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- Arizona plans to execute Leroy Dean McGill on Wednesday for a 2002 murder.
- McGill was convicted of killing Charles Perez by setting him on fire.
- Arizona's execution is the first of three scheduled in the U.S. this week.
PHOENIX — An Arizona prisoner convicted of killing another man by throwing gasoline at him and lighting a match is set to be put to death Wednesday, the first of three executions planned this week around the U.S.
Leroy Dean McGill, 63, is scheduled to receive a lethal injection of pentobarbital at the Arizona State Prison Complex in Florence. He was convicted of murder in the July 2002 death of Charles Perez.
Authorities said McGill threw the gasoline and a lit match at Perez and Perez's girlfriend, Nova Banta, as they sat on a sofa in a north Phoenix apartment on July 13 of that year. Perez and Banta had accused McGill of stealing a gun from the apartment before the attack. At the time, McGill was using methamphetamine and hadn't slept in several days.
Banta survived the attack, but Perez died.
Twelve people have been executed so far this year in the United States. Tennessee and Florida each are scheduled to carry out an execution on Thursday.
At the Arizona trial, Banta testified that McGill told her and Perez not to talk behind people's backs. Before they could respond, McGill set them on fire, authorities said.
Perez and Banta ran out of the apartment. Another man who lived in the apartment used a blanket to put out the flames on Banta, who suffered third-degree burns over three-quarters of her body. Perez died later at a hospital after suffering what prosecutors described as extreme pain.
Banta identified McGill as the attacker at trial.
Jurors deliberated for less than an hour before convicting McGill of murder in Perez's death in October 2004. He was also convicted of attempted murder for attacking Banta, arson, and endangerment of people who escaped without injuries when the fire forced them to flee the apartment and a nearby unit where flames spread.
McGill's lawyers had argued for leniency by presenting evidence about the abuse he suffered as a child, as well as mental impairment and psychological immaturity. The jury ultimately returned the death sentence.
This spring, McGill's lawyers made a last-ditch bid to get him resentenced, but a lower-court judge rejected it. The Arizona Supreme Court also declined a request from McGill's lawyers to postpone the execution.
McGill, who declined an interview request from The Associated Press, waived his right to seek clemency.
Arizona last applied the death penalty in 2025, executing Richard Kenneth Djerf for the 1993 killings of four members of a Phoenix family and Aaron Gunches for the 2002 fatal shooting of his girlfriend's ex-husband.
The state carried out three executions in 2022 following a nearly eight-year hiatus brought on by difficulties obtaining execution drugs and by criticism that a 2014 execution was botched. In that execution, Joseph Wood was injected with 15 doses of a two-drug combination over two hours, leading him to snort repeatedly and gasp hundreds of times before he died.
The state's execution protocol calls for administering two syringes of the sedative pentobarbital, according to the Arizona Department of Corrections, Rehabilitation and Reentry.
Arizona currently has 109 prisoners on death row.









