Execution canceled for 73-year-old Idaho killer, on death row for over 40 years, because of vein issue: A 'harmless old man'



The execution of Idaho's longest-serving death row inmate has been canceled after officials were unable to access a vein into which they could inject the prescribed lethal drugs.

Thomas Creech, 73, has been on death row since 1981, when he pled guilty to killing a fellow prisoner. He has also been convicted a total of four other murders in Idaho, California, and Oregon. While in custody, he told investigators that he may have murdered as many as 42 people by the time he was 24, though that number remains in doubt.

Over the years, Creech's execution has been authorized on 12 separate occasions, most recently in January. Though Idaho technically permits executions by lethal injection and firing squad, the state does not have the facilities for a firing squad, so lethal injection remains the de facto option for death row inmates.

At 10 a.m. on Wednesday morning, officials at the Idaho Maximum Security Institution in Kuna began the process to execute Creech via lethal injection. Witnesses were brought into the proper chamber while a handful of protestors, many of them identifying as Christians, stood outside to demonstrate against the proceedings.

It seems their prayers may have been answered as officials tried in vain for 45 minutes to "establish an IV line," said Department of Corrections Director Josh Tewalt. By 11 a.m., the procedure was canceled, Creech was returned to his cell, and his death warrant will be allowed to "expire" as the state now considers its "next steps," Tewalt's statement added.

A statement from Creech's attorneys, members of the legal nonprofit Federal Defender Services of Idaho, slammed the "botched" execution of such a "harmless old man." "This is what happens when unknown individuals with unknown training are assigned to carry out an execution," the statement read in part.

Earlier this month, Creech was granted a hearing before a state parole board, asking the six-person panel to override his death sentence and allow him to die of natural causes in prison. During the hearing, some of his supporters — including former and current prison employees and the Ada County judge who gave him the death penalty — claimed that he was a changed man.

"For me, Tom has become a living symbol for the problems with the death penalty," wrote former state Rep. Donna Boe, a Democrat. "I have no doubt that he has changed and grown as a person, that he has true care and concern for others including the staff who work at the prison, and that an execution would be a tragic waste of life."

According to reports, Creech has developed relationships with prison staff. He also got married 25 years ago. Creech and his wife, LeAnn Creech, shared what they believed would be his last meal on Tuesday night.

Despite his pleas for "grace," the parole board deadlocked 3-3, thereby denying his motion. SCOTUS likewise declined his final appeals on Wednesday morning.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

DeSantis to sign bill lowering death penalty threshold; 'Only appropriate punishment' for child rapists



Florida's Republican governor, Ron DeSantis, is expected to sign a bill allowing the death penalty with an 8-4 jury vote rather than requiring a unanimous vote, Politico reported Monday.

"What happened with the Parkland case ... You had one juror that held out," DeSantis said Monday morning in an interview with Simon Conway on WFLA's "Good Morning Orlando."

DeSantis was responding to the host's question about a bill heading to his desk that would change the number of jurors required to recommend a death penalty. The current requirement is for a unanimous vote. Once DeSantis signs SB 280, the requirement will be a 2/3 vote, or 8 to 4 on a 12-person jury.

The bill would reverse a 2017 law requiring jurors' unanimity in capital cases.

"I think we're doing it fair. What we're doing is what Florida law used to be. Our old, liberal Supreme Court struck that down. Our current Supreme Court, which is conservative, overruled that precedent. So all we're doing is basically returning to what Florida had done historically," DeSantis said.

The Sunshine State governor went on to explain his objection to a single juror having the power to nullify a death sentence decision. He focused specifically, as he has in the past, on the case of the Parkland shooter.

DeSantis took office the year after the 2018 Parkland massacre took the lives of 17 students and staff at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

Instead of describing the effect of the bill as "lowering the threshold" for the imposition of capital punishment, he described it as "protection against ... nullification."

He went on to explain that though prosecutors are entitled to get a "death-qualified jury," meaning that each juror says he or she is willing to vote to administer capital punishment under the right circumstances, there is always a chance that a juror will slip through who has no intention of doing so under any circumstance.

"You have people that, you know, bring an agenda to bear, and they're willing to get on that jury and do that," he said.

"If you don't support capital punishment, I respect that. But the way to deal with that is to try to get the laws changed in the state through the democratic process. It's not to be on a jury and to nullify capital punishment."

"In Parkland, [capital punishment] was the only appropriate punishment. Now, [the Parkland shooter] is going to be in prison the rest of his life. It's going to cost the taxpayers a fortune, for 60, 70 years, potentially. And that's not really justice for the families."

In addition to his comments on the bill changing the threshold for capital punishment, DeSantis also signaled his support for a separate measure that would authorize the death penalty for people convicted of raping children.

"We are authorizing the death penalty for child rapists, which is cutting against recent Supreme Court precedent, but I think we're right on the law and I think the current court would consider a challenge to that," Gov. DeSantis said.

