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Council of State Ordered to Reconsider Lethal Injection
2007-08-13 13:27:24
News Update 8.13.07 North Carolina Death row inmate Eric Queen, age 28, died at Central Prison last week of an apparent suicide. Mental illness likely played a role in his death. It has been over a decade since there was a successful suicide on North Carolina’s death row. In a major development, Senior Administrative Law Judge Fred Morrison has ordered the Council of State to reconsider its decision to approve the proposed lethal injection protocol. His findings include that: * the Warden should not be allowed to determine unconsciousness on the basis of a brain wave monitor alone * the portion of the protocol giving the Warden authority to stop an execution is not in keeping with the statute * the protocol does not ensure that inmates will be rendered unconscious and prevented from feeling pain * the Council denied the defendants due process by refusing to hear from both sides prior to making its decision You can read the decision here. News reporting here and here. The deci
Read more: Lethal , Injection

Free Floyd Brown
2007-08-02 11:34:26
Imagine you have been accused of a crime you didn’t commit. Now imagine that you can’t defend yourself because your IQ makes you the mental equivalent of a five or six-year-old child. You can’t tell time. You can’t spell your own name. But somehow, police say, you gave them a lengthy and detailed confession to the murder of an elderly woman. You are facing the death penalty. Fast forward fourteen years. You’re still in jail. You haven’t gone to trial. Both of the detectives who accused you have been convicted of federal racketeering charges. All of the physical evidence against you - if there ever was any - has disappeared. It’s not clear that you will ever get your day in court. There is a very good chance you will die in a state mental facility because you are too retarded to stand trial for something you didn’t even do. On the bright side, the Supreme Court has outlawed the execution of the mentally retarded. This is the s
Read more: Floyd , Brown

What Mass Incarceration Means for America
2007-08-01 10:48:52
News Update 8.01.07 North Carolina Nothing to report. Elsewhere Even Alabama prosecutors are starting to question whether the death penalty “is a wise and humane use of our resources.” Billy Hill, the former DA of Shelby County, is concerned that sometimes there is no rhyme or reason to who is sentenced to death and who isn’t. He is also troubled by the quality of representation the accused receive, and the possibility of executing an innocent person. Of course, it might have been helpful for Hill to express these concerns last week, before Darrell Grayson, who Hill put on death row during his days as a prosecutor, was executed. In Ohio, death row inmate John Spirko has been granted his seventh stay of execution. Governor Ted Strickland said that Spirko should not be killed until DNA from the crime scene has been tested and conclusively shows whether Spirko was involved in a 1982 murder. Although the victim’s family would be satisfied with life without paro
Read more: Means , America

Executions - August 2007
2007-08-01 09:54:59
7 - James T. Williams (PA - stay likely) 15 - Kenneth Parr (TX) 16 - Leonard Young (TN - stay likely) 21 - Frank Duane Welch (OK) 22 - Johnny Conner (TX) 23 - Luther Jerome Williams (AL) 28 - Daroyce Mosley (TX) 29 - John Joe Amador (TX) 30 - Kenneth Foster (TX)
Read more: August

Another Chapter in the Hoffman Saga
2007-07-30 09:37:50
News Update 7.30.07 North Carolina A retired judge says that he did not allow criminal charges against the prosecutors who put Jonathan Hoffman on death row because he thought it “unlikely” that a jury would convict them. Hoffman’s death sentence was reversed when it was discovered that generous deals given to the State’s star witness were hidden from his defense counsel. The witness’s attorney says that prosecutors Kenneth Honeycutt and Scott Brewer were in the room when the plea deals were discussed, but Judge Howard Greeson, Jr. didn’t find that claim reliable enough to go in front of a jury. Even though the star witness now says that his testimony was made up, Jonathan Hoffman will be retried later this year. We’ll see what claims are considered reliable enough to go before that jury. Unsanctioned by either the courts or the Bar, Honeycutt is in private practice and Brewer is now (heaven help us) a judge. Elsewhere California People
Read more: Chapter

