The Controversy Surrounding Alabama's First Execution by Nitrogen Gas
#alabama #nitrogen_gas #capital_punishment
Alabama recently executed a convicted murderer using nitrogen gas, sparking debate about the use of this method for capital punishment.
Geoffrey Todd West was an American convicted murderer executed in Alabama in 2025 for a 1997 capital murder. On March 27, 1997, West and his girlfriend went to Harold’s Chevron, a convenience store where he had previously worked, intending to rob it. West, armed with a .45 caliber handgun, held the store clerk, Margaret Parrish Berry, at gunpoint, took $250 from the store’s cash, and fatally shot Berry in the back of the head while she was lying face-down behind the counter. He was convicted of capital murder on June 1, 1999, and sentenced to death following a jury recommendation of 10-2[1][2][3]. West spent more than two decades on death row before his execution by nitrogen hypoxia—breathing pure nitrogen gas to cause death by oxygen deprivation—at the William C. Holman Correctional Facility in Atmore, Alabama, on September 25, 2025. He was 50 years old at the time. This execution marked one of the first uses of nitrogen gas as a method in the United States, with Alabama being a pioneer state in this approach[1][2][3][6]. In interviews before his execution, West expressed regret for his crime, stating he struggled to understand his actions and wished he could take them back. He apologized privately to Berry’s family and spoke of seeking peace through his recent baptism and confirmation into the Catholic Church. Despite an appeal from Berry’s son for clemency and to deliver a message of forgiveness, the governor allowed the execution to proceed. West received visits from family, attorneys, and a spiritual advisor in his final hours and declined a special last meal but ate some offered food[2][3][4]. Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall framed the execution as upholding justice and accountability, emphasizing the state's commitment to victims and communities. West's case remains notable for the use of nitrogen hypoxia and the complex dynamics surrounding capital punishment and forgiveness in Alabama[1][3][4].
#alabama #nitrogen_gas #capital_punishment
Alabama recently executed a convicted murderer using nitrogen gas, sparking debate about the use of this method for capital punishment.
#alabama #capital_punishment #crime
After 24 years, Alabama has finally executed Geoffrey Todd West for robbing and killing a gas station clerk in 1997.