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Robert
Lee McCONNELL
Robert Lee McConnell,
33, pleaded guilty to shooting his victim nine times with a handgun in
August 2002 at the home the man shared with a woman McConnell used to
date. McConnell then waited for the woman to return from work, cut off
her clothes with a knife, raped her and forced her to drive to San
Mateo, Calif.
She escaped when they stopped at a service station,
and he was captured later in San Francisco.
“I wouldn’t play around and have feelings like I did
the last time,” McConnell told the Reno Gazette-Journal in a prison
interview. “I wouldn’t let her get away. She would be tortured and
killed.”
Robert Lee McConnell
A June 9 2005 execution
was scheduled Thursday by Nevada prison officials for Robert Lee
McConnell, 33, sentenced to die for raping his ex-girlfriend and
murdering her fiancé.
The former Reno resident has said he won't
file any appeals or petitions that would automatically stop his
execution by injection at the Nevada State Prison in Carson City. State
Prisons Director Jackie Crawford scheduled the execution following a
Washoe County District Court appearance last week by McConnell, who said
he spoke with prosecutors and agreed that his execution in early June "would
be fine."
Pam McCoy, the mother
of McConnell’s victim, Brian Pierce, attended Tuesday’s hearing and said
she was glad to see the process moving forward. She said she has not
decided whether she will attend the execution, but said, “I do support
the death penalty.”
McConnell pleaded
guilty to shooting Brian Pierce, 25, 10 times with a handgun in August
2002 at the Sun Valley home that Pierce shared with a woman McConnell
previously dated.
After killing Pierce,
McConnell hid the body in a back bedroom and waited for the woman to
return from work, police said. He then raped her and forced her to drive
to the San Francisco Bay area, where she escaped when they stopped at a
service station.
In July 2003, a Washoe
County jury sentenced McConnell to death for the murder and to two life
prison terms for the rape and kidnapping. He fired his court-appointed
lawyers and represented himself during the sentencing proceedings -
agreeing with a prosecutor who called him an evil man who deserved no
mercy.
During the penalty
phase of the trial, jurors heard a taped phone call from McConnell to
his father, in which McConnell said Pierce was reaching for a door and
"I shot him 10 times before he hit the ground."
Michael Pescetta, a
federal public defender who specializes in death penalty cases, said his
office has been in contact with McConnell, is aware of the death row
inmate's interests and isn't sure if there will be an attempt to appeal
over his wishes.
A mandatory, automatic
appeal to the state Supreme Court already has been rejected. If
McConnell is executed, he'd become the 12th person to die in Nevada
following the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in the 1970s that cleared the
way for capital punishment to resume in this country. Ten of those who
died in Nevada since then were, like McConnell, volunteers who declined
to file further appeals that would have kept them alive.
UPDATE:
As he
awaits his scheduled execution Thursday, Robert Lee McConnell says his
only regret is that he killed his ex-girlfriend's fiancé instead of the
woman. "I wouldn't play around and have feelings like I did the last
time," the 33-year-old death row inmate told the Reno Gazette-Journal.
"I wouldn't let her get away. She would be tortured and killed."
The former Reno car
salesman has said he won't file any appeals or petitions that would
automatically stop his execution by injection at the Nevada State Prison
in Carson City.
McConnell pleaded
guilty in Washoe County District Court to shooting Brian Pierce, 25,
nine times with a handgun in August 2002 at the Sun Valley home that
Pierce shared with the woman McConnell once dated. McConnell then waited
for the woman to return from work, cut off her clothes with a knife,
raped her and forced her to drive to San Mateo, Calif. She escaped when
they stopped at a service station, and he was captured later in San
Francisco.
In a prison interview
with the Gazette-Journal, McConnell says he plotted to kill Pierce and
the woman after his 2001 arrest on suspicion of violating a temporary
protective order the woman had sought. He was fired later from his
$10,000-a-month sales job. "They ruined my livelihood," McConnell says.
