Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
International

Execution Date Set For First Indian-Origin Death-Row Prisoner In US

Darpan News Desk IANS, 11 Jan, 2018 01:07 PM
    The execution date of the first death-row Indian-American prisoner convicted of killing a baby and her Indian grandmother has been set for next month.
     
    Raghunandan Yandamuri, 32, in 2014 was given death penalty for kidnapping and killing a 61-year-old elderly Indian woman and her 10-month grand-daughter.
     
    It was seen as part of a botched kidnapping-for-ransom plot. Yandamuri’s execution date has been set for February 23 by local correctional authorities.
     
    However, he is likely to get a reprieve because of a 2015 moratorium on death penalty by Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf. Yandamuri is the first Indian-American to face death penalty.
     
    Federal authorities alleged that killings were part of a botched kidnapping-for-ransom plot
     
    A native of Andhra Pradesh, Yandamuri had come to the US on a H-1B visa. He holds an advanced degree in electrical and computer science engineering. Following his conviction, he asked that death penalty be imposed upon him. Later, he appealed his sentence, but lost his appeal last April.
     
    The local Times Herald on Wednesday reported that even though his execution by lethal injection is set for February 23, he might get a reprieve because a death penalty moratorium previously was put in place by Governor Tom Wolf.
     
    In a new release, Pennsylvania Department of Corrections, said, “The law provides, which when the governor does not sign a warrant of execution within the specified time period, the secretary of corrections has 30 days within that to issue a notice of execution.”    
     
    According to the report, Wolf imposed a moratorium on the death penalty in 2015. State officials are awaiting the results of a study conducted by the Pennsylvania Task Force and Advisory Committee on Capital Punishment, before moving forward with any executions.
     
    Pennsylvania has not seen any executions in the last nearly 20 years. Since 1976, three persons have been executed in the States between 1995 and 1999. 

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Pakistan Terror Groups Pose Threat To Our Interests In India, Afghanistan: US Spy Chiefs

    Pakistan Terror Groups Pose Threat To Our Interests In India, Afghanistan: US Spy Chiefs
    The intelligence community in the US is believed to have informed the US Congress that Pakistan has by and large failed to curb militants and terrorists operating from its soil.

    Pakistan Terror Groups Pose Threat To Our Interests In India, Afghanistan: US Spy Chiefs

    A Man's Religious Devotion Can Predict His Social Behaviour

    A Man's Religious Devotion Can Predict His Social Behaviour
    The level of devotion one feels toward religious beliefs can predict how that person likely will interact with members of his own group or with members outside of the group, according to a recent study.

    A Man's Religious Devotion Can Predict His Social Behaviour

    Man in Florida Told the Police He Killed Neo-Nazi Roommates for Disrespecting His Muslim Faith

    Man in Florida Told the Police He Killed Neo-Nazi Roommates for Disrespecting His Muslim Faith
    Dramatic developments shook Tampa as a Florida man, Devon Arthurs, shot two of his neo-nazi roommates on Friday.

    Man in Florida Told the Police He Killed Neo-Nazi Roommates for Disrespecting His Muslim Faith

    Hillary Clinton Compares Trump To Nixon, Says 'Presidency Would Eventually End In Disgrace'

    Hillary Clinton Compares Trump To Nixon, Says 'Presidency Would Eventually End In Disgrace'
    In a fiery commencement speech at her alma mater of Wellesley College on Friday, former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton drew a comparison between U.S. President Donald Trump and former President Richard Nixon.

    Hillary Clinton Compares Trump To Nixon, Says 'Presidency Would Eventually End In Disgrace'

    Bill Seeking H-1B Limits Exemption For Foreigners With US PhD Introduced

    Bill Seeking H-1B Limits Exemption For Foreigners With US PhD Introduced
    Introduced by Congressmen Erik Paulsen and Mike Quigley, the Stopping Trained in America PhDs from the Leaving the Economy (STAPLE) Act, is likely to benefit Indians, given that they constitute the largest number of students doing PhD in the US.

    Bill Seeking H-1B Limits Exemption For Foreigners With US PhD Introduced

    'Anti-National' Poet Mirza Ghalib Defends Self

    'Anti-National' Poet Mirza Ghalib Defends Self
    A new play has done just that — plucking the 19th century poet out of history and placing him in contemporary times.

    'Anti-National' Poet Mirza Ghalib Defends Self