Derrick Dewayne Charles, 32, became the seventh prisoner put to death this year in the United State's most active capital punishment state. He was pronounced dead at 6:36 pm Central Daylight Time (CDT), 25 minutes after being given the execution drug.
Asked by the warden if he wanted to make a final statement, Charles replied: "Nah. I'm ready to go home."
As the pentobarbital took effect, he took two breaths, yawned and then appeared to go to sleep. Six relatives of Charles' victims witnessed the execution, but he made no eye contact with them.
"We are disappointed with the Court's response," Paul Mansur, Charles' lead attorney, said in a statement. "Derrick Charles has a lifelong history of severe mental illness.
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While the Court has ruled that it is unconstitutional to execute the insane "those people without a rational understanding of why they are being executed" it is a hollow promise without resources and evaluation.
State lawyers opposing Charles' appeals said his attorneys had made similar arguments about his competency before and that the courts rejected those.
Charles pleaded guilty to capital murder charges in 2003 for the slayings of Myiesha Bennett, her mother, Brenda Bennett, 44, and her grandfather, Obie Bennett, 77. Their bodies were discovered at their Houston home in July 2002.
Charles, then 19, was arrested the next day at a motel where police also found Brenda Bennett's car. Relatives said she was not pleased with Charles' sexual relationship with her teenage daughter.