2 SC legislators call for independent investigation into latest execution
The above shows the execution chamber in the Department of Corrections' Columbia prisons complex, as seen from the witness room. The firing squad chair (left) was added following a 2021 state law that made death by firing squad an option. The electric chair is under the cover. (Provided by the S.C. Department of Corrections)
COLUMBIA — Two South Carolina legislators are calling for an investigation into last month's execution by firing squad, according to a letter sent to legislative leaders and the governor.
Rep. Neal Collins, a Pickens County Republican, and Rep. Justin Bamberg, a Bamberg County Democrat, are trying to increase awareness of questions raised in a notice attorneys filed last week claiming bullets largely missed inmate Mikal Mahdi's heart during his April 11 execution. The second execution by firing squad in state history came one month after the first.
SC executes second death row inmate by firing squad
A letter sent Monday by the two representatives, who are also attorneys but unaffiliated with the specific case, called for a 'clear, transparent, and accountable protocol' before any future execution by firing squad.
'This request is not rooted in sympathy for Mikal Mahdi, nor is it made to undermine the horrible acts for which he was charged and convicted of and the impacts his crimes had on his victims,' their letter reads.
'This independent investigation is to preserve the integrity of South Carolina's justice system and public confidence in our state's administration of executions under the rule of law.'
What, exactly, an investigation might look like would depend on the response the legislators get. That could include involving the state inspector general, the attorney general, the State Law Enforcement Division or a panel of legislators, the representatives said.
'I'm open to how it's handled, as long as it is done, because I do think it's important,' Collins, of Easley, told the Daily Gazette.
If none of the letter's recipients — Gov. Henry McMaster, House Speaker Murrell Smith, Senate President Thomas Alexander and Joel Anderson, the acting corrections director, — spur an investigation, Bamberg said he would consider trying to address the issue through legislation.
McMaster does not see the need for a state investigation, said spokesman Brandon Charochak.
'The governor has high confidence in the leadership of the Department of Corrections,' Charochak said in a statement. 'He believes the sentence of death for Mr. Mahdi was properly and lawfully carried out.'
A spokesperson for Smith, R-Sumter, declined to comment. Alexander, R-Walhalla, didn't respond to a request for comment. Chrysti Shain, spokeswoman for the Department of Corrections, reiterated the department's position that nothing went wrong during the execution or autopsy.
Bamberg suggested writing into state law an independent review board responsible for investigating every execution and making suggestions for how the next could go better. He and Collins also proposed adding legislators as witnesses to executions.
Trying to remove the firing squad, which Bamberg and Collins voted against adding in 2021, would likely prove too controversial for any real traction, Bamberg told the Daily Gazette.
Instead, Bamberg and Collins would rather focus on ensuring the execution process happens without any issues, Bamberg told the Gazette.
'How can we breed trust and a degree of accountability and transparency for something as final as taking a life?' he said.
Legislators added the rarely used method as an option in 2021 in order to restart the execution process, which had been on hold as state officials struggled to get the drugs needed for lethal injections. That problem was resolved in September of 2023, thanks to another law legislators expanded to protect the source of the drugs.
Two condemned inmates have chosen to die by firing squad since executions resumed last September. Another three opted to die by lethal injection.
Bamberg had questions before attorneys for Mahdi submitted an analysis of his autopsy report to the state Supreme Court, but the filing submitted last Thursday solidified his concerns, he said.
According to protocol for South Carolina's firing squad executions, three volunteer marksmen fire at a target placed over the inmate's heart from 15 feet away. The gunmen use .308 Winchester bullets, meant to expand and fragment on impact in order to kill the inmate as quickly as possible, prison officials have said previously.
Bullet fragments partially hit Mahdi's heart, but they didn't destroy it completely as was the case in Brad Sigmon's March 7 execution by firing squad, according to a pathologist hired by death row lawyers to analyze the autopsy report. Instead, the bullets struck below Mahdi's heart, causing more damage to his liver and pancreas than the heart itself, the pathologist wrote.
