Anthony Boyd is scheduled to be executed in Alabama on October 23, 2025, for his role in the 1993 kidnapping and murder of Gregory “New York” Huguley. Mr. Boyd was convicted based solely on eyewitness testimony with no physical evidence linking him to the crime, and he has maintained his innocence. Alabama will execute Mr. Boyd using nitrogen gas, the seventh time state has used this controversial method since January 2024, when the state executed Kenneth Smith in the first-ever execution of its kind.
Mr. Boyd’s original court-appointed attorney, William Willingham, was paid the statutory capped fee of just $1,000 for his work representing Mr. Boyd. Professional standards and empirical studies have long linked low counsel compensation to ineffective representation. Both the 1989 and 2003 American Bar Association Guidelines clearly state that it is “improper” for attorneys like Mr. Willingham to be paid flat fees or with lump-sum contracts. Mr. Willingham, whose practice included criminal defense, juvenile work, and divorce cases, had previously worked in the local district attorney’s office under prosecutor Robert Rumsey, who handled the prosecution of Mr. Boyd.
Before trial, Mr. Willingham expressed concerns to the trial judge, Judge Jerry Fielding, about his ability to prepare adequately to defend Mr. Boyd. During a pre-trial conference, Mr. Willingham stated that he did not want to be appointed to Mr. Boyd’s case because he needed to prioritize higher-paying work. He recalled telling Judge Fielding he didn’t have any time to prepare for it, adding “plus it gets to be pretty much pro bono work after a certain point.” When Mr. Willingham learned he would have just over a month to review evidence in the case revealed during pre-trial discovery, he objected. Judge Fielding disagreed, calling one month “a reasonable length of time” for Mr. Willingham to prepare for Mr. Boyd’s capital trial.
Capital cases are both time and resource intensive, requiring a significant amount of time for defense counsel to thoroughly and independently investigate the crime charged and also the life experiences of their client for sentencing. Competent attorneys spend thousands of hours preparing for trial, but as Mr. Willingham noted, his capped compensation meant he would not be compensated if he had invested the necessary time to prepare effectively.
During Mr. Boyd’s trial, Mr. Willingham’s poor preparation was clear: he did not obtain grand jury testimony until a week before trial and did not subpoena several witnesses. Mr. Willingham also failed to interview prosecution witnesses, and instead relied on notes from DA Rumsey, his former boss, to determine how they would testify. According to appellate counsel for Mr. Boyd, Mr. Willingham also failed to call several witnesses who could have corroborated Mr. Boyd’s alibi that he was at a birthday party in a neighboring town and spent the night at a motel with his then-girlfriend the night that Mr. Huguley was killed.
The prosecution’s case relied heavily on testimony from one of Mr. Boyd’s codefendants, Dwinaune Cox, who agreed to testify against Mr. Boyd and his other codefendants in exchange for a lesser sentence. Mr. Cox was the only witness to testify about what happened on the evening of Mr. Huguley’s murder and contained inconsistencies between his initial statement and his June 1994 statement made as part of his plea deal. Mr. Cox initially claimed he remained in the van with his codefendants as they rode to where Mr. Huguley was killed. His story later changed, with Mr. Cox stating he rode to the location where Mr. Huguley was killed by himself and met up there with his codefendants. When asked about this inconsistency, Mr. Cox stated he did not originally have a plea agreement, “and then when I signed the agreement [my lawyer] told me that if I testify falsely and get caught in a lie, that the agreement could be breached. So, that’s when I changed my story.” Other witnesses provided testimony that differed in key details, including whether Shawn Ingram, one of the individuals charged with Mr. Huguley’s murder, had a gun and if they saw Mr. Boyd in the van that was used in the commission of the crime. One witness who testified to seeing both Mr. Ingram and Mr. Boyd was contradicted by her aunt, who testified that the witness had been at her house all day, miles from where Mr. Huguley was allegedly abducted.
The state’s medical examiner, Joseph Embry, testified that there was no physical evidence linking Mr. Boyd to the crime. Dr. Embry also testified that evidence of duct tape was found on Mr. Huguley’s face and right forearm, but not on his legs, calling the prosecution’s theory of Mr. Boyd’s involvement into question. Fingerprints collected from evidence found near the crime scene also did not match Mr. Boyd.
After three days of trial, Mr. Boyd was found guilty and sentenced to death by a jury vote of 10 – 2. Alabama and Florida are the only states that allow non-unanimous juries to impose sentences of death. Mr. Boyd was tried in Talladega County, which during the 1980s and 1990s had the highest per capita rate of death sentences in the nation. The county, then home to about 74,000 people, accounted for about 10% of Alabama’s death row population at that time. District Attorney Robert Rumsey, who prosecuted Mr. Boyd, sent 12 people to death row during his tenure in office. A 2001 Birmingham Post-Herald investigation found that half of those sentenced to death under DA Rumsey were Black.
In 2018, the Alabama legislature passed a bill authorizing the use of nitrogen gas in executions and gave death row prisoners 30 days to designate whether they would be executed by nitrogen gas or lethal injection. Mr. Boyd initially chose nitrogen gas as his execution method; however, he has since reversed this decision, asserting he lacked sufficient information to make an informed decision.
His legal team filed a challenge in July 2025 contesting Alabama’s use of nitrogen gas on two constitutional grounds: that the execution method itself constitutes cruel and unusual punishment prohibited by the Eighth Amendment; and that the state’s withholding of an unredacted protocol denies him due process. The challenge focused largely on evidence from the state’s previous nitrogen gas executions, as well as one carried out in Louisiana. In each case, independent media witnesses stated that they saw the prisoners gasp for air and shake violently against restraints. In his legal filings, as required, Mr. Boyd proffered alternative methods of execution, including the firing squad, arguing that his asthma and vertigo increase chances of complication with nitrogen gas. A federal court heard Mr. Boyd’s claims in an evidentiary hearing in September 2025, where defense counsel presented a dozen witnesses to testify about the cruel and unusual nature of executions using nitrogen gas. The state, following previous statements, told the court that the method was working as intended, and that Mr. Boyd had earlier agreed to this method.
In early October, Chief U.S. District Judge Emily Marks denied Mr. Boyd’s challenge and request for a stay of execution. In her denial, Judge Marks wrote that Mr. Boyd would be unlikely to win on the merits of his claims, and that he was “inexcusably delayed” in filing his suit. Judge Marks noted that “the Court does not doubt that a person consciously deprived of oxygen even for two minutes under the protocol experiences discomfort, panic, and emotional distress,” however, much of this pain “is pain which the inmate would inevitably experience because he knows he will soon die — an experience which attends every execution and cannot be avoided.” She also noted that the proper inquiry into the constitutionality of the state’s use of nitrogen gas would have questioned whether the method “’superadds’ pain beyond what’s needed to effectuate a death sentence.”
Counsel for Mr. Boyd appealed this decision to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, which denied his request for a stay of execution.
Lauren Gill, He Was Convicted Entirely On Clashing Eyewitness Testimony. Alabama Plans to Execute Him Next Week., Bolts Magazine, October 15, 2025; Ivana Hrynkiw, Judge rejects Alabama inmate’s plea to call off his nitrogen gas execution, AL.com, October 9, 2025.