As Spisak entered the death chamber and lay on the gurney, witness Eric Barnes, brother of murder victim Brian Warford, held photographs of Warford up to the glass window separating the men so Spisak could see them.
While executioners were inserting the intravenous lines for the injection, another brother of Warford’s, Jeffrey Duke, said they should just hook him up to an electrical generator.
“If I could get to him, that’s what I’d do to him,” Duke said. “A person like him, who could go around thinking he could kill people just because he doesn’t like the color of their skin or their religion. ...”
His voice trailed off. “I’m sorry, that’s just the way I feel.”
Spisak admitted his intent was to go on “hunting parties” to kill blacks in hopes of starting a race war in Cleveland.
Strapped to the gurney and reading from a handwritten transcript being held in front of his face by a guard, Spisak haltingly read a German-language rendition of the apocalyptic Revelation 21:1-7, which begins, “Then I saw a new heaven and earth, for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away.”
His faltering reading drew some chuckles from witnesses representing Spisak’s victims.
“He’s making it up,” said Cathy Sheehan Daly, daughter of murder victim Timothy Sheehan.
“You don’t know German. Speak English, you fool,” Barnes said. “This is embarrassing.”
When he finished reading, Spisak said, “Heil Herr.”
As the lethal chemicals began to flow, he made five loud snorting noises, his chest heaving, then lay still until the warden pronounced him dead.
Beforehand, Spisak, 59, read his final statement — a German language reading of Revelation 21:1-7 — which begins, “Then I saw a new heaven and earth, for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away.”
In a prepared statement, Cora Warford, the mother of one of Spisak’s victims, said, “In memory of my baby boy, Brian Warford, I can finally say justice has been served. Spisak will have to stand before a higher court one day as we all will, and may God have mercy on his soul.”
Witnesses to Thursday’s lethal injection were to include Brian Warford’s two brothers, the daughter of victim Timothy Sheehan, and John Hardaway, who survived being shot by Spisak. The lead prosecutor in the case, Donald Nugent, now a federal judge, also was to witness the execution. Spisak’s attorneys and a friend, Bill Kimberlin, were to witness on his behalf.
Kimberlin is a professor of psychology at Lorain Community College who studies death row inmate. Kimberlin became acquainted with Spisak while doing that research, said Carlo LoPara, spokesman for the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction.
Spisak, 59, arrived at the Lucasville prison from death row in Mansfield just before 10 a.m. Wednesday. “His mood was calm and reserved,” LoParo said.
He ate a “special meal” of spaghetti, tossed salad, chocolate cake, root beer and coffee Wednesday night, LoParo said. He spent the night resting in bed and listening to music. He wrote a letter.
Two priests conducted a Roman Catholic Mass for Spisak at the death house at 7 a.m. Thursday, three hours before the scheduled execution. “There was an indication during the Mass he was a bit emotional,” LoParo said.
He said Spisak’s body is to be cremated and the state will handle disposition of the remains.
A self-acknowledged disciple of Adolf Hitler, Spisak, 59, killed three men, wounded Hardaway and shot at a woman. He later admitted he went on “hunting parties” to kill blacks in hopes of fomenting a race war in Cleveland.
The survivors later identified Spisak as their assailant. Spisak admitted to the crimes, but unsuccessfully argued at his 1983 trial that he was legally insane.
In a clemency report last month that unanimously recommended against sparing Spisak’s life, the Ohio Parole Board told Gov. John Kasich that Spisak remains fascinated by Nazis and still reads books about Hitler, though he says he no longer agrees with Hitler’s philosophies. Spisak has said he learned racial tolerance by associating with blacks on death row.
“Spisak’s expressions of remorse for his victims are insincere and manipulative,” the report said. It noted that in 2004, Spisak wrote a threatening letter to the son of one of his victims. The son, Brendan Sheehan, was an assistant Cuyahoga County prosecutor and is now a common pleas judge.
Kasich denied clemency, and a federal appeals court on Tuesday denied Spisak’s last-minute bid for a stay of execution. The U.S. Supreme Court declined to step in.
Spisak’s attorneys attempted to halt the execution by quoting anti-death penalty statements this year by former Ohio Supreme Court Justice Paul Pfeifer, a Republican who helped to write the state’s death penalty law while in the legislature. Pfeifer said he no longer supports the death penalty and the process lacks the proper reviews.
Spisak is to be the last Ohio inmate to be executed using the drug sodium thiopental, whose production in Italy has been discontinued amid controversy about its use in capital punishment.
The state intends to use another single drug — Pentobarbital, also known as Nembutal — in future executions, beginning with that of Johnnie Baston of Toledo on March 10. Including Spisak, nine executions are set for 2011 in Ohio.
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