Jan. 12




TEXAS----execution

Texas carries out nation's 1st execution in 2017


Texas has executed death row inmate Christopher Wilkins, who was convicted of killing 2 men after one of them mocked him for falling for a phony drug deal.

The lethal injection of the 48-year-old Wilkins Wednesday is the nation's 1st execution this year. 20 were carried out in the U.S. last year, the lowest number since the 1980s.

Wilkins was declared dead at 6:29 p.m. local time.

Wilkins explained to jurors at his capital murder trial in 2008 how and why he killed his friends in Fort Worth 3 years earlier, saying he didn't care if they sentenced him to death.

The Supreme Court declined to block Wilkins' execution about 3 hours before the scheduled lethal injection. Wilkins' attorneys had argued to the Supreme Court that he had poor legal help at his trial and during earlier appeals and that the courts improperly refused to authorize money for a more thorough investigation of those claims to support other appeals and a clemency petition.

In their unsuccessful appeal to the high court, Wilkins' attorneys contended he had poor legal help at trial and during earlier appeals and that the courts improperly refused to authorize money for a more thorough investigation of his claims.

State attorneys said courts have rejected similar appeals and that defense lawyers are simply employing delaying tactics.

Wilkins was released from prison in 2005 after serving time for a federal gun possession conviction. He drove a stolen truck to Fort Worth, where he befriended Willie Freeman, 40, and Mike Silva, 33.

Court records show Freeman and his drug supplier, who wasn't identified, duped Wilkins into paying $20 for a piece of gravel that he thought was a rock of crack cocaine. Wilkins said he shot Freeman on Oct. 28, 2005, after Freeman laughed about the scam, then he shot Silva because he was there. Wilkins' fingerprints were found in Silva's wrecked SUV and a pentagram matching 1 of Wilkins' numerous tattoos had been carved into the hood.

Wilkins also testified that the day before the shootings, he shot and killed another man, Gilbert Vallejo, 47, outside a Fort Worth bar in a dispute over a pay phone, and about a week later used a stolen car to try to run down 2 people because he believed 1 of them had taken his sunglasses.

"I know they are bad decisions," Wilkins told jurors of his actions. "I make them anyway."

Wes Ball, 1 of Wilkins' trial lawyers, described him as "candid to a degree you don't see," and had hoped his appearance on the witness stand would have made jurors like him.

"It didn't work," Ball said.

While awaiting trial, authorities discovered he had swallowed a handcuff key and fashioned a knife to be used in an escape attempt.

"This guy is the classic outlaw in the model of Billy the Kid, an Old West-style outlaw," said Kevin Rousseau, the Tarrant County assistant district attorney who prosecuted Wilkins.

20 convicted killers were executed in the U.S. last year, the lowest number since the early 1980s. That tally includes 7 executions in Texas - the fewest in the state since 1996. Wilkins is among 9 Texas inmates already scheduled to die in the early months of 2017.

(source: Associated Press)

**********************

Condemned killer of San Antonio woman loses appeal


The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has rejected an appeal from a man sent to death row for fatally stabbing a disabled woman at her San Antonio home after she refused to give him and his girlfriend money to support their $1,000-a-day drug habit.

Lawyers for 40-year-old Armando Leza contended he was innocent of the 2007 slaying of a neighbor, 57-year-old Caryl Jean Allen, and that his deficient trial lawyers contributed to a Bexar County jury's decision to convict him and give him the death penalty. The appeals court sent the appeal back to the trial court, which held a hearing and recommended the arguments be rejected.

The appeals court ruling Wednesday supports the trial court's findings.

Leza's girlfriend also was charged and testified against him in a plea deal.

(source: foxsanantonio.com)






PENNSYLVANIA:

Still only 7 jurors selected for Easton death penalty case


Attorneys in the death penalty case of Jeffrey Knoble added a juror but they also lost a juror Wednesday.

Jury selection continues in the trial of the 27-year-old Riegelsville man. He's charged with fatally shooting Andrew "Beep" White in March 2015 in the former Quality Inn hotel in Easton.

The total number of jurors holds steady at 7. The attorneys made their way through a pool of 40 prospective jurors on Monday and Tuesday. They started questioning a new pool of 56 one by one on Wednesday.

Jeffrey Knoble is charged with killing Andrew "Beep" White at a Downtown Easton hotel in 2015.

They need 12 jurors and 4 alternates before testimony can begin.

Northampton County Judge Emil Giordano hopes jury selection can wrap up by Friday, allowing testimony to begin Tuesday, Jan. 17.

