metro.co.uk

US death row inmate set to be executed by firing squad for the first time in 15 years

Convicted murderer Brad Sigmon has chosen to die by firing squad (Pictures: Reuters/Getty)

A death row inmate is set to be the first person to die by firing squad in the US since 2010.

Unless he is given a last-minute reprieve, Brad Sigmon will be executed at 6pm local time today.

The 67-year-old will be taken to a death chamber at Broad River prison in Columbia, South Carolina and a target placed over his heart.

A hood will be pulled over his head, before three volunteers armed with rifles simultaneously fire bullets designed to shatter on impact with his chest.

Sigmon was sentenced to death for battering his ex-girlfriend’s parents to death with a baseball bat after she refused to come back to him.

He had also planned to kill his ex but she escaped.

Only four other people have been killed by firing squad since the death penalty was reinstated in the US 49 years ago.

Sigmon said he chose this method because he felt the other choices offered by the state would be worse.

FILE - This undated image provided by the South Carolina Department of Corrections shows Brad Sigmon. (South Carolina Department of Corrections via AP, File)

Sigmon beat his ex-girlfriend’s parents to death with a baseball bat (Picture: AP)

His lawyer Gerald ‘Bo’ King said Sigmon didn’t want to pick the electric chair, which would ‘cook him alive,’ and feared a lethal injection would be ‘just as monstrous’ following a series of issues with this approach over recent years.

‘If he chose lethal injection, he risked the prolonged death suffered by all three of the men South Carolina has executed since September — three men Brad knew and cared for — who remained alive, strapped to a gurney, for more than twenty minutes,’ Mr King wrote in a statement.

The lawyer said South Carolina does not release enough information about the lethal drug, which was also behind Sigmon’s reason to avoid it.

‘He does not wish to inflict that pain on his family, the witnesses, or the execution team. But, given South Carolina’s unnecessary and unconscionable secrecy, Brad is choosing as best he can,’ Mr King added.

Death by firing squad has been used to punish mutinies and desertion in armies, as frontier justice in America’s Old West and as a tool of terror and political repression in the former Soviet Union and Nazi Germany.

In recent years, however, some death penalty supporters have started to see the method as a more humane option.

If the shooter hits his mark death should be almost instantaneous.

FILE - This undated photo provided by the South Carolina Department of Corrections shows the state's death chamber in Columbia, S.C., including the electric chair, right, and a firing squad chair, left. (South Carolina Department of Corrections via AP, File)

Broad River prison’s death chamber, where Sigmon is set to be executed (Picture: South Carolina Department of Corrections via AP)

Why does South Carolina have a firing squad?

South Carolina introduced a firing squad option as it struggled to find alternative methods to execute death row inmates.

By the beginning of this decade, the state’s supply of lethal injection drugs was gone and no company would sell more except anonymously, which was not allowed at the time.

Judges would not set execution dates if the electric chair was the only method.

Thirteen years elapsed between executions, and cases of death row inmates started to pile up.

A Democratic lawmaker in South Carolina suggested a firing squad if the state was going to keep capital punishment.

Supporters cited U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, who wrote in a 2017 dissent that ‘in addition to being near instant, death by shooting may also be comparatively painless’.

Sigmon has been close to death before. He had execution dates set three times, but each time it was when the state didn’t have lethal injection drugs and judges halted his death warrant because he couldn’t choose that method.

Brad Sigmon is an inmate on South Carolina???s death row. (South Carolina Department of Corrections/TNS)

Sigmon said he had also planned to kill his ex girlfriend and himself (Picture: TNS)

What crime did Sigmon commit?

Sigmon battered his former partner’s parents, David Larke, 62 and Gladys Larke, 59 to death with a baseball bat to death in 2001.

He was furious his ex Rebecca Barbare wouldn’t come back to him and that Mr and Ms Larke had evicted him from a trailer they owned.

The couple had been in separate rooms at their Greenville County home and Sigmon went back and forth attacking them until they were dead, investigators said.

Sigmon then kidnapped Ms Barbare at gunpoint, but she escaped from his car. He shot at her as she ran, but missed, prosecutors said.

‘My intention was to kill her and then myself,’ Sigmon said in a confession typed out by a detective after his arrest.

‘That was my intention all along. If I couldn’t have her, I wasn’t going to let anybody else have her. And I knew it got to the point where I couldn’t have her.’

The South Carolina Department of Corrections (SCDC) headquarters is seen behind barbed wire fence, where death row inmate Brad Sigmon, 67, will be executed on Friday by firing squad method, at the Broad River Correctional Institution in Columbia, South Carolina, U.S., March 6, 2025. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton

South Carolina Department of Corrections, which is set to execute Sigmon (Picture: Reuters)

Can his life still be spared?

For Sigmon’s life to be spared, either the U.S. Supreme Court orSouth Carolina Republican governor Henry McMaster must intervene

His lawyers have asked Mr McMaster to commute his death sentence to life in prison.

They said Sigmon is a model prisoner trusted by guards and works every day to atone for the killings he committed after succumbing to severe mental illness.

No South Carolina governor has granted clemency to a prisoner set to beexecuted since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976. Since then, 46 men have been put to death in the state.

The state Supreme Court has been issuing death warrants every five weeks.

Two more inmates are currently out of appeals; they will also get to choose between lethal injection, firing squad or the electric chair.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this,check our news page.

MORE: Brit facing death penalty hangs head in shame for ‘smuggling ecstasy into Bali’

MORE: Pilot and passengers wrestle teen ‘armed with shotgun’ to floor of plane

MORE: Donald Trump reveals limits on Elon Musk’s power for the first time

Breaking News

Never miss the biggest stories with breaking news alerts in your inbox.

Read full news in source page