Man Executed for Double Murder. What does the Investigation Predict?

372

Man Executed for Double Murder – A man convicted of killing two people more than two decades ago was killed by lethal injection in the western US state of Oklahoma on Thursday, according to officials.

Man Executed for Double Murder:

Michael Smith, 41, was executed at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester, the Department of Corrections announced in a statement. It stated that the execution process began at 10:09 a.m. Central Time (1509 GMT), and Smith was pronounced dead 11 minutes later. There was a “spiritual advisor” in the death chamber then. Smith was found guilty in 2003 of murdering Janet Moore and Sharath Babu Pulluru, a convenience store clerk, in Oklahoma City in 2002.

What does the Investigation Predict?

According to the Death Penalty Information Centre, Smith initially admitted to shooting Moore and Pulluru but later claimed he was high and couldn’t recall being caught. The Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board refused Smith’s mercy request last month, and the US Supreme Court denied his last-ditch appeal for a stay of execution on Thursday. Smith’s solicitors argued that his life should be spared since he is intellectually impaired and has misused drugs for many years. This year, three other executions have taken place in the United States, including the first use of nitrogen gas in Alabama.

The two others, in Georgia and Texas, were carried out using fatal injections. Another fatal injection execution was scheduled for February in Idaho, but it was postponed due to a medical team’s inability to establish an intravenous line. Capital punishment has been banned in 23 US states, and the governors of six more — Arizona, California, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, and Tennessee — have halted its implementation. There were 24 executions in the United States in 2023, all of which were carried out by lethal injection.

Comment via Facebook

Corrections: If you are aware of an inaccuracy or would like to report a correction, we would like to know about it. Please consider sending an email to [email protected] and cite any sources if available. Thank you. (Policy)


Comments are closed.