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Eric John KING
Next day
Summary:
Shortly after midnight, a black male brandishing a pistol robbed a
convenience market in Phoenix. During the course of the robbery, both
the store clerk, 46 year old Ron Barman, and the security guard, 61 year
old Richard Butts, were shot and killed.
The robbery was captured on two video cameras which
showed the robber wearing a distinctive sweater shooting the clerk. No
one else was present in the store at the time of the robbery. The
security guard was discovered by a passing driver outside the store with
an empty holster.
While dialing 9-1-1, the witness observed a black man
wearing a distinctive sweater walk up to the security guard on the
ground and wipe his holster and belt with a cloth. Nekita Renee Hill
lived within walking distance of the Short Stop. As she approached, Hill
saw King, with whom she was acquanted, walk toward a dumpster and throw
a thin plastic bag in the dumpster. The bag was later recovered and
contained a gun and a dark sweater with a white diamond pattern that
Hill had seen defendant wearing earlier that night.
Hill's boyfriend, Michael Jones, testified at trial
that he was at the Short Stop when the robbery and murders occurred. He
testified that he and King had gone to the Short Stop to buy wine and
that he had remained outside while defendant went inside the store.
Jones said that while he was waiting outside, he heard gunshots. On
hearing the shots, he turned toward the store and saw defendant leaving
the store with a gun in his hand and the security guard lying on the
ground in front of the store.
Jones was later released and no charges were filed
against him. At the time of the murders, King had just been released
from prison after serving seven years for rape and kidnapping.
Citations:
State v. King, 180 Ariz. 268, 883 P.2d 1024 (Ariz. 1994). (Direct
Appeal) King v. Schriro, 537 F.3d 1062 (9th Cir. 2008). (Habeas)
Final Words:
None.
Final / Special Meal:
Fried catfish, collard greens, candied yams, cornbread, chocolate cake
with ice cream, and cream soda
Arizona Department of
Corrections
Inmate: KING ERIC J.
DOB: 09/30/1963
Gender: Male
Race: Black
Height: 5'9"
Weight: 165 lbs.
Hair: Black
Eyes: Brown
Conviction: Murder 1st Degree (2 Counts), Armed Robbery
County: Maricopa
Case#: 9000050
Offense Date: 12-27-89
Sentence: DEATH, 21 Years
Sentence Date: 03-08-91
On December 27, 1989, Eric John
King, accompanied by a black male later elieved
to be Michael Page Jones, robbed a Short Stop
convenience store in Phoenix, Arizona.
King shot and killed the clerk, Mr. Ron Barman, and
the store's security guard, Mr. Richard Butts. Officers believe King
used Mr. Butt's .357 revolver in the commission of the offenses.
Witnesses saw the defendant return to the scene to wipe off Mr. Butt's
holster. Approximately $72 was taken from the cash register in the
store.
King was arrested on December 28, 1989.
PROCEEDINGS
Presiding Judge: Michael D. Ryan
Prosecutor: Paul Rood
Start of Trial: August 28, 1990
Verdict: September 5, 1990
Sentencing: March 4, 1991
Aggravating Circumstances:
Pecuniary gain
Especially depraved
Multiple homicides
Mitigating Circumstances:
Traumatic childhood
Dysfunctional family
Substance abuse
Post-traumatic distress
Family loves him
PUBLISHED OPINIONS
State v. King, 190 Ariz. 268, 883 P.2d 1024 (1994).
Azcentral.com
Arizona executes man for deadly 1989 armed robbery
By Michael Kiefer - AzCentral.com
Mar. 29, 2011
FLORENCE - Eric John King was executed Tuesday for
the 1989 murders of two men at a Phoenix convenience store during a
robbery that netted less than $73. It was the second execution in five
months; another is scheduled for next week, and the Arizona Attorney
General's Office has asked the state Supreme Court for execution dates
for three more death-row inmates in coming months.
On Monday night, King, 47, had a last meal of fried
catfish, collard greens, candied yams, cornbread, chocolate cake with
ice cream, and cream soda before he was moved from his cell on death row
to the death house.
When the curtains opened onto the execution chamber
at 10 a.m. Tuesday, he smiled to someone he recognized in the small
witness gallery in a way that two witnesses to the execution described
as meaning, "It's all right." Then, the witnesses said, when asked if he
had any last words, King boomed out a simple "no." By 10:08 a.m., his
eyes closed, his mouth gaped open, and a doctor who entered the chamber
determined that he was fully sedated. At 10:22, he was pronounced dead.
"Out of a violent act in which two people died, the
end was rather subdued," said Maricopa County Attorney Bill Montgomery,
who witnessed the execution. "The families of the victims in this case
may now take some comfort in knowing the criminal who deprived his
victims of their lives and robbed their families of their loved ones has
paid for this terrible crime," said Arizona Attorney General Tom Horne,
who also was among the witnesses. King's attorney, Michael Burke of the
Federal Public Defender's Office, declined comment.
Early Tuesday, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to
consider the case and stay the execution. In the past several weeks,
several state and federal courts and the Arizona Board of Executive
Clemency had refused to grant stays or reprieves based on a number of
issues that ranged from flaws in the original evidence to the quality
and origin of the drugs used to put him to death.
Late last week, it was discovered that the U.S.
Customs and Food and Drug Administration documents that accompanied the
drugs' import from England last fall described them as drugs intended
for animals. This raised questions as to whether they were in fact
animal drugs or if they had been purposely misrepresented during their
import. The Arizona Department of Corrections dismissed the
misclassification as a clerical error committed by an import broker
engaged by the department to handle the importation details.
But in an emergency clemency hearing on Monday, Burke,
King's defense attorney, showed that the "clerical error" involved a
drop-down menu on a computer program that clearly groups and delineates
animal and human drugs. Burke suggested the error was improbable,
especially since it was made three times in September and October. The
issue will certainly be raised again in the next week as defense
attorneys battle the Attorney General's Office in last-hour appeals and
motions for stay before the scheduled execution of Daniel Wayne Cook,
who killed two men in Lake Havasu City in 1987.
Arizona executes convicted killer
By Catherine Holland - AzFamily.com
Associated Press - March 29, 2011
FLORENCE, Ariz. – Arizona has executed a man
convicted of murdering two people during an armed robbery at a Phoenix
convenience store in late 1989. Eric John King, 47, was executed by
lethal injection at the state prison in Florence at 10 a.m. He was
pronounced dead at 10:22 a.m. When asked if he had any last words, King
said only, "No."
King was convicted of shooting and killing security
guard Richard Butts and convenience store clerk Rob Barman during an
armed robbery on Dec. 27, 1989. The robbery netted just $72. At the time
of the robbery and shooting, King had just been released from prison
after serving seven years for rape and kidnapping. Although he was
convicted on two counts of murder, he always maintained his innocence in
the convenience store killings. Defense attorneys said there was
“substantial doubt” about King’s guilt.
“He has always maintained his innocence for the
crimes,” said defense attorney Michael Burke. “I truly believe he was
denied a fair trial.” According to Burke, King was calm in his last
hours of life, even after hearing that the U.S. Supreme Court would not
step in and review a lower court’s decision to deny a stay of execution.
“Although he’s very calm, he [King] continues to maintain his innocence,”
Burke said. “He’s done what he can do. All he has left to do is maintain
his dignity.”
For his last meal, King had fried catfish, collard
greens and chocolate cake with chocolate ice cream.
None of King's blood relatives were in the witnesses'
viewing room. Witnesses, including 3TV's Mike Watkiss, said King
appeared to be smiling and at peace when he entered the death chamber.
They said it even looked like he waved from beneath the sheet.
Arizona Attorney General Tom Horne witnessed the
execution. "It has been more than 20 years since Mr. Barman and Mr.
Butts were murdered and now justice has finally been served," Horne said
in a formal statement. "The families of the victims in this case may now
take some comfort in knowing the criminal who deprived his victims of
their lives and robbed their families of their loved ones has paid for
this terrible crime. "In the clemency hearing, a family member of one of
the victims testified to the overwhelming anguish for the family because
of the delay in achieving justice. Our office is working very hard to
persuade the courts to shorten the unconscionable delay in doing justice
in capital cases.”
In a last-ditch appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court,
doubts about King’s guilt were just one point defense attorneys argued.
Also at issue was the state’s method of execution. King was one of the
last people put to death with a three-drug cocktail. Defense attorneys
have questioned how one of those three drugs, an anesthetic called
sodium thiopental, was obtained.
Both Arizona and Georgia got the drug in England just
a short time before the British government banned such exports. Because
the drug did not come from the Hospira, the only source of sodium
thiopental approved by the Food and Drug Administration, some have
questioned its quality. There has been some concern that the drug might
not properly sedate the inmate.
Arizona’s last execution took place on Oct. 26.
Jeffrey Landrigan won a one-day delay, but the U.S. Supreme Court ruled
5-4 that there was no evidence that the sodium thiopental was unsafe. "Speculation
cannot substitute for evidence that the use of the drug is 'sure or very
likely to cause serious illness and needless suffering,'" the court said.
Another execution slated for April 5 will be the last
time the three-drug mix is used. The state announced last week that it
will switch to a single-drug injection.
On Monday, Burke argued that King’s execution should
have been put on hold until that change is made. The Arizona Supreme
Court denied the stay of execution.
