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Thread: Ernest John Dobbert, Jr. - Florida Execution - September 7, 1984

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    Administrator Heidi's Avatar
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    Ernest John Dobbert, Jr. - Florida Execution - September 7, 1984

    Facts of Crime: Dobbert was arrested in 1972 for beating and choking his nine-year-old daughter to death. Subsequent evidence also linked him with the murder of his seven-year-old son and the torture of two other children, ages five and eleven. A jury convicted Dobbert on all counts, but recommended life imprisonment instead of death, jurors voicing uncertainty over Dobbert's alleged intent to kill the children. The presiding judge used his option to override the jury's recommendation, and Dobbert was sentenced to die. His appeals exhausted, the child killer was executed in the electric chair on September 7, 1984. Governor Bob Graham told the press, "Ernest Dobbert has been executed because of his brutal actions toward his own children. I hope that this indication of the seriousness of child abuse will be an example of the value which the people of Florida place upon the lives of infants and young people in our state."

    Victims: Kelley Dobbert and Ryder Dobbert

    Time of Death: 10:09 am

    Manner of execution: Electric Chair

    Last Meal: None

    Final Statement: None

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    Senior Member Frequent Poster joe_con's Avatar
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    September 7, 1984

    Ernest John Dobbert Jr. executed

    By KENNETH A. SOO
    United Press International

    STARKE, Fla. -- Ernest John Dobbert Jr., called 'the most hated man on Florida's death row' for the torture deaths of his young daughter and son, went to his death in the electric chair as 20 people outside the prison cheered and applauded.

    Dobbert, 46, was pronounced dead at 10:09 a.m. EDT after the Supreme Court denied his last-minute appeal. He accepted his death calmly with a tight-lipped smile and made no final statement.

    Prison Superintendent Richard Dugger asked, 'Ernest Dobbert, do you have any last words?'

    'No, No,' Dobbert said, shaking his head.

    Then Dobbert, who said he had become a born-again Christian, winked twice at the Rev. Melvin Biggs of Lynchburg, Va., and his attorney, William P. White, an assistant puiblic defender from Jacksonville, Fla.

    He mouthed several words at the two which looked like, 'I love you.'

    As the power was turned on, Dobbert's fists clenched and then became progressively purple. His head and legs shaved and barefoot, Dobbert wore a new navy blue suit and white shirt.

    Outside the sprawling lime-green prison, about 20 pro-death penalty activities cheered and applauded when the execution was announced. About 30 anti-capital punishment protesters gathered nearby and sang hymns.

    There was a sign in a late-model car following the hearse that carried Dobbert's boby which said, 'When murderers die, justice lives.'

    Dobbert, a former tire recapper, spent his final hours with his family, including his 17-year-old daughter -- the sister of the two children he killed. He refused a final meal.

    Dobbert was the sixth man executed in Florida's oaken electric chair this year and the eighth to die in the state since the Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976. He was the 23rd executed in the United States since the ban was lifted.

    Dobbert, a lanky, 200-pound native of Milwaukee, Wis., was convicted of first-degree murder for strangling his daughter, Kelly Ann, 9, Dec. 31, 1971, and sentenced to death. He also was convicted of second-degree murder for the death of his son, Ryder, 7, who died two months after Kelly Ann as the result of constant beatings.

    Dobbert, who had claimed to be a victim of child abuse himself, had been scheduled to be part of a double execution Thursday. But he received a stay until today, and Nollie Lee Martin, also a convicted killer, was granted an indefinite delay while his appeal was heard.

    The Supreme Court, with Justices Thurgood Marshall and William Brennan dissenting, rejected Dobbert's final appeal at 1:30 a.m. in Washington. Prison spokesman Vernon Bradford said Dobbert 'was calm and resigned' when he heard the court's decision.

    'I think he probably anticipated the decision. I think he felt that way yesterday when the appeals court turned him down,' Bradford said.

    Dobbert, who had been scheduled to die in Florida's electric chair twice before, was turned down by the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta late Thursday and attorneys had rushed his case to the nation's highest court.

    The Atlanta appeals court allowed a temporary stay it had granted Dobbert earlier in the week to expire at 10 a.m. today and state prison officials set his execution for that hour.

    Dobbert's history of venting his violent rages on his children made him 'the most hated man on Florida's Death Row,' officials said. Dobbert admitted beating his children, but denied killing any of them.

    Bradford said Dobbert made no request for a special meal and when a breakfast of chipped beef on toast was brought to him, he turned it down.

    He was visited late Thursday and early today by several family members including his mother Catherine Dobbert; sister Katherine Sartore; and 17-year-old daughter Honore. She was the little girl who Dobbert abandoned on the steps of a Fort Lauderdale, Fla., hospital when she was 5 while he was fleeing police following the murders.

    Also visiting the death row cell were his sister Joanne Elsey and her husband; Lynchburg, Va., the Rev. Melvin Biggs, a minister who has befriended him; a prison chaplin; and three attorneys.

    A Jacksonville, Fla., circuit court judge sentenced Dobbert to death in 1974 despite the jury's recommendation he be given a life sentence.

    During his 10 years on death row, the former tire recapper became a born-again Christian and, according to a prison chaplain, 'a different man.'

    Martin, 35, had been scheduled for execution for sexually assaulting and killing a convenience store clerk. But the Atlanta federal appeals court granted him an indefinite stay, halting what was to have been the nation's first double execution in 19 years.

    http://www.upi.com/Archives/1984/09/...742736/?spt=su

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