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Federal officials set May execution date for McVeigh
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) The government has scheduled his execution
date and Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh insists he doesn't
plan a last-minute bid for presidential clemency.
McVeigh, 32, allowed a deadline for resuming that process to
expire last week, and the Federal Bureau of Prisons on Tuesday set
a May 16 date for his execution by injection.
Although he reserved the right to seek executive clemency,
McVeigh told The Buffalo News of Buffalo, N.Y., that he would not
ask for mercy from George W. Bush, who will be inaugurated on
Saturday.
"I harbor no illusions that George 'The Reaper' Bush would
grant me a commutation of sentence, nor would I beg any man to
spare my life," McVeigh, a native of Pendleton, N.Y., said in
response to written questions from the newspaper.
McVeigh's attorneys insisted on Tuesday, however, that their
client still might seek clemency. "That issue is still under
consideration," said lawyer Nathan Chambers of Denver.
McVeigh has 30 days to file a petition for clemency with the
Justice Department, which would make a recommendation to the
president.
Bush is a firm death penalty supporter. During his nearly
six-year tenure as Texas governor, 152 inmates were put to death;
only once did he use his power to stop an execution.
Some survivors of the blast and relatives of people killed
wondered what motivated McVeigh to drop his appeals, with some
speculating that he wants to become a martyr for anti-government
causes or wants to mock the government with a petition for
clemency, knowing federal authorities haven't put anyone to death
in nearly 40 years.
"I just feel like it's his way of controlling things right down
to the very end," said Jeannine Gist, whose daughter died in the
April 19, 1995, explosion.
McVeigh told the newspaper only that he that he did not time his
actions in an effort to engineer an execution date coinciding with
the anniversary of the bombing, but simply withdrew his appeals
under a Dec. 12 deadline.
"On death row, an inmate lives death every day, so no one is
more aware of the factors that weigh into such a decision as the
inmate himself," McVeigh told the newspaper.
McVeigh also reiterated that he does not want his body to be
autopsied. "I was sentenced to death, not to death and
disembowelment."
McVeigh was convicted of murder and conspiracy for the bombing
of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building that killed 168 people and
injured hundreds of others. It was the deadliest act of terrorism
ever committed on U.S. soil.
Prosecutors said McVeigh, a decorated Gulf War veteran, was
motivated by hatred of the U.S. government and a desire for revenge
for the April 19, 1993, deaths of about 80 people in the cult
disaster near Waco, Texas.
Terry Nichols was convicted separately and sentenced to life in
prison.
The federal government has not put a prisoner to death since
1963, when it executed Victor Feguer for murder and kidnapping.
Dozens of survivors and victims already have told prison
officials they want to watch McVeigh die. Authorities said they
will try to accommodate them, possibly with closed-circuit
television.
McVeigh's father, retired Pendleton, N.Y., factory worker
William McVeigh, told newspaper that his son explained his decision
to drop his appeals to the family.
"I guess his feeling is, he knows he's going to die it might
as well be sooner than later."
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