The federal government on Tuesday carried out its first execution in almost two decades, killing by lethal injection a man convicted of murdering an Arkansas family in a 1990s plot to build a whites-only nation in the Pacific Northwest.
The execution of Daniel Lewis Lee came over the objection of the victims’ relatives and following days of legal wrangling and delays.
Lee, 47, of Yukon, Oklahoma, professed his innocence just before he was executed at the federal prison in Terre Haute, Indiana.
“I didn’t do it,” Lee said. “I’ve made a lot of mistakes in my life, but I’m not a murderer.”
His final words were: “You’re killing an innocent man.”
The decision to move forward with the first execution by the Bureau of Prisons since 2003 — and two others scheduled later in the week — drew scrutiny from civil rights groups and the relatives of Lee’s victims, who had sued to try to halt it, citing concerns about the coronavirus pandemic. The pandemic has killed more than 135,000 people in the United States and is ravaging prisons nationwide.
Critics argued the government was creating an unnecessary and manufactured urgency for political gain.
One of Lee’s lawyers, Ruth Friedman, said it was “shameful that the government saw fit to carry out this execution during a pandemic.”
“And it is beyond shameful that the government, in the end, carried out this execution in haste,” Friedman said in a statement.
The developments are likely to add a new front to the national conversation about criminal justice reform in the lead-up to the 2020 elections.
The execution of Lee, who died at 8:07 a.m. EDT, went off after a series of legal volleys that ended when the Supreme Court stepped in early Tuesday in a 5-4 ruling and allowed it to move forward.
Attorney General William Barr has said the Justice Department has a duty to carry out the sentences imposed by the courts, including the death penalty, and provide closure to the victims and those in the communities where the killings happened.
But relatives of those killed by Lee in 1996 opposed that idea and argued Lee deserved life in prison. They wanted to be present to counter any contention the execution was being done on their behalf.
“For us it is a matter of being there and saying, ‘This is not being done in our name; we do not want this,’” relative Monica Veillette said.
They noted Lee’s co-defendant and the reputed ringleader, Chevie Kehoe, received a life sentence.
Kehoe, of Colville, Washington, recruited Lee in 1995 to join his white supremacist organization, known as the Aryan Peoples’ Republic. Two years later, they were arrested for the killings of gun dealer William Mueller, his wife, Nancy, and her 8-year-old daughter, Sarah Powell, in Tilly, Arkansas, about 75 miles (120 kilometers) northwest of Little Rock.
At their 1999 trial, prosecutors said Kehoe and Lee stole guns and $50,000 in cash from the Muellers as part of their plan to establish a whites-only nation.
Prosecutors said Lee and Kehoe incapacitated the Muellers and questioned Sarah about where they could find money and ammunition. Then, they used stun guns on the victims, sealed trash bags with duct tape on their heads to suffocate them, taped rocks to their bodies and dumped them in a nearby bayou.
A U.S. District Court judge put a hold on Lee’s execution on Monday, over concerns from death row inmates on how executions were to be carried out, and an appeals court upheld it, but the high court overturned it. That delay came after an appeals court on Sunday overturned a hold put in place last week after the victims’ relatives argued they’d be put at high risk for the coronavirus if they had to travel to attend the execution.
Lee’s execution was then set to happen at 4 a.m. EDT, but a last-minute legal question was raised by his lawyers. The Justice Department said it filed a request with the court to straighten it out but went through with the execution.
A U.S. marshal lifted a black telephone inside the execution room — a small square room inside the prison with green tiles and windows looking at the witness rooms — and asked if there was anything to impede the execution. He said there was not and the execution could proceed.
Lee had a pulse oximeter on a finger of his left hand, to monitor his oxygen level, and his arms, which had tattoos, were in black restraints. The IV tubes were coming through a metal panel in the wall.
He breathed heavily before the drug was injected and moved his legs and feet. As the drug was being administered, he raised his head to look around. In a few moments, his chest was no longer moving.
Lee was in the execution chamber with two men the Bureau of Prisons identified as “senior BOP officials,” a U.S. marshal and his spiritual adviser, described by a prisons spokesperson as an “Appalachian pagan minister.” They and Lee didn’t wear masks.
One of the senior prisons officials in the room announced Lee’s time of death, and the curtain closed.
Two other federal executions are scheduled for this week, though one remains on hold in a separate legal claim.
There have been two state executions in the U.S. since the pandemic forced shutdowns nationwide in mid-March — one in Texas and one in Missouri, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. Alabama had one in early March.
Executions on the federal level have been rare, and the government has put to death only three defendants since restoring the federal death penalty in 1988 — most recently in 2003, when Louis Jones was executed for the 1995 kidnapping, rape and murder of a young female soldier.
Though there hadn’t been a federal execution since 2003, the Justice Department has continued to approve death penalty prosecutions and federal courts have sentenced defendants to death.
In 2014, following a botched state execution in Oklahoma, President Barack Obama directed the Justice Department to conduct a broad review of capital punishment and issues surrounding lethal injection drugs.
