Harold Lamont Otey was executed by the State of Nebraska for the sexual assault and murder of a photography student
According to court documents Harold Lamont Otey would see the victim Jane McManus sleeping on a porch. Otey would go into the home and steal a number of items. Harold would then go back to the porch and sexually assault McManus before killing her
Harold Lamont Otey would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death
Harold Lamont Otey would be executed by way of the electric chair on September 2 1994
Harold Lamont Otey Photos
Harold Lamont Otey FAQ
When was Harold Lamont Otey executed
Harold Lamont Otey was executed on September 2 1994
How was Harold Lamont Otey executed
Harold Lamont Otey was executed via the electric chair
Harold Lamont Otey Case
The murder was committed during the early morning hours of June 11, 1977, in Omaha, Nebraska. Harold Lamont Otey entered the apartment of the victim and took a stereo set which he placed behind a garage nearby. This stereo was later identified and traced back to the defendant.
The victim awakened when the defendant reentered the apartment. Harold Lamont Otey told the victim that he was going to rob her and that he would rape her. When she resisted he inflicted a knife wound across the top of her forehead. The defendant then sexually assaulted the victim. After the sexual assault the defendant and the *39 victim went to the second floor of the apartment to get her money. There the defendant stabbed the victim a number of times inflicting deep wounds, struck her about the head with a hammer, and strangled her with a belt. The evidence shows that the victim died from the multiple wounds and strangulation inflicted upon her by the defendant.
Harold Lamont Otey was apprehended in Florida in January 1978. On January 28, 1978, he was interviewed there by two Omaha police officers and after proper warnings gave a voluntary statement which was a full confession. The statement was received in evidence and there is no contention here that the statement was not voluntary or should not have been received in evidence.
The information which was filed on February 1, 1978, listed only the name of a police officer at the time it was filed. The case was set for trial on April 5, 1978. On March 23, 1978, the county attorney notified Harold Lamont Otey that the State would ask leave to endorse the names of 44 additional witnesses upon the information. On March 31, 1978, the defendant moved for a continuance which was denied on April 5, 1978. The motion alleged that additional time was required to prepare for trial because the defendant was undergoing psychiatric evaluation and defense counsel had been unable to locate certain possible defense witnesses. There was no showing made as to names of any witnesses, other than a Donald Lawrence, or as to what their testimony would be. The trial court offered to allow defense counsel to disclose in camera what the nature of the testimony might be, but the offer was not accepted.
https://law.justia.com/cases/nebraska/supreme-court/1979/42204-1.html
Harold Lamont Otey Execution
Harold Lamont Otey was electrocuted early this morning when Nebraska carried
out its first execution in 35 years.
His last hope for a reprieve vanished at 7:55 p.m. Thursday when the U.S. Supreme
Court, for the eighth time in 16 years of appeals, declined to take up his case.
Harold Lamont Otey, 43, who raped and killed Jane McManus, 26, of Omaha in 1977, was the first
person executed in Nebraska since serial killer Charles Starkweather in 1959.
Shortly after midnight at the Nebraska State Penitentiary, Otey was strapped into the
same electric chair used to kill Starkweather.
After the Supreme Court rejected the last appeal, Vince Powers, one of five attorneys
who have represented Otey, said he knew of no further action that could be taken in
Otey’s behalf.
“I think it’s over,” Powers said.
“It’s a disappointment.
I don’t like a human being being killed with my tax dollars.
“When I wake up tomorrow morning, Nebraska will not only have drive-by
shootings, but sit-down killings.
We’ve made the big time.” J. Kirk Brown, assistant Nebraska attorney general, told
reporters about 8:30 p.m. that the Attorney General’s Office remained ready in case
Otey’s lawyers filed a last-minute appeal.
“Our obligation is to stay with this case until the execution is completed,” he said.
Brown said a Supreme Court clerk called him at 8:05 p.m. with the news that Otey’s
appeal had been denied.
Brown said he immediately notified Attorney General Don Stenberg, who notified the
McManus family.
1Jean Eden, a longtime member of Nebraskans Against the Death Penalty, said she
was with Otey when he received word about 8 p.m. that the Supreme Court had
declined to hear his case.
“He was called out of the room for a phone call from his attorney,” Shawn Renner,
said Ms. Eden, who recently moved to Madison, Wis., after living 35 years in Lincoln.
“He came back, stuck his thumb down and said ‘6 to 2.’ Everybody was pretty quiet.
I hugged him.” She said Harold Lamont Otey was calm and quiet despite the news.
The only notation on the order was that Justices John Paul Stevens and Ruth Bader
Ginsburg would have granted Otey’s request to delay the execution.
Newly appointed Justice Stephen Breyer did not participate in the ruling.
Brown said the Attorney General’s Office would contact the U.S. Supreme Court and
8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals shortly before the execution to ensure that the courts
had not issued any last-minute stays.
Once the courts gave clearance, Brown said, his office would tell prison officials to
proceed with the execution.
“We’re just moving toward 12:01,” he said.
