Hartford Courant

Death row inmate spared execution

Azibo Aquart sentenced instead to life in prison for horrifying 2005 triple murder in Bridgeport

- By Edmund H. Mahony Hartford Courant

The last federal criminal defendant who had been facing execution for a crime in Connecticu­t was resentence­d to life in prison Thursday in federal court for a horrific, triple murder in Bridgeport 16 years ago.

Azibo Aquart, now 40 years old, was 23 in 2005 when he and others in his drug crew kidnapped three people he considered rivals, wrapped them in duct tape with only their eyes and noses uncovered and beat them to death with baseball bats.

He was convicted in 2011 of more than a half dozen murder, racketeeri­ng and drug crimes.

He was sentenced to death a year later and imprisoned on death row at the federal penitentia­ry in Terre Haute, Indiana.

A federal appeals court in New York reversed the death sentence in 2018 finding that prosecutor­s had improperly questioned an FBI agent during the trial. The appeals court ordered Aquart resentence­d. After federal prosecutor­s decided against pursuing a second death sentence, U.S. Judge Janet Bond Arterton imposed the only alternativ­e under the law, which is life in prison.

Aquart became the first federal criminal defendant in Connecticu­t to get a death sentence after the federal government reinstated capital punishment in 1988. Former President Donald Trump resumed federal executions in 2020 after a 17-year hiatus. Federal officials said there may be two or three pending federal cases in Connecticu­t that are death penalty eligible, but a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s office said death sentences are not being pursued in any of them.

Connecticu­t abolished capital punishment for state crimes in 2015 and closed down the state’s death row.

Federal prosecutor Elena Lalli Coronado told Arterton that Aquart’s victims died a “brutal, pointless and agonizing death,” and that at one point during the baseball bat murders, he joked to one of his accomplice­s, “Yo, come and get you some.”

Relatives of Aquart’s victims told Arterton of grand children and a great grandchild who are growing up without having known their murdered grandparen­ts or great grandparen­ts. They all asked Arterton to put an end to a seemingly interminab­le prosecutio­n that one said has summoned them back to court repeatedly to relieve their losses through more “hearings, pleadings and argument.”

Aquart’s lawyers were building the legal foundation for another return to court to argue for a further sentence reduction on compassion­ate grounds because of what they called his exemplary record of self-improvemen­t while confined under harsh death row conditions.

They said Aquart had a terrifying childhood, was physically and sexually abused as a child and was homeless on the streets of Bridgeport by age 12. He was so traumatize­d by the conditions he encountere­d when arriving on death row that he became incapable of speech, his lawyers said.

Arterton said Aquart’s resentenci­ng “shines a light on the terrifying and arbitrary nature of life on death row and the toll that it takes, nearly driving Mr. Aquart to madness.”

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