replaced with happier memories of Brenda, memories of her laughter, her smile, her wit, her charm and her loving heart. I, for one, am ready to remember the beauty of my sister instead of reliving the brutality of her death.'

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10446635/Oklahoma-prepares-execute-man-2001-hotel-slayings.html

OTHER LINKS:

See also

List of people executed in Texas, 2020–present

Tuesday, September 28, 2021

DOUBLE KILLER RICHARD RHOADES EXECUTED IN TEXAS ON SEPTEMBER 28, 2021

   

Rick Rhoades was executed by lethal injection Tuesday evening at the state penitentiary in Huntsville. He was condemned for the September 1991 killings of 31-year-old Charles Allen

[PHOTO SOURCE: https://abc13.com/texas-execution-inmate-sentenced-to-death-charles-allen-pasadena-brothers-murdered/11059852/]

 

On this date, September 28, 2021, Rick Rhoades, 57, was executed by lethal injection at the state penitentiary in Huntsville. He was condemned for the September 1991 killings of Charles Allen, 31, and Bradley Allen, 33. The brothers were killed less than a day after Rhoades had been released on parole after serving a sentence for burglary.

 

Even if a civil society were to be dissolved by the consent of all its members (e.g., if a people inhabiting an island decided to separate and disperse throughout the world), the last murderer remaining in prison would first have to be executed, so that each has done to him what his deeds deserve and blood guilt does not cling to the people for not having insisted upon this punishment; for otherwise the people can be regarded as collaborators in his public violation of justice. – Immanuel Kant

  


Texas inmate executed for fatally stabbing 2 brothers

HUNTSVILLE, Texas (AP) — A Texas inmate was executed Tuesday evening for fatally stabbing two Houston-area brothers during a robbery in their home more than 30 years ago.

Rick Rhoades, 57, was executed by lethal injection at the state penitentiary in Huntsville. He was condemned for the September 1991 killings of Charles Allen, 31, and Bradley Allen, 33. The brothers were killed less than a day after Rhoades had been released on parole after serving a sentence for burglary.

Rhoades, strapped to the death chamber gurney, turned his head and looked briefly at relatives of his victims as they walked to a window in a witness area a few feet from him. Asked by the warden to make a final statement, he declined.

Then as the lethal dose of the powerful sedative pentobarbital began flowing through needles in each of his arms, Rhoades took several deep breaths, gurgled twice and began snoring, each breath becoming less pronounced. Within about a minute, all movement stopped. He was pronounced dead at 6:29 p.m. CDT, 17 minutes after the lethal injection began.

The U.S. Supreme Court declined to delay Rhoades’ execution over claims his constitutional right to due process was being violated because he was being prevented from pursuing allegations that some potential jurors at his trial might have been dismissed for racially discriminatory reasons.

“We hope the Allen family finds peace after nearly 30 years of waiting for justice for their loved ones,” Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg, who attended the execution, said in a statement.

“The death penalty should be reserved for the worst of the worst, and a Harris County jury determined long ago that this defendant fits the bill. Let us honor the memory of the victims, Charles and Bradley Allen, and never forget that our focus has and always will be on the victims.”

Marley Allen Holt, Bradley Allen’s daughter who now lives in Brooklyn, N.Y., and who was born during Rhoades’ trial, said she attended Tuesday’s punishment because Rhoades watched her father die and “I wanted to watch him die.”

“It’s a weird feeling,” Kevin Allen, whose two brothers were slain, said after witnessing the execution. “I can’t really describe what it’s like. It’s the most solemn thing I think I’ve ever been part of, if that’s the word that’s even appropriate.”

In July, Rhoades’ attorneys had filed a federal lawsuit against state District Judge Ana Martinez in Houston over a request they had made that the judge order prosecutors to release information related to allegations some jurors were dismissed based on racial discrimination.