"So, you're going to pay. I told them, `It may not be today, but when
you least expect it.' "
But McConnell says he
had second thoughts about killing the woman after she returned home that
day. "I allowed my personal feelings from the past to come into play,"
he told the Gazette-Journal. "With Brian, it was business. ... It was
brutal. It was heinous. With her it was like, `I hate this person. I
hate this person,' but 30 minutes into it, it's weird. I was like, `I
don't know if I'm going to be able to do this.' "
McConnell claims it was
the woman's fault that Pierce was killed. "She played both sides against
the middle," he says. "The truth is, this guy got taken by her, too. "He
was a cool guy. I will always maintain the apology I gave to Pierce's
mother. I'm sorry I took your son. I don't think he deserved that. "The
honest truth is, if I could take it back, I would kill her. Yes, I
should have killed her and left him alone," he adds. In July 2003, a
Washoe County jury sentenced McConnell to death for the murder and to
two life prison terms for the rape and kidnapping.
During the trial,
McConnell said he believed in the death penalty. Now, he says he opposes
capital punishment as state-sanctioned murder. But he gave his word to
go ahead with the execution, he says, and plans to follow through. "No
matter what I do I'm going to upset people on either side," McConnell
says. "If I don't go through with it, I upset (Pierce's) family. If I
do, my mother ... loses a son."
UPDATE:
Death
row inmate Robert Lee McConnell filed an 11th-hour appeal Thursday night
that prevented his execution by lethal injection at Nevada State Prison.
Officials said they had expected McConnell, 33, to file the petition,
even though he declared at a Wednesday news conference that he was ready
to die. "It certainly seems as though he was playing a game with the
system," Deputy Attorney General Gerald Gardner said.
A stay halting the
execution was signed at 8:26 p.m. by Washoe County Judge Steve Kosach
after McConnell exercised his right to an appeal. McConnell was
sentenced to death for murdering his ex-girlfriend's fiance in August
2002.
He expressed regret for
the murder but said he should have followed through with his plan to
kill the woman who had ruined his life and "deserved to die." McConnell
decided to petition after getting a final hug from his mother and
stepfather, meeting with a Catholic priest and federal public defender
and having a last meal of pepperoni pizza and cookies-and-cream ice
cream.
The former Reno car
salesman told reporters he was guilty of murdering Brian Pierce, 25, and
didn't fear dying but also said he didn't deserve to die for shooting
Pierce. He called executions "state-sanctioned murder."
McConnell also was
convicted of raping the woman at the Sun Valley home she shared with
Pierce. McConnell, raised in a broken home and in group homes, spent
about three years in the California Youth Authority before his release
at age 21.
He said that background
plus his bad temper and vindictiveness led to the events that put him on
death row. McConnell pleaded guilty in Washoe County District Court to
shooting Pierce nine times. Prosecutors said the final shot, to the head,
was fired at such close range that it left burns on the victim.
After the shooting,
prosecutors said McConnell dragged the body to a back bedroom, tried to
dig out some of the bullets that killed Pierce and then stabbed him with
a steak knife and placed a tape of the movie "Fear" next to the knife
that was buried to the hilt in the victim's chest.
According to court and
police records, McConnell, dressed in black, then waited for the woman
to return from work and attacked her. In July 2003, a Washoe County jury
sentenced McConnell to death for the murder and to two life prison terms
for the rape and kidnapping.
He fired his court-appointed
lawyers and represented himself during the sentencing proceedings
agreeing with a prosecutor who called him an evil man who deserved no
mercy. A mandatory, automatic appeal was later rejected by the state
Supreme Court.
The road of revenge: With nothing
left to lose, Robert McConnell talks about his life -- and crossing the
line
By Martha Bellisle -
Rgj.com
June 4, 2005
Revenge.
Obsession. And a temper beyond control.
This lethal combination led Robert McConnell to plot
a murder, shoot the young man who was living with his former girlfriend
and then rape and kidnap her.
And given the opportunity, he said, he would finish
the task: The woman, then 25, would not be spared.