Members of the media who witnessed the execution reported that Mahdi let out low, loud moans for about a minute after the guns fired.
If Mahdi remained alive and suffering, that could mean the state violated the U.S. Constitution's ban on cruel and usual punishment, Bamberg and Collins wrote.
'Regardless of the crime committed, the state bears a moral and constitutional obligation to ensure that executions are carried out humanely and in strict adherence to protocol,' their letter reads.
The attorneys' filing raises questions Bamberg and Collins want answered, they wrote. Among them: Why did Mahdi's chest show only two bullet holes? Was the target on Mahdi's chest placed in a spot other than right over his heart? Why was Mahdi's clothing not analyzed or documented in the autopsy?
Collins said he and Bamberg want to ensure that, in the future, all evidence is preserved so that if valid questions arise — as in Mahdi's case — 'we can settle this.'
Mahdi's body was cremated at his request, said a spokesperson for his attorneys. That means officials can't exhume his body and conduct another autopsy.
All three guns fired, and no bullet fragments were found in the death chamber following the execution, Shain said in an email. Two of the three bullets struck in the same spot and followed the same pathway through the body, explaining the two bullet wounds, Shain said.
A medical professional used a stethoscope and a chest X-ray to place the target over Mahdi's heart. The autopsy was done by the same private firm that has done all execution autopsies for the agency, Shain said.
The department 'did not provide any instructions or restrictions on the pathologist regarding photographs or X-rays in the same way SCDC provided no such instructions regarding the autopsies of the previous executions,' Shain said in a statement.
Regardless of what happened, an independent review would be able to give impartial answers, Bamberg said.
'The fact that there are differing explanations is part of the problem, and that's what we're trying to address,' he said. 'There should not be a question as to what happened, because we're talking about the government taking a life.'
Until an independent review is conducted, Bamberg and Collins told the Gazette they're calling for the firing squad to be taken off the table as an option for any upcoming execution. The state Supreme Court is expected to issue a death warrant this Friday.
If execution by firing squad is no longer an option, inmates would have to choose between lethal injection, which attorneys have also questioned, and electric chair, which attorneys have said their clients want to avoid.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Axios
32 minutes ago
- Axios
Trump-y ad blitz launched to sway the president on energy credits
A new business-backed group with GOP ties just launched a $2 million, three-week ad blitz to preserve IRA tax credits — and the framing is very Trump-y. Why it matters: It comes during crunch time for hundreds of billions of dollars of tax incentives on the chopping block in the budget reconciliation fight. The big picture: Built for America is placing ads on Fox, Truth Social, Rumble, podcasts and beyond. "Unlike other efforts focused on Congress, Built for America is the only campaign speaking directly to the president and making the case that these energy tax credits are a cornerstone of his pro-worker, pro-growth agenda," the rollout states. State of play: It's not disclosing specific donors, but backers include players in nuclear, carbon capture, hydrogen, critical minerals, storage and more, it said. The executive director is Mitch Carmichael, a Republican who previously served as West Virginia's lieutenant governor and economic development secretary. Republican strategist and former Trump campaign adviser Bryan Lanza is advising the new effort. Driving the news: "Trump country is booming. We're building, hiring and winning in America, because energy tax credits put America first," one of the ads states, touting new jobs and manufacturing. "President Trump, keep what works," it states. Catch up quick: More business interests are pressing the Senate to soften House GOP budget plans that scuttle or restrict IRA energy tax credits. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, in a new post, is urging preservation of what it calls "pro-growth" credits around hydrogen and clean electricity production. The bottom line: Low-carbon energy industries are increasingly framing their message more around "energy dominance" and less — a lot less — around green goals.