"My view is, you have some of these people that will be serial rapists of six-, seven-year old kids. I think the death penalty is the only appropriate punishment when you have situations like that."

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

Idaho governor signs legislation allowing firing squad executions



Idaho's Governor Brad Little (R) signed legislation Friday allowing execution by firing squad beginning July 1.

"The families of the victims deserve justice for their loved ones and the death penalty is a way to bring them peace," said Gov. Little in a transmittal letter to Idaho's Speaker of the House, Rep. Mike Moyle (R).

"Fulfilling justice can and must be done while minimizing stress on corrections personnel ... For the people on death row, a jury convicted them of their crimes, and they were lawfully sentenced to death."

Idaho's House Bill 186 calls for the director of the Idaho Department of Corrections to determine within five days of a death warrant being issued whether lethal injection is available. available. If lethal injection is available, lethal injection will be used as the method of execution. If the director does not so certify, fails to file the certification, or determines lethal injection is not available, the method of execution shall be firing squad.

In addition, the bill says if a court finds lethal injection to be unconstitutional, the method of execution shall be firing squad.

The legislation applies to all executions carried out on or after July 1.

Pharmaceuticals used to carry out executions by lethal injection have become more challenging to acquire due in part to pharmaceutical companies barring the use of their drugs for that purpose, the Associated Press reported.

The Idaho Department of Corrections estimates the cost to retrofit a death chamber for firing squad executions at about $750,000, CBS News reported.

Idaho became the fifth state to permit execution by firing squad when Gov. Little signed HB 186. Other states allowing the method include Mississippi, Utah, Oklahoma, and South Carolina. South Carolina's law, however, is currently being challenged in court, AP also reported.

Ronnie Gardner, the most recent person to be executed by firing squad in June 2010, chose the method himself, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

How are executions via firing squad carried out?

TheBlaze cautions readers that the following section contains graphic descriptions of death via firing squad.

The death row inmate sentenced to execution by firing squad is typically first bound to a chair with leather straps across his or her waist and head, DPIC explains. Sandbags surrounding the chair are meant to absorb the blood. The chair is positioned in front of a canvas wall.

A black cloth is pulled over the prisoner's head. A doctor pins a cloth over the target, the prisoner's heart.

A number of shooters either 3 or 5, depending on the state, stand in an enclosure about 20 feet away. Each shooter has a .30 caliber rifle with single rounds. One of the shooters is given blank rounds. In South Carolina, each shooter's rounds are live.

Each shooter aims his or her rifle through a slot in the canvas wall and fires. If the shooter(s) miss the prisoner's heart, the prisoner slowly bleeds to death.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

'The death penalty ... is the ONLY just punishment': Allie Stuckey reacts to new details in Athena Strand murder



Tanner Horner, the FedEx driver accused of kidnapping and killing 7-year-old Athena Strand last week, has confessed to strangling the young girl to death because “she was going to tell her father" that he had hit her with his truck, according to court documents.

Horner, 33, told investigators that he accidentally hit Athena after delivering a package to her home but that the little girl was "not seriously injured." Then, he said he "panicked and put her in the van." Video footage captured by the truck's interior camera shows Horner talking with the child inside of the van.

"The Defendant [Horner] stated when he was backing up in his FedEx truck, he accidentally hit Athena with the truck, but she was not seriously injured, [he] panicked and put her in the van. The Defendant stated Athena was alive at that time, talking to him, and told him her name was Athena. The Defendant stated he attempted to break Athena’s neck to kill her. The Defendant stated when he attempted to break Athena’s neck, it did not work, so he strangled [her] with his bare hands in the back of the Fed Ex van," an arrest warrant affidavit said. "During the course of the interview, the Defendant again stated he strangled Athena because she ‘was going to tell her father about being hit by the Fed Ex truck the Defendant was operating."

"The death penalty, if he is convicted, is the only just punishment. It is the only just punishment. It is actually profoundly unjust for him not to get the death penalty," stated BlazeTV host Allie Beth Stuckey on a recent episode of "Relatable."

"If there is any case that deserves the death penalty, it is this. And it is an injustice by the United States of America to not push for the death penalty in cases like this. It would be an injustice by the state of Texas to not push for that," She added. "Federal executions for some of the most heinous murders that you have ever heard of, that is justice. That is not cruel. That is justice. God calls it justice, and you are not, none of us are more just than God."

Watch the video below or find more episodes of "Relatable" with Allie Beth Stuckey here. Can't watch? Download the podcast here.


Want more from Allie Beth Stuckey?

To enjoy more of Allie's upbeat and in-depth coverage of culture, news, and theology from a Christian, conservative perspective, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.

FACT CHECK: No, The Military Has Not Executed Adam Schiff

The congressman has made public appearances

Virginia Votes To Abolish Death Penalty

'Virginia has come too close to executive an innocent person'

Donald Trump Demands Death Penalty for 'Animals' Who Shot L.A. Deputies

President Donald Trump on Saturday called for the death penalty after a gunman ambushed and shot two Los Angeles County sheriffs in Compton.