The 12th Execution of 2024
A Utah man, Taberon Dave Honie, who killed his girlfriend’s mother by slashing her throat was put to death by lethal injection early on August 8, 2024 in the state’s first execution since 2010, reported The Associated Press.
Honie, 48, was convicted of aggravated murder
in the July 1998 death of Claudia Benn, the maternal grandmother of his now
27-year-old daughter, Tressa.
Honie was pronounced dead at 12:25 a.m. Mountain Time in an
execution that went as planned and took about 17 minutes. He tapped his foot
and mouthed “I love you” to family members watching from a witness chamber
after he was given the lethal injection of two doses of pentobarbital.
Strapped to the execution table in a sterile white room at
the state prison, Honie turned his head to thank correctional officers for
taking care of his family before he lost consciousness, warden Bart Mortensen
told reporters after the execution.
Honie let out a gasp as the drug flowed through IVs in both
arms, and his torso jolted off the table. He then laid still for several
minutes before he died, turning a pale shade of blue as his glasses slid back
on his forehead.
His final words were, “From the start it’s been, if it needs
to be done for them to heal, let’s do this. If they tell you you can’t change,
don’t listen to them. To all my brothers and sisters in here, continue to
change. I love you all. Take care.”
Honie was 22 when he broke into Benn’s house in Cedar City,
the tribal headquarters of the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah, after a day of
heavy drinking and drug use. He repeatedly slashed Benn’s throat and stabbed
other parts of her body. The judge who sentenced him to death also found that
Honie had sexually abused one of Benn’s other grandchildren who was in the
house with a then 2-year-old Tressa at the time of the murder.
Honie, who had grown up on the Hopi Indian Reservation in
Arizona, spent the evening with his daughter and other immediate family before
the execution. He told Tressa earlier this week that he had come to terms with
his fate and hoped she could too, she told The Associated Press. His last meal
was a cheeseburger, french fries and a milkshake, the Utah Department of
Corrections said.
After the medical team removed Honie’s body from the
chamber, his family was allowed in to perform a Native American grieving ritual
with bird feathers and cornmeal that they told officers would help free his
soul after death.
Outside the prison, a group of anti-death penalty protesters
sang “Amazing Grace” and held signs that said, “All life is precious.”
After decades of failed appeals, Honie’s execution warrant
was signed in June despite defense objections to the planned lethal drug. In
July, the state changed
its execution protocol to using only a high dose of pentobarbital —
the nervous system suppressant used to euthanize pets.
The Utah Board of Pardons and Parole denied
Honie’s petition to commute his sentence to life in prison after a
July hearing during which Honie’s attorneys described his troubled childhood
growing up on the reservation with parents who abused alcohol. He had started
using hard drugs as a teenager and told the parole board he wouldn’t have
killed Benn if he had been in his “right mind.” He asked the board to allow
him “to exist” so he could be a support for his daughter.
Tressa Honie told the board she has a complicated
relationship with her mother and would lose her most supportive parent if her
father were to be executed. She said in an interview Tuesday that she wasn’t
ready to lose her dad and felt abandoned by family on her mother’s side who had
fought for his execution.
Benn’s close family argued that Taberon Honie deserved no
mercy, and they said his execution was the justice they needed after decades of
grief.
“He deserves an
eye for an eye,” said Benn’s niece, Sarah China Azule.
She and her cousins described Benn as a pillar in their
family and southwestern Utah community. She was a Paiute tribal council member,
substance abuse counselor and caregiver for her children and grandchildren.
Tressa, who has few memories of her grandmother, said she
understands why her cousins needed closure in this way, but it has left her
feeling alone. She has found herself grieving the absence of the strong
maternal role model her father stole from her life.
Correctional officers kept Honie’s immediate family separate
from Benn’s as they witnessed the execution. His brutal crime drove a wedge
between family members that several said will be tough to repair.
Honie was one of six people facing execution in Utah. The
death sentence for a seventh person, Douglas Lovell, who killed a woman to keep
her from testifying against him in a rape case, was recently overturned by the
Utah Supreme Court. He will be resentenced.
To read more CLICK HERE
No comments:
Post a Comment