Mississippi executes condemned inmate Bishop
By HOLBROOK MOHR
PARCHMAN, Miss. — The youngest inmate executed in Mississippi in two decades urged death penalty opponents to vote for presidential candidate Barack Obama in order to end executions and apologized to the family of the victim in his final moments.
Dale Leo Bishop, 34, was put to death by lethal injection Wednesday
for his role in the 1998 claw hammer bludgeoning of a friend.
Bishop’s attorneys had argued his life should have been spared
because he did not swing the hammer that killed Marcus James Gentry,
22. The courts were not persuaded.
“To Mark’s family, I would like to express my sincerest apologies.
It was a senseless act. It was a needless act. The world is worse off
without him,” Bishop said while strapped to a gurney. “To my family, I
love you. It’s going to be all good.”
He finished his statement by mentioning Obama, the presumptive Democratic nominee.
“For those who oppose the death penalty and want to see it
end, our best bet is to vote for Barack Obama because his supporters
have been working behind the scenes to end this practice,” Bishop said.
“God bless America, it’s been great living here. That’s all.”
Bishop had a goatee and was dressed in a red prison jumpsuit and
flip flops when he was executed. He was pronounced dead at 6:14 p.m.
Wednesday.
Bishop’s statements appeared to signal contradictions about the death penalty in his final hours.
Corrections Commissioner Chris Epps told reporters before the
execution that Bishop said he believed in capital punishment, but did
not want to die. Bishop also insisted that another man who participated
in the crime should be on death row, rather than serving a life
sentence.
The victim’s relatives said after the execution that opponents of
the death penalty might feel differently if faced with the murder of a
loved one.
“We lost Mark, not by chance, but by two ungodly men,” the family said in a statement.
“Whether or not people believe in the death penalty, until you stand
in our shoes and feel our pain … do not judge. A small piece of justice
has been served here today. It does not correct the injustice that
happened to Mark, but it is the law and it was carried out as it should
have been.”
Bishop’s ex-wife, Tonya Cunningham, and his nephew, David Wolf, wept
in a witness room while watching the execution. Bishop appeared to wink
and nod at the two. Cunningham pressed her hand to the glass window
separating the witness room from the chamber. Bishop took a few deep
breaths and appeared to fall asleep.
Gentry’s mother and uncle watched from a different room.
Bishop had acknowledged participating in the attack, but another
man, Jessie Johnson, admitted striking the lethal blows. Johnson was
tried separately and sentenced to life without parole.
The attack began in Gentry’s car after a night of drinking and drug
use and continued on an isolated dirt road near Saltillo in north
Mississippi, court records show. Prosecutors said Gentry was hit 23
times before the hammer lodged in his throat.
“The pain and loss that these men helped put on us will never be forgotten,” Gentry’s family said.
Bishop had hoped three pending appeals before the U.S. Supreme Court
and a last-minute request to Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour might spare
him. Both denied his requests.
At the end of his 2000 trial, Bishop waived his right to a jury
sentencing and asked the judge for the death penalty. Bishop said he
later changed his mind about wanting to die after being prescribed
medication for a bipolar disorder diagnosed in prison.
Bishop was the youngest person executed in the state since
27-year-old Connie Ray Evans was put to death in 1987 in the gas
chamber. Bishop was the second man executed in Mississippi this year.
Epps said Bishop spent his last hours “doing a lot of political
talk” and discussing other death row inmates. Bishop’s parents,
ex-wife, oldest brother and nephew visited him Wednesday afternoon. He
had a last meal of pineapple supreme pizza, ice cream and root beer.
Sixteen protesters rallied Wednesday outside the prison, urging the execution be halted.
(AP)