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SC inmate set to die by firing squad

The Associated Press//March 7, 2025//

Unless South Carolina’s governor or the courts intervene, Brad Sigmon will be executed today by firing squad for the baseball bat slayings of his former girlfriend’s parents. (South Carolina Department of Corrections file)

Unless South Carolina’s governor or the courts intervene, Brad Sigmon will be executed today by firing squad for the baseball bat slayings of his former girlfriend’s parents. (South Carolina Department of Corrections file)

SC inmate set to die by firing squad

The Associated Press//March 7, 2025//

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COLUMBIA — When the clock strikes 6 p.m. today, will walk into the death chamber, be strapped into a chair and have a target placed over his heart. He may utter last words before a hood is placed over his head, a curtain shielding him from spectators is swept aside and three volunteers armed with rifles simultaneously fire bullets designed to shatter on impact with his chest.

Unless the governor or the U.S. grants him a last-minute reprieve, , 67, will be the first person to die by in the U.S. since 2010 — and just the fourth since the resumed in the U.S. 49 years ago.

Sigmon, who admitted to killing his ex-girlfriend’s parents with a baseball bat after she refused to come back to him, said he chose to die by bullets because he considered the other choices offered by the state to be worse.

His lawyers said he didn’t want to pick the , which would “cook him alive,” or a , whose details are kept secret in South Carolina. He also feared an injection of pentobarbital into his veins would send a rush of fluid into his lungs and drown him.

The death row inmate’s only remaining choice was a firing squad, an method with a long history in the U.S. and around the world. But in recent years, some death penalty proponents have started to see the death by bullets as a more humane option: If the shooters’ aim is true, death is nearly instaneous, whereas lethal injections require inserting an IV in a vein. Electrocution appears to burn and disfigure. Inmates also have been seen to writhe and struggle when the latest method — — is used to suffocate them as it is pushed through a mask.

Execution procedure

When the curtain opens Friday evening, Sigmon’s lawyer, family members of the victims and three members of the news media will watch from behind glass recently upgraded to be bullet-resistant.

The shooters will be 15 feet away — the length from the backboard to the free-throw line on a basketball court.

Moments after the hood is placed over Sigmon’s head, three trained volunteers will shoot at the same time.

Each will be armed with .308-caliber Winchester 110-grain TAP Urban ammunition often used by police marksmen. The bullet is designed to shatter on impact with something hard, like an inmate’s chest bones, sending fragments meant to destroy the heart and cause death almost immediately.

A short time later, a doctor will confirm Sigmon is dead. At most, the process will take five minutes — a quarter of the time needed for a lethal injection.

Capital sentence alternative

South Carolina turned to the firing squad as it struggled to find alternate methods to execute condemned inmates. By the beginning of this decade, the state’s supply of lethal injection drugs was gone, and no company would sell more except anonymously, which was not allowed at the time. Judges would not set execution dates if the electric chair was the only method. Thirteen years elapsed between executions, and cases of death row inmates started to pile up.

A Democratic lawmaker suggested a firing squad if the state was going to keep capital punishment. Supporters cited U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, who wrote in a 2017 dissent that “in addition to being near instant, death by shooting may also be comparatively painless.”

Sigmon has been close to death before. He had execution dates set three times, but each time it was when the state didn’t have lethal injection drugs and judges halted his death warrant because he couldn’t choose that method.

Deadly attack

Sigmon beat to death his ex-girlfriend’s parents with a baseball bat because he was angry that they had had him evicted from a trailer they owned. They were in separate rooms of their home and Sigmon went back and forth attacking them until they were dead, investigators said.

Sigmon then kidnapped his ex-girlfriend at gunpoint, but she escaped from his car. He shot at her as she ran but missed, prosecutors said.

“My intention was to kill her and then myself,” Sigmon said in a confession typed out by a detective after his arrest. “That was my intention all along. If I couldn’t have her, I wasn’t going to let anybody else have her. And I knew it got to the point where I couldn’t have her.”


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