
South Carolina Executes Second Inmate by Firing Squad
South Carolina executed another convicted murderer by firing squad on Friday night, the second such execution in the state.
The inmate, Mikal Mahdi, 41, was declared dead shortly after 6 p.m. after a firing squad shot three bullets at a target placed over his heart, the State Department of Corrections said.
A judge had ordered Mr. Mahdi, who pleaded guilty in 2006 to fatally shooting an off-duty police officer in South Carolina, to choose from three methods of execution: lethal injection, electrocution or firing squad. His lawyer, David Weiss, said that Mr. Mahdi did not want to offer a public explanation for why he chose a firing squad.
His execution came just a month after Brad Sigmon, who was convicted of beating his ex-girlfriend's parents to death with a baseball bat in 2001, became the first inmate to be executed by firing squad execution in the state — and the first in the United States in 15 years.
Mr. Sigmon had chosen to be shot on March 7 because he had concerns about South Carolina's lethal injection process, his lawyer said.
Polls show that a majority of Americans favor the death penalty, although many view firing squads as an archaic form of justice. But as lethal injection drugs have become harder to obtain, and have at times resulted in botched executions, several states have recently legalized firing squads as an execution method.
Utah had previously been the only state to use a firing squad in modern times; it did so in 2010, 1996 and 1977.
Mr. Mahdi's lawyers had asked the U.S. Supreme Court to review his case and issue a stay of execution, but the court did not grant one. Mr. Mahdi had also asked Gov. Henry McMaster, a Republican, for clemency, but that was denied. No South Carolina governor has granted clemency since the death penalty resumed in the United States in 1976.
Arrest records show that on July 14, 2004, when Mr. Mahdi was 21, he stole a gun and a car in Virginia and fatally shot Christopher Biggs, a store clerk in Winston-Salem, N.C., in the face as he checked Mr. Mahdi's identification. Three days later, Mr. Mahdi stole someone's car in Columbia, S.C., according to records.
Then, on July 18, Mr. Mahdi hid in a shed at the home of James Myers, a public safety officer in Orangeburg, S.C. The shed was near a gas station where Mr. Mahdi had unsuccessfully tried to buy gas with a stolen credit card and left the stolen vehicle behind, records show.
When Mr. Myers, 56, returned to the house, Mr. Mahdi ambushed him and shot him at least eight times, according to court records. Mr. Mahdi then set Mr. Myers's body on fire and fled. The victim's wife found his body in the shed, according to records.
Mr. Weiss, the lawyer, said in an interview on Thursday that Mr. Mahdi 'takes complete responsibility for the crimes that he committed.'
'He knows how awful they were, he knows how much pain he's caused, and he really just does his best to sort of live a life of the mind,' Mr. Weiss said. He added that South Carolina's execution process, in which a death row inmate chooses how to be killed, 'shows that we're on this sort of fruitless search to find the right way to kill people. And I think at the end of the day, there really isn't a right way to kill people.'
Mr. Weiss said that Mr. Mahdi grew up in an abusive household. His father abused his mother, who fled the home when Mr. Mahdi was 4. As a result, Mr. Mahdi suffered from depression and mental health issues, Mr. Weiss said, and when his school tried to get him help, his father pulled him out.
Mr. Mahdi's life devolved from there, Mr. Weiss said: He began stealing to help support himself and his brother because their father, who had his own mental illness, was not working. He went to juvenile prison at 14. He spent the next seven years in and out of prison before committing the two murders.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
5 takeaways from the Alex Padilla furor
Chaotic scenes in which Sen. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) was pressed to the ground and handcuffed by federal agents set the political world aflame on Thursday. Padilla had come to a news conference being held by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, raising his voice to ask questions. Agents, reportedly including at least one member of Noem's official security detail, swarmed Padilla, moving him to a corridor before pressing him to the ground and placing the handcuffs on him. The stunning moment played out against the political backdrop of disorder in California. President Trump's administration is seeking to crack down even harder on immigrants without legal status, and pro-immigrant activists are trying to block Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents from detaining people. Anti-ICE demonstrators have hurled debris at police and set cars ablaze. The strife — and the political debate — intensified after Trump ordered the deployment of the National Guard and the Marines. He did so in contravention of the wishes of California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass (D). Here are the main takeaways from the Padilla episode. The sheer potency of the Padilla video is more powerful than anything else. The most widely circulated clip, which lasts less than a minute, begins with Padilla standing relatively close to where Noem is speaking, but not within arm's reach or making any sudden move toward her. Agents begin to push him further away. As they continue physically pressing in on him, the senator says, 'I am Sen. Alex Padilla, I have questions for the secretary.' Padilla begins to make remarks that he never gets to finish related to 'violent criminals,' and he is pushed into an adjacent corridor, briefly out of view of the camera. A voice — presumably Padilla's — says 'hands off.' Moments later, with three agents surrounding him, he is told to get 'on the ground' and to put his hands behind his back. At least two of the agents have their hands on Padilla holding him to the ground at this point, and cuffs are placed on him. A voice from an unidentified man then tells the person filming the events on their cellphone that no recording is allowed. The brief clip ends. But the shocking nature of seeing a sitting senator treated in such a way resonated immediately, taking over cable TV networks and social media and sparking a political firestorm. Democrats responded with fury to the treatment of Padilla, casting it as horrifying in itself — and as emblematic of the Trump administration's broader approach. Former Vice President Kamala Harris wrote on social media that the way Padilla was treated was a 'shameful and stunning abuse of power.' Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said he was 'sickened to my stomach' by what he had seen. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) called it 'a horrifying moment in our nation's history.' Democrats, and millions of liberal Americans, were already outraged about Trump's deployment of the National Guard and the Marines, which they argue was an unnecessary and purposefully inflammatory move. Several media outlets reported that Padilla's attempt to question Noem took place after she had claimed federal agents were going 'to liberate this city' from its 'socialist' leaders. Soon after the incident on Thursday, Newsom called the treatment of Padilla 'outrageous, dictatorial and shameful,' and Bass said it was 'absolutely abhorrent.' But liberals also see the immigration question as part of a bigger picture, in which Trump has sought to exert his muscle against universities, the media, judges and law firms, as well as his political foes. To them, he is a president exceptional in all the wrong ways — in his intolerance of dissent, and his willingness to use the levers of government power to crush it. The images of Padilla being handcuffed crystallizes their case. The White House has vigorously defended the agents' treatment of Padilla. They are saying the senator is to blame. White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson said in a statement, 'Padilla stormed a press conference, without wearing his Senate pin or previously identifying himself to security, yelled, and lunged toward Secretary Noem.' The video of the incident does not appear to show Padilla wearing the pin that identifies senators, but it also does not include images of him lunging at Noem. Moreover, he clearly does inform the agents who swarm him that he is a senator. The White House's argument is that he did not do so early enough in the encounter. Jackson added, 'Padilla didn't want answers; he wanted attention.' The official X account of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) also contended that Padilla had 'interrupted a live press conference without identifying himself' and had 'lunged' at Noem. The DHS also alleged that Padilla was 'told repeatedly to back away and did not comply with officers' repeated commands.' Noem herself told Fox News soon after, 'He was never arrested. … Nobody knew who he was when he came into the room creating a scene. He was removed from the room. Yes, they started to put handcuffs on him — when he finally identified himself and then that was stopped.' Padilla says it's false to suggest nobody knew who he was, even before the melee erupted, because a member of the National Guard and an FBI agent escorted him into Noem's press conference from elsewhere in the building in the first place. Even so, members of the Trump administration plainly believe that adopting the president's 'never back down' approach will pay political dividends. The Padilla episode plainly helps Democrats make their case that the Trump administration is prone to repressive tactics. But the image of the senator on the ground also has to compete, in a political sense, with some of the equally compelling images of disorder in Los Angeles. Images of anti-ICE protesters using Molotov cocktails, carrying Mexican flags and setting fire to vehicles have been potent, especially with audiences that lean to the right. The latter images have been used to make the case that Democrats are soft on immigration — and on crime, especially if it relates to protests for causes they believe in. Those images, in turn, feed the belief that Trump is justified in mobilizing troops to restore order. Immigration was Trump's strongest issue in the general election campaign against Harris last year. He argued that former President Biden had been far too lax on the issue, in effect facilitating a massive influx at the southern border. Voters have mostly approved of Trump's efforts on border security while in office, as unauthorized crossings have fallen precipitously. But his poll ratings on immigration writ large are much more mixed. It's plausible that the apparent discrepancy stems from a public disquiet with some of the tactics used by immigration agents, and with Trump's often fractious attitude toward the courts when they rule against him. An Economist/YouGov poll this week highlighted the split. It found that 47 percent of surveyed Americans believe Trump's approach to immigration it too harsh, 40 percent believe it is about right, and 7 percent believe it is too soft. The same poll found 87 percent of surveyed Americans supporting the deportation of migrants without legal status who have committed violent crimes — but 61 percent opposed to deportations of those who had not committed violent crimes. In short, the politics of immigration is more nuanced and more changeable than hard-liners on either side make it appear. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Chicago Tribune
an hour ago
