South Carolina to carry out first firing squad execution in US in 15 years


  • World
  • Friday, 07 Mar 2025

A woman leaves after attending a vigil for death row inmate Brad Sigmon, 67, on the eve of his execution by firing squad method at the Broad River Correctional Institution, at the Washington Street United Methodist Church in Columbia, South Carolina, U.S., March 6, 2025. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton

COLUMBIA, South Carolina (Reuters) - South Carolina plans to execute a man convicted of two murders by firing squad on Friday, the first use of the method in the U.S. in 15 years.

Brad Sigmon, 67, chose to be killed by a firing squad, saying he feared the alternatives of the electric chair or lethal injection would risk a slower and more torturous death.

Sigmon was convicted of beating to death his ex-girlfriend's parents, William and Gladys Larke, with a baseball bat at their home in the town of Taylors in 2001.

Executioners were due on Friday to strap him into a chair in a steel basin with a hood over his head and a target over his heart. Three executioners planned to fire live ammunition from 15 feet (4.5 meters) away.

Sigmon asked the U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday to halt his execution, arguing that South Carolina's refusal to share information about its lethal injection protocol violated his due-process rights.

The last three men to be executed by South Carolina all chose lethal injection, and the executions lasted for about 20 minutes before they were declared dead, Sigmon's lawyer, Bo King, said in an interview.

Sigmon "was left to decide whether to die by the firing squad, knowing that the bullets are going to break the bones in his chest and destroy his heart, or risk a 20-minute-long execution strapped to a gurney with your lungs filling with blood and fluid," King said. "This is an impossible choice."

Sigmon is scheduled to be executed at 6 p.m. on Friday at the South Carolina Department of Corrections' execution chamber in Columbia.

There have been only three executions in the U.S. by firing squad since 1976, all in Utah, one of only five states that still offers a method that was common in the 19th century during the Civil War.

Most U.S. executions use lethal injection, introduced in the 1970s as a less outwardly violent method. But it has become the most frequently botched means of execution, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

Some states have struggled to secure the drugs needed because of a European Union ban on pharmaceutical companies selling drugs for use in capital punishment.

Executioners have also sometimes struggled to find veins on prisoners' bodies. And autopsies of people executed by lethal injection have sometimes found frothy, bloody liquid filling the lungs' airways, which some doctors say indicate the condemned person experienced the painful sensation of drowning before they died.

In January, the U.S. Department of Justice cited those autopsy reports and withdrew its lethal injection protocol for federal executions, saying it may cause unconstitutional pain and suffering.

(Reporting by Aleksandra Michalska in Columbia, South Carolina, and Jonathan Allen in New York; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In World

From pulpit to turntables: Portugal's 'DJ Priest' brings his message to Latin America
Explainer-French lawmakers race to agree 2026 budget before year-end
Afghan hunger crisis deepens as aid funding falls short, UN says
Myanmar junta says Suu Kyi 'in good health' after son raises alarm
Bow failure caused 1994 Estonia ferry disaster, final report shows
BBC says it will fight Trump lawsuit over edited speech
Plan to build church for war dead in city park sparks rare protest in Russia
Netherlands will host International Claims Commission for Ukraine, minister says
Polish student detained over suspected Christmas market attack plot
UN envoy hopeful on Cyprus, says multi-party summit premature

Others Also Read