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Georgia executes a woman for the first time in 70 years - TV

Georgia executed the only woman on the state’s death row on Wednesday, marking the first time in 70 years the state has carried out a death sentence on a woman, a television station reported.

Kelly Gissendaner, 47, died by injection at 12:21 a.m. EDT at a prison in Jackson, Georgia, the Atlanta television station WSB-TV reported on its website.

Pope Francis had urged officials to commute her death sentence. Gissendaner was sentenced to death for her role in plotting her husband’s murder in 1997.

“At 12:21 am (0441 GMT) the court-ordered execution of Kelly Gissendaner was carried out in accordance with state law,” said Gwendolyn Hogan, a spokeswoman for the Georgia Department of Corrections.

She was the first woman to be executed in the southern state since 1945, and the 16th nationwide since the Supreme Court re-established the death penalty in 1976.

Gissendaner was sentenced to death after being found guilty of conspiring to murder her husband in 1997.

Her execution initially was scheduled for 7 pm Tuesday (2300 GMT), but was delayed as her lawyers sought an 11th hour reprieve in filings before a federal court of appeals, the Georgia supreme court and the US Supreme Court, to no avail.

Pope Francis’s personal representative sent a letter to Georgia’s parole board on Tuesday making “an urgent appeal” to commute Gissendaner’s sentence to “one that would better express both justice and mercy.” “Please be assured of my prayers as you consider this request by Pope Francis for what I believe would be a just act of clemency,” the Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano wrote.

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