Post by Anja Nieser on Sept 4, 2006 12:04:03 GMT -5
Inmate picks electric chair----State law gives killer alternative to
lethal injection
A Shelbyville man who is scheduled to be executed on Sept. 19 has asked to
die by electric chair, raising the possibility that the state could carry
out its first electrocution death in 46 years.
Daryl Keith Holton, a Gulf War veteran who shot his 3 sons and their
sister in 1997, could have chosen death by lethal injection.
But under Tennessee law, death-row inmates can choose between the electric
chair and lethal injection if their crimes were committed before 1999, said
David Raybin, a Nashville attorney and legal scholar who wrote the state's
death penalty statute.
The inmates were allowed that option when the state adopted lethal injection
as the method of execution to avoid any appeals of the process.
"What they did was say, 'You could have your choice,' and then there
wouldn't be any way they could challenge the method of execution, since they
had the power to decide themselves," Raybin said.
Last week Holton checked electric chair as his preferred way to die, Dorinda
Carter, spokeswoman for the Department of Correction, said. The state will
be able to use the device, she said.
It wasn't clear why Holton chose it over lethal injection. His attorneys
could not be reached for comment.
The last time the electric chair was used in Tennessee was Nov. 7, 1960,
when inmate William Tines was executed for rape, Holton said. That was the
last execution in the state until 2000, the year that convicted child killer
Robert Glen Coe was put to death. Sedley Alley, who was convicted of raping
and killing a Marine, was executed in June. Both men died by lethal
injection.
(source: The Tennessean)
lethal injection
A Shelbyville man who is scheduled to be executed on Sept. 19 has asked to
die by electric chair, raising the possibility that the state could carry
out its first electrocution death in 46 years.
Daryl Keith Holton, a Gulf War veteran who shot his 3 sons and their
sister in 1997, could have chosen death by lethal injection.
But under Tennessee law, death-row inmates can choose between the electric
chair and lethal injection if their crimes were committed before 1999, said
David Raybin, a Nashville attorney and legal scholar who wrote the state's
death penalty statute.
The inmates were allowed that option when the state adopted lethal injection
as the method of execution to avoid any appeals of the process.
"What they did was say, 'You could have your choice,' and then there
wouldn't be any way they could challenge the method of execution, since they
had the power to decide themselves," Raybin said.
Last week Holton checked electric chair as his preferred way to die, Dorinda
Carter, spokeswoman for the Department of Correction, said. The state will
be able to use the device, she said.
It wasn't clear why Holton chose it over lethal injection. His attorneys
could not be reached for comment.
The last time the electric chair was used in Tennessee was Nov. 7, 1960,
when inmate William Tines was executed for rape, Holton said. That was the
last execution in the state until 2000, the year that convicted child killer
Robert Glen Coe was put to death. Sedley Alley, who was convicted of raping
and killing a Marine, was executed in June. Both men died by lethal
injection.
(source: The Tennessean)