Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Supreme Court sends Missouri execution case back to appeals court - Los Angeles Times

The U.S. Supreme Court stayed a condemned Missouri inmate's execution Wednesday evening, sending the case back to the U.S. 8th Circuit Court of Appeals, and Missouri officials told those who had planned to witness it to go home.

The high court granted the stay for Russell Bucklew "pending the disposition of petitioner's appeal. We leave for further consideration in the lower courts whether an evidentiary hearing is necessary."

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Among the witnesses sent home Wednesday night were the victim's two sons, his sister, her husband, an uncle and a cousin, Bucklew's two brothers, a doctor, a nurse, one of his attorneys, investigators who handled the case and Republican stat! e Rep. Paul Fitzwater.

Fitzwater told The Times that he had awaited the execution in a small room with other state witnesses, apart from Sanders' and Bucklew's witnesses. When officials notified them that the execution had been stayed, he said, some witnesses were disappointed. "We waited all day long for this to happen."

Corrections officials did not tell witnesses how soon they might be brought back, he said.

"It could be 30 days or six months," Fitzwater said, noting the appeals court has to reconsider the case and the state attorney general has to set a new execution date.

Fitzwater, who leads a legislative committee on corrections, said it would have been the first execution he witnessed. He said he had asked to "see for myself" after receiving numerous phone calls from constituents inquiring about the state's lethal-injection procedure.

Earlier this year, Fitzwater - a staunch supporter of capital punishment - proposed switchi! ng to firing squads. The proposal drew widespread ridicule and! did not pass. In hindsight, he said he would not propose it again.

He left the prison Wednesday concerned about what the U.S. Supreme Court's decision meant for death penalty advocates nationwide.

"This is a setback here in the state of Missouri and across the country. I know people here want to keep the death penalty. They got the wind knocked out of their sails here today."

Seth Klamann reported from Bonne Terre and Molly Hennessy-Fiske from Houston.

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times

Source : http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-missouri-execution-stayed-again-20140521-story.html