A convicted double murderer has been executed by firing squad in the first use of the method in the US in 15 years.
Brad Sigmon, 67, chose to be killed by bullets, saying he feared the alternatives of the electric chair and lethal injection would risk a slower and more torturous death.
He was convicted of beating to death his ex-girlfriend’s parents, William and Gladys Larke, with a baseball bat at their home in the town of Taylors, South Carolina, in 2001. He was sentenced to death in 2002.
After being shot by three volunteer prison employees armed with rifles that were loaded with live ammunition, Sigmon was pronounced dead at 6.08pm (11.08pm in the UK) on Friday.
On Wednesday, prior to his death, he asked the US Supreme Court to stop his execution, arguing South Carolina’s refusal to share information about its lethal injection protocol violated his due-process rights.
His lawyer Bo King said the last three men to be executed in the state chose lethal injection, with the process lasting for about 20 minutes before they were dead.
He said Sigmon was left with “an impossible choice” and was forced “to decide whether to die by the firing squad, knowing that the bullets are going to break the bones in his chest and destroy his heart, or risk a 20-minute-long execution strapped to a gurney with your lungs filling with blood and fluid”.
There have only been three executions by firing squad in the US since 1976, all of which were in Utah – one of only five states that still offers the method common in the 19th century during the Civil War.
Ahead of the execution, a group of protesters gathered outside the South Carolina Department of Corrections holding signs with messages such as “all life is precious” and “execute justice not people”.
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