Oct. 13



OHIO----execution

Ohio executes man for killing in robbery that brought $15


In Lucasville, a man was executed Wednesday for a shotgun slaying during a
robbery that netted $15 in 1994.

At age 28, Adremy Dennis was the youngest inmate put to death in Ohio
since 1962.

He was pronounced dead by injection at 10:10 a.m. at the Southern Ohio
Correctional Facility.

Dennis had said the victim, Kurt Kyle, 29, was partly to blame for the
slaying because he put his hand in his pocket after being ordered not to
move. He also told an Ohio Parole Board member he regretted the robbery
brought so little cash and that he allowed any witnesses to survive.

"I'm in God's hands now. Everything's going to be just the way it was
intended. I'll see everybody when they get there," Dennis said when
allowed to make a final statement.

Defense lawyers said all appeals were exhausted when the 6th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals in Cincinnati rejected a request last week to postpone
the execution for Dennis' challenge that Ohio's method of lethal injection
violates the U.S. Constitution as an unacceptably cruel punishment.

Gov. Bob Taft followed the state parole board's split recommendation
Tuesday and denied clemency, saying Dennis did not prove he was
remorseful.

Dennis and an accomplice approached Kyle and a friend in front of Kyle's
home in Akron. Kyle, a stock race car driver, was celebrating a victory at
Barberton Speedway.

The friend, Martin Eberhart, handed over $15 at gunpoint. Kyle searched
his pockets, prompting Dennis to shoot him.

"I ain't saying it's all his fault, but why did he move?" Dennis said in a
death row interview. "Every day I think about that. It ain't 'Why did you
kill that man?' It's 'Why did you move?'"

Dennis also blamed Kyle for not cooperating in the robbery when he should
have noticed that Dennis was high on drugs and alcohol.

"(Kyle) had to know I was drunk. I know he could smell it on my breath,
smell the weed lingering on my clothes," Dennis said.

A Summit County jury convicted him of aggravated murder, attempted
aggravated murder, aggravated robbery and unlawful possession of a gun.

Eberhart survived. Dennis' accomplice, Leroy Lamar Anderson, who was 17 at
the time, is serving a life sentence. Ohio prohibits the death penalty for
defendants under age 18.

Dennis' mother, Marquita, sobbed while witnessing the execution and was
comforted by her aunt.

Dennis talked about family memories in his cell before the execution with
his mother and great-aunt, prisons spokeswoman Andrea Dean said. Dennis
wrote letters to 2 imprisoned brothers, smoked cigarettes and talked with
spiritual advisers about his Christian faith, she said. He prayed at his
bedside Tuesday night.

3 friends of Kyle's also planned to watch the execution, Dean said.

Dennis becomes the 7th condemned inmate to be put to death this year in
Ohio and the 15th overall since the state resumed capital punishment in
1999.

Dennis becomes the 50th condemned inmate to be put to death this year in
the USA and the 935th overall since America resumed executions on January
17, 1977.

(sources: Associated Press & Rick Halperin)



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