The 16th Execution of 2024
A Texas man, Travis Mullis, who had waived his right to appeal his death sentence received a lethal injection on September 24, 2024 for killing his 3-month-old son more than 16 years ago, one of five executions scheduled within a week’s time in the U.S., reported The Associated Press.
Travis Mullis, 38, was pronounced dead at 7:01 p.m. CDT
following the injection at the state penitentiary in Huntsville. He was
condemned for stomping to death his son Alijah in January 2008.
“I’d like to thank everyone ... that accepted me for the man
I became during my best and worst moments,” Mullis, while strapped to the death
chamber gurney, said after his spiritual adviser offered a brief prayer over
him.
He also thanked prison officials and staff for “changes made
across the system” that allowed “even the men on death row to show it is
possible to be rehabilitated and not deemed a threat and not the men we were
when we came into this system.”
He added that while he “took the legal steps to expedite to
include assisted suicide, I don’t regret this decision, to legally expedite
this process. ... I do regret the decision to take the life of my son.” He
apologized to his son’s mother, to her family and said he had no ill will
toward anyone involved in the punishment.
“It was my decision that put me here,” he said.
The execution was delayed about 20 minutes while technicians
worked to find a suitable vein. One needle carrying the lethal dose of the
sedative pentobarbital was inserted in his right arm, the usual procedure. A
second needle, rather than entering his left arm, was inserted in his left
foot.
He closed his eyes as the drug began taking effect and took
seven barely audible breaths before his breathing abruptly stopped. He was
pronounced dead 20 minutes late
Mullis was the fourth inmate put to death this year in
Texas, the nation’s busiest capital punishment state. Another execution was
carried out Tuesday evening in
Missouri, and executions were also scheduled to take place Thursday
in Oklahoma and Alabama.
South Carolina conducted an execution Friday.
Authorities said Mullis, then 21 and living in Brazoria
County, drove to nearby Galveston with his son after fighting with his
girlfriend. Mullis parked his car and sexually assaulted his son. After the
infant began to cry uncontrollably, Mullis began strangling the child before
taking him out of the car and stomping on his head, according to authorities.
The infant’s body was later found on the roadside. Mullis
fled the state but was later arrested after surrendering to police in
Philadelphia.
Mullis’ execution proceeded after one of his attorneys,
Shawn Nolan, said Tuesday afternoon that he planned no late appeals in a bid to
spare the inmate’s life. Nolan also said in a statement that Texas would be
executing a “redeemed man” who has always accepted responsibility for
committing “an awful crime.”
In a letter submitted in February to U.S. District Judge George
Hanks in Houston, Mullis wrote that he had no desire to challenge his case any
further. Mullis
has previously taken responsibility for his son’s death and has said
“his punishment fit the crime.”
At Mullis’ trial, prosecutors said Mullis was a “monster”
who manipulated people, was deceitful and refused the medical and psychiatric
help he had been offered.
Since his conviction in 2011, Mullis has long been at odds
with his various attorneys over whether to appeal his case. At times, Mullis
had asked that his appeals be waived, only to later change his mind.
The U.S. Supreme Court has prohibited the application of the
death penalty for the intellectually disabled, but not for people with serious
mental illness.
If the scheduled executions in Alabama and Oklahoma are
carried out as planned, it will mark the first time in more than 20 years —
since July 2003 — that five were held in seven days, according to the nonprofit
Death Penalty Information Center, which takes no position on capital punishment
but has criticized the way states carry out executions.
The first took place Friday when South
Carolina put inmate Freddie Owens to death. Also Tuesday, Marcellus
Williams was executed in Missouri. On Thursday, executions are
scheduled for Alan Miller in Alabama and
Emmanuel Littlejohn in Oklahoma.
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