Executions create more victims
The impact on those who carry them out
Those who witness or participate in executions share an unlikely bond: they are at the absolute center of capital punishment. The folklore is that executions heal wounds, but studies and anecdotal evidence suggest that executions inflict more wounds than they heal, all while creating a new set of grieving victims.
Executions traumatize corrections and government officials
- Every execution requires a team of executioners who watch the inmate in his or her final days, who strap the inmate to the gurney, who insert and reinsert the needles, and who remove the inmate from the gurney following the execution. They are the ones who deal with botched executions, who struggle with inmates fighting to stay alive, and who pull inmates away from their families when it is time for their final goodbye.
- Executioners, haunted by the experience of putting people to death, have committed suicide, turned to alcohol, or suffered mental and physical health problems.
In the words of the executioner: Stories of a broken system
- "Sometimes I wonder whether people really understand what goes on down here and the effect it has on us. Killing people, even people you know are heinous criminals, is a gruesome business, and it takes a harsh toll… I have no doubt it’s disturbing for all of us. You don’t ever get used to it."1
— Jim Willet, former warden, Huntsville, Texas, who oversaw 89 executions
- "There was this big old-line officer, a well liked fellow, and he oversaw the executions. Afterwards he’d get very, very drunk and not come in for several days. It’s terrible, terrible – I get very emotional thinking about it. I certainly don’t like terrorism or murder but there has to be a better way than putting men to death."2
— Steve Dalsheim, former Superintendent, Sing Sing Prison, New York
- "I saw staff traumatized by the duties they were asked to perform. Officers who had never even met the condemned fought tears, cowering in corners so as not to be seen. Some of my colleagues turned to drugs and alcohol to numb the pain of knowing that a man had died by their hands. I myself was haunted by the men I was asked to execute in the name of the State of Florida. I would wake up in the middle of the night to find them lurking at the foot of my bed."3
— Ron McAndrew, former Warden, Florida State Prison, who presided over eight executions.
Executions traumatize clergy, jurors, journalists, and others
- Carol Pickett, a minister who witnessed almost 100 executions in Texas, attributed his severe health problems to the stress involved with witnessing these executions. They haunted him years after he stopped ministering to death row inmates.
- Studies have found symptoms of anxiety, nausea, and nightmares among journalists who had recently witnessed an execution.4
- A 1993 study found that jurors who serve on death penalty trials are likely to endure prolonged distress as a result of determining whether someone should live or die.5
New victims – the families of the executed
- Every execution leaves a family behind – a son or daughter who doesn’t understand why their parent was executed, a grieving mother who will never hear the voice of her child again. Theirs are among the hidden stories of capital punishment:
Case in point: Delores Williams was just 12 or 13 years old when she was raped and became pregnant. When she gave birth to Wesley Eugene Baker nine months later, she was still a child. She never told him that he was the product of her horrible rape. By the time her son was executed for murder 47 years later, she had already lived through an abusive relationship and lost her other son and a brother to murder. Just before Baker’s execution, she told the Baltimore Sun, "I just don't want to lose Eugene… I understand the [victim's] family, the suffering they have been through," she said. "I just don't want to lose my son. I think I've had my share."
Case in point: Larry Robison was diagnosed with severe mental illness at age 21. His parents, Lois and Ken, sought treatment for him for years. Each time Larry was admitted to a hospital, he was soon discharged because he was "not violent" and they "needed the bed." Lois and Ken begged for help but were always told that Larry would get treatment if he became violent. Larry’s first and only violent act was to kill five people. His parents were horrified and devastated. Instead of treatment , Larry was executed. "I feel all this sympathy for the families that were also devastated by this," said Larry’s sister. "But the world automatically grieves for them. But what the world does not realize is that this family – this good family – is going to get nothing but spit in our face when our loved one dies."6
The death penalty’s impact reaches far beyond the victim and the executed. All who cross its path shoulder the burden of participating in the death of a human being. Meanwhile the system creates a whole new set of victims who are left to grieve in silence.
- 1. Washington Post, May 13, 2001.
- 2. Washington Post, February 12, 2005.
- 3. Testimony before the Montana House Judiciary Committee, March 25, 2009
- 4. Freinkel A, Koopman C, Spiegel D. "Dissociative symptoms in media eyewitnesses of an execution." American Journal of Psychiatry, September, 1994.
- 5. Hafemeister, Thomas L. “Juror Stress.” Violence and Victims, Volume 8, Number 2, 1993.
- 6. Press release by Lois Robison, at http://archive.uua.org/ga/ga01/uuagafri2055.html; CBS News, September 21, 2000, at http://freenet-homepage.de/dpinfo/drinmatesfamilies.htm
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