Monday, August 31, 2009

The New Yorker - "Trial by Fire Did Texas execute an innocent man?"

Willingham had requested a final meal, and at 4 P.M. on the seventeenth he was served it: three barbecued pork ribs, two orders of onion rings, fried okra, three beef enchiladas with cheese, and two slices of lemon cream pie. . . . Willingham’s mother and father began to cry. “Don’t be sad, Momma,” Willingham said. “In fifty-five minutes, I’m a free man. I’m going home to see my kids.” Earlier, he had confessed to his parents that there was one thing about the day of the fire he had lied about. He said that he had never actually crawled into the children’s room. “I just didn’t want people to think I was a coward,” he said. Hurst told me, “People who have never been in a fire don’t understand why those who survive often can’t rescue the victims. They have no concept of what a fire is like.”


The warden told Willingham that it was time. Willingham, refusing to assist the process, lay down; he was carried into a chamber eight feet wide and ten feet long. The walls were painted green, and in the center of the room, where an electric chair used to be, was a sheeted gurney. Several guards strapped Willingham down with leather belts, snapping buckles across his arms and legs and chest. A medical team then inserted intravenous tubes into his arms. Each official had a separate role in the process, so that no one person felt responsible for taking a life.


Willingham had asked that his parents and family not be present in the gallery during this process, but as he looked out he could see Stacy watching. The warden pushed a remote control, and sodium thiopental, a barbiturate, was pumped into Willingham’s body. Then came a second drug, pancuronium bromide, which paralyzes the diaphragm, making it impossible to breathe. Finally, a third drug, potassium chloride, filled his veins, until his heart stopped, at 6:20 P.M. On his death certificate, the cause was listed as “Homicide.”


After his death, his parents were allowed to touch his face for the first time in more than a decade. Later, at Willingham’s request, they cremated his body and secretly spread some of his ashes over his children’s graves. He had told his parents, “Please don’t ever stop fighting to vindicate me.”

1 comment:

  1. "Each official had a separate role in the process, so that no one person felt responsible for taking a life."

    The sheer violence that the above sentence does to any reasonable notions of moral responsibility and causation, not to mention the English language, is incredible.

    Imagine that five of my friends and I go out one night to beat up some homeless people. One of our victims dies and we are arrested and each of us is charged with murder. Is it any defense, either morally or legally, to say that I personally did not strike the killing blow? Or if the victim died because of the cumulative effects of his or her injuries, can I get off by mentioning that I did not personally cause each of those injuries, only a couple of them? To suggest so would be silly, and its only benefit in a real criminal trial might be to give support to an insanity defense.

    The death penalty is perverse and immoral no matter how you slice it.

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