THE mother of a inmate sentenced to death for a crime he committed as a teenager has pleaded with President Donald Trump to spare his life. Christopher Vialva is due to be put to death on September 24. Vialva was sentenced to death for shooting Todd Bagley in the head near Ft Hood, Texas, in […]
THE mother of a inmate sentenced to death for a crime he committed as a teenager has pleaded with President Donald Trump to spare his life.
Christopher Vialva is due to be put to death on September 24.
Christopher Vialva (left) and his mother Lisa Brown (right) during a prison visit[/caption]Vialva was sentenced to death for shooting Todd Bagley in the head near Ft Hood, Texas, in 1999, when Vialva was 19.
At the time of Vialva’s trial in 2000, the court said he also killed Bagley’s wife Stacie and burned the bodies in the couple’s car, reported Indiana Public Media.
According to court records the Bagleys prayed for their attackers and begged for mercy before they were killed.
One of Vialva’s co-defenants, Brandon Bernard, was also sentenced to death, while Tony Sparks, who was 16 at the time, was was sentenced to life in prison for carjacking the couple, but had his sentenced reduced.
Christopher Vialva (front left) on the day he was convicted for his role in a 1999 double murder near Ft. Hood, Texas.[/caption] Vialva is ministering to fellow inmates[/caption] Terre Haute also housed the Oklahoma bomber[/caption]Two other teenagers were also given 20 year-long prison sentences for their role in the crimes, and a 15-year-old received a five year sentence.
Vialva is being kept at the United States Penitentiary in Terre Haute, where Timothy McVeigh, the Oklahoma City bomber who killed 168 people in 1995, was imprisoned until he was executed in 2001.
“The only thing my son has said is that he’s deeply remorseful for the pain he’s caused to the family, and me with his actions that day,” Vialva’s mother Lisa Brown, told the local paper.
As Vialva’s execution date draws closer, Brown is still hoping Trump will pardon her son.
“I’m still holding onto my faith and praying for a miracle that somehow the President will see that he’s not the same person,” Brown said.
Since he was imprisoned, Vialva has become a Messianic Jew and spent two years convincing prison staff to allow him to conduct weekly services.
Vialva will be the first black man to be executed under Trump[/caption] Vialva’s mother is pleading for a stay of execution[/caption] The federal prison complex in Terre Haute[/caption]He now regularly ministers to fellow inmates.
Last year, Attorney General Bill Barr announced the first federal execution dates in 16 years, and shortly after, Vialva was told his execution date.
“They brought me out of my cell and took me to the Unit Team office, where the Warden was waiting,” he told The Intercept via email.
““I sat down at the table. There was a piece of paper in front of me. The Warden then tells me that I have been scheduled for execution September 24.
“I spent the rest of the night thinking about my mother’s heart breaking, and what this was going to do to her.”
Vialva will be the seventh person executed this year and the first black man to be executed during Trump’s presidency.