This article contains references to child abuse.

US authorities on Friday carried out their 10th execution of the year, the last in a series of capital punishments that President Donald Trump’s administration has carried out before he leaves office.

Alfred Bourgeois, a Black man sentenced to death for the murder of his two-year-old daughter, was executed by lethal injection at a prison in Terre Haute, Indiana.

“Bourgeois was pronounced deceased at 8:21 pm Eastern Standard Time by the Vigo County Coroner,” the federal prison said in a statement.

This June 2020 photo provided by Nueces County Sheriff’s Office in Corpus Christi, Texas, shows Alfred Bourgeois.

Nueces County Sheriff’s Office

The execution occurred a day after another convicted prisoner, Brandon Bernard, was also executed in Terre Haute.

Following a paternity test, Bourgeois, a 55-year-old former truck driver, took temporary custody of his daughter and brought her on a trucking route for part of the summer of 2002.

He severely abused her before he violently killed her.

Since the crime took place on a military base where he was making a delivery, he was tried in federal court and sentenced to death in 2004. 

He remained on death row, with the United States having suspended federal executions beginning in 2003, in particular because of questions over the legality of drugs used in injections.

Mr Trump however restarted federal executions in July – even though states still using capital punishment have delayed theirs due to the dangers posed to prison staff and witnesses by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Seven federal executions occurred before the 3 November election that Mr Trump lost to Democrat Joe Biden, who is due to be sworn in on 20 January despite the outgoing president’s refusal to concede.

Mr Biden has pledged to work with Congress to bring an end to federal executions.

For 131 years, outgoing presidents traditionally suspended federal executions during the transition period.

But the Trump administration had announced six executions between November and January, including Bourgeois.

His lawyers had asked the US Supreme Court to intervene, saying he suffers from a mental disability.

“The jury that sentenced Mr Bourgeois to death never learned that he was a person with intellectual disability because his trial lawyers did not present the evidence that was available to them,” said his new lawyer Victor Abreu.

After the execution, his legal team issued a statement saying that “tonight, the United States killed a man with intellectual disability in spite of clear directives from the US Supreme Court and federal laws that prohibited it.” 

Bourgeois was the 17th person executed in the United States in 2020, a historic low linked to the suspensions at the state level.

He was the 10th executed at the federal level, the highest in more than a century.

Readers seeking support can contact Lifeline crisis support on 13 11 14, Suicide Call Back Service on 1300 659 467 and Kids Helpline on 1800 55 1800 (for young people aged 5 to 25). More information is available at Beyond Blue.org.au and lifeline.org.au.

Anyone seeking information or support relating to sexual abuse can contact Bravehearts on 1800 272 831 or Blue Knot on 1300 657 380.



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