Texas
inmate Daniel Lee Lopez got his wish Wednesday when he was executed for
striking and killing a police lieutenant with an SUV during a chase
more than six years ago.
The lethal injection was carried out after the U.S. Supreme Court
rejected appeals from his attorneys, who disregarded Lopez's desire to
die and disagreed with lower court rulings that found Lopez was
competent to make that decision.
"I hope this execution helps my family and also the victim's family,"
said Lopez, who spoke quietly and quickly. "This was never meant to be,
sure beyond my power. I can only walk the path before me and make the
best of it. I'm sorry for putting you all through this. I am sorry. I
love you. I am ready. May we all go to heaven."
As the drugs took effect, he took two deep breaths, then two shallower breaths. Then all movement stopped.
The roar of revving motorcycles on the street outside the Huntsville
prison, from a group of bikers supporting police, could be heard as
Lopez spoke, along with rumbles of intermittent thunder.
He was pronounced dead at 6:31 p.m. CDT — 15 minutes after the lethal dose began.
Lopez, 27, became the 10th inmate put to death this year in Texas, which carries out capital punishment more than any other state. Nationally, he was the 19th prisoner to be executed.
Lopez's "obvious and severe mental illness" was responsible for him
wanting to use the legal system for suicide, illustrating his
"well-documented history of irrational behavior and suicidal
tendencies," attorney David Dow, who represented Lopez, had told the
high court. Dow also argued the March 2009 crime was not a capital
murder because Lopez didn't intend to kill Corpus Christi Lt. Stuart
Alexander.
The officer's widow, Vicky Alexander, and four friends who were
witnesses with her prayed in the chamber before a physician pronounced
Lopez dead. At the same time, some people selected by Lopez as witnesses
sang "Amazing Grace" from an adjacent room.
"This has nothing to do with revenge," Vicky Alexander said afterward,
and after hugging more than a dozen police officers who stood at
attention as she departed the prison. "This has to do with the law. And
when you break the law, there's punishment for what you do. He broke the
ultimate law, and he had to pay the ultimate price, as my husband did."
She said as a nurse of 25 years, it was "totally against my grain to see something like this."
"But it's justice for my husband. It is the law. It's part of the system
he believed in and worked for, and society has to have rules to
maintain peace."
Stuart Alexander, 47, was standing in a grassy area on the side of a
highway where he had put spike strips when he was struck by the SUV
Lopez was fleeing in.
Lopez, who also wrote letters to a federal judge and pleaded for his
execution to move forward, said last week from death row that a Supreme
Court reprieve would be "disappointing."
"I've accepted my fate," he said. "I'm just ready to move on."
Nueces County District Attorney Mark Skurka said Lopez showed "no regard
for human life" when he fought with an officer during a traffic stop,
then sped away, evading pursuing officers and striking Alexander, who
had been on the police force for 20 years. Even when he finally was
cornered by police cars, Lopez tried ramming his SUV to escape and
didn't stop until he was shot.
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