Time for Change in NC’s Evidence Rooms
2007-07-27 08:57:54
News Update 7.27.07 North Carolina Chris Mumma, the Executive Director of the North Carolina Center on Actual Innocence and a member of the North Carolina Chief Justice’s Criminal Justice Study Commission, was interviewed as part of a Denver newspaper’s series on the crisis of lost and destroyed DNA evidence nationwide. “People are recognizing that evidence preservation is becoming more of an issue,” she said. “Here in North Carolina, there’s been a lot of talk about how we don’t know how to fix the problem, how we can’t keep anything, how we don’t have the money. But we’re out of time with that type of approach. Now it’s time for everyone to put their heads together for solutions.” The federal government requires that biological evidence be preserved, but 26 states (including North Carolina) do not. Elsewhere In Arkansas, the ACLU and a local newspaper have sued for the right to view the entire execution proces
Read more: Change , Evidence , Rooms

Video of North Carolina’s Execution Chamber
2007-07-25 08:03:41
News Update 7.25.07 North Carolina Scott Langley has released a ten-minute video of a tour of North Carolina ’s death chamber conducted by former warden Marvin Polk in 2005. The video traces the inmate’s final 24 hours, from the time he is brought to the special pre-execution holding cell until his body is transported to a local hospital for autopsy. Polk speaks briefly about the involvement of medical personnel in executions. One thing I didn’t know is that there are three executioners. One operates the line that sends lethal chemicals into the inmate’s right arm, one operates the line that sends lethal chemicals into the inmate’s left arm, and the third operates a dummy line with no chemicals that is not actually attached to the inmate. This is the modern-day equivalent of the person on the firing squad whose rifle contained only blanks. I fail to understand why someone who volunteered to kill another human being needs or deserves the assurance that
Read more: Execution , Chamber

General Assembly Approves Protections for Defendants
2007-07-24 09:41:33
News Update 7.24.07 North Carolina From Hickory, a profile of capital defense attorney Lisa Dubs. The article looks at the major cases of Dubs’ career and explores why she chooses to defend some of society’s most reviled members. (I must say that I was given pause by the sexist undertone of the article - newspapers do not comment on the fashion choices of male attorneys - but Dubs clearly knows how to deal with people who see her as a woman first and an attorney second.) In Raleigh, the General Assembly unanimously passed several bills to protect the rights of the accused. The first bill sets standards for eyewitness identifications, whether using photo or live lineups, to prevent officers (inadvertently or otherwise) from suggesting whom the witness should identify. The second requires that all suspect interrogations in homicide cases be recorded on audio or video tape. A third bill provides inmates and defendants with better access to DNA testing to prove their innoc
Read more: Defendants

Constitution Throws Monkey Wrench in Florida Lethal Injection Machine
2007-07-23 09:15:47
News Update 7.23.07 North Carolina Loose ends from the Jerry Anderson trial here and here. Elsewhere Some very interesting developments out of Florida , where Judge Carven Angel has issued a temporary injunction preventing the execution of Ian Lightbourne. The judge heard testimony on the torture-execution of Angel Diaz, and then-Governor Jeb Bush’s attempts to cover it up, before ordering the State to revise its lethal injection protocol to provide for adequate equipment, trained personnel, and a medically-informed procedure. From Maryland, the story of Vicki Schieber, whose daughter was brutally killed in 1998. The loss did not change her views on capital punishment, but it did change her life. Harris County, Texas has scheduled the execution of its 100th inmate in the modern era. That one county has executed more people than any state in the union, except of course Texas. More than Virginia. More than twice as many as all of North Carolina. About eight times more than the
Read more: Machine , Lethal , Injection , Constitution

Breaking: Anderson Mistrial
2007-07-20 14:26:29
After over 30 hours of deliberation, the judge has declared a mistrial. The jury, split 11-1, was unable to decide whether Jerry Anderson is guilty of the murder of his wife, Emily. The defense presented strong evidence of innocence, including witnesses who saw Emily Anderson alive with another man after police say her husband shot her.
Read more: Breaking

Free Floyd Brown, Part II
2007-08-16 11:17:32
Background As discussed in a prior post, Floyd Brown , an innocent mentally retarded man, has been locked up for 14 years without a trial. He has been held at the state mental hospital since 1993 in connection with the murder of an Anson County woman. Until the Supreme Court banned the execution of the mentally retarded, he was facing a death sentence. Two days ago, his attorneys filed a petition that could finally win him his freedom. New Information The petition puts forth new information pointing to Mr. Brown’s innocence and blatant misconduct on the part of the Anson County Sheriff’s Department, including: > Law enforcement officers conducted a search of Mr. Brown and his home prior to his arrest for which there is no documentation. No warrants were obtained and no reports were produced. The record contains a Consent to Search form signed by Mr. Brown on the day before law enforcement claims it first made contact with him. Mr. Brown’s sister observed him b


Justice Department Greases the Fast Track to Death
2007-08-16 09:30:06
News Update 8.16.07 North Carolina In an editorial, The Fayetteville Observer advocates for continued stays of execution while the lethal injection quagmire is worked out. Elsewhere Tennessee Supreme Court ruling will allow the execution of some mentally retarded defendants. Mental retardation is a condition that, by definition, must manifest itself before the age of 18. Therefore, the Court said, courts should not take into consideration IQ tests performed after that age. That would be reasonable if everyone was given an IQ test prior to the age of 18, but Tennessee’s new law will allow people to be executed just because they came from families or school districts without the resources to properly identify and diagnose their disabilities. There are also concerns with the age-of-18 bar because the human brain continues to develop into one’s twenties. The Justice Department is proposing new rules that would give Alberto Gonzales more control over state capital prosecutio
Read more: Track

Floyd Brown Update
2007-08-16 08:45:28
Attorneys for Floyd Brown (see prior discussion here) have filed a habeas corpus petition seeking his release. (For nonlawyers: In Latin, “habeas corpus” roughly means “bring the body.” The idea is that a federal court can ask a state prison to (figuratively) bring a prisoner to the court so that it can be determined whether he is being lawfully held.) Concerned citizens can contact the district attorney and ask that Mr. Brown’s case be dismissed with prejudice, meaning that the charges cannot be refiled at a later date. Honorable Michael Parker, DA District Attorney’s Office P.O. Box 761 Wadesboro, NC 28170 (704) 694-0129
Read more: Update

UNC-CH Presents Death Penalty Series
2007-08-14 09:59:01
News Update 8.14.07 North Carolina The fine folks at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill’s Summer Reading Program have set up an impressive series of death penalty-related events and performances spanning the next year. This month: * August 20 (Monday) - An Evening with Nick Yarris, 7:00 p.m., F.P.G. Student Union Great Hall Come hear special guest Nick Yarris, who was exonerated after spending 23 years on Death Row. Yarris delivers a powerful message focusing on social conscience, human rights, and penal reform. * August 26 (Sunday) - After Innocence, 6:00 p.m., F.P.G. Student Union Auditorium After Innocence tells the dramatic and compelling story of the exonerated — innocent men wrongfully imprisoned for decades and then released after DNA evidence proved their innocence. The film focuses on the gripping story of seven men and their emotional journey back into society and efforts to rebuild their lives. Included are a police officer, an army sergeant, and a young f
Read more: Presents , Penalty

Floyd Brown to Get Day in Court
2007-08-20 09:54:41
News Update 8.20.07 North Carolina Good news for Floyd Brown . Durham County Superior Court Judge Orlando Hudson, Jr. has set a hearing for October 8th to determine whether Brown’s continued detention is legal. Brown has been awaiting trial on a murder charge for 14 years. District Attorney Michael Parker has refused to drop the charges, despite evidence of Brown’s innocence. Many are calling for Brown’s immediate release. Officials at Fort Bragg have announced that Timothy Hennis will face a court martial for three 1985 killings of which he was acquitted in civilian court. A military judge will soon announce a schedule for arraignment, motions, and the (third) trial of Tim Hennis. Elsewhere Texas Students Against the Death Penalty are encouraging supporters of Kenneth Foster to make and send YouTube videos to Governor Perry asking for clemency. To see existing videos or submit your own, click here. For more information, watch the video below and read up on Kenn


The Easter Bunny Made Me Do It
2007-08-23 08:46:49
News Update 8.23.07 North Carolina In Pasquotank County, things got a little colorful at the trial of Donald Carlton Lowry. At the climax of his closing argument, District Attorney Frank Parrish picked up the murder weapon, a baseball bat, and slammed it down on the defense table so hard that a sliver of wood flew off. Parrish told the judge he hadn’t actually meant to hit the table, so it was all OK. Elsewhere The New York Times marks the 80th anniversary of the executions of Sacco and Vanzetti. Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were executed in 1927 for a Massachusetts double murder they did not commit. (c/o ODPI) Texas executed its 400th inmate last night. Johnny Ray Conner was 32 years old.
Read more: Easter , Bunny

