Friday, July 17, 2020

DUSTIN LEE HONKEN (MARCH 22, 1968 TO JULY 17, 2020)


   
Dustin Lee Honken, 52, was put to death by lethal injection in Terre Haute penitentiary, Indiana




Johnson's former boyfriend, Dustin Honken, was convicted of five counts of Continuing Criminal Enterprise murder. Although it was Honken who pulled the trigger, killing three adults and two children, Johnson received the death penalty for four of the victims, while Honken was sentenced to death for only the two children. The unanimous Eighth Circuit affirmed Honken's conviction and sentence in September 2008.

On July 25, 2019, United States Attorney General William Barr approved the use of the single drug pentobarbital for federal executions, and an execution date of January 15, 2020, was set for Honken. On November 20, 2019, U.S. District Judge Tanya S. Chutkan issued a preliminary injunction preventing the resumption of federal executions. Honken and the other three plaintiffs in the case argued that the use of pentobarbital may violate the Federal Death Penalty Act of 1994. On December 5, 2019, the Supreme Court denied a stay of Chutkan's injunction while the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit reviewed Chutkan's decision. Honken was imprisoned at the United States Penitentiary, Terre Haute.

While in prison Honken had converted to Catholicism. The Archbishop of Newark, Cardinal Joseph W. Tobin had written to president Donald Trump in early July 2020 asking him to commute Honken's sentence, claiming that he had witnessed Honken's "spiritual growth in faith and compassion".

In April 2020, a divided panel of the D.C. Circuit vacated District Judge Chutkan's injunction in a per curiam decision. Circuit Judges Gregory G. Katsas and Neomi Rao both wrote concurring opinions concluding that Honken may be executed, but for different reasons. Circuit Judge David S. Tatel dissented, arguing that the statute explicitly requires the federal government to follow state execution protocols. On June 29, 2020, the Supreme Court denied Honken's petition for review, with Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor dissenting.

On July 17, 2020, at 3:36 p.m. CST, Honken was executed by lethal injection. His final words were, "Hail Mary, Mother of God, pray for me."

Family of victims after Honken execution: 'step toward the healing of broken hearts and shattered lives'

He is the first defendant in an Iowa case to be put to death since 1963.
Posted: Jul 17, 2020 3:55 PM
Updated: Jul 18, 2020 8:23 AM

TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (AP) — The U.S. government on Friday put to death an Iowa chemistry student-turned-meth kingpin convicted of killing five people, the third execution by the federal government in a week.

FILE - In this Oct. 11, 2005, file photo, Dustin Lee Honken is led by US Marshals into the Federal Courthouse in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, prior to his sentencing. AP photo

Dustin Honken, who prosecutors said killed key witnesses to stop them from testifying in his drugs case, received a lethal injection at the Federal Correctional Complex in Terre Haute, Indiana. Two others were also put to death during the week after a hiatus of nearly 20 years, including Kansan Wesley Purkey. His lawyers contended he had dementia and didn’t know why he was being executed.
The first in the spate federal executions happened Tuesday, when Daniel Lewis Lee was put to death for killing a family in the 1990s as part of a plot to build a whites-only nation. Lee’s execution, like Purkey’s, went ahead only after the U.S. Supreme Court gave it a green light in a 5-4 decision hours before.

Honken, of Britt, Iowa, had been on death row since 2005 and was the first Iowan with a death sentence imposed by Iowa jurors to be executed since 1963. Iowa struck the death penalty from state statutes in 1965, but Honken was eligible for the death penalty under U.S. law because he was tried in federal court.

Honken was pronounced dead at 4:36 p.m., the Bureau of Prisons said.

The inmate — known for his verbosity at trial and for making a long statement of his innocence at his sentencing — spoke only briefly, neither addressing victims’ family members nor saying he was sorry. His last words were, “Holy Mary, mother of God, pray for me.”

Honken's lawyer, Shawn Nolan, said his client was “redeemed” and had repented for his crimes. Honken was a devout Catholic who “cared for everyone he came into contact with” in prison, Nolan said.