(source: lehighvalleylive.com)






VIRGINIA----impending execution

Federal judge declines to delay execution over drug controversy


A judge for the US District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia on Tuesday declined to delay the execution of convicted killer Ricky Gray, which is scheduled to take place January 18. Gray's attorneys argued in December that the drugs to be used during the execution were untested and potentially torturous. Judge Henry Hudson concluded that "any discomfort experienced by Gray in the execution process is unlikely to cause serious pain or suffering." He also concluded that the possibility of pain was outweighed by the harm done if the execution was delayed. Gray's attorney, Lisa Fried, stated that "it is unconstitutional ... to carry out an execution that risk chemically torturing a prisoner to death." No other state has used the mixture of drugs to be used at Gray's execution. His attorneys plan to appeal.

Capital punishment remains a controversial issue in the US and worldwide. Last Wednesday the Florida Supreme Court issued a 1-paragraph order informing judges and prosecutors that the state's death penalty procedure is unconstitutional, marking the 2nd such order in 3 months. In October the US Supreme Court vacated the death sentence of an Oklahoma man convicted of killing his girlfriend and her 2 children in a case where the trial judge permitted family members to recommend the sentence to the jury. In May a Miami judge ruled that Florida's revamped death penalty law is unconstitutional because it does not require a unanimous agreement among jurors to approve executions. In April Virginia's General Assembly voted to keep secret the identities of suppliers of lethal injection drugs. In 2002 the Supreme Court held in Atkins v. Virginia that the Eighth Amendment's proscription on cruel and unusual punishment makes the execution of individuals with intellectual disability unconstitutional, which was considered in the Moore v. Texas case. In November, Oklahoma became the 1st state to have the death penalty explicitly added to their state constitution as legal. According to a report by the Death Penalty Information Center (DPIC), only 5 out of 31 states that have the death penalty held executions in 2016.

(source: jurist.org)






FLORIDA:

House panel reviews Supreme Court death decisions


In December, the Supreme Court of Florida ruled that death row inmates sentenced before 2002 would not get a new hearing, while those given death afterwards would, even though all were sentenced under a sentenced under a law declared unconstitutional;. Law professor Michael Allen told the house committee reviewing the opinion that it made no sense whatsoever.

"The Florida Supreme Court's decision to make the rule retroactive to some people but not others, finds absolutely no support in anything I'm aware of anywhere in the country says the law professor.

Prosecutors have opposed giving all death row inmates a 2nd bite at the sentencing apple. State Attorney Brad King, who prosecutes cases in west central Florida says death is the only appropriate sentence for some crimes.

"Sometimes you can only know that difference if you've been a cop like me and been to scenes or been the state attorney and been to scenes, and see the hole that a little girl was buried in, after she was put in a plastic bag alive, after she was rapped and then she was buried and left to suffocate to death and then the question of the death penalty I think becomes a little more real" said an emotional King.

Last Thursday, the state's high court issued an option saying no death cases can be prosecuted until lawmakers re-enact a unanimous jury requirement, but the court quickly withdrew the opinion, calling it premature.

(source: flanews.com)






OHIO:

New details revealed in killing of 89-year-old Northside man


A woman facing the death penalty in the killing of an 89-year-old man told detectives she "snapped" before stabbing him with a large kitchen knife, prosecutors said.

Margaret Kinney, 41, and her boyfriend, 43-year-old Michael Stumph, then used a pillow to try to suffocate Otto Stewart, according to prosecutors.

Hamilton County Assistant Prosecutor Seth Tieger said Wednesday at Kinney's arraignment that the couple wrapped a cord around Stewart's neck, tightening it "like a tourniquet with a letter opener."

Prosecutors say the killing happened Nov. 19 at Stewart's Northside home. Stewart's body was found nearly a month later by his landlord. The couple was homeless and Tieger said they had befriended Stewart, a military veteran.

They lived with him "for a period of time," Tieger said, and were "taking advantage of him."

Prosecutors have previously said Stewart was lending money to the couple, who were homeless, but eventually told them to find jobs and pay him back.

Tieger said Kinney told homicide detectives that "she snapped...got a large knife and stabbed him."

Prosecutors say Kinney and Stumph then took cash and other items from Stewart, including his vehicle.

Both Kinney and Stumph were arrested last month in Kentucky.

At Wednesday's hearing, Kinney's attorneys, Elizabeth Agar and Tim McKenna, entered a not guilty plea on her behalf. Hamilton County Common Pleas Judge Lisa Allen set her bond at $5 million.

