Condemned killer chooses electric chair

Condemned killer chooses electric chair

Paul Warner Powell

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Condemned killer Paul Warner Powell wants to be executed in Virginia’s electric chair.

He is scheduled to die July 14 for the 1999 rape and murder of a 16-year-old Yorkshire girl.

Since 1995, death row inmates in Virginia have had a choice of how they want to be executed by lethal injection or electrocution. Powell is the first inmate since 2006 to pick the electric chair.

The 29-year-old is sentenced to death for stabbing 16-year-old Stacie Reed and her 14-year-old sister, Kristie, in their Yorkshire home on Jan. 29, 1999.

Kristie’s throat was slashed, but she survived. Her sister, who suffered a stab wound to the heart, did not. Their stepfather came home from work to find Stacie dead in her bedroom and Kristie bleeding in the basement.

Despite life-threatening injuries, Kristie was able to tell police officers and paramedics that Powell was responsible. Police arrested Powell the next day at a friend’s house.

Powell was originally convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death in 2000, but the Supreme Court of Virginia tossed out the conviction, ruling that the attacks on the sisters were separate crimes and did not rise to capital murder.

After that ruling, Powell sent a letter laced with profanity to Prince William Commonwealth’s Attorney Paul Ebert, giving chilling details of Stacie’s death. In it, he wrote about attempting to rape the struggling girl before stabbing her to death. The letter gave prosecutors the evidence they needed to bring a new capital murder charge against him.

He was convicted in 2003, and the appeals began soon after. Through the years, state appeals courts and the Virginia Supreme Court have upheld his conviction.

Powell’s lawyers have filed a clemency petition with Gov. Timothy M. Kaine and could still ask the U.S. Supreme Court to hear an appeal. But last-minute clemency is unlikely.

Since the 1995 introduction of lethal injection, 75 killers have been executed by injection and four have opted for electrocution.

In all, 339 inmates have been executed in Virginia since the first electrocution in 1908.

In 1972, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down capital punishment, but it was reinstated in 1976. Since then, Virginia has executed 103 inmates.

Today, there are 15 inmates on death row.

Communities editor Kari Pugh can be reached at 703-878-8056.

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by vmj on July 05, 2009 at 7:04 pm

I agree, just providing information…

Flag Comment Posted by micala232 on July 05, 2009 at 6:03 pm

I dont know all the states rules on it but it doesnt matter if we are in va or in texas it is wrong to let this guy chose…

Flag Comment Posted by vmj on July 05, 2009 at 11:40 am

From what I understand not every state that has the death penalty has a choice of execution, but if it does offer more than one, the person gets to choose.

So Virginia is no different from any other state that offers a choice.

Flag Comment Posted by micala232 on July 05, 2009 at 9:09 am

I believe it should be upto the state as well or up to the victims family.  VA is kinda screwed up that way.  WE cant CHOOSE to die when we are terminally ill, but hey a viscious killer can choose the way he wants to die.  O well sh*t is what it is.

Flag Comment Posted by blue_doggette on July 05, 2009 at 8:55 am

It must be some provision in the VA constitution. 

I am not sure he made the best choice in methods to die. 

I believe the state should ultimately get to decide.  How many choices are there on ways to die?

Flag Comment Posted by micala232 on July 05, 2009 at 8:31 am

As much as I have to agree, I still do not believe he should get the choice of how he dies.  And I believe this man gets what ever he has coming.  What he did to them is unforgiveable and unforgettable.

Flag Comment Posted by blue_doggette on July 05, 2009 at 8:18 am

As a nation, we have to seperate ourselves from some of these evil people.  Therefore when we kill them, we do it in a humane way. (as humane as we can get sending volts of electricity through someone so it causes death)

Tempting though it is to wish the same death on those people as they did to their victims, I am glad we don’t do that.  Then we become them.

Flag Comment Posted by micala232 on July 05, 2009 at 7:57 am

I went to school with him, kristie and stacie, he has always been creepy.  I dont think he should have had the choice of how he gets to die.  I think he should have to die the way he killed stacie, or have to walk around with the scars that kristie does for the rest of her life.  As much as I hate the death penelty this scum bag needs to just go away… I hope that his death brings some type of peace to the Reeds.

Flag Comment Posted by vmj on July 02, 2009 at 8:46 pm

I just read that whole disgusting letter he sent Ebert and it made me sick.  This guy is pure evil.  Scary evil.
If anyone ever needed to be put down, taken out or removed from this earth, he does.

Flag Comment Posted by blue_doggette on July 02, 2009 at 7:53 pm

Chris, for once we agree.  One will fry and one won’t.  I would not care if both did.

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