“I wouldn’t play around and have feelings like I did
the last time,” McConnell says during a recent interview at the Nevada
State Prison in Carson City. “I wouldn’t let her get away. She would be
tortured and killed. And her dad.”
These thoughts and this admission come from a man who
seemingly has nothing else to lose — a cocky, aggressive guy who doesn’t
drink, smoke or do drugs and characterized by prosecutors as an evil,
cold, calculating control freak who would stop at nothing to get his way.
After dropping all appeals and vowing before a jury
and a judge to take responsibility for his crime by saving the victim’s
family any more grief, McConnell is scheduled to die of lethal injection
Thursday for the brutal murder of 25-year-old Brian Pierce on Aug. 7,
2002.
If all goes as planned, McConnell, 32, will become
the 11th death row inmate in Nevada to volunteer to be executed since
the Legislature reinstated capital punishment in 1977. Only one inmate
during that period died against his will.
While some question whether McConnell is competent to
make a rational decision about his death and some say capital punishment
only encourages a cycle of violence, others, including Pierce’s mother,
say McConnell’s passing will allow closure to a violent nightmare that
has torn their lives apart and changed them forever.
Even standing this close to his own mortality,
McConnell, an articulate fast-talker who collects data like squirrels
collect acorns, and who thinks the Internet is the best invention ever,
talks about the execution with the same matter-of-fact style that he
recalls looking into Pierce’s eyes after the fatal shooting or wishing
he had killed the young woman instead.
“No matter what I do I’m going to upset people on
either side,” says McConnell, as he sits in a small meeting room,
handcuffs resting just below the spiderweb and “fighting Irish guy”
tattoos decorating his forearms. “If I don’t go through with it I upset
his family. If I do, my mother ... loses a son.
“But at the same time, that’s what I said from the
beginning. So...”
So he waits, along with his lawyers, prosecutors, the
victims’ families and his, for that 9 p.m. gathering across the prison
yard in an upstairs room, knowing that at any point in the process, he
can change his mind.
Violent lessons
Chief Deputy District Attorney Tom Barb, who
prosecuted the case from the start, says McConnell has spent his life
trying to manipulate people.
“He’s a guy who can’t let go of anything,” says Barb.
“Everything’s a game to him. His macho side keeps him from ever being
able to lose.
“He just wants to be in control of everything the
touches and if he’s not, he’s a nasty, nasty person.”
McConnell even sought to control his own trial. Soon
after pleading guilty, he dismissed his lawyers and told the judge he
wanted to represent himself. Washoe District Judge Steven Kosach granted
his request.
But McConnell’s mother, Kim Sauln, who recently moved
to Northern Nevada from San Jose, Calif., said he had a rough start in
life.
“I was very young when I had him -- 15,” she said.
“He always had difficulty with his quick temper. He was very rebellious.
He could never get rid of that chip.”
“But with the situation the way it is, how can we not
forget the past,” she said, crying. “He’s always going to be my son. Now
two mothers lose their sons.”
McConnell, a short, stocky man who used to shave his
head and now sports a beard, began making decisions for himself at a
very early age. He said his mom, a single parent who never married his
dad, worked too much and was unavailable for even the most basic of
child care.
He slept on the couch, was continually locked out of
the apartment, ate popcorn for breakfast and stole money out of her
wallet for lunches, he says. After hearing complaints from his Bay Area
neighbors, the state found her an unfit mother and sent him to a group
home.
“My mom was a great mom as far as loving,” McConnell
recalls. “But working two jobs, the supervision was lacking. There was
no physical abuse. It was more neglect.”
After leaving the home when he was about 10,
McConnell went to live with his father in Texas, and there learned what
physical abuse felt like, he says.
“That was the way he grew up: corporal punishment,”
McConnell says. “I ran away several times and was successful in ’87 when
I was 15.” He found his way back to his mother in California by sneaking
on to buses and hitching rides.
But by then his mother was dating a man who did not
allow McConnell to control the roost. After a few run-ins with the law,
he soon landed in the California Youth Authority and didn’t get out
until he turned 21 and they could no longer hold him.
