
A grandmother was shot and killed in a gruesome carjacking. A family member says her murderer should not have been executed
A relative of a grandmother who was viciously murdered during a carjacking more than two decades ago says they never wanted her killer to be put to death - and is now speaking out against President Donald Trump for green-lighting the execution.
John Hanson, 61, received the lethal injection at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester on Thursday morning, becoming the 22nd death row inmate to be executed in the US this year.
He was convicted of killing 77-year-old Mary Agnes Bowles after he and another man carjacked and kidnapped her from a Tulsa mall in August 1999.
Bowles, a retired banker and community volunteer, was found dead a week later in a remote dirt pit on the outskirts of Owasso, having suffered multiple gunshot wounds in what authorities described as an execution-style killing. Hanson and his accomplice also killed a witness to the crime.
After a quarter of a century behind bars, Hanson was declared dead at 10:11am on Thursday.
His execution was made possible by the Trump administration, which approved his transfer from federal custody in Louisiana to Oklahoma in February for the sole purpose of carrying out his death sentence.
But Bowles' grand-niece, Alana Price, told DailyMail.com she never wanted Hanson to be put to death and is 'so upset' at Trump for facilitating his execution, noting that Hanson was 'developmentally disabled.'
Mary Agnes Bowles, 77, was shot at least six times. The retired banker volunteered at numerous local organizations, including at a local hospital where she'd logged 11,000 hours in the neonatal unit
'I want the world to know that today's state-sponsored murder of John Hanson has only deepened the grief that I feel over her loss,' Price said on Thursday.
'Each spring when I see the dogwood trees in my neighborhood start to bloom, I'm flooded once again with grief over the loss of my beloved Aunt Mary, who decorated her house with images of their four-petaled flowers.
'Following today's execution, my ongoing grief will also be layered with the weight of another murder – the state-sanctioned murder of John Hanson.'
Hanson's death, Price said, left her with a 'sick feeling of guilt and complicity'.
'Executions like these don't heal violence – they reproduce the violence and make the pain worse, forcing everyone in our society to be complicit in murder,' she added.
Hanson had been serving life in a federal Louisiana prison for bank robbery and several other federal convictions unrelated to the Bowles case.
Federal officials transferred him to Oklahoma custody in March to adhere to President Donald Trump's executive order to more actively support the death penalty.
Hanson's execution had previously been set for December 15, 2022, but the Biden administration blocked his transfer to Oklahoma, in keeping with the former president's opposition to capital punishment.
His execution was once again thrown into doubt this week after his attorneys argued in a last-minute appeal that Hanson didn't receive a fair clemency hearing last month.
They claimed one of the board members who denied the appeal was biased because he worked for the Tulsa County DA when Hanson was prosecuted.
A district court judge this week issued a temporary stay halting the execution, but that was later vacated.
Like Price, Hanson's attorney, Callie Heller, blasted Hanson's execution as 'an act of pointless cruelty.'
Heller claimed that Hanson has autism, and that made him more susceptible to being manipulated by his 'dominating co-defendant,' Victor Miller.
But not all of Bowles' relatives were against Hanson being put to death.
Her niece, Sara Parker Mooney, called for reforms to death row practices in an interview with USA Today, insisting Hanson should've been executed years ago.
'Capital punishment is not an effective form of justice when it takes 26 years,' said Mooney, who travelled from Texas to Oklahoma to witness his death.
'Respectfully, if the state is going to continue to execute individuals, a better process is needed.
'This existing process is broken.'
Jacob Thurman, the son of Jerald Thurman, who was the witness killed by Hanson and Miller, also celebrated Hanson's death.
'I feel like now we can finally be at peace with this,' he said. 'I feel like we have some closure and our families can pick up the pieces now and move forward.'
Thurman gave specific thanks to US Attorney General Pam Bondi for ordering Hanson's transfer so that 'Oklahoma can carry out this just sentence.'
Hanson did not request anything special for his final meal on Wednesday, a spokesperson for the Department of Corrections said.
He was served what all of his other inmates received: chicken pot pie, two rolls, carrots, and two fruit cups.
Before being administered his lethal dose, he told those gathered to watch his final breath: 'Just forgive me and peace to everyone.'
A spiritual adviser stood close by, reading from a Bible as the execution began.
Hanson could be heard snoring when the Department of Corrections chief of operations announced he was unconscious, USA Today reported.
