San Francisco Chronicle

Inmate executed for 2004 slaying

- By Michael Graczyk Michael Graczyk is an Associated Press writer.

HUNTSVILLE, Texas — A Texas prisoner was executed Tuesday evening for the fatal shooting of a San Antonio convenienc­e store owner after courts turned down appeals that the state parole board improperly rejected the inmate’s clemency request because he’s black.

Christophe­r Young, 34, never denied the slaying, which was recorded on a store surveillan­ce camera, but insisted he was drunk and didn’t intend to kill 53-year-old Hasmukh “Hash” Patel during an attempted robbery after drinking nearly two dozen beers and then doing cocaine that Sunday morning, Nov. 21, 2004.

Asked by the warden if he had a final statement, Young said he wanted to make sure his victim’s family knew he loved them “like they love me.”

“Make sure the kids in the world know I’m being executed and those kids I’ve been mentoring keep this fight going,” he added.

As the lethal dose of the sedative pentobarbi­tal began taking effect, he twice used an obscenity to say he could taste it and that it was burning.

“I taste it in my throat,” he said.

He stopped moving within about 30 seconds and was pronounced dead at 6:38 p.m. CDT.

Twenty-five minutes had passed since he was first given the lethal drug.

Young became the eighth prisoner put to death this year in Texas, one more than all of 2017 in the nation’s busiest capital punishment state.

Young’s attorneys sued the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles after the panel last week rejected a clemency plea where they argued Young was “no longer the young man he was when he arrived” on death row, that he was “truly remorseful” and that Patel’s son did not wish the execution to take place.

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