Martinez ruled she lacked jurisdiction to consider the request. The suit was dismissed earlier this month by a Houston federal judge, who also declined to stay the execution. The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Monday upheld the suit’s dismissal and also declined to stay the execution. The appeals court in 2019 had previously denied a similar claim by Rhoades’ attorneys on allegations that two Black jurors were dismissed due to racial bias. Rhoades is white.

Rhoades’ attorneys had previously unsuccessfully argued in other appeals: that his constitutional rights were violated when childhood photos depicting Rhoades in normal, happy activities and designed to show he was nonviolent and would do well in prison were excluded during his trial’s punishment phase; that a state investigator gave false testimony at his trial over whether Rhoades could receive an unaccompanied furlough if sentenced to life in prison; and that “evolving standards of decency” prohibit executions as a punishment for murder.

“A 2020 Gallup poll on Americans’ attitudes regarding capital punishment shows that public support for the death penalty is at its lowest in a half-century, with opposition higher than any time since 1996,” David Dow and Jeffrey Newberry wrote in a court motion last month.

  

Charles Allen, 31, and Bradley Allen, 33.


Rhoades had a long criminal history, including convictions for burglary and auto theft in Florida, Iowa and Texas, when he broke into Charles Allen’s house in the Houston suburb of Pasadena.

The home, located near where the siblings’ parents lived, had just been custom built for Charles Allen and he had invited his brother to temporarily live with him. The two brothers had recently gone through separate divorces.

Charles Allen, who played the piano and had dreams of a musical career, worked as a chemical operator at a local refinery. Bradley Allen worked as a freelance artist.

At trial, prosecutors told jurors the siblings were asleep when Rhoades broke into their home in the early morning hours and attacked Charles Allen as he was in his bed. Bradley Allen was killed when he came to his brother’s defense.

An arrest in the case wasn’t made until about a month later when Rhoades was caught burglarizing an elementary school. While in custody, Rhoades confessed to killing the brothers. But he claimed it was done in self-defense after exchanging words with Charles Allen as Rhoades took a walk at 2:30 a.m.

“I was tired of running. I wanted to tell what happened,” Rhoades said in his confession.

Rhoades was the third inmate put to death this year in Texas and the sixth in the U.S. Four more executions are scheduled for later this year in Texas, the nation’s busiest capital punishment state.

INTERNET SOURCE: https://apnews.com/article/texas-race-and-ethnicity-executions-racial-injustice-houston-4d674e247e2dc79d65adf3228dada893

  

Snakes are poisonous wherever they are. You can't underestimate a snake just because there's only one. It's dangerous wherever it is. - Ashin Wirathu

[PHOTO SOURCE: https://quozio.com/quote/cfng2qb4scqt/1289/snakes-are-poisonous-wherever-they-are-you-cant]

http://soldierexecutionerprolifer2008.blogspot.com/2021/09/firebrand-buddhist-monk-ashin-wirathu.html

OTHER LINKS:

https://www.tdcj.texas.gov/death_row/dr_executed_offenders.html

See also

Thursday, December 10, 2020

BRANDON BERNARD EXECUTED FOR THE 1999 MURDER OF TEXAS COUPLE (DECEMBER 10, 2020)

On this date, December 10, 2020, Brandon Bernard was executed in U.S. prison in Terre Haute, Indiana, by the US Federal Government. He was convicted of the 1999 murders of Texas Couple, Todd and Stacie Bagley in 1999.

Brandon Bernard

American double murderer Brandon Bernard


Born

Brandon Am Bernard


July 3, 1980

San Antonio, Texas, U.S.

Died

December 10, 2020 (aged 40)

Federal Correctional Institution, Terre Haute, Indiana, U.S.

