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South Carolina death row inmate chooses firing squad as execution method
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South Carolina death row inmate chooses firing squad as execution method

Jimmie Dempsey
Last updated: February 22, 2025 10:39 am
Jimmie Dempsey Published February 22, 2025
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A South Carolina death row inmate has chosen to be executed by a firing squad, which would make him only the fourth inmate in the U.S. to die by this execution method.

Brad Sigmon, 67, who is scheduled to be killed on March 7, informed state officials on Friday that he wishes to die by firing squad rather than by lethal injection or the electric chair, citing, in part, the prolonged suffering the three inmates previously executed in the state had faced when they were killed by lethal injection.

Sigmon was the first South Carolina inmate to choose a firing squad. Only three inmates in the U.S. have been executed by this method since 1976 and all were in Utah, with the last one carried out 15 years ago.

In the death chamber, Sigmon will be strapped to a chair and have a hood over his head and a target over his heart. Three shooters will fire at him through a small opening about 15 feet away.

SOUTH CAROLINA DEATH ROW INMATE ASKING FOR POSTPONED EXECUTION TO OBTAIN AUTOPSY FROM STATE’S LAST EXECUTION

Lawyers for Sigmon asked to delay his execution date earlier this month because they sought information on whether the last inmate executed by the state, Marion Bowman, was given two doses of the sedative pentobarbital at his execution on Jan. 31. It is unclear if Sigmon’s lawyers have received Bowman’s autopsy report, which they had requested along with additional information about the lethal injection drug.

Justices denied the request for a postponed execution.

Sigmon was convicted in the 2001 baseball bat killings of his ex-girlfriend’s parents at their home in Greenville County. The two were in separate rooms, investigators said, and Sigmon went back and forth between the rooms as he beat them both to death.

After killing the couple, Sigmon kidnapped his ex-girlfriend at gunpoint, but she managed to escape from his car. He shot at her as she ran away but missed.

“I couldn’t have her, I wasn’t going to let anybody else have her,” he said in a confession.

Sigmon’s lawyers now have one last appeal, asking the state Supreme Court to stop his execution to allow a hearing on their claims that his trial lawyers lacked experience and failed by not stopping his statement to the jury or fully bringing his mental illness or rough family life as a child before the jury.

After that final appeal, Sigmon’s last chance to save his life may be asking Republican Gov. Henry McMaster to reduce his sentence to life without parole, but no South Carolina governor has granted clemency in the 49 years since the death penalty resumed.

SOUTH CAROLINA EXECUTES MAN CONVICTED OF MURDER IN STATE’S THIRD EXECUTION SINCE SEPTEMBER

Death chamber in Columbia, S.C.

The state Legislature approved the firing squad after prison officials had difficulty obtaining lethal injection drugs due to pharmaceutical companies’ concerns that they would have to disclose they had sold the drugs to state officials. The state legislature then passed the shield law, allowing officials to keep lethal injection drug suppliers private, but the firing squad remained an option.

Lawyers for Sigmon said he chose against lethal injection because of concerns over the three previous executions since the state resumed carrying out the death penalty in September after a 13-year involuntary pause and moved to using a massive dose of pentobarbital. Witnesses to the three prior executions said that despite the men appearing to stop breathing and moving in only a few minutes, they were not declared dead for at least 20 minutes.

Sigmon did not select the electric chair because it would “burn and cook him alive,” his attorney, Gerald “Bo” King, said in a statement.

“The choice Brad faced today was impossible,” King wrote. “Unless he elected lethal injection or the firing squad, he would die in South Carolina’s ancient electric chair, which would burn and cook him alive. But the alternative is just as monstrous.”

“If he chose lethal injection, he risked the prolonged death suffered by all three of the men South Carolina has executed since September—three men Brad knew and cared for—who remained alive, strapped to a gurney, for more than twenty minutes. At least one required a second, massive dose of pentobarbital before his heart stopped, and he died with his lungs swollen with fluid,” he continued.

South Carolina keeping information secret about how it conducts lethal injections led him to decide on the firing squad, which he acknowledges will be a violent death, his lawyer said.

“The only choice that remained is the firing squad. Brad has no illusions about what being shot will do to his body,” King said. “He does not wish to inflict that pain on his family, the witnesses, or the execution team. But, given South Carolina’s unnecessary and unconscionable secrecy, Brad is choosing as best he can. “

Execution room

The autopsy report has been released for only one of the executions. Prison officials said Richard Moore was given two large doses of pentobarbital 11 minutes apart on Nov. 1. Sigmon’s lawyers said Moore’s autopsy showed unusual amounts of fluid in his lungs, and an expert suggested he may have felt like he was consciously drowning and suffocating during the 23 minutes it took for him to be pronounced dead.

Attorneys for the state said the fluid is not unusual for executions by a large dose of pentobarbital and cited witnesses who said the inmates executed in the state so far have only been conscious and breathing for about a minute after the process begins.

There was no autopsy after the execution of Freddie Owens on Sept. 20 at his request, citing religious reasons due to his Muslim faith.

South Carolina has executed 46 inmates since the death penalty was resumed in the U.S. in 1976. In the early 2000s, the state was carrying out an average of three executions per year. Only nine states have killed more inmates.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Read the full article here

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