The 43rd Execution of 2025
A South
Carolina firing squad has executed a man on November 14, 2025, the third person to die by
that method in the state this year, reported The Associated Press.
Three
prison employees, all with live ammunition, volunteered to carry
out the execution of Stephen Bryant, 44, who was pronounced dead at
6:05 p.m. Bryant killed
three people in five days in a rural area of the state in 2004.
Bryant
chose to die by firing squad instead of lethal injection or the electric chair.
He made no final statement and briefly glanced toward the 10 witnesses before
the hood was placed on his head.
The shots
rang out about 55 seconds later. Bryant made no noise. The red bullseye target
that marks the location of his heart flew forward off his chest. He had a few
shallow breaths and then a final spasm a little over a minute later. A doctor
checked him with a stethoscope for a minute before he pronounced Bryant dead.
A media
witness said after the execution that a pool of wetness emerged on Bryant’s
chest where he was shot. Three family members of victims who served as
witnesses held hands during the execution.
Bryant is
the seventh person put to death by South Carolina in 14 months after the state
had a 13-year pause in executions when it couldn’t obtain lethal injection
drugs.
Republican
Gov. Henry McMaster denied clemency for Bryant, according to his office. No
South Carolina governor has offered
clemency since the death penalty resumed in the U.S. in 1976.
Final meal
and memory
For his
final meal, Bryant had spicy mixed seafood stir-fry, fried fish over rice, egg
rolls, stuffed shrimp, two candy bars and German chocolate cake.
Bo King, a
lawyer who works on death penalty cases in South Carolina, said Bryant had a
genetic disorder, was a victim of sexual and physical abuse by relatives, and
his mother’s binge drinking “permanently damaged his body and brain.”
“Mr.
Bryant’s impairments left him unable to endure the tormenting memories of his
childhood,” King wrote in a statement.
King said
Bryant “showed grace and courage in forgiving his family and great love for
those in and outside of his prison.”
“We will
remember his unlikely friendships, his fierce protectiveness, and his love for
nature, the water, and the world,” King wrote.
Firing
squad vs. lethal injection drugs
The firing
squad has a long
and violent history around the world. Death by a hail of bullets 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 in
recent years, it’s been revived in the U.S. Some lawmakers say it’s the
quickest and most humane way to execute a person.
That’s
since a number of botched executions by other methods, including lethal
injection drugs. South Carolina and other states have struggled to maintain
adequate supplies of lethal injection drugs.
In part
because of this, South Carolina paused executions for 13 years. The state then
restarted in September 2024, after which four men have been executed by lethal
injection and three by firing squad. The state is among several where the
electric chair is still legal.
King, the
lawyer speaking on Bryant’s behalf, said each of the seven executions have been
“brutal and shameful.”
“None has
made South Carolina safer or more just,” King said.
The three
other recent firing squad executions in the U.S. have been in Utah with none in
that state since 2010. The method is also still legal in Idaho and a backup
method if others aren’t available in Oklahoma and Mississippi.
The 2004
killings in rural South Carolina
Bryant
admitted to killing Willard “TJ” Tietjen in October 2004 after stopping by his
secluded home in rural Sumter County and saying he had car trouble.
Tietjen
was shot several times. Bryant then answered Tietjen’s phone after it rang
several times telling both his wife and daughter that he was the prowler and
had killed them, prosecutors said.
Bryant
also killed two men — one before and one after Tietjen. He gave the men rides
and when they got out to urinate on the side of the road, he shot them in the
back, authorities said.
During the
search, officers stopped nearly everyone driving on dirt roads in the area just
east of Columbia, and told people to be leery of anyone they did not know
asking for help.
Bryant is
the 43rd man killed by court-ordered execution so far this year in the U.S. At
least 14 others are scheduled to be put to death during the remainder of 2025
and next year.
Bryant is
also the 50th person executed in South Carolina since the state restarted the
death penalty 40 years ago.
What
happens during a firing squad execution
The
curtain opens in the death chamber of the prison with fewer than a dozen
witnesses sitting behind bulletproof glass.
The person
is strapped into a chair. A white square with a red bull’s-eye target is placed
over his heart by a doctor. Their lawyer can read a final statement. A prison
employee then places a hood over the person’s head, walks across the small room
and pulls open a black shade where the firing squad waits.
Without an
audible or visual warning to witnesses, the shooters then fire high-powered
rifles from 15 feet (4.6 meters) away.
A doctor
will then come out within a minute or two, examine him and declare him dead.
Lawyers
for the last man executed by a firing squad said the shooters nearly missed the
heart of Mikal
Mahdi. They suggested by barely hitting the bottom of the heart that
Mahdi was in agonizing
pain for three or four times longer than experts say he would have
been if his heart had been hit directly.
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