
2 death row inmates executed in Florida, Alabama minutes apart for grisly murders
Anthony Wainwright was put to death in Florida and Gregory Hunt was killed in Alabama four minutes later Tuesday evening. It's the fourth time this year there have been double-executions, according to USA Today.
3 Anthony Wainwright is scheduled to be killed in Florida.
AP
Wainwright, 54, was killed by lethal injection 30 years after he raped and fatally shot mother of two Carmen Gayheart, 23, in Lake City.
He was pronounced dead at 6:22 p.m. shortly after the execution got underway. His final words weren't inaudible from the witness room.
Wainwright and his co-defendant Richard Hamilton, broke out of North Carolina prison and while they were on the run carjacked Gayheart's blue Ford Bronco in April 1994.
The two men forced her into the car at gunpoint and then raped her in the backseat as they drove off.
Wainwright and Hamilton, who died on death row, then dragged her from the car and shot her twice in the back of the head.
3 Gregory Hunt will be executed in Alabama.
Alabama Department of Corrections/AFP via Getty Images
They were captured the next day and convicted in 1995.
Gayheart's sister, Maria David, has kept track of every court hearing and appeal since her loved one's murder.
'I'm looking forward to getting the last pieces of paperwork that say he's been executed to put into the book and never having to think about Anthony Wainwright ever again,' she said recently.
Wainwright's legal team tried to convince the US Supreme Court to stop his execution — to no avail — by arguing that his exposure to Agent Orange before he was born led to cognitive and behavioral problems throughout his life, according to CBS Miami.
Wainwright's father, who fought in the Vietnam War, was exposed to the herbicide and Wainwright was conceived six months after he came back from the war, his lawyers argued.
'Although Mr. Wainwright did not serve in the Vietnam War, and was not even a viable life at that point, he was catastrophically and immutably cognitively damaged from it,' part of the petition states, according to the station.
'Unlike veterans, who make knowing sacrifices for our country in the face of grave risks, Mr. Wainwright had no such choice.'
The argument was one of several appeals the Supreme Court shot down Monday. The highest court also rejected a final plea Tuesday morning.
3 One of the two men will be killed by lethal injection.
AP
Meanwhile Hunt's execution was by nitrogen gas about 35 years after he was convicted of bludgeoning a woman he had been dating, Karen Lane, to death inside an Cordova apartment she shared with Hunt's female cousin in 1988.
He was pronounced dead at 6:26 p.m.
Lane, 32, was so badly beaten that she had 60 injuries, including 20 to the head. She was also sexually abused by Hunt leading up to the fatal attack.
He was convicted in June 1990 of capital murder, as well as sexual abuse and burglary. Jurors then voted 11-1 that he be sentenced to death, which the judge signed off on.
Hunt claimed in an interview last month he was a changed man, and that the killing was fueled by booze, drugs and overwhelming jealousy after he saw Lane in a car with another man,
'Karen didn't deserve what happened to her,' Hunt said.
'You have your come-to-Jesus moment,' he added.
'Of course, after the fact, you can't believe what has happened. You can't believe you were part of it and did it.'
This was the sixth time a state has killed an inmate with nitrogen gas.
With Post wires.
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San Francisco Chronicle
27 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
New lawsuit challenges Trump's federal takeover of DC police department as crackdown intensifies
WASHINGTON (AP) — The nation's capital challenged President Donald Trump's takeover of its police department in court on Friday, hours after his administration stepped up its crackdown on policing by naming a federal official as the new emergency head of the department, with all the powers of a police chief. District of Columbia Attorney General Brian Schwalb said in a new lawsuit that Trump is going far beyond his power under the law. Schwalb asked a judge to find that control of the department remains in district hands and sought an emergency restraining order. 'The administration's unlawful actions are an affront to the dignity and autonomy of the 700,000 Americans who call D.C. home. This is the gravest threat to Home Rule that the District has ever faced, and we are fighting to stop it," Schwalb said. The lawsuit comes after Trump Attorney General Pam Bondi said Thursday night that Drug Enforcement Administration boss Terry Cole will assume 'powers and duties vested in the District of Columbia Chief of Police.' The Metropolitan Police Department 'must receive approval from Commissioner Cole' before issuing any orders, Bondi said. It was unclear where the move left the city's current police chief, Pamela Smith, who works for the mayor. Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser pushed back, writing on social media that 'there is no statute that conveys the District's personnel authority to a federal official.' Schwalb had said late Thursday that Bondi's directive was 'unlawful,' arguing it could not be followed by the city's police force. He wrote in a memo to Smith that 'members of MPD must continue to follow your orders and not the orders of any official not appointed by the Mayor,' setting up the legal clash between the heavily Democratic district and the Republican administration. 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Volunteers helped homeless people leave long-standing encampments — to where was often unclear. Department of Homeland Security police stood outside Nationals Park during a game Thursday between the Washington Nationals and the Philadelphia Phillies. DEA agents patrolled The Wharf, a popular nightlife area, while Secret Service officers were seen in the Foggy Bottom neighborhood. Bowser, walking a tightrope between the Republican White House and the constituency of her largely Democratic city, was out of town Thursday for a family commitment in Martha's Vineyard but would be back Friday, her office said. The uptick in visibility of federal forces around the city, including in many high-traffic areas, has been striking to residents going about their lives. Trump has the power to take over federal law enforcement for 30 days before his actions must be reviewed by Congress, though he has said he'll re-evaluate as that deadline approaches. 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New York Post
27 minutes ago
- New York Post
Lawyer ‘deeply sorry' for submitting fake, AI-generated quotes in murder case
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USA Today
4 hours ago
- USA Today
As Democrats try to defend cities from Trump, have they learned their lesson on crime?