“It was the most violent place I’ve seen, even
considering the stuff I’ve seen here,” he says, referring to the state
prison system.
It was in this juvenile facility, he says, that he
learned the power of revenge -- guidelines that have governed his life
ever since.
“I had done somebody wrong when I was 17 or so,” he
says. “Three years later I forgot about this guy, and he caught up with
me and smashed me, beat me down.”
McConnell says he asked the guy what the attack was
all about, and was reminded of their previous run-in.
“This was just his first opportunity to catch me
slipping,” he said. From then on, he says, he followed this guy’s lead
and got even with anyone who crossed him.
“If somebody cuts you off (in traffic) you may say f-you
and get in a fist fight, but you’re not going to track them down two
years later and say you’re in for it,” he says.
“But see, I would. I’m like that.”
He says he tried to live a normal life, selling cars
and hanging out with friends.
“I could handle all that,” he says. “But I never got
the temper in check and I still live by those same rules.”
Crossing the line
According to court testimony, McConnell dated the
woman some time in 2001, but the relationship soured. When she moved on
and began dating Pierce, a Reed High School graduate with a strong
Christian upbringing and supportive family, McConnell stayed around.
He says she kept calling him back; she says he
wouldn’t go away.
Finally, after several confrontations, McConnell says
the woman and Pierce, who became engaged, crossed the line and pushed
him to the point where revenge was his only option.
The last straw came with a fight over a temporary
protective order the woman had sought early in 2001. The order was
granted, forcing McConnell to keep his distance.
But she said he continued to violate the restrictions.
When she called the police several times to report that McConnell was
driving by her house and calling, a judge issued an arrest warrant.
McConnell says he was served with the warrant on the
showroom floor at a local car dealership where he was pulling in $10,000
per month as a salesman.
“The secretary, all these people, are looking at me,
like you’re a scumbag who beats on woman,” McConnell recalls. He told
his coworkers that the woman’s claims were “bogus,” he says, but he was
fired, so it was time to fight back.
“It just stacked up on me to the point where, all
right, if I’m going to go back to jail, it’s like the World Series of
poker, I’m on a limb,” he says. “I’m not going back for a nickel and
dime. I’m going to kill these people, and I’ll get rid of the witnesses.
At that point there was no more threatening, he says.
“They ruined my livelihood,” he adds. “So, you’re
going to pay. I told them, it may not be today, but when you least
expect it.”
Yearlong plot
At the end of 2001, McConnell left Reno and headed
east to Pennsylvania to help his father with a construction project. He
stayed away for nine months before stuffing his backpack with a 9 mm
handgun, seven or eight clips, 100 rounds, a ski mask, rope, gloves and
a knife and boarded an Amtrak train in August 2002 for the ride west.
He secured a car with dealer plates, staked out the
Sun Valley home the woman and Pierce shared, clocked their comings and
goings on a note pad and waited for the perfect moment.
It came on Aug. 7, 2002.
Dressed in black, he broke into the house and when
Pierce returned from work at 2:30 p.m., McConnell fired 10 shots,
hitting Pierce nine times. McConnell dragged Pierce’s body into a spare
bedroom and used a butter knife to remove several of the special Black
Talon bullets he brought for the occasion.
“Yeah, I was doing that to see what they looked like
and thought maybe I should take them out for evidence because they’re
going to know what kind of bullet it was,” he says nonchalantly. He left
the knife in Pierce’s body when he was done.
He also left a calling card: on Pierce’s stomach
McConnell placed the video of the movie he found in the living room:
“Fear -- Together forever. Or else.”
McConnell considered dismembering the body, he told
his father during a recorded call from prison in 2002, but decided
against it. “I was going to cut the dude’s head off, but I didn’t have
time -- she was coming home,” he said in the recording.
The plan was to kill her, too, he says during the
recent interview.
McConnell says he thought he would get away with it,
but when the woman arrived home “it kind of went sideways.”
