State to alter execution policy for cancer-stricken inmate from Hamilton

Kenneth Smith, sentenced to die in the 1995 slaying of a Hamilton couple, can sit up to use artificial voice box.

COLUMBUS — A Hamilton man suffering from larynx cancer who is sentenced to die for the deaths of a Hamilton couple more than 15 years ago will be able to make a final statement at his execution next month due to a modification in the state’s capital punishment procedures.

Since his incarceration, Kenneth Smith, 45, had his larynx removed and uses an artificial voice box. The state will raise the gurney on which Smith will lay and allow him to keep one arm free so he can use his voice box during his July 19 execution. It would be the first time an Ohio inmate has not been completely strapped down in the 45 executions since the state resumed the death penalty in 1999.

Smith, formerly of Hanover Street, was convicted of aggravated murder and two counts of aggravated robbery for the May 1995 double murder of Lewis and Ruth Ray by a jury that also recommended the death penalty. Former Butler County Common Pleas Judge Anthony Valen sentenced Smith to die, according to court records.

Lewis Ray, 58, and his wife, Ruth, 54, were found by Hamilton police inside their Grand Boulevard home on May 12, 1995.

Lewis Ray died after his throat was cut while Ruth Ray died of strangulation, according to police.

Smith’s lawyers said Wednesday they were pleased the state is changing its policies to accommodate Smith.

Attorney Carol Wright added that the defense still believes there are issues with Ohio’s lethal injection process that need to be resolved.

According to Hamilton police, the Rays knew Smith and his brother Raleigh Randall Smith, who both went to the residence to rob the couple.

For his part in the slayings, Raleigh Randall Smith, 46, formerly of Hampshire Drive, is serving two terms of life in prison without parole eligibility for 30 years for aggravated murder and complicity to aggravated murders. He also is serving 15 to 25 years each for aggravated robbery and complicity to aggravated robbery.

The Associated Press contributed to this report

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