Miss. gov denies clemency for Jackson; execution set for 6 p.m.

JACKSON, Mississippi (AP) - Two women who asked Mississippi's governor Phil Bryant to spare their brother from execution, even though he killed four of their children, paralyzed another and stabbed one of the sisters have had their request denied.

Luther Vandross was outed as gay after his death.

HOLBROOK MOHR, Associated Press

JACKSON, Mississippi (AP) — Two women who asked Mississippi’s governor Phil Bryant to spare their brother from execution, even though he killed four of their children, paralyzed another and stabbed one of the sisters have had their request denied.

Henry “Curtis” Jackson Jr., 47, is scheduled to die at 6 p.m by injection. He killed the four children, ages 2 to 5, during a rampage that started when he went to his mother’s home in Leflore County to take money from her safe on Nov. 1, 1990, court records say.

His mother was at church that day, but Jackson’s adult sister, Regina Jackson, was at the home with her two daughters and four nieces and nephews. Regina Jackson was stabbed five times. Her two daughters and two nephews were stabbed to death. Another niece was so severely injured that she was paraplegic until her recent death.

Regina Jackson told The Associated Press that she was meeting with Gov. Phil Bryant on Monday and would plead for her brother’s life. She also wrote Bryant a letter last month asking for a reprieve, saying she doesn’t want her brother to get out of prison and that she “just can’t take any more killing.”

“As a mother who lost two babies, all I’m asking is that you not make me go through the killing of my brother,” she wrote.

She told the AP in a telephone interview that she has forgiven her brother over the years. “If they kill him, they’re doing the same thing that he did. The dying is going to have to stop somewhere.”

Another sister and her husband, Glenda and Andrew Kuyoro, have also asked Bryant to spare Curtis Jackson in a letter dated May 15.

Curtis Jackson’s attorney, Robert Davis Jr. of Tupelo, filed a clemency request with Bryant’s office last week.

Cliff Johnson, a Jackson attorney helping the sisters, said Monday that the case is unusual because the victims are asking for clemency for the attacker.

“Much is said about the importance of respecting the rights and wishes of victims and their families. This case raises a very important question: Are we committed to honoring the wishes of victims’ families when they ask for mercy, or do we hear those voices only when they ask for vengeance?” Johnson asked.

Jackson has appealed the case over the years but hasn’t been successful. He has said he doesn’t remember stabbing the children, but testimony from his trial describes a horrific scene.

He cut the phone line before going in the house, according to the court record. Once inside, he demanded money and attacked his sister.

One of the children tried to help, but he stabbed her, too. At some point, Regina Jackson tried to fight him off with an iron rod, but he grabbed one of the children and used her as a shield.

Regina Jackson testified at trial that she was in and out of consciousness after being tied up and stabbed in the neck, but she could hear her brother dragging a safe down a hall. The noise woke up 5-year-old Dominique, one of her daughters.

“Regina testified that Jackson called Dominique to him, told her that he loved her, stabbed her, and tossed her body to the floor,” according to the court record. “Jackson returned to Regina, stabbing her in the neck and twisting the knife, at which point she pretended to be dead until she heard him leave.”

Jackson turned himself in to police and confessed to some details. He was convicted and sentenced to death on four counts of capital murder after a trial in September 1991.

His mother, Martha Jackson, said Monday that she has forgiven her son and plans to visit him before the execution.

“If I don’t forgive him, God don’t forgive me,” she said.

Martha Jackson said she’s not sure if she’ll watch the lethal injection at the Mississippi State Penitentiary at Parchman.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.

SHARE THIS ARTICLE