“There was no reason for the government to kill him, in haste or at all. In any case, they failed. The Dustin Honken they wanted to kill is long gone,” Nolan said. "The man they killed today was a human being, who could have spent the rest of his days helping others and further redeeming himself. May he rest in peace.”

Honken, whose crimes struck at the foundation of the U.S. justice system, always seemed the least likely to win a reprieve from the courts.

Mark Bennett, the now-retired federal judge who oversaw Honken’s 2004 trial for the kidnappings and killings, said previously that he generally opposed the death penalty. But if anyone deserved it, he added, it was Honken.

While out on bond in his drugs case in July 1993, Honken and his girlfriend Angela Johnson kidnapped Lori Duncan and her two daughters from their Mason City, Iowa, home, then killed and buried them in a wooded area nearby. Ten-year-old Kandi and 6-year-old Amber were still in their swimsuits on the hot summer day when they were shot execution-style in the back of the head.

Their primary target that day was Lori Duncan’s then-boyfriend, Greg Nicholson, who also lived at the home and was also killed. He and Lori Duncan were bound and gagged and shot multiple times. Honken had recently learned Nicholson, a former drug-dealing associate, was cooperating with investigators and would likely testify against Honken at trial.

Lori Duncan didn’t know Nicholson was an informant and she wasn’t involved in drugs.

As the investigation into Honken continued, he killed another drug dealer working with him, Terry DeGeus, beating him with a bat and shooting him.

Honken had earlier informed the judge in his drug case that he would plead guilty at the end of July. But days after the still-undiscovered killings of Nicholson and the Duncans, he told the court he would stick to his not guilty plea.

Investigators found the Nicholson and Duncan bodies only seven years later, in 2000, after Johnson scrawled out a map showing a jailhouse informant where they were buried. DeGeus’ body was found a few miles from the wooded area.

Honken was considered so dangerous that the judge took the rare step of impaneling an anonymous jury. Other security measures included fitting Honken with a stun belt under his clothes to prevent him from trying to escape.

Johnson, Honken’s girlfriend, was convicted in a separate trial and sentenced to death. Bennett later reduced her sentence to life behind bars.

Statement from the family of Terry DeGeus:

“The reason for us being present today was not to watch a man die. It was to show love, support, and respect to my daughter’s father, Terry. That we loved him until the end and still do. It was the least we could do."

Statement from the family of Lori, Kandace & Amber Duncan:

“To whom it may concern,”

“27 year ago two beautiful girls and their mother were taken from us by a violent criminal and his girlfriend. For 27 years we have grieved for them while their killers lived on.”

“Today, the little girls Kandace and Amber would be 37 and 33. They never had the chance to grow up and share in the joys and sorrows of life. Their mother never got to see them having a first dance, first date, or walk down the aisle at their wedding. There were no family reunions. No visits to grandparents’ house, no overnights at cousins. Their lives were snuffed out.”

“However, their killer has lived the years since then with a bed and meals provided for him.”
“Today, we gather to witness the execution of Dustin Honken, their murderer. It is a day we thought would never come. Finally, justice is being done. It will bring a sense of closure but we will continue to live with their loss. However, this is a step toward the healing of broken hearts and shattered lives.”

“We regret that so many members of our family have passed on and were never able to see this day.”

Over recent days, prison authorities permitted Honken to make his last calls to family and friends, according to Sister Betty Donoghue, a Catholic nun whom he called Wednesday.
On death row, Honken befriended Lee and knew his execution was called off one hour, then was back on another hour, Donoghue said.

“He was very upset with the way Danny died,” said Donoghue, who visited Honken regularly over the past decade.

Yet Donoghue, of the Sisters of Providence just outside Terre Haute, said she was startled by how calm Honken sounded over the phone.

“He was at peace. I was totally amazed,” she said. “He believed he would go to heaven. He is ready to meet his maker.”

At his sentencing in 2005, Honken denied killing anybody, but Donoghue said never heard him say he was innocent.

Honken’s mother, brother and college-aged daughter visited him in prison in recent days, she said.

Honken grew up in the northern Iowa town of Britt, the son of an alcoholic father with bank robbery convictions. But Hoken was regarded as bright and good at math. He went on to study chemistry at a community college, before dropping out to pursue a career dealing drugs instead.

He moved to Arizona and drew on his expertise in chemistry to produce highly purified meth in the hopes of getting rich. He and a friend distributed their product through dealers based in Mason City, Iowa.

At trial, Honken’s attorney, Alfredo Parrish, tried unsuccessfully to soften his client’s image, describing him to jurors as “basically a nerd” who became “infatuated with drug manufacturing.”


  

Daniel Lewis Lee (January 31, 1973 – July 14, 2020) was an American convicted murderer who was sentenced to death for the 1996 murders of William Mueller, Nancy Ann Mueller, and their daughter Sarah Elizabeth Powell. Lee and his accomplice, Chevie Kehoe, murdered gun dealer William Frederick Mueller, his wife, and his 8-year-old step-daughter, in Arkansas, on January 11, 1996. He was executed on July 14, 2020 at The Federal Correctional Institute, Terre Haute, Indiana. He was executed by lethal injection and pronounced dead at 8:07 a.m. EDT.

Kehoe was sentenced to three consecutive life sentences for the Mueller murders. Lee was also convicted for his role in the murders; he was sentenced to death by the United States federal government in spite of pleas for clemency from the Muellers' family members. Lee was scheduled to be executed on July 13, 2020, but on that date, a U.S. district judge blocked the execution, citing unresolved legal issues. In the early hours of July 14, the Supreme Court ruled that the execution could proceed. Following this ruling, Lee's execution was scheduled for 4:00 AM that same day. The execution took place later that morning, and Lee was declared dead at 8:07 AM on July 14, 2020. He was the first person to be executed by the federal government in 17 years.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Lewis_Lee

https://www.facebook.com/VictimsFamiliesForTheDeathPenalty/posts/2940750019380278 ....... https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/zoetillman/trump-administration-carried-out-first-federal-execution

https://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/ny-supreme-court-federal-exectuion-daniel-lewis-lee-proceed-20200714-eki22tmfqjc25ih76nmjvutws4-story.html



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Thursday, July 16, 2020

WESLEY IRA PURKEY EXECUTED BY THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT (JULY 16, 2020)


In this 1998 photo, Wesley Ira Purkey, center, is escorted by police officers in Kansas City, Kan., after he was arrested in connection with the death of 80-year-old Mary Ruth Bales. (AP/The Kansas City Star)


Wesley Purkey raped, kidnapped, and murdered 16-year-old Jennifer Long. Purkey then dismembered and burned her body and scattered the remains into a septic pond. He was also convicted of the murder of 80-year-old polio patient, Mary Ruth Bales.

Wesley Ira Purkey executed by lethal injection, the second federal execution this week

Purkey's lawyers contended he had dementia and was unfit to be executed

The U.S. carried out its second federal execution this week by killing Wesley Ira Purkey on Thursday morning.

Purkey, 68, died by lethal injection at the Federal Correctional Complex in Terre Haute, Ind., at 8:19 a.m. local time.

The man was convicted in the 1998 kidnapping and killing of 16-year-old Jennifer Long, whose body was dismembered, burned and dumped in a septic pond. That same year, Purkey also was convicted in a state court in Kansas after using a claw hammer to kill an 80-year-old woman who had polio.

Purkey's lawyers contended he suffered from dementia and was unfit to be executed.

“I deeply regret the pain and suffering I caused to Jennifer’s family,” Purkey said in the moments before his execution. “I am deeply sorry. I deeply regret the pain I caused to my daughter, who I love so very much. This sanitized murder really does not serve no purpose whatsoever.”

In this 1998 photo, Wesley Ira Purkey, center, is escorted by police officers in Kansas City, Kan., after he was arrested in connection with the death of 80-year-old Mary Ruth Bales. (AP/The Kansas City Star)

The U.S. Supreme Court cleared the way for his execution to take place just hours before, ruling in a 5-4 decision. The four liberal justices dissented — as they had in the first execution case earlier this week.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote that “proceeding with Purkey’s execution now, despite the grave questions and factual findings regarding his mental competency, casts a shroud of constitutional doubt over the most irrevocable of injuries.” She was joined by Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, and Elena Kagan.

placeholder
It was the federal government’s second execution after a 17-year hiatus. Another man, Daniel Lewis Lee, was put to death Tuesday after his eleventh-hour legal bids failed.

