The state of Missouri on Tuesday executed Brian Dorsey for the 2006 murders of his cousin, Sarah Bonnie, and her husband, Benjamin Bonnie, after an effort to have his life spared failed in recent days.

Dorsey’s time of death was recorded as 6:11 p.m, the Missouri Department of Corrections said in a news release. The method of execution was lethal injection, Karen Pojmann, a spokesperson for the department, said at a news conference, adding it “went smoothly, no problems.”

The execution of Dorsey, 52, occurred hours after the US Supreme Court declined to intervene and about a day after Missouri’s Republican governor denied clemency, rejecting the inmate’s petition – backed by more than 70 correctional officers and others – for a commutation of his sentence to life in prison.

Dorsey and his attorneys cited his remorse, his rehabilitation while behind bars and his representation at trial by attorneys who allegedly had a “financial conflict of interest” as reasons he should not be put to death. But those arguments were insufficient to convince Gov. Mike Parson, who said in a statement carrying out Dorsey’s sentence “would deliver justice and provide closure.”

  • @pixeltree
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    138 months ago

    Either there is an acceptable number of innocent people that can be executed, or the government never makes mistakes. Which is it?

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      -18 months ago

      This is a poor argument and you know it. It is just a false dichotomy.

      The same can be said about imprisonment, homelessness, slave wages/being poor and dying early.

      No there is no acceptable amount.

      But when people commit crimes that are extremely foul I think there needs to be a finalization. It is wrong to just let them continue

      • @pixeltree
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        18 months ago

        To let them continue what? Commiting crimes? Guess what, we don’t, that’s what prison is for. Far better than killing people because your personal opinion is that they need to die