Starke, FL – Florida Man Yells ‘Murderers!’ As He’s Put To Death

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    Joseph Thornton, a Gainesville, Fla., resident, rings a bell during a vigil for Eric Scott Branch in Gainesville, Thursday, Feb. 22, 2018, as he is sentenced to the death penalty. (Lauren Bacho/The Gainesville Sun via AP)Starke, FL – As the execution drugs were being administered, inmate Eric Scott Branch let out a blood-curdling scream. Then he yelled “murderers! murderers! murderers!” as he thrashed on a gurney as he was being put to death for the 1993 slaying of a college student.

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    The drugs included a powerful sedative Thursday evening and the 47-year-old inmate, following the outburst, gave a last guttural groan and turned silent. Minutes earlier, he had just been addressing corrections officers, saying it should fall to Florida Gov. Rick Scott and his attorney general to carry out the death sentence — not to those workers present.

    “Let them come down here and do it,” Branch said. “I’ve learned that you’re good people and this is not what you should be doing.”

    Branch was pronounced dead at 7:05 p.m. Thursday after receiving the injection at Florida State Prison in Starke. The governor’s office made the announcement.

    Asked later whether Branch’s scream could have been caused by the execution drugs, Department of Corrections spokeswoman Michelle Glady said “there was no indication” that the inmate’s last actions were a result of the injection procedure. She said that conclusion had been confirmed by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement.

    Branch was convicted of raping and fatally beating University of West Florida student Susan Morris, 21. Her body was found buried in a shallow grave — a crime whose brutality was noted by the Florida Supreme Court in denying one of Branch’s appeals.

    “She had been beaten, stomped, assaulted and strangled. She bore numerous bruises and lacerations, both eyes were swollen shut,” the justices wrote.

    Evidence in the case shows Branch approached Morris after she left a night class on Jan. 11, 1993, so he could steal her red Toyota and return to his home state of Indiana. He was arrested while traveling there.
    The family of Susan Morris makes a statement after the execution of Eric Scott Branch on February 22, 2018. Branch was convicted of raping and killing a University of West Florida student in 1993 so he could steal her car. [Lauren Bacho/Gainesville Sun]
    Branch also was convicted of sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl in Indiana and of another sexual assault in the Florida Panhandle that took place just 10 days before Morris was killed, court records show.

    The jury in his murder case recommended the death penalty by a 10-2 vote under Florida’s old capital punishment system, which was ruled unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2016. The high court said juries must reach a unanimous recommendation for death and judges cannot overrule that. Florida legislators subsequently changed the system to comply.

    One of Branch’s final and unsuccessful appeals to the U.S. Supreme Court involved whether he deserved a new sentencing hearing because of that jury’s 10-2 vote in his 1994 trial. The Florida Supreme Court has ruled that the new system of sentencing did not apply to inmates sentenced to death before 2002.

    Elsewhere, Texas’ governor spared a convicted killer’s life shortly before the inmate was to have been executed Thursday for masterminding the fatal shootings of his mother and brother. Gov. Greg Abbott accepted the state parole board’s rare clemency recommendation and commuted the sentence of Thomas “Bart” Whitaker to life without parole. Whitaker’s father also was shot in the 2003 plot at the family’s suburban Houston home but survived. He led an effort to save his son from execution.

    And in Alabama, officials postponed the execution of Doyle Lee Hamm, who was scheduled to die Thursday evening for the 1987 death of a motel clerk during a robbery. Hamm fought his death sentence, arguing there was a risk of a botched execution because of damage to his veins from lymphoma and other illnesses. The U.S. Supreme Court delayed the execution Thursday evening to consider Hamm’s request to block it, but then gave the go-ahead about 9 p.m. Corrections spokesman Bob Horton said there was not enough time to prepare Hamm before the death warrant expired at midnight.

    In Florida, relatives of victim Susan Morris said they remain profoundly grieved by her violent death. Though Morris was 21 when she was killed, more time has passed than the number of years she lived, the family statement said. Still, the pain remains.

    “Twenty-five years ago, Susan’s life was suddenly and brutally extinguished. We have grieved for her longer that she was with us. Yet because of who she was … she will never be forgotten by those who love her,” said the statement, read out by her sister Wendy Morris Hill shortly after Branch was put to death.


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    10 Comments
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    PaulinSaudi
    PaulinSaudi
    6 years ago

    Wow, twenty-four years of expensive arguing to get to this point.

    triumphinwhitehouse
    triumphinwhitehouse
    6 years ago

    I wish this can happen to all murders, the problem is liberal states like NY don’t and claim its racist (what else) despite this garbage being white.

    Ppppp
    Ppppp
    6 years ago

    Dems are screaming against the death penalty because as the president said today they care more for the criminals than the victims. Shameful.

    Normandavid1
    Normandavid1
    6 years ago

    24 years? What a joke!

    PaulinSaudi
    PaulinSaudi
    6 years ago

    #4 You will recall how enthusiastic President Trump is for the death penalty. He took out a full-page ad in the Failing New York Times call for the Central Park Rapists to be killed.
    .

    They were innocent of course.

    6 years ago

    To #6 - Those low life individuals may have been innocent of the actual rape in Central Park, but they were there, and assisted the rapist, by holding the girl down, and physically abusing her. Also, regarding how long it took to execute that savage in Florida, in the country where you live, in Saudi Arabia, execution takes place very quickly, and is done in a public square with a sword. It wouldn’t take so long in the USA, if those Attorneys with an agenda, would not file frivolous appeal, after appeal.

    favish
    favish
    6 years ago

    you pailin in eye for eye….seldom one was found comlete innocent like wasnt there att all, mistaken identity….’usually its that was part of crime but didnt pull trigger’. you are what we call ‘kol hamrachaim al achzor sifo yiyah achzor al raCHMONI’