12 Nov 24th–Nov 30th, 2022 phoenixnewtimes.com phoenix new Times | music | cafe | film | culTuRe | NighT+Day | feaTuRe | NeWs | OPiNiON | feeDBacK | cONTeNTs | “seemed to go back and forth between quiet resignation to his fate to finding humor in what was going on.” Hooper chuckled as prison staff applied a topical anesthetic before inserting the IV, Curtis said. Asked to give his last words, Hooper said, “It’s all been said. Let it be done. To all my lawyers and loved ones, don’t be sad for me, don’t cry. Don’t say goodbye, but say, I’ll see you later. Let’s go.” Within a minute of the drugs being administered, Hooper appeared to quietly lose consciousness. A chaplain was present in the small execu- tion chamber and prayed. As in the last two executions conducted, the executioners — whose identities and medical training are not made public — strug- gled to insert the IVs to administer the lethal dose of pentobarbital, according to witnesses. It took around 25 minutes for the IV lines to be inserted, although Hooper did not appear to feel pain, Curtis said. According to Christie, the executioners examined Hooper and informed him they would be inserting one IV in his femoral artery in the upper leg and the other one in his upper right arm. It took around 10 minutes to complete the femoral artery procedure after using a sonogram to find the artery. Then, after this was successful, they attempted to insert an IV into his right arm. This failed at first, but the second attempt was successful. “At one point while all this was going on,” Curtis added, Hooper “looked at the glass and said, ‘Can you believe this?’” After the IV lines were inserted and the warden read off the warrant of execution, Christie said, a few moments passed before the drugs were administered. “What’s taking so long?” Hooper asked. Misconduct or ‘Smoke and Mirrors’? Hooper’s death marked the conclusion of a case that has stretched on for more than 40 years. In a series of high-profile trials, Hooper and two other men were convicted of murdering Pat Redmond and his mother-in-law, Helen Phelps, in their north Phoenix home on New Year’s Eve 1980. Redmond’s wife, Marilyn, was shot in the head but survived. The prosecution claimed the murders were part of a wide-ranging plot by Chicago crime boss Robert Cruz to murder Redmond to further his own business interests. They claimed that Cruz and several of his associates hired Hooper and two others to kill Redmond. Many of Cruz’s own associates served as witnesses in the trial, sometimes in exchange for significant benefits. Cruz himself had multiple trials, ultimately was acquitted, and later was killed in Illinois. Hooper initially admitted to police he was involved, though in the decades since has claimed he’s innocent. Hooper said he was set up by Cruz’s associates and then railroaded by the criminal justice system. No physical evidence tied Hooper to the scene of the crime. His attorneys have spent years trying to discredit the prosecution and argued that the lead police investigator engaged in “extensive misconduct,” including questionable tactics to encourage witnesses to testify. Multiple witnesses who knew Hooper personally testified that he was involved, and he was identified by Marilyn Redmond in a police lineup. Mike Redmond said that the claims of misconduct were simply “smoke and mirrors.” The family has been supportive of the death penalty in Hooper’s case and submitted a letter opposing his clemency at a recent hearing. Long Wait for ‘Any Justice’ Redmond remembered his father as a “good guy” who had resisted “shady” business dealings by Cruz. In 1968, before the Redmond murders, Hooper pleaded guilty to manslaughter for shooting and killing his then-girlfriend. After a decade or so in prison, he was released and then received a death sentence in Illinois for his involvement in a separate triple murder, although that conviction was ultimately vacated due to issues at trial. Redmond said he was skeptical that police corruption was behind each of these convic- tions and called Hooper a “killer for hire.” “I was a 23-year-old sergeant in the Marine Corps when my dad was murdered,” he wrote. “My sisters were 22 and 21.” They had to wait until their 60s “before we saw any justice in this case,” he said. Mike Redmond became a police officer working in criminal investigations for most of his career. Capital cases such as Hooper’s take decades to resolve. Of the 111 people on Arizona’s death row, fewer than two dozen have exhausted their appeals. Those who have are mostly, like Hooper, in their 70s or 80s. As a result, Arizona has been mainly executing the elderly. And, like Hooper, their time may be running out — although now that elections have given Arizona a new governor and likely a new attorney general, the future of the death penalty in the state is less clear. In a statement, current Attorney General Mark Brnovich called justice for Redmond’s family “long-awaited.” A spokesperson for Brnovich did not respond to questions about whether the attorney general intends to seek more death warrants before he leaves office in early January — or who will be the next death to occur in Florence. | NEWS | “Done” from p 9 A photo of Pat Redmond, who was murdered in 1980, was displayed during a press conference after the execution of Murray Hooper. Katya Schwenk