James Lewis DeRosa was killed by lethal injection at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester yesterday, becoming the state's second inmate executed this year.
At a clemency hearing last month, DeRosa took responsibility for his role in the October 2, 2000, stabbing deaths of Curtis and Gloria Plummer, for whom he had previously done some ranch work. He also apologized to their family.
Strapped to the gurney in the penitentiary's death chamber, though, he had nothing to say before the fatal mixture of drugs was pumped into his veins.
According to prosecutors, DeRosa had worked on the Plummers' ranch in the Le Flore County community of Poteau, and on the day of the killings, he and accomplice John Eric Castleberry went there under the pretence of looking for work.
DeRosa and Castleberry persuaded the couple to let them into their home and then attacked them, stabbing the couple over and over and slashing both their necks, prosecutors said. They made off with USD 73 and the couple's pickup truck, which was found abandoned at a nearby lake.
At his clemency hearing before the Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board last month, DeRosa spoke via a video link from prison about how he had found religion and turned his life around behind bars. He urged the board to recommend to Gov. Mary Fallin that she commute his sentence to life in prison so that he could be a positive influence on his fellow inmates.
He also apologized to the victims' loved ones and owned up to what he had done.
The family wasn't swayed, and the board voted 3-2 to not recommend he be pulled off of death row.
After the execution, the Plummers' daughter, Janet Tolbert, said the execution wasn't about DeRosa.
"This is about Curtis and Gloria Plummer. The family of Curtis and Gloria are pleased that justice has been served," said Tolbert, who was wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with a picture of her parents' faces.
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