Ohio executes man who said he couldn't recall the crimes he committed


LUCASVILLE, Ohio (AP) — The state today executed a man who said he didn’t remember fatally shooting his ex-girlfriend and her boyfriend at the woman’s Cincinnati apartment in 1984.

Daniel Lee Bedford, 63, became the third inmate in Ohio and the nation to be put to death using the surgical sedative pentobarbital as a stand-alone execution drug. He was pronounced dead at 11:18 a.m.

He declined to give a formal final statement but yelled “I love you” to his adult daughter, Michelle Connor, who was in the witness room and shouted back, “I love you, Daddy” after he had climbed onto a gurney. He also called out to witness Kristi Schulenberg, a friend and pen pal with whom he had kept in touch since the mid-1990s. She said she loved him, too.

“God bless you,” he said as the injection began. His mouth moved slightly and his chest appeared to rise and fall several times before he became still.

Prison staff appeared to have some difficulty inserting the IVs into one arm, prompting an attorney witnessing the execution to leave the witness room to call a colleague with concerns about how many times Bedford’s arm had been poked. She also shouted to Bedford through the glass viewing window and asked if there were problems. He replied that he’d been poked several times.

The attorney declined to comment after the execution.