- Michelle Byrom is on death row for a murder to which her son has confessed
- If she's executed Thursday, Byrom will be first woman executed in state since 1944
- Ex-prosecutor says he stands by verdict, as do Mississippi and federal appellate courts
- Convicted gunman says he's innocent and that Michelle Byrom's son used him as pawn
Editor's note: CNN's original series, "Death Row Stories," explores America's capital punishment system each Sunday at 9 p.m. ET/PT. Join the conversation about the death penalty at facebook.com/cnn or Twitter @CNNorigSeries using #DeathRowStories.
(CNN) -- The letter starts off like any normal letter from a son to his mother.
"First, let me say Happy M-Day, + I Love you."
The second sentence, however, reveals a darker history.
"Yes, the past is just that, the past, but certain decisions + choises (sic) are unforgettable and unforgiveable (sic)."
The letter was hand-written to a mother on death row, set to pay for a crime that her own son confessed to committing.
Mississippi Attorney General Jim Hood has requested that 57-year-old Michelle Byrom be executed by lethal injection Thursday for the 1999 murder of her husband, which prosecutors said she plotted. Edward Byrom Sr. was fatally shot in his home in Iuka, Mississippi, while Michelle was in the hospital receiving treatment for double pneumonia.
The state Supreme Court has the final say on executions and has yet to confirm the date or weigh in on the request.
If Byrom is put to death, she will be the first woman the state has executed in 70 years, but her advocates say there are many reasons she deserves a stay.
Chief among them is the fact that Byrom's son has confessed not once, but four times, to killing his abusive father: in three jailhouse letters smuggled to his mother, and once in a statement given to a court-appointed psychologist.
In what's been called a "perversion of American jurisprudence" by Warren Yoder, executive director of the Public Policy Center of Mississippi, a jury has never heard any of Edward Byrom Jr.'s confessions.
This is because Byrom's defense attorneys, trying their first capital murder case, never had the confession letters entered into evidence. Byrom's son ended up taking a plea deal in exchange for a reduced sentence, testifying against his mother and pinning the plot on her.
In one explicit confession letter to his mother, Byrom Jr. detailed how he killed his father in a rage after his father called him a "bastard, no good, mistake, and telling me I'm inconciderate (sic) and just care about my self."
His father hit him for the last time that day, Byrom Jr. wrote.
"He slaps me, then goes back to his room. As I sat on my bed, tears of rage flowing, remembering my childhood, my anger kept building and building," the letter said.
Byrom Jr. retrieved a 9mm handgun -- a WWII weapon that belonged to his grandfather, according to the Jackson Free Press -- entered his father's bedroom, opened fire and fled, Byrom Jr. wrote.
Today, Byrom Jr. is a free man, living where he grew up, in Tishomingo County in rural northeastern Mississippi. He has found religion, according to a letter he wrote to his mother after her conviction, and his Facebook page says he studi
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