Both Kinney and Stumph, who also is being held on a $5 million bond, face charges including aggravated murder and aggravated robbery. Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty against both.

(source: cincinnati.com)



INDIANA:

Judge Lets Death Penalty Appeal Go To High Court


A northern Indiana judge has ruled that a man who faces the death penalty can appeal claiming the state's death penalty law is unconstitutional.

The (Gary) Post-Tribune reports that a Lake County judge made the ruling Friday in the case of 45-year-old Darren Vann, who is charged in the deaths of 7 women. Last year Vann's attorneys made the argument in a case filing but a judge denied their claim. On Friday the attorneys asked the judge if they could appeal the ruling to the Indiana Supreme Court and the judge allowed it.

Officials with the Lake County prosecutor's office said they agree with the judge's ruling but don't object to the defense's appeal.

Lake County prosecutors requested the death penalty in Vann's case.

(source: WBIW news)






ILLINOIS:

The death knell for the death penalty in Illinois


Nobody paid much attention to the date Wednesday and the significance it has in Illinois history. January 11, 2003, then Governor George Ryan cleared out death row in Illinois by declaring it unfair. With the stroke of a pen, George Ryan, a Republican, spared the lives of 163 men and 4 women.

Among liberal groups, he was called a hero. He was even nominated for a Nobel Prize. Among conservatives who like nothing more than a good execution, he was called a closet liberal and other terms too crude to repeat.

Among George haters, and there were and are a lot of them to this day, it was said he made the move to curry favor with African-Americans to taint a jury pool prior to his being indicted on corruption charges. When you think about it, that is a pretty racist statement. To think African-Americans would be so overwhelmed by ending the death penalty that they would give someone a pass is a slap in the mouth to African-Americans.

African-Americans are used to being slapped in the mouth although the sting never lessens. The fact the insult came from many liberals is even more insulting.

I'm not in the hate George camp although it is fashionable to hate him. See, unlike so many who hate the man without knowing him, I know George personally. I know his kids; I knew his wife and I have a deep love for his family. For George, my emotions are mixed and here is why.

When I was a child growing up in Kankakee, Illinois, my neighbor was George Ryan. I lived on Cobb Boulevard in the middle of the block. The Ryans lived up the alley on the corner of Park and Greenwood. We were neighbors and although his kids were younger than me, they were the same age as my young sister so we all knew one another.

I well recall one winter night when I was very sick. I could hardly breathe and had a high temperature. My Mom called Dr. Burnett, our family doctor who would give me a prescription in the morning. I was very sick, so at 2 AM, my Mom called George Ryan.

The Ryans own Ryan's Pharmacies in Kankakee. And George went at the wee hours of the morning and filled a cheap prescription for a young kid who was sick. However, that wasn't good enough. The next day, George Ryan came by to see how I was doing.

I know about all the terrible things that happened with license scandal. I know George inherited the McBroom political machine and continued to use it for power. I know those things and as those who know me know, I am dedicated to ending political corruption.

I also know there is goodness in George Ryan. It may have gotten lost somewhere, but it is there. I know, because I have been witness to it first-hand.

I don't think George Ryan pardoned those people and set Illinois on the path to ending the death penalty. I believe George did it because regardless of all else that happened, there is goodness in George Ryan.

I'm proud to know him, and for those in the future, who want to bash him, remember the story of the sick child and the medicine. That story was not unique. It is uniquely George because he is a good man in spite of the scandal.

If you want to read about corrupt political machines in Illinois, author Jim Ridings has a book out named, Kankakee Confidential. He chronicles the machine Governor Ryan ran, which dates back to Al Capone and perhaps the most corrupt Governor of all, Governor Small, of Kankakee. He has a book about Governor Small named Governors and Gangsters that studies the relationship between Al Capone and Governor Small. Both are an interesting history of Illinois crime where it meets power in Springfield.

(source: Bob Schneider, chicagonow.com)






USA:

Dylann Roof's Death Sentence Is A Tragedy... For A Lot Of Other People


Yesterday, Dylann Roof got the death penalty for walking into a church, being accepted by the African-American congregation, and then murdering them. And once again, America has to look itself in the mirror and consider its comfort with what Justice Blackmun called "the machinery of death."

Most people are going to be pretty cool with it today.

