About 14 years after he murdered Sergeant Jack Ohrberg, Gregory Resnover received his death warrant, and his execution date was set on December 8, 1994. The Indiana Catholic Conference made a public appeal for clemency from the Indiana governor, stating that the death penalty breached the sacredness and dignity of human life, and pushed for the
commutation of Resnover's death sentence to
life without parole. Subsequently, Governor
Evan Bayh refused clemency for Resnover, after Bayh rejected the plea of Resnover's father that Resnover did not directly kill Sergeant Ohrberg despite firing the shots. In response, the lawyers of Resnover filed an appeal to challenge Bayh's decision to reject clemency, but the appeal was dismissed by Marion County judge Anthony J. Metz III. The
Indiana Supreme Court also rejected Resnover's appeal during the final week before his execution. During the final moments leading up to the execution, friends and family members of Resnover condemned his upcoming execution, stating that it was "vindictive, politically expedient and racially motivated", given that Resnover was
African-American and there were allegations that Resnover was judged more harshly in the killing of a White police officer (Sergeant Ohrberg) in comparison to a White cop killer. Resnover's brother Dwight quoted in his own words, "It's just unfair, and there will be many more acts of unfairness." At the same time, the surviving family members and colleagues of Sergeant Ohrberg commemorated him and his life, stating that Ohrberg, who was born in
Brooklyn to immigrants from
Denmark, was a good father and police officer, and Ohrberg's daughter stated that her father often showed concern for her welfare and her brother's, while a former co-worker of Ohrberg stated that the victim was dutiful as an officer and insisted on going as the first in line to arrest Resnover and Smith for the killing of William Sieg. On December 8, 1994, 43-year-old Gregory Duane Resnover was put to death by the
electric chair at the
Indiana State Prison. Prisons spokesperson Pam Pattison confirmed in a press conference that Resnover was pronounced dead at 12:13a.m. According to Indianapolis police patroller John Correll, many police officers supported the execution, although members of the international
human rights group Amnesty International protested against the execution. Resnover reportedly declined a
last meal and made no final statement, and his teenage son was present to witness the execution. Just an hour before Resnover's execution, the Indiana Supreme Court blocked a lower court's ruling to approve videotaping of the execution by the
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which the group requested as video evidence to prove their contention that the electric chair amounted to "
cruel and unusual punishment". Resnover was the third convict executed in Indiana since the 1976
resumption of capital punishment, as well as the first in Indiana to be executed involuntarily after exhausting all avenues of appeal in more than 30 years. As of 2025, Resnover was the last person to be executed by the electric chair in Indiana. ==Execution of Tommie Smith==