“It’ll be good to have an end to it.” Harold Lamont Otey gave his final statement to official witnesses at
about 11 p.m. A four-man escort team accompanied Otey from his “death watch” cell in
the prison hospital to the electric chair.
Deputy Lancaster County Attorney David Stempson, one of two independent
observers appointed to monitor the execution, said he spoke with Otey for 25 minutes
Thursday.
“I think personally, and it’s only my gut feeling, that he was holding out high hopes
for his appeals,” Stempson said.
But “As I looked in his eyes and saw his body posture, I had the distinct impression that
he felt the appeals weren’t going to work.” State Auditor John Breslow, the other
independent observer, said a visitor to Otey had brought a prepared will.
Harold Lamont Otey signed the three-part document, and Breslow notarized it.
“When he signed the first signature, he said jokingly, ‘Well, I don’t have to write my
number on this, do I?
‘ ” Breslow said.
Harold Lamont Otey smiled when making the reference to his inmate number, Breslow said, but
otherwise was “as serious as serious can be.” Otey declined his final meal, which would
have been a spaghetti dinner.
Thursday afternoon Gov. Nelson reiterated his resolve to see the execution through.
“While I derive no pleasure in the taking of any human life, the death penalty is the
law in Nebraska, and I support it,” he said.
“We’re all today feeling the pain of carrying out this sentence.” Meanwhile, prison
officials said execution preparations were going according to schedule.
That schedule included tests of the electric chair and support equipment and special
visits for Harold Lamont Otey from his family, friends and supporters.
Warden Frank Hopkins said Otey had a stream of visitors.
2One visitor said there was a line of people waiting to see Otey.
Hopkins would not identify the visitors, other than to say they included Otey’s
attorneys.
He said he did not think members of Otey’s family were present.
Four Witnesses Otey designated four witnesses to the execution: Paula Hutchinson,
an attorney in Lincoln; Alim Abdullah of Lincoln, a Muslim clergyman; Joseph
Munshaw; and Jessica French.
Hopkins did not have a hometown or occupation for the latter two.
“He feels a lot of pain for the visitors, who come to him and say goodbye, maybe for
the last time,” Breslow said.
“You can see it on his face.
He kind of shakes his head.” Among Otey’s visitors was Lincoln radio talk show host
Bonnie Coffey, who aired a half-hour recorded interview with Otey Thursday morning
on Lincoln’s KLIN radio station.
Ms. Coffey said Otey called her Wednesday night and asked her to come because he
was interested in what people had to say about the interview.
She said he laughed at a couple of the more outrageous comments by callers.
Ms. Coffey described Otey as “cool, calm and collected.” Prison officials began
restricting other inmates to their cells beginning late Wednesday morning because of
concerns that inmates might demonstrate.
Otey’s case became a test of Nebraska’s will to carry out the death penalty.
In June 1991, Otey came within six hours of the electric chair before winning a stay
from the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
After the court granted the stay Stenberg said, “I hear laughter across the state of
Nebraska.
It is the laughter of murderers who know they are safe.
It is the laughter of gang members and drug dealers who know they are safe because
they can see there is always some technicality, some loophole that will keep them safe.”
Otey was not the first man given a death sentence after the Nebraska Legislature
reinstituted the death penalty in 1973.
He moved to the front of the line through a mixture of fate and misfortune.
At least two men sentenced before him succeeded in overturning their death sentences.
A third died of a heart attack on death row.
Brown gave two other factors.
“For one thing, his case went to (federal judge) Warren Urbom, and Warren Urbom
gives you decisions,” Brown said.
Other judges seem to take longer than Urbom to rule, he said.
“For another, Otey never won anything,” he said.
“You begin to develop a certain momentum.”
Many Appeals Otey’s legal battle included three state court appeals of his 1978
conviction and sentence, three federal court appeals of the conviction and sentence, a
3state court action challenging his 1991 clemency hearing and a federal civil rights action
over the clemency hearing.
His only success was in 1991, when Lancaster County District Judge Bernard
McGinn granted a stay of execution on the Pardons Board issue.
That stay was dissolved when the Nebraska Supreme Court rejected Otey’s
arguments in May 1992.
The rejection of Otey’s final appeal was the last decision in a 17-year story that
began June 11, 1977.
That day, Jane McManus’ brother, John, found her battered body lying in her rented
house near Ak-Sar-Ben racetrack.
She had been raped, stabbed, strangled with her belt and bludgeoned with a hammer.
After getting leads that pointed to Otey, Omaha police tracked him down in January
1978 at the Florida Downs track near Tampa, Fla.
Over the course of two days, Otey talked with police for more than eight hours.
He gave a tape-recorded, detailed account of the McManus murder and told police he’d
committed at least 10 rapes in six years.
On April 13, 1978, a Douglas County District Court jury found Otey guilty of first-
degree murder in the commission of a sexual assault.
In the KLIN interview, which was taped Monday afternoon, Otey himself offered no
predictions whether he would still be alive today.
“I’m not commenting,” he said when Ms. Coffey asked him whether he still would
be alive Saturday
https://www.laguardia.edu/lesson/files/otey/lexis%20nexis%20otey/otey%2012.pdf