Elmer Carroll Set To Be Executed for Florida Girl's Murder

The U.S. Supreme Court is considering a petition filed by his attorney

A man convicted of raping and strangling a young girl 22 years ago is set to be executed after more than two decades of failed appeals by lawyers who argued that he was too mentally ill to stand trial or be subjected to the death penalty.

Elmer Carroll, 56, is scheduled to die by lethal injection on Wednesday at the Florida State Prison in Starke. His last chance at a reprieve is before the U.S. Supreme Court, which is considering a petition filed by his attorney. The petition says that Carroll should have been considered mentally ill at the time of the murder.

"As far as I'm concerned, he was mentally ill at the time of the offense," said Carroll's attorney, Michael Reiter. "He has had mental illness all of his life."

Prosecutors disagreed and several courts have upheld Carroll's competency to stand trial and be put to death.

"Carroll does not meet, much less even allege, he meets either the definition of, or, factual requirements to be considered sufficiently mentally ill to bar his execution," Assistant Attorney General Scott Browne wrote in a motion filed last month.

Miami Man Sentenced to Death in Murder of 80-Year-Old Woman

In November 1990, Carroll was indicted on a count of first-degree murder and sexual battery for the rape and murder of 10-year-old Christine McGowan, who lived with her family next door to a halfway house for homeless men where Carroll was staying, in the Orlando suburb of Apopka.

Carroll, who had twice been imprisoned for indecent assault on a child, had told one of his housemates that the girl was "cute, sweet and liked to watch him make boats," according to witness testimony at his trial.

Witnesses said they saw Christine talking to a man who may have been Carroll the day before she was murdered in October 1990. Authorities said Carroll broke into Christine's home later that night. The next day, her stepfather, Robert Rank, found her dead in her bedroom when he went to wake her up. Rank noticed the front door was ajar and that his pickup was missing, according to court records.

An all-points bulletin was sent out for the missing truck, which a short time later was found on the side of a busy state road. A state wildlife officer found Carroll walking about a mile away. He had blood on his sweatshirt and genitals, while traces of his semen, saliva and pubic hair were found on Christine, according to the court record.

A public records search for Robert Rank turned up disconnected phone numbers. It was unclear whether he or other family members planned to attend the execution. The judge presiding over Carroll's trial was Circuit Judge Belvin Perry, who two decades later would gain worldwide fame presiding over the Casey Anthony trial.

Carroll's lawyers argued that he was unable to assist in his defense. They employed the insanity defense at his trial, during which they and prosecutors presented conflicting testimony from psychiatrists about Carroll's mental competency.

Two experts hired to evaluate him found that he wasn't competent to stand trial, and one concluded that Carroll was psychotic, schizophrenic, delusional, incoherent and withdrawn. Carroll was committed to a psychiatric unit at a local hospital for several days. Subsequently, after hearing from other experts, a judge found him competent to stand trial.

Florida Executes One of Longest-Serving Inmates

An expert witness testified that he thought Carroll had been making an effort to appear more mentally troubled than he actually was. The psychiatrist also said a low IQ test underestimated Carroll's intelligence, which he put in the average range, since Carroll purposefully wasn't cooperating.

During his appeals, Carroll argued that his defense attorney had failed to provide background material to help the psychiatrists with their testimony. One expert at a post-conviction hearing testified that Carroll had the problem-solving capacity of an 11-year-old and the attention span of an 80-year-old at the early start of dementia. The expert also testified that Carroll suffered brain damage. Perry denied Carroll's request for post-conviction relief and that denial was upheld by the Florida Supreme Court.

In 2002, after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled it unconstitutional to execute mentally disabled individuals, Carroll requested another hearing, claiming he was borderline mentally disabled and suffered brain damage. His attorneys argued the U.S. Supreme Court ruling should extend to mental illness. Again, Perry denied the request, saying Carroll wasn't mentally disabled.

But Reiter disagreed, pointing out that Carroll still seemed delusional when he met with him two weeks ago.

"He thinks God can save him," he said. "He knows he is being executed for a crime but he believes God doesn't want him dead."

More Local Stories:

Copyright The Associated Press
Contact Us