- Chicago Tribune
Daywatch: Another $24M proposed to settle police misconduct lawsuits
Good morning, Chicago. Chicago taxpayers could be on the hook for another $24 million to settle lawsuits alleging police misconduct. The city's Law Department is recommending a series of settlements in three wrongful conviction cases tied to infamous members of the Chicago Police Department. The City Council's Finance Committee will vote on the settlements Monday, setting them up for a final vote Wednesday. If approved, the settlements will continue to hike the soaring cost of police lawsuit payouts. Chicago taxpayers have already approved $145.3 million to settle police lawsuits this year, a record amount far above the city's $82.6 million budget that through May already towers above such spending in past years. Read the full story from the Tribune's Jake Sheridan. Here are the top stories you need to know to start your day, including: what Gov. JB Pritzker said yesterday in a House hearing, the latest on Israel's attack on Iran and Today's eNewspaper edition | Subscribe to more newsletters | Asking Eric | Horoscopes | Puzzles & Games | Today in History Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker defended Illinois' sanctuary laws for immigrants in the U.S. without legal permission before a House committee yesterday and pointed at congressional Republicans and Democrats for using the issue to try to score political points rather than enacting comprehensive immigration reform. Protests continued yesterday in Chicago as part of demonstrations across the country against President Donald Trump's deployment of troops in Los Angeles amid his immigration crackdown. The crowd at the day's second protest grew to about 400 people by 4 p.m., as demonstrators held red signs and shouted their support for immigrants at Michigan Avenue and Ida B. Wells Drive. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem pledged to carry on with the Trump administration's immigration crackdown despite waves of unrest across the U.S. Hours after her comment yesterday, a judge directed the president to return control to California over National Guard troops he deployed after protests erupted over the immigration crackdown, but an appeals court quickly put the brakes on that and temporarily blocked the order that was to go into effect today. Israel attacked Iran early today in strikes that took out top military officers and hit nuclear and missile sites, raising the potential for an all-out war between the two bitter Middle East adversaries. It appeared to be the most significant attack Iran has faced since its 1980s war with Iraq. President Donald Trump's trade war is affecting Americans everywhere from the grocery store to their electric bill, with the cost of bananas, ground beef and electricity surging to all-time highs, according to the latest data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Here's a closer look at how the price of everyday goods is changing under the second Trump administration. A veteran Chicago police officer will no longer carry a badge as part of a plea agreement in which he admitted that he struck an eighth grade boy while making an off-duty visit to a South Side elementary school two years ago. Craig Lancaster, 56, was placed on 18 months' supervision and ordered to undergo eight hours of anger management as part of a plea deal in which prosecutors reduced the original felony charge of aggravated battery to misdemeanor disorderly conduct. For the Chicago Cubs front office, revamping the bullpen was a top offseason priority. The return on investment over the last month has been apparent. Entering play Wednesday ahead of a 7-2 loss in Philadelphia, the Cubs bullpen's 0.82 earned-run average was MLB's best dating to May 14 — a stretch of 24 games. Edward Gorski Jr.'s Purple Heart medal was returned by the Illinois treasurer's office to the World War II veteran's grandson, Shawn. An Army veteran himself, Shawn said receiving it was an emotional experience. 'It just shows that everything he went through, we're able to, you know, tell those stories,' he said. 'Ultimately, our teachings and his legacy will live on.' A 4-day-old bottlenose dolphin born last weekend at the Brookfield Zoo Chicago died suddenly Wednesday. The male calf was the first dolphin born at the west suburban zoo in more than a decade. At this year's Tony Awards, a delightfully quirky little musical called 'Maybe Happy Ending' beat out big competitors and walked off with the big prize. Although it's about family dynamics rather than robotic romance, 'Kimberly Akimbo,' a similarly small and unusual show that won best musical in 2023, paved its way writes Tribune theater critic Chris Jones.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Stockard on the Stump: Private-prison operator to see inmate reduction after riot
Trousdale Turner Correctional Facility, which is managed by CoreCivic. (Photo: Tennessee Department of Corrections) The Tennessee Department of Correction will be reducing the number of inmates at privately-run Trousdale Turner in the wake of a prison riot that injured a staffer and inmates, according to state officials. Republican Sen. Mark Pody told the Lookout he spoke with Correction Department officials after the incident last weekend in Hartsville where 2,690 state inmates are held. 'They've indicated they're going to be reducing the number of prisoners at that facility,' Pody said. 