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Thread: Carroll Edward Cole - Nevada Execution - December 6, 1985

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    Carroll Edward Cole - Nevada Execution - December 6, 1985




    Summary of Offense: Confessed killer of 13 was sentenced to death in Nevada for the murder of Marie Cushman

    Victim: Marie Cushman

    Time of Death: 2:10 a.m.

    Manner of execution: Lethal Injection

    Last Meal: Tossed salad with French dressing, jumbo shrimp, French fries and Boston clam chowder

    Final Statement: "It's all right," he mouthed through the glass.

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    Carroll Edward Cole (May 9, 1938 – December 6, 1985), was an American serial killer who was executed in 1985

    Early life

    Carroll Cole was born in Sioux City, Iowa. While his father went to fight in World War II, Cole was taken along by his mother and forced to watch as she had sexual encounters with men. She would often beat him to scare him into not telling his father. Even when his father returned home, Cole was frequently whipped and beaten by his mother for the most minor infractions, and he grew up with a deep hatred of women. He was also picked on at school for having a "girl's name", so he would usually go by his middle name, Eddie.

    Murders

    At the age of 10, Cole drowned a classmate of the same age in a lake. The boy's death was regarded as an accident until Cole confessed to it many years later.

    After scraping through school with a D+ average, even with an I.Q. of 152, Cole became a drifter, doing menial jobs, drinking heavily and serving frequent prison sentences for crime such as burglary, vagrancy, arson and car theft. He attempted suicide at least once, and on a number of occasions, had himself committed to mental hospitals where he confessed his fantasies of murdering women. Although diagnosed as a psychopath, Cole was usually discharged promptly, as he had a personality disorder, as opposed to a mental illness - the former was considered to be untreatable by psychiatrists at the time, unlike the latter.

    His first victim as an adult was Essie Buck, whom he'd picked up in a tavern in San Diego, California, on May 7, 1971. He strangled her to death in his car and drove around with her body in the trunk before eventually dumping it. Just two weeks later, he killed an unidentified woman and buried her in some woods.

    In July 1973, Cole married barmaid Diana Pashal, who was also an alcoholic. They argued and fought frequently, and Cole regularly went off on his own for days at a time. He would commit murders while he was away, including one woman he allegedly cannibalized to a degree. In September 1979, Cole strangled Pashal to death. A suspicious neighbor called the police eight days later, but although they found Pashal's body wrapped in a blanket and stuffed in a closet, they inexplicably decided that she had died because of her heavy drinking, and Cole was released without charge after questioning.

    By 1980, Cole was married again and living in Las Vegas. Toward the end of the year, he murdered three more women. Arrested on suspicion of murdering the final victim, Cole began his confession, claiming that he had murdered at least 14 women over the previous nine years, although he added that there may have been more — he couldn't remember exactly, as he was usually drunk when he committed his crimes.

    Death

    Sentenced to death, Cole refused to appeal and was executed in Nevada on December 6, 1985 by lethal injection.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carroll_Cole

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    December 7, 1985

    Nevada Executes Killer of Five

    25 View Death of Carroll E. Cole by Lethal Injection

    By DAVID FREED
    The Los Angeles Times

    CARSON CITY, Nev. — Convicted killer Carroll Edward Cole, who insisted that prolonging his life would be a waste of tax dollars, died by lethal injection here early Friday, the first execution in the Far West since 1979.

    Cole, convicted of killing five women, fulfilled his death wish shortly after 2 a.m., when officials at Nevada's maximum-security prison sent powerful doses of three undisclosed drugs flowing though an intravenous needle in the condemned man's arm.

    Strapped to a padded table in a converted gas chamber, Cole, 47, blinked repeatedly but showed no emotion waiting for the lethal drugs to course through his veins. He had been sedated earlier to prevent any final resistance.

    Seventeen reporters and eight designated witnesses--nearly all of them court or law enforcement officials--had gathered to watch the execution. But looking out from behind one of the chamber's three large windows, Cole seemed to notice only two of the witnesses, Mike and Judy Newton, a Las Vegas couple writing his biography.

    His last words were to them: "It's all right," he mouthed through the glass.

    Took Five Minutes

    Moments later, as the lethal drugs began to flow, Cole closed his eyes, coughed and appeared to convulse, gasping for breath. Over the next several seconds, his chest heaved mechanically and his head slowly arched back. His lips parted; his eyelids opened slightly.

