Skip to main content

Clemency petition filed on behalf of Ivan Teleguz, set to be executed this month in Virginia

Ivan Teleguz
Ivan Teleguz
Lawyers for condemned murder-for-hire killer Ivan Teleguz are asking Gov. Terry McAuliffe to stop his execution, set for April 25, in a clemency petition delivered Friday.

The petition contends the jurors who convicted and sentenced Teleguz to death relied on testimony since proved false and recanted.

“Significant information has emerged since Teleguz’s trial suggesting he is innocent,” his lawyers said in a statement Friday.

“In this case — where new evidence jurors never had a chance to consider shows that Mr. Teleguz’s conviction and death sentence are based on false testimony — Governor McAuliffe should protect the integrity of the ultimate sanction and grant clemency to ensure that Virginia does not execute an innocent man,” said Elizabeth Peiffer, Teleguz’s lawyer.

Asked for comment Friday, Marsha L. Garst, the commonwealth’s attorney for Rockingham County, wrote in an email that, “All the issues have been very thoroughly tried and decided in local, state and federal courts. I feel at this stage that since the case is being handled by the Attorney General’s Office, that they should address any questions.”

A spokesman for the Attorney General’s Office referred inquiries to the governor’s office, which did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday. Governors generally have not commented on pending clemency requests.

Teleguz, 38, was sentenced to death for the 2001 capital murder of Stephanie Yvonne Sipe, the mother of their 23-month-old son. Sipe was stabbed to death in her Harrisonburg apartment. Trial evidence showed that Teleguz was angry that he had been ordered to pay child support.

He hired two men to kill Sipe for $2,000 and drove them from Pennsylvania, where Teleguz had moved. Sipe suffered defensive wounds and three other knife wounds — one wound went from the left side of her neck to the right side. The body was discovered by a neighbor who also found her son, unharmed, in a bathtub full of water.

The unanimous three-judge panel of the Richmond-based 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected a stay request and a related matter last month.

But Teleguz’s lawyers argue that the new evidence pointing to his innocence has never been fully examined by the courts. They say two prosecution witnesses admitted “that they testified falsely in exchange for leniency in their own cases, and have no reason to think Teleguz was involved in the murder-for-hire.”

One of the witnesses has been deported, and the other was told he would lose his release date set for next year if he went back on his testimony.

Teleguz also says jurors relied on false testimony that he was involved in an additional murder in Pennsylvania. Investigation since trial by law enforcement and by the defense has confirmed that the murder never happened.

His lawyers contend the only evidence remaining against Teleguz is the testimony of Michael Hetrick, the actual killer who was spared the death penalty. His lawyers said the clemency petition details why his testimony is not credible or reliable.

Among other things, his lawyers said the petition is supported by an expert on clemency and former Maryland Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich, Jr., who oversaw two executions as governor there from 2003 to 2007.

A Change.org petition in support of clemency has been signed by more than 113,000 people, and Teleguz also has submitted written requests for clemency from thousands of supporters.

Source: Richmond Times-Dispatch, Frank Green, April 8, 2017

⚑ | Report an error, an omission, a typo; suggest a story or a new angle to an existing story; submit a piece, a comment; recommend a resource; contact the webmaster, contact us: deathpenaltynews@gmail.com.


Opposed to Capital Punishment? Help us keep this blog up and running! DONATE!

Most viewed (Last 7 days)

South Carolina man who received rare double death sentence chooses method of execution

A South Carolina man on death row for two separate murders in 2005 has opted to die by lethal injection. Stephen Christopher Stanko, who wrote a book about his experiences in prison following an earlier conviction for assault and kidnapping, received an unusual two death sentences at two separate murder trials for a pair of slayings in April 2005. Stanko was convicted in Georgetown County for the murder of his girlfriend, librarian Laura Ling, in her Murrells Inlet home. He also sentenced to 110 years for sexually assaulting and slitting the throat of Ling's daughter, who survived and called the police.

Indonesia | 3 British nationals face death penalty for allegedly smuggling 1 kg of cocaine onto tourist island of Bali

Three British nationals accused of smuggling over two pounds of cocaine into Indonesia were charged Tuesday in a court on the tourist island of Bali. They face the death penalty under the country's strict drug laws. Convicted drug smugglers in Indonesia are sometimes executed by firing squad. Jonathan Christopher Collyer, 28, and Lisa Ellen Stocker, 29, were arrested on Feb. 1 after customs officers halted them at the X-ray machine after finding suspicious items in their luggage disguised as food packages, said prosecutor I Made Dipa Umbara.

