‘My husband was given the lethal injection 5,000 miles away in Texas’

  • london
  • June 18, 2026
  • Comments Off on ‘My husband was given the lethal injection 5,000 miles away in Texas’
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The first and only time Tiana Broadnax physically touched her husband, he lay dead on a gurney.

James Broadnax had just been pronounced dead after receiving the lethal injection at a prison in Huntsville, Texas, on April 30.

Tiana, having flown over from London, watched through the glass screen for 40 minutes as the poison killed him.

She told Metro: ‘After he was pronounced dead, I got to touch him for the first time. But the prison chaplain told me not to touch him from the chest down, as the poison was still inside him.’

James, 37, was sentenced to death following the deaths of two people during a robbery 18 years ago. He and his cousin, Demarius Cummings, had attacked Stephen Swan and Matthew Butler in a parking lot.

At the time of his arrest, James claimed he was the shooter, something he later retracted. Cummings, who was given life without parole, has recently confessed to having fired the shots. All of the black jurors were dismissed during the trial.

‘Watching James die was utterly traumatising,’ Tiana said. ‘And it feels so isolating. No one in the UK can possibly relate to what I have been through.’

‘I swore to myself I wouldn’t fall in love with a prisoner’

Mum-of-one Tiana began writing to James inmid-2024 after learning about his case. The law student, based in Lewisham, had been sending letters to inmates on death row in Texas, US, as part of her master’s dissertation.

She told Metro: ‘I had sworn to myself to not be one of those women who fell in love with a prisoner. But I soon found myself desperately waiting to hear from him.’

By the end of 2024, their relationship was official – despite Tiana living in her London flat and James being locked up nearly 5,000 miles away, with a six-hour time difference between them.

They never held hands, went out to dinner or kissed. But despite this, Tiana says she has been left ‘broken’ by his death.

She said: ‘I now understand what people mean when they are scared to leave the house. If I go too far, I am back in that room, where they killed him.’

‘Mentally, I was on death row too’

The couple got to enjoy their relationship for a year.

This took the form of six-hour phone calls which would automatically cut out every 30 minutes, letters and the occasional prison visit, during which they had to be careful what they said.

Even going through airport security, Tiana automatically lifts her arms the way she had to before entering prison.

‘In a way I was institutionalised too, because I had to live parts of my life around Texas prison rules,’ Tiana said. ‘Even now when I am on a long phone call I automatically check to see if we have nearly reached the 30 minute mark.’

The execution date was set

In December last year, the couple was given the news: James’s execution date has been set. He was going to die on April 30.

‘I was sat in my lounge and I just remember screaming,’ she said. ‘But after that, it was just “right, we need to fight this”.’

The pair spent their remaining months appealing through the few outlets they had. But they also managed to find the time to get married.

They said ‘I do’ through prison glass two weeks before James’s death date – which, according to Tiana, was ‘hard, but worth it for being allowed to spend 45 minutes together for the ceremony’.

The Supreme Court and parole board were all unwilling to grant a stay of execution. Governor Abbott’s office – which they saw as their most likely route to life – declined to help.

Tiana said: ‘We got confirmation the governor’s office wasn’t going to help the day before James’s death. And at that point, I just wanted to spend our last few hours together.’

On the day itself, Tiana was taken to the viewing room as her husband was strapped to a gurney. Even in his final lucid moments, they were not allowed to be in the same room together.

After the injection was administered, it took nearly 40 minutes for James to die.

‘Watching it all sent me into a bit of a psychotic state,’ Tiana said. ‘Officers tried walking me out of the prison, and I saw James standing with the death row protestors outside.’

She added: ‘I ran to him shouting, but one of the officers grabbed me and I realised I had hallucinated the whole thing.’

A week later, Tiana was back at home in London. She is unable to go back to work and her studies full-time, so is focusing on looking after her daughter.

‘I was James’s PA, advocate and therapist full time. I was looking after him and my daughter full-time and getting about four hours of sleep a night,’ she said.

‘Now he is gone, the world feels a lot emptier.’

Once emotionally recovered, Tiana plans to complete her master’s and will commit her life to advocating against the death penalty – particularly as right-wing politicians begin pushing for its reinstatement in the UK.

Almost half of university students polled were in favour of bringing back capital punishment for the most serious of crimes, while growing political party Restore Britain have said they support it.

‘I actually messaged [Restore leader] Rupert Lowe, and told him of how utterly devastating it is,’ Tiana said.

‘I emailed him and even messaged him on TikTok. Funnily enough, I haven’t heard back.’

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