State & Federal
Mississippi
History of the Death Penalty
From 1804 – 1940, all executions in Mississippi were carried out by hanging. The first execution by electrocution took place on October 11, 1940. From then until 1952, the electric chair was moved from county to county for 75 executions. Inmates were executed by lethal gas from 1954 – 1989. In 1984, the Mississippi legislature amended the state’s death penalty statute to provide for lethal injection for all individuals sentenced to death after the law went into effect. Inmates sentenced prior to the change were still executed by lethal gas. In 1998, lethal gas was removed as an option.
Timeline
1818 — Mississippi carries out its first documented execution.
1940 — The portable electric chair replaces hanging as the primary method of execution in Mississippi. Hilton Fortenberry is the first person in Mississippi to be executed by electric chair.
1955 — In a botched execution lasting 45 minutes, Gerald Gallego is the first person to be executed by lethal gas. Louisiana then adds an additional step to the required testing of the gas chamber to include placing an animal in the chamber to test if the mixture of gas is sufficiently lethal.
1984 — The Mississippi legislature amends the state’s death penalty statute to allow lethal injection for all individuals sentenced to death once the law goes into effect. Inmates sentenced prior to this statute still faced execution by lethal gas.
1998 — Lethal gas is removed as an option for method of execution.
2002 — Tracy Hansen is the first person to executed by lethal injection in Mississippi.
2011 — A bill is introduced to impose a moratorium on executions but the state legislature does not pass the bill.
2015 — A federal judge blocks Mississippi from using the sedatives pentobarbital and midazolam in its lethal injection execution protocol. Midazolam has been implicated in executions gon awry in Ohio, Oklahoma, and Arizona.
2017 — Mississippi appeals court grants Sherwood Brown a new trial after reviewing exculpatory results of DNA testing and evidence. Mr. Brown’s death sentence conviction was obtained as a result of misleading forensic testimony.
2020 — Curtis Flowers is exonerated after spending 23 years on death row. Mr. Flowers was tried capital murder six times by the same prosecutor, Doug Evans, and has faced numerous issues with prosecutorial misconduct and racial bias in jury selection in his trials.
2021 — Mississippi carries out the execution of David Cox by lethal injection. This is the first execution carried out in nearly a decade.
2022 — Mississippi legislature passes a law allowing corrections officials to chose their preferred execution method by either lethal injection, electrocution, firing squad, or nitrogen hypoxia.
Notable Exonerations
Sabrina Butler was 17 years old when her 9‑month old son, who had a heart murmur, stopped breathing. After attempts to resuscitate her son, Butler rushed to the hospital, where the young child was pronounced dead. The following day Butler was arrested for child abuse due to the bruises left by her resuscitation attempts. She was interrogated by the police and then prosecuted. Then, in 1990, she was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death.
Her conviction was overturned by the Mississippi Supreme Court in 1992. (Butler v. State, 608 So.2d 314 (Miss. 1992)). The court said that the prosecution had failed to prove that the incident was anything more than an accident. At re-trial, she was acquitted on Dec. 17, 1995 after a very brief jury deliberation. It is now believed that the baby may have died either of cystic kidney disease or from sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS).
Milestones in Abolition/Reinstatement
In 2011, a bill was introduced to impose a moratorium on executions. The bill did not pass the state legislature.
Other Interesting Facts
Mississippi was one of two states to use a portable electric chair, and the first state to do so.
Resources
Mississippi Execution Totals Since 1976
News & Developments
News
Dec 20, 2023
Batson Relief for Another Mississippi Prisoner Prosecuted by Doug Evans
On December 12, 2023 U.S. District Judge Michael P. Mills overturned Terry Pitchford’s death sentence and ordered Mississippi to retry him in 6 months or release him from custody. Judge Mills found that the original trial judge failed to allow the defense to properly challenge the exclusion of Black jurors by now-retired District Attorney Doug Evans, the same prosecutor who prosecuted Curtis Flowers. “This court cannot ignore the notion that Pitchford was seemingly given no chance to rebut…
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Dec 07, 2023
Mississippi Supreme Court Delays Decision on Willie Manning Execution Date, Allows Time for Appeal
On November 30, 2023, the Mississippi Supreme Court ordered that the state’s request to set an execution date for death row prisoner Willie Manning be held until the court rules on a recent petition seeking to bring new evidence of Mr. Manning’s innocence. Mr. Manning’s attorneys had filed a petition at the court on September 29, asking for an opportunity to present recantations from jailhouse informants who testified against Mr. Manning, as well as new expert analysis debunking the…
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Nov 10, 2023
A Veterans Day Review: Uneven Progress Understanding the Role of Military Service in Capital Crimes
In 2015, DPIC’s Battle Scars report brought worldwide attention to the issue of military veterans on death row. DPIC found approximately 300 veterans incarcerated under a sentence of death, representing at least 10% of death row, and many more who had been executed. Since that report, research and understanding about Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), traumatic brain injury (TBI), substance use disorders, and mental illness among veterans has only grown. A 2023 survey of…
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Jul 12, 2023
Doug Evans, the District Attorney Who Prosecuted Curtis Flowers Six Times, Retires
Doug Evans, the District Attorney who tried death row exoneree Curtis Flowers for murder six times, is retiring. Mr. Flowers received four death sentences, but each conviction was overturned when courts found that Evans had illegally excluded Black jurors from the jury…
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Dec 19, 2022
Mississippi Executes Thomas Loden, As John Hanson, Gerald Pizzuto Death Warrants Expire
The three final executions scheduled in 2022 highlighted broader trends in the year’s executions — the execution of vulnerable defendants, unavailability of lethal-injection drugs, and the scheduling of executions without regard for the ability to actually carry them out. Mississippi executed Thomas “Eddie” Loden Jr. (pictured) on December 14, the 18th execution of the year, while two executions set for December 15 — John Hanson’s in…
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