MINERAL
POINT, Mo. — A 75-year-old man who was sentenced to death for killing
his wife in a 1992 shooting rampage at the St. Louis County Courthouse
has died in prison, the Missouri Department of Corrections said Monday.
Kenneth
Baumruk died late Friday at the Potosi Correctional Center in Mineral
Point of apparent natural causes, the agency said. He was the oldest
inmate on Missouri's death row.
Baumruk
pulled two handguns from a briefcase and opened fire in the Clayton
courthouse on May 5, 1992, killing his wife, Mary, as their divorce
hearing was about to begin. He also wounded both of their lawyers, a
bailiff and a security guard, and fired at a judge and police officers
but missed.
Police
returned fire and struck Baumruk nine times, including twice in the
head. Authorities said he had carried the .38-caliber handguns in his
luggage on a flight from a Seattle, where he was living.
Baumruk
initially was ruled incompetent for trial partly because of head
injuries suffered when he was shot by police. He was eventually found
guilty and sentenced to die in 2001, but the case was thrown out by the
Missouri Supreme Court.
A
2007 retrial held ended with Baumruk convicted of first-degree murder
and again sentenced to die. The jury ignored pleas from Baumruk's
lawyers to find him not guilty by reason of what they called a
delusional disorder that left him incapable of appreciating the error of
his actions.
Baumruk
was weeks away from execution in 2009, but the lethal injection was
postponed by appeals. The state Supreme Court upheld his conviction in
2012, letting stand lower court rulings that denied his claims of
ineffective work by his lawyers.
A new execution date had not been set.
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