The Justice Department reinstated federal executions in mid-July after a 17-year hiatus.
Nelson,
45, had been sentenced to death for the 1999 kidnapping, sexual abuse
and subsequent killing of a 10-year-old girl, Pamela Butler, he abducted
while she was rollerblading in front of her Kansas home. Nelson
confessed to raping Butler and strangling her with a wire.
Nelson's
attorneys had filed a flurry of last-minute legal challenges to his
execution, including arguments that the use of the drug pentobarbital,
used in every federal lethal injection this summer, violated the Food,
Drug and Cosmetics Act. The appeals court in Washington, DC, ultimately
ordered his execution must move forward despite his claim. They did not
appeal to the Supreme Court.
His attorneys, Dale Baich and Jen
Moreno, said that "the execution of Keith Nelson did not make the world a
safer place. Over the years, we have come to know Keith as someone who
was different than the person who committed the horrible crime to which
he admitted and pled guilty to in 2001. We saw his humanity, his
compassion, and his sense of humor."
When
a prison official standing over Nelson asked him if he had any last
words, he was met with silence. Nelson did not utter a word, grunt or
nod. The official waited for about 15 seconds, his eyes fixed on Nelson,
then turned away and began the execution procedures. Nelson was
pronounced dead about nine minutes after the injection began.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Of course, Nelson is now different from 20 years ago.
Good riddance! Good for the government.
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