Three British citizens will rot on death row in some of the world’s worst jails this Christmas contemplating their upcoming executions by hanging, lethal injection and firing squad. 

The three women who may share the same grisly fate have been convicted of heinous offences including murder and drug smuggling and have all appealed their sentences with no success. 

The death penalty has long been outlawed in the UK with the last British woman to be executed being Ruth Ellis in 1955 who was hanged for shooting her lover outside a pub in North London. 

Nearly three-quarters of all countries had abolished capital punishment in law or in practice by the end of 2023.

A total of 112 have abolished it for all crimes, nine others have abolished it for ordinary crimes and a further 23 are considered de-facto abolitionists because they have not executed anyone in a decade.

The only country on the European continent to still apply the death penalty is the former Soviet republic of Belarus, a staunch ally of Russia. 

However, there are many countries around the world, including the US, India and Indonesia that still regularly carry out the death penalty for serious crimes. 

Today both East and West deploy techniques that involve shock, injury and gas – in some cases leaving the condemned person to suffer for more than half an hour before dropping dead.

Ahead of their executions, MailOnline revisits the cases of the three British women who are currently condemned to die this Christmas.   

Lindsay Sandiford – Death by firing squad

Lindsay Sandiford has been imprisoned since 2013 for trying to smuggle £1.6 million cocaine into Indonesia in her suitcase.

The 67-year-old may have her sentence converted into a whole life term instead due to a law change being introduced in January, due to good behaviour behind bars.

Cellmates told The Mirror how the woman, dubbed the ‘grandmother’, enjoys special privileges including medium-rare steak dinners and teaches inmates how to knit.

Lawyers could argue for her to be returned to the UK, where she may be able to go free due to the time already served, the newspaper reported.

Lindsay Sandiford has been imprisoned since 2013 for trying to smuggle £1.6 million cocaine 

The 67-year-old may have her sentence converted into a whole life term instead due to a law change being introduced in January, due to good behaviour behind bars

The 67-year-old may have her sentence converted into a whole life term instead due to a law change being introduced in January, due to good behaviour behind bars

This picture taken in November 2012 shows a female detainee at Kerobokan prison

An inmate at Sandiford’s prison told The Mirror: ‘If she can get through to 2025 then she thinks she may be able to avoid the death penalty.’

Human rights barrister Felicity Gerry KC called for the grandmother to be returned to Britain.

She currently awaits being brought to Nusa Kambangan, known as Execution Island, from her cell in the Kerobokan jail.

Sandiford’s cellmate told the newspaper that she ‘is scared of dying but she has accepted it’ while another con claimed she is ‘foul-mouthed, antagonistic’ and drives people out of her cell. 

The grandmother-of-two is locked up in one of the toughest prisons in Indonesia and the site of many deadly riots, known ironically as Hotel K.

Drug mule Sandiford was caught flying into Bali from Bangkok with 10.16 lb of cocaine in 2012.

Smugglers face severe penalties in the country as around 80 per cent of the prison’s population are locked up on drug charges waiting to be executed, according to the Mirror.

 Lindsay Sandiford, is to be executed by a firing squad after she was caught in 2012

 Now grey-haired and suffering arthritis, Sandiford spends her days knitting in the cramped five metres-by-five-metres cell she shares with four other women prisoners

Barbed wire fences encircle the Kerobokan jail in Denpasar on Indonesia’s resort island of Bali

Sandiford met one of her granddaughters (pictured) while in prison awaiting her fate

Sandiford (pictured left with her eldest son and right in her younger days) will be transferred to Nusa Kambangan – known as Execution Island – and shot by firing squad 

The Brit, from Yorkshire, who has no previous convictions, claimed she was forced by a UK-based drugs syndicate to smuggle cocaine from Thailand to Bali by threats to the life of one of her two sons in Britain.

She received a death sentence despite cooperating with police in a sting to arrest people higher up in the syndicate, sparking an outcry from human rights lawyers and former UK Director of Public Prosecutions Ken Macdonald who said she had been treated with ‘quite extraordinary severity’.

She will be transferred to Nusa Kambangan – known as Execution Island – and shot by firing squad at midnight with up to a dozen other condemned prisoners when and if her death penalty is carried out

The British government has repeatedly refused to fund Sandiford’s appeal, despite a ruling from Supreme Court judges in London who said ‘substantial mitigating factors’ had been overlooked in her original trial.

