Download Request: Current Document: 7 Time Of Request: Thursday, October 11, 2018 Send To: Subbaraman, Nidhi BUZZFEED 111 E 18TH ST 13TH FL Terms: (Fred Leuchter ) Source: All News, All Languages Project ID: None 15:19:21 EST Page 1 Page 2 Tenn. killer set to die in electric chair USA TODAY September 11, 2007 Tuesday 1 of 1 DOCUMENT USA TODAY September 11, 2007 Tuesday FINAL EDITION Tenn. killer set to die in electric chair BYLINE: Leon Alligood SECTION: NEWS; Pg. 3A LENGTH: 415 words NASHVILLE -- For the first time in nearly 47 years, Tennessee correctional officers are preparing the state's electric chair for an execution. Daryl Keith Holton, 45, who confessed to fatally shooting his three sons, ages 12, 10 and 6, and his ex-wife's 4-year-old daughter in November 1997, is scheduled to die in the electric chair at 1 a.m. Wednesday. Holton chose the electric chair instead of lethal injection, as was his right under state law for inmates whose crimes occurred before 1999. Holton will be the first to die in Tennessee's electric chair since Nov. 7, 1960, when convicted rapist William Tines was executed. Holton has dropped all appeals. Unless a court intervenes, the Army veteran will be electrocuted at Riverbend Maximum Security Institution. Nine other states still use the electric chair: Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Illinois, Kentucky, Nebraska, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Virginia. Since 2000, nine inmates have been electrocuted. The last state to use the chair was Virginia in 2006, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. Holton did not comment on his choice. Dixie Gamble, Holton's spiritual adviser, said Holton chose it because he believes he will die instantly and painlessly. Fred Leuchter, who built the chair in 1989, asked Tennessee Gov. Phil Bredesen not to use it, saying it's been modified in such a way that it will be "tantamount to torture." Leuchter said the voltage specified by the state -- 1,750 volts -- is too low and should be at least 2,000. The state plans to comply with Holton's request. "We are prepared to use the chair," Department of Correction spokeswoman Dorinda Carter said. The chair is inspected and tested quarterly and was tested last week, she said. The chair was modified in the 1990s by Jay Wiechert, an electrical engineer from Fort Smith, Ark. It will work as intended, said Wiechert, who modified controls, increased the voltage and changed protective devices to provide steady, adequate current. For some residents of Shelbyville, the execution will bring closure. Shelbyville Police Officer Rod Stacy was on duty when Holton walked into the police department Nov. 30, 1997. "It haunts me to this day," Stacy said. Holton told police he was angry at his ex-wife for keeping him away from the kids. Neither Holton's family members nor Crystle Holton, the mother of the four children he killed, plan to attend the execution. Alligood reports for The Tennessean in Nashville. Contributing: Sheila Burke, The Tennessean. Page 3 Tenn. killer set to die in electric chair USA TODAY September 11, 2007 Tuesday LANGUAGE: ENGLISH PUBLICATION-TYPE: NEWSPAPER SUBJECT: PRISONERS (90%); CAPITAL PUNISHMENT (90%); CORRECTIONS (90%); CORRECTIONS WORKERS (89%); PRISONS (89%); US STATE GOVERNMENT (79%); ARMIES (78%); LAW ENFORCEMENT (78%); NEGATIVE PERSONAL NEWS (77%); DEATH & DYING (77%); ADMISSIONS & CONFESSIONS (77%); SHOOTINGS (77%); TORTURE (75%); CRIMINAL CONVICTIONS (75%); ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING (73%); POLICE FORCES (73%); SEXUAL ASSAULT (70%) PERSON: PHIL BREDESEN (59%) CITY: NASHVILLE, TN, USA (93%); FORT SMITH, AR, USA (71%) STATE: TENNESSEE, USA (96%); VIRGINIA, USA (92%); ARKANSAS, USA (92%); FLORIDA, USA (79%); KENTUCKY, USA (79%); OKLAHOMA, USA (79%) COUNTRY: UNITED STATES (96%) LOAD-DATE: September 11, 2007 Copyright 2007 Gannett Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved