[Deathpenalty] death penalty news----ARKANSAS
Rick Halperin
rhalperi at smu.edu
Thu Apr 27 22:30:57 CDT 2017
April 27
ARKANSAS:
Arkansas execution delayed as U.S. Supreme Court hears appeals
A plan by Arkansas to execute an inmate was delayed on Thursday as the U.S.
Supreme Court heard last-minute appeals from the man convicted of murdering a
cheerleader, who then escaped from prison and killed 2 other people before
being captured again.
The state, which had not held an execution in 12 years until this month, has
already put three inmates to death since April 20. It had planned to execute
Kenneth Williams, 38, by lethal injection at 7 p.m. CDT (0000 GMT) at its
Cummins Unit prison.
Arkansas had initially planned to execute eight inmates in 11 days in April,
the most of any state in as short a period since the death penalty was
reinstated in 1976. Four of those executions were halted by various courts.
The unprecedented schedule, set because a drug in the state's execution mix
expires at the end of April, prompted criticism that Arkansas was acting
recklessly. It also set off legal filings that raised questions about U.S.
death chamber protocols, troubled prosecutions and difficulties in obtaining
lethal injection drugs.
Hours before Thursday's planned execution, however, lawyers for Williams filed
a petition with the U.S. Supreme Court, seeking to halt the proceedings on
grounds including that Arkansas failed "to provide Mr. Williams a forum to
litigate his claim that he is intellectually disabled."
A U.S. District Court and courts in Arkansas have already rejected other
motions seeking to halt the execution.
Williams, sentenced to life without parole for the 1998 murder of 19-year-old
college cheerleader Dominique Hurd, broke out of a maximum-security prison in
1999.
He murdered Cecil Boren, 57 at his farmhouse, shooting him multiple times.
Williams then stole Boren's pickup truck and fled to Missouri, where he slammed
his vehicle into one driven by delivery man Michael Greenwood, 24, killing him.
"We've been waiting a long, long time for this," Genie Boren, the widow of
Cecil Boren, was quoted as saying by local TV broadcaster Fox 16.
But Greenwood's daughter, Kayla Greenwood, sent Arkansas Governor Asa
Hutchinson a letter on Thursday asking him to spare Williams.
"His execution will not bring my father back or return to us what has been
taken, but it will cause additional suffering," the letter said.
In 2005, Williams sent a letter to a local Arkansas paper where he confessed to
killing Jerrell Jenkins on the same day as the cheerleader.
(source: Reuters)
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