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Ala. set to execute inmate in ’85 police officer killing

Alabama is preparing to execute Vernon Madison who lawyers contend can no longer remember killing a cop

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This undated file photo provided by the Alabama Department of Corrections shows a police mug shot of Vernon Madison, who is scheduled to be executed for the 1985 murder of Mobile police officer Julius Schulte on Thursday.

Alabama Department of Corrections, via AP, File

Associated Press

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Alabama is preparing to execute an inmate whose lawyers say should be spared because he has developed dementia and can’t remember killing a police officer three decades ago nor understand his punishment.

Vernon Madison, 67, is scheduled to receive a lethal injection at 6 p.m. Thursday at a prison in southwest Alabama.

Madison was sentenced to death for the 1985 killing of Mobile Police Cpl. Julius Schulte.

Schulte, a 22-year veteran of the police force, had responded to a report of a missing child placed by Madison’s then-girlfriend. Prosecutors said Madison crept up and shot Schulte in the back of the head as he sat in his police car.

Madison’s attorneys have asked the U.S. Supreme Court to halt the execution, saying that Madison, who has had several strokes, no longer remembers killing Schulte or understands his looming execution.

“It is undisputed that Mr. Madison suffers from vascular dementia as a result of multiple serious strokes in the last two years and no longer has a memory of the commission of the crime for which he is to be executed. His mind and body are failing,” wrote attorney Bryan Stevenson, of the Equal Justice Initiative.

Attorneys said Madison also has slurred speech, is legally blind, can no longer walk independently and has urinary incontinence due to brain damage.

The Supreme Court has previously ruled that condemned inmates must have a “rational understanding” that they are about to be executed and why.

But the same court ruled in November that Madison’s execution could proceed. Justices said then in an unsigned opinion that testimony shows Madison “recognizes that he will be put to death as punishment for the murder he was found to have committed,” even if he doesn’t remember the killing itself.

The state attorney general’s office said courts have found that Madison, though in declining health, is competent.

Madison’s attorneys have also asked for a stay on the grounds that a judge sentenced him to death, even though a jury recommended life imprisonment. Alabama lawmakers in 2017 changed the law to no longer allow a judge to override a jury’s sentence recommendation in death penalty-eligible cases.

The Alabama attorney general’s office, in opposing the stay, said the 2017 legislation was not retroactive and did not affect Madison and other inmates already on death row.