The 24th Execution of 2024
An Indiana man, Joseph Corcoran, convicted in the 1997 killings of his brother and three other men received a lethal injection on December 18, 2024 in the state’s first execution in 15 years, without any independent witness present under the state’s laws shielding information about the death penalty.
Corcoran, 49, was pronounced dead at 12:44 a.m. CST at the
Indiana State Prison in Michigan City, Indiana, the Indiana Department of
Correction said in a statement. Corcoran was scheduled to be executed with the
powerful sedative pentobarbital, but the state agency’s statement did not
mention that drug. Corcoran’s execution was the 24th in the U.S. this year.
Last summer the governor announced the resumption of state executions after a yearslong hiatus marked by a scarcity of lethal injection drugs nationwide.
Indiana and Wyoming are the only two states that do not
allow members of the media to witness state executions, according to a
recent report by the Death Penalty Information Center.
Indiana has provided few details about the process. Prison
officials only provided photos of the execution chamber, which resembles a
sparse operating room with a gurney, bright fluorescent lighting and an
adjacent viewing room.
Corcoran’s attorneys have fought the death penalty sentence
for years, arguing he is severely mentally ill, which affects his ability to
understand and make decisions. Corcoran exhausted
his federal appeals in 2016, and this month his attorneys asked the
Indiana Supreme Court to stop his execution but the request was
denied.
Corcoran’s attorneys asked the U.S. District Court of
Northern Indiana last week to stop his execution and hold a hearing to decide
if it would be unconstitutional because Corcoran has a serious mental illness.
The court declined to intervene Friday, and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
7th Circuit did the same Tuesday.
Corcoran’s attorneys then asked the U.S. Supreme Court to
review his case and issue an emergency order halting his execution, but the
high court denied their request for a stay.
According to court records, before Corcoran shot the men in
July 1997, he was stressed because his sister’s forthcoming marriage to Turner
would necessitate moving out of the Fort Wayne home he shared with her and his
brother.
Corcoran awoke to hear his brother and others downstairs
talking about him, loaded his rifle and then shot all four, records show. While
jailed, Corcoran reportedly bragged about fatally shooting his parents in 1992
in northern Indiana’s Steuben County. He was charged in their killings but
acquitted.
Indiana’s last state execution was in 2009, when Matthew
Wrinkles was put to death for killing his wife, her brother and sister-in-law
in 1994.
Since that time 13
executions have been carried out in Indiana, but they were initiated
and performed by federal officials in 2020 and 2021 at a federal prison in
Terre Haute.
State officials have said they could not continue executions
because a combination of drugs used in lethal injections had become
unavailable.
For years there has been a shortage nationwide because
pharmaceutical companies have
refused to sell their products for that purpose. That has pushed
states, including Indiana, to turn to compounding pharmacies, which manufacture
drugs specifically for a client. Some use more accessible drugs such as the
sedatives pentobarbital or midazolam — both of which, critics say, can cause
intense pain.
Indiana planned to use pentobarbital to execute Corcoran
and, like many states, is refusing to divulge the source of the drugs. When
asked for details, the Indiana Department of Correction directed The Associated
Press to a state law labeling the source of lethal injection drugs as confidential.
Religious groups, disability rights advocates and others
have opposed his execution. About a dozen people, some holding candles, held a
vigil late Tuesday to pray outside the prison, which is surrounded by barbed
wire fences in a residential area about 60 miles (90 kilometers) east of
Chicago.
“We can build a society without giving governmental
authorities the right to execute their own citizens,” said Bishop Robert
McClory of the Diocese of Gary, who led the prayers.
Other death penalty opponents also demonstrated outside the
prison Tuesday night, some holding signs that read “Execution Is Not The
Solution” and “Remember The Victims But Not With More Killing.”
“There is no need and no benefit from this execution. It’s
all show,” said Abraham Borowitz, director of Death Penalty Action, his
organization that protests every execution in the U.S.
Prison officials said in a brief statement Tuesday evening
that Corcoran “requested Ben & Jerry’s ice cream for his last meal.”
Corcoran said farewell late Tuesday to relatives, including
his wife, Tahina Corcoran, who told reporters outside the prison that they
discussed their faith and their memories, including attending high school
together. She reiterated her request for Indiana’s governor to commute her
husband’s death sentence.
Tahina Corcoran said her husband is “very mentally ill” and
she doesn’t think he fully grasps what is happening to him.
“He is in shock. He doesn’t understand,” she said.
One of Corcoran’s sisters, Kelly Ernst, who lost both a
brother and her fiancé in the 1997 shootings, said she believes the death
penalty should be abolished and executing her brother will not solve anything.
“I’m at a loss for words. I’m just really upset that they’re
doing it close to Christmas,” she said. “My sister and I, our birthdays are in
December. I mean, it just feels like it’s going to ruin Christmas for the rest
of our lives.”
To read more CLICK HERE
No comments:
Post a Comment