Ramandeep Kaur Mann – Death by hanging 

Ramandeep Kaur Mann was found guilty of murdering her husband Sukhjit Singh, 34, by lacing his biryani dinner with sedatives and slitting his throat as he slept in the marital bed during a family holiday in India in 2016.

Mann, 38, from Derby, plotted to execute her husband with her lover Gurpreet Singh, his childhood friend – but the murder was witnessed by their eldest son Arjun, who was aged nine at the time.

Her son Arjun was the key prosecution witness at her trial and gave gripping testimony in court as his mother looked on. 

He chillingly described how he saw his mother smother his father with a pillow before her lover hit him over the head with a hammer and then she slit his throat.

Arjun says he will never forgive his mother for what she did to his dad. Now 17, he has asked MailOnline to use only childhood photos of him for this article so he can rebuild his life.

Mann (pictured)  has been sentenced to death in India for murdering her husband so that she could inherit £2 million from his life insurance policy

Sukhjit Singh (pictured) was murdered by his wife Ramandeep Kaur Mann in front of their nine-year-old son Arjun (middle)

Speaking exclusively to MailOnline, Arjun, said: ‘There are not many children who watch their mother kill their father and then give evidence about it. How do you try and get on with your life after something like this?

‘I’ve had to be very brave and I’m proud of what I’ve done because I’ve got justice for my father.

‘My brother and me don’t think of this woman as my mother anymore, she’s evil.

‘We want nothing to do with her. As far as I’m concerned, she stopped being a mother to us the moment she murdered our father.’

Commenting on her death sentence, which in India is usually carried out by hanging he said: ‘I would like to be there when it happens. It doesn’t fill me with fear, in fact, it would give me a lot of satisfaction and relief and I look forward to that day. I would like all my family to be there with me.

‘I would like to see with my own eyes that justice for my father has been served. She deserves to hang because she did such an evil thing she did.’

Arjun was in the UK when his mother’s death sentence was announced by a judge following her trial in Shahjahan District Court in the state of Uttar Pradesh, north India.

He said: ‘I had a lot of mixed feelings when I heard about it. On one hand I felt relief and that it was right. But I wasn’t happy because I’ve still lost my father, which makes me very sad.

‘But I don’t have any sympathy for her because she’s never shown any remorse and has lied this whole time.’

Arjun was awoken on the night of the murder while he slept in an adjoining bed to his father

The following morning he told his grandmother what he had seen and his mother was arrested

Arjun revealed that since her arrest, neither he or his younger brother Aaron have ever spoken or communicated with Mann

Mann is currently languishing in Shahjahanpur District Jail and is appealing her death sentence (Pictured with her husband)

Arjun was awoken on the night of the murder while he slept in an adjoining bed to his father as he did not eat the biryani laced with sedatives, which his younger brother Aaron, then aged 5, ate.

Recalling the events of the night, Arjun said: ‘I was fast asleep and then I heard a banging noise. I looked up from under the sheet and my mum was on top of my dad smothering him with a pillow.

‘Then Gurpreet, who I called “uncle Mithu” hit him over the head with a hammer. I remember the two of them then had a conversation saying “he’s still alive. We’ve got to finish him off.” 

My mum then took the knife and slit his throat.’

As he looked on, Arjun remembered: ‘I was terrified that if I said something or tried to stop them, they might kill me. I was lying on my side under a sheet watching this horror happen.

‘Out of pure fright I just lay there, I froze. I closed my eyes, and my heart was beating really fast. None of it felt real, I couldn’t understand what I’d just seen. I was so scared.’

With his father lying next to him in a pool of blood, Arjun said that he hid under a sheet and the next thing he remembers is that it was morning.

He immediately rushed downstairs to alert his grandmother that ‘something had happened’ but was unable to tell her exactly what as he was accompanied by his mother.

Police arrived within an hour, but it was not until later that day that Arjun whispered to his grandmother what he witnessed as Mann was being spoken to by officers in a separate part of the house.

She was arrested at the family home in the village of Basantapur, north India, where they had been staying during the visit to Mr Singh’s mother.

Arjun revealed that since her arrest, neither he or his younger brother Aaron have ever spoken or communicated with Mann. 

She is currently languishing in Shahjahanpur District Jail and is appealing her death sentence.

Linda Carty – Death by lethal injection  

Linda Carty, 63, has been awaiting execution for 20 years after being convicted of killing young mother Joana Rodriguez and plotting to steal the victim’s newborn son, Ray, with three men.

