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Tennessee will hold it's first execution in almost a decade this week when a convicted pedophile who killed and raped a 7-year-old girl will receive a lethal injection.

59 year-old Billy Irick will be executed by the state on Thursday, August 9th for raping and killing the young child he was babysitting in 1985. Irick's lawyers launched a last-minute appeal with the U.S. Supreme Court to spare his life, claiming he suffers from psychosis for his entire life. The court rejected the attorneys' claims that putting him to death would violate legal norms barring the execution of people with severe mental disorders or disabilities.

 

Billy Irick will be put to death for raping and killing 7-year-old Paula Dyer

 Epoch Times reports: Irick, who has spent more than three decades on death row, is set to be put to death at 7 p.m. CDT at the Riverbend Maximum Security Institution in Nashville. If the execution goes ahead, it would be the 15th this year in the United States and the first in Tennessee since 2009.

He was convicted of raping and strangling Paula Dyer in Knoxville. Irick had been a boarder in the home where the girl lived with her mother, stepfather, and siblings.

Irick’s lawyers have argued for nearly 20 years that his original counsel, who no longer represents him, failed at his murder trial to present a long history of violent and psychotic behavior, which included Irick being institutionalized as a child. “Irick has a lifelong severe mental illness which manifested in early childhood and was present before and during the offense for which he was convicted, the rape and murder of … Paula Dyer,” they wrote in their Supreme Court filing submitted earlier this week. Tennessee state prosecutors have said Irick knew what he was doing was wrong, is competent to be executed and did not properly raise the mental illness claim in state court.

Irick's and other death row inmates are also challenging the state’s lethal injection mix, which contains the sedative midazolam, a valium-like drug used in troubled lethal injections in other states. Lawyers contend it does not achieve the level of unconsciousness required for surgery and is unsuitable for lethal injections, where other drugs are used to cause cardiac arrest. Executions in Tennessee have been put on hold for years due in large part to lawsuits from death row inmates over the drug mix and death chamber protocols.

 http://www.neonnettle.com/news...e-in-landmark-ruling
 

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What's amazing is the thought someone tried to save his life! And, to actually kiss this nasty monster!

Witnesses to the execution included members of Paula's family, Knox County Sheriff Jimmy "J.J." Jones, Tennessee Deputy Attorney General Scott Sutherland, Irick's attorney Gene Shiles and seven members of the media.

Shiles and Sutherland left the viewing room at 7:12 p.m., presumably to go into the execution chamber and observe Irick's IV being administered.

 

When the two men returned to the observation room around 7:25 p.m., Shiles told witnesses that he kissed Irick and touched him.

Last edited by Jutu

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