Cause of death

Execution by lethal injection of phenobarbital

Education

Killeen High School (1997–1998)

Motive

Robbery

Conviction(s)

Murder (2 counts)

Criminal penalty

Death penalty

Partner(s)

Christopher Vialva, Terry Brown, Christopher Lewis, Tony Spark

Details

Victims

Todd Bagley
Stacie Bagley

Date

June 21, 1999

Imprisoned at

Federal Correctional Institution, Terre Haute


Brandon Am Bernard
(July 3, 1980 – December 10, 2020) was an American man who was convicted for the 1999 robbery, kidnapping, and murder of two people. He was sentenced to death for the murders and remained on death row until his execution in December 2020.

Bernard spent most of his childhood in Killeen, Texas. In his early teens, he began committing crimes such as burglary and joined a neighborhood gang. His crimes and rebellious behaviors lead him to being kicked out of several schools and prosecuted in the juvenile criminal justice system. In 1999, Bernard and a few of his friends robbed, kidnapped, and murdered two youth pastors, whom they shot burned inside a car.

Christopher Andre Vialva was executed on 24 September 2020, and Bernard was executed on 10 December. The remaining teens received a range of different prison terms; some remain incarcerated.

In the time leading to his execution, politicians, celebrities, and the prosecutor and several jurors who convicted Bernard advocated that his sentence be commuted.

INTERNET SOURCE: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brandon_Bernard

Early life

Brandon Bernard was born on July 3, 1980, to Army nurse Thelma Bernard in San Antonio, Texas. He had 2 younger siblings. Due to the Army transferring Bernard's mother to Alaska, the family moved briefly to Fairbanks, Alaska between 1982 and November 1984, they then moved to Killeen, Texas. He would spend the majority of his childhood in Killeen. As a child, Bernard was suffering from asthma. In 1986, Bernard began attending school at the Seventh-Day Adventist Academy. The family spent the summer of 1987 in Colorado for his mother's medical training. In September 1992, Bernard's intoxicated father sprayed his mother Thelma in the face with mace; the couple later divorced in 1993.

In 1994, Bernard's cousin Melsimeon Pollock joined the household. Pollock began promoting Bernard to burglarize houses in early 1995. Bernard's new rebellious and criminal behavior led him to be bounced between his parent's households, multiple school changes, and 5 months in a juvenile detention facility in Brownwood, Texas in 1995. Bernard then became a member of the organized neighborhood gang known as "212 Piru Bloods". In 1996, Bernard attempted to gain employment but failed to do so. He would later complete his GED in 1997 and enroll as a senior at Killeen High School for the 1997-1998 school year. While attending Killeen High School, he managed to receive decent grades and had good class attendance. In the summer of 1998, Bernard attempted to enroll in the United States Army but was rejected due to his juvenile offenses.

  

Christopher Vialva, 40, is set to receive the death penalty on Thursday at a federal prison in Terre Haute, Indiana. He was convicted 20 years ago for the 1999 murders of two youth ministers

[PHOTO SOURCE: https://wikispro.com/christopher-vialva-wiki-bio-age/]

Crimes

On the afternoon of June 21, 1999, Brandon Bernard, age 18, Christopher Vialva, age 19, Terry Brown, age 15, and Christopher Lewis, age 15, and Tony Spark, age 16, approached Todd and Stacie Bagley, two youth pastors, and asked them for a ride at a gas station–with plans to rob them. Once the Bagleys agreed to give them a ride, Vialva held the couple at gunpoint and forced them into the trunk. While in the trunk for several hours driving around, the Bagleys spoke through an opening in the backseat and urged their abductors to accept Jesus Christ and to spare their lives. The perpetrators then robbed the Bagleys by using their ATM card to withdraw cash, stealing money, stealing jewelry, and seeking to pawn Stacie's wedding ring. Soon after, the teens pulled to the side of the road and poured lighter fluid inside the vehicle while the Bagleys sang "Jesus Loves Us" among themselves. Vialva then shot both of the Bagleys in the head, killing Todd and knocking Stacie out to later die of smoke inhalation. Vialva then ordered Bernard to set the car on fire. Bernard has claimed he thought that both of the Bagleys were already deceased when he ignited the vehicle.

