ATMORE, Ala. — A man convicted of beating a woman to death nearly 37 years ago is scheduled to be executed Tuesday in Alabama in what will be the nation's sixth execution with nitrogen gas.
Gregory Hunt is scheduled to be put to death Tuesday night at a south Alabama prison. Hunt was convicted of killing Karen Lane, a woman he had been dating for about a month, according to court records.
The Alabama execution is one of four that had been scheduled this week in the United States. Executions are also scheduled in Florida and South Carolina. On Monday a judge in Oklahoma issued a temporary stay for an execution in that state, but the state attorney general is seeking to get it lifted.
Lane was 32 when she was murdered Aug. 2, 1988, in the Cordova apartment she shared with a woman who was Hunt's cousin.
Prosecutors said Hunt broke into her apartment and killed her after sexually abusing her. A physician who performed an autopsy testified that she died from blunt force trauma and that Lane had sustained some 60 injuries, including 20 to the head.
A jury on June 19, 1990, found Hunt guilty of capital murder during sexual abuse and burglary. Jurors recommended by a vote of 11-1 that he receive a death sentence, which a judge imposed.
The U.S. Supreme Court denied Hunt's request for a stay Tuesday afternoon, clearing the way for the execution to go forward.
Hunt's stay final request for a stay, which he filed himself, focused on claims that prosecutors made false statements to jurors about evidence of sexual abuse, which is what what elevated the crime to a death penalty offense.