The Guardian (USA)

Alabama executes Nathaniel Woods despite outcry from activists nationwide

- Kenya Evelyn in Washington

Alabama has executed Nathaniel Woods, a prisoner convicted of capital murder for the 2004 killings of three police officers, despite a national outcry over his case.

The execution by lethal injection came after the US supreme court issued a temporary stay to consider lastminute appeals and then denied the inmate’s petitions. Alabama governor Kay Ivey denied a request for clemency.

“This is not a decision that I take lightly, but I firmly believe in the rule of law and that justice must be served,” Ivey said in a statement after the execution. Woods was pronounced dead at 9pm local time.

Advocates have, for weeks, called for the state’s governor to intervene. On Tuesday Alabama senator Doug Jones shared via Twitter that he “expressed [his] concerns”.

Earlier in the day, the son of Martin Luther King Jr joined a growing list of activists and celebritie­s calling on Alabama governor Kay Ivey to stop the planned execution.

Martin Luther King III, an activist and the son of the civil rights leader, sent Ivey a letter “pleading with [her] not to execute” Woods.

He said: “Killing this African American man, whose case appears to have been strongly mishandled by the courts, could produce an irreversib­le injustice.”

King went on to question whether

Ivey is “willing to allow a potentiall­y innocent man to be executed?” Later on Twitter he called for people to make phone calls to the governor in support of the cause.

The execution proceeded despite the co-defendant, Kerry Spencer, supporting Woods’ innocence. The pair were sentenced to death for killing Birmingham police officers Carlos Owen, Harley Chisholm and Charles Bennett as they swarmed a suspected drug house.

At the time, the prosecutio­n alleged

Spencer opened fire after Woods told officers he was surrenderi­ng, making Woods a willful accomplice – a crime punishable by death in Alabama. One officer who survived testified he saw Spencer standing in the doorway and shooting in his direction.

The news of Woods’ death was met with condemnati­on from prominent figures including Alexandria OcasioCort­ez, who called for America to “abolish the death penalty”, and Kim Kardashian West, an advocate for criminal justice reform, who said the case was “a tragic example of injustice in the system”.

Authoritie­s say Spencer was the lone gunman. He also confessed to the crime in a handwritte­n letter provided by his attorneys this week.

Spencer wrote in the letter: “Nathaniel Woods is 100% innocent. I know this to be a fact because I’m the person that shot and killed all three of the officers.”

Spencer was convicted of murder and sentenced to death. No execution date has been set for him.

Momentum over Woods’ case had been building after his sister called on prominent leaders who were set to visit the state to commemorat­e the 55th anniversar­y of a civil rights protest march from Selma to Montgomery known as “Bloody Sunday”.

Woods’ supporters also point to a joint investigat­ion between The Appeal and the Alabama Media Group that uncovered several accusation­s of police misconduct involving Woods’ case. They argue Woods had insufficie­nt counsel who ignored a trial riddled with errors, including the admission of rap lyrics and police-car drawings found in his cell as he awaited trial.

In a statement released Wednesday, Alabama state attorney general Steve Marshall rejected growing calls to halt the execution, insisting “justice is set to be carried out” because Woods was “correctly found guilty and sentenced to death by a jury of his peers”.

“The only injustice in the case of Nathaniel Woods is that which was inflicted on those four policemen that terrible day in 2004,” the statement read.

Ivey’s offices did not immediatel­y respond to the Guardian’s request for comment. The US supreme court turned down Woods’ appeal last year.

Woods’s attorneys also challenged the 11th US circuit court of appeals over the drugs used to administer the execution.

 ?? Photograph: Al Drago/EPA ?? Martin Luther King III said: ‘Killing this African American man, whose case appears to have been strongly mishandled by the courts, could produce an irreversib­le injustice.’
Photograph: Al Drago/EPA Martin Luther King III said: ‘Killing this African American man, whose case appears to have been strongly mishandled by the courts, could produce an irreversib­le injustice.’

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