Finished the electric chair
American killer Alan Davis.
Alan Lee Davis
(July 20, 1944 - July 8, 1999)
He was an American murderer convicted of murdering three-month pregnant Nancy Wyler on May 11, 1982 in Jacksonville, Florida and executed by electric chair.
Nancy Wyler was "beaten beyond recognition" by Davis with a Magnum and punched more than 25 times in the face and head, according to reports. He was additionally convicted of shooting Nancy Weiler's two daughters, Christina, age 9, and Catherine, age 5, twice in the face as she tried to flee and then struck her in the skull with the gun.
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Cause of Death Execution by electrocution Criminal Status Acting Intent Pedophilia, Rape, Robbery, Murder (3 Counts)
Involuntary manslaughter
Robbery (2 counts)
Attempted robbery
Davis, who has a long criminal history, was engaged in armed robbery at the time of the murders.. . He later admitted that his primary objective was to rape and kill Christina, kill her sister and mother, and then rob the house.
Davis was electrocuted on July 8, 1999. His death was allegedly botched, with witnesses reporting that Davis was still alive after the power was cut off to Old Sparky. Davis' nose also bled during the execution, although prison officials alleged that this was due to a nosebleed.
Due to the controversy surrounding his execution, Davis remains the last person to be executed by electric chair in Florida. All subsequent executions in Florida have been carried out by lethal injection, although inmates can still choose to be executed by electric chair.
Davis had prior convictions for armed robbery, attempted armed robbery, use of a firearm in the commission of a felony and involuntary manslaughter. He also had a history of child abuse. Nancy Wyler's husband, John Wyler, later called Davis "a deranged animal who should have been permanently caged or killed years before May 1982."
For his last meal, Davis requested a dinner consisting of lobster tail, fried potatoes, half a pound of fried shrimp, six ounces of fried clams, half a loaf of garlic bread, and 32 US fluid ounces (950 ml).
Electrical parameters
According to the licensed electrical engineer who managed the equipment, the amount of electrical energy applied to Davis in three steps:
1,500 volts, 10 amperes, 150 ohms, for 8 seconds (power = 15.0 kilowatts (kW), energy = 120 kilojoules (kJ)) 600 volts, 4.5 amperes, 133 ohms, for 22 (power = 22 seconds, energy = 9.7 .7 kJ) at 1,500 Volts, 10 Amperes, 150 Ohms, for 8 seconds (Power = 15.0 kW, Energy = 120 kJ)
Controversy
Davis' execution gained national media attention in the US after he was electrocuted and bled profusely from the nose.During his time in the electric chair, Davis suffered burns to his head, leg and groin.
A subsequent examination concluded that Davis had started bleeding before the first electrocution. He had been taking blood thinners for an unrelated health problem. It was concluded that the electric chair worked as intended, and the Florida Supreme Court upheld electrocution as a means of capital punishment. However, a dissenting judge published photographs of the incident after the incident in an attempt to argue that executions by electrocution are outdated, and that future executions should be carried out by lethal injection.
In 1999, the state of Florida heard a petition from another death row inmate, Thomas Harrison Provenzano, arguing that the electric chair was "cruel and unusual punishment." As of 2021, Davis was the last Florida inmate executed by electric chair. Since the execution of Terry Melvin Sims in 2000, all subsequent executions have been by lethal injection. However, inmates can still choose to be electrocuted. By 2023, Wayne C. Only Dottie has chosen death by electrocution; He is still alive, and his execution date has not yet been set
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