The 12th Execution in 2025
A firing squad on April 10, 2025 executed Mikal Mahdi a South Carolina man who killed an off-duty police officer, the second time the rare execution method has been used by the state in the past five weeks, reported The Associated Press.
Mikal Mahdi gave no final statement and did not look to his
right toward the nine witnesses in the room behind bulletproof glass and bars
once the curtain opened.
He took a few deep breaths during the 45 seconds between
when the hood was put over his head and when the shots rang out, fired by three
volunteers who are prison employees at a distance of about 15 feet (4.6
meters).
Mahdi, 42, cried out as the bullets hit him, and his arms
flexed. A white target with the red bull’s-eye over his heart was pushed into
the wound in his chest.
Mahdi groaned two more times about 45 seconds after that.
His breaths continued for about 80 seconds before he appeared to take one final
gasp.
A doctor checked him for a little over a minute, and he was
declared dead at 6:05 p.m., less than four minutes after the shots were fired.
Firing squad executions resume
Mahdi’s execution came a little over a month after Brad
Sigmon was put to death March 7, in the first U.S. firing squad death
in 15 years and the fourth since 1976. The others all occurred in Utah.
The firing squad is an execution method with a long
and violent history around the world. It has been used to punish
mutinies and desertion in armies, as frontier justice in America’s Old West and
as a tool of terror and political repression in the former Soviet Union and
Nazi Germany.
But South Carolina lawmakers saw it as the quickest and most
humane method, especially with the uncertainty in obtaining lethal injection drugs.
In a statement Mahdi’s attorney, assistant federal public
defender David Weiss, called the execution a “horrifying act that belongs in
the darkest chapters of history, not in a civilized society.”
Mahdi had the choice of dying by firing squad, lethal injection
or the electric chair.
“Faced with barbaric and inhumane choices, Mikal Mahdi has
chosen the lesser of three evils,” Weiss said. “Mikal chose the firing squad
instead of being burned and mutilated in the electric chair, or suffering a
lingering death on the lethal injection gurney.”
Mahdi is the fifth inmate executed by South Carolina in less
than eight months as the state makes its way through prisoners who ran out of
appeals during an unintended 13-year pause on executions in the state.
Mahdi’s is the 12th execution in the U.S. this year.
Twenty-five prisoners in nine states were killed in all of 2024. Alabama and Louisiana have
killed inmates by nitrogen gas. Florida, Oklahoma, Arizona and Texas have
executed men by lethal injection, while South Carolina has used both the firing
squad and lethal
injection.
Mahdi’s last meal was ribeye steak cooked medium, mushroom
risotto, broccoli, collard greens, cheesecake and sweet tea, prison officials
said.
The crime
Mahdi admitted killing Orangeburg Public Safety officer
James Myers in 2004, shooting him at least eight times before burning his body.
Myers’ wife found him in the couple’s Calhoun County shed, which had been the
backdrop to their wedding 15 months earlier.
Myers’ shed was a short distance through the woods from a
gas station where Mahdi tried but failed to buy gas with a stolen credit card
and left behind a vehicle he had carjacked in Columbia. Mahdi was arrested in
Florida while driving Myers’ unmarked police pickup truck.
Mahdi also admitted to the killing three days earlier of
Christopher Boggs, a Winston-Salem, North Carolina, convenience store clerk who
was shot twice in the head as he checked Mahdi’s ID. Mahdi was sentenced to
life in prison for that killing.
Final appeal
Mahdi’s final appeal was
rejected this week by both the U.S. and South Carolina Supreme Courts.
His lawyers said Mahdi’s original attorneys put on a shallow case trying to
spare his life that did not call on relatives, teachers or others who knew him
and ignored the impact of months spent in solitary confinement in prison as a
teen.
The defense’s case to spare Mahdi’s life before a judge
lasted only about 30 minutes. It “didn’t even span the length
of a Law & Order episode, and was just as superficial,” Mahdi’s lawyers
wrote.
Mahdi’s earliest memory was his father slamming his mother
through a glass table and later lying to his son and saying his mother was
dead. Mahdi’s father pulled him out of school in fifth grade when officials
suggested he needed behavioral help, defense lawyers said.
Prosecutors said Mahdi constantly used brutality to solve
his problems. As a death row prisoner, he stabbed a guard and hit another
worker with a concrete block. Mahdi was caught three times with tools he could
have used to escape, including a piece of sharpened metal that could be used as
a knife, according to prison records.
“The nature of the man is violence,” prosecutors wrote.
Weiss, Mahdi’s attorney, said his client died in full view
of a system “that failed him at every turn — from childhood to his final
breath.”
Busy death chamber
Mahdi’s death is the end of a busy time in South Carolina’s
death chamber. He is the fifth inmate killed since September after the state
had not had any executions since 2011. No other inmates are out of appeals but
several are close.
The state was able to restart executions after lawmakers
allowed the firing squad and passed a bill allowing suppliers of the pentobarbital
to remain secret, along with the exact procedures used to kill inmates and the
names of prison employees on execution teams, including the firing squad
shooters.
Along with Sigmon’s
firing squad death last month, three other South Carolina prisoners
have been executed via lethal injection since September.
The state now has 26 inmates on its death row. Just one man has been sentenced to death in the past decade.
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