During his clemency hearing last month, Hanson expressed remorse for his involvement in the crimes and apologized to Bowels and Thurman's families.
'I'm not an evil person,' Hanson said via a video link from the prison. 'I was caught in a situation I couldn't control. I can't change the past, but I would if I could.'
Hanson's attorneys acknowledged he participated in the kidnapping and carjacking, but said there was no definitive evidence that he shot and killed Bowles.
They painted Hanson as a troubled youth with autism who was controlled and manipulated by the domineering Miller.
Mary Bowles was returning to her car at the Promenade Mall in Tulsa on August 31, 1999, when she was ambushed by Hanson and Miller at gunpoint.
The two men forced the elderly woman into her own car and drove to an isolated dirt pit near Owasso.
The owner of the pit, Jerald Thurman, saw the car pull in.
Miller got out and shot Thurman four times, including once in the head, as Bowles watched on helplessly from the backseat, court records state.
She asked the two men, 'Do you have kids or anyone who loves you?', prompting Hanson to punch her in the face.
Moments later, Miller stopped the car. Hanson forced Bowles out and shot her at least six times, court records say.
Thurman's nephew was on the phone with him just before the attack and found his wounded uncle still alive shortly after the shooting.
Tragically, Thurman, 44, succumbed to his injuries two weeks later.
Bowles' 'significantly decomposed' remains were found on September 7, 1999, more than a week after her abduction.
Hanson and Miller, meanwhile, continued on a five-day crime spree, robbing a bank and a video store, before Miller's wife turned the two men into police, following an argument.
They were eventually captured two days after Bowles' remains were found.
Miller was sentenced to life in prison while Hanson was sentenced to the death penalty.
Later, Miller bragged that he was the one who'd shot Bowles, not Hanson, court records say.
Hundreds would turn out to mourn Bowles' death.
She volunteered at numerous local organizations, including at a local hospital where she'd logged 11,000 hours in the neonatal unit caring for critically ill newborns.
Hashtags

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


The Independent
38 minutes ago
- The Independent
Australian man shot to death at a villa on the tourist island of Bali
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging. At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story. The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it. Your support makes all the difference.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Strangest last meals of the world's most evil men: From the killer who asked to eat dirt to the Nazi who wanted a cheese board and the murderer who wanted a single olive
Capital punishment is becoming increasingly rare in the 21st century. More than half of all nations have outright abolished the practice, as of 2024. A further 17% of countries around the world have all but banned it. This leaves just over a quarter of nations that continue to execute prisoners for their crimes. In almost all cases, only those who commit the most heinous of crimes are punished this way. But despite the barbarity of their crimes, many of the nations that still practice executions allow prisoners one final dignity before the end of their lives. Final meals are perhaps best thought of as symbolic of the life a person has led, or wanted to lead. In many cases, they come in the form of specially prepared meals that take prisoners back to a simpler time, before they bore the weight of their crimes on their shoulders. Sometimes, however, these meals can completely unexpected. From the murderer who requested a single olive in the hope he could grow a symbol of peace, to the Nazi who got a cheeseboard before facing justice, and the bizarre request of a killer who wanted a pound of dirt to get reincarnated, these are the strangest final meals ever requested by death row prisoners. James Edward Smith In April 1990, James Edward Smith was executed by lethal injection for murder. He was 37 years old. Smith fatally shot insurance executive Larry D. Rohus during a robbery inside a second-floor cashier's office near the Astrodome on March 7, 1983. During the jury selection for his trial in Texas, Smith attempted to escape and ran from the courthouse. He only made it a few blocks before he was captured and returned to custody. After being found guilty of murder and sentenced to death, Smith appealed the sentence. However, it was upheld by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals in 1987. For his final meal, Smith initially requested a lump of rhaeakunda dirt. It was thought that the specific dirt was used in voodoo rituals, which Smith thought may assist him in reincarnation. However the Texas Department of Criminal Justice denied Smith's request - so he settled on a cup of yoghurt. His initial execution was scheduled for 1988; but this was pushed back when his mother's lawyers appealed for stay of execution. He was eventually executed in 1990. Adolf Eichmann Adolf Eichmann, one of the architects of the Holocaust, was kidnapped by agents of the Israeli intelligence agency Mossad from his Argentina bolthole in a daring mission in 1960. He was smuggled back to Israel to face justice for his horrific crimes. During the eight-month trial, his actions as the man who actively facilitated and managed to mass deportation of millions of Jewish people to ghettos and concentration camps across Europe were laid bare to the world. He showed no remorse for his actions, telling the court in his pardon plea: 'There is a need to draw a line between the leaders responsible and the people like me forced to serve as mere instruments in the hands of the leaders. 