South Carolina killer who taunted police with message written in victim’s blood chooses execution by firing squad

October 31, 2025
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A man on death row in South Carolina who taunted investigators with messages written with a victim’s blood chose Friday to die by firing squad.

Stephen Bryant, 44, will be the third man this year to die by South Carolina’s newest execution method. His execution is set for Nov. 14.

Bryant is being put to death for killing a man in his home. Investigators said he burned Willard “TJ” Tietjen’s eyes with cigarettes after shooting him and painting “catch me if u can” on the wall with the victim’s blood.

Prosecutors said he also shot and killed two other men he was giving rides to as they were relieving themselves on the side of the road during a few weeks that terrorized Sumter County in October 2004.

Earlier this month, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to review Bryant’s death sentence.

Court fight likely after objections to last firing squad death

Bryant’s decision to die by being shot by three volunteers from 15 feet away means there will likely be a court fight about the execution over the next two weeks.

Attorneys for the second and most recent man shot to death said the shooters nearly missed Mikal Mahdi’s heart. They suggested Mahdi was in agonizing pain for three or four times longer than experts say he would have been if his heart had been hit directly. They released photos from the autopsy and questioned why there only appeared to be two bullet entrance wounds when three people fired.

Witnesses reported several moans and groans from Mahdi that did not happen during the first firing squad execution of Brad Sigmon. It also took Mahdi longer – about 80 seconds – to take his final breath.

Prison officials said the execution went as planned and the shooters only had to hit the heart, not destroy it. They said when volunteers practice their marksmanship, often two bullets enter the same place in the body.

Experts hired by Mahdi’s lawyers who reviewed the autopsy said the bullet hole in his body was not jagged enough to have been made by two bullets.

In contrast, the autopsy on Brad Sigmon, the first man killed by firing squad in the state, showed three distinct bullet wounds and his heart was obliterated, according to Dr. Jonathan Arden, a pathologist hired by attorneys for condemned inmates.

Firing squad is new addition to South Carolina’s execution methods

South Carolina added the firing squad during a 13-year pause in executions, in part because the state couldn’t obtain the drugs needed for lethal injections. Brad Sigmon was executed by firing squad in March 2025, the first execution of its kind in the U.S. since 2010.

Mikal Mahdi was also executed by firing squad in South Carolina, a month later, in April 2025. Before the South Carolina executions since 1977, only three other prisoners in the U.S. have been executed by firing squad. All were in Utah, Ronnie Gardner the last prisoner to be executed by firing squad in 2010.

South Carolina Execution

This undated photo provided by the South Carolina Department of Corrections shows the state’s death chamber, including the electric chair, right, and a firing squad chair, left. 

South Carolina Department of Corrections via AP


Bryant’s execution will be the eighth in South Carolina since executions restarted in September 2024. Apart from the firing squad, all others chose execution by lethal injection. The state also has an electric chair.

Investigators say killings terrorized South Carolina county 

Bryant admitted to killing Willard “TJ” Tietjen after stopping by his secluded home in rural Sumter County and saying he had car trouble.

Tietjen was shot several times. Candles were lit around his body. Someone took a potholder made by his daughter when she was child, dipped the corner in blood and wrote “victem 4 in 2 weeks. catch me if u can” on the wall, authorities said.

Tietjen’s daughter called him several times, getting more worried when he didn’t answer. On the sixth call, she testified, a strange voice answered and said he had killed Tietjen.

Prosecutors said Bryant also killed two men – one before and one after Tietjen. He gave the men rides and when they got out to urinate on the side of lonely, rural roads, he shot them in the back.

Bryant’s lawyers said he was troubled in the months before the killing, begging a probation agent and his aunt to get him help because he couldn’t stop thinking about being sexually abused by four male relatives when he was a child.

Bryant tried to help himself through the pain by using meth and smoking joints he sprayed with bug killer, his defense attorneys said.

A total of 41 men have died by court-ordered execution in the U.S. this year, and at least 18 more are scheduled to be put to death during the remainder of 2025 and next year.

Bryant’s death will be the 50th execution in South Carolina since the death penalty was reinstated 40 years ago.

According to the Death Penalty Information Center, South Carolina currently has 27 inmates on death row. No clemencies have ever been granted in the state.

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