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Asked for his final words, a 42-year-old convicted murderer had one thought to share from the electric chair: "Kiss my ass."

Robert Gleason Jr. became the country's first execution of 2013 when authorities in Virginia pronounced him dead at 9:08 p.m. Wednesday.

Gleason was serving a life sentence for a 2007 murder. While in prison, Gleason also strangled one of his cellmates and another fellow inmate. He vowed to continue killing until state authorities sentenced him to death.

The farewell bid "Kiss my ass" was actually uttered in Irish Gaelic -- spoken ?Pog mo thoin? -- moments before Gleason was put to death, the New York Daily News reports.

The 42-year-old inmate was ... the first to choose to die by electrocution since 2010. In Virginia and nine other states, inmates can choose between electrocution and lethal injection.

Gleason had fought last-minute attempts by former attorneys to stop the execution. He told the Associated Press he deserved to die for what he did.

Gleason was sentenced to life in prison after he admitted to shooting Mike Jamerson, whose son was cooperating with a federal investigation into a methamphetamine ring that Gleason was involved in.

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At least he knew he deserved death. No need to keep him in the system spending more tax dollars.

Life in prison is cheaper than death row.

I think electric executions are already banned...

I think you need to read the OP ;)

I read about this case the other day, and apparently his lawyers were still appealing for him against his wishes.

On a side note, ?Pog mo thoin? or "Pogue Mahone" is the original name of the Pogues.

I read about this case the other day, and apparently his lawyers were still appealing for him against his wishes.

On a side note, ?Pog mo thoin? or "Pogue Mahone" is the original name of the Pogues.

Well that's not going to do them much good since they already executed him, and the article stated both that he got executed and that hi lawyers tried to stop it against his wishes.

I did and I think they actually need to remove that inhumane way of execution of a person.

Yes because of the humane ways people commit murder doesn't justify it. But I agree, lethal injection should be the standard. Guillotine is probably more decisive, leaves no doubt the person is dead. (Y)

Execution itself is inhumane, it's state sponsored murder.

People with your point of view should be on a registry so you can support keeping those criminals alive with your donations.

Yes because of the humane ways people commit murder doesn't justify it. But I agree, lethal injection should be the standard. Guillotine is probably more decisive, leaves no doubt the person is dead. (Y)

People with your point of view should be on a registry so you can support keeping those criminals alive with your donations.

and yet again, Death row is more expensive than life in prison.

on the other hand, maybe "people like you" should be on a register, so that when you get accused of a crime, we know you're a death row supporter with minimal waiting time, so once you're found guilty, you're shipped off to have you head cut off. to bad when we find out you where innocent a few on months/years down the road, but hey, your choice.

Yes because of the humane ways people commit murder doesn't justify it.

I think this is a fairly primitive logic. I don't see why one would alternate moral values on a person by person basis.

People with your point of view should be on a registry so you can support keeping those criminals alive with your donations.

Similarly people with your view should be on a rotatory to be the executioner.

Also the "humane execution" is done as much for the sake of the executioner as the convict. If you really believe in it you will do it with an axe.

I don't know why they don't use inert gas asphyxiation as a form of execution:

When humans breathe in pure nitrogen, they exhale carbon dioxide without resupplying oxygen. Nitrogen is a colorless, odorless and tasteless gas that constitutes approximately 78 percent of the Earth's atmosphere. As the principal component in air, nitrogen poses no significant risk upon discharge. As such, the subject would detect no abnormal sensation. This leads to asphyxiation without the painful and traumatic feeling of suffocation.

Source

There was also a pretty interesting documentary covering this:

and yet again, Death row is more expensive than life in prison.

on the other hand, maybe "people like you" should be on a register, so that when you get accused of a crime, we know you're a death row supporter with minimal waiting time, so once you're found guilty, you're shipped off to have you head cut off. to bad when we find out you where innocent a few on months/years down the road, but hey, your choice.

So where is your source for your claim? Provide proof. Otherwise it's urban myth

The authors calculated that, if the Governor commuted the sentences of those remaining on death row to life without parole, it would result in an immediate savings of $170 million per year, with a savings of $5 billion over the next 20 years.

http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/costs-death-penalty

Helps to be informed about the issues you support. but hey, America has LOTS of money and has no need to save 170 Million per year, in ONE state...

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