Current Cases in NC
2007-08-22 10:08:33
News Update 8.22.07 North Carolina There are presently at least two capital murder trials underway in North Carolina. In Hoke County, Kelvin Ray Smith has been convicted of robbery and murder charges and is moving into the sentencing phase of his trial. In Wake County, jury selection has begun for the trial of Andrew Canty. Meanwhile, at least four defendants who formerly faced the death penalty have been sentenced to less: Robert Lilly (Anson County, second-degree murder), Jondre Lowemincey (Onslow County, first-degree murder - life without parole x2), Tharon Johnson (Onslow County, second-degree murder x2), and Robert Fastje (Union County, second-degree murder). An op-ed by the ACLU’s Christopher Hill: At every step of the capital conviction process, our state government has shown a willingness to evade, or even betray, the truth. It is against this backdrop that North Carolina must now reconsider carrying out the most severe sanction. The truth is that the death penalty in N
Read more: Current

Good News Edition
2007-08-28 08:34:42
News Update 08.28.07 Excuse me while I pry myself down from the rafters. North Carolina Three North Carolina men who had been facing the death penalty were spared yesterday. * In Gaston County, Samuel Mayfield obtained a plea to second-degree murder. * In Hoke County, a jury unanimously decided against imposing the death penalty on Kelvin Ray Smith. * In Wake County, Andrew Canty pled guilty to first-degree murder and was sentenced to life without parole. Finally, the North Carolina Department of Justice is stepping in to review the case of Floyd Brown. Brown has been held in the state mental institution for 14 years without a trial. Elsewhere Miscellaneous coverage of the Gonzales resignation here.
Read more: Edition , Good News

Life Sentence for Lowry
2007-08-27 09:14:40
News Update 8.27.07 North Carolina A victory in Pasquotank County - a jury took just over half an hour to decide that Donald Carlton Lowry does not deserve to die. He was sentenced instead to life without parole. Love Lived on Death Row will be showing in the multipurpose room of Central Carolina Community College’s Pittsboro Campus on September 20 at 6:45 PM. The documentary tells the story of the children of a man who was executed by the State in 2005. Elsewhere According to The New York Times, Alberto Gonzales has resigned the position of Attorney General. CNN is reporting that he will be replaced by Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff. Allegations of perjury before Congress are only the most recent scandal for Gonzales, who has also been accused of firing assistant attorney generals for not being aggressive enough in seeking capital punishment. A new study by law professors Eric Freedman (Hofstra) and David Dow (U-Houston) shows that the Anti-Terrorism and Effect
Read more: Sentence

North Carolina Seeks Death Penalty Against Woman
2007-08-31 11:37:02
News Update 8.31.07 North Carolina Wake County prosecutors have announced their intention to seek death against Monique Berkley for the murder of her husband. One of Berkley’s co-defendants pleaded guilty earlier this week, the other will be testifying for the prosecution in exchange for a promise not to seek the death penalty. There are four women on North Carolina ’s death row. Elsewhere Is Ohio, the deathiest state in the North, making a move towards abolition? The cases of three men - Kenny Richey (possibly innocent), John Spirko (possibly innocent), and Jason Getsy (sentenced to death when man who orchestrated killing was not) - have caused many to question whether the death penalty is just, fair, or fixable. (c/o CDW) The Nation on the evolution of Texas’s approach to the death penalty. In sparing the life of Kenneth Foster, argues John Nichols, Governor Perry crawled up out of the swamp and onto the shore. (c/o CDW) The Foster family extend their thanks t
Read more: Penalty

Kenneth Foster Spared
2007-08-30 12:33:02
Thanks to the hard work of thousands of people from around the globe, the life of Kenneth Foster has been saved. Foster was scheduled to die tonight for a 1996 Texas murder. Many said that Foster should not be executed because he was not the shooter, only the getaway driver. Foster was tried simultaneously with the shooter, who was executed in 2006. Backed by a highly unusual parole board recommendation for clemency, Governor Perry commuted Foster’s sentence to life without parole. Announcing his decision, the Governor said, “After carefully considering the facts of this case, along with the recommendations from the Board of Pardons and Paroles, I believe the right and just decision is to commute Foster’s sentence from the death penalty to life imprisonment. I am concerned about Texas law that allows capital murder defendants to be tried simultaneously, and it is an issue I think the legislature should examine.” (image source)


