Clarence Carter, 49, is to be executed by lethal injection at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in Lucasville. He is to be the second inmate killed using the surgical sedative pentobarbital as a stand-alone execution drug.
Allen was being held on a theft charge. Carter had been convicted of aggravated murder and he told the Ohio Parole Board in February that the first slaying was over items stolen from a drug operation in which he was involved.
Carter spent Monday visiting with his brother, lawyer and two spiritual advisers, praying and reading the Quran, said Ohio prisons department spokesman Carlo LoParo. He also took a nap and wrote a note. Among items allowed in his cell were assorted photographs and a skull cap.
LoParo said Monday that Carter opted not to have a special meal and was to be served the same dinner as the other Lucasville inmates: tuna salad, wheat bread, oven-browned potatoes, turnip greens, coleslaw, an orange and a beverage.
Carter's brother, nephew and one of his attorneys planned to attend the execution. No one planned to witness on behalf of Allen.
In letters to the parole board, Allen's mother and sister said he was unrecognizable after the beating and never regained consciousness and that he has grandchildren he'll never meet.
Carter has no challenges pending. The parole board ruled unanimously last month against granting clemency, and Gov. John Kasich last week denied him mercy.
Carter had been scheduled for execution in 2007, but was spared by a lawsuit pending at the time that challenged lethal injection.
That year, the parole board had voted 6-3 against clemency, with those dissenting saying they were troubled by what appeared to be contradictory or inaccurate testimony by inmate witnesses. Carter's lawyers have said that ruling also incorrectly said his first murder victim was a police informant who was going to testify against a friend.
The Mortgage Mess: Just How Many Screwups Were There?