“I allowed my personal feelings from the past to come
into play,” he says. “With Brian, it was business. As bad as that sounds,
at the time everything went according to plan. I looked in his eyes. I
checked his pulse. I stabbed him after. It was brutal. It was heinous.”
But with the woman, it became emotional, he says.
“With her it was like, ‘I hate this person. I hate
this person,’ but 30 minutes into it, it’s weird,” he says. “I was like,
‘I don’t know if I’m going to be able to do this.’ ”
“At that point,” McConnell says with a laugh, “I said,
‘I’m going to prison.’ The minute I started having second thoughts about
taking her life, man, I’m leaving a living witness. I’m done.”
Instead of shooting her, McConnell took the woman
into the master bedroom, restrained her with duct tape and handcuffs and
forced her to have sex, according to court testimony. He then made her
drive them to California where she escaped during a stop at a gas
station in San Mateo.
She didn’t learn that her fiance was dead in the
other bedroom until she returned to Reno.
Five days later, McConnell was captured in the San
Francisco area following a manhunt that included the FBI and several law
enforcement agencies.
After several court hearings, he pleaded guilty on
May 30, 2003 and was sentenced to die on Aug. 28, 2003.
Remorse?
As the execution date approaches, McConnell says his
only regret is that he killed Pierce instead of the woman.
And he says it was her fault that Pierce was killed.
“She played both sides against the middle,” McConnell
says. “The truth is, this guy got taken by her, too.
“He was a cool guy,” McConnell adds. “I will always
maintain the apology I gave to Mrs. McCoy. I’m sorry I took your son. I
don’t think he deserved that.
“The honest truth is, if I could take it back, I
would kill (her),” he says adamantly. “Yes, I should have killed her and
left him alone.”
Preparing to die
With all the court hearings behind him, McConnell
says he keeps busy reading, writing and trying to keep things as normal
as possible. He keeps his cell in Unit 12 immaculate -- he makes his bed
and stacks his books neatly on a shelf.
His style is orderly, free of clutter -- everything
in its place.
Thanks to the encouragement of Pam McCoy, Pierce’s
mother, he says he has made amends with his own mother. During his trial,
McConnell spoke badly of her and said he had “trust issues with women”
that stemmed from their failed relationship.
“I wrote my mom a letter expecting her to reject it,
like I had done to her, and she didn’t,” he says. “She wrote back and
said the past is the past. I don’t know what the future has in store but
this has got to end and we’re both adults now, you’re my first-born son
and I love you.
“I told her, ‘I love you, too , mom, and I’m sorry.’
”
During the trial, McConnell said he believed in the
death penalty. “I would give me a death sentence — that’s a fact,” he
told the jury during the penalty phase.
But now, McConnell says he opposes the death penalty,
believing it is state-sanctioned murder. He also says he was brought up
Catholic and believes in Pope John Paul’s opposition to capital
punishment.
But he gave his word to go ahead with the execution,
he says, so he plans to follow through.
“My attorney said it best,” he says. “She said, ‘I
understand life in prison is going to be tough,’ but I told her I don’t
want to be buried in a room for the rest of my life.”
“The most basic instinct is self-preservation,” he
adds. “But regardless of how bad it is, you have to understand that you
put yourself there. And there is a certain amount of punishment that you
have to accept.
“I made those prior statements and I’m feeling
pressure from all sides to follow through. But I’m also receiving
pressure from other people to not do it and not take another life.”
Nevada death
row inmate decides to appeal; execution postponed
By Brendan Riley - Associated Press
June 9, 2005
CARSON CITY, Nev. – Death row inmate Robert Lee McConnell filed an 11th-hour
appeal Thursday night that prevented his execution by lethal injection
at Nevada State Prison.
Officials said they had expected McConnell, 33, to
file the petition, even though he declared at a Wednesday news
conference that he was ready to die.
"It certainly seems as though he was playing a game
with the system," Deputy Attorney General Gerald Gardner said.
A stay halting the execution was signed at 8:26 p.m.
by Washoe County Judge Steve Kosach after McConnell exercised his right
to an appeal.
