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Kentucky

Governor Andy Beshear, Democrat

Timeline

1868 — Susan Eliza is the last child to be hanged in Kentucky at thir­teen years old. She was the last female exe­cut­ed by Kentucky.

1928 — Kentucky sequen­tial­ly exe­cutes sev­en men by electrocution.

1936 — Rainey Bethea is exe­cut­ed by hang­ing in the last pub­lic exe­cu­tion in Kentucky, withnews­pa­pers at the time esti­mat­ing as many as20,000 witnesses.

1938 — Kentucky abol­ish­es hang­ings after Rainey Bethea’s public execution.

1974 — Kentucky enacts a new cap­i­tal sen­tenc­ing statute call­ing for a manda­to­ry death sen­tence for those con­vict­ed of murder.

1976 — The Kentucky leg­is­la­ture repeals the manda­to­ry death penal­ty statute. The Commonwealth’s cur­rent death penal­ty statute goes into effect.

1989 — InStanford v. Kentucky, the U.S. Supreme Court holds that the impo­si­tion of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment on an indi­vid­ual for a crime com­mit­ted at16 or17 years old does not vio­late the8th amend­ment as cru­el and unusual punishment.

1998 — Kentucky adopts the Racial Justice Act, allow­ing judges to con­sid­er whether racial bias played a role in the deci­sion to seek or impose the death penalty.

2002 — Larry Osborne, the youngest man on Kentucky’s death row, is acquit­ted of a crime for which he was wrong­ful­ly con­vict­ed at17 years old.

2008 — InBaze v. Rees, the U.S. Supreme Court holds that Kentucky’s four-drug lethal injec­tion process does not vio­late the8th amendment.

2011 — Kentucky turns over their sup­ply of sodi­um thiopen­tal, a drug used in lethal injec­tions, to theDEA after Georgia’s sup­ply was seized based on the ques­tion­able legal­i­ty of how it was import­ed. Kentucky obtained its sup­ply from CorrectHealth, a pri­vate Georgia cor­rec­tion­al health company.

2014 — Kentucky drops its pro­posed use of a two-drug exe­cu­tion method, includ­ing mida­zo­lam and hydro­mor­phone, after Ohio and Arizona’s use of mida­zo­lam in a two-drug pro­to­col result­ed in two pro­longed exe­cu­tions where the inmates where report­ed­ly gasp­ing after being injected.

2018 — The Kentucky Supreme Court strikes down the Commonwealth’s death penal­ty intel­lec­tu­al dis­abil­i­ty law which requires proof of anIQ score of70 for a cap­i­tal defen­dant to be found inel­i­gi­ble for the death penal­ty. The court found that a fixed70-IQ cut­off score is incom­pat­i­ble with the diag­nos­tic frame­work of the medical community.

2019 — EugeneRed” Mitchell is acquit­ted of cap­i­tal mur­der and relat­ed charges after spend­ing near­ly six years in jail due to his inabil­i­ty to afford bail.

2019 — Before leav­ing office, Governor Matt Bevin com­mutes the sen­tences of Gregory Wilson and Leif Halvorsen, two of the state’s longest serv­ing death row pris­on­ers, to life without parole.

2022 — Kentucky becomes the sec­ond state in the U.S. to bar impos­ing the death penal­ty on defen­dants diag­nosed as severe­ly mentally ill.

Famous Cases

Rainey Bethea, exe­cut­ed August14,1936 at Owensboro, Kentucky, was the state’s last pub­lic exe­cu­tion. He was pub­licly hanged for rape on August14,1936 in a park­ing lot in Owensboro, Kentucky (to avoid dam­age to the cour­t­house lawn by thou­sands of peo­ple who were expect­ed to attend). Bethea, who was black, con­fessed to the rape and mur­der of a 70-year-old white woman named Lischia Edwards but he was nev­er charged with mur­der. Murder was pun­ish­able by death in the elec­tric chair at Eddyville while rape was pun­ish­able by pub­lic hang­ing in the coun­ty where the rape occurred. Prosecutors opt­ed to go with the rape charge only. The spec­ta­cle that attend­ed the hang­ing con­tributed to the end of pub­lic exe­cu­tions in the United States.