The attorney general said last July the review had been completed, allowing executions to resume. He approved a new procedure for lethal injections that replaces the three-drug combination previously used in federal executions with one drug, pentobarbital. This is similar to the procedure used in several states, including Georgia, Missouri and Texas.
Numbers of state executions have fallen steadily since the 2003 federal execution, according to data compiled by the Death Penalty Information Center. States put to death 59 people in 2004 and 22 in 2019.
(AP)
9 Responses
Sorry the family was unhappy, but the execution of these most heinous murderers is not designed
Sorry the family was unhappy, but the execution of these most heinous murderers is not designed to please the family. It was intended to rid our shores of those who wantonly desecrate human life. The beneficiaries if this sentence are all of America. I am just bothered that there is a bizarre amount of effort invested in making the penalty pain free and comfortable. Why? If these evil people suffer a little, so what? they inflicted major suffering on countless people, not just their deceased victims. As the Torah states, the one who spills blood, his blood should be spilled.
It was about time, wasn’t it hard all those years without anyone being killed?
we need this killings to satisfy our ego, brings us a sense of security and most important, revenge.
here are some facts you can google,
1- the death penalty does not reduce crimes, it has no effect on the amount of murdered committed
2- more than 4 percent of people that were executed were proven innocent.
we need to examine our motivation to kill people and abolish the death penalty.
@the little I know,
you are fill of hat,
you are fill of pain,
do you know this person? did you read about the evidence? are you related to the victims?
if not… do you realize that the comfort you find in his killing is not justifiable? do you realize it is morally wrong? do you realize that it is your own inner discomfort and pain that leads you to become excited by killings of people you do not know?
do you know what the talmud states on the amount of people that were killed? do you know the amount of evidence that was needed? or… do you just take the Torah for a shield to you’re deep-seated hate and bigotry?
do you realize that the verse you are stating is totally misplaced?
maybe you should talk to someone.
Not hate, nor pain. Simple intolerance. I cannot tolerate a system that rewards evil.
As for the evidence, the court already held a trial, and the burden of proof was on the prosecution. These animals are entitled to countless appeals, all at the taxpayer expense, and all has been exhausted. I have zero comfort in his death penalty. I am proud that there is one less depraved murderer on the streets, and pray for the elimination of many more of them.
The Torah relates to the Yiddishe neshomoh that went astray and committed murder. Not the goyishe animal. Not hate, nor bigotry. The Torah specifically addresses the death penalty of midoh kineged midoh as the appropriate consequence, while creating loopholes for a neshomoh. So, go right ahead and make your inaccurate statements about me and my psyche. I want the perpetrators of heinous crimes eliminated, whether by death penalties, or putting them where they can never relapse. And their creature comforts are not important to me at all, as these animals did not consider them relevant to their victims and their families.
Two things I do not understand
1. What is shameful about killing someone during a pandemic? Would it be better if he gets sick first and then dies?
2. How can anyone say that executing someone for a crime committed 24 years ago is considered being done “in haste”?
to “Honesty Period”
a fact that you should think about
1) death penalty does reduce crime. its a fact, if a criminal wold know he will get the electric chair if he gets caught, he will refrain from doing anything stupid.
2) the reason why you think its doesnt reduce crime, is because the leftist media will not cover it, but if they would cover this story like they covered the Corona Virus ( which was a stupid cold) then it would have a major effect in the crime in america.
3) all criminals think they were innocent, if you know anything about human psycology or would just be real with yourself, even you could come to that conclusion yourself.
4) theres actually a verse in bereishis, that when cain killed hevel, G-D said to him afterwards the Bloods of your brother screams from the earth ( something like that i have to look it up to say it exactly the right way) this implies that there must be justice for murder. a murderer deserves to die, if you dont believe that then you have no shaychus to the Jewish religion whatsoever.
“shameful that the government saw fit to carry out this execution during a pandemic.”
what sense does that make?
with a lawyer so stupid as this is it any wonder that this man was executed protesting that he was innocent.
at times a man is faced with so much nonsense that it is hard to confront it…
1- that it is your opinion, it is not backed by evidence, you can google countries that have the death penalty vrs those who do not and then the number of crimes committed, it has no effect at all.
or maybe all countries work together to hide it? just like there pretending that hundreds of thousands died from what you say is a regular cold?
2- did the news not cover the execution yesterday? was it not in every headline? are you saying criminals do not know that death penalty is still legal in America? (UNLIKE ANY OTHER CIVILIZED COUNTRY)
3- well, a huge percent of people executed utter their last words with deep sadness on how they are sorry for what they did. they have nothing to lose. ill give you one example Martin Grossman, who we all fought to save.
4- here is a quote of someone with no shaichus to yiddishkeit by your standard, the rambam.
ספר המצוות מצוה לא תעשה ר”ץ: האזהרה שהוזהרנו מלהוציא לפועל את העונשים על פי אומד חזק ואפילו קרוב לודאי… אלא עד שיהיו בירור שאין בו שום ספק…. אם נקיים את העונשים באומד ובדימוי אפשר שביום מן הימים נהרוג נקי. ויותר טוב ויותר רצוי לפטור אלף חוטאים, מלהרוג נקי אחד ביום מן הימים”.