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Fellow inmate William Van Poyck (July 4, 1954 – June 12, 2013) was sentenced to death for his role in Griffis' murder, and was executed on June 12, 2013. After Valdes' death, prosecutors of the state criminal trial stated that the attack on him was due to a desire to prevent him from discussing mistreatment of inmates with reporters. [4]
Van Poyck is later transferred into the mainstream prison population, where he and four other inmates form an escape plan. Of the five, only Van Poyck makes it out. He hops a train to St. Petersburg and drives a stolen car to West Palm Beach, where he moves in with a friend. When Van Poyck tries to obtain weapons for a robbery, his friend turns ...
Jeffrey Demond Williams: 37 23 14 [14] 13 May 29, 2013 Elmer Leon Carroll: 56 34 22 White Florida [15] 14 June 12, 2013 Elroy Chester: 43 28 15 Black Texas [16] 15 William Edward Van Poyck: 58 32 26 White Florida [17] 16 June 18, 2013 James Lewis DeRosa: 36 23 13 Oklahoma [18] 17 June 25, 2013 Brian Darrell Davis: 39 27 12 Black [19] 18 June 26 ...
Witness to an execution: After watching the execution of William Van Poyck, 'the world didn't seem safer. I was just numb' At a desk in my hotel room, I wrote out the shells of two stories — one ...
The following is a list of people executed by the U.S. state of Florida since capital punishment was resumed in the United States in 1976.. The total amounts to 106 people. Of the 106 people executed, 44 have been executed by electrocution and 62 have been executed by lethal injection.
Jeffrey van Hooydonk (born 1 October 1977) is a Belgian racing car driver. A native of Antwerp , Van Hooydonk began racing karts in 1990 and graduated to open-wheel racing five years later. For the next three seasons, he was successful in Formula Renault , winning the European Formula Super Renault championship in 1997.
Jeff Van Gundy, one of the all-time great NBA on-air game analysts, is reportedly out at ESPN as part of continuing layoffs that have hit every corner of the company. According to Andrew Marchand ...
At least some of the top officials overseeing Kentucky’s response to the opioid epidemic are as open to medications as Merrick is. “My perspective is whatever gets them sober, gets them well, is what we need to do,” said Van Ingram, the executive director of Kentucky’s Office of Drug Control Policy.