And why wouldn't they be? Finally, we've got someone who deserves the death penalty. A nasty little s**tbag who literally got Burger King after he killed nine innocent people (even if he didn't actually get driven there). Eric Garner gets killed for selling cigarettes and this mass murderer gets a burger. That pretty much sums up justice in America.

Maybe this will balance the scales just a bit.

It won't, of course, but that's how the argument goes. Fundamentally poisoned systems rely on moments like this to thrive - it's what keeps the whole affair from collapsing under its own weight. Offing the unrepentant killer who absolutely, positively murdered these people provides that neat and tidy legitimization of America's barbaric and racist fascination with the death penalty. Roof is a sacrifice at the altar of the death penalty to forgive all of its sins.

Never mind that nationally, African-Americans are around 3 times more likely to end up on death row than demographics would suggest, while other killers are more likely to be shunted off into punishments with a longer life expectancy. Or that miscarriages of justice are supercharged in capital cases because the death penalty is an irrevocable punishment that doubles down on the often racially driven failures of the criminal justice system writ large. Occasionally you can get a few people to focus on these problems. Mostly when innocent folks get exonerated years after the fact and get high-profile media coverage. Those stories plant seeds of doubt in the minds of the public. You can actually see the polls start ever so slightly to shift.

But now, bad people are getting what they deserve again! Who can take any death penalty critic seriously when the face of death row is no longer someone like Glenn Ford - innocent man exonerated after 30 years - but Dylann Roof? Just watch that support for the death penalty tick right back up again. It's the life cycle of injustice - nobody cares about the doing the right thing when it helps the wrong people.

That's why this sentence is ultimately a tragedy. Dylann Roof deserves the worst punishment imaginable. But, as they say, it's not what you do, it???s what you justify. And sentencing Roof to death is going to justify a whole lot of state-sponsored injustice.

(source: Joe Patrice is an editor at Above the Law and co-host of Thinking Like A Lawyer----abovethelaw.com)

***************

Anguish, Rage and Mercy as Dylann Roof Is Sentenced to Death


In an extraordinary culmination to the federal death penalty trial of Dylann S. Roof, 35 family members and friends of his nine African-American victims confronted him directly at a sentencing hearing on Wednesday. Some forgave him with Christian grace. Others damned him to hell. But almost all proclaimed defiantly that his murderous church rampage had failed in its mission to sow division and racist hate.

"The hate that you possess is beyond human comprehension," Melvin Graham, a brother of one of the victims, Cynthia Hurd, told the young white supremacist seated across the courtroom. "You wanted people to kill each other. But instead of starting a race war, you started a love war."

At the close of the nearly 5-hour hearing, Judge Richard M. Gergel of Federal District Court formally sentenced Mr. Roof, 22, to death, in accordance with the verdict that a jury quickly delivered on Tuesday. Although they were not required to do so, most of the jurors who heard the case attended Wednesday's proceedings.

"This trial has produced no winners, only losers," Judge Gergel said. "The defendant will now pay for his crimes with his life. But the trial has not been a futile act because the jury, acting as the conscience of this community, has stated clearly and unequivocally that his hate, his viciousness, his depravity will not go unanswered."

Mr. Roof, who presented no defense during his trial and denied any mental incapacity, declined an offer to speak before Judge Gergel imposed the sentence: death on 18 counts, and life in prison for an additional 15. Mr. Roof, whose case will probably be appealed for years, had no family members in the audience.

Throughout the hearing in the courtroom, where the victims' loved ones spent more than 2 weeks reliving the June 17, 2015, massacre at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, one family member after the next demanded, sometimes with raised voices, that Mr. Roof turn his head to look at them. He refused to do so, sitting as he did through most of his trial as if in a trance, motionless, staring ahead and exhibiting no expression.

"I wish you would look at me, boy," said Janet Scott, an aunt of Tywanza Sanders, who, at 26, was the youngest victim of the attack during a Bible study session. "But I know you hear me."

In legal terms, Wednesday's hearing was a formality, as Judge Gergel was bound by the unanimous sentencing decision of the jury, which on Dec. 15 found Mr. Roof guilty of 33 counts. But it afforded family members, many of them dressed in funereal black, an unfettered opportunity to express the full measure of their grief and fury in ways not allowed when some testified during the penalty phase of the trial. They had been limited then to characterizing their relatives and the impact of their loss, and could not advocate a particular punishment.

Wednesday's session served as something of a reprise, or at least a bookend, to the bond hearing held 2 days after the killings, in which 5 family members stunningly offered Mr. Roof a measure of public forgiveness. They had since learned much more about Mr. Roof, including the vehement nature of his white supremacist beliefs, as expressed in a confession and a variety of writings, and his utter lack of remorse.