'We can't have this. … There was somebody stabbed up there, and we need to make sure if somebody is incarcerated they are still safe.' Department of Correction spokesperson Dorinda Carter confirmed that in response to the event some Trousdale Turner inmates will be moved to state-run prisons as part of a new 'operational structure' the department is working on to ensure safety for staff and inmates. Pody said he understood a staff member sustained a stab wound in the riot. A CoreCivic spokesman confirmed an officer was treated and released for a minor injury in the incident. Three inmates were treated for minor injuries as well. The riot took place a day before Gov. Bill Lee signed a bill into law forcing the state's private-prison operator to lower inmate populations in facilities with high death rates. The law by Pody and Republican Rep. Clark Boyd of Lebanon, requires inmate numbers to be reduced by 10% if the death rate there is twice as high as the rate at comparable state-run prisons. Set to take effect Sunday, the law shows how Republicans who hold a supermajority in the legislature are starting to take a closer look at the private-prison operator. 'This was another unfortunate event,' Pody said. In light of the riot and a federal probe into Trousdale Turner, Pody wants to renew a prison oversight panel that was nixed more than a decade ago, giving lawmakers more control over CoreCivic and the state's prisons. The riot also revives questions about operations at Trousdale Turner where the company has struggled to hire officers and keep them. An inmate reduction also could affect the company's bottom line in Tennessee where it makes about $240 million annually to run four prisons and drew a nearly $7 million bump for cost increases this year. The prison remains on lockdown during an investigation of the riot in which officers used chemical agents to force inmates out of an inner yard they commandeered and make them return to cells. The incident is giving critics of privately-run prisons more proof to back their complaints. 'The recent events at Trousdale Turner Correctional Facility are as horrific as they are unsurprising and preventable,' said Matthew Charles, state legislative affairs manager of the nonprofit FAMM, which advocates for incarcerated people and their families. 'Violence and chaos have pervaded Trousdale Turner since its opening in 2016. The people who live and work there fear for their lives on a daily basis.' The U.S. Department of Justice started a civil rights investigation into Trousdale Turner last year based on reports showing high death rates and sexual violence, partly as a result of understaffing and constant turnover. FAMM, which urged the federal probe, has been advocating for independent prison oversight in Tennessee, Charles said, adding violence continues at Trousdale Turner despite the investigation. The conditions at Trousdale Correction Facility have been horrific for a long time – nobody is safe there. Not the prisoners, not the guards, not the staff. CoreCivic has known about this, but they do nothing – because fixing isn't profitable. – Sen. Heidi Campbell, D-Nashville Andy Potter, executive director of One Voice United, another inmate advocacy group, said correctional officers and inmates are being put at risk. 'While the riot at Trousdale Turner was resolved without loss of life, this incident underscores the harsh reality of a correctional system pushed past its limits, suffering from chronic understaffing, insufficient training and a lack of oversight that has led to increasingly dangerous conditions,' Potter said in a statement. CoreCivic said in a press release that Trousdale County Sheriff's Department and Tennessee Highway Patrol helped its staff and the Tennessee Department of Correction quell the riot without serious injuries to inmates or officers. The riot broke out Sunday when a group of inmates left their cells and gained access to an inner yard at the prison, destroying property, setting small fires and refusing to take orders from staff, according to CoreCivic. U.S. Department of Justice opens investigation into CoreCivic Trousdale County prison No inmates tried to escape the facility, and the staff's response did not involve a hostage situation, according to CoreCivic, which said it is 'committed to operating safe and secure facilities that provide comprehensive, compassionate care' for inmates and staff. Yet Democratic state Sen. Heidi Campbell said she hears frequently from people who are 'terrified' for loved ones being held at CoreCivic prisons. It oversees 8,150 inmates, more than a third of those in 12 state prisons. 'The conditions at Trousdale Correction Facility have been horrific for a long time – nobody is safe there. Not the prisoners, not the guards, not the staff. CoreCivic has known about this, but they do nothing – because fixing isn't profitable,' Campbell said in a statement. Amid the chaos, CoreCivic is lining up to win federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement contracts to detain immigrants, Campbell said. While Democratic lawmakers have been warning about the consequences of using the private-prison operator for several years, mainly because of bad audits, Republican lawmakers are catching on. Yet even as the state penalized the company $44.78 million since 2022 for contractual shortfalls on staffing, Correction Commissioner Frank Strada and Gov. Bill Lee show no signs of moving in a different direction. Lee, in fact, called CoreCivic an 'important partner.' Former Tennessee Education Commissioner Penny Schwinn visited Nashville this week with U.S. Education Secretary Linda McMahon, touring a charter school and meeting with officials to build support for an appointment to a federal post. 