A Brief History of Capital Punishment in North Carolina
2007-08-29 13:17:38
Early America Colonists brought the practice of capital punishment with them from England. Many of the crimes that had been death-eligible in England - robbery, burglary, arson, counterfeiting, theft, and of course murder – were quickly made capital in the common law. The colonies also executed people for other crimes, including witchcraft, aiding a runaway slave, forgery, and concealing a birth. At this time, there were no prisons, only small local jails incapable of containing criminals for long periods of time. Death was one of few punishments available in the event of a serious crime. The first known execution in the colonies was that of George Kendall, who was shot to death in Virginia in 1608 for espionage. Most early executions were carried out by hanging, but such methods as breaking on a wheel, hanging in chains, gibbeting, bludgeoning, and burning at the stake were also employed. The first person executed in North Carolina was likely George Senneca, hung on August 26,
Read more: North Carolina , Brief , History , Punishment , Capital Punishment

Life Saved in Watauga County
2007-09-21 08:44:30
News Update 09.21.07 North Carolina In Watauga County , Kyle Quentin Triplett pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and other charges yesterday for the 2005 death of Stephen William Harrington. Jury selection was already underway in Triplett’s first-degree murder trial, which could have resulted in a death sentence. More here and here. Some wonder whether a recent Tennessee decision finding lethal injection unconstitutional might affect similar litigation in North Carolina. North Carolina uses a chemical cocktail identical to the one in Tennessee, but it’s worth noting that the Tennessee protocol actually provides more safeguards in terms of inmate monitoring during the execution. Elsewhere The African nation of Gabon has announced that it will formally abolish the death penalty. No one has been executed in Gabon in 20 years. (c/o Abolish!)


Trial Date Set for Tim Hennis
2007-09-19 15:40:58
News Update 09.19.07 North Carolina A tentative June 1, 2008 trial date has been set for Timothy Hennis. Hennis will stand trial in a Ft. Bragg military court for a 1985 triple murder of which he was acquitted in civilian court. There will be a motions hearing in January, at which time the judge might decide to push the trial back if necessary. Meanwhile, attorneys for Sgt. William J. Kreutzer, Jr. were in court today at Ft. Bragg. Kreutzer was convicted and sentenced to death in 1996 for a shooting during a training run that killed one paratrooper and injured 18 others. His conviction was reversed in 2005 due to ineffective assistance of counsel and bad rulings by the judge. Kreutzer will be retried in April 2008. Doctors at Dorothea Dix Hospital in Raleigh say that Michael Charles Hayes is no longer mentally ill, and no longer a danger to others. Hayes has been kept at Dix since 1989, when he was found not guilty by reason of insanity after killing four people and wounding five
Read more: Trial

Council of State to Decide Lethal Injection Issue
2007-09-17 09:15:51
News Update 09.17.07 North Carolina Back in August, the Council of State was ordered to reconsider its decision to approve the new lethal injection protocol. Last week, the Council announced that it will take this under advisement - and render a final decision - at its October 2nd meeting. The Council is not allowing live testimony, but will permit the parties to submit their arguments in writing. The Council is not bound to accept the judge’s findings of fact or conclusions of law, which included that the proposed protocol is insufficient to guard against undue suffering during an execution. John Holdridge and Christopher Hill of the NC-based ACLU Capital Punishment Project weigh in on the capital defense crisis in the “Death Belt”. Elsewhere In California, the federal judge overseeing that state’s lethal injection challenge has moved a hearing back two months to allow him time to visit California’s shiny new execution chamber. At the December hearing,
Read more: Lethal , Injection

Future Dean Sacked Over Death Penalty Views
2007-09-13 11:25:42
News Update 09.13.07 North Carolina Erwin Chemerinsky, Duke Law School’s own god of constitutional law, signed a contract on September 4th to become the first dean of the new law school at UC-Irvine. Yesterday, the school rescinded their offer, apparently upset over Chemerinsky’s criticism of the DOJ’s plan to give the Attorney General more control over capital cases. Pretty much everyone thinks this was a bad move on UCI’s part. Samples: one and two. Your loss, California. Elsewhere Since the Supreme Court decided Coker v. Georgia in 1977, no one has been executed in the United States for the crime of rape. But the Court’s decision applied only to the rape of an adult woman. A Louisiana man, facing death for the rape of an 8-year-old girl, is asking the court to consider whether his death sentence is constitutional. You can read Patrick Kennedy’s entire petition here. Kennedy is the only person on death row in the United States for a non-hom
Read more: Future , Sacked , Penalty , Death Penalty