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Mayors take the lead in spotlighting policies that make cities safer Democrats have to "stop being afraid" to talk about fighting crime, Scott said. That starts with forcefully combating GOP claims by spotlighting personal stories coupled with the significant investments that have helped lower crime rates, the mayors said. "Share the facts until you're blue in the face," said Kansas City, Missouri, Mayor Quinton Lucas. The Vera Institute's advocacy arm Vera Action, for example, assessed that the the GOP spent more than $1 billion attacking Democrats on crime and immigration in 2024, while Democrats spent roughly $319 million on advertisements that played up their public safety records. "We missed the mark, and now it's time for us to take the bullhorn ourselves and talk about the good work we're doing as mayors," said Cleveland Mayor Justin Bibb, who also serves as president of the Democratic Mayors' Association. "This is a narrative we can win.' Making that information resonate with voters, however, will be difficult. Many Americans often view crime through what they see in their neighborhoods or on local TV news, experts say, rather than academic studies and government reports. That has been a significant problem for Democrats as the party adapts to Trump's blitzing style, which is often propped up by administration officials and MAGA-aligned activists spotlighting individual acts of violence that startle most voters. In 2024 exit polling, Trump outperformed Kamala Harris by five points on the issue of crime. He hammered the former California attorney general and San Francisco district attorney as soft on violence and made misleading claims about the amount of crime the country experienced while she and former President Joe Biden were in office. Violent crime decreased nationwide by an estimated 3% in 2023 and fell by 4.5% in 2024, according to the FBI. Crime has continued to drop in most categories in a July study from the Council on Criminal Justice. Several of the cities called out by Trump − all with Black mayors − have seen significant dips in crime. They attribute the reduction in part to investments in youth programs and other policing alternatives. Mayor Bibb, in Cleveland, said he'd spoken to DNC Chair Ken Martin and other party leaders and they are of the same mindset: Democrats have to flood the country with what they are doing to improve public safety. Days before Trump seized control of law enforcement in Washington, D.C., the DNC cut an 8-minute video − dubbed "Mayors Get S--t Done" − featuring Bibb that showcased crime prevention programs across the country that have decreased homicides, expanded affordable housing, and reduced homelessness. "Data is one thing, but it's also making sure people feel and perceive the safety in their cities, and I know that it's something I'm focused on in Cleveland, and my counterparts across the country are focused on it as well, too," Bibb said. He noted homicides are down 30% in Cleveland in the first half of the year. Democrats say it's a distraction Democrats with higher political aspirations have focused their messages less on crime, and instead have clapped back by saying Trump's deployment in D.C. and threats to do so elsewhere are a distraction from unpopular parts of his tenure, such as healthcare cuts in Republicans' tax and spending bill or Jeffrey Epstein's case files. "Let's not lie to the public," Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, a 2028 hopeful, said in an Aug. 11 post on X responding to Trump. "You and I both know you have no authority to take over Chicago. By the way, where are the Epstein files?" As roughly 800 guard members move into position across Washington, D.C., Trump pledged that his efforts will result in a "crime-free" city. "This is going to be a beacon, and it's going to also serve as an example of what can be done," Trump said on Aug. 13. He told reporters earlier this week that "other cities are hopefully watching" and will "self clean up" as a result. But in several metro areas that has already begun. As the Justice Department itself announced in January, total violent crime in Washington, D.C. for 2024 was down 35% from the year before. And in Chicago, long a Republican example of runaway disorder, violent crime is down 22% compared to the same period last year. This year has seen 110 fewer homicides than in the same period in 2024. Mayor Brandon Johnson, who took office in 2023, lives on the West Side of Chicago, where shootings and other violence have been a scourge. He said he understands why some residents feel crime remains prevalent. "I'm likely the first mayor in the history of Chicago to wake up in one of the most disinvested communities in Chicago, where trauma and violence has been pervasive − and at the same time we are experiencing a decrease in violence," the 49-year-old mayor told USA TODAY. "So I recognize the work has not necessarily caught up with people's feelings, but it doesn't take away the work that we have done," he said. In Chicago, for instance, Johnson's administration made a $40 million investment in July aimed at modernizing homeless shelters. He also touts other initiatives, such as the Peacekeepers Program, a $34.5 million state-funded effort that trains residents to help de-escalate community conflicts. Johnson said he will do everything possible "to ensure that our constitutional rights are protected" and hinted at legal action if Trump follows through on his threat against the Windy City. "We have to stand firm and stand up to the tyrannical reign of this tragic president," he said. Crime was also down in L.A. when Trump ordered the National Guard there to help quell anti-deportation protests in June. The city is at a 60-year low in homicides, and gang violence is down. The guard deployment to L.A. was "completely unnecessary," Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass said in an interview. "In Los Angeles, we had 4,000 national guardsmen and women in our city, who had absolutely nothing to do. About 100 of them were used to guard two buildings, maybe 200, out of 4,000, and the rest sat around doing nothing, playing video games and missing work, school and their family.' Whether Trump can replicate the deployments could rest on the outcome of a case that's currently before a California court. The state is suing Trump over his National Guard deployment. Polling shows that when it comes to allegations of executive overreach, at least, the public is on local officials' side. A Quinnipiac poll taken in late June found that voters disapproved 55% to 43% of Trump's decision to deploy the National Guard in Los Angeles.