A US man
awaiting execution in Alabama has had his life spared a seventh time following
a last-minute stay ordered by the US Supreme Court. The 74-year-old was
convicted in the 1982 slaying of his girlfriend's husband.
Deutsche Welle, 4 November 2016
The US
Supreme Court ordered a last-minute stay of execution Thursday as Alabama state
officials were preparing to put Thomas Douglas Arthur to death by lethal
injection. Arthur - who maintains his innocence - has been on death row for
more than three decades after being convicted of shooting to death Troy Wicker
as he slept in his home in Muscle Shoals, Alabama, court records showed.
Prosecutors said Arthur's girlfriend, Judy Wicker, paid him $10,000 to kill her
husband.
The Supreme
Court's order did not state a reason for the stay of execution but had earlier
ordered the state of Alabama and other states to review a controversial law
that gives judges - rather than juries - the power to impose the death penalty.
Arthur's
defense lawyers had challenged the constitutionality of Alabama's lethal injection method of execution on the grounds that it is cruel and unusual punishment. In their challenge, his lawyers claimed that midazolam, the first
drug that is used in executions causes "excruciatingly painful and
agonizing effects."
International
drug companies - many under EU pressure - have stopped supplying drugs used in
lethal injections and many states have improvised lethal cocktails that often
lead to complications that prolong the condemned man's suffering.
Arthur's
latest scheduled execution followed three trials and another man's confession
to the crime. In all, Alabama had scheduled Arthur's execution six times before
Thursday.
Arthur had
two convictions overturned on constitutional grounds, including improper
introduction of evidence about a prior murder conviction. After his third
conviction in 1991, he asked the jury to sentence him to death. Arthur's former
girlfriend, Judy Wicker told police a black man raped her, knocked her
unconscious and shot her husband at their home.
In court,
prosecutors had claimed that Arthur, who is white, disguised himself as a black
man. At her trial, Judy Wicker denied Arthur was the killer but later changed
her testimony during his trial, Arthur's lawyers said. She was convicted of
murder and paroled after 10 years in prison, according to the Alabama
Department of Corrections. Limited crime scene testing found no DNA link to
Gilbert or Arthur. Alabama lost a rape kit that might have cleared Arthur, his
lawyers said.
jar/sms (Reuters, AP)

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