US state of Georgia executes man for beating another man to death while trying to steal his car keys

Joshua Bishop in an undated picture from the Georgia Department of Corrections. PHOTO: REUTERS

ATLANTA (Reuters) - The United States state of Georgia executed a man on Thursday (March 31) convicted of beating another man to death with a wooden closet rod in 1994, a prison spokesman said.

Joshua Bishop, 41, who had also admitted to being involved in a second murder, died by injection at 9.27pm local time at the Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Prison in Jackson, said Ms Lisa Rodriguez-Presley, a spokesman for the Georgia Department of Corrections.

His execution marked the third in Georgia this year and the 10th in the United States, according to the non-profit Death Penalty Information Center.

Bishop told the police he had wanted to take the car of a man who was sleeping inside a friend's mobile home after they had been out for a night of partying.

He reached into the pocket of Mr Leverett Morrison, 35, to take his car keys, but Mr Morrison awoke and Bishop beat him with a rod, a court document said.

"I hit him too hard, I reckon, and he didn't say anything," Bishop told police in Milledgeville, Georgia, court records show. "He just wouldn't breathe."

Bishop dumped the victim's body and burnt his car with the help of the man living in the mobile home, Mark Braxley, who avoided a death sentence by pleading guilty.

Bishop was executed after losing last-minute appeals to the US Supreme Court and lower courts.

Bishop was never offered a plea deal, his attorneys said in a clemency petition filed on Monday with Georgia's State Board of Pardons and Paroles.

Bishop has been "haunted by his crimes", his attorneys wrote, asking for his sentence to be commuted to life without parole. The parole board denied his petition on Thursday.

Bishop was heavily intoxicated when he killed Mr Morrison, the petition stated, and had suffered an abusive childhood in which he was frequently homeless and often hungry.

Bishop also confessed to involvement in the killing of Mr Ricky Lee Wills two weeks before Mr Morrison's death, but was never tried on that charge, according to court records.

The evidence of the first killing was not introduced until the penalty phase of his trial for Mr Morrison's murder.

Bishop requested a last meal on Thursday of a barbecue sandwich, Brunswick stew, potato chips, coleslaw, lemonade and purple candy, according to the Georgia Department of Corrections.

On Wednesday, a US appeals court halted the execution of a Texas man who killed his two young daughters in 2001.

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