The 13th Execution of 2020
Over previous 56 years, before President Trump, the federal government had executed just three people — all in the early 2000s. Prior to this year there had been a 17-year hiatus in federal executions, reported The Associated Press.
William Emmett LeCroy, 50, was pronounced dead on September 23, 2029 at
9:06 p.m. EDT after receiving a lethal injection at the same U.S. prison in
Terre Haute, Indiana, where five others have
been executed in 2020.
Lawyers had asked President Trump in a
petition to commute LeCroy’s sentence to life in prison, saying that LeCroy’s
brother, Georgia State Trooper Chad LeCroy, was killed during a routine traffic
stop in 2010 and that another son’s death would devastate their family.
The execution began nearly three hours later than
scheduled as LeCroy's lawyers made an ultimately failed, last-minute bid to
convince the U.S. Supreme Court to issue a stay.
As a curtain rose across glass windows separating
witnesses from the death chamber, LeCroy lay strapped to a cross-shaped gurney,
with IVs in his forearms and hands. He kept his eyes fixed firmly on the
ceiling, not turning to look toward witnesses. The witnesses included the
father and fiancé of Joann Lee Tiesler, whom LeCroy raped and stabbed to death
19 years ago, Justice Department spokesperson Kerri Kupec said in a statement.
LeCroy's spiritual adviser, Sister Barbara Battista,
stood a few feet away inside the chamber, her head bowed and reading softly
from a prayer book.
Asked if he had any last words, LeCroy responded
calmly
LeCroy had said last week he didn’t want to play
into what he called the “theater” surrounding his execution and so might not
make a full statement in the minutes before he died, Battista told The
Associated Press earlier Tuesday.
When a prison official leaned over him Tuesday night
and gently pulled off LeCroy’s face mask to ask if he had any last words,
LeCroy responded calmly and matter-of-factly. His last and only words were:
“Sister Battista is about to receive in the postal service my last
statement."
LeCroy kept his eyes open as someone out of his view
in an adjacent room began administering the lethal injection of pentobarbital.
His eyelids grew heavy while his midsection began to heave uncontrollably.
After several more minutes, color drained from his limbs, his face turned ashen
and his lips tinted blue. After about 10 more minutes, an official with a
stethoscope entered the chamber, felt LeCroy’s wrist for a pulse and then
listened to his heart before officially declaring him dead.
Another execution, of Christopher Vialva, is
scheduled Thursday. He would be the first African American on federal death row
to be put to death in the series of federal executions this year.
Critics say the Justice Department's resumption of
federal executions this year is a cynical bid to help Trump claim the mantel of
law-and-order candidate leading up to Election Day. Supporters say Trump is
bringing long-overdue justice to victims and their families.
LeCroy broke into the Cherrylog, Georgia, mountain
home of Joann Lee Tiesler on Oct. 7, 2001, and waited for her to return from a
shopping trip. When she walked through the door, LeCroy struck her with a
shotgun, bound and raped her. He then slashed her throat and repeatedly stabbed
her in the back.
LeCroy had known Tiesler because she lived near a
relative’s home and would often wave to her as he drove by. He later told
investigators he’d come to believe she might have been his old babysitter he
called Tinkerbell, who LeCroy claimed sexually molested him as a child. After
killing Tiesler, he realized that couldn’t possibly be true.
Two days after killing Tiesler, LeCroy was arrested
driving Tiesler’s truck after passing a U.S. checkpoint in Minnesota heading to
Canada.
Authorities found a note LeCroy wrote before his
arrest in which he asked Tiesler for forgiveness, according to court filings.
“You were an angel and I killed you,” it read. “I am a vagabond and doomed to
hell.”
"Today justice was finally served. William
LeCroy died a peaceful death in stark contrast to the horror he imposed on my
daughter Joann,” the victim’s father, Tom Tiesler, said in a statement.
He had been contemplating death in the days
leading up to the execution
“I am unaware that he ever showed any remorse for
his evil actions, his life of crime or for the horrific burden he caused
Joann’s loved ones," the statement read.
A few hours before the execution, Battista, waiting
near the prison, held a bag of caramel chocolate that she said was LeCroy’s
favorite. In conversations with him in the days leading up to the execution,
she said he had been contemplating his likely death and sounded resigned.
“He said, ‘You know, once we were not and then we
are and then we are not,’” she said. “He was reflective. He didn’t seem
agitated.”
LeCroy joined the Army at 17 but was soon was
discharged for going AWOL and later spoke about an interest in witchcraft that
began during a previous stint in prison for burglary, child molestation and
other charges.
He had ruminated for days before the slaying about
how Tiesler was Tinkerbell and that assaulting her would reverse a hex she put
on him. After he cut her throat, he went to Tiesler’s computer to search for
books about witchcraft, court filings said.
He was convicted in 2004 on a federal charge of
carjacking resulting in death and a jury recommended a death sentence.
LeCroy's lawyers had unsuccessfully tried to halt
the execution and argued that his trial lawyers didn’t properly emphasize
evidence about his upbringing and mental health that could have persuaded
jurors not to impose a death sentence. Their last-minute appeal to the U.S.
Supreme Court was also rejected.
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