The US state of Georgia executed its oldest death row inmate on
Wednesday, just days before his 73rd birthday, in a move critics
denounced as emblematic of capital punishment's excesses.
Brandon Jones received a lethal injection at a state prison in Jackson, a corrections spokesman told AFP.
The African American man had spent more than 36 years behind bars for the 1979 murder of a white convenience store clerk.
His lawyers had launched last-minute appeals to halt the execution, including with the US Supreme Court, but they were rejected.
Critics
point to his case as an example of the "double punishment" faced by
some death row prisoners, spending decades in solitary confinement with
no prospects but death.
Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer spoke
out last year against "unconscionably long delays that undermine the
death penalty's penological purpose."
Electric chair
Death
penalty opponents note that many death row inmates were sentenced to
death at a time when they lacked a satisfactory defense system and that
if they were tried today, the outcome would be different.
"Jones's
case raises questions of proportionality and discriminatory application
of the death penalty," the Death Penalty Information Center said in a
statement.
"He and his co-defendant Van Solomon, both African
American were sentenced to death for killing a white gas station store
clerk during a robbery. "Jones denies shooting the clerk and prosecutors never determined who fired the fatal shot."
Solomon died on the electric chair in 1985. A judge had ordered Jones to be resentenced because jurors had a Bible in the room during deliberations over his punishment.
During the decades he spent behind bars, Jones read a lot and become known for his writings on prison life and issues of race. There
are now 75 men on death row in Georgia, which suspended executions for
several months in 2015 in response to a controversy over the drugs used
in its lethal injections.
The United States executed 28 people last year, the lowest number since 1991.
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