February 11, 2009 2:08 PM

Kentucky Grants Child Killer's Death Wish

(AP)  The Kentucky Supreme Court cleared the way Thursday for the execution of a child killer who asked to be put to death so that delays would not "drag out the misery" for himself and his victims' families.

Marco Allen Chapman, 36, could be put to death as early as next month if no further appeals are filed. The court issued only a brief order to set the execution in motion and did not explain its reasoning.

"I say we should go ahead and get it over with and done," Chapman told a judge in a separate hearing in Lexington on Thursday. "I should be able to do what I want to do and go ahead and have the execution put forth."

Chapman filed an affidavit last year asking that public defenders not be allowed to file additional appeals because he wants to be executed for the murders of 6-year-old Cody Sharon and 7-year-old Chelbi Sharon in the northern Kentucky town of Warsaw in August 2002.

His defense attorneys called his request for a speedy execution "suicide by court," and argued that his wish to waive appeals showed he was not competent. They have been pushing for another competency hearing.

Defense attorney John Palombi, one of a team of lawyers who have been trying to stop the execution, said Chapman has been unwilling to authorize pleadings in his case. He said he doesn't know what the next step will be for the defense team.

"I really don't even want to predict," Palombi said.

The Supreme Court had previously rejected arguments made by Chapman's defense team that his guilty plea amounted to state-assisted suicide.

Attorney General Jack Conway disagrees.

"I believe justice is being served by the Kentucky Supreme Court's decision to uphold the death sentence," Conway said in a prepared statement.

Under state law, the execution would go forward on Nov. 21.

The trial judge, Tony Frohlich, said at the time Chapman asked to die that he could find no legal reason not to grant the request.

Chapman took part by telephone in the ancillary hearing Thursday afternoon in Lexington. At issue is whether a circuit judge should overturn Chapman's decision to fire his attorneys and go ahead with the execution.

Chapman dismissed his lawyers in 2004 and entered the guilty plea. Since then, they have been seeking to represent him by questioning his competency.

Special Judge Roger Crittenden gave attorneys until Oct. 31 to file legal briefs. He set another hearing in the case for Nov. 7.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 17 Comments
by barbaram99 October 26, 2008 12:24 PM EDT
His peers gavr him death. He wrote his ticket and chosen death when he killed that child. He should not have ask to be put to death. His peers gave him death. He wants it carried out. Will it.
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by Netterz October 25, 2008 11:38 PM EDT
We waste far too much $ on guys like this every day. I applaude the judge for allowing this. The usual number of yrs for appeals is 10 yrs. Thats ALOT of tax payers $ to support the extreme *** most killers try and come up with the avoid being killed. This one admits he did it, and wants to get his sentence carried out. Has to be a 1st that one has admitted his crime and seeks penalty for it. Just get it over with and let all the families involved begin to heal.
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by eggy1620 October 24, 2008 6:46 PM EDT
The public defenders are just trying to fatten their saved lives stats for when they send out resumes to fat cat legal firms.
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by candy-apple October 24, 2008 5:33 PM EDT
Finally, someone willing to take responsibility and his punishment for his actions. Such a rarity in the world today!!!
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by aggiekat2004 October 24, 2008 2:54 PM EDT
Good for this guy. The lawyers should be hung in a public arena. At least he seems to be at peace with his decision to give the family closure.

Just shows that lawyers are scum of the earth, and that our legal system is really, really messed up.
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by good4always October 24, 2008 12:13 PM EDT
It apears that this murderer is least bad person compared to lawers who wants to stop the execution!
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by kemetorigin October 24, 2008 11:40 AM EDT
This is demonstrative of legal system waste. This is a complete waste of time and resources to drag out a death sentence. Get it over with already. Not because he wants it, but because justice should be swift.
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by whatthe7700 October 24, 2008 11:28 AM EDT
Is he going through hell every day in his mind for what he did? Then continue the suffering and let him live.
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by brianbwb-2009 October 24, 2008 10:10 AM EDT
"I should be able to do what I want to do and go ahead and have the execution put forth."

Sorry son, you lost the right to be able to do what you want.

This reminds me of the joke "how does a *** hurt a ***? By saying "no".
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by grammawhamma October 24, 2008 4:13 AM EDT
Aren''t defense lawyers supposed to be working FOR their client? Why are they fighting to prevent his wishes from being carried out? What a crazy mixed up world this has become!
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