Last meal On July 8, 1999, Davis was electrocuted. For his
last meal, Davis requested and received a dinner consisting of one lobster tail, fried potatoes, a half pound of fried shrimp, six ounces of fried clams, half a loaf of garlic bread, and of
A&W Root Beer.
Electrical parameters According to the licensed electrical engineer who managed the equipment, the amount of electrical
energy applied to Davis in three steps was: or 1.3hp. The total energy used was 299.4kJ or 284
Btu, over a period of 38seconds. A Btu is defined as the amount of energy required to raise the temperature of one
pound of water by one degree
Fahrenheit. Davis weighed 350pounds.
Controversy Davis's execution gained nationwide
media attention after he bled profusely from the nose while being electrocuted. Also during his time in the
electric chair, Davis suffered burns to his head, leg, and groin area. A subsequent investigation concluded that Davis had begun bleeding before any electricity was applied. He had been taking blood thinning medication for an unrelated health problem. It was concluded that the electric chair had functioned as designed, and the Florida Supreme Court upheld electrocution as a means of capital punishment. However, a dissenting justice published photos of the aftermath of the incident in an attempt to argue that the practice of
capital punishment by electrocution was outdated, and that any future executions should be carried out through
lethal injection. Furthermore, appellate attorney Marty McClain, who had represented Davis while Davis filed appeals on death row, analyzed the results from a second, independent autopsy requested by
Thomas Harrison Provenzano, another death row inmate who had initially been scheduled to die in the electric chair soon after Davis, and Provenzano's attorneys. McClain observed that Davis's body sustained fewer burns than the bodies of other inmates electrocuted in Florida, but that his brain was hardly damaged by the electricity: "There was no evidence that his brain was cooked. That means the brain was more likely to be functioning. That would be consistent with evidence of breathing [after the electrocution]." In 1999, the state of Florida heard a petition from Provenzano in which Provenzano argued that the electric chair was a "
cruel and unusual punishment", with Davis' execution cited as an example of an inhumane death. , Davis was the last Florida inmate executed by electric chair. Since the 2000 execution of
Terry Melvin Sims, all subsequent executions were by lethal injection, and lethal injection is Florida's primary method of execution. However, inmates may still choose electrocution. , only
Wayne C. Doty has expressed wanting to die by electrocution; Doty is still alive, and his execution date has yet to be set.
Aftermath The Florida Department of Corrections placed Davis's body in his brother's custody. His brother Richard scheduled Davis's body to be cremated on July 14, 1999, but his cremation was postponed from that date due to Provenzano requesting an independent autopsy on Davis. ==See also==