Mississippi
MS prisoner Richard Jordan awaits responses from federal court, governor before execution
Executions in Mississippi: What to know
A look at the process of determining when and how a prisoner on death row in Mississippi should be executed.
The quest to halt the execution of Mississippi prisoner Richard Jordan is speeding up as his execution date nears.
Jordan, at 79 is Mississippi’s oldest prisoner on death row and is the longest-serving. He’s been on death row since 1977, after he was convicted of capital murder in the kidnapping and murder of Edwina Marter, a Gulfport bank executive’s wife and mother of two young sons.
He is scheduled for execution on Wednesday, June 25, at the Mississippi State Penitentiary at Parchman.
On Monday, June 16, Attorney General Lynn Fitch sent a letter as promised to U.S. District Judge Henry Wingate in response to a question he posed during a hearing Saturday, June 14, at the Thad Cochran Federal Courthouse in Jackson.
Wingate said Mississippi does not have a protocol in writing for the possibility of a prisoner injected with the sedative Midazolam responding to stimulation during a consciousness test conducted four minutes after the drug is administered.
If a prisoner responds to the consciousness test, the other two parts of the three-drug process of execution should not be given to the person, Jordan’s attorney James Craig said. He pointed out that the consciousness test was administered much sooner than four minutes for prisoners David Cox and Thomas Loden, who were executed in 2021 and 2022, and it is not clear whether they would have responded to pain after the second drug, a paralytic, was administered.
At the Saturday hearing, attorneys from Fitch’s office said the Mississippi Department of Corrections Commissioner Burl Cain would have the option to restart the process, which means giving the prisoner, in this instance, Jordan, another dose of 500 mg of Midazolam and doing another consciousness test or halt the execution.
But Wingate said the protocol wasn’t in writing and asked, before he wrote his opinion, if the state and Jordan would be willing to stop the execution until he could decide what should happen next.
Jordan and his attorneys agreed, but Wilson Minor, representing the state at the hearing, said he did not know if his client would be amenable to calling Judge Wingate in the event the consciousness test failed since there was no written protocol.
In Fitch’s letter to Wingate, filed Monday morning, she said the state indeed has a protocol that says Cain should restart the process. If the consciousness test fails a second time, he should halt the process and the court would decide what happens next. She did not specify which court.
“This is the proper course of action,” Fitch wrote. “The State’s execution protocol, like the ‘gold standard’ Oklahoma execution protocol, gives the Commissioner the discretion to restart the execution, and he should be allowed to exercise that discretion, and all other discretion under the State’s execution protocol.”
The hearing was in response to a lawsuit Jordan and others filed in 2015 challenging the three-drug protocol, saying it violates the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments.
Jordan and his co-plaintiffs say chemical executions using Pentobarbital is more effective and assures a pain-free execution.
Pentobarbital has been in short supply and difficult to obtain since 2021, but on Jan. 20, the first day of President Donald Trump’s first day of his second term, he issued an executive order, Restoring the Death Penalty and Protecting Public Safety, to guarantee states access to the drugs needed to carry out executions.
Craig filed a letter in response to Fitch’s, saying Fitch did not directly answer Wingate’s question, but basicially said Cain should be allowed to exercise sole discretion over the execution process.
“Somewhat buried in this language is the fact that the Commissioner’s answer to the Court’s question is ‘No,’” Craig wrote. “Instead, the Commissioner insists that the MDOC Protocol gives him ‘the discretion to restart the execution, and he should be allowed to exercise that discretion, and all other discretion under the State’s execution protocol.’
“The Court is correctly concerned about the consequences of allowing Commissioner Cain unbridled discretion. Under Mr. Cain, after all, the ‘consciousness check’ language of the MDOC Protocol has been changed three different times: Nov. 12, 2021, Dec. 12, 2022, and May 25, 2025.”
Craig said the 2022 protocol changed the consciousness check to four minutes after the third drug was administered, “despite the fact that the third drug, potassium chloride, ‘interferes with the electrical signals that stimulate the contractions of the heart, inducing cardiac arrest.’ The notion that the consciousness check would be performed after cardiac arrest demonstrates a profound lack of understanding about the reason for the check.”
As of Wednesday evening, June 18, Wingate had not filed his opinion on the matter.
Jordan has a petition for an emergency stay of execution awaiting a decision in the U.S. Supreme Court. The justices had scheduled the matter for conference Wednesday but have not shared the results of their discussion.
