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Home Front: Culture Wars
Conn. Death Penalty Opponents Protest - 5 Day Walk
2005-05-09
HT to Polipundit
Death penalty opponents set off Sunday on a five-day walk to protest the state's plans to execute a serial killer who admitted killing and raping eight young women in Connecticut and New York in the early 1980s.
wow, only 8? I can see why they think he can be saved
About two dozen protesters began the 30-mile journey that will eventually lead to the prison where Michael Ross is scheduled to be put to death Friday in what would be the first execution in New England in 45 years.
Nighty-nite Michael, say hi to Satan
"So many people have asked me, 'Why are you doing this for Michael Ross?'" said Robert Nave, executive director of the Connecticut Network to Abolish the Death Penalty, who is leading the effort. "We're not doing this for Michael Ross. We're doing this because it is state-sponsored homicide."
It used to be known as "justice."
Protesters plan to walk for periods each day through Thursday night, stopping at the state Capitol, at churches and for vigils along the way. They began before dawn in Hartford at Gallows Hill at Trinity College, the site where the state executed five criminals in colonial days. Later, they held a moment of silence for the eight women Ross admitted killing and their families.
Are they still dead?
Yeah, but it's been a long time. They don't matter anymore.
One moment for them, five days for their killer.
Most opponents will not walk the entire 30 miles.
Yeah, that's a purdy fur piece...
They will come and go over the next few days.
It's called "milling around"...
For those who are marching, clergy have offered to open their homes to give them a place to rest at night.
lazy f&cks. I'd respect em more if they had the committment to actually walk the whole way...jeebus
Even if they could walk the whole way, I still wouldn't have any respect for them.
Out of shape and portly as I am, I think I could walk the 30 miles in a single day and still have time to stop at the 31 Flavors ...
Though many acknowledged there was little hope the execution would be halted, they hoped to send a message.
Thought they were at Western Union, did they? Well, I think most of us have gotten the message that they're airheads, most of whom probably have never seen a dead body, much less one that was murdered...
Walter Everett, whose 24-year-old son Scott was killed in Bridgeport in 1987, said he never wanted his son's killer to die, just to serve a long prison sentence. Everett, a Methodist pastor in Hartford, once testified before a parole board for the man to have an early release after serving time with good behavior.
"Thanks Dad. I'm still dead"
"That's okay. I can always get another kid, but murderers are hard to find..."
I'm okay with a man of the cloth protesting the death penalty, but the rest of them are airheads.
"I'm convinced the death penalty is society's way of admitting defeat," he said.
No, it's society's way of protecting itself from ticks...
Marjorie Henry, 71, lived directly across the street from the Wethersfield prison where the state conducted its last execution in 1960, putting to death Joseph "Mad Dog" Taborsky in the electric chair for a series of killings and robberies. The memory of that night causes her to cringe, even now. "I just remember a chill," she said. "Being chilled to the core of the soul."
"My electric blanket quit working when they juiced him"
Posted by:Frank G

#14  JFM:

"(BTW, most anti-death penalty types are also against perpetual jail, at times telling us that prisoners must have hope of being released or they would be too dangerous for the jailers)."

Isn't it pretty much that way in Europe right now?
Posted by: Xbalanke   2005-05-09 14:42  

#13  If it's all grown up and it's broken, you're gonna have to kill it.
Posted by: .com   2005-05-09 14:38  

#12  For an admitted serial killer and rapist: 5 days.

For his 8 victims: a moment of silence.

That's f***ing beautiful.
Posted by: Dar   2005-05-09 14:13  

#11  DNA has eliminated the chance of error in almost all cases. Hesitance to sentence to death where not sure defers most of the DNA-less cases to life sentences. Fry em up - early and often would be my preference
Posted by: Frank G   2005-05-09 13:58  

#10  I oppose the routine use of the death penalty. The justice system is far to fallible to have it applied even as little as it is today. Its just too misused and badly applied.

But cases like this are clear cut, and the convict is clearly a threat to society and innocents. To take his life in self defense, whether by citizen or government, can be justified withing a given framework.
Posted by: OldSpook   2005-05-09 13:46  

#9  I wonder how many of these protesters are also adamant pro-abortion believers. That is one of the great hypocrisies of the left...kill the innocent babies but protect the depraved murderers and rapists.

On the cost issue, look at how long ago this guy was incarcerated. The appeals process on a death row case is so long and covoluted that it costs the state far more to implement the death penalty than to just throw these guys in jail for life and forget about them. I think the long delay also eliminates any deterrent factor. I think there should be no more than one year of appeal and then proceed with the sentence.
Posted by: remoteman   2005-05-09 12:20  

#8  And how do the CNADP propose to protect other prisoners (and the guards!) from the ultra-violent cases? Or do some prisoner's lives matter more than others?
Posted by: James   2005-05-09 11:23  

#7  The death penalty opponent spiel is sick. It cost one hell of alot of money to keep a person in prison. The perp in this case has already wrought untold damage on a number of levels. In a society that has many other more important needs, why keep this guy alive? I'd say, if the victims' families agree that the perp can live and somebody other than taxpayers is willing to foot the bill to keep the perp alive then fine, let em live. If none of those conditions are met, then fry the perp because public funds are better spent helping out worthy citizens live better lives.
Posted by: Tkat   2005-05-09 10:44  

#6  Slippery slope??? Paves the road for others???
I certainly hope so, Andrea. I'm all for the death penalty for admitted serial rapist killers who are sentenced to death. If others don't approve, the legislature is the place to effect change, not a five-day "look at me, look at me" traffic-snarling snail-paced walk.
Posted by: Tom   2005-05-09 10:33  

#5  Michael Ross wants to die so lets save the tax payers a little money. Unfortunately, this creates a slippery slope in our judicial system, which happens to be slippery enough. Let one die and it paves the road for others. Much like Karen Schiavo- take the feeding tube away from one easily and the tubes of others will be taken etc.

Andrea Jackson
Posted by: Andrea Jackson   2005-05-09 10:09  

#4  Too often we allow the leftists to corner us into the "death penalty as deterrent" or "death penalty as punishment". But in fact it is "death penalty as protective measure": some criminals will kill again at the first opportunity so it is their non-execution who is state-sponsored homicide, state sponsored homicide of innocents. (BTW, most anti-death penalty types are also against perpetual jail, at times telling us that prisoners must have hope of being released or they would be too dangerous for the jailers).
Posted by: JFM   2005-05-09 02:00  

#3  "...state-sponsored homicide."
Call it what they will, I call it justice. If they don't like it they are free to move to some place without a death penalty.

I am pretty sure I could do 30 miles in 2 days with a pile of rest breaks and general screwing around tossed in.
Posted by: Sock Puppet 0’ Doom   2005-05-09 01:30  

#2  I think it was "Mad Dog" Taborsky that also loudly announced on his way to the chamber that he'd been cheating the other inmates at cards for years.
Posted by: Pappy   2005-05-09 01:13  

#1  ROTFLMAO with the electric blanket bit!
Posted by: Grunter   2005-05-09 00:58  

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