Axios
32 minutes ago
- Axios
Anti-ICE demonstrations expand to Colorado
Demonstrations against federal immigration enforcement are spreading across the country — including in metro Denver. The latest: Activists in Denver and Aurora this week joined a wave of national protests against recent U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids — and the increasingly militarized response in Los Angeles and beyond. The big picture: The unrest in LA — where President Trump deployed thousands of National Guard troops and hundreds of Marines — has become a flashpoint. Cities like New York and Austin, where protests have broken out in solidarity with LA demonstrators, have been met with mass arrests and tear gas. Why it matters: Backlash is growing against the Trump administration's hardline immigration agenda, which has sent shockwaves through Colorado — from large-scale ICE raids to lawsuits targeting Denver's defiance. Zoom in: At least three demonstrations have taken place across metro Denver this week. On Tuesday, an "ICE Out!" protest at the Colorado State Capitol that started peacefully ended with Denver police in tactical gear using smoke and pepper balls to order protesters to disperse on Broadway. Police said 17 arrests were made for vandalism, obstruction and assaulting officers, CPR reports. Protesters on Monday marched to the ICE detention center in Aurora, led by leftist and immigrant rights groups like the Denver Party for Socialism and Liberation and Casa de Paz. The same day, the local SEIU chapter rallied in downtown Denver, standing behind SEIU California president David Huerta, who was arrested in LA Friday, and slamming Gov. Jared Polis for cooperating with ICE. What they're saying: "What is happening in Los Angeles … makes me both furious and proud," state Sen. Julie Gonzales (D-Denver) said at the Denver protest Monday. "There is nothing more patriotic than seeing so many Americans … exercising their First Amendment rights … against unjust enforcement, racial terror and fascist displays of power," she added. State of play: A bill signed into law last month by Polis, a Democrat, explicitly restricts the deployment of military forces from outside Colorado in the state unless the governor permits it. "We have done everything that we can do — but what we have seen is that Donald Trump is willing to overrule local governments and state governments in order to exercise his will," said Gonzales, the bill's lead sponsor. Between the lines: Nearly half of American adults disapprove of the Trump administration's deployment of the National Guard and Marines in response to the LA protests, the latest YouGov polling shows. The other side: In a statement on X, the Colorado Republican Party said Monday that it "stands firmly with President Trump and … law enforcement as they work to restore order in Los Angeles amid the violent riots." "Their commitment to upholding the rule of law and protecting our communities is commendable," the party added. What's next: More protests are planned in Colorado as part of a " nationwide day of defiance" in response to Trump's multimillion-dollar military parade in D.C. on Saturday. What we're watching: How demonstrations develop across metro Denver and whether the violent clashes seen between protesters and police in other cities happen here. Activists say they're preparing for that possibility.


Axios
32 minutes ago
- Axios
Nashville mayor stands behind immigration executive order
Nashville Mayor Freddie O'Connell is defending his executive order that requires city agencies to report communication with federal immigration officials, saying it is an "appropriate, transparent measure." Why it matters: Republican leaders have been ferociously critical of O'Connell's order, saying it amounted to obstruction of immigration enforcement. But O'Connell told reporters Friday that the order shows the community "nobody is trying to hide anything here." The big picture: O'Connell updated an existing executive order following an immigration crackdown last month that resulted in nearly 200 arrests. The goal was to alert Metro sooner when city employees were aware of ICE activity. Republicans at every level of government seized on the order, saying O'Connell was trying to interfere with ICE actions. Republicans launched two congressional investigations into the matter. Zoom in: Tennessee House Speaker Cameron Sexton issued a statement on Thursday calling on O'Connell to rescind the order, which he said forces city employees "to act as big brother." "This order has jeopardized the safety of federal and state agents to the extent that individuals are harassing and interfering in the lawful duty of these agents," Sexton said. Driving the news: O'Connell downplayed the criticism on Friday. "Our focus is on participating in conversations," the mayor said. "We don't spend as much energy on statements." "I think if they have specific requests, we'll pay attention to those." Between the lines: O'Connell faces a delicate balancing act.