South Carolina inmate set to be executed by firing squad, first in US in 15 years
A South Carolina prison inmate, convicted of killing his ex-girlfriend’s parents with a baseball bat, is set to become the first person in the United States to be executed by firing squad in 15 years.
If Brad Sigmon's execution proceeds on Friday at 18:00 local time (23:00 GMT), three volunteers standing behind a curtain will simultaneously fire rifles at his chest with specially designed bullets, News.Az reports, citing BBC.
The state's procedure requires that those put to death by firing squad be strapped to a chair when they enter the execution chamber. The inmate then has a target placed on his heart and a bag put over his head.
Sigmon, 67, was convicted of murdering David and Gladys Larke in 2001 before kidnapping his ex-girlfriend at gunpoint. She later escaped as he shot at her.
Offered the alternatives of death by electric chair or lethal injection, Sigmon's lawyers said he chose the more violent process because of his concerns about the effectiveness of the other two methods.
He will be the first person to be executed by firing squad in the US since 2010, and only the fourth since the country reintroduced the death penalty in 1976.
Sigmon was charged with murder in 2001 after investigators said he killed his ex-girlfriend's parents in their home in Greenville County by alternately beating them with a bat.
He also told detectives that he planned to harm his ex-girlfriend before she escaped.
"I couldn't have her. I wasn't going to let anybody else have her," he told them.
The South Carolina Supreme Court this week rejected a request from Sigmon's lawyers to intervene. They wanted more time to learn about the drug South Carolina uses in lethal injections and questioned whether his 2002 legal representation was adequate.
That is expected to be his final appeal ahead of Friday's planned execution.
No South Carolina governor has granted clemency to an inmate facing execution since the US legalised the death penalty again in 1976, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.