    Then, he lay still. It had taken Cole five minutes to die.

    "He was ready to go; he wanted to go," said his attorney, Edward G. (Ted) Marshall, one of the official witnesses.

    The last execution west of Texas occurred Oct. 22, 1979, on the very spot where Cole died. On that day, Jesse Walter Bishop of Garden Grove, Calif., went to the gas chamber for gunning down a honeymooner in a Las Vegas casino robbery.

    Cole's execution--the 50th since the U.S. Supreme Court restored the death penalty in 1976--marked the first time that execution by lethal injection was used in this state, where the gas chamber was born in 1924.

    Nevada lawmakers authorized the use of lethal injections last year after George W. Sumner, director of state prisons, complained that the old chamber had leaks. Supporters of the switch declared it a more humane means of executing Cole and the other 28 men and two women on Nevada's Death Row.

    A one-time San Diego resident who was raised in Richmond, Calif., the stubby, tattooed Cole was convicted in Texas of strangling three Dallas women in 1980. He was sentenced to life in prison.

    Confessed to 13 Murders

    In February, 1984, Cole was extradited to Nevada, where seven months later he received the death sentence for strangling two Las Vegas women in 1977 and 1979.

    Cole confessed to 13 murders and once told a psychiatrist that he killed 35 people, all but one of them women whom he usually picked up in bars.

    To the end, Cole rejected all legal efforts to save him.

    "I just messed up my life so bad that I just don't care to go on," he told one interviewer last week.

    Given Cole's insistence that he be put to death, not even the American Civil Liberties Union attempted to intervene in his behalf.

    But there was one last-minute effort to save his life.

    On Thursday night, Nevada's five Supreme Court justices met briefly to review a petition filed earlier in the day by three Death Row inmates anxious to delay Cole's date with death.

    Fearing that his willingness could hasten their own scheduled executions, the inmates contended that Cole was mentally unbalanced and entitled to better psychiatric evaluation than was available at the prison.

    The high court disagreed, deliberating about half an hour before denying a stay of execution.

    Cole spent his last day under constant watch in a special, third-story cell less than 20 paces from the death chamber.

    He wore new prison denims and his old white sneakers. The laces of the shoes had been removed to prevent any possibility of his hanging himself.

    Dines on Shrimp and Chowder

    At 5:30 p.m., Cole was served his last meal. He was given what he had requested: tossed salad with French dressing, jumbo shrimp, French fries and Boston clam chowder. He also finished off what remained of the 25 pounds of cookies and candy sent him last week by the Newtons.

    Then Cole, a Catholic, wiled away his final hours playing cards with the prison priest.

    At 12:20 a.m., he received the first of two shots of Valium intended to calm him. He hardly seemed to need it.

    "He wasn't nervous at all," said Harol L. Whitley, the prison warden.

    Outside, on the parking lot of the sober, gray granite prison, about a dozen people gathered under a crescent moon to light candles in protest of Cole's execution.

    "It's a time to witness against the whole concept of vengeance," said a spokesman for the group, Reno community organizer Bob Fulkerson.

    At 1:43 a.m., wearing leg irons and a chain attached to his waist and wrists, Cole was escorted into the death chamber and lifted onto the table by four corrections officers who had volunteered for the job. When the medical equipment was in place 23 minutes later, the execution began.

    Positioned behind a wall so that he could not be identified, a volunteer from the prison staff inserted a syringe filled with lethal liquid into the intravenous needle.

    In all, Cole was injected with three drugs to stop his heart and disrupt his breathing.

    There was no noise, except for the whirring of a nearby wall fan. The witnesses--one or two of them dabbing moist eyes--watched quietly as Cole convulsed.

    Cole was declared dead at 2:10 a.m.

    Family Didn't Attend

    His body was taken to a Carson City mortuary, where a prominent Las Vegas neurologist planned to examine Cole's brain for any biological evidence that might explain his life of violence.

    Cole is survived by a brother and three sisters. None attended his execution, and his body was not claimed.

    After an autopsy, his remains were to be cremated.

    The cell blocks, steaming in the cold night air, were silent as Cole's body was wheeled to a waiting station wagon for the three-mile ride to the mortuary.

    The temperature by 2:35 a.m. had dipped to 26 degrees as the vehicle made its way past the prison gate.

    The death penalty protesters keeping vigil on the parking lot had already gone home.

    http://articles.latimes.com/1985-12-...al-injection/3

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