Vile Wicked Black Who Killed Black and White Co-Workers by Hammering Them and Setting Them on Fire Gets Lethal Injection

Daily Mail
March 22, 2014

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Phyllis Harris was beaten with a hammer and then set on fire, by her Black co-worker.

A Florida man who killed two female co-workers by beating them with a hammer and setting them on fire during a robbery at a fabric store where they worked in 1987 was executed on Thursday.

One witness to the lethal injection blurted out ‘Die!’ as the inmate read his last statement.

Robert L. Henry, 55, was pronounced dead at 6:16 p.m. on Thursday after the chemical injection at the Florida State Prison.

He was convicted of first-degree murder in the November 1987 deaths of Phyllis Harris, 53, and Janet Thermidor, 35, at the Deerfield Beach store. Authorities say about $1,200 was taken in the robbery.

Before the execution, Henry read a three-minute statement in which he apologized for his crimes and said he hoped his death would comfort the families of the victims.

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Miriam Wiley Elliott, right, comforts Seth Penalver, prior to the execution of Robert L. Henry, by the prison near Starke, Fla., on Thursday.

But he also criticized the death penalty, saying thieves don’t get their hands amputated as punishment.

‘Why would we continue to be murderers to those who have murdered?’ he said.

Then, as he continued, an unidentified victim family member who was witnessing the execution said in a loud voice: ‘Die!’ The comment wasn’t audible through the thick glass partition separating witnesses from the chamber.

After the execution, Thermidor’s sister, Deborah Knights, read a family statement.

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Robert L. Henry was interrupted during his speech about how unfair the death penalty is, by a relative of one of the victims shouting ‘Die’ at him.

‘We will always cherish the memory of her life that was taken too soon by a demon from hell,’ she said.

‘Today should be closure, but how can you forget the brutal way in which two lives were taken without remorse?’

In the 1987 attack, Thermidor was still alive when authorities found her beaten and burned. She identified Henry as the attacker in a recorded statement before she died hours later.

Court records show Henry initially claimed the robbery was committed by three masked intruders who also abducted him, but later he confessed to acting alone. That confession was recorded.

‘You talk about atrocious, heinous, cruel, vile or wicked,’ Broward County prosecutor Michael Satz told the jury that convicted Henry in 1988. ‘This is a case that nightmares are made of.’

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