Charles Stamper Executed For 3 Murders

Charles Stamper was executed by the State of Virginia for three murders committed during a robbery

According to court documents Charles Stamper would take three of his coworkers hostage and force them into a walk in freezer. Once they were inside the three would be fatally shot. Stamper would steal money from the safe before fleeing

Charles Stamper would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

During his time on Virginia death row Charles Stamper would receive the reputation of being a snitch. He was violently beaten by fellow inmates and would suffer a severe spinal cord injury that left him paralyzed. So when it came time for his execution many believed that since he was now unable to use his legs he was no longer a threat to society however the Governor at the time still wanted the execution to take place

On January 19 1993 Charles Stamper would be executed in the electric chair

Charles Stamper Photos

Charles Stamper

Charles Stamper FAQ

When Was Charles Stamper Executed

Charles Stamper was executed on January 19 1993

How Was Charles Stamper Executed

Charles Stamper was executed in the electric chair

Charles Stamper Case

Charles Stamper, a disabled death-row inmate, was executed in Virginia’s electric chair Tuesday night for the 1978 slayings of three co-workers at the restaurant where he was a short-order cook.

Stamper, 39, was pronounced dead at 11:15 at Greensville Correctional Center, said Wayne Brown, the facility’s operations officer.

Brown said prison guards, at Stamper’s request, held him by the shoulders and helped him walk the last few steps to the electric chair.

As the execution approached, four family members of one of Stamper’s victims waited outside the prison gate.

“I think it’s a shame it took 14 years to do it,” said Clyde Vie, a brother of slaying victim Agnes Hicks.

Four death-penalty opponents also waited outside the prison.

“I’m personally sorry this man is going to be executed, and this is my prayer for him,” said Suzie Hudenburg of Richmond.

Stamper had spent the day visiting with relatives.

Requests by Stamper’s attorneys to halt the execution on grounds there was insufficient evidence to prove Stamper was the trigger man in the slayings were rejected Tuesday by U.S. District Judge James R. Spencer and the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Barry Weinstein, Stamper’s lawyer, appealed to the Supreme Court, which denied the request without comment at 9:25 p.m.

Two men were convicted in the slayings, Stamper receiving the death sentence and his accomplice a prison term.

Weinstein said Stamper should not have received the death penalty “because he wasn’t the actual perpetrator of the homicide.”

A three-judge panel of the appeals court said, however, that Stamper showed no constitutional error in the trial and that he did not show why he failed to Stamper assert his claim earlier.

Stamper had been on death row longer than any other Virginia inmate. He had been in a wheelchair since his spinal cord was injured in a 1988 fight with other inmates.

Leigh Dingerson, director of the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty, said no one in a wheelchair has been executed since the Supreme Court allowed the resumption of capital punishment in 1976.

Stamper’s execution originally was set for last Oct. 28. Gov. Douglas Wilder postponed the execution while a medical team evaluated Stamper’s condition.

https://scholar.lib.vt.edu/VA-news/ROA-Times/issues/1993/rt9301/930120/01200262.htm


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