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US state executes mentally ill convicted murderer

Death by lethal injection was conducted at Greensville prison in Virginia
Death by lethal injection was conducted at Greensville prison in Virginia

A man convicted of killing a prison guard and a police officer during a jailbreak was put to death last night in Virginia despite last minute pleas over his mental condition.

William Morva, a 35-year-old dual US-Hungarian citizen who human rights activists say suffered from a mental disorder akin to schizophrenia, died by lethal injection in Greensville prison at 9.15pm local time, the state prison system said.

Hours earlier, state governor Terry McAuliffe had refused to grant Morva a last-minute stay of execution.

Mr McAuliffe said he and his legal team had examined the case and concluded that "Mr Morva was given a fair trial and that the jury heard substantial evidence about his mental health as they prepared to sentence him".

Morva had originally been jailed for attempted armed robbery.

But in 2006 he escaped from a Virginia prison hospital, beating up a deputy and taking his pistol, which he then used to kill a guard.

He used the same weapon to shoot dead another sheriff's deputy a day later during a manhunt close to the campus of Virgina Tech University.

Morva was sentenced to death in 2008, even though two psychiatrists diagnosed him with a severe mental disorder.

"Mr Morva's petition relies on the diagnosis of a psychiatrist who evaluated him nearly seven years after his trial and conviction," said Mr McAuliffe.

"My team and I evaluated that report closely alongside the findings of the experts who testified at trial in order to determine if the totality of their findings might have led the jury or appellate courts to hand down a different sentence," he said.

Morva's defenders had argued he suffered from psychological delusions which rendered him incapable of understanding the consequences of his actions, and that jurors were not given an accurate picture of his mental state during his trial.

The governor's refusal to spare Morva came a day after two top UN human rights officials called for a stay of execution, expressing deep concern that "Mr Morva's original trial did not meet fair trial safeguards".