Spartanburg man
executed for movie theater killings in 1991
MICHAEL
KERR Associated
Press
COLUMBIA, S.C. - In his final statement, a
Spartanburg man convicted in the killings of two Upstate movie
theater employees more than 14 years ago said he didn't pull the
trigger, but he apologized to the victims' families.
Richard Longworth, 36, died by lethal injection at 6:14 p.m.
Friday.
In the statement read by attorney David Belser, Longworth said he
would not ask the families of Alex Hopps and Todd Green for
forgiveness, because he knew it wouldn't be granted.
"I am morally and legally responsible for what happened,"
Longworth said in the statement. "I hope they also know how deeply,
truly sorry I am for what I have done. I hope my death brings them
the peace they deserve."
Green's mother and Hopps' father and sister witnessed the
execution, the second stemming from a brutal double murder that
Spartanburg residents still remember more than a decade later.
Longworth stared at the ceiling, never turning his head to look
at the witnesses through the barred window. Shortly after 6 p.m. he
was given the lethal injection. His chest moved up and down rapidly
for a minute or two and then all was still.
The final chapter in a 14-year story was complete.
Longworth was the second of two men executed in the shooting
deaths of 19-year-old Hopps and 24-year-old Green on Jan. 7, 1991.
He lost a final appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday
afternoon.
Longworth and his co-defendant David Rocheville decided to go to
the WestGate Mall movie theater in Spartanburg where they used to
work and rob it, prosecutors said. They dragged Hopps, an usher and
University of South Carolina student, outside. Longworth pinned
Hopps against a bar and Rocheville shot Hopps in the head.
The pair convinced Green, a theater manager, to let them back
inside. They ordered Green to empty the safe and forced him into a
van. After driving away from the theater, Longworth stopped and
ordered Green to get out, get on his knees and face forward.
Rocheville then shot Green in the head.
Rocheville was executed in 1999.
"I hope my family knows how much I love them, and how ashamed I
am that I have tarnished their name," Longworth said in his
statement. "For the last 14 years I have tried to live my life as
cleanly and as honorably as I was raised."
Longworth had a hamburger, french fries and chocolate milkshake
for his final meal.
"I would just like to say that two young men, two bright shining
stars of South Carolina are no longer with us," Hopps' sister,
Caroline Short, said after Longworth's execution. "They had a
future. It's hard to really say how much I love my brother ... He
told me he loved me regularly."
Todd was Mary Ann Green's only child.
"I can't explain how hard it is to go along without him," she
said, fighting back tears.
About ten people protested outside the Broad River Correctional
Facility carrying signs denouncing the death penalty.
Margaret Abbott said she's been protesting executions at the
facility for ten years, and that she is a friend of Longworth's
mother.
"Execution is not a solution," Abbott said before Longworth was
put to death. "It doesn't solve anything. It doesn't heal anybody.
You've got victims on both sides."
But while the execution can't make the pain go away, Hopps'
father said it does help to know the process is finally over.
"We got justice today," said Alexander Hopps, who wanted to
remember his son for what he was, not for the crime that ended his
life.
"He was a great person," Hopps said of his son. "We miss him
every day. We think about him every day. I hope he's up there
smiling down on
us." |