Skip to main content

Countdown to an execution - Last 24 hours and the process of the death penalty Pt.4

 5 pm

Execution witness arrive. Any people such as journalists, victim's family, or the prisoner's family/loved ones are allowed to watch the execution. They enter the room and told to be quiet. 

6pm - 8 pm

It is a time for the last walk for the prisoner. Times are different depending on the state. They have to walk from the death hoouse to the execution room. Most of the prisoners manage to walk by their own feet for a few steps, they are still srounded by 5 guards.

15 minutes before..

This is the time when the lethal injection is being prepared. 

Minutes before..

The curtains between the room for execution and the witness room are drawn, and the prisoner is allowed to give their final statements.

"But not all States allow long - or any time at all.

Kentucky grants two minutes, while Pennsylvania only allows inmates a written statement - the time for talking is done. (Mirror, 2020)"

Time for execution

The straps on the chair are put around the prisoner, and their life gets ended.


Reference

https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/us-news/countdown-execution-final-24-hours-18832619

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Death Penalty in ancient times

Capital punishment actually has a longer history than people imagine. Historical records show that people in the most ancient times even utilized methods of punishing criminals or wrongdoers.   “A life for a life” has been one of the most basic concepts for dealing with crime since the start of recorded history"(crime museum, 2021). Today, I am going to introduce some of the early forms of capital punishment and examples. Early forms of death penalty was made to punish the criminal slowly, so the person can feel the pain until they breath their last. Types of tourtures were different depending on what kind of crime they committed. For examples, law breakers were " put to death by stoning, crucifixion, being burned at the stake, and even slowly being crushed by elephants"(crime museum, 2021). Some other methods in the ancient times were, bites by snakes, devouring by animals, tearing apart by animals and trampling by horses. Later, the soceities started to realize that th...

Death Penalty - 1st blog, 30 questions

  Here I listed up various questions to make you understand the topic and its issue better! 1. Have you ever deeply studied this topic in the past? 2. Do you agree/disagree to death penalty? 3.  (2) Why? 4. What are some opinions of those who support this system? 5. What are some opinions of those who are against this system? 6. Does your country have the system? 7. Is your country democratic? 8. What kind of method does your country use for the punishment? 9. Do you know the very beginning of capital punishment in the history? 10. What kind of methods did they use to execute in the ancient times? 11. Do you think such a punishment is humane or inhumane?  12. (11)Why? 13. What do you think is the opinion of the government who supports the punishment? 14. What do you think is the opinion of the government who does not support the punishment? 15. Do you think the death sentenced criminal gets to know the execution date? 16. Do the sentenced criminals get any special treatme...

Death Penalty from 3 perspectives

  P erspective 1. murder victim's family who is against death penalty HI, I am the mother of Julie Heath. The last time anyone saw our daughter, Julie Heath alive was Oct. 3, 1993. She was 18-year-old and set out to visit her boyfriend in Hot Springs, Arkansas. A week later, a hunter discovered Heath’s body, less than eight miles from where her broken-down car was found. She wore a black shirt, socks and underwear, but they were inside-out. Her black jeans were partially unzipped. Her throat was slashed. Police later arrested Eric Randall Nance for Heath’s murder. Investigators said he picked her up near her vehicle, before DNA evidence proved he raped and killed her. In 1994, he was handed the death penalty.  But even when executions take place, the pain of surviving family like us doesn’t disappear with the perpetrator’s pulse. Death penalty advocates and politicians, including Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge, argue that when the state executes a person who has com...