Jerry Correll, 59, was pronounced dead at 7:36 p.M yesterday at Florida State Prison after receiving a lethal injection. The execution came after the US. Supreme Court rejected his latest appeals. Correll is the 22nd inmate to be executed under Gov.Rick Scott the most executions under a single governor since the death penalty was reinstated in Florida in 1979.
Correll, strapped to the death gurney, said "no sir" when asked if he had any final statement before his execution. He mouthed the words "thank you" to a chaplain sitting in the front row. A group of witnesses sobbed while holding hands.
Correll was found guilty and sentenced to death for each of four slayings in Orlando. A jury convicted him of killing his former wife, their 5-year-old daughter, Tuesday; Susan Correll's mother, Mary Lou Hines; and Susan Correll's sister, Marybeth Jones.
Correll had a cheeseburger, French fries and a Coca-Cola as his final meal, said Florida Department of Corrections spokesman McKinley Lewis. Lewis said Correll was "calm and in good spirits" before the execution and that he spoke with his surviving daughter on the telephone.
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Correll's attorneys argued that midazolam alone would not be strong enough to knock him out given his history of alcohol abuse and subsequent brain damage. In Florida executions, the sedative is used first, followed by drugs that cause paralysis and stop the heart.
Correll's lawyers had also asked the US Supreme Court to postpone the execution until it rules in a separate case on whether Florida gives judges too much power in deciding death-penalty sentences. Arguments in that case were heard this month. The court rejected Correll's appeal Thursday night, with Justices Stephen Breyer and Sonia Sotomayor dissenting.