Kenneth Kenley Executed For Ronald Felts Murder

Kenneth Kenley was executed by the State of Missouri for the murder of Ronald Felts

According to court documents Kenneth Kenley would enter the Blue Moon Tavern and told all of the customers to get on the floor. Kenley would fire his gun and would strike Ronald Felts killing him instantly. Kenley would shoot another person who would survive their injuries. Earlier in the night Kenley had robbed a store and kidnapped the clerk who would be shot and injured when she attempted to escape

Kenneth Kenley would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Kenneth Kenley would be executed on February 5 2003 by lethal injection

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Kenneth Kenley - Missouri execution

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When Was Kenneth Kenley Executed

Kenneth Kenley was executed on February 5 2003

Kenneth Kenley Case

Kenneth Kenley, who murdered a pool player to show he meant business while robbing a crowded tavern 19 years ago, was executed by injection early today in the Potosi Correctional Center. Kenley, 42, was condemned for shooting Ronnie Felts on Jan. 4, 1984, in the old Blue Moon tavern just south of Poplar Bluff, Mo. Felts, a 27-year-old father of two children, was playing pool with friends when Kenley burst in and announced a holdup.

Kenley was pronounced dead at 12:03 a.m. today. Kenley appeared to speak to his relatives and friends through the window separating him from the witnesses. After he lost consciousness, a woman in that group began weeping loudly. Kenley’s execution is the 60th Missouri has carried out under current U.S. Supreme Court rules. It was the first in Missouri since former Illinois Gov. George Ryan emptied his state’s death row last month by pardoning four inmates and reducing the sentences of the 167 others. Missouri has 63 other men awaiting execution at the Potosi prison.

Lawyers for Kenley asked Gov. Bob Holden to commute his sentence to life without parole. They also filed last-ditch appeals with federal courts, arguing that Kenley was mentally unfit to be executed. But Holden declined to intervene about 11 p.m., shortly after the U.S. Supreme Court turned down the appeal. Kenley met Tuesday with relatives. Two cousins, an uncle and an in-law were prepared to witness on his behalf.

Phyllis Manns, who is Ronnie Felts’ widow, and their children, Mark Van Meter and Melissa Felts, all of Poplar Bluff, were to witness from a nearby area for the victim’s family. Regina Sanders, a step-aunt to Kenley, spoke to him by telephone Tuesday. “He said, ‘If they’re going to do it, they’re going to do it,'” said Sanders, of Greenville, Texas. “I asked him why he did (the murder). He said, “I had a death wish.'”

Kenley never claimed innocence. Numerous witnesses testified that he rushed into the tavern shortly after midnight and ordered everyone onto the floor. Aiming his .38-caliber revolver at Felts, Kenley shouted, “I’ll make an example of you,” and shot him in the head. He also wounded the bartender and tried to kidnap the female owner.

An hour earlier, Kenley had robbed a convenience store and abducted a customer, and he shot and wounded her as she fled. He tried to rob a motel after he left the Blue Moon and was arrested later that morning in Corning, Ark., when he tried to switch getaway cars.

Kenley received the death penalty in a trial in Poplar Bluff. A federal judge ordered a new hearing on sentencing, and Kenley was condemned again after a rehearing in Rolla, Mo., in 1994.

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