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Edward CASTRO
The prison guard snapped back the curtain in the
death chamber Thursday, revealing a prostrate Edward Castro with arms
outstretched and needles planted in each. Castro turned his head to the
right, as if he could see through the one-way window of the witness
gallery. He smiled, like he recognized someone, then winked.
A moment later, at 6:01, Castro was given the chance
to make a last statement. He had already polished off a T-Bone steak and
accepted an injection of Valium, and now Castro had people to thank,
mercy to bestow and forgiveness to request. "Tell my mother I love her,
and I'd like to take the opportunity to apologize to the families of the
victims," said Castro, 50, staring at the ceiling where the microphone
hung.
A California drifter who confessed in 1987 to three
murders, Castro finished up with a thanks to "everybody who's shown me
love. That's it." He then closed his eyes.
At 6:02 p.m. the deadly
potassium chloride mixture rushed into Castro's veins. A minute later,
Castro's eyes jerked open and fluttered. His mouth twitched, and his
head rose several inches off the gurney's small blue pillow.
Then his
body relaxed, his eyes shut again, and he appeared not to breathe. The
medical doctor declared him dead at 6:15 p.m. The official witnesses, 13
in all, sat silently and unmoving for the 13 minutes in between.
Castro was the sixth prisoner to die by lethal
injection. Unlike most death-row inmates, who file loads of motions and
appeals, Castro in recent years fired all his attorneys and told a judge
he was ready to die. "To proceed any further would be to allow myself
something I never allowed my victim, the opportunity to beg for my life,"
he told Circuit Judge Jack Singbush in 1997.
Family members of the condemned are not allowed to
watch the execution. Castro's mother, along with seven other siblings or
relatives, bade him goodbye for the full three hours allowed Thursday by
prison officials. C.J. Drake, spokesman for the Florida Department of
Corrections, said officials hadn't been able to locate the families of
Castro's victims.
The death sentence was carried out for the 1987
murder of Austin Carter Scott, a 56-year-old Ocala resident. Castro told
authorities he taunted Scott in the moments before his death. "Hey, man,
you've lost. Dig it?" Castro said.
He also confessed to the stabbing deaths of George
Larry Hill of St. Petersburg and Claude J. Henderson of Polk County.
Castro was sentenced to life in prison for Hill's death and was never
tried for Henderson's.
Hill's identical twin brother stayed in his Tampa
apartment during the execution.
"I feel weak in the knees," said Nathan Jerry Hill,
64, when told Thursday night of Castro's last-minute apology.