Also on Wednesday, the Rev. Dr. Jeff Hood and others against capital punishment held another call for the state to “Stand Down” on the execution of Jordan.
Earlier this week, a petition was sent to Gov. Tate Reeves requesting an in-person interview where Jordan’s representatives could plead for clemency on his behalf.
“Richard Gerald Jordan requests that you commute his death sentence to the lesser penalty of life in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections without parole,” Jordan’s representative Frank D. Rosenblatt wrote on Monday. Mr. Jordan’s representatives also request a fifteen-minute in-person or virtual interview with you. It is the long-standing practice of the Office of the Governor in Mississippi to allow a fifteen to twenty-minute meeting with a death-sentenced inmate’s representatives.”
Reeves had not responded as of Wednesday evening.
On Monday, Eric Marter, the eldest son of Edwina and Charles Marter said neither he nor his father nor his brother Kevin would attend the execution.
Lici Beveridge is a reporter for the Hattiesburg American and the Clarion Ledger. Contact her at lbeveridge@gannett.com. Follow her on X @licibev or Facebook at facebook.com/licibeveridge.
Mississippi
Mississippi College Baseball Wins Series vs. West Florida for First Time
Mississippi College baseball has won the series against West Florida for the first time ever
The Choctaws have been playing UWF since 2015
MC won the first two games and put on a bit of a comeback in game 3
Next: GSC at Delta St., then Conference Tournament
Mississippi
George County High School senior killed in Highway 26 crash, MHP says
GEORGE COUNTY, Miss. (WLOX) — A George County High School senior is dead after an SUV hit him while bicycling on Highway 26 Friday night.
Mississippi Highway Patrol (MHP) officials said at 8:15 p.m. the MHP responded to a fatal crash on Highway 26 in George County.
Those officials said a Ford SUV traveling west on Highway 26 collided with 18-year-old Tyree Bradley of McLain, Mississippi, who was bicycling.
Bradley was fatally injured and died at the scene, MHP officials said.
The crash remains under investigation by the MHP.
See a spelling or grammar error in this story? Report it to our team HERE.
Copyright 2026 WLOX. All rights reserved.
Mississippi
Mississippi State Drops Series Opener at Texas A&M Despite Late Chances
Some losses feel like they drag on longer than the box score suggests, and Mississippi State’s 3-1 opener at Texas A&M fits that category.
It wasn’t a blowout. It wasn’t a game where the Bulldogs looked outmatched.
It was just one of those nights where the early mistakes stuck around and the offense never quite found the swing that could shake them loose.
The frustrating part is how quickly the hole formed. Two solo homers and a wild pitch in the first two innings put Mississippi State behind 3-0, and that was basically the ballgame.
Against a top tier SEC team on the road, spotting three runs that early is a tough ask. The Bulldogs didn’t fold, but they also didn’t cash in when the door cracked open.
“I liked our fight. I think we’re really just working through some things offensively, and trying to stay together,” Mississippi State coach Samantha Ricketts said. “This team still believes, and we’re going to battle and fight every chance we get, and I think I saw a lot of that. I’m encouraged for what that means for us moving forward, but, you know, they’re a good hitting team, and we’ve got to be able to shut them down early. I don’t think Peja [Goold] had her best stuff, but she continued to battle out there and find ways to get outs.”
They had chances. Two runners stranded in the fifth. Two more in the sixth. Another in the seventh. Des Rivera finally got the Bulldogs on the board with an RBI single, but the big hit that usually shows up for this lineup never arrived.
It wasn’t a lack of traffic. It was a lack of finish.
If there was a bright spot, it came from the bullpen. Delainey Everett gave Mississippi State exactly what it needed after the rocky start.
“That was just a huge relief appearance by Delaney to keep us in it,” Ricketts said. “It’s really good to have her back and healthy these last few weeks because these are the moments where we really need her and rely on her. We know that she’s going to be a big part of the remainder of the season going forward as well.”
Three hitless innings, one baserunner, and a reminder that she’s quietly putting together a strong stretch.
There were individual positives too. Nadia Barbary keeps climbing the doubles list. Kiarra Sells keeps finding ways on base.
But the bigger picture is simple. Mississippi State is now 6-10 in the SEC, and the margin for error is shrinking. Nights like this one are the difference between climbing back into the race and staying stuck in the middle.
They get another shot this morning with the schedule bumped up for weather. The formula isn’t complicated.
Clean up the early innings, keep getting quality relief, and find one or two timely swings. The Bulldogs didn’t get them Friday. They’ll need them today.
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