Dead Man Walking…Away From Death Row
2007-09-11 09:06:57
News Update 09.11.07 North Carolina Twelve years after being sentenced to die, Charles Walker is off of death row. Walker was hours away from execution in 2004. In 2006, a judge found that the State withheld vital evidence from Walker’s defense team and that one of Walker’s co-defendants lied on the stand. Instead of retrying the case, prosecutors allowed Walker to enter an Alford plea to conspiracy to commit murder and accessory to murder. Said Walker’s attorney, “If there is a larger lesson here, it’s that you can’t expect a system made up of human beings to be successful when they decide to play God.” More here. Elsewhere In New York, a court is considering the fate of the only person on the state’s death row. New York, which has not executed anyone since 1963, reinstated the death penalty in 1995. That law was held unconstitutional in 2004. For John B. Taylor, the question is whether special jury instructions given by the judg
Read more: Walking , hellip , Dead Man , Death Row

Two Lives Spared in Winston-Salem
2007-09-06 11:27:45
News Update 09.06.07 North Carolina Two Forsyth County men entered life-saving guilty pleas yesterday. Kohumna Hoyle, 34, was sentenced to life without parole in the death of his son, Raynell. Hoyle’s bipolar illness may have contributed to the child’s death. Daniel Learmond Hayes, 21, will spend the rest of his life in prison for the murder of a cab driver. Hayes’s life was saved in large part by his victim’s children, who told prosecutors to be merciful because they didn’t want Hayes’s family to have to endure the pain of his execution. Elsewhere Alabama plans to pay a Massachusetts doctor $400 an hour to analyze the combination of drugs the state uses to kill people. OK, but don’t complain about the cost of the defense’s expert. Mississippi plans to retry Kennedy Brewer for rape and murder, even though the DNA shows he didn’t do it. Brewer was sentenced to death and incarcerated for 15 years before DNA proved his innocence.
Read more: Lives , Winston , Salem

Living on Borrowed Time
2007-09-04 14:58:51
News Update 09.04.07 North Carolina The Greensboro News-Record wades into the “death penalty briar patch.” James Thomas was supposed to be dead seven months ago. The News and Observer takes a look at Thomas and five other men whose lives have been extended by the current pause in executions. Some say it’s justice delayed. Thomas is just happy to have more time to spend mentoring younger inmates. Elsewhere In Georgia, the head of the Capital Defender’s Office has stepped down to protest the dearth of funding for capital cases and the refusal of the Public Defender Standards Council to acknowledge the problem and call for a halt to capital prosecutions. The high court in Nebraska is considering whether the electric chair - the state’s sole means of execution - is a cruel and unusual punishment. If the court rules for Raymond Mata, Jr., the question will then become whether lethal injection is a constitutional alternative. Murder Victims’ Families f
Read more: Living

People on North Carolina’s Death Row
2007-09-04 13:51:34
DOC # Last Name First Name Sex Race 1 0234897 Laws Wayne A. M W 2 0207779 Jennings Patricia W. F W 3 0288088 Moore Blanche T. F W 4 0265106 McCollum Henry L. M B 5 0351933 Rose Clinton R. M W 6 0100579 Davis Edward E. M W 7 0353186 Rouse Kenneth B. M B 8 0339314 Reeves Michael M. M W 9 0347839 Robinson Eddie C. M B 10 0264009 McCarver Ernest P. M W 11 0294214 Moseley Carl M W 12 0084604 Conaway John L. M B 13 0039561 Bowie Nathan M B 14 0039569 Bowie William M B 15 0057308 Burkes Rayford L. M B 16 0058316 Burr John M W 17 0104984 Decastro Eugene M B 18 0156518 Gregory Warren M B 19 0251740 Lynch David M W 20 0021418 Barrett Jeffrey M B 21 0030124 Best Norfolk M B 22 0063592 Campbell James M W 23 0141374 Garner Daniel M W 24 0099090 Daughtry Johnny R. M W 25 0054499 Buckner George C. M W 26 0441726 Williams James E. M W 27 0149506 Goode George E. M B 28 0343075 Richardson Martin A. M B 29 0012311 Atkins Randy L. M W 30 0153
Read more: Death Row , North , Carolina , North Carolina

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