'I was not a responsible leader, and as such do not feel myself guilty.' For his crimes against humanity, he was sentenced to death by hanging. Despite his terrible actions during the Second World War, he was offered a chance to eat a special meal. Eichmann, however, declined this and instead asked to have a bottle of Carmel, a dry red Israeli wine, alongside the normal prison food of cheese, bread, olives and tea. But he reportedly only finished half of the bottle as he finished his meal on May 31 1962. He was hanged to death in a prison in Ramla, Israel, just a few minutes after midnight. Eichmann's final words, according to one witness, were: 'I hope that all of you will follow me.' Mathias Kneißl Mathias Kneißl was a German outlaw, poacher and popular social rebel in the Dachau district, in the Kingdom of Bavaria. He gained infamy in the region throughout his life for repeatedly humiliating the police, who were seen as corrupt. Kneißl began his career of crime at an early age, joining his brothers in their cattle poaching escapades before being jailed for the first time at the age of 16. Though he was eventually released, he was unable to hold legitimate jobs down and turned back to his life of crime. He committed several armed robberies, and was chased through the region for his crimes. In one arrest attempt which ended in a gun fight with police, he injured two policemen so badly that they later died from their injuries. Kneißl stayed on the run for another few months. Eventually, however, he was captured by a massive group of 60 policemen. During the ensuing gunfight, Kneißl was seriously injured after taking a bullet to his abdomen. He was charged with two murders, attempted murder, as well as armed robbery and extortion. The Court sentenced him to receive the death penalty for murder and 15 years imprisonment on the other charges. In 1902, he was sentenced to decapitation by guillotine. For his last meal he requested six glasses of beer. Ricky Ray Rector Ricky Ray Rector was an American murderer who was executed for the 1981 murder of police officer Bob Martin in Conway, Arkansas. After getting into a heated disagreement with his friend, a furious Rector pulled a gun on his friend and shot him in the throat and forehead, killing him almost instantly. He went on the run for several days, before his sister convinced him to turn himself in. He agreed, but said he would only do so to Bob Martin, a police officer he had known since he was a child. After Martin arrived at Rector's mother's home on March 24, Rector shot him in the jaw and neck before walking out of the home. After shooting Bob Martin, Rector attempted to take his own life by shooting himself in the head. The bullet wound, and subsequent surgery to remove the bullet from Rector's head resulted in a frontal lobotomy (the loss of a three-inch section of his brain), leaving him mentally impaired. In 1996 Rector was executed by lethal injection, however Rector seemed incapable of understanding his pending death sentence. For his last meal, he requested a steak, fried chicken, cherry Kool-Aid and a pecan pie. But he left the pecan pie he requested on the side of the tray, telling the guards who came to take him to the execution chamber that he was saving it 'for later'. Ronnie Lee Gardner Gardner ate a last meal of steak, lobster tail, apple pie, vanilla ice cream and 7-Up before beginning a 48-hour fast while watching The Lord of the Rings film trilogy Ronnie Lee Gardner was sentenced to death for the 1985 killing of attorney Michael Burdell during an attempted escape from a Salt Lake City courthouse. At the time of the murder, Gardner was in court, accused of killing Melvyn John Otterstrom during a 1984 robbery at a bar. Somehow, he had smuggled a revolver into the Metropolitan Hall of Justice at Salt Lake City. Officials believe he was surreptitiously handed the firearm as he was being escorted into the court from the underground car park. As he pulled the gun out, he was shot in the shoulder by armed guard Luther Hensley, before shooting unarmed bailiff George Kirk in the abdomen. This allowed him to run to the court's archive room, where he confronted two attorneys, Robert Macri and Michael Burdell. Gardner pulled the revolver up and pointed it at Macri, who was in court doing pro bono work for his church. Upon shooting him, he ran to the front of the building where he was confronted by dozens of officers. After a quarter of a century on death row, Gardner, 49, became the first man to die by firing squad in Utah in 14 years in 2010. He is the most recent person to be executed by this method. Gardner ate a last meal of steak, lobster tail, apple pie, vanilla ice cream and 7-Up before beginning a 48-hour fast while watching The Lord of the Rings film trilogy. His lawyers said that the fast was done for 'spiritual reasons', though did not explain why he watched the film adaptation of JRR Tolkien's classic trilogy. Thomas J Grasso Thomas J Grasso admitted murdering two elderly people six months apart. He strangled 85-year-old Hilda Johnson in 1990 with a set of Christmas tree lights in her own home, stealing $8 from her purse and $4 in loose change, along with a TV set that he fenced for $125. Six months later, after moving to New York, he killed Leslie Holtz in 1991, an 81-year-old man from whom he stole his social security cheque. His bizarre last meal request was for two dozen steamed mussels, two dozen steamed clams, a Burger King double cheeseburger, six barbecued spare ribs, two large milkshakes, a tin of SpaghettiOs with meatballs, half a pumpkin pie and strawberries and cream. Unfortunately, the length or complexity of his list seemed to confuse kitchen staff who made one crucial mistake. Less than an hour before he died, he issued his final statement to the world: 'I did not get my SpaghettiOs, I got spaghetti. I want the press to know this.' Victor Feguer Victor Feguer was a convicted murderer who became the last federal inmate to be executed by the United States in 1963. He was also the last person to be put to death in the state of Iowa. Originally from Michigan, he found himself in Iowa and was renting a small room in a dilapidated boarding house. His murder of Dr. Edward Bartels was the incident that landed him an execution by hanging. After falsely calling the doctor to his home by claiming a woman needed medical attention, he kidnapped him and smuggled him out of the state to Chicago. There, he is believed to have shot and killed the doctor in a cornfield, before leaving his body to rot. Investigators believed he kidnapped the tragic doctor to coerce him into giving him drugs used to treat patients. Feguer claimed that it was actually a Chicago drug addict, who he met on his way to Chicago, who murdered Bartels. But the judge overseeing the case did not believe him, and sentenced him to hang. For his final meal, he requested a single olive with the pit still inside. He told guards he hoped an olive tree would be grown from his grave 'as a sign of peace.'


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Trump's military parade taps an ancient tradition of power: from Mesopotamia to Maga
To Donald Trump, the inspiration is the pomp and pageantry of Bastille Day, France's annual celebration of the 1789 revolution. For his critics, it is redolent of the authoritarian militarism proudly projected by autocracies like Russia, China and North Korea. Despite its military prowess and undoubted superpowers status, overt military displays in civilian settings are the exception rather than the rule in US history. But in bringing to the streets of Washington DC on Saturday the military parade Trump has long hankered after he – consciously or otherwise – is tapping into a tradition that harks back to antiquity. The first known instances of victorious exhibitions of military might date back to ancient Mesopotamia, whose territory now comprises modern-day Iraq and parts of Turkey, Syria and Iran. Mesopotamian emperors decorated their palaces and citadels with friezes portraying heroic conquests. Portraits would display a massive potentate striding ahead of his troops and crushing on his opponents' skulls. Military parades were also integral rituals of the Roman Empire, where generals and emperors who had won battles would march from the field of Mars into the temple of Jupiter, witnessed by thousands of adoring peasants. The looted possessions of conquered nations were said to be conveyed in chariots, while abducted barbarians were dragged along in chains. Slaves were encouraged to murmur 'Memento mori' (remember that you will die) to their captors, it is said, as part of a drama supposed to link the Roman public to its leaders. In one depicted image, created in the 19th century by the artist Bartolomeo Pinelli, the Roman military leader, Marcus Claudius Marcellus, is seen leading his triumphant army to Rome after defeating the Gauls, having personally triumphed over their leader in one-to-one combat. These Roman rituals were later adopted by European countries as they evolved into nation states and sought to project images of power and military potency. The military parade is widely believed to have been refined in Prussia, a European state that later became part of a unified Germany under the leadership of Otto von Bismarck. Featuring choreography including salutes, precise spacing between soldiers, and goose steps, the Prussian model became a prototype for other armies in Europe and beyond. Other European countries had different versions, that have in some cases become annual rituals. In Britain, starting during the reign of Charles II, Trooping the Colour is held every year on Horse Guards Parade near Buckingham Palace to celebrate the sovereign's birthday. This year's parade, celebrating the birthday of the current King Charles, coincidentally takes place on Saturday, which is also Trump's 79th birthday. Staring under the Soviet Union and continuing in present day Russia, Moscow plays host on 9 May every year to victory day, commemorating victory over Nazi Germany