Tennessee man to be electrocuted for killing fellow inmate
NASHVILLE — A Tennessee inmate is scheduled to die in the state’s electric chair Thursday, becoming the fifth convict in the past 16 months to choose electrocution over lethal injection, the state’s preferred method.
Nicholas Sutton, 58, was sentenced to death in 1986 for killing fellow inmate Carl Estep in a conflict over a drug deal while both were incarcerated in an East Tennessee prison. Sutton had already been serving time for three murders he committed in 1979 when he was 18, including the killing of his grandmother.
In a clemency petition to Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee, Sutton’s supporters had said the inmate is not the same man who went to prison 40 years ago.
“I can confidently state that Nick Sutton is the most rehabilitated prisoner that I met working in maximum security prisons over the course of 30 years,” former Correction Lt. Tony Eden stated in an affidavit included with the clemency petition.