Legal proceedings

Bernards trial was held in 2000, 1 year after the murders. Since the crimes took place at Fort Hood, the trial would be held in federal court and not in a state level court. He was convicted of 2 counts of murder and sentenced to death.

Death row

Controversy

In the time preceding his execution, there was substantial national and international controversy on whether Bernard should have been sentenced to death and executed.

Execution

Bernard was executed by lethal injection at the Federal Correctional Institution in Terre Haute, Indiana. While preparing for the execution, Bernard spoke his last words saying he was "sorry" to the couple he murdered citing those words as "the only words that I can say that completely capture how I feel now and how I felt that day.” The chemical used during the lethal injection was pentobarbital. He was pronounced dead at 9:27 p.m. EST on December 10, 2020.

See also


   

Todd and Stacie Bagley, left and right, were murdered by Christopher Andre Vialva


‘Please remember the victims,’ Todd Bagley’s mother releases statement following Vialva execution

by: Web Desk

Posted: Sep 24, 2020 / 08:55 PM EDT Updated: Dec 10, 2020 / 08:28 AM EST

(AP Photo/Michael Conroy, File)

TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (WTWO/WAWV) — Here is Todd Bagley’s mother Georgia’s complete statement on the execution of Christopher Vialva:

U.S. government puts first Black inmate to death since resumption of federal executions this year

After watching the news broadcast this morning, I was both hurt and disappointed that the death penalty was the issue, yet both sides of the story were not told. The story was focused on Vialva’s life and the changes that he has made. This is not about him and his changed life, but about the victims in this case.

At 19, Vialva was aware of right and wrong and was trying to prove himself as a leader of a gang. Vialva preplanned with the other members what would go down that day. He personally shot both Todd and Stacie in the head, killing Todd instantly. Stacie was shot in the mouth after watching her husband die. She later died of smoke inhalation after Bernard set their car on fire. The gang utilized Sparks, who at 15 was the youngest of the group, to ask Todd for a ride home. In the course of trying to help, Todd and Stacie agree to give their time to take him home, which was their practice to reach out to help anyone they could, when given the opportunity.

Vialva, Brown, and Bernard hid from sight until Sparks gave them the Ok. They then all rushed out and jumped in the car, putting guns to Todd and Stacie’s head, and Vialva said, “plans have changed.” Todd and Stacie were two innocent young people who were deceived because they always saw the good in others. They were then forced into the truck of their car and driven around for 7 horrific hours on that hot day in June. They had no water, no restroom, they were robbed of their belongings, they had all of their money withdrawn from their bank account, they were driven around to other gang members houses, and slam banged around on a dirt country road. They begged from the trunk of their car for someone to call the police to help them at the different houses, but no one would call for help.

Vialva now says he has turned his life around and has influenced other lives since then, but Todd and Stacie have also influenced many lives. They were willing to lay down their lives to try and win their kidnappers to the Lord by quoting scripture, praying, and singing praises to God before they died. We will never know how many people they could have influenced for good if they had been given the chance. I feel when these tragedies happen, both sides of the story should be given. I believe when someone deliberately takes the life of another, they should suffer the consequences for their actions.

Christopher’s mother had the opportunity to visit him for the past 21 years. This execution should have been carried out 3-5 years after a jury of 12 people found him guilty. We have had to wait for 21 years for justice and closure. We cannot be with our children for visits or to see them on holidays. We were denied that privilege. Todd and Stacie were innocent victims. Please remember the victims and their families whose lives have been shattered and are still trying to cope. I have the assurance that Todd and Stacie were staunch Christians and are now in heaven with Jesus, who will richly reward them for their willingness to be his witnesses even unto death. I know without a doubt we will have a glorious reunion with them one day!

I want to make sure to thank everyone that participated in seeing that Todd and Stacie received justice for this horrific crime, particularly: Our Federal Prosecutors in Texas, The FBI, The Texas Rangers, The Ft. Hood Military Police, and The Crisis Support Team in Indiana. We appreciate that President Trump felt compassion to the victims and the families to reinstate the Death Penalty, and allow us some closure and to give Todd and Stacie justice.

Georgia, Todd Bagley’s Mother

INTERNET SOURCE: https://www.mywabashvalley.com/federal-executions/statement-from-todd-bagleys-mother-georgia/

Todd and Stacie Bagley, left and right, were murdered by Christopher Andre Vialva


OTHER LINKS:

http://soldierexecutionerprolifer2008.blogspot.com/2020/09/christopher-vialva-executed-for-1999.html

https://www.yahoo.com/news/u-set-execute-brandon-bernard-200824383.html

https://www.facebook.com/VictimsFamiliesForTheDeathPenalty/posts/3369853736469902

https://www.facebook.com/ProDeathPenalty/posts/5215079158502530

Thursday, September 24, 2020

CHRISTOPHER VIALVA EXECUTED FOR THE 1999 MURDER OF TEXAS COUPLE (SEPTEMBER 24, 2020)

On this date, September 24, 2020, Christopher Vialva was executed in U.S. prison in Terre Haute, Indiana, by the US Federal Government. He was convicted of the 1999 murders of Texas Couple, Todd and Stacie Bagley in 1999.


Christopher Vialva, 40, is set to receive the death penalty on Thursday at a federal prison in Terre Haute, Indiana. He was convicted 20 years ago for the 1999 murders of two youth ministers

Christopher Vialva executed for 1999 murder of Texas couple, the seventh federal execution since July

Michael Tarm

Associated Press

TERRE HAUTE, Ind. — A man who killed a religious couple visiting Texas from Iowa was executed Thursday, the first Black inmate put to death as part of the Trump administration's resumption of federal executions.

Christopher Vialva, 40, was pronounced dead at 6:42 p.m. EDT after receiving a lethal injection at the federal prison in Terre Haute, Indiana.

He was 19 years old in 1999 when he shot Todd and Stacie Bagley and burned them in the trunk of their car. Vialva's lawyer, Susan Otto, has said race played a role in landing her client on death row for slaying the white couple.

Vialva was the seventh federal execution since July and the second this week. Five of the first six were white, a move critics argue was a political calculation to avoid uproar. The sixth was Navajo. 

In the video statement released his lawyers released Thursday, Vialva expressed regret for what he'd done and said he was a changed man.

"I committed a grave wrong when I was a lost kid and took two precious lives from this world," he said. "Every day, I wish I could right this wrong."

Vialva's mother, Lisa Brown, spoke at an anti-death penalty rally Thursday morning across from the prison where her son was later put to death.

"This is the first venue I've had in which I could say to Todd and Stacie's family, I am so sorry for your loss," said Brown, who was expected to witness her son's execution.

Federal authorities executed just three prisoners in the previous 56 years. Death penalty foes accuse President Donald Trump of restarting them to help stake a claim as the law-and-order candidate. 

Otto said one Black juror and 11 white jurors recommended the death sentence in 2000 after prosecutors told them Vialva led a Black gang faction in Killeen, Texas, and killed to boost his gang status. That claim, Otto said, was false and only served to conjure up menacing stereotypes. 

"It played right into the narrative that he was a dangerous Black thug who killed these lovely white people. And they were lovely," Otto said in a recent phone interview. 

  

 

A portrait of Stacie and Todd Bagley on the tombstone of Stacie Bagley’s grave in Dyersburg, Tenn., on Sept. 18, 2020.


According to court filings, the Bagleys were on their way home from a Sunday worship service during a visit to Texas when Vialva and his teenage accomplices asked them for a lift after they stopped at a convenience store — planning all along to rob the couple.

After the Bagleys agreed and began driving away, Vialva pulled out a gun and told the couple: "Plans have changed."

After stealing their money, jewelry and ATM card, the teens locked the Bagleys in the trunk of their car as they drove around for hours trying to withdraw money from ATMs and seeking to pawn Stacie Bagley's wedding ring. The Bagleys pleaded for their lives from the trunk.

The teens eventually pulled to the side of the road and poured lighter fluid inside the car. As they did, the Bagleys sang "Jesus loves us" in the trunk. Vialva, the oldest of the group, donned a ski mask, opened the trunk and shot the Bagleys in the head. Stacie Bagley, prosecutors said at trial, was still alive as flames engulfed the car.

Questions about racial bias in the criminal justice system have been front and center since protests erupted across the country following the death of George Floyd  after a white Minneapolis police officer pressed his knee on the handcuffed Black man's neck for several minutes.

Ruth Bader Ginsburg becomes first woman to lie in state:8 other strides she made for women

A report this month by the Washington, D.C.-based Death Penalty Information Center  said Black people remain overrepresented on death rows and that Black people who kill white people are far more likely to be sentenced to death than white people who kill Black people.

Of the 56 inmates currently on federal death row, 26 — or nearly 50% — are Black, according to center data updated Wednesday; 22, or nearly 40%, are white and seven, around 12% were Latino. There is one Asian on federal death row. Black people make up only about 13% of the population.

INTERNET SOURCE: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2020/09/24/christopher-vialva-black-man-death-row-lawyer-argues-racial-bias/3519379001/

   

Todd and Stacie Bagley, left and right, were murdered by Christopher Andre Vialva


OTHER LINKS:

'I believe when someone deliberately takes the life of another, they suffer the consequences for their actions, Todd Bagley´s mother, Georgia, wrote in a statement released after the execution.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8770649/Feds-Black-inmate-death-execution-restart.html

A portrait of Stacie and Todd Bagley on the tombstone of Stacie Bagley’s grave in Dyersburg, Tenn., on Sept. 18, 2020.

https://www.facebook.com/VictimsFamiliesForTheDeathPenalty/posts/3145401272248484

https://theintercept.com/2020/09/20/federal-executions-christopher-vialva/

Candlelight for the two victims

https://www.facebook.com/VictimsFamiliesForTheDeathPenalty/posts/3152501258205152

https://www.facebook.com/LifesparkJustice/photos/a.2060617870925244/2738535539800137/

https://wikispro.com/christopher-vialva-wiki-bio-age/

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/122251488/todd-bagley

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/30076708/stacie-lynn-bagley

 

Thursday, July 2, 2020

SOMALIAN POLICE OFFICER SENTENCED TO DEATH FOR KILLING TWO CIVILIANS


SOMALIA: Police officer sentenced to death for killing two civilians

Military court Judge Col.Hassan Ali Nur Shute
A Somali military court has sentenced a police officer to death by a firing squad for killing two people in in the capital, Mogadishu, during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

The police officer, Hassan Adan Hassan, shot the two people dead near their home in Mogadishu, in the pretext of enforcing a Covid-19 curfew which had been imposed just hours before the incident.


Hassan Adan Hassan


The killing of the two young people sparked protests in Mogadishu with protesters demanding the government to arrest and put the police officer behind the killing into trial.

The officer has 30 days to appeal the sentence.

Tuesday, December 17, 2019

BELARUSSIAN HAMMER KILLER EXECUTED BY A GUNSHOT FOR THE MURDER OF TWO GIRLS [DECEMBER 17, 2019]


            Alyaksandr Asipovich was reported to be executed by a gunshot to the back of his head on December 17, 2019 in Belarus. He was convicted of the murder of two girls. He was weeping when he was sentenced to death. One of his victim’s mother supported his execution.