in the second world war. During the cold war, the parades, featuring Red Army soldiers marching through Red Square viewed by the Soviet leadership, became a symbol of Moscow's implacable hostility to the west in the ideological struggle between capitalism and communism. Red Square was the venue for what is believed to be the largest military parade ever staged, on 24 June 1945, when 40,000 troops and 1,800 armored vehicles passed through to mark victory over Germany. This year's occasion, marking the 80th anniversary of the war's end, featured even greater pomp than usual, with troops from China, Egypt, Belarus and several central Asian countries marching alongside their Russian counterparts. China's leader, Xi Jinping, was among several international statesman joining Russia's president, Vladimir Putin, in the reviewing stands. Comparable displays of military muscle are seen in China. The national day parade in Beijing's Tiananmen Square – marking the anniversary of the Communist regime's ascent to power – is now a once-a-decade affair but used to occur more regularly. The most recent event, which took place on 1 October, 2019 to celebrate the regime's 70th birthday, was billed as the biggest military parade and mass pageant ever held in China. Beijing's ally, North Korea, holds annual parades to celebrate the date of the state's founding, as well as separate events to mark the birthdays of its dynastic leaders. Strikingly, if less well-documented, Pyong Yang's parades are mirrored by equivalent events in democratic South Korea, which stages armed forces day annually on 1 October to mark the anniversary of its troops crossing the 38th parallel during the Korean War. By contrast, choreographed exhibitions are much rarer in the US. The most recent parade was instigated by Trump himself during his first presidency when – apparently triggered by having watched a Bastille Day parade alongside the French president, Emmanuel Macron, in Paris – his administration organized a Salute to America event to coincide with the 4 July celebrations in 2019. That display on Washington's national mall included aircraft flyovers, presentations of military vehicles and an address by Trump at the Lincoln memorial. It was the first military parade in the US Capitol since a June 1991 extravaganza, watched by an estimated 200,000 spectators, to celebrate expelling Saddam Hussein's Iraqi forces from Kuwait in the first Gulf war. Tanks and Patriot missile batteries were rolled out while Stealth fighter jets flew above a parade led by general Norman Schwarzkopf, the commander of coalition forces in the conflict. The 1953 presidential inauguration of Dwight Eisenhower, a former general of US and allied forces in the second world war, included a parade by 22,000 troops and even a nuclear-capable canon. In similar vein, John F Kennedy, a decorated military veteran, had military hardware on show at his 1961 inaugural. Others notable military parades took place to mark the end of the first and second world war, as well as the American Civil War. A ticker tape welcome was afforded victorious troops, including 13,000 members of the 82nd airborne division, in a spectacular victory parade in New York in 1946 that was seen by an estimated four million people. Similar parades were staged in New York and Washington in 1919, with General John Pershing, commander of the American Expeditionary Force that had fought in France, leading 25,000 parading soldiers in full battle dress. In 1865, after Abraham Lincoln's assassination in the immediate aftermath of the American Civil War, his successor Andrew Johnson ordered a two-day grand review of the armies. The result saw about 145,000 soldiers from the armies of the Potomac, Georgia and Tennessee marching down Pennsylvania Avenue, to be reviewed by victorious Union generals, Ulysses S Grant, William Sherman and George Meade. In general, however, US presidents have avoided explicitly militaristic displays – until now. A stark contrast to Trump's bullish attitude was offered by his Republican predecessor, Gerald Ford, who declined to take part in the military parades organized for the 1976 bicentennial celebrations, citing the enduring negative sentiment over the Vietnam war. Ford's posture may seem extreme but it may be more in keeping with the feelings of America's founding fathers towards militarism, according to Jonathan Alter, a historian who has chronicled several US presidencies. 'The United States was founded by men who were admirers of the Roman Republic, which had an important law that military commanders could not bring their troops into Rome,' he explained. The law, however was violated by Julius Caesar, who crossed the Rubicon river in 49BC with his forces at the start of a civil war that was to result in him acquiring dictatorial powers. 'It was a hugely significant thing, and a violation of 400 years of very important Roman tradition which the founders of our country were quite aware of,' Alter said. 'That's the way military dictatorship lies, if you have the head of state bringing his army into the capital. 'We have a more modest tradition when it comes to showing military power. It goes back to George Washington. There's always been a sense that tanks in the capital are a bad sign, even if it's just for a parade.'