Nichols Spared Death as Jury Deadlocks
NewsMax Wires
Saturday, June 12, 2004
McALESTER, Okla. -- Convicted Oklahoma City bombing
conspirator Terry Nichols was spared the death penalty Friday by
jurors who convicted him of 161 counts of murder but deadlocked
over his sentence.
The impasse in the state trial is the second time prosecutors
have been denied the death penalty against Nichols, who was
sentenced to life in prison in 1998 after federal jurors also could
not agree on his punishment.
Jurors announced they were at an impasse after deliberating for
about 19{ hours over three days. Nichols will be sentenced by Judge
Steven Taylor, who is required by law to sentence Nichols to life
in prison.
The deadlock was a blow to state prosecutors and victims' family
members who said death was the appropriate punishment for the
bombing of the Oklahoma City federal building.
The jurors deliberated over Nichols' sentence after a week of
emotional testimony in the trial's sentencing phase. Nichols faced
sentences of life in prison or death by lethal injection on state
murder convictions.
The jury convicted Nichols of 161 state murder counts May 26.
Taylor set the sentencing for Aug. 9.
Nichols, 49, escaped the death chamber after a federal trial in
the late 1990s in which he was acquitted of murder but convicted of
conspiracy and involuntary manslaughter in the deaths of eight
government agents. Oklahoma prosecutors then brought him to trial
for the deaths of the other victims, including one fetus, with
hopes of winning a death sentence.
The April 19, 1995, bombing killed 168 people and wounded 500.
Timothy McVeigh, Nichols' former Army buddy and the mastermind of
the bombing, was convicted of federal charges and executed in 2001
for what was the deadliest terrorist attack on American soil at the
time.
Prosecutors said the blast was a twisted attempt to avenge the
deaths of about 80 people who died in the government siege at the
Branch Davidian compound in Waco, Texas, exactly two years earlier.
They said Nichols helped build the two-ton bomb _ made from farm
fertilizer and fuel oil _ that was packed into a Ryder truck and
detonated outside the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building.
During closing arguments in the sentencing phase, prosecutor
Suzanne Lister called the bombing "one of the darkest, ugliest
days in American history."
"Think about the number of dreams, the number of plans and the
number of loved ones that Terry Nichols destroyed on April 19,
1995," Lister said. "Think of them as individual human beings.
One-hundred-sixty-one. Nineteen children. Some of their bodies are
torn beyond recognition. Some are decapitated."
Defense attorneys argued Nichols found God in the past four
years and has corresponded with prayer partners and made cards for
his children. They showed jurors childhood photos of Nichols
feeding his pets and clowning with his brothers and sisters.
Just before the start of deliberations, defense attorney
Creekmore Wallace stood behind Nichols, put his hands on his
shoulders and asked jurors to spare his life.
"This case is about one person, this man, Terry Lynn Nichols,
and whether you will take his life," Wallace said. "It's about
whether you will kill Terry Lynn Nichols, the man."
Prosecutors put on 65 witnesses during the sentencing phase,
including bombing survivors and victims' relatives. The defense
called several Nichols family members in arguing that he deserves a
chance for redemption.
Nichols was home in Herington, Kan., the day of the bombing. But
prosecutors presented a mountain of circumstantial evidence that
Nichols and McVeigh worked side-by-side to carry out the attack.
They said Nichols bought the fertilizer, stole detonation cord,
blasting caps and other materials, and helped finance the plot by
robbing a gun dealer.
Defense attorneys maintained that Nichols was the fall guy for a
shadowy conspiracy far wider than the government has acknowledged.
Nichols surrendered two days after the bombing _ the same day
President Clinton vowed: "Justice for these killers will be
certain, swift and severe. We will find them, we will convict them,
and we will seek the death penalty against them."
Nichols was first brought to trial in federal court in 1997. He
was sentenced to life in prison in 1998 after the jury deadlocked
on a death sentence.
In 1999, Oklahoma prosecutors charged Nichols with 161 counts of
murder with the goal getting the death sentence Nichols escaped in
federal court.
His Oklahoma trial began in March and lasted more than three
months. Judge Steven Taylor earlier moved the case 130 miles from
Oklahoma City to McAlester because of the difficulty in finding an
impartial jury in the city where passions still run high over the
bombing.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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