Convicted killer who twice avoided execution dies in California prison
A man who was twice sentenced to execution and twice avoided that fate died in a prison hospital over the weekend. Darryl T. Kemp, 88, died of natural causes Saturday at the California Medical Facility in Solano County, according to the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. Kemp was one of the more than 600 inmates in the California penal system who were sentenced to death but have instead been made to wait out their natural life after the state put a permanent freeze on prison executions. Convicted killer Darryl T. Kemp is shown in this prison photo from the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation on March 23, 2018. Kemp, originally from Los Angeles, was convicted of first-degree murder in 2009, found responsible for the 1978 rape and killing of 40-year-old Armida Wiltsey at a reservoir in Contra Costa County. For Kemp, it was the second time he’d been convicted of rape and murder and then sentenced to death. In 1960, he was found guilty of killing and raping Los Angeles nurse Marjorie Hipperson. He was sentenced to death following that trial, and waited