Last week, Arizona’s five-member clemency board
unanimously voted to turn down King’s request that his sentence be
commuted to life in prison or that his execution be delayed. Arizona
began using lethal injection as its method of execution in 1993. Since
then, the state has put 23 inmates to death using the three-drug
combination.
Arizona inmate executed by lethal injection
Abc15.com
March 28, 2011
PHOENIX - A man convicted of killing two people in a
Phoenix convenience store robbery 22 years ago has been executed by
lethal injection, despite last-minute arguments over one of the
execution drugs and his lawyers' doubts about his guilt. Eric John King
died at the state prison in Florence Tuesday morning.
ABC15's Brian Webb was one of approximately 25
witnesses at the execution. Webb reported that King's last meal Monday
night consisted of fried catfish, collard greens, candied yams, two
small pieces of corn bread, one small tomato, a medium-sized pink
grapefruit, one piece of chocolate cake with chocolate frosting, and two
20-ounce bottles of cream soda.
At 10 a.m. Tuesday a drape was opened between the
room where King was strapped to a table, covered to his neck with a
white sheet, and a room where the witnesses were gathered. Included in
the group were Attorney General Tom Horne and Maricopa County Attorney
Bill Montgomery.
The charges against King were read and he was asked
if he had any last words. He simply said 'no,' Webb reported.
Administration of a sedative began at 10:04 and King
took some deep breaths, Webb said. King then tilted his head slightly
away from the spectactors and began taking shallower breaths. At 10:08 a
medical worker examined King and confirmed he was unconscious. Webb said
King's stomach stopped moving up and down about 60 seconds later. He was
officially declared dead at 10:22 a.m. by Warden Carson McWilliams. The
drape was pulled shut before King's body was moved from the room.
Webb said King did not appear nervous or in pain at
all. He said there did not appear to be any protesters outside the
prison.
The 47-year-old was convicted of killing security
guard Richard Butts and clerk Ron Barman in a 1989 robbery that netted
$72. King maintained his innocence since his arrest, and lawyers fought
until the last minute to get a stay of execution.
They argued that the state shouldn't execute King
until it enacts a new single-drug lethal injection protocol. Arizona's
current three-drug cocktail uses a sedative whose short supply has
raised questions about how states obtain it from overseas. The Arizona
Supreme Court ruled Monday to decline to stay the execution after
lawyers for Eric John King raised questions about how an execution drug
was imported and argued that his execution should be stayed until
Arizona puts its new lethal injection protocol in place.
Burke said Monday that he was disappointed in the
state Supreme Court’s denial of his motion to stay King’s execution and
said he was asking the U.S. Supreme Court to review it. The U.S. Supreme
Court denied the stay on Tuesday morning. “I think that we have credible
evidence that the DOC misled U.S. Customs in importing the drugs they’re
going to use to execute Mr. King,” Burke said. “I had hoped the Arizona
Supreme Court would be as troubled by that as we are. At least by their
ruling, they appear not to be.”
Burke also unsuccessfully sought to have the state’s
clemency board reconsider its Thursday decision to denying King a
reprieve based on the mislabeling. The board denied a reprieve again
Monday.
Crime Background:
On December 27, 1989, Eric John King and accomplice
Michael Page Jones allegedly robbed the Short Stop convenience store on
the corner of 48th Street and Broadway Road in Phoenix. King shot and
killed the clerk, Mr. Ron Barman, and the store's security guard, Mr.
Richard Butts, according to authorities. Officers believe King used Mr.
Butts' .357 revolver in the commission of the offenses. Approximately
$72 was taken from the cash register in the store.
King was arrested on Dec. 28, 1989, convicted on Sept.
5, 1990, and sentenced to death on March 4, 1991. King was already a
felon, released after serving 7 years for rape and kidnapping. Activists
on King's behalf argue there was no physical evidence against King - no
gun was ever found, crime witnesses couldn't identify him, and store
surveillance video didn't give a clear look. Jones testified against
King in his trial.
Arizona Execution Facts:
King will be Arizona’s 89th execution since 1910. The
most recent execution was Jeffrey Landrigan on October 26, 2010. After
King’s execution, there will be 130 inmates on Arizona’s death row.
Three of them are women. The next scheduled execution after King is
Daniel Cook, next week, on April 5th.
The oldest person on Arizona’s death row is Richard
Glassel, age 72. The person on death row awaiting execution the longest
is Robert Moorman, sentenced to death on May 31, 1972. Second is Edward
Schad, sentenced to death on January 2, 1980.
Execution changes coming in Arizona
The state announced Friday that it was changing from
three execution drugs to just one, but only after King’s execution and
the execution of another inmate April 5. Corrections Director Charles
Ryan said the change was to allay any “perceived concerns” that the
knockout drug sodium thiopental is ineffective. Critics have said the
three-drug protocol might result in an inmate being painfully suffocated
if the sedative doesn’t work before the other two drugs are administered.
