Jessie Cummings Executed For Melissa Moody Murder

Jessie Cummings was executed by the State of Oklahoma for the murder of eleven year old Melissa Moody

According to court documents Jessie Cummings would sexually assault and murder his niece Melissa Moody. The murder went unsolved until three years later Juanita Cummings confessed in 1994 to murdering Moody Mayo telling police that Jessie Cummings told her to do so or else he would kill her son

Jessie Cummings would be arrested, convicted of both murders and sentenced to death

Jessie Cummings would be executed on September 25 2008

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When Was Jessie Cummings Executed

Jessie Cummings was executed on September 25 2008

Jessie Cummings Case

A bigamist and cruel patriarch, Jesse James Cummings led a life scarred by violence. It came to a peaceful end Thursday when he was executed by lethal injection for the 1991 murder of his 11-year-old niece Melissa Moody. His conviction in the murder of his half-sister Judy Moody Mayo, Melissa’s mother, had been overturned on appeal.

Janell Jenkins, one of Cummings’ ex-wives, said in a statement that Melissa “had her innocence, and then her life” taken from her 17 years ago. “Now, finally, after those 17 years there is justice being done, by the execution of Jesse James Cummings. “And also now no one, especially no female, will ever have to live in fear because of this horrible, horrible man.”

But Cummings, 52, denied his guilt to the end, saying, “You came here to see an innocent man die,” moments before he was injected with the drugs that rendered him unconscious and ultimately stopped his breathing and his heart. While strapped to a gurney in the execution chamber at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary, Cummings said: “I love my family. I love my children. The justice system let me down on this case. It turned a blind eye to truth in this.” Before taking two heaving last breaths, he said, “I forgive everybody involved in this.”

Although the courts upheld his conviction for his niece’s murder throughout the appeals process, Cummings consistently claimed that he had been wrongly convicted. The Oklahoma Indigent Defense System, the Innocent in Prison Project International and others had joined in support of his petition for clemency, which was denied last month.

Oklahoma Attorney General Drew Edmondson said in a statement before the execution: “Cummings was properly convicted and sentenced to death for the murder of Melissa Moody. Appeals courts at every level have upheld this conviction and sentence. My thoughts are with the family and friends of Melissa and her mother, Judy.”

At the time of the murders, Cummings lived in a Coal County household of overlapping sexual relationships. In the small town of Phillips, the polygamist lived with his ailing father; his wives, Sherry and Juanita Cummings; and one child of each woman. His half-sister and niece lived in nearby Tushka. His wives testified that Cummings lorded over their home, employing violence, rape and incest to control his family.

The gruesome murders went unsolved for three years until Juanita Cummings confessed in 1994 to murdering Moody Mayo. She testified that her husband had threatened to kill her son if she did not murder his sister. While Cummings was escorting his father to Oklahoma City for cancer treatment, she carried out his order. When Cummings returned, he and his wives disposed of the corpse. According to testimony, he then sexually assaulted his niece, murdered her and disposed of her body.

Juanita Cummings is serving a life sentence for second-degree murder. Sherry Cummings is serving a 35-year sentence on two counts of accessory to murder after the fact and one count of permitting a child to be abused.

Cummings’ execution was witnessed by a female friend, Atoka County Sheriff Gary McCool, his defense attorney, two spiritual advisers, and five friends and relatives of the victims.

For his last meal, Cummings asked for a bucket of KFC chicken, eight additional drumsticks and a chocolate milkshake.

Oklahoma has executed 171 people since 1915. The state’s death row now holds 77 inmates.

http://www.tulsaworld.com/news/article.aspx?articleID=20080926_11_A10_McALES84383

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