Kenneth Lee Boyd

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Kenneth Lee Boyd (January 19, 1948December 2, 2005) was a murderer who was executed by the U.S. state of North Carolina. He was convicted of the March 4, 1988 murder in Stoneville of his wife, Julie Curry Boyd and her father Thomas Dillard Curry. He was pronounced dead at 2:15 a.m. EST on December 2, 2005 at the North Carolina Central Prison in Raleigh by lethal injection.

After the commuting of Robin Lovitt's death sentence to life just over 24 hours before Lovitt's scheduled execution, Boyd was the 1,000th person executed since the United States Supreme Court lifted a ban on capital punishment in Gregg v. Georgia. Boyd had said he did not want to be remembered as a number and should spend the rest of his life in prison.

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[edit] Murders

After leaving school in the ninth grade, Boyd later joined the United States Army and volunteered for a tour of duty in Vietnam in 1967. Two years later he received an honorable discharge. After his first marriage had ended in divorce, he married Julie. This second marriage, which resulted in three boys, had a series of arguments, separations, and reconciliations.

On March 4, 1988 he went to the house of her father, where she and their children were living, while Boyd and Julie were separated once again. He told police that he found the door unlocked and entered with a .357 Magnum pistol. Seeing a silhouette that he thought was Thomas, he fired and hit him. He continued firing as he moved through the house, finding Julie in the kitchen. While reloading he heard her moan and so shot her again. He fired at anything that moved and then rang 9-1-1 and told police to "come and get me." When they arrived, Boyd emerged from nearby woods and surrendered. He gave a full confession after being read his Miranda warning.

[edit] Trial and appeals

After being indicted on 16 May 1988, he was tried, convicted and received a death sentence for each murder from a jury in Rockingham County. This conviction and sentence was overturned on appeal to the North Carolina Supreme Court on the grounds that a juror was improperly excused after a private, unrecorded bench conference with the juror. A new trial resulted in Boyd once again being convicted and sentenced to death on July 14, 1994. The sole aggravating circumstance was that the murder was committed during the commission of other acts of violence.

Psychiatrists testified as expert witnesses at his trial that Boyd suffered from various mental health issues at the time of the murders. Dr. Patricio Lara said that Boyd suffered from adjustment disorder with psychotic emotional features, alcohol abuse, and obsessive-compulsive personality disorder. Dr. John Warren diagnosed chronic depression, alcohol abuse disorder, dependent personality disorder, and a reading disability. He had an IQ of 77, placing him into "borderline deficiency" region of the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale, one level above "mild mental retardation".

The Supreme Court of the United States turned down Boyd's petition for a writ of certiorari on October 3, 2005. Ten days later, the North Carolina Secretary of Corrections, Theodis Beck, set the execution date for December 2, 2005.

Less than four hours before the scheduled time, Governor Mike Easley denied Boyd clemency. It was just after the Supreme Court of the United States had denied another appeal by Boyd's lawyers.

[edit] Execution

In the early hours of December 2, 2005, Boyd was executed by lethal injection. He was pronounced dead at 2:15 a.m..

In his final statement, he asked that his son and grandchildren be looked after and finished with "God bless everybody in here."

Boyd's last meal consisted of New York strip steak, a baked potato with sour cream, salad with ranch dressing and cola.

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