The federal prison in Terre Haute, Indiana, where Purkey was executed Thursday. (AP)

Purkey’s lawyers had argued his condition had deteriorated so severely that he didn’t understand why he was being executed. They said he was repeatedly sexually assaulted as a child and had been diagnosed with schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and other mental health conditions.

The issue of Purkey’s mental health arose in the run-up to his 2003 trial and when, after the verdict, jurors had to decide whether he should be put to death in the killing of Long in Kansas City, Missouri. Prosecutors said he raped and stabbed Long, dismembered her with a chainsaw, burned her body and dumped her ashes 200 miles away in a septic pond in Kansas.

Purkey was separately convicted and sentenced to life in the beating death of 80-year-old Mary Ruth Bales, of Kansas City, Kansas.

Daniel Lewis Lee has been executed in Indiana, marking the first federal execution in 17 years
Purkey had a long history of childhood trauma, was sexually abused by family members and a Catholic priest and was beaten by other family members, Liz Vartkessian, a mitigation specialist who worked with Purkey’s legal team and visited him dozens of times in the last five years, told the Associated Press.

But recently, Purkey’s mental health had seriously deteriorated to the point he didn’t have the stamina for long visits with his legal team and often forgot key facts and dates, she said.

Correction officers had to help him write down a schedule to remember his visits with his lawyers, Vartkessian added.

And he had a long history of paranoia and delusions and believed the Justice Department was moving forward with his execution because of many complaints and lawsuits he brought in prison, even though most had failed, Vartkessian said.

The Supreme Court this week has also lifted a hold placed on other executions set for Friday and next month.

Dustin Honken, a drug kingpin from Iowa convicted of killing five people in a scheme to silence former dealers, is scheduled for execution Friday.


Victim's father reacts after federal execution
Jul 16, 2020
The father of a teenage girl killed by Wesley Ira Purkey spoke to reporters Thursday after Purkey received a lethal injection at a federal prison in Indiana. William Long says he'll never have closure. (July 16)

   

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RE: Sister Helen Prejean: Stop the federal killings Helen Prejean, CSJ July 15, 2020
From: Dudley Sharp, independent researcher, death penalty expert, former opponent, 832-439-2113, CV upon request
Sr. Prejean believes there is a rush to justice . . . with a 17 year pause in federal executions?

Wednesday, July 15, 2020

BARRY TELFORD UNIT PRISON KILLER, BILLY JOEL TRACY’S DEATH SENTENCE UPHELD

                In loving memory of Correction Officer Timothy Davison, I am satisfied that his Prison Killer, Billy Joel Tracy’s death sentence was upheld.

[PHOTO SOURCE: https://txktoday.com/crime/tracy-sentenced-death/]

 

Death sentence affirmed for Billy Joel Tracy by Texas Court of Criminal Appeals

By Field Walsh -
April 1, 2020

A Texas prison inmate who was sentenced to death for the 2015 killing of a Barry Telford Unit correctional officer was denied a new trial Wednesday by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals in a unanimous decision.

Billy Joel Tracy, 42, was found guilty by a Bowie County jury of capital murder in November 2017 and sentenced to death by 102nd District Judge Bobby Lockhart. Tracy beat Timothy Davison, 47, to death with a metal bar used to open slots in the prisoner’s doors at mealtime.

Davison was escorting Tracy back to his one-man cell after an hour of recreation July 15, 2015. Tracy managed to escape his handcuffs and attacked Davison with his fists. Once Davison was on the ground, Tracy grabbed his slot bar, straddled Davison’s body and struck him repeatedly.

The jury at Tracy’s trial watched a video of the beating and heard testimony from dozens of witnesses, including other Texas correctional officers, who had been targets of Tracy’s assaults.

