Stop the Execution of Jessie Hoffman in Louisiana
Governor Jeff Landry
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Jessie Hoffman was convicted in Louisiana for the 1996 killing of Mary "Molly" Elliot. He is scheduled to be executed via nitrogen gas suffocation on March 18, 2025.
CURRENT STATUS as of 9pm CT on March 14: This execution is ON.
PLEASE CONTINUE TO TAKE ACTION: This execution was stayed on March 11, however the state appealed and on March 14 the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals overturned the stay. Jessie's attorneys are likely to appeal top the US Supreme Court. For now the execution is back ON and it may be Tuesday before there is certainty.
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Call Governor Landry at 225-342-0991 with the following message:
"Hi. My name is [your name]. I am calling to ask that Gov. Landry grants clemency to Jessie Hoffman, who is scheduled to be executed by nitrogen suffocation on March 18, 2025. We do not need the death penalty to be safe from people who have committed great harm-- a life sentence is punishment enough. Thank you."
CLICK HERE TO REGISTER FOR THE LIVE VIRTUAL VIGIL starting at 5pm CT on 3/18.
[Please sign this petition specific to Jessie, and also this other petition from our partners in Louisiana, which opposes the resumption of executions in Louisiana in general.]
Mary Elliot, an account executive for an advertising agency, was reported missing the day before her murder. Soon after her body was found, Hoffman was identified as a suspect. After providing inconsistent statements during his police interviews, he eventually confessed to kidnapping and robbing the victim, engaging in sexual intercourse, then shooting her. Jessie’s videotaped confession, along with DNA evidence linking him to the crime scene, was used to secure his conviction. Although Jessie’s defense team never disputed that he had shot Mary, they argued that she had been shot accidentally, rather than purposefully, during a struggle over the gun.
During the penalty phase, the defense presented testimony from eleven witnesses to show that Jessie had no prior issues with the law and, therefore, would not pose any future danger to society. However, the jury unanimously agreed on a death sentence because the offense had been committed in an especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel manner.
Louisiana also intends to be the second state to implement nitrogen suffocation executions after years without an execution due to troubles sourcing lethal injection drugs. Alabama became the first state to implement this experimental method when it executed Kenneth Smith January 2024. The public was promised an execution method that resulted in an almost immediate loss of consciousness and a quick and painless death, yet Kenneth's execution went very differently than how the state insisted it would. Kenneth thrashed, convulsed, gasped and heaved for more than 20 minutes. The 3 nitrogen suffocations that followed went similarly.
The State of Louisiana has not had an execution in 15 years. Its scheduling of an execution at this time makes the state an outlier in its use of the death penalty while the majority of other states are on a downward trend away from executions.
Please sign the petition asking Governor Jeff Landry to do everything within his power to stop this execution, including issuing a stay, and seeking a path to clemency in the case.
Sponsored by
To:
Governor Jeff Landry
From:
[Your Name]
Governor Landry,
We are writing to ask you to stop the execution of Jessie Hoffman on March 18, 2025, for the 1996 murder of Mary Elliot. While we acknowledge the gravity of his actions, we ground this appeal in our firm belief that nitrogen hypoxia is an inhumane method of execution, which may carry an unconstitutional risk of cruel and unusual punishment.
The execution of Kenneth Smith on January 25, 2024, showed, in horrific detail, the extreme suffering inflicted by nitrogen hypoxia. Despite many claims that this method would result in a quick and painless death, Kenneth was subjected to 32 minutes of visible agony. Executing Jessie in a similar manner would not serve justice but would instead become a mere spectacle of human suffering.
You claim to want to keep the promises Louisiana made to the victims of ‘these horrific crimes’. Governor Landry, the fundamental nature of a violent act does not change simply because it is sanctioned by law.
We, the undersigned, ask that you do everything within your power to stop this execution, including issuing a stay, and seeking a path to clemency in the case.
Thank you for time and attention to this urgent and serious matter.