McConnell was sentenced to death for murdering his
ex-girlfriend's fiance in August 2002. He expressed regret for the
murder – but said he should have followed through with his plan to kill
the woman who had ruined his life and "deserved to die."
McConnell decided to petition after getting a final
hug from his mother and stepfather, meeting with a Catholic priest and
federal public defender and having a last meal of pepperoni pizza and
cookies-and-cream ice cream.
The former Reno car salesman told reporters he was
guilty of murdering Brian Pierce, 25, and didn't fear dying – but also
said he didn't deserve to die for shooting Pierce. He called executions
"state-sanctioned murder."
McConnell also was convicted of raping the woman at
the Sun Valley home she shared with Pierce.
McConnell, raised in a broken home and in group homes,
spent about three years in the California Youth Authority before his
release at age 21. He said that background plus his bad temper and
vindictiveness led to the events that put him on death row.
McConnell pleaded guilty in Washoe County District
Court to shooting Pierce nine times. Prosecutors said the final shot, to
the head, was fired at such close range that it left burns on the victim.
After the shooting, prosecutors said McConnell
dragged the body to a back bedroom, tried to dig out some of the bullets
that killed Pierce – and then stabbed him with a steak knife and placed
a tape of the movie "Fear" next to the knife that was buried to the hilt
in the victim's chest.
According to court and police records, McConnell,
dressed in black, then waited for the woman to return from work and
attacked her.
In July 2003, a Washoe County jury sentenced
McConnell to death for the murder and to two life prison terms for the
rape and kidnapping. He fired his court-appointed lawyers and
represented himself during the sentencing proceedings – agreeing with a
prosecutor who called him an evil man who deserved no mercy. A mandatory,
automatic appeal was later rejected by the state Supreme Court.
Eleven men have been executed in Nevada following the
U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in the 1970s that cleared the way for
capital punishment to resume in this country. Ten of those who died in
Nevada were inmates who declined to file appeals that would have kept
them alive.
The last execution in Nevada was that of Terry Jess
Dennis, who died in August 2004 for strangling a woman in a Reno motel
in 1999. Also in 2004, Lawrence Colwell Jr. was executed for strangling
of an elderly tourist in Las Vegas.
CARSON CITY -- Robert Lee
McConnell ate his last meal of pepperoni pizza and was administered
rites by a Catholic priest Thursday but decided less than 40 minutes
before his execution to seek a stay.
McConnell, scheduled to die at 9
p.m. for shooting and stabbing a man in Reno who was dating his ex-girlfriend,
sought the stay at 8:26 p.m. It was accepted by Washoe District Judge
Steven Kosach by telephone.
Media witnesses to McConnell's
execution had filed into the grounds of the Nevada State Prison and were
waiting to be escorted to the execution chamber when news of his change
of heart was announced.
Several members of the family of
victim Brian Pierce were on hand to witness McConnell's execution.
Corrections Department Director
Jackie Crawford said there was "silence" when Pierce's family was given
the news.
About 20 protesters waited outside
the prison grounds, carrying signs opposed to the death penalty. One
sign said: "All killing is wrong."
McConnell, 32, signed the stay
after conferring with Assistant Federal Public Defender Michael Pescetta.
Crawford said McConnell will be
returned Monday to death row at Ely while his appeal of his death
sentence is pursued.
Chief Deputy Attorney General
Gerald Gardner said McConnell was free at any time to pursue his appeal.
"In the presence of a member of the
federal public defender's office he signed documents requesting a stay
of execution and requesting that a petition of post-conviction relief be
filed on his behalf in the Second Judicial District Court in Reno,
Nevada," he said.
Gardner said he did not know the
nature of the discussion between Pescetta and McConnell. But earlier in
the day, Pescetta urged McConnell to file for a stay sooner rather than
later, Gardner said.
"At this point he still has many
months left before he has to file a finalized post-conviction relief
petition," Gardner said.
Asked whether the last-minute delay
was orchestrated, Gardner said that possibility seemed likely.