Arizona Inmate Executed Amid Questions Over Drug
By Amanda Lee Myers -MyFoxPhoenix.com
March 29, 2011
FLORENCE, Ariz. - A man convicted of killing two
people in a 1989 Phoenix convenience store robbery was executed Tuesday
despite last-minute arguments by his attorneys who raised questions over
one of the lethal injection drugs and said they had raised "substantial
doubt" about his guilt.
Eric John King's death at the state prison in
Florence was the first execution in the state since October and one of
the last expected to use a three-drug lethal injection cocktail. The 47-year-old
had maintained his innocence since his arrest and his lawyers fought
until the last minute to get his sentence reversed or delayed.
Defense attorney Mike Burke said before the execution
that he visited with King on Tuesday morning. "Although he's very calm,
he continues to maintain his innocence," Burke told The Associated Press.
"He's done what he can do. All he has left to do is maintain his dignity."
The Arizona Supreme Court declined to stay King's
execution Monday after Burke argued that the state should wait until it
enacts its new lethal injection protocol. The U.S. Supreme Court refused
to intervene. Corrections Director Charles Ryan announced Friday that
Arizona will switch to using just one drug in an effort to allay any "perceived
concerns" that sodium thiopental is ineffective, but only after the
scheduled executions of King and Daniel Wayne Cook on April 5.
Defense attorney Michael Burke had argued that the
Department of Corrections may have engaged in fraud when it imported the
sedative from Great Britain by listing it on forms as being for "animals
(food processing)," not humans.
Arizona Attorney General Tom Horne said the
mislabeling resulted from a clerical error. Arizona obtained the drug
legally, and that's why it has been able to avoid problems other states
have had, Assistant Attorney General Kent Cattani has said. Georgia's
supply of sodium thiopental was seized by federal Drug Enforcement
Administration agents on March 15 over questions about how it was
obtained. The drug is part of the three-drug lethal injection cocktail
used by nearly all 34 death penalty states, but it became scarce last
year after the sole U.S. manufacturer stopped making it.
Some states started obtaining sodium thiopental
overseas, and lawyers have argued that potentially adulterated,
counterfeit or ineffective doses could subject prisoners to extreme pain.
Texas and Oklahoma recently announced they are switching from sodium
thiopental to pentobarbital in their three-drug protocol. Ohio has
switched to using only pentobarbital for its executions, and Ryan said
that's the drug Arizona might start using.
Burke also was unable to successfully argue that King
be granted clemency at a hearing Thursday. Burke had argued that the two
key witnesses who testified against King at his trial have changed their
stories, that no physical evidence exists and surveillance video used at
trial was of extremely poor quality.
Vince Imbordino, a prosecutor with the Maricopa
County attorney's office, argued that the photographic evidence was
clear and that if jurors didn't believe King was guilty, they wouldn't
have convicted him. King was convicted of fatally shooting security
guard Richard Butts and clerk Ron Barman at a Phoenix convenience store
two days after Christmas in 1989. Butts and Barman both were married
fathers whose families have testified that their deaths in a robbery
that netted $72 devastated them.
Shortly before the killings, King had been released
from a seven-year prison term on kidnapping and sexual assault charges.
Police say King, who was 18 at the time, and another man kidnapped a
woman and took her to an abandoned house, where both repeatedly and
brutally sexually assaulted her over six hours.
Before he was sentenced in that crime, deputy adult
probation officer Lee Brinkmoeller wrote that King had plans to reform
himself. "The defendant's plans for the future are to become a machinist
and to have his own car, house, family, and start being able to do
things for his mother for all the things she has done for him,"
Brinkmoeller wrote. "He states that he wants to have his mother be proud
of him before she dies and he wants to be somebody."
Court documents show King had a troubled childhood.
Born in a taxi on the way to the hospital in Phoenix, King was one of 12
siblings whose alcoholic, abusive and mentally disturbed father died of
a heart attack when King was 11, according to court records. Records
also say King's mother struggled to provide for the children, who were
so hungry at times that they tried to catch crawdads in irrigation
canals and frequently were without electricity.
King reported to a prison psychiatrist that he had
heard voices on and off his entire life, and suffered from anxiety and
insomnia. His son, 20-year-old Eric Harrison, saw King for the first
time Thursday at the clemency hearing and asked the board to spare his
father. "This is the first time I've ever seen my dad, ever in life, and
I know I love him," Harrison said. "That's my dad. He gave me life. Just
don't take him."
Arizona has executed 22 death-row inmates with the
three-drug lethal injection method since it began using lethal injection
in 1993. The most recently was Jeffrey Landrigan on Oct. 26. The state
had previously executed 38 inmates with lethal gas since it started
using that method in 1934. Another 28 inmates had been executed by
hanging between 1910 and 1931.