South Carolina to Carry Out Firing Squad Execution, Third This Year
A unanimous decision by the South Carolina Supreme Court has paved the way for Stephen Bryant, 44, to be executed by firing squad on Friday. The condemned killer will be put to death at 6 p.m. ET for killing three people over five days in 2004, leaving taunting messages for police in the blood of one of his victims.
Bryant's lawyers made a last-ditch appeal, arguing that their defense team had not fully explored the effects of fetal alcohol spectrum disorder on his brain, which was allegedly caused by his mother's drinking and drug use while pregnant. However, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to review the case in October.
The court rejected Bryant's argument, stating that even if more investigation into his brain damage had been conducted, it would not have changed the outcome of the death sentence. The justices found that Bryant demonstrated a high level of planning and calculation in his crimes.
Bryant will be the third person to be executed by firing squad in South Carolina this year. He is scheduled to die after choosing this method over lethal injection, which was initially paused due to struggles to obtain drugs.
The death penalty has been reinstated in South Carolina since 1985, and Bryant's execution marks the 50th person to be put to death in the state under that system. The method of execution has also been used in other countries, including Nazi Germany and the former Soviet Union, as a tool of terror and repression.
Bryant will be executed with three volunteers from 15 feet away, and his sentence can still be reduced to life in prison by Governor Henry McMaster if he chooses to do so. However, this decision has been met with skepticism, with no South Carolina governor having granted clemency in the modern era of the death penalty.
In a rare move, Bryant chose to die by firing squad, joining an exclusive list of only three other prisoners who have undergone the same method since 1977 - all in Utah.
A unanimous decision by the South Carolina Supreme Court has paved the way for Stephen Bryant, 44, to be executed by firing squad on Friday. The condemned killer will be put to death at 6 p.m. ET for killing three people over five days in 2004, leaving taunting messages for police in the blood of one of his victims.
Bryant's lawyers made a last-ditch appeal, arguing that their defense team had not fully explored the effects of fetal alcohol spectrum disorder on his brain, which was allegedly caused by his mother's drinking and drug use while pregnant. However, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to review the case in October.
The court rejected Bryant's argument, stating that even if more investigation into his brain damage had been conducted, it would not have changed the outcome of the death sentence. The justices found that Bryant demonstrated a high level of planning and calculation in his crimes.
Bryant will be the third person to be executed by firing squad in South Carolina this year. He is scheduled to die after choosing this method over lethal injection, which was initially paused due to struggles to obtain drugs.
The death penalty has been reinstated in South Carolina since 1985, and Bryant's execution marks the 50th person to be put to death in the state under that system. The method of execution has also been used in other countries, including Nazi Germany and the former Soviet Union, as a tool of terror and repression.
Bryant will be executed with three volunteers from 15 feet away, and his sentence can still be reduced to life in prison by Governor Henry McMaster if he chooses to do so. However, this decision has been met with skepticism, with no South Carolina governor having granted clemency in the modern era of the death penalty.
In a rare move, Bryant chose to die by firing squad, joining an exclusive list of only three other prisoners who have undergone the same method since 1977 - all in Utah.