The 6th Execution of 2017
After more than 25 years on death row, James Bigby was put to death for launching a 1987 crime spree that led to the killing of four people, including a 4-month-old boy he drowned in a sink, reported Reuters.
Bigby was executed by lethal injection at the Texas death chamber in Huntsville and
pronounced dead on March 14, 2017 at 6:31 p.m.
The execution was the 542nd in Texas since the U.S.
Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976, the most of any state. It
was also the sixth this year in the United States, and four of those execution
have taken place in Texas.
There were no last-minute appeals for Bigby. Lawyers
previously asked for a halt to his execution, saying he had schizophrenia and
his mental illness was not properly considered as a mitigating factor during
sentencing.
Bigby was convicted and sentenced to death for the
Fort Worth-area murders of Michael Trekell, 26, and his son Jayson, a 17-week
old infant. He was also suspected in but not charged with the deaths of Calvin
Crane and Frank Johnson.
Sometimes in multiple killings, prosecutors opt not
to charge a person with all the murders, leaving open the possibility of
bringing those charges later if there are problems at trial.
Bigby thought his three friends were trying to block
a worker's compensation claim he filed. To stop them, he shot Trekell in the
head and killed the baby in December 1987, according to court documents. Later
the same day, he killed Crane and went the next day to Johnson's house and
fatally shot him when he opened the door, the documents said.
He was arrested after a standoff with police during
which he threatened suicide and said he wanted to go out "in a blaze of
glory," the documents showed.
During a recess in his 1991 murder trial, Bigby
retrieved a revolver from the judge’s bench, entered the judicial chambers,
pointed the gun at the judge’s head and said: “Let’s go," the documents
said.
He was eventually subdued and later condemned to
death.
In his last statement, he offered apologies to the
families. "I’m sorry. I’m sorry. I hope that my death will bring you peace
and closure," he was quoted as saying by the Texas Department of Criminal
Justice.
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