Death Row: Not So Deadly

Page 1

SAVINGS INSIDE

NEVADA â—† B1

MAN FACES 20 CHARGES OF KIDNAPPING, SEXUAL ABUSE

$749 Smart Source of $133, Redplum of $94

Sunday, December 6, 2015

Students at Sun Youth Forum say education is top priority

Las Vegas Review-Journal š D[lWZWÊi BWh][ij D[mifWf[h š Leb$ '''" ?iik[ (+& š $3

NEVADA CAPITAL PUNISHMENT

DEATH ROW ECONOMIC ENGINE

Expert sees edge in race for plant NLV in running for electric car factory By Richard N. Velotta BWi L[]Wi H[l_[m#@ekhdWb

Economic policy expert Robert Lang sees a day in the not-too-distant future when attendees of the International Consumer Electronics show will sign up for a special tour to North Las Vegas to see Faraday Future’s new electric car manufacturing plant at Apex. After all, Lang reasons, the Faraday Future will be more like a smartphone on wheels than any kind of transportation on the road today. And the thousands of people who travel to Las Vegas every year for CES will want to get a look at the technology they might be parking in their garages in a few years, just as they flocked to Las Vegas to see the first video-cassette recorder, the first compact disc and the first digital video recorder. “Why not?� asked Lang, the director of Brookings Mountain West at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. “That’s what the show is all about. And it’s thousands of people coming to Las Vegas, every year.� Lang firmly believes Nevada holds the edge in the sweepstakes to bring what would be a $1 billion economic engine to the Las Vegas Valley. It will come in the form of a new industry that would probably be a game-changer for whichever location is selected by the company sometime in the next three weeks.

NOT SO DEADLY Below are some death row inmates convicted in high-profile Clark County murder cases who are awaiting execution at Ely State Prison.

Donte Johnson

Kevin Lisle

Marlo Thomas

Travers Greene

Donte Johnson, 36, fatally shot Tracey Gorringe, 20, Matthew Mowen, 19, Jeffrey Biddle, 19, and Peter Talamantez, 17, in a Las Vegas home robbery in 1998.

44, fatally shot Justin Lusch, 19, the son of a former police chief, and in a separate incident, Bishop Gorman High School student Kip Logan, 19, on U.S. Highway 95 in 1994.

42, stabbed to death two employees in 1996 at a restaurant where he had lost his job as a dishwasher, Carl Dixon, 23, of North Las Vegas and Matthew Gianakis, 21, of Las Vegas.

39, fatally shot Deborah Michelle Farris, 18, and her fiancĂŠ, Christopher True Payton, 19, while the couple was camping near Sunrise Mountain in 1994.

Beau Maestas

Ammar Harris

Zane Floyd

32, attacked two children in Mesquite in 2003 because he believed their mother’s boyfriend had sold him salt instead of methamphetamine, killing Kristyanna Cowan, 3, and paralyzing Brittney Bergeron Himel, then 10.

29, fatally shot Kenneth Cherry, Jr., 27, while both were driving on the Strip in 2013, triggering a car crash that killed taxi cab driver Michael Boldon, 62, and his passenger Sandra Sutton-Wasmund, 48, of Maple Valley, Wash.

40, after losing his job and other personal setbacks, walked into a Las Vegas Albertsons and fatally shot four employees: Lucy Tarantino, 60, Thomas Darnell, 40, Carlos “Chuck� Leos, 41, and Dennis Troy Sargent, 31, in 1999.

Joseph Weldon Smith

Jose Echavarria

Robert Byford

Patrick McKenna

Richard Haberstroh

45, drove Monica Wilkins, 18, to the desert, where he shot her and burned the body in 1991.

69, strangled and killed his cellmate Jack Nobles, 20, at the Clark County jail in 1979.

60, raped, choked and killed Donna Kitowski, 20, after he kidnapped her from a Las Vegas Albertsons in 1986.

75, struck his wife, Judith Smith, 47, and stepdaughters, Wendy Jean Cox, 20, and Kristy Cox, 12, with a hammer and strangled and killed them at their home at a gated community in Henderson in 1990.

SEE PLANT, A4

54, fatally shot Las Vegas FBI agent John Bailey, 47, during a bank robbery in 1990.

PHOTOS PROVIDED BY NEVADA CORRECTIONS DEPARTMENT

Disease, suicide kill more inmates than executions By Sean Whaley Review-Journal Capital Bureau

C

Apex Industrial Park in North Las Vegas might be in the running for Faraday Future’s new electric car manufacturing plant. Advantages of the location include easy interstate highway and rail access to Southern California ports and an easily accessible international airport with direct flights to just about anyplace in the world.

ARSON CITY — It’s called death row. The place where Nevada’s worst of the worst spend 22 hours or more each day in solitary cells, waiting for the call that means they will be

executed by lethal injection for their heinous crimes. But for Nevada’s approximately 80 death row inmates at Ely State Prison, it is a place where they are more likely to die of disease or suicide than be executed. Lengthy appeals, the lack of a suitable execution chamber,

debates over the drugs used to administer the death penalty and defense attorneys who diligently represent their clients all factor into why Nevada has not executed an inmate in almost a decade. Despite a reputation for being SEE DEATH ROW, A23

LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL

WEATHER

LIFE

TODAY

MON

TUE

61°/42°

64°/44°

68°/48°

SPORTS

Complete forecast, A25 Books ............ F5 Business .......D1 Classified .......J1 Movies .......... F6 Obituaries .....B4

Puzzles..........D5 Real Estate....H1 Television......D6 Travel ............ F7 Viewpoints.... E1

Celebrations remind us of Sinatra’s impact

Bishop Gorman claims seventh straight title

On what would have been Frank Sinatra’s 100th birthday today, we look back on Ol’ Blue Eyes’ career that spanned more than four decades and forever changed the Las Vegas landscape. F1

Biaggio Ali Walsh rushed for 255 yards and three touchdowns as Bishop Gorman rolled to a 62-21 win over Liberty for its seventh straight Division I state championship. C1


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Death Row: Not So Deadly by Las Vegas Review-Journal - Issuu