Tag Archive for 'Marco Chapman'

History of Ky. death penalty

Get the latest on Marco Chapman’s execution.

By Brandon Ortiz

Executions in Kentucky have been rare the last 40 years, but the death penalty has a long history in the Bluegrass state.

Chapman is expected to be the 165th person executed at the Kentucky State Penitentiary, and only the second to die by lethal injection. The others died by electric chair.

The racial breakdown is disproportionate: 80 whites and 84 blacks. Blacks currently make up less than 10 percent of Kentucky’s population, although that proportion was higher in the early 20th century.

Chapman would be the third inmate executed since the death penalty was reinstated in 1977, and only the fourth since 1956, when three people were executed. The death penalty was once common in Kentucky, with 161 men being executed in Eddyville from 1911 to 1955. (Kentucky did not begin to keep complete records of executions until 1911.) The most inmates to be executed in one night is seven, on July 13, 1928.

Nine others were legally hanged elsewhere in Kentucky between 1920 and 1938.

Only 50 of Kentucky’s 120 counties have sent someone to Death Row. The last time someone convicted in Fayette County was executed was in 1943. Jefferson County has set the most inmates to death with 44.

After Chapman’s execution, there will be 35 men and one woman on Death Row. Thirteen of them have been on Death Row longer than 20 years. Thirty inmates are white, six are black and one is Hispanic.

Source: Kentucky Department of Corrections

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UPDATE: Notes from media briefings at Chapman execution

Get the latest on Marco Chapman’s execution.

By Brandon Ortiz

Here are the highlights of a 4:30 p.m. CST press briefing with Lisa Lamb, a Kentucky Department of Corrections spokeswoman.

-    With two-and-a-half hours left to live, Marco Allen Chapman is seemingly calm. “He has not outwardly expressed any fear or communicated that to us,” Lamb said.
-    Chapman has not changed his mind and has not filed any last-minute appeals. The execution, scheduled for 7 p.m. CST, remains on schedule.
-    The cost of Chapman’s final meal was $31.81.

Lisa Lamb, a spokeswoman for the Kentucky Department of Corrections, briefed the media at 3:30 p.m. CST. Here are the highlights of the press conference:

– Marco Allen Chapman was served his last meal, a 32-ounce steak with A1 steak sauce and 20 butterfly shrimp, at 3 p.m. He was eating it at the time the press conference began
– Chapman met with a public defender at his request at 2 p.m. The meeting, with lawyer Heather McGregor, lasted 30 minutes. The content of the discussion is confidential.
– Chapman’s last meal was bought at a local food market and prepared by prison staff.
– At this point only a court order can stop Chapman’s execution. A public defender is available if he chooses to exercise his remaining appeals.
– Chapman spent the early afternoon watching Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.

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Child killer’s final wish on course

- Associated Press Writer

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — For four years, Marco Allen Chapman hasn’t wavered about his last wish - to die by lethal injection for killing two children in a violent attack on their family.

That wish will be granted Friday night, barring a last-minute change of heart by Chapman or the Kentucky Supreme Court.

Chapman is scheduled to be executed at Kentucky State Penitentiary, which would make him the first Kentucky inmate to die at the hands of the state since 1999.

“The only thing I could says is I’m sorry. Even though they shouldn’t accept it, my heartfelt apologies for their loss and what I’ve done,” Chapman told The Associated Press in May. “I’m ready. I’m ready and I’m sorry. There’s nothing else I can say.”

Chapman’s aunt, Donna Rumburg of Mount Airy, Md., said his family is a little less certain about his decision. Rumburg, who raised Chapman for a short time, said she hasn’t forgiven Chapman for what he did because it’s not her place.

“But I don’t say I don’t love him,” Rumburg said.

Chapman, 37, pleaded guilty in December 2004 to killing 7-year-old Chelbi Sharon and 6-year-old Cody Sharon in their northern Kentucky home. He also admitted stabbing 10-year-old Courtney Sharon, who survived, then raping and trying to kill their mother, Carolyn Marksberry, during the 2002 assault.

Prosecutors said at the time of Chapman’s plea in 2004 that Chapman attacked the family because he was upset with Marksberry for telling Chapman’s girlfriend to end a relationship with him. But Chapman has never explained the attack and may not before the lethal three-drug cocktail is administered.

“To this day, I still don’t know why. I don’t know exactly what happened that night,” Chapman said. “I did something that was immoral and wrong. I want to pay the price for it.”

Gov. Steve Beshear said on Thursday he has no plans to stop Chapman’s execution.

“I quite honestly don’t see any extenuating circumstances that will cause me to exercise my authority to grant clemency,” Beshear said. “It is a heinous crime that was committed.”

The state’s high court on Thursday rejected a motion that would have halted the execution.

Chief Justice John Minton signed an order denying a request by a Louisville attorney to stop it. The attorney, Philip Longmeyer, had questioned on behalf of a group of private citizens whether the Kentucky Department of Corrections should have held public hearings before adopting regulations that specify how lethal injections are administered.

Chapman’s first attorney in the case, public defender John Delaney, visited Chapman in prison last week. He said he thinks his former client is telling the truth about not knowing why he committed the crimes.

“Marc is a nice man,” Delaney said. “He’s a nice guy, a smart guy who doesn’t really have a good handle on why he did what he did.”

Linda Talley Smith, who prosecuted Chapman, described his case as unusual because Chapman has been so forthcoming about what he did and wanting to take the punishment for it. But that doesn’t make it easier for everyone involved to handle, Smith said.

“I don’t think that there is any such thing as a healing effect in this type of case,” Smith said. “Come Saturday morning, Codi and Chelbi will still be missing from their family’s lives.”

Despite Chapman’s willingness to die, anti-death penalty activists plan to hold a vigil Friday at the prison.

“The issue isn’t Chapman,” said the Rev. Pat Delahanty, head of the Kentucky Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty. “The issue is when do you kill. We happen to think it’s never appropriate to kill someone.”

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Attorney seek stay of execution for child killer

FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) — Attorneys are seeking a stay of execution for a confessed child killer who has volunteered to be put to death.
The Kentucky Supreme Court cleared the way last week for Marco Allen Chapman to become the first death row inmate executed in the state in nearly 10 years. The execution date is set for Nov. 21.
Chapman dismissed his public defenders in 2004, entered a guilty plea and asked to be put to death.
The public defenders questioned Chapman’s competency in one motion for a stay. In another, they argued that Chapman shouldn’t be executed until appeals are exhausted in a separate case that questions the validity of Kentucky’s execution protocol. That case is pending before the state Supreme Court.

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