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Kelly Gissendaner

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Nationality
  
American

Criminal penalty
  
Death


Name
  
Kelly Gissendaner

Siblings
  
Shane Brookshire

Kelly Gissendaner Kelly Gissendaner 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know Heavycom

Born
  
March 8, 1968 (
1968-03-08
)
Lawrenceville, Georgia

Cause of death
  
Execution by lethal injection

Criminal charge
  
Malice murder(February 25, 1997)

Criminal status
  
Executed(September 30, 2015)

Conviction(s)
  
Malice murder(November 18, 1998)

Died
  
September 30, 2015, Jackson, Georgia, United States

Spouse
  
Doug Gissendaner (m. 1995–1997), Doug Gissendaner (m. 1989–1993)

Children
  
Brandon Gissendaner, Kayla Gissendaner, Dakota Gissendaner

Parents
  
Maxine Wade, Larry Brookshire

Similar
  
Kimberly McCarthy, Lena Baker, Teresa Lewis

Interview with kelly gissendaner february 1997


Kelly Renee Gissendaner (March 8, 1968 – September 30, 2015) was an American murderer who was executed by the U.S. state of Georgia. Gissendaner had been convicted of orchestrating the murder of her husband, Douglas Gissendaner (December 14, 1966 – February 7, 1997). At the time of the murder, Gissendaner was 28 and her husband was 30. After her conviction, and until her execution, Gissendaner was the only woman on death row in Georgia.

Contents

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Early life and family

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Gissendaner was born into a poor cotton-farming family. According to sworn affidavits by friends and family members, she was molested by her stepfather and other men during her childhood and adolescence. During her senior year of high school, she claimed to have been date raped. Nine months later, her first son was born. In 1987, at age 19, Kelly Gissendaner married her first husband. They stayed together for six months.

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Kelly married Douglas Gissendaner for the first time on September 2, 1989. They had a baby together, lost their jobs and moved in with Kelly's mother. Douglas joined the Army and they were sent to Germany. Kelly got pregnant by another man who died of cancer. Kelly and Douglas divorced in 1993. In May 1995, she remarried Douglas. In December 1996, the couple bought a house together in Auburn, Georgia.

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Kelly, in addition to her daughter with Douglas, had two sons. Douglas was the stepfather to her sons.

Murder

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On February 7, 1997, Gregory Bruce Owen (born March 17, 1971) hid near the couple's home in Auburn. When Douglas arrived, Owen forced Douglas into his car at knifepoint and drove him to a wooded area in Gwinnett County near Harbins Park. After striking Douglas in the head with a nightstick, Owen stabbed Douglas in the neck and back multiple times. When Kelly arrived on the scene moments later, the two set fire to her husband's car and hid the body in the woods.

Trial

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Before trial, prosecutors offered both Owen and Gissendaner a plea deal of life in prison and no chance of parole for twenty-five years. Gissendaner, however, rejected the plea deal.

Gissendaner was convicted of orchestrating her husband's murder and sentenced to death in 1998 after Owen testified against her in a plea agreement in which he was sentenced to life imprisonment. Owen told a jury that Gissendaner had first approached him about “a way to get rid of” her husband three months before the murder. He further testified that Gissendaner thought murder was the only way to get Douglas out of her life and still get the house and a payoff from his life insurance policy. During the trial, Gissendaner was discovered to have threatened witnesses and also plotted to pay a witness to commit perjury.

Ministry

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After being sentenced to death, Gissendaner resided in Metro State Prison until it was closed in 2011. She was then transferred to Arrendale State Prison. While in prison, Gissendaner had a conversion to Christianity. During her time in prison, Gissendaner ministered to other women living in prison with her. A group of women who were incarcerated with Gissendaner formed a group called the Struggle Sisters after they were released from prison. Kelly spoke to the women through an air vent and prevented some from committing suicide, while other women tell of how Kelly’s words encouraged them to turn their lives around. The women released a video detailing the impact Gissendaner had on their lives.

Theology studies

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In 2010, Gissendaner enrolled in a theology studies program for prisoners, run by a consortium of Atlanta-area divinity schools, including the divinity school at Emory University. During theology studies, she became a student of Christian thinkers like Dietrich Bonhoeffer and Rowan Williams. Gissendaner developed a relationship with Jurgen Moltmann while she was in prison. Gissendaner sent Moltmann a paper that she had written on Bonhoeffer. He was impressed with her paper, and he wrote back. After that, the two became penpals exchanging letters about theology and faith. Gissendaner completed a theological degree program through Emory University.

Execution

Gissendaner's execution was scheduled for February 25, 2015, then after a weather delay for March 2, 2015, and then again one of the execution drugs was found to have been spoiled through improper storage.

Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, on behalf of Pope Francis, urged the Georgia State Board of Pardons and Paroles to spare Gissendaner's life. Gissendaner's clemency application to the Board of Pardons included support from a number of correctional officers that she met while in prison. Norman S. Fletcher, the former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Georgia, urged clemency because capital punishment was not proportional to her crime. The Georgia Republican Party’s general counsel and Republican Bob Barr also supported clemency.

The board again declined to commute her sentence on September 29, 2015. (Georgia is one of three US states in which the governor is not empowered to grant clemency to the condemned.)

Gissendaner was scheduled to be executed on September 29, 2015, but was again delayed by appeals. She was finally executed via lethal injection at the Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Prison in Jackson, Georgia, on September 30 at 12:21 a.m.

Gissendaner cried, prayed, sang "Amazing Grace", said, "Bless you all. Tell the Gissendaners I am so, so sorry that an amazing man lost his life because of me. If I could take it all back, I would." She was the first woman executed in Georgia since 1945.

References

Kelly Gissendaner Wikipedia