Death delayed: Severe weather sees Georgia postpone execution of 1st woman in 70yrs

26 Feb, 2015 06:30 / Updated 10 years ago

A winter storm passing through the State of Georgia Wednesday may have stranded thousands of motorists, but for one prisoner on death row it brought a four-day reprieve.

Uit ‘The new orange is black’? “@cnnbrk: Georgia postpones execution of Kelly R.Gissendaner http://t.co/FATR6K8IUapic.twitter.com/9R4BA8x8OJ

— AVdbe (@avcvdb) February 25, 2015

Kelly R. Gissendaner, 46, was supposed to be executed by lethal injection on Wednesday evening. Anticipating snow-related problems, the Georgia Department of Corrections rescheduled the execution for Monday. Spokeswoman Gwendolyn Hogan cited “winter weather and associated scheduling issues” as reasons for the temporary reprieve, noting that this was the first time the state had delayed an execution on account of weather.

Latest snowfall 4cast today/tonight; significant winter storm shaping up. Confidence low on southern edge. #gawxpic.twitter.com/8kpU5tWOz6

— NWS Atlanta (@NWSAtlanta) February 25, 2015

The National Weather Service forecast up to 8 inches (20cm) of snow in the northern parts of Georgia and issued a winter storm warning until Thursday morning. While mild in comparison to the record-breaking snowfall in northeastern US this winter, the storm is unusual for the southern state. Governor Nathan Deal declared a state of emergency, set to last till the storm’s end on Thursday afternoon.

READ MORE: Southern US struggles through 'catastrophic' winter storm

Gissendaner was charged with planning the February 1997 murder of her husband Douglas, committed by her then-boyfriend, Gregory Owen. While Owen was sentenced to life imprisonment, Gissendaner received the death penalty. Her last appeal for clemency was rejected earlier this year.

“There are no excuses for what I did. I am fully responsible for my role in my husband's murder,” Gissendaner wrote in her appeal. “I had become so self-centered and bitter about my life and who I had become, that I lost all judgment.”

The last time Georgia executed a female inmate was March 1945, when Lena Baker was sent to the electric chair. In 2005, the state Parole Board ruled that denying her clemency had been “a grievous error.”