Duncan McKenzie | |
Birth Name: | Duncan Peder McKenzie Jr. |
Birth Date: | 5 October 1951 |
Birth Place: | Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
Death Place: | Montana State Prison, Deer Lodge, Montana, U.S. |
Death Cause: | Execution by lethal injection |
Criminal Status: | Executed |
Conviction Penalty: | Death (March 3, 1975) |
Victims: | Debra Prety, 15 Lana Harding, 23 |
Date: | October 26, 1973 January 21, 1974 |
Conviction: | Deliberate homicide Aggravated kidnapping Sexual intercourse without consent |
Country: | United States |
States: | Idaho and Montana |
Duncan Peder McKenzie Jr. (October 5, 1951 – May 10, 1995)[1] was convicted of the murder of a schoolteacher from Conrad, Montana named Lana Harding on January 21, 1974. After his conviction in March 1975, he was on death row for twenty years, receiving eight stays of execution. His ninth stay of execution was denied by the United States courts of appeals.[2]
McKenzie was executed on May 10, 1995. He was the first person executed in Montana since 1943, and also the first ever U.S. death row inmate to spend twenty years or more on death row and still eventually be executed.[3] He is one of only three people to have been executed in Montana since the reinstatement of the death penalty. He was the only person of the three to be executed involuntarily.
In 2021, DNA tests posthumously linked McKenzie to a separate sexual assault and murder of a 15-year-old girl in Idaho in 1973.[4]
McKenzie was born on October 5, 1951, in Chicago, Illinois.[5] He married Shirley Marlene McKenzie (born July 1943). They had three children together, Richard, Michelle, and Jon and lived in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho at the time of his incarceration. Shirley passed away in May 2017 at Coeur d'Alene, Idaho.https://www.englishfuneralchapel.com/obituaries/shirley-mckenzie[6]
He was convicted of the murder, rape, and death by asphyxia of Lana Harding. He was sentenced to death for aggravated kidnapping.[7] The crime was committed on January 21, 1974, in the early morning. Harding was a schoolteacher in a small one-classroom schoolhouse and members of the community raised concerns of her well-being when she did not arrive at the school and her shoes were left in the driveway.[8]
He waited on death row for twenty years from 1975 to 1995. He was one of three inmates to be sentenced with the reinstated death penalty in Montana. The other two sentenced were Bernard Fitzpatrick and Dewey Coleman, although their appeals to their own executions were successful.[9]
McKenzie was executed on May 10, 1995, at Montana State Prison, becoming the first person to be executed in Montana since 1943.[10] His last meal was tenderloin steak, french fries, a tossed salad, orange sherbet and whole milk.[11] Upon his request, he was allowed to listen to country music as he was put to death.[12] McKenzie remains the first of only three people to be executed in Montana since the resumption of capital punishment. The others were Terry Allen Langford in 1998 and David Thomas Dawson in 2006. McKenzie was the only one of the three to be executed involuntarily.[13]
In 2021, DNA tests linked McKenzie to the rape and murder of 15-year-old Debra Prety in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho in October 1973, days before Halloween. McKenzie abducted and strangled Prety as she was returning home from a school dance. McKenzie had long been a suspect in her murder, but had not confessed to killing her before his execution. A DNA sample showed that the odds of the killer being someone other than McKenzie were 7.08 sextillion to one.[14]