<<<<  Back

 

Home Page
Moratoria

 

Signature On-Line

 

Urgent Appeals

 

The commitment of the Community of Sant'Egidio

 

Abolitions, 
commutations,
moratoria, ...

 

Archives News  IT  EN

 

Comunit� di Sant'Egidio


News

 

Informations   @

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
NO alla Pena di Morte
Campagna Internazionale
Comunità di Sant'Egidio

 

USA; OKLAHOMA, ESEGUITA CONDANNA ASSASSINO

 WASHINGTON, 14 FEB - Nel carcere di McAlester, in Oklahoma, un uomo che uccise un'anziana donna, che l'aveva sorpreso mentre stava rubando il suo televisore, e' stato messo a morte con un'iniezione letale.

La raccomandazione d'un comitato statale che aveva chiesto che all'uomo fosse commutata la pena e' stata ignorata.

Bobby Joe Fields, 39 anni, e' stato dichiarato morto alle 18.05 locali, poco dopo l'una di notte italiana. Prima di subire l'iniezione letale, l'uomo ha affidato sua figlia a suo cugino e ha avuto poche parole per i suoi familiari.

Fields s'era dichiarato colpevole dell'omicidio nel 1993 di Louise Schem, 77 anni, assassinata nella sua casa di Oklahoma City: la donna lo scopri' mentre rubava e lo affronto' con un'arma; Fields gliela strappo' e la uccise, sostenendo poi che s'era trattato d'un incidente.

   L'esecuzione di giovedi' notte e' stata la seconda in Oklahoma quest'anno e la 57.a da quando, nel 1990, esse sono riprese nello Stato.    


State executes Bobby Joe Fields for 1993 slaying of elderly woman

 In McAlester, Bobby Joe Fields died Thursday for the 1993 fatal shooting of a 77-year-old Oklahoma City woman, executed despite a clemency recommendation from the state parole board.

 Fields died at 6:05 p.m., 3 minutes after receiving a lethal dose of drugs at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester for killing Louise J. Schem during a burglary March 2, 1993.

 Fields, 39, smiled at his sister, Geraldine Banks, and his cousin, then told his 2 attorneys witnessing the execution to "stay strong. You all keep fighting.

 "Cousin, if you can, try to look after my boy," Fields said of his estranged son during his final statement. Then to Banks: "Baby girl, stay strong and hold the family together. I love you all."

 Banks wept and buried her face into her handkerchief as Fields' eyes slowly closed and his head jerked slightly before he became still.

 No one on Schem's behalf watched Fields' execution.

 Fields' execution came despite the Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board's Jan. 6 recommendation that his sentence be commuted to life in prison - just the board's 5th clemency recommendation since 1995.

 Gov. Brad Henry, in his 1st death penalty review, denied clemency. Fields was originally to be executed Jan. 13, but former Gov. Frank Keating issued a 30-day reprieve to give Henry time to consider the clemency recommendation.

 "Bobby Joe Fields was properly convicted and sentenced," Attorney General Drew Edmondson said. "His appeals have been exhausted and the governor has rightfully denied clemency. It is time the execution is carried out."

 Fields' attorneys argued during the clemency hearing that Fields should be spared because he had no advance intention of killing Schem. The board voted 3-1 in favor of clemency, with one abstention.

 "I understand how the governor has made his decision, but my initial review was that that was not his (Fields') intent, to cause bodily harm," said parole board chairwoman Stephanie Chappelle, who voted for clemency.

 But parole board member Susan Bussey, who voted against clemency, said there was nothing presented during the hearing that warranted commuting Fields' sentence.

 After a night of drinking and using cocaine, Fields broke into Schem's Oklahoma City house to steal her television, when she walked in with a gun, court records say. Fields and Schem scuffled over the weapon, spilling out onto the sidewalk where Fields shot Schem in the back of the neck as she tried to flee, records say.

 Fields and his first attorney, a public defender, expected an Oklahoma County judge to give him life in prison without parole when he pleaded guilty to 1st-degree murder in 1994. But Judge James L. Gullett ordered capital punishment after the sentencing hearing. The attorney, Catherine Burton, who's now in private practice, was too upset about Fields' execution to comment, her secretary said.

 Fields dined on $15 worth of food just before 1 p.m. Thursday as he waited for his execution. The state limits final meals to $15.

 Daniel Juan Revilla, 34, of Altus, was executed Jan. 16 for the 1986 death of his girlfriend's baby. Execution dates have been set this year for 6 more inmates.

 Fields becomes the 2nd condemned inmate to be put to death this year in Oklahoma, the 57th overall since the state resumed capital punishment in 1990, and the 140th in the state's history.

 Fields becomes the 12th condemned inmate to be put to death this year in the USA and the 832nd overall since America resumed executions on January 17, 1977.