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There are presently two men on death row in Montana: [52] William Jay Gollehon and Ronald Allen Smith. Both men have been on death row for more than three decades. In 1983, Ronald Allen Smith was sentenced to death for two counts of aggravated kidnapping and two counts of deliberate homicide for murdering two Native American men while on LSD. [53]
Edenfield is the oldest death row inmate in Georgia. Tiffany Moss: Murdered her stepdaughter, 10-year-old Emani Moss. 5 years, 239 days Moss is the only female death row inmate in Georgia. Michael Nance: Robbed a bank and committed murder during a carjacking. 27 years, 90 days Lyndon Fitzgerald Pace
The following is a list of people executed by the U.S. state of Montana since capital punishment was resumed in 1976. A total of 3 people convicted of murder have been executed since the Gregg v. Georgia decision. They were all executed by lethal injection. Terry Langford and David Dawson waived their appeals and asked that their executions be ...
As of January 2024, there were nearly 2,200 prisoners facing the death penalty in state cases, according to the center, which states the death row population has been declining over the last 20 years.
An inmate in the Riverbend Maximum Security Institution, Dotson has been on death row since he was sentenced to death six times over in connection with the 2008 murders in the Binghampton area.
Of the 40 prisoners on federal death row, only three were not given commutations on their sentences. Here's what to know about those men: President Joe Biden speaks Dec. 16 as he visits the ...
List of death row inmates in the United States; List of juveniles executed in the United States since 1976; List of most recent executions by jurisdiction; List of people executed in the United States in 2024; List of people executed in Texas, 2020–present; List of women executed in the United States since 1976
A number of states collect some form of death data from all their jails. In others, the reporting process is far from comprehensive. Some, like Texas, collect information from counties but not from municipalities. Others, like Louisiana, only track deaths of inmates in state custody — a tiny fraction of the jail population.