'During my visit to @Nshprep in Tennessee, I witnessed firsthand how their year-round learning cultivates sharp critical thinkers,' McMahon said in a post on X, formerly Twitter. Oddly enough, they didn't invite the media, which normally is dragged along in hallways when Gov. Bill Lee visits local schools. It's possible McMahon and Schwinn didn't want to take questions from the press, which might have asked why the latter failed to report a new business, New Horizon BluePrint Group, on her federal conflict of interest disclosure, then dissolved it shortly before the U.S. Senate held her confirmation hearing for deputy secretary. Former Tennessee education leader promises feds she will cut conflicts McMahon and her husband, Vince McMahon, started the company that morphed into World Wrestling Entertainment, apparently part of the criteria to earn a key post in the Trump Administration. (The president attended a rasslin' event recently before sending troops to Los Angeles to quell protesters.) Why anyone would want to take a position in the U.S. Education Department is puzzling, when half of America wants to get rid of it. Many of these experts say states should be in charge of education. For the most part, they are, except for sections dealing with special education and the needs of low-income students. Tennessee sets its own curriculum for students, which could be the reason so many are struggling to read. Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti joined with a group called Students for Fair Admissions this week in filing an anti-discrimination lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Education over its Hispanic-Serving Institution program, which provides federal funds for low-income students at colleges with at least 25% Hispanic students. For instance, the University of Memphis is ineligible for the funds because it doesn't have enough Hispanic students, even though 61% of its student population is made up of minorities, according to a release from Skrmetti's office. 'A federal grant system that openly discriminates against students based on ethnicity isn't just wrong and un-American – it's unconstitutional,' Skrmetti said. Tennessee's attorney general is buoyed by the Supreme Court ruling that said Harvard University's admission standards are racially discriminatory. He lumps this Hispanic program in with that one and adds, 'Treating people differently because of their skin color and ancestry drags our country backwards.' We can think of a lot of other things that push the nation back toward the 1800s. But there's no need to replay the history of the 20th century. 2025-6-hsi Shortly before announcing he would step down from Tennessee's 7th Congressional District seat, U.S. Rep. Mark Green introduced one of those acronym bills that would take mere mortals years to coin. The Ashland City area Republican who represents a portion of Nashville announced late last week he is sponsoring the Focusing Academies on Leadership and Cultivating Officers for National Security Act. Also known as the FALCONS Act, the bill is designed to execute an executive order by President Trump by removing courses that teach 'radical gender ideology' and critical race theory. A West Point graduate, Green said banning the teaching of Marxist theories at the military academy such as critical race theory and gender ideology will make sure 'the primary focus remains not just how to fight, but what to fight for – liberty, the Constitution, representative government and our national defense.' Green added he's glad West Point removed a course called 'Race, Ethnicity and Nation,' and another called 'Power and Difference,' along with two on gender ideology. The former Republican state senator concluded his opus by saying, 'That all men are created equal is the self-evident truth at the heart of our nation,' contrary to the concept of critical race theory, which he said defines people by 'immutable physical characteristics' and seeks to change historical wrongs through discrimination. If that means 'redlining' neighborhoods to stop banks from lending money to Black residents never took place, then maybe the concept should be eliminated. Unfortunately, it happened, and colleges could do our future military officers a favor by letting them know about this injustice. But Green's motive for sponsoring this bill when he's set to step down after a vote on the president's budget is hard to figure. Maybe it's one last rage against the machine. In advance of scheduled protests around Friday's court hearing for Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran man inadvertently deported, U.S. Rep. Andy Ogles is targeting groups that could be involved in the rally. Ogles, who represents the heavily gerrymandered 5th Congressional District, said in an X post Wednesday that several non-government organizations named in a news article are 'sponsoring an insurrection in Nashville this Friday' and asks a Republican data group to see if they receive government funds. Garcia faces two criminal human smuggling charges connected to a 2022 traffic stop in Tennessee. He's to be arraigned Friday at the federal courthouse in Nashville, and groups such as Service Employees International Union are to participate in a rally opposing his deportation and generally resisting Trump's deportation policies. To gain attention, Ogles might be trying to compare the groups with those who stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021 and caused the deaths of multiple police officers while Trump and his entourage watched from a bunker. The main difference is the Nashville crowd will be raising a ruckus over immigration enforcement instead of trying to stop the peaceful transfer of presidential power. Ogles is under fire for embellishing his resume and misleading the public with his Federal Election Commission reports, although Trump derailed that investigation. But this conflation of insurrection versus protestation could be bad for what we once called a nation. The ultimate question is whether the president would pardon Nashville protesters as he did the Jan. 6 rioters. 'What a field day for the heat / a thousand people in the street.'* *'For What It's Worth', Buffalo Springfield SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX