On
this date, October 15, 1999, The Rainbow Warrior A.K.A Joseph Mitchell Parsons
was executed by lethal injection in Utah. He was convicted of murdering Richard
Lynn Ernest on August 31, 1987. I will post information about him from
Wikipedia before giving my thoughts. Please go to Unit 1012 Blog to hear from the victim's family members.
Mug shot of Joseph Mitchell Parsons (Utah
State Prison mug shot)
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Joseph
Mitchell "Yogi" Parsons (July 22, 1964 – October 15, 1999) was an
American who was executed for the August 1987 murder of Richard Lynn Ernest.
Parsons hitched a ride with Ernest in California and stabbed him to death at a
remote rest area in Utah. After assuming Ernest's identity, Parsons continued
to insist that he was Ernest when he was later arrested.
Parsons,
who called himself the "Rainbow Warrior", pleaded guilty to the
murder. During his sentencing hearing, Parsons said that he killed Ernest to
fend off a homosexual advance, but was unable to present any evidence to
support this claim in his defense. The jury sentenced him to death. In 1999,
Parsons stated that "it's time to move on" and dropped his appeals,
allowing his execution to proceed. Discussion was later raised whether "Rainbow
Warrior" was a reference to homosexuality or Parsons' favorite auto racing
team.
Parsons
chose to die by lethal injection, avoiding the publicity that John Albert
Taylor, the previous prisoner to be executed in Utah, sought by selecting the
firing squad. Parsons shunned attention and described himself as "Utah's
forgotten inmate". His 1999 execution at Utah State Prison was the first
to be carried out in a new chamber designed for both lethal injections and
firing squads.
Parsons received no visitors during his five
years at Nevada State Prison.
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Background
Joseph
Mitchell Parsons was born on July 22, 1964 to Joseph Michael and Marie Parsons
in New York City. Joseph Mitchell spent the first five years of his life
without his father, who was incarcerated in jail. His parents worked odd jobs
from sewing fuzzy dice to construction. Joseph Mitchell's half-sister Dinah
said that his father beat him frequently until he wet himself. After Joseph
Michael left the family, Marie took Joseph Mitchell and Dinah to Florida, where
Marie met and married Lawrence Gordon. Dinah met a drug dealer nicknamed Yogi,
who Parsons admired. Parsons later adopted the nickname and had
"Yogi" tattooed onto his right arm.
After
a year in Florida, Parsons was caught stealing cash from an apartment
management office. He ended up with three burglary convictions during his four
years in the state as a minor. He graduated from high school with a C average
and sold shoes in a shopping mall. When Parsons' stepfather refused to buy him
a motorcycle, Parsons took one for a test drive from a dealer in Fort Lauderdale
and did not return. He went to New Jersey to see his biological father, but was
rebuffed. Parsons' sister-in-law Theresa Gomez said, "He rejected him ...
Who knows what went through his mind?" Parsons then rode the motorcycle
west to Las Vegas, Nevada.
Imprisonment
in Nevada
On
the night of October 16 to 17, 1982, Parsons met David Wood in Las Vegas and
took a cab to the Strip in search of marijuana. Near the destination, Parsons
pointed a .22-caliber revolver at the driver's neck to rob him. After stealing
the driver's taxi, the two were caught in an alley and placed under citizen's
arrest by Charles Conant and his brother-in-law Ronald Maske, who were both
armed with guns. During trial, Parsons characterized himself as an orphan who
stayed out of trouble and testified against Wood. The court did not have access
to Parsons' juvenile record, and was unaware of his parents on the East Coast.
Parsons later stated that he provided false testimony against Wood in a plea
bargain for a lighter sentence. Wood was convicted and spent 13 years in
prison. No visitors came to see Parsons during his five years at Nevada State
Prison. In August 1987, Parsons was paroled to a halfway house in Reno. He
walked out of the facility before his release date and fled on a stolen
motorcycle.
A Dodge Omni similar to the one driven by
Ernest and stolen by Parsons.
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Death of Richard Ernest
On
August 30, 1987, Parsons was hitchhiking along Interstate 15 near Barstow,
California. He was picked up by 30-year-old Richard Lynn Ernest, a concrete
laborer from Loma Linda, California on his way to a construction job in Denver,
Colorado. Ernest did not know that Parsons was a fugitive. At about 3 a.m. on
August 31, Ernest was too tired to drive and stopped at the Lunt Park rest area
near Cedar City, Utah to get some sleep. Parsons stabbed Ernest to death and
drove off in his blue Dodge Omni.
At
about 5 a.m., Parsons stopped at a Texaco service station 23 miles to the
north. He was wearing Ernest's clothes and had assumed his identity. Parsons
told the station attendant he needed to hose out red construction paint from
the car's interior and offered to give him Ernest's construction tools. The
attendant said that he observed Parsons throwing away clothing, books, posters
and carpentry tools into a dumpster. Parsons asked the attendant about the
distance to Denver and spoke of Ernest's 9-year-old son as his own. He
purchased cigarettes and food with Ernest's MasterCard credit card before
leaving. At 7:23 a.m., Parsons used the credit card to check into a Quality Inn
at Richfield, Utah. He used the card again at about 10 a.m. to purchase seat
covers and floor mats from Kmart to cover up the blood stains in the car. A
clerk called the Richfield Police Department after Parsons attempted to
purchase $300 worth of items at 12:34 p.m. and the credit card was found to be
over its limit. The attendant back at the Texaco station called the Beaver
County Sheriff's Office after discovering bloody items in the dumpster. Deputy
Raymond Goodwin found Ernest's bank statement and Parsons' bloody clothes in
the dumpster. After calling Ernest's wife Beverley, the officers concluded that
the person who visited the service station was not Richard Ernest. At about
4:25 p.m. on August 31, a Utah Highway Patrol officer found Parsons sleeping in
Ernest's car at the Red Creek rest area on Interstate 70, west of Salina, Utah.
When Parsons was brought into the Richfield police station where the bloody
clothes were gathered, he continued to insist that he was Ernest. When officers
asked for his street address, Parsons asked for a lawyer. Sheriff Kenneth
Yardley recalled that Parsons asked if he could keep his book to read.
On
September 1, 1987, Ernest's body was discovered underneath a sleeping bag
dumped on the east side of Interstate 15, about a mile north of the rest area
where he had been killed. He had been stabbed nine times, including in the
heart and throat.
Trial
and sentencing
Iron
County prosecutor Scott Burns stated that he had witnesses from three different
states and crime scenes in three different counties. While awaiting trial in
the county jail, Parsons became afflicted with a severe case of crab lice.
Lieutenant Matt Yengich told investigators that Parsons likely contracted the
lice from "some type of homosexual interaction".
During
a court hearing for the murder, Parsons said, "Why are we doing this? I
did it and everyone knows I did it." He pleaded guilty to motor vehicle
theft, aggravated robbery and first-degree murder on September 18, 1987.
Parsons' sentence was decided by a jury. Parsons said that he was defending
himself with a four-inch knife when Ernest grabbed his leg and thought that
Ernest's multiple wounds were "superficial." Parsons was unable to present
evidence to corroborate his claim of a sexual advance by Ernest. Ernest's
family and friends stated in court that Ernest was not gay or bisexual.
Prosecution witnesses testified of Parsons' homosexual activity in jail.
According to forensic psychiatrist David Tomb from the University of Utah, the
descriptions of Parsons' sexual history indicated that he "may have been
the one initiating the contact and became angry when [Ernest] turned him
down." A medical examiner testified that Ernest appeared to have been stabbed
while sleeping and was unable to defend himself. On February 18, 1988, a jury
of six men and six women sentenced Parsons to death. He was sent to Utah State
Prison.
Appeals
Parsons
filed an appeal disputing the constitutionality of his first-degree murder
conviction with the Utah Supreme Court. His attorney argued that Parsons had
already been convicted of another charge for the crime, making his murder
conviction a violation of double jeopardy. On October 16, 1989, the court
unanimously upheld the conviction and rejected his appeal on the grounds that
Parsons should have raised that objection before he waived his right to a trial
with his guilty plea. On March 5, 1990, District Judge J. Philip Eves rejected
Parsons' complaint that he was denied his right to legal counsel while in
prison and set his execution date for April 30, 1990. A new team of attorneys,
which included Gregory Sanders and Ronald Yengich of the Rocky Mountain Defense
Fund, took up Parsons' appeal that he had ineffective counsel during his trial.
On January 12, 1994, the Utah Supreme Court rejected Parsons' petition for a
writ of habeas corpus.
I'm not putting up or down what people did to get in here. But in a nutshell, no human contact is a form of torture. - Joseph Mitchell Parsons, 1998
On
July 6, 1999, Parsons abandoned a federal appeal of his sentence to the U.S.
10th Circuit Court of Appeals, stating that he preferred execution than waiting
for years on death row. He complained that he was bored in prison, which he
called "torture, plain and simple." The last visit Parsons had
received was two hours with his mother in 1996. On August 16, 1999, District
Judge Philip Eves signed a death warrant and scheduled Parsons' execution for
October 15.
Execution
Parsons
submitted a last request to walk under the stars, play basketball, and watch
science-fiction films to prison warden Hank Galetka. Parsons also asked for his
remains to be cremated and turned over to his family. Prison spokesperson Jack
Ford said that the requests would be granted, but that Parsons would only be
allowed to shoot some hoops in a fenced recreation area instead of a game of
basketball in the prison gymnasium. The authorities were concerned that an
injury could delay the execution. Parsons was permitted to walk outdoors at
night to the place of execution.
On
the evening before his execution, Parsons watched The Mummy and was
visited in his death watch cell by his brother and his cousin. They shared his
last meal of Burger King hamburgers, French fries, milkshakes, root beer, and
chocolate chip ice cream. Parsons' attorney said he believed his client chose
this meal because the Burger King slogan "Have it your way" was a
reflection of him taking control of his life. After playing a game of Uno, he
asked for the score of the 1999 American League Championship Series game.
Parsons was permitted to call his mother Marie Gordon Rivera in Florida and his
sister.
Parsons
would become the first inmate to be executed in a new chamber that was built in
1998 at Utah State Prison for use in either firing squads or lethal injections.
Two people, whose identities were withheld, were selected to administer
individual injections, of which only one was lethal so that neither would know
with certainty who executed the prisoner. The prison selected among paramedics
or nurses because the American Medical Association prohibits licensed
physicians from participating in executions. A mild sedative was delivered
intravenously to calm Parsons before the deadly drugs were administered.
At
12:10 a.m. on October 15, 1999, Parsons was executed by lethal injection. Seven
minutes later, a physician checked Parsons' stopped heartbeat with a
stethoscope and pronounced him dead at 12:18 a.m. Parsons' last words were:
"Love to my family and friends. And Woody, the rainbow warrior rules.
Thank you."
After
the execution, prison spokesperson Jack Ford said that "rainbow" may
have been a homosexual reference to the victim, but fellow inmate Doug
"Woody" Lovell claimed that "Rainbow Warrior" was referring
to the colorful racing car of NASCAR champion Jeff Gordon. However, attorney
Greg Sanders stated that Parsons spoke to him about his hatred of homosexuals.
Public
reaction
Although
Parsons requested that no one protest his death, the American Civil Liberties
Union of Utah planned to organize a candlelight vigil in opposition to the
execution. A group of less than 50 people gathered outside the prison, mostly
criminal justice students from Weber State University.
Unlike
the previous execution of John Albert Taylor in 1996 (or Ronnie Lee Gardner
that would follow in 2010), Parsons' execution attracted little media
attention, with representatives from only 12 news organizations. Spokesperson
Jack Ford called the level of interest virtually "nonexistent".
Deputy attorney general Reed Richards presumed that the media apathy was a
result of Parsons' choice of lethal injection, which was more broadly adopted
in the United States than execution by firing squad, which was unique to Utah.
Parsons' court-appointed attorney Greg Sanders said that his client called
himself "Utah's forgotten inmate". Ernest's widow Beverley, who
attended the execution, said that she was grateful for the lack of media
scrutiny. Ernest's brother-in-law Jonathan Woods stated, "The world is
less for having lost Richard. I hope, for Parsons' sake, the world will be less
for having lost him, but that is not how I feel."
MY THOUGHTS:
The
ACLU policy on Euthanasia is:
"Each of us should have the right to die in a humane and dignified manner... The exercise of this right is as central to personal autonomy and bodily integrity as rights safeguarded by this Court's decisions relating to marriage, family relationships, procreation, contraception, child rearing and the refusal or termination of life-saving medical treatment...
There is nothing new about the desire of terminally ill patient to end their suffering by hastening their death... Developments in modern health care have simply brought into the open a previously private [sic] that society has long condoned.""High Court Rejects Constitutional Right To Doctor-Assisted Suicide," www.aclu.org, June 26, 1997
Many
people know that they are Anti-Death Penalty and Pro Choice but they are
Pro-Euthanasia.
Wait
a minute!
If
they support euthanasia, they should not bother the Rainbow Warrior and just
let him have a state suicide assist. How unpersuasive they are!
When
Parsons requested that no one protested his execution, the ACLU still insisted on
doing it. If they want to fight for the rights of murderers, then it proves that
they sidestep their own murderers for their selfish agenda. They should respect
one of Parsons’s last wish, rather than go against it.
Parsons
was similar to Gary Gilmore, the first person executed in the United States
since 1976, when they both needed a suicide assist.
Gary
Gilmore also did not want those ACLU demons to interfere with his execution, he
was quoted as saying:
"They always want to get in on the act. I don't think they have ever really done anything effective in their lives. I would like them all — including that group of reverends and rabbis from Salt Lake City — to butt out. This is my life and this is my death. It's been sanctioned by the courts that I die and I accept that."
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