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Ohio Supreme Court delays execution for Cleveland man convicted in 1993 Lucasville prison riot

Keith LaMar had been serving a life sentence for murder in Cuyahoga County when he killed five people during the 1993 melee at the Scioto County facility.

COLUMBUS, Ohio — The Ohio Supreme Court has delayed the execution of an inmate sentenced to die in the slayings of fellow inmates during a 1993 prison riot for three years.

Keith LaMar was convicted of aggravated murder in 1995 for the deaths of five inmates during a riot at the Southern Ohio Correctional Institution in Lucasville. He received the death penalty for four of the killings.

The high court on Thursday moved his execution date from Nov. 16, 2023, to Jan. 13, 2027.

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Lamar, a Cleveland who is currently being held at the Ohio State Penitentiary in Youngstown, had been serving a sentence of 18 years to life after pleading guilty to a separate Cuyahoga County murder when the 1993 riot took place. His lawyers have argued the only evidence against the 54-year-old prisoner came from inmates that authorities never corroborated, and that further proof of his innocence was withheld.

Credit: Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction
Mugshot of Keith LaMar

His reprieve comes amid an unofficial death penalty moratorium in the state, which Republican Gov. Mike DeWine has attributed to the state's ongoing inability to obtain drugs from pharmaceutical companies.

Ohio's execution schedule is now pushed out until late 2026. The state has not carried out an execution since 2018, when Robert Van Hook was put to death for killing a man he met in a Cincinnati bar in 1985.

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