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This undated photo released by the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections shows Frederick Treesh. (AP Photo/Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections)
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Updated: Wednesday, 06 Mar 2013, 12:14 PM EST
Published : Wednesday, 06 Mar 2013, 7:12 AM EST
LUCASVILLE, Ohio (WANE) - A man from Waterloo, Indiana who has been on death row for 18 years after going on a multi-state crime spree died by lethal injection at 10:37 am Wednesday morning. Frederick Treesh was executed inside the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in Lucasville, Ohio.
Treesh, in a last statement, apologized for the death of security guard Henry Dupree who was shot dead during the robbery of an Eastlake, Ohio adult book store in August of 1994, but said he wouldn't say he was sorry to family members of a video store clerk killed in Michigan who were witnessing the execution.
"I've never been tried, I've never been charged," he said.
After a few more comments he said, "If you want me murdered, just say it."
Treesh was the 50th inmate put to death by the state since it resumed executions in 1999.
Treesh was sentenced to die for killing Dupree. The state parole board voted against Treesh getting clemency. Gov. John Kasich denied his request for mercy.
The following is a timeline of events leading up to the execution:
Treesh arrived at the facility at 10:06 am Tuesday.
He ate lunch consisting of a hamburger patty, carrots, and a potato.
From 1:14pm - 3:31pm he sllept
Later that afternoon he took a call from his daughter Tabatha and after that met with his spiritual advisors.
At 7:29 pm authorities ended any visits for Treesh.
7:54 pm was when they conducted the first vein assessment, part of the procedure leading up to the lethal injection.
Special meal requested for dinner
- 32 oz porterhouse steak with mushrooms and eggs
- hash browns
- cottage cheese
- onion rings
- hot fudge sundae
- coca cola
- root beer
(Ate most of onion rings and only half of sundae.)
From 8:45pm to 11:21 pm Treesh talked on the phone with inmate James Goff who is a father figure to him. Goff is being held at the Chillicothe Correctional Facility.
12:23am Wednesday - 1:22am he talked on the phone with a friend from Fort Wayne, Kay Beard.
2:05am - 2:31am slept
Refused breakfast Wednesday morning but had milk and orange juice.
6:14 am - 6:31 talked with father on the phone and got emotional (Robert Treesh)
Met with attorney afterwards
8 am met with spiritual leader. Got emotional and tearful
8:45am requested and ate the rest of his ice cream sundae
10:00 am - Treesh is brought to the death house and the lethal injection process is begun.
At 10:37 am, Treesh is declared dead.
Daughter speaks
After Treesh was found guilty of killing Dupree, Treesh told NewsChannel 15 he blames his actions on his crack cocaine addiction.
Tuesday morning Treesh's daughter, Tabatha, sent NewsChannel 15's Megan Reust a letter talking about her father's execution.
"What people need to realize is my Dad did not set out to kill anyone. He was supporting a $1,000 a day crack cocaine habbit. Drugs like that force good people to do terrible things they cannot change no matter how remorseful they are.
My Dad shot a man because of his addiction. He may be sorry, but he cannot change it.
I do not believe that the death penalty is the answer but society does. I believe everyone makes mistakes in life, but that doesn't mean that they have to pay for them the rest of their lives. Sometimes good people make bad choices but that doesn't mean that they are bad people." - Tabatha, Fred Treesh's daughter
Treesh's execution is set for 10 a.m. Wednesday. NewsChannel 15's Megan Reust will be in the media room in the prison and will update you once more details become available.
The following is an AP article written by Andrew Welsh-Huggins filed Wednesday morning:
LUCASVILLE, Ohio (AP) — A man who fatally shot an adult bookstore security guard in 1994 at the end of a multistate crime spree was executed on Wednesday.
Frederick Treesh received a single powerful dose of pentobarbital and was pronounced dead at 10:37 by Donald Morgan, warden of the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in Lucasville.
Treesh was sentenced to die for killing Henry Dupree in Eastlake east of Cleveland on Aug. 27, 1994.
Treesh, in a last statement, apologized for the death of Dupree, but said he wouldn't say he was sorry to family members of a video store clerk killed in Michigan who were witnessing the execution.
"I've never been tried, I've never been charged," he said.
After a few more comments he said, "If you want me murdered, just say it."
Treesh was the 50th inmate put to death by the state since it resumed executions in 1999.
Gov. John Kasich denied Treesh clemency last week, following the recommendation of the state parole board, which ruled unanimously last month that the evidence showed Dupree was seated when shot and hadn't shown any sign of being a threat to Treesh. The board also said Treesh's decision to shoot a clerk in the face as he left the store suggests Treesh's "murderous intent" when coming to the store.
Treesh and his co-defendant "gratuitously brutalized, humiliated and killed innocent people, most of whom, like Dupree, posed no real or perceived
threat to them," the board said.
Prosecutors say Treesh, 48, and the co-defendant robbed banks and businesses, committed sexual assaults, stole cars, committed carjackings and shot someone to death in a Michigan robbery during a spree that also took them to Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota and Wisconsin.
Treesh's attorneys described him as a cocaine addict who was high during the robbery and is deeply sorry for what happened.
"Hindsight, regret and remorse cannot turn back the clock and cannot return Mr. Dupree's life," they said in a petition for clemency. "What Fred can do and has tried to do is to help prevent others from making the same mistakes he did" by teaching them to avoid drugs.
His lawyers also alleged Treesh's rights were violated during a prolonged interrogation as he was coming down from a drug high, which contributed to his death sentence. They also say Treesh suffers from health problems, including a seizure disorder, that raise concerns Ohio's lethal injection process would cause him suffering amounting to cruel and unusual punishment.
Prosecutors contend Treesh intentionally murdered Dupree and tried to kill others, including police officers in pursuit.
"Treesh has never taken responsibility for his actions," Lake County prosecutor Charles Coulson wrote. "Treesh still claims 'the cocaine made him do it.'"
Coulson also noted that courts previously determined Treesh's constitutional rights weren't violated.
Treesh declined to be interviewed by the parole board.
The parole board cited Treesh's refusal to be interviewed as evidence he has not grown or improved as a person in prison.
Treesh's prison behavior is indicative of "a self-indulgent, petulant and immature individual," the board said.
He was never prosecuted for the crimes in the other states, according to the Ohio Attorney General's office.
Ohio's most recent execution was in November, when the state put to death Brett Hartman for the 1997 stabbing and dismemberment of an Akron woman.
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Andrew Welsh-Huggins can be reached on Twitter at https://twitter.com/awhcolumbus.
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