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On January 15, 1983,
Frank Russell returned home from work to discover that his wife, Edith,
had been murdered.
The Russells rented an
apartment at the back of their Chattanooga, Tennessee, house to a tenant
who, at that time, was away on vacation, and Edith’s body was found
inside this apartment.
Medical examiners
determined that the cause of her death was “massive multiple skull
fractures with marked lacerations of the scalp and head, expelling brain
tissue and literally crushing the victim’s face and disfiguring her
beyond recognition.”
Edith was last seen
that afternoon at a neighborhood market, where witnesses spoke with her
between approximately 2:30 and 2:45 p.m. Bags of groceries and ignition
keys were found in Edith’s car, which was parked in the driveway, when
her body was discovered near midnight. Nothing in the record indicates a
precise time of death.
The logical inference
is that Edith was killed a short time after purchasing the groceries in
the middle of the afternoon, or else she would have taken them and her
keys out of her car. Moreover, the porch lights were off. Her husband
said she always left the outside lights on for protection.
The Russells’ house and
the rented apartment were burglarized. Missing items included “an RCA XL-100
television, two cable television converters, a quartz heater, a Polaroid
210 camera, a silver Cross pen and pencil set, a jeweler’s loupe, a
jewelry box, antique jewelry, a marble vase, and Edith’s purse.”
The police later found
the quartz heater, the Polaroid camera, the pen and pencil set, and the
jeweler’s loop in the residence of Janice Duckett, who was Harbison’s
girlfriend and co-defendant David Schreane’s sister.
The jeweler’s loop was
found in Harbison’s shaving kit. In an adjacent unoccupied apartment,
the police found Edith’s purse, a jewelry box, and two large paper bags
containing antique glassware and brassware. The stolen television was
found in the residence of Schreane’s girlfriend.
Schreane was taken into
custody and questioned on February 21, 1983, when he led police to the
missing marble vase. Chemical testing later revealed the presence of
blood on the vase. Furthermore, debris that was vacuumed from the carpet
in Harbison’s car revealed crystalline calcite fragments that were
consistent with the marble vase.
Harbison also was
arrested on February 21, 1983. In a taped statement, he confessed to
killing Edith Russell. Harbison stated that after he drove his
girlfriend home from work, he and Schreane went to the Russell home,
determined that it was empty, and used a screwdriver to break into the
residence.
While he and Schreane
were carrying the stolen items from the house and the apartment to their
car, Edith returned home. Harbison contended that he thought Edith was
reaching for a gun, so he grabbed her. He stated that he hit her with
the marble vase, “at the most” two times.
At his trial, Harbison
testified that he had not killed Edith Russell and that he was not at
the Russell house on the day of the murder. He said that he was at his
girlfriend’s home that afternoon and evening. He asserted that his
confession was coerced, and that the police had threatened to arrest his
girlfriend and take away her children if he did not confess.
He further testified
that the police had told him what to say and that his taped confession,
which was played to the jury, had been altered. Finally, he testified
that he had purchased the jeweler’s loupe at a pawn shop.
The officer principally
responsible for investigating Edith Russell’s murder, indicated that Ray
Harrison had a motive to burglarize and/or murder Edith Russell. Ray
Harrison told the detective that he had tried to sell Russell a ring the
previous week, but that she did not buy it.
Harrison’s cousin
confirmed that he had given a ring to Ray Harrison a week before Edith’s
murder and that Harrison was supposed to sell the ring for him. Ray
Harrison’s wife told police that Edith Russell had taken the ring to a
jeweler for an appraisal and purportedly determined that it contained a
fake diamond.
The police interview
with Ray Harrison’s brother-in-law indicated that “Ray Harrison and (his
cousin) were mad at Edith Russell because they believed that she had
‘switched rings on Ray.’” Harbison was convicted and sentenced to death.
Judge Trauger concluded that, as a result
of lack of training of personnel involved and other failings,
Tennessee’s lethal injection protocol posed a "substantial risk" that
the prisoner would not be unconscious when the second and third drugs
were administered. In addition, "Because there is no check for
consciousness, such a mistake may never be discovered." She concluded
that Harbison’s pending execution under this protocol would violate the
constitutional ban on "cruel and unusual" punishment.
Governor Bredesen was quoted as responding
to Judge Trauger’s ruling by saying: "She’s kind of created a Catch-22
for us. She decries the lack of medically trained personnel involved in
the execution, and of course it's very hard to get trained medical
personnel to participate in any fashion… I think this is the wrong
decision in this case. I think she's trying to push us into uncharted
territory, which I'm going to have to think carefully about. And I think
she's made it very difficult to fix the three-drug protocol."
Judge Trauger had not issued a stay of
execution. On 24 September, the state filed a motion in the Tennessee
Supreme Court asking the Court to vacate E.J. Harbison’s execution date.
The motion stated that the Commissioner of the Department of Correction
needed "additional time" to determine how to respond to Judge Trauger’s
ruling, and that the Department would "not be in a position to go
forward with the execution of Mr Harbison on September 26, 2007."
On 25 September, the state Supreme Court
granted the motion, and set a new execution date of 9 January 2008. One
of the judges dissented, arguing that under state law the execution
could go ahead by electrocution. The dissenting judge said that the
Governor could issue a temporary reprieve to allow the state time to
decide what to do.
In another development on 25 September,
the US Supreme Court agreed to consider the constitutionality of lethal
injections in a case brought by two Kentucky death row inmates claiming
that the three-drug execution process used in Kentucky is
unconstitutional.
408 F.3d 823
JeromeHarbison,
Petitioner-appellant, v.
Ricky Bell, Warden, Respondent-appellee
asserts that Strong, who represented him in his motion for new trial
and on direct appeal, was ineffective because he failed to argue
that Harbison's trial attorneys were
ineffective for failing to investigate and present evidence of
Harbison's family background. This claim
was asserted in Harbison's post-conviction
petition. The Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the trial
court's dismissal of this claim on the merits, and the Supreme Court
of Tennessee denied Harbison's request for
further review.