SC Carries Out 3rd Firing Squad Execution of the Year

Stephen Bryant killed 3 people in 2004
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Nov 11, 2025 10:58 AM CST
Updated Nov 14, 2025 7:06 PM CST
South Carolina Court Won't Stop Friday Execution
Stephen Bryant is led to a Sumter-Lee Regional Detention Center van on Sept. 11, 2008, in Sumter County, SC.   (Keith Gedamke/The Item via AP)
UPDATE Nov 14, 2025 7:06 PM CST

A South Carolina firing squad executed a man Friday, the third person to die by that method in the state this year. Three prison employees, all with live ammunition, volunteered to carry out the execution of Stephen Bryant, 44, who was pronounced dead at 6:05pm. Bryant killed three people in five days in a rural area of the state in 2004. Bryant chose to die by firing squad instead of lethal injection or the electric chair. He made no final statement and briefly glanced toward the 10 witnesses before the hood was placed on his head, the AP reports. The shots rang out about 55 seconds later. Bryant made no noise. Three family members of victims who served as witnesses held hands during the execution. Bryant is the seventh person put to death by South Carolina in 14 months after the state had a 13-year pause in executions when it couldn't obtain lethal injection drugs.

Nov 11, 2025 10:58 AM CST

South Carolina's highest court has refused to stop the execution of a man who killed three people over five days more than 20 years ago—while leaving taunting messages for police in the blood of one of his victims. Stephen Bryant, 44, is scheduled to die at 6pm Friday by firing squad at a Columbia prison, per the AP. Lawyers for Bryant made a last-ditch appeal, arguing the judge who sentenced him to die never got to consider how badly his brain was damaged from his mother's alcohol and drug use while pregnant.

But the South Carolina Supreme Court rejected that appeal late Monday, writing that even if Bryant's defense had done more investigation into whether he had Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder, it simply would have given a different reason for his problems while not changing the outcome of a death sentence. "By any stretch, (Bryant) demonstrated a high level of planning, decision making, and calculation," the justices wrote in Monday's unanimous decision.

  • Bryant is being executed for killing Willard "TJ" Tietjen in his home in October 2004. Investigators said Bryant burned Tietjen's eyes with cigarettes after shooting him and painted "catch me if u can" and other taunting messages on the wall with the victim's blood. Prosecutors said he also shot and killed two men he was giving rides to as they stepped out of his truck to urinate over five days that terrorized Sumter County.
  • Bryant can still ask the governor to reduce his death sentence to life in prison in a decision that, if made, won't be announced until minutes before the execution is set to start. No South Carolina governor has ever granted clemency in the modern era of the death penalty.

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