Alabama is set to execute Carey Dale Grayson by nitrogen gas hypoxia Thursday evening for a brutal Jefferson County murder. It would be the state's sixth execution for the year and third in two months.
It would also be only the third nitrogen gas hypoxia execution in the nation, after Alabama conducted the first execution by the then-untried method in January.
Grayson, now 49, was convicted of capital murder along with three other teens in the torture, bludgeoning death and mutilation of Vickie Deblieux on Feb. 21, 1994. The 37-year-old Deblieux was hitchhiking from Chattanooga, Tennessee, to visit her mother in Louisiana when the teens picked her up along Interstate 59 near Trussville in Jefferson County, court records show.
The execution is set to begin at 6 p.m. the week before Thanksgiving. The Montgomery Advertiser asked Gov. Kay Ivey if she considered the timing before she set the execution date. "Did Carey Grayson give any consideration to the fact that he robbed Vicki DeBlieux and her family of now 30 Thanksgivings?" Ivey said.
The crime
Court records and media coverage paint a grim picture of Deblieux’s last hours. Grayson was convicted on capital murder along with Kenny Loggins, Trace Duncan and Louis Mangione.
After picking her up on the interstate, the group went to a wooded area on Bald Mountain using the ruse that the teens were going to get another vehicle. Deblieux was beaten, stomped and kicked to death. Testimony showed that one teen stood on her throat in an effort to kill her.
Her body was thrown off a cliff. The teens returned later and mutilated her corpse, cutting the body at least 180 times and removing a portion of one of her lungs and cutting off her fingers. The teens became suspects in the murder when Mangione showed one of Deblieux’s fingers to a friend.
Duncan, Loggins and Mangione had their death sentences reversed and were each given life in prison without the possibility of parole after the United States Supreme Court in 2005 banned the execution of offenders who are younger than 18 when they commit crimes. Grayson was 19 at the time of the murder.
The execution method
Nitrogen hypoxia is a controversial method of execution, having only been tried for the first time in the country when Alabama executed Kenneth Eugene Smith in January. Smith’s execution by the method drew national and international scorn and media attention, including a protest from the Vatican.
In Alabama, there are about 160 inmates on death row, and they are given the option of what method of execution will be used. The three execution methods in Alabama are lethal injection, nitrogen hypoxia and electrocution. Grayson is among about 30 inmates who chose the nitrogen hypoxia method before its first use in Alabama.
With the nitrogen hypoxia method, the condemned breathes pure nitrogen through a mask that displaces oxygen in their system. Proponents claim it is an almost instant and painless method. Opponents claim it is untried and amounts to torture.
Smith appeared to writhe and convulse on the gurney for at least four minutes during the execution. State and prison systems' officials had said before the execution that Smith should lose consciousness “within seconds,” and be dead within minutes once the gas started flowing into the full-face mask Smith wore.
Alabama Department of Corrections Commissioner John Q. Hamm called Smith’s execution “textbook,” in a news conference about half an hour after the execution, and said the prisons system was ready to move forward with other nitrogen hypoxia executions.
On Sept. 26, Alan Eugene Miller was executed with nitrogen hypoxia as the method.
Source:
tuscaloosanews.com, Marty Roney, November 19, 2024
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"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed,
but by the punishments that the good have inflicted."
— Oscar Wilde
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