Kevin Stanford is one of three juve­nile offend­ers sen­tenced to death in Kentucky since the Commonwealth brought back cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in1975. Sentenced to death for a January1981 mur­der com­mit­ted when he was17 years old, Stanford’s case went to the U.S. Supreme Court, which — in a 5 – 4 vote — upheld the use of the death penal­ty against offend­ers aged16 or17. In2003, Governor Paul Patton com­mut­ed Stanford’s death sen­tence to life with­out pos­si­bil­i­ty of parole. The U.S. Supreme Court over­turnedStanford v. Kentuckyin2005, rul­ing inRoper v. Simmonsthat the appli­ca­tion of the death penal­ty against offend­ers younger than age18 con­sti­tut­ed cru­el and unusu­al pun­ish­ment. The Kentucky Supreme Court had pre­vi­ous­ly over­turned the con­vic­tion of Todd Ice, who was15 years old when he charged with the December1978 mur­der of a sev­en-year-old girl. On retri­al, Ice was con­vict­ed of a lesser offense.

Notable Exonerations

Larry Osborne — then the youngest per­son on Kentucky’s death row — was acquit­ted upon retri­al in July2002 for the December1997 mur­ders of two peo­ple. Osborne was17 at the time of his arrest. The1998 con­vic­tion and death sen­tence was over­turned by a unan­i­mous vote of the Kentucky Supreme Court and a new tri­al was ordered.

Milestones in Abolition/​Reinstatement

In1880, Kentucky abol­ished pub­lic hang­ing. In1920, Kentucky restored pub­lic hang­ing for rape and pro­vid­ed that the sen­tence was to be car­ried out in the coun­ty where the rape occurred, although pris­on­ers con­demned for mur­der were exe­cut­ed in prison in the electric chair.

In1938, Kentucky abol­ished hang­ing after as many as20,000 peo­ple wit­nessed the August14,1936 hang­ing of Rainey Bethea (see above).

In1974, two years afterFurman v. Georgia, Kentucky enact­ed a new cap­i­tal sen­tenc­ing statute, Ky. Rev. Stat. §532.030(1) (1974), that went into effect January1,1975. The statute called for a manda­to­ry death sen­tence for those con­vict­ed of mur­der. The three pris­on­ers sen­tenced to death under that statute had their death sen­tences over­turned when the U.S. Supreme Court declared manda­to­ry death sen­tences uncon­sti­tu­tion­al on July21976.

In a spe­cial leg­isla­tive ses­sion in December1976, the Kentucky leg­is­la­ture repealed the manda­to­ry death penal­ty statute and enact­ed the Commonwealth’s cur­rent death penal­ty statute, which took effect on December221976.

KentuckyFirsts”

Kentucky adopt­ed the Racial Justice Act on February5,1998, allow­ing judges to con­sid­er whether racial bias played a role in the deci­sion to seek or impose the death penalty.

Other Interesting Facts

Kentucky holds the record for the most judi­cial­ly autho­rized exe­cu­tions in a sin­gle day: on July13,1928 sev­en men were sequen­tial­ly elec­tro­cut­ed inOld Sparky” (the nick­name giv­en to the elec­tric chair in Eddyville).

Kentucky has not exe­cut­ed a female in more than150 years. On February7,1868, Kentucky exe­cut­ed a 13-year-old black girl, iden­ti­fied only asSusan.” The youngest per­son (whose age is known) exe­cut­ed in the state was an enslaved12-year-old boy named Bill who was hanged on July301791.

A one-lane bridge. Photo by Donald Vish, who offers this descrip­tion of the bridge: For gen­er­a­tions, this one lane bridge was gov­erned by the iron law of civil­i­ty and reg­u­lat­ed by the fine art of com­pro­mise. I am proud of my state for its his­to­ry and ethos of over­com­ing adver­si­ty and pur­suit of its mot­to: United We Stand, Divided We Fall.”

Resources

Kentucky Execution Totals Since 1976

News & Developments

Methods of ExecutionAugust 28, 2025Kentucky Governor Cites Constitutional Concerns with Execution Protocol and Drug Acquisition Issues in Refusal to Set Execution Date Methods of ExecutionJuly 15, 2025Kentucky Governor Cites Constitutional Concerns with Execution Protocol and Drug Acquisition Issues in Refusal to Set Execution Date Intellectual DisabilityJune 4, 20252025 Roundup of Death Penalty Related Legislation Methods of ExecutionOctober 31, 2024Kentucky Supreme Court Denies Attorney General’s Request to Remove Injunction on Executions IssuesJuly 9, 2024Disability Pride Month Series: Serious Mental Illness Exemptions and Legislation IssuesMay 29, 2024Recent Decisions in Capital Cases Reflect Growing Understanding of How Serious Mental Illness Affects Behavior and Culpability ResearchJanuary 12, 2024State Legislative Roundup: New Legislation on the Death Penalty IssuesNovember 2, 2023Under Recent State Legislation, Courts in Ohio and Kentucky Rule Four Men Ineligible for Execution Due to Serious Mental Illness
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