Neighbour Joana, aged 25, was kidnapped from her Houston apartment with her four-day-old son, suffocated to death and found in the boot of Carty’s car in 2001.

Carty, a native of St. Kitts and Nevis – which was a British territory when she was born, appears on tonight’s British Grandma On Death Row with Susanna Reid, which airs on ITV at 9pm. 

When asked by the host, ‘if you weren’t the one responsible, how did [it] happen?’, a tearful Carty replies: ‘I don’t know for sure because I wasn’t there.

‘But I can truthfully say, and I can truthfully look you in the eye, and tell you that I had nothing to do with this crime.’

Linda Carty (pictured), 63, has been awaiting execution for 20 years after being convicted of killing young mother Joana Rodriguez and plotting to steal the victim’s newborn son, Ray, with three men

Carty (pictured left), a native of St. Kitts and Nevis – which was a British territory when she was born, appears on tonight’s British Grandma On Death Row with Susanna Reid (pictured right), which airs on ITV at 9pm

Neighbour Joana (pictured), aged 25, was kidnapped from her Houston apartment with her four-day-old son, suffocated to death and found in the boot of Carty’s car in 2001

‘The court heard Linda orchestrated the kidnap of her pregnant neighbour, Joana Rodriguez, equipped with scrubs and scissors, as she intended to cut the baby out. 

‘Linda didn’t know that Joana had already had her baby four days earlier. Joana and her tiny baby boy were kidnapped and Joana was suffocated to death,’ explains Susanna in the programme. 

The presenter travels to Texas to meet Carty, who continues to plead her innocence and has never moved from her stance of ‘not guilty’, despite the substantial evidence against her. 

When asked by the host, ‘if you weren’t the one responsible, how did [it] happen?’, a tearful Carty (pictured before she was jailed) replies: ‘I don’t know for sure because I wasn’t there’

Prosecutors claim Carty was so desperate for a baby that she sought to kidnap Joana and keep baby Ray for herself.

However, the documentary claims that there are many questions over the validity of the witnesses who testified against Carty at her trial, as their stories have changed since her conviction.

But despite several applications for appeal Carty remains behind bars awaiting the death penalty.

With access to police custody footage of Carty and one of the key witnesses, Susanna investigates the harrowing murder case. 

She speaks to Carty’s daughter, ​​Jovelle Joubert, who candidly talks of the struggles of awaiting her mother’s execution on death row and admits she would not attend the execution of her mother. 

Lynn Hardaway, former Harris County Assistant District Attorney, recalls Carty’s conviction and says: ‘I don’t have any doubt she is guilty of this crime; all the evidence was consistent and had her as the ringleader and orchestrator of the whole offence.’

Barrister Hugh Southey QC has campaigned for Carty’s release for the last ten years and says the convicted grandmother did not have sufficient, high-quality representation at the murder trial.

Prosecutors said Carty, who had been living in Houston for about 20 years by the time of her trial, recruited three men to abduct Joana and her newborn son, Ray Cabrera, in the hopes of saving her relationship with her common-law husband by passing off the child as her own. She had previously suffered several miscarriages.

Carty, a former primary school teacher, was convicted under the Texas ‘law of parties’ which dictated that a person is criminally liable if one ‘solicits, encourages, directs, aids, or attempts to aid the other person to commit the offence’. 

Carty (pictured) has maintained her innocence arguing that she was convicted largely on the word of her co-accused

She has maintained her innocence arguing that she was convicted largely on the word of her co-accused. 

Joana and Ray were abducted from their Houston apartment on May 16, 2001. 

The newborn was found unharmed in a vehicle that same day, but his mother was found dead with duct tape over her mouth and a plastic bag around her head in a car Ms Carty was leasing. 

Gerald Anderson, Chris Robinson and Carlos Williams were charged as Carty’s accomplices and received long prison terms. Carty was sentenced to death. 

Carty spoke to Sky News from behind bars in Huntsville Prison, Texas, in 2012 where she claimed she was: ‘110 percent innocent’. 

She maintained that she was framed for the crime in the interview saying she felt for the victim’s family.

She said: ‘She’s somebody’s child too and she’s somebody’s daughter. So for me it’s not only a healing process for me but to show the families that the person you have been hating all these years and that you thought because the state of Texas told you this is who did it, did not commit this crime.’

She does not yet have an execution date.

Share.
Exit mobile version