Iran | 10 Men Hanged in 2 Group Hangings in Ghezel Hesar Prison

Iran Human Rights (IHRNGO); May 29, 2025: Ten men including an Afghan national and four Kurdish minorities were hanged in two group hangings in Ghezel Hesar Prison on Monday and Wednesday. Farman Koushaki, Yashar Jafari, Akbar Ebrahimi, Hojat Havasizadeh, Abbas Laki, Majid Bahrami, Afshin Ezati, Amirhossein Mohammadi and two unidentified men were hanged for drug-related, murder and rape charges in separate cases.  According to information obtained by Iran Human Rights, five men including an Afghan national and two Kurdish minorities were hanged in Ghezelhesar Prison on 26 May 2025.

Oscar Franklin Smith, Tennessee death row inmate, declines to select execution method

Oscar Franklin Smith, a Tennessee death row inmate scheduled for execution on May 22, will die by lethal injection if the process moves forward. Smith, who was asked to choose between lethal injection and the electric chair, declined to pick, his attorney Kelley Henry, a supervisory assistant federal public defender, said. When an inmate does not choose, the method defaults to lethal injection. It's not the first time Smith has been given this grim decision and declined. That decision to not choose ultimately saved his life for three more years.

Texas | Man ordered final death row meal so controversial that no one gets one anymore

As well as listing off five people we wouldn't mind getting stuck in a lift with if it ever came to it, we've all debated what we would have for our last ever meal on Earth. These imaginary scenarios help us kill a bit of time during long journeys, or can reignite the conversation if it gets a bit stale. But for death row inmates, fantasising about their final feast isn't just a fun and fictitious pastime - it's something they actually have to decide on before they face their fate. Unless they are locked up in Texas, that is, as the US state no longer offers prisoners this privilege thanks to the actions of one convict 14 years ago.

Japan | Steady-handed prison guard remembers faces of condemned he executed

His hands never trembled, not even as he slipped the noose around the necks of several condemned men. But now, years later, their faces return to him -- uninvited, every day. Currently in his 70s, a Japanese man who worked as a prison guard for many years at a detention center in eastern Japan, remains anonymous for privacy reasons. One morning in the 1990s, he was informed he was to be that day's "noose handler," assisted by four other prison officers and several staff in the task of hanging death row inmates. "I knew this was a road I'd have to go down eventually if I worked at a detention center," the man said in an interview with Kyodo News. "You don't have any power to veto the decision."

“Violent” Movements During Indiana Execution Raise Unanswered Questions

Benjamin Ritchie’s exe­cu­tion in Indiana on May 20, 2025, has raised new con­cerns about the use of pen­to­bar­bi­tal after defense coun­sel report­ed their client dis­played an unusu­al phys­i­cal reac­tion after being inject­ed with the drug. But because Indiana offi­cials bar media wit­ness­es from observ­ing exe­cu­tions, the pub­lic has no inde­pen­dent wit­ness reports on what transpired. Steve Schutte, an attor­ney for Mr. Ritchie, told the Indiana Capital Chronicle that Mr. Ritchie made what appeared to be ​“vio­lent” move­ments, lift­ing his head and shoul­ders abrupt­ly from the gur­ney soon after it is believed the drugs began to flow. 

Trump's Justice Department examining pardons issued by Biden

WASHINGTON, June 2 (Reuters) - A senior official in Republican U.S. President Donald Trump's Justice Department told staff on Monday that he has been directed to investigate clemency granted by Democrat Joe Biden in the waning days of his presidency to members of his family and death row inmates. Ed Martin, the Justice Department's pardon attorney, wrote in an email seen by Reuters that the investigation involves whether Biden "was competent and whether others were taking advantage of him through use of AutoPen or other means."

Idaho pauses executions into 2026 as prison system preps for firing squad

Idaho's state prison system has suspended all executions and execution-related procedures, including lethal injection, at least until the end of 2025. This suspension is due to the upcoming transition to firing squad executions as the state's primary method of capital punishment, a change that necessitates significant renovations to the execution chamber at the maximum-security prison.  The new law prioritizing the controversial firing squad method is set to take effect in July 2026.

Governor says Indiana is out of execution drugs, signals willingness to debate capital punishment

Indiana has exhausted its supply of lethal injection drugs after carrying out two executions in the past six months — and Gov. Mike Braun said Tuesday he doesn’t plan to buy more, at least for now. The governor’s remarks followed the state’s December execution of Joseph Corcoran — Indiana’s first since 2009 — and last month’s execution of Benjamin Ritchie. Recent reporting by the Indiana Capital Chronicle revealed the state spent $900,000 last year to obtain pentobarbital to carry out executions, but officials wouldn’t say how much was purchased and refused to provide information on expiration dates, storage or other details.