 
Asipovich (pictured during sentencing) confessed to the killings, but has been sentenced to death. In Belarus, those sentenced to death are forced to kneel before being shot by a state executioner in the back of the head



Hammer killer is executed with a gunshot to the back of the head for murdering two women he met at a nightclub in Belarus
·         Alyaksandr Asipovich met two women  in a nightclub in Babruysk, Ukraine 
·         He murdered 27-year-old Alesya Klimava by hitting her 77 times with a hammer
·         Her friend Krystsina Krushkina had been stabbed multiple times moments later
·         Asipovich was executed by a single shot to the back of the head, it is reported


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Belarus has executed a 'beast' convicted of brutally murdering two women who he met at a nightclub.

Alyaksandr Asipovich, 36, had wept in a court glass cage after losing his appeal in May to spare him in Europe's only country still using the death penalty.

A subsequent plea for clemency to strongman president Alexander Lukashenko was also rejected.

Alyaksandr Asipovich, 36, had wept in a court glass cage after losing his appeal in May to spare him in Europe's only country still using the death penalty

Krystsina Krushkina, victim (right) with her sister Irina (left). Krystsina was stabbed 16 times in the head and neck by Asipovich having met him in a nightclub in Babruysk, Belarus 

Alesya Klimava, pictured, was beaten at least 77 times with a  hammer by Asipovich


The murderer was made the kneel and shot in the back of the head at close range, the customary method of state execution, it is understood.

His death in a Belarus jail was confirmed today by Olga Ivanova, senior state prosecutor Mogilev region.

Victim Alesya Klimava, aged 27, was stuck 77 times by Asipovich with a hammer and his fists, his trial heard.

Her friend Krystsina Krushkina, 26, died from multiple stab wounds.

He had met the women at a nightclub and persuaded them to return with him to his apartment in Babruysk city.

Shortly before they were killed, Krushkina had made a desperate call to Belarus police from the man's apartment to say they were barricaded into a bathroom and he intended to murder them.

Asipovich, pictured, wept when his appeal against his execution was rejected. He was shot in the back of the head in jail, according to authorities 


She gave the name of the street but did not know the number of the apartment block.

By the time police tracked down the right address, the women were dead.

Krushkina was killed from 16 stab wounds to her neck and head.

Asipovich, 36, had made plans to dismember their bodies, then dispose of the human remains, but police arrived before he could carry them out, his trial was told.

The killer confessed to murdering the women and showed police how he carried out the killings in a murder reconstruction.

But in his appeal hearing the Belarus Supreme Court he claimed the women had attacked and tried to rob him, prompting gasps from the mothers.

'I am asking to overturn the (death sentence) verdict,' pleaded Asipovich.

   
Kystina' smother, pictured, witnessed Asipovich receiving his death sentence following his conviction for the double murders. He had originally planned to dismember the bodies of both girls and dump them

But grieving mother Nina Klimava told the three judges: 'To me, he is a beast.

'This was such a horrible murder of my girl – 77 wounds.'

She had not been allowed to see her daughter's brutalised face.

'I did not even look at her to say goodbye – her head was smashed to pieces,' she told the court.

'He has not repented.

'He was a beast and he remains a beast.

'The girls called police, they begged for help… but he beat them to death.'

She attacked his plea to live.

'Tell me please, who deserves mercy? This man…..?

'My mother's pain will never stop, even if he is shot. As long as I live I will condemn him.

'I don't wish it to anybody, to face what I had to.

'I think the death sentence verdict is fair.

'The girls suffered so much, they begged him to let them go…'

One judge told her: 'I understand your emotions, please control yourself'.

Asipovich 'wept and asked forgiveness' in a glass court cage on hearing the verdict.

Asipovich had previous convictions for theft, robbery, malicious hooliganism and grievous bodily harm causing death.

  
Asipovich had previous convictions for theft, robbery, malicious hooliganism and grievous bodily harm causing death

Four men were executed in 2018.

No advance details are given on when executions are carried out. 



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BELARUSSIAN HAMMER KILLER SENTENCED TO DEATH FOR THE MURDER OF TWO GIRLS [JANUARY 9, 2019]