HUNTSVILLE, Texas — A Texas man was executed Tuesday evening, 13 years to the day of a convenience store robbery in which he set a clerk on fire in a Dallas suburb.
Matthew Lee Johnson, 49, received a lethal injection at the state penitentiary in Huntsville. He was condemned for the May 20, 2012, attack on 76-year-old Nancy Harris, a great-grandmother he splashed with lighter fluid and set ablaze in the suburb of Garland. Badly burned, she died days afterward.
Asked by the warden if he had a final statement, Johnson turned his head and looked at his victim's relatives, watching through a window close by.
''As I look at each one of you, I can see her on that day,'' he said, speaking slowly and clearly. ''I please ask for your forgiveness. I never meant to hurt her.'' He added, "I pray that she's the first person I see when I open my eyes and I spend eternity with.''
''I made wrong choices, I've made wrong decisions, and now I pay the consequences,'' said Johnson, who also asked forgiveness from his wife and daughters.
There was little reaction from Harris' relatives — three sons, two daughters-in-law and a granddaughter — who witnessed the execution and declined to speak with reporters afterward.
As the lethal dose of the sedative pentobarbital began taking effect, Johnson gasped several times, then made repeated sounds like snoring. Within a minute, all movement stopped. He was pronounced dead at 6:53 p.m. CDT, 26 minutes after the drugs began flowing into his arms.
Johnson's execution was the second carried out Tuesday in the United States. Hours earlier in Indiana, Benjamin Ritchie received a lethal injection for the 2000 killing of a police officer.