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Michael Carl
GEORGE
Rape - Torture - Robbery
Next day
Michael Carl George was executed Thursday night
for killing a 15-year-old boy who was handcuffed to a tree, sexually
tortured and shot through the head.
George was put to death by lethal injection at
the Greensville Correctional Center for the June 1990 slaying of
Alexander Eugene Sztanko. The inmate was pronounced dead at 9:18
p.m., a prison official said.
George made no final statement but told prison
Warden David Garraghty that he gave a written statement to his
minister, who read a Psalm to the inmate while he waited on the
gurney. However, the minister left the prison without releasing the
statement.
George's mother, father and three brothers were
his last visitors.
Among the witnesses to the execution was Del.
David G. Brickley, D-Prince William. The Sztanko boy was killed in
Brickley's district.
Earlier Thursday, the U.S. Supreme Court voted
7-2 to deny a stay of execution for George. Justices John Paul
Stevens and Ruth Bader Ginsburg voted to stay the execution.
George, 39, abducted the boy as he rode a
motorcycle along a dirt power line trail in Woodbridge. After
handcuffing the teen-ager to a tree, George sexually assaulted him,
tortured him with a stun gun, then shot him with a 9mm handgun.
In an appeal petition and stay request filed last
week with the Supreme Court, attorney Stephen Northrup argued it was
improper for the prosecutor to comment about the crime's impact on
the victim's parents before the jury had issued a verdict.
Northrup said Wednesday that George had written a
letter to the boy's parents that will be delivered by a clergyman.
He did not know the content of the letter or when it would be
delivered.
Although no clemency request was filed, Gov.
George Allen said Thursday he had reviewed the court rulings and
would not stop the execution.
"As a father, I am particularly aware of, and
sensitive to, the profound pain and loss suffered by the parents of
the victim, taken from them at such a young age and in such a brutal
manner,'' the governor said.
Before the Sztanko slaying, George pleaded guilty
to involuntary manslaughter and abduction in the May 1979
disappearance of 8-year-old Larry Perry, who lived near the same
power line where the Sztanko boy was killed.
George originally was charged with murdering the
Perry boy, but authorities agreed to the manslaughter plea because
the victim's body was never found. George served two years of a
five-year sentence before being released in 1986 on mandatory
parole.
George's execution was the first in Virginia this
year. In 1996, the state executed eight men - more than any other
state in the country.