A Greenville County inmate will be the first person to face execution in South Carolina since 2011.
Freddie Eugene Owens, 46, was ordered to be executed on Sept. 20 after spending more than 20 years on death row, the South Carolina Department of Corrections announced.
Owens was served with the order Friday evening.
Under state law, Owens is allowed to elect the method of execution. The Department of Corrections said he will be allowed to choose between lethal injection, firing squad and the electric chair 14 days prior.
Owens was convicted of murder, armed robbery and criminal conspiracy. He was sentenced to death in 1999 after robbing and killing a Greenville convenience store employee, Irene Graves, in 1997.
Earlier this year, the state Supreme Court ruled that all of South Carolinaâs execution methods are constitutional. The ruling allowed state executions to resume. The state has 33 people waiting to be executed, The State previously reported. Several of those awaiting execution have exhausted their appeals.
The case came before the court after four death row inmates, including Owens, brought a lawsuit in Richland County more than two years ago. It argued that the two methods of execution at the time â electrocution and firing squad â were unconstitutional.
âThe state did not âinflictâ an âunusual punishmentâ as the section prohibits. Rather, the state gave inmates a choice, and âchoiceâ is not âunusualâ under our constitution,â Justice John Few wrote in the majority opinion.
In 2022, state Judge Jocelyn Newman had ruled executions by electrocution and firing squad were unconstitutional, citing the state Constitution, which bars âcruel,â âcorporalâ and âunusualâ punishment. In February, Associate Justice John Kittredge said Newmanâs argument was âriddled with errors.â
The electric chair recently became the stateâs default method of execution.
Before that, it was lethal injection. But the Department of Corrections had trouble getting the drugs until Gov. Henry McMaster signed a âshieldâ law, which allows the state to keep the pharmaceutical companies involved in the transactions secret.
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