Devastated Parchman: Mississippi Executes Longest鈥慡erving Death鈥慠ow Inmate

By Kaushiki

Devastated Parchman: Mississippi Executes Longest鈥慡erving Death鈥慠ow Inmate

Parchman (38738) 鈥 Mississippi State Penitentiary 鈥 Richard Gerald Jordan, Mississippi鈥檚 longest-serving death-row inmate, was executed by lethal injection at Parchman鈥檚 penitentiary on June 25, ending nearly 50 years behind bars. The 79-year-old Vietnam veteran was convicted in 1976 for the kidnapping and murder of 35-year-old Edwina Marter during a failed ransom scheme. This marked the state鈥檚 third execution in the past decade and follows years of appeals, including a Supreme Court challenge over Mississippi鈥檚 three-drug protocol.

Jordan鈥檚 final hours were overshadowed by courtroom drama: he gave a brief statement, apologizing to the victim鈥檚 family and expressing gratitude for the 鈥渉umane鈥 method of execution. Edwina鈥檚 son, Eric Marter, now in his 50s, welcomed the outcome, stating, 鈥淚t should have happened a long time ago鈥 鈥 underscoring his belief that justice has finally been served.

Beyond the execution itself, Jordan鈥檚 case highlights broader questions about mental health, wartime PTSD, and legal fairness. His defense argued he never received a proper independent mental-health evaluation at trial. Still, the courts and Governor Tate Reeves refused clemency, citing overwhelming evidence and severity of the crime.

This story not only ends one of Mississippi鈥檚 longest capital punishment sagas鈥攂ut also prompts wider reflection on how the justice system weighs decades-long appeals against victims鈥 need for closure.

Detectives, attorneys, and victim-survivors gathered outside Parchman as Jordan鈥檚 last appeal was rejected. Mississippi Department of Corrections staff began the procedure shortly after 6鈥痯.m.; Jordan was pronounced dead by 6:16鈥痯.m. His elderly wife and defense counsel were present. Meanwhile, back in Gulfport鈥攚here the crime originated鈥擡dwina Marter鈥檚 family watched events unfold via livestream. 鈥淣othing can ever restore what he stole from us,鈥 her family stated, reflecting both sorrow and relief.

WHY THIS MATTERS NOW:

After nearly five decades of legal limbo, Jordan鈥檚 execution stirs debate over capital punishment persistence, the impact of PTSD on criminal behavior, and whether the justice system neglected mental-health assessments early on.

馃啎 6/25/2025 6:00鈥痯.m.: Execution begins at Mississippi State Penitentiary

馃啎 6/25/2025 6:16鈥痯.m.: Richard Jordan pronounced dead

馃啎 6/26/2025: Governor Reeves addresses media on denied clemency

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