Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH
05.19.2009 5:56 pm

Jay Nixon denies clemency, explains reasons

Post-Dispatch Jefferson City Bureau
  • Email this
  • Print this
Skillcorn

Skillcorn

JEFFERSON CITY — Gov. Jay Nixon won’t step in to stop the execution of Dennis Skillicorn.

In a statement released late today, Nixon said he was denying Skillicorn’s clemency petition. Skillicorn is scheduled to die at 12:01 a.m. tomorrow for the murder of Richard Drummond of Excelsior Springs.

Skillicorn would be the first person executed in Missouri since 2005.

The governor, who strongly supported the death penalty when he was attorney general, said he took into account Skillicorn’s three other murder convictions.

Here is Nixon’s statement:

“Early this morning, I received from my counsel a final briefing on the petition for clemency from Dennis Skillicorn, which has been reviewed in detail. After careful deliberation, I have denied this petition.

As Governor, this is a power and a process I do not take lightly, particularly in capital punishment cases. Each instance involves a very specific set of facts, which must be considered on its own.

At the time he murdered Richard Drummond, Dennis Skillicorn was out on parole for another murder in Missouri. The jury that recommended the death sentence for Dennis Skillicorn took that previous murder conviction into consideration as an aggravating circumstance. The jury also took into account during the sentencing phase the fact that Richard Drummond was kidnapped and robbed before he was murdered.

After more than a decade of legal challenges, both the conviction and the death sentence of Dennis Skillicorn have held up under extensive judicial review by the state and federal courts.

The two murders for which Dennis Skillicorn was convicted in Missouri are not his only murder convictions. He also received life sentences after pleading guilty to murdering an Arizona couple in 1994, a few days after the Drummond murder.

These factors were taken into consideration in the clemency process and played a significant role in my decision. The jury that convicted Dennis Skillicorn determined that he deserved the most severe punishment under Missouri law, and my decision on clemency upholds the jury’s action.

Finally, I ask that Missourians remember Dennis Skillicorn’s victims at this time – Richard Drummond, Joseph and Charlene Babcock, and Wendell Howell – and keep their families and friends in their thoughts and prayers.”

7 comments

Comments are closed.

Way to go Governor Nixon!

— Si Vis Pacem Para Bellum
8:23 pm May 19th, 2009

Nixon would inject the needle himself if he could. He’s just that kinda guy.

— St Louis Oracle
8:33 pm May 19th, 2009

This is the worst part of an otherwise pretty good job. I don’t envy anyone with the power of clemency. I wish them wisdom, grace and fortitude.

— selwyn
8:34 pm May 19th, 2009

Being a pro-life GOP dangerous extremist myself, I am against the death penalty and I thought all Democrats were since they have ceaselessly attacked Bush for eight years for doing this as Gov. of Texas. Boy the Dems are so silent on Nixon doing it this time. I remember how they acted with Blunt.

— A CENTRIST
9:17 pm May 19th, 2009

Well, Centrist, if it makes you happy - count me in as a Democrat who is disappointed by this.

But, I can’t say I’m the lease bit surprised, either. Just a few years ago, as AG he argued all the way up to the Supreme Court in defense of the death penalty.

So, he’s not perfect. But I’m still happy that I voted for him, no question.

— ell
9:24 am May 20th, 2009

I am extremely saddened by this. It is a shame that a governor would allow for the state to murder a human being. The death penalty has never been a deterrent to crime and so many innocent people have been executed that the policy should truly be done away with.

In 50 years, young people are going to look back at the days of capital punishment and wonder how we could have been such savages.

— Cathryn
12:53 pm May 20th, 2009

I am appalled at the debased culture we live in where there is little or no regard for the victims..Dennis Skillicorn made his decision and lot in life. Execution is punishment for his crime-you lose “human rights” when you do something inhuman-life is full of choices…as far as capital punishment being racist, more whites were executed nationwide than blacks according the Justice Departments website…

— Jim
3:18 pm June 16th, 2009