At both hearings, nearly 19 months apart, however, the deep faith of the bereaved - and the value placed on forgiveness and repentance by African Methodism - played prominent roles.

"Know that God will forgive you. Know that you can change your life," Daniel L. Simmons Jr., the son of the Rev. Daniel L. Simmons Sr., urged in a preacher's cadence on Wednesday. "Feel that awesome power of God. Feel it. Feel it. Feel it. Feel it."

Sheila Capers, Ms. Hurd's sister-in-law, told Mr. Roof she hoped God would open his heart so that he would go to heaven after his execution. "If at any point before you're sent to prison, you want me to come to pray with you, I will do that," she said.

But just as the group was divided, including within families, about whether Mr. Roof should be put to death, many who spoke could not disguise their disdain. Some said they could not bear to look at him or to speak his name. But others spoke it emphatically, in full - Dylann Storm Roof - as if to hold him to full account.

"To you, Dylann, I know you will be burned in hell," Gary Washington, the son of Ethel Lee Lance, said through a sign language interpreter.

Gracyn Doctor, a daughter of the Rev. DePayne Middleton Doctor, suggested that the killings qualified as "the one sin that I'm not even sure God can look past." Marsha Spencer, a church member, likened Mr. Roof to Judas and described him as a "subhuman miscreant." Tyrone Sanders, Mr. Sanders's father, said he wished the law required Mr. Roof to lose a limb each time he filed an appeal.

And Malcolm Graham, another of Ms. Hurd's brothers, described Mr. Roof as the embodiment of racism. "There's just no place for forgiveness in this community for racism, hatred and discrimination," he said. "There's no room for it. There's no room for him."

Felicia Sanders, 1 of 3 survivors of the attack and Mr. Sanders's mother, told Mr. Roof how she continued to use the Bible she carried that night, only partly cleaned of bloodstains. But Ms. Sanders, in her 3rd round of testimony during the proceedings, said the percussion of gunfire, which began as the worshipers closed their eyes in benediction, haunted her each day.

She could not watch fireworks, she said. She could not hear "something as small as an acorn drop from out of a tree." Mr. Roof and his rampage were constantly in her head.

"Most importantly," she continued, "I cannot shut my eye to pray. I cannot shut my eye to pray. Even when I try, I cannot, because I have to keep my eye on everyone that is around me."

Despite such personal trauma, the speakers vowed that the shooting had bent families but not broken them; had unified their community along racial lines, not rived it; had reinforced their confidence in God, not shaken it.

"You can't have my joy,' Bethane Middleton-Brown, Ms. Doctor's sister, told Mr. Roof. "It's simply not yours to take. You can't have it. So I guess you will spend the rest of your time being angry because you can't have it. The other thing that you will be angry about is because you didn't win."

Then she added: "You couldn't make me hate you. May God bless you."

(source: New York Times)

**********************

With no sincere remorse comes death sentence


If Death lingers in courtroom corridors awaiting sentences, this historic city's federal courthouse was surely a top destination. On Tuesday, the Reaper's patience was rewarded with the jury's return of the death penalty for Dylann Roof.

Roof, who insisted on representing himself during the sentencing phase of his 33-count murder trial, was found guilty last month for the slaughter of 90 black parishioners at Mother Emanuel A.M.E. Church in June 2015.

Roof's self-lawyering is still mystifying when he had at his disposal one of the nation's best death-penalty lawyers, David Bruck, who did represent Roof during the guilt phase that ended last month. Bruck was allowed only to advise Roof during the penalty phase, which began last week, but briefly addressed the judge Tuesday when Roof requested that Bruck address objections.

While the government's case seemed airtight in covering all the requirements for the death penalty, Roof's remarks Tuesday took fewer than 5 minutes.

Wearing slacks and a blue cable-knit sweater - his bowl-cut hair obviously recently shaped - Roof approached the lectern with a single, yellow, letter-sized sheet of paper for his closing argument.

Barely audible - and his pauses were longer than his sentences - he made essentially two suggestions seemingly aimed at creating doubt about his alleged hatred of black people and his intent in carrying out his mission, which he himself previously identified as wanting to incite racial violence.

"I think it's safe to say nobody in their mind wants to go to a church and kill people," he began. Then he contradicted other confession statements that he had to do what he did. "In my (FBI confession) tape I told them I had to do it. ... Obviously that's not true. Nobody made me do it. I felt like I had to do it, and I still feel like I had to do it."

