The 7th Execution of 2025
Jessie
Hoffman was put to death on March 19, 2025 at Louisiana State Penitentiary in
Angola, becoming the first person in the state executed using nitrogen gas, reported the Louisiana Illuminator.
It also
marked the first time Louisiana has carried out the death penalty in 15 years,
citing its inability to obtain the drugs necessary for lethal injection. With
no foreseeable sources to resuming using that method, Republican Gov. Jeff
Landry and the GOP-dominated state legislature approved nitrogen hypoxia as an
alternative.
Alabama is
the only other state to have used the technique, having put four condemned men
to death since adopting the method in February 2024.
“It went
flawless. There was nothing that happened incorrectly,” Gary Westcott,
secretary of Louisiana’s Department of Public Safety and Corrections, told
reporters after Hoffman’s execution, according to WAFB-TV.
Hoffman,
46, was executed for the 1996 kidnapping, rape and murder of 28-year-old Mary
“Molly” Elliot.
Investigators
said Hoffman abducted Elliot at a downtown New Orleans parking lot where he was
a valet and where she parked daily for her job at an advertising agency. She
was taken to rural St. Tammany Parish, where she was assaulted and fatally shot
the day before Thanksgiving. A hunter found her nude body the next day at a
remote boat launch near the Pearl River.
Landry’s
office issued a statement from him after Hoffman’s execution. It stressed how
Elliot’s “family and friends have been forced to relive the tragedy through
countless legal proceedings.”
“In
Louisiana, we will always prioritize victims over criminals, law and order over
lawlessness, and justice over the status quo,” Landry said. ”If you commit
heinous acts of violence in this State, it will cost you your life. Plain and
simple.”
Read the
governor’s full statement below.
Lawyers
for Hoffman, seeking a last-minute reprieve from his death sentence being
carried out, argued nitrogen hypoxia amounts to cruel and unusual punishment,
prohibited under the 8th Amendment. Hoffman instead sought death by firing
squad or lethal injection, acknowledging his responsibility for Elliot’s
violent death.
Earlier
this month, U.S. District Judge Shelly Dick of Louisiana’s Middle District
Court, temporarily blocked Hoffman’s execution date to allow that argument to
proceed. Attorney General Liz Murrill challenged that order. Last week,
the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals removed the injunction from Dick, a
federal court appointee of former President Barack Obama. In a 5-4 decision
late Tuesday afternoon, the Supreme Court refused to stop Hoffman’s execution.
Cecelia
Koppel, one of Hoffman’s attorneys and director of the Center for Social
Justice at Loyola University College of Law, issued a statement shortly after
Hoffman’s death.
“Tonight,
the State of Louisiana carried out the senseless execution of Jessie Hoffman,”
Koppell said. “He was a father, a husband, and a man who showed extraordinary
capacity for redemption. Jessie no longer bore any resemblance to the 18-year
old who killed Molly Elliot.”
Koppel had
unsuccessfully challenged Louisiana’s move to nitrogen hypoxia, arguing the
method was an illegal affront to Hoffman’s Buddhist faith. Justice Neil
Gorsuch, an appointee of President Donald Trump, joined the court’s three
liberal jurists and wrote the dissenting opinion, calling out the 5th Circuit’s failure
to address Hoffman’s religious concerns.
The
expedited nature of Louisiana’s nitrogen hypoxia protocols was also a point of
contention for Koppel. Although Landry and lawmakers approved the method last
year, the governor didn’t provide the legally required execution protocol until
Feb. 10. Those details remained under seal until March 5, giving Hoffman’s team
less than two weeks to challenge the pending execution.
“The State
was able to execute him by pushing out a new protocol and setting execution
dates to prevent careful judicial review and shrouding the process in secrecy,”
Koppel said.
State
corrections officials allowed only two journalists to witness the execution.
According to The Advocate, Hoffman was fastened to a gurney and inhaled
nitrogen gas for 19 minutes. State officials said he displayed “convulsive
activity” as he died, and he was pronounced dead at 6:50 p.m.
Hoffman
declined to make a final statement before his death and refused a last meal,
according to the report.
Ilona
Hoffman, the executed man’s wife, issued a statement that said he “was not
defined by his worst moment” and that the “system” had failed him as a child.
“This
execution was not justice. It was revenge,” Ilona Hoffman said. “True justice
recognizes growth, humanity, and redemption. Louisiana chose to ignore that.”
The
Promise of Justice Initiative, which opposes the death penalty, was among the
groups in Hoffman’s corner. Its senior staff attorney, Samantha Pourciau, took
critical aim at the Landry administration in a statement after his death.
“Governor
Landry’s yearslong pursuit of this execution concluded with more pain and more
trauma. Tonight, while many in our state cannot afford groceries, the state
used countless resources to kill one man,” Pourciau said in part. “The governor
cannot cloak this in fighting for victims, because today we learned that this
is not, in fact, what this family wants. This is what the governor wants. This
has been in service of no one, but the bloodlust of our state government.”
There are
55 more people on death row in Louisiana, and Murrill has said the state
intends to execute four people this year.
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