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Murder with one of the following aggravating circumstances is the only crime punishable by death in South Carolina: [14] The murder was committed while in the commission of the following crimes or acts: criminal sexual conduct in any degree, kidnapping, trafficking in persons, burglary in any degree, robbery while armed with a deadly weapon, larceny with use of a deadly weapon, killing by ...
Richard Moore will be the second person executed in South Carolina following a 13-year pause when the state ran out of the drugs needed for lethal injections.
Texas has executed the most inmates of any other state in the nation, and it's not even close. The Lone Star state has put 591 inmates to death since 1982, most recently Garcia Glen White on Oct. 1.
Moore, a 59-year-old convicted of killing a convenience store clerk 25 years ago, was pronounced dead at 6:24 p.m., said Chrysti Shain, spokesperson for the South Carolina Department of ...
The following is a list of people executed by the U.S. state of South Carolina since capital punishment was resumed in the United States in 1976. Since the 1976 U.S. Supreme Court decision of Gregg v. Georgia, a total of 46 people have been executed in South Carolina.
South Carolina has executed 43 inmates since the death penalty was restarted in the U.S. in 1976. Nearly all inmates have chosen lethal injection since it became an option in 1995. South Carolina ...
Richard Bernard Moore (February 20, 1965 – November 1, 2024) was an American man executed in South Carolina for murder. He was convicted of the September 1999 murder of James Mahoney, a convenience store clerk, in Spartanburg, South Carolina.
Moore received the death penalty on Oct. 22, 2001, after a jury found him guilty of murder for shooting 42-year-old James Mahoney on Sept. 16, 1999, at Nikki's Speedy Mart in Spartanburg's Whitney ...