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Robert Wayne Holsey Executed

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Robert Wayne Holsey was executed in Georgia last night after the usual last-minute appeals were denied.  The NBC News story has the following 17 words tucked in, skipping lightly over the reason Holsey received his sentence:

...as the clock ticked down to his execution for the 1995 murder of sheriff's deputy Will Robinson.

That was fast!

The less abrupt part of the story says nothing about Holsey's behavior.  It does, however, go on to blame Holsey's trial lawyer, the defendant's low IQ, and the barbaric people of Georgia:

"Robert Wayne Holsey is an intellectually disabled African-American man who was represented at trial by a chronic alcoholic who was more concerned about avoiding his own criminal prosecution than defending his client against the death penalty," his current lawyer, Brian Kammer, had said before the execution, which was carried out at 10:51 p.m. ET -- an hour after the court rejected the plea.

Kammer had argued that a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in May that found Florida's standard for proving intellectual disability was too strict also applied to Georgia's rules. "We will keep challenging the burden of proof that Georgia requires. It is too heavy," Kammer said late Tuesday night. "It's the heaviest burden of proof in the law and guarantees that the mentally ill will be executed." Holsey's appeals had also argued that he did not have effective legal counsel because his lawyer admittedly was drinking up to a quart of vodka a day. 

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