"Based on some of the things Mr.
McConnell has been saying in the last week, it certainly seems he was
playing a game with the system," he said.
Crawford said there is an expense
in getting ready for an execution, but the department must follow
through when a death row inmate decides to give up his appeals and
voluntarily be executed.
Of the 11 executions in Nevada
since the death penalty was reinstated in 1977, all but one occurred
when inmates dropped their appeals.
Many years have passed since a
death row inmate said he was going forward with his execution only to
drop it at the last minute. The last was Jimmy Neuschafer, who was
scheduled to be executed in December 1990 when he backed out six hours
beforehand. Neuschafer died of natural causes in prison in 1998.
Signs existed McConnell might not
go through with his execution. In an interview at the prison Wednesday,
McConnell said he would file an appeal if he did not get one last hug
from his mother.
McConnell was not allowed "contact"
visits with family because of security concerns.
But Crawford on Thursday allowed
McConnell's mother and stepfather to have a contact visit, with
McConnell remaining in restraints. McConnell's mother gave him a hug
goodbye.
In the 15-minute interview,
McConnell said he used to believe in the death penalty but does not
support it any more. He said he did not deserve to die for killing
Pierce.
"I just don't think that it's right
to say what I did is wrong, and it's a state-sanctioned murder," he said
of his impending execution.
But McConnell also said Pierce did
not deserve to die either.
"Nobody has the right to take life,"
he said.
McConnell was sentenced to death in
July 2003. Besides killing Pierce, he raped his former girlfriend.
In the interview, McConnell said
his only regret was not killing his ex-girlfriend.
Crawford said the previous two
voluntary executions went forward without incident.
"Making the noises and talking to
the various media and some of the threats he's made, sometimes you begin
to wonder if it's a manipulation of the process," she said.
High court rejects
killer's appeal
Challenge to state's
lethal injection method dismissed
Las Vegas Review-Journal
By Brendan Riley
July 26, 2009
CARSON CITY -- The state Supreme Court has rejected
an appeal from condemned Nevada inmate Robert Lee McConnell, who came
within 34 minutes of being executed in 2005.
Justices dismissed several claims Thursday from
McConnell, 37, including one that Nevada's lethal injection method is
unconstitutional. The state uses three drugs for executions, including a
"downer" that can cause death, another that stops breathing, and a third
that stops the heart.
The former Reno car salesman was convicted in Washoe
County District Court of murdering Brian Pierce, 25, his ex-girlfriend's
fiance, in 2002. He also was convicted of raping the woman at the Sun
Valley home she shared with Pierce.
The high court said a lower court properly rejected
Mc-Connell's challenge of the lethal three-drug "cocktail," which isn't
spelled out in state law and is left to the discretion of the state's
prison director.
Justices also dismissed McConnell's arguments that
the lower court erred in dismissing his claims that his guilty plea
wasn't entered knowingly and voluntarily; that he had ineffective legal
counsel; and that the elected jurists who presided over his trial and
appeals lacked impartiality because they're "beholden to the electorate."
Also dismissed was McConnell's argument for a
revision of the Supreme Court's 2004 ruling in his case that has led to
numerous reviews of other Nevada death penalty cases. He sought the
revisions to bolster his ineffective-counsel claim.
In the 2004 ruling, the court held that a defendant
can't be convicted of first-degree murder using a particular
circumstance, such as a killing that occurred during a robbery, and then
have robbery used again as an aggravating circumstance in the penalty
phase of a trial.
McConnell pleaded guilty to shooting Pierce nine
times. Prosecutors said the final shot, to the head, was fired at such
close range that it left burns on the victim.
After the shooting, prosecutors said McConnell
dragged the body to a back bedroom, tried to dig out some of the bullets
that killed Pierce. Then McConnell stabbed him with a steak knife and
placed a tape of the movie "Fear" next to the knife that was buried to
the hilt in the victim's chest.
According to court and police records, McConnell then
waited for the woman to return from work and attacked her.