South Carolina convict inches closer to first US death by firing squad in 15 years

Mar 7, 2025 | Uncategorized

A South Carolina death row inmate who gruesomely killed his ex-girlfriend’s parents with a baseball bat in 2001 is scheduled to be executed by firing squad on Friday – the first execution of its kind in the U.S. in 15 years.

Brad Sigmon, 67, who admitted to the killings because his ex-girlfriend refused to get back to him, will be blindfolded and strapped to a chair at around 6 p.m. before three volunteers armed with rifles about 15 feet away will fire bullets into his heart.

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.

Brad Sigmon firing squad

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The execution will go ahead if South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster and South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson signed off on it. Sigmon’s lawyers have asked McMaster to commute his death sentence to life in prison, arguing that he is a model prisoner and works every day to atone for the killings he committed after succumbing to severe mental illness. But no South Carolina governor has granted clemency in the 49 years since the death penalty resumed.

Sigmon chose the firing squad method over the electric chair which would “cook him alive,” or a lethal injection, whose details are kept secret in South Carolina, his lawyers said. 

South Carolina keeping information secret about how it conducts lethal injections led him to decide on the firing squad, which he acknowledges will be a violent death, his lawyer said. On Thursday, Sigmon’s lawyers asked the Supreme Court to delay his execution because the state doesn’t release enough information about the lethal injection drug. 

Sigmon said he carried out the brutal slayings because he was angry that victims Gladys and David Larke had been evicted from a trailer they owned. They were in separate rooms of their Greenville County home and Sigmon went back and forth attacking them until they were dead, investigators said.

He then kidnapped his ex-girlfriend, Rebecca Armstrong, in his car but she jumped out of the moving vehicle and was able to escape. Sigmon shot at her as she fled, but missed, prosecutors said.

Firing squad graphic

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“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.”

He told jurors during his trial that he was obsessed with her. “Did I love her? More than anything else in the world.”

Armstrong told USA Today this week that the killings ripped her family apart and that “he should answer for what he’s done.”

She said that her parents were simple country folk who had five children and were always looking out for everyone and that they’ve missed the births of some of their eight grandchildren and five great-grand children since they were murdered.

“They were the glue of the family,” Armstrong said, adding, “He took that away.”

Armstrong said she doesn’t believe in the death penalty and won’t attend the execution, although her son Ricky Sims will be there. 

Sims told the Greenville News that he will be wearing a pair of boots that were the last gift his grandparents ever gave him.

“He’s going to pay for what he’s done,” Sims told the outlet. “He took away two people who would have done anything for their family. They were the rock of our family … They didn’t deserve it.”

Five states — Idaho, Mississippi, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Utah — authorize the use of firing squads in certain circumstances.

Just three inmates — in Utah in 1977, 1996 and 2010 — have faced a firing squad in the U.S. since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976. Ronnie Gardner was the last prisoner to be executed by firing squad, in Utah in 2010.

Death chamber in Columbia, S.C.

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Executions in South Carolina resumed in September, when the state – once one of the busiest for executions – ended a 13-year pause in carrying out the death penalty.

The pause was caused in part by the state having difficulty obtaining lethal injection drugs after their supply expired because of pharmaceutical companies’ concerns that they would have to disclose they had sold the drugs to state officials. The state legislature then passed a shield law allowing officials to keep lethal injection drug suppliers private.

Twenty-five executions were carried out in the U.S. last year. Five have already been carried out in 2025, per the Death Penalty Information Center.

Fox News’ Landon Mion and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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