Clarity isn't his strong suit.

Next, Roof challenged the prosecution's claim that he's filled with hatred, one of the statutory-required aggravating factors in capital cases. He referred to his confession when an FBI agent asked him if he hated blacks. Roof's reply was, "I don't like what black people do."

To the jury, he posited: "If I was really filled with as much hate as I allegedly am, wouldn't I just say, 'Yes, I hate black people'?"

Finally, Roof said it's fair to say that the prosecutors hate him since they're seeking the death penalty. Then he tutored the court that people hate because they've been misled. He also said that people think they know what hatred it is, but "they don't know what real hatred looks like."

Does Roof? Is this because some hate-filled person misled him? Or did he merely look in the mirror?

Not once during his very brief remarks did Roof say he regretted his actions, which might have elicited some empathy from those burdened with determining his fate. Indeed, in a jailhouse journal, he wrote that he isn't sorry and that he hadn't shed a tear for the "innocent people I killed."

Tuesday, as he attempted to take on a battery of lawyers hell-bent on ultimate justice, he seemed ever the evil child who, rather than acknowledging the horror and the agony of what he did, was somehow above the process. Expressionless and aloof, as he had been throughout the trial, he was anything but a sympathetic character and certainly no advocate for his continued access to life.

Throughout the proceedings, my mind kept wandering to an earlier case I covered when Bruck was fighting another death penalty - the 1994 trial of Susan Smith, the young mother who rolled her car into a Union, South Carolina, lake, drowning her 2 small children.

The crime was heinous and the trial heart-wrenching. At one point during the father's testimony, the judge had to call for a break because nearly everyone in the courtroom, including the media, was weeping. The father had been talking about his 3-year-old's favorite Disney movie, which the child called, "1-o-1 Dalma-hay-tions."

Susan Smith threw herself across the defense table, loudly sobbing with the agony of regret and the sorrow of inconsolable loss. Yes, she was responsible for her children's death, but there was no questioning her remorse or doubting that her life in prison would be an endless night of piercing pain.

For death penalty opponents like me, this seemed a far more just end than death would have been. With Roof, there's plainly no sense of sorrow now - or to come.

In the end, evidence of sincere remorse, which is to say, humanity, can be the difference between life and death.

(source: Column, Kathleen Parker, Washington Post)

********************

Friends of Slain Pastor React to Death Sentence


The friends of the slain pastor of Mother Emanuel have mixed emotions about the death sentence for the convicted killer and white supremacist.

"The verdict does bring about some closure in the sense that we don't have to be in court every single day anymore," Dr. Kylon Middleton, Rev. Clementa Pinckney's best friend explained. ???It really continues a process that facilitates you know mixed emotions on both sides, because some people are for the death penalty and some people are against the death penalty."

Middleton said it's not necessarily a time to celebrate over the fact that Dylann Roof, the man convicted of killing and shooting 9 Black worshippers at Mother Emanuel in 2015 will get death.

"This is a day that brings some finality to a long, very painful chapter, it's certainly not a day of celebration," Middleton said.

"This is not a jubilant time. This is not a time to say this is a celebration. This is a sad time. It does not end well. We have still lost a loved one," Senator Gerald Malloy, Pinckney's friend and lawyer echoed.

Malloy said it's a very challenging time for everyone involved.

"We have the loss of 9 lives at a church of people that are ages from 87 to 26 years of age. The 87-year-old woman took at least 11 shots in her body," the senator said of the tragedy.

"Senator Pinckney was a great man, one of the most decent people you would ever meet in your life," Malloy said of his friend. "We don't know what he would have become."

Malloy also shared how Pinckney was truly a man who supported the voiceless. He said his friend had great plans for Mother Emanuel.

"I still can't imagine life without him although he's been gone for 18 months. At this point you know giving me a sense of peace," Middleton said. "When I'm still you know kind of taking his children to dance and or piano, and dealing with 2 little girls who don't have a father and a wife who no longer has a husband, there's no peace there."

Middleton said he forgives Roof and is committed to continuing Pinckney's legacy and believes his friend is smiling on them from heaven.

"I think he's smiling when we walked out of the courtroom, although it's still chilly, the sun was shining brightly, I look at all of those things as you know almost a sign, if you will of affirmation," Pinckney's best friend said. "And just him in the universe sort of supporting the fight that we continue and that we're going to continue."

(source: WLTX news)

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