Post by ScotKaren on Jun 21, 2006 13:16:22 GMT -5
www.clarkprosecutor.org/html/death/US/block775.htm
Executed May 10, 2002 by Electric Chair in Alabama
26th murderer executed in U.S. in 2002
775th murderer executed in U.S. since 1976
9th female murderer executed in U.S. since 1976
1st murderer executed in Alabama in 2002
24th murderer executed in Alabama since 1976
1st female murderer executed in Alabama since 1976
Since 1976 Date of Execution State Method Murderer
(Race/Sex/Age at Murder-Execution) Date of
Birth Victim(s)
(Race/Sex/Age at Murder) Date of
Murder Method of
Murder Relationship
to Murderer Date of
Sentence
775 05-10-02 AL Electric Chair Lynda Lyon Block
W / F / 45 - 54
02-08-48 Roger Lamar Motley
OFFICER
W / M / 39
10-4-93 Handgun None 12-21-94
Summary:
Block, 54, and her common-law husband, George Sibley Jr., were on the run after failing to appear on a domestic battery charge. With Block's 9 year old son in the car, they stopped so Block could use the telephone in a Walmart parking lot. Opelika Police Sergeant Roger Lamar Motley had just finished lunch and was shopping for supplies for the jail when a woman came up to him and told him there was a car in the parking lot with a little boy inside. The woman was worried about him. She was afraid that the family was living in their car. Would he check on them? Motley cruised up and down the rows of parked cars and finally pulled up behind the Mustang. Sibley was in the car with the boy, waiting for Block to finish a call to a friend from a pay phone in front of the store. Motley asked Sibley for his drivers license. Sibley said he didn't need one. He was trying to explain why when Motley put his hand on his service revolver. Sibley reached into the car and pulled out a gun. Motley uttered a four-letter expletive and spun away to take cover behind his cruiser. Sibley crouched by the bumper of the Mustang. People in the parking lot screamed, hid beneath their cars and ran back into the store as the men began firing at each other. Preoccupied by the threat in front of him, Motley did not see Lynda Block until the very last moment. She had dropped the phone, pulling the 9mm Glock pistol from her bag as she ran toward the scene, firing. Motley turned. She remembered later how surprised he looked. She kept on firing. She could tell that a bullet struck him in the chest. Staggering, he reached into the cruiser. She kept on firing, thinking he was trying to get a shotgun. But he was grabbing for the radio. "Double zero," he managed to say -- the code for help. He died in a nearby hospital that afternoon. In letters to friends and supporters, Block later would describe Motley as a "bad cop" and a wife beater with multiple complaints against him. As part of the conspiracy against her, she said, she was prohibited from bringing up his record in court. His personnel file makes no mention of any misbehavior. His wife says he was a kind and patient man. Both Block and Sibley received deeath sentences. True to their "patriot" ideologies, Block waived her appeals. She has refused to accept the validity of Alabama’s judicial system, claiming that Alabama never became a state again after the Civil War. She has been completely non-cooperative with her court-appointed attorney, who nevertheless attempted to work against her death sentence. First execution of a female in Alabama since 1957. She is the 9th female executed in the U.S. since reinstatement of the death penalty in 1976.
Citations:
Block v. State, 744 So.2d 404 (Ala.Crim.App. 1996) (Direct Appeal).
Ex Parte Block, 744 So.2d 412 (Ala.Crim.App. 1996) (On Remand).
Final Meal:
None.
Final Words:
Block declined the offer to make a final statement.
Internet Sources:
Executed May 10, 2002 by Electric Chair in Alabama
26th murderer executed in U.S. in 2002
775th murderer executed in U.S. since 1976
9th female murderer executed in U.S. since 1976
1st murderer executed in Alabama in 2002
24th murderer executed in Alabama since 1976
1st female murderer executed in Alabama since 1976
Since 1976 Date of Execution State Method Murderer
(Race/Sex/Age at Murder-Execution) Date of
Birth Victim(s)
(Race/Sex/Age at Murder) Date of
Murder Method of
Murder Relationship
to Murderer Date of
Sentence
775 05-10-02 AL Electric Chair Lynda Lyon Block
W / F / 45 - 54
02-08-48 Roger Lamar Motley
OFFICER
W / M / 39
10-4-93 Handgun None 12-21-94
Summary:
Block, 54, and her common-law husband, George Sibley Jr., were on the run after failing to appear on a domestic battery charge. With Block's 9 year old son in the car, they stopped so Block could use the telephone in a Walmart parking lot. Opelika Police Sergeant Roger Lamar Motley had just finished lunch and was shopping for supplies for the jail when a woman came up to him and told him there was a car in the parking lot with a little boy inside. The woman was worried about him. She was afraid that the family was living in their car. Would he check on them? Motley cruised up and down the rows of parked cars and finally pulled up behind the Mustang. Sibley was in the car with the boy, waiting for Block to finish a call to a friend from a pay phone in front of the store. Motley asked Sibley for his drivers license. Sibley said he didn't need one. He was trying to explain why when Motley put his hand on his service revolver. Sibley reached into the car and pulled out a gun. Motley uttered a four-letter expletive and spun away to take cover behind his cruiser. Sibley crouched by the bumper of the Mustang. People in the parking lot screamed, hid beneath their cars and ran back into the store as the men began firing at each other. Preoccupied by the threat in front of him, Motley did not see Lynda Block until the very last moment. She had dropped the phone, pulling the 9mm Glock pistol from her bag as she ran toward the scene, firing. Motley turned. She remembered later how surprised he looked. She kept on firing. She could tell that a bullet struck him in the chest. Staggering, he reached into the cruiser. She kept on firing, thinking he was trying to get a shotgun. But he was grabbing for the radio. "Double zero," he managed to say -- the code for help. He died in a nearby hospital that afternoon. In letters to friends and supporters, Block later would describe Motley as a "bad cop" and a wife beater with multiple complaints against him. As part of the conspiracy against her, she said, she was prohibited from bringing up his record in court. His personnel file makes no mention of any misbehavior. His wife says he was a kind and patient man. Both Block and Sibley received deeath sentences. True to their "patriot" ideologies, Block waived her appeals. She has refused to accept the validity of Alabama’s judicial system, claiming that Alabama never became a state again after the Civil War. She has been completely non-cooperative with her court-appointed attorney, who nevertheless attempted to work against her death sentence. First execution of a female in Alabama since 1957. She is the 9th female executed in the U.S. since reinstatement of the death penalty in 1976.
Citations:
Block v. State, 744 So.2d 404 (Ala.Crim.App. 1996) (Direct Appeal).
Ex Parte Block, 744 So.2d 412 (Ala.Crim.App. 1996) (On Remand).
Final Meal:
None.
Final Words:
Block declined the offer to make a final statement.
Internet Sources: