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Trump’s execution resumes to put Boston Marathon bomber, Charleston church shooter and more killers on the hot seat
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Trump’s execution resumes to put Boston Marathon bomber, Charleston church shooter and more killers on the hot seat

President-elect Donald Trump has promised to end it The Biden-Harris Administration moratorium on federal executions when he returns to office next year, putting 40 federal inmates on death row on notice.

The US government has executed 50 inmates since 1927, according to the Bureau of Prisons, including Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh and Cold War spies Julius and Ethel Rosenberg. That’s far fewer than individual states, which have executed more than 1,500 convicted inmates over the past 50 years.

The government executed 13 federal prisoners during Trump’s first term, the most under any president in a century. President Biden then declared a moratorium on federal executions after taking office in 2021.

Here are some of the high profile criminals sentenced to death in the custody of the US Bureau of Prisons:

Boston Marathon bomber case thrown back to lower court

The survivors The Boston Marathon bomber planted explosives at the running event with his older brother Tamerlan on April 15, 2013. They killed three people, including an 8-year-old child, and injured hundreds more. They then killed an MIT police officer named Sean Collier while trying to escape.

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tsarnaev disables the camera

Convicted Boston bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev gestures to a surveillance camera in his cell in this 2013 surveillance image released by the U.S. Department of Justice on April 22, 2015.

Police shot and killed Tamerlan on April 18, 2013, and arrested Dzhokhar the next day when they found him hiding in a trailer boat.

He has not yet exhausted his appeals, and in March a federal appeals court sent the case to a lower court to look into juror bias.

His death sentence was thrown out by the US Court of Appeals for the First Circuit in 2020, but was later reinstated by the Supreme Court.

Now 31, Tsarnaev is being held at the US maximum security penitentiary in Florence. in Colorado.

Supreme Court rejects appeal by Dylann Roof, sentenced to death for Sc Black Church murders

A white supremacist who walked into Emanuel AME Church in South Carolina and opened fire, killing nine black parishioners attending a Bible study in 2015.

Jurors needed less than two hours to find him guilty on all counts.

Convicted mass murderer Dylann Roof was led into a police court. He has a bowl haircut and wears a white T-shirt and bulletproof vest

Police lead alleged shooter Dylann Roof into court in Shelby, North Carolina, June 18, 2015.

Roof, who in 2017 was the first person sentenced to death for a federal hate crime, had a Supreme Court appeal rejected in 2022. A lower court upheld his conviction the previous year.

Now, aged 30, he is being held at the United States Penitentiary Terre Haute, Indiana.

Philadelphia Drug Kingpin Charged with Dozens of Murders

Council spent a week at a motel across the street from CresCom Bank in Conway, South Carolina, where he watched the movie “Get Rich or Die Tryin'” before entering with a gun and killing two women who worked there, a woman of 36 years old. – an elderly teller named Kathryn Davis Skeen and 59-year-old Donna Major, the bank manager.

FBI agent says bank robbery suspect confessed to murder

Council already had a prior felony conviction and told an FBI agent that he entered the bank knowing he was going to kill someone during the robbery.

He was on parole for a month at the time of the murders, which took place during his second bank robbery since leaving prison.

He was sentenced to death in 2019. Now, 39, he is on death row in Terre Haute.

FBI reportedly let death row inmate help search for victim’s remains

Two career thieves who escaped from a Kentucky prison in 2005 and went on a violent interstate crime spree that included kidnappings, rapes and the killing of two women, Samantha Burns, 19, and Alice Donovan, 44.

The two were on the run for 17 days. They killed Donovan in South Carolina and Burns in West Virginia.

They stole their first getaway vehicle in Indiana and tied the owner to a tree, leaving him alive. They committed other robberies, robberies and carjackings before the police recaptured them.

Fulks, 47, and Basham, 43, are both awaiting execution in Terre Haute.

Brandon Basham with messy hair and shirtless in prison photo

Brandon Basham, then 21, is pictured after escaping from the Hopkins County Jail on November 4, 2002.

Savage is a Philadelphian drug lord who ordered 12 murders, including a fire that killed six people.

He had his friends set a fire in revenge against another cocaine dealer named Eugene Coleman, who became an FBI informant.

Coleman was not at home. The fire killed his mother, his 15-month-old son, three other children between the ages of 10 and 15, and another adult.

Savage was also convicted of ordering or participating in six other murders.

He is 49 years old and is also held in Florence.

Lawrence is a serial bank robber who killed a police officer named Bryan Hurst, 33, during an attempted robbery in Columbus, Ohio in 2005.

The gunman entered the bank and opened fire, striking Hurst, who was stationed inside the bank on a special mission just above the vest, according to Officer memorial page down.

Hurst, a Marine veteran whose daughter was 6 months old at the time, returned fire, wounding Lawrence.

The suspect abandoned the robbery attempt and fled without injuring anyone else.

Lawrence, 49, is on death row in Terre Haute.

Robert Bowers, the Pittsburgh Synagogue shooter, will be sentenced to death

Bowers is the former truck driver who drove into Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life Synagogue in 2018 and fatally shot 11 Jewish worshippers.

Robert Bowers has short, graying hair and is clean shaven in his driver's license photo

Robert Bowers in an undated Pennsylvania driver’s license photo. He was convicted of killing 11 Jewish worshipers at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh.

Now 52, ​​Bowers was originally indicted under the first Trump administration and former Attorney General Bill Barr.

He received the death sentence in 2023 despite the Biden-Harris administration’s moratorium on executions. He is sentenced to death in Terre Haute.

Another exception to Biden’s moratorium on death penalty cases is Payton Gendronwho stormed a supermarket in Buffalo, New York in 2022 and killed 10 black people in a hate crime massacre that he live-streamed. Although not on death row, Attorney General Merrick Garland announced in January that the Justice Department would seek the death penalty.

Trump has also promised to expand the death penalty to other crimes, including child rape, human trafficking and drug trafficking.

The death penalty is reserved for the worst of the worst criminals. To ensure that it is not arbitrarily imposed, courts follow a system that weighs aggravating factors against mitigating factors.

Most often, the death penalty is reserved for criminals, but it can also be imposed on spies, traitors, and the serious. drug traffickers.

In many states, killing a police officer is already an aggravating factor in sentencing. So, too, is killing someone who is helpless, such as a child or an elderly victim.

People convicted of drug crimes can sometimes be sentenced to death under federal law, especially if someone has died in connection with their case, they have prior felony convictions, they exploit minors to traffic their drugs, or they sell them near schools .

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source of the original article: Trump’s execution resumes to put Boston Marathon bomber, Charleston church shooter and more killers on the hot seat