At the time of Davison’s murder, Tracy was serving a life sentence he received in 1998 in Rockwall County for the beating and abduction of a 16-year-old girl. Tracy was sentenced to 45 years for assaulting an officer in Potter County in 2007 and he received a 10-year sentence in 2011 for assaulting an officer in Jones County.

A date for Tracy’s execution has not been set.

INTERNET SOURCE: https://www.facebook.com/VictimsFamiliesForTheDeathPenalty/posts/2692086687579947 https://txktoday.com/news/death-sentence-affirmed-for-billy-joel-tracy-by-texas-court-of-criminal-appeals/

Timothy Allen Davison

(February 16, 1968 to July 15, 2015)

Tracy sentenced to death

By Field Walsh

NEW BOSTON, Texas: It took about an hour for a Bowie County jury to sentence Billy Joel Tracy to death for the July 15, 2015, slaying of a correctional officer at the Barry Telford Unit.

Tracy, 39, is now headed to the Texas Department of Criminal Justice’s death row. Correctional Officer Timothy Davison was escorting Tracy back to his cell following an hour of recreation July 15, 2015, when Tracy escaped from his handcuffs and attacked. After knocking Davison down, Tracy grabbed the officer’s metal tray slot bar, a tool used to open the slot in cell doors, and beat him with it until Davison’s face was unrecognizable. Davison was pronounced dead a few hours later at a Texarkana hospital.

Tracy’s jury found him guilty of capital murder Oct. 27. Wednesday they sentenced him to death.

Assistant District Attorney Lauren Richards told the jury there has never been evidence which more strongly supports a death sentence in Texas than the testimony the jury heard in Tracy’s trial.

“Someone will receive a death sentence at the end of this trial,” Assistant District Attorney Kelley Crisp argued. “Will it be another correctional officer with TDCJ or will it be Billy Joel Tracy?”

Tracy’s defense attorneys, Mac Cobb of Mount Pleasant and Jeff Harrelson of Texarkana, argued that mitigating circumstances should lead to a sentence of life without parole rather than death, citing brain abnormalities testified to by defense experts and testimony from a defense psychologist that Tracy’s childhood was traumatic.

The jury had to decide if Tracy presents a continuing threat to society and whether any mitigating circumstances would make life without parole the appropriate punishment rather than death. The jury answered yes to the first of the “special issues” and no to the second, leading 102nd District Judge Bobby Lockhart to sentence Tracy to death.

Tracy’s jury heard from many prior victims of Tracy’s violence. A woman who was beaten, burned and dragged into a wooded area in Rockwall, Texas, was among the witnesses.

Tracy was sentenced to two life sentences plus 20 years for the assault on the girl in Rockwall, a related assault on a Rockwall police officer and a home burglary when he attacked Correctional Officer Katie Stanley at the Clements Unit in 2005, nearly killing her.

Tracy was sentenced to an additional 45-year sentence for the attack on Stanley and a 10-year sentence for an attack on former Correctional Officer Brianlee Lomas in 2009. Tracy slashed Lomas’ face, permanently scarring him, at the Robertson Unit. While at the Hughes Unit, Tracy and two other inmates in administrative segregation managed to hatch an escape plan and had sawed through bars in a recreation yard when they were caught. In January 2014, Tracy was moved from Hughes to Telford, where he was held until he murdered Davison.

Tracy constantly mounted minor assaults on prison staff, was constantly found in possession of dangerous contraband, and repeatedly promised he would some day kill a correctional officer, witnesses testified.

Lockhart advised Tracy of his right to appeal his death sentence to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals as the proceedings ended Wednesday.

Timothy Davison’s brother, Ken Davison, said there will always be a void in the lives of Timothy Davison’s daughters but that he is grateful to the Bowie County District Attorneys Office and the jury for their work.

“I’m relieved,” Ken Davison said. “Justice has been a long time coming.”

INTERNET SOURCE: https://txktoday.com/crime/tracy-sentenced-death/

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https://victimsfamiliesforthedeathpenalty.blogspot.com/2020/07/corrections-officer-ii-timothy-davison.html