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Updated: 10:47 PM Nov 11, 2009
Virginia Second in Nation for Death Penalty Executions
The Valley On Tuesday, D.C. sniper John Allen Muhammad became the 104th person executed in Virginia since 1976 and another another man will die by electrocution next week.
Posted: 6:09 PM Nov 11, 2009Reporter: Michael Hyland Email Address: mhyland@whsv.com |
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Sniper John Allen Muhammad refused to utter any last words before he was executed Tuesday night.
The 48 year old took to the grave answers about why and how he plotted the killings of ten people that terrorized the Washington, D.C. area for three weeks in October 2002.
Muhammad died by lethal injection Tuesday night as relatives of the victims watched from behind glass at Greenville Correctional Center, south of Richmond.
Muhammad was the 104th person executed in Virginia since 1976. Next week, Larry Bill Elliot will die by electrocution for the deaths of two people in Woodbridge. Virginia is second in the nation to Texas for death penalty executions.
A group led by the Harrisonburg Unitarian Universalist Church protested Tuesday's execution. Robin McNallie is a member of the church.
"We are mourning the violence that was done on the victims as well as what we feel to be the state's violence on the criminal," says McNallie.
He feels violent criminals deserve to be punished but should stay locked in prison. The frequency of executions has him concerned.
"It tells me that we are behind other states in really looking [at], scrutinizing the death penalty," says McNallie.
Republican state Sen. Mark Obenshain says the number two ranking should not be the focus.
"As long as there are adequate and fair appellate procedures in place, the people of the Commonwealth of Virginia and across America strongly support the utilization of a fair and appropriate death penalty," says Obenshain.
According to a Washington Post poll, Virginians favor the death penalty by more than a two-to-one margin in murder cases.
"It seems to me to just perpetuate a cycle of violence," says McNallie.
"Quite frankly, I'm very satisfied that our system here in Virginia is one that yields true and just results," says Obenshain.
Obenshain says the General Assembly will consider a bill that could expand use of the death penalty this winter. The expansion would allow for the execution of people who don't commit a murder but have the same intent to kill or plan it.
The bill has been vetoed before. Obenshain is optimistic Gov.-elect Bob McDonnell will support it.
Latest Comments
I am also ashamed, Rusty, but only because I share a community with such narrow-minded people such as yourselves. Karin, George, and Pat, you say that us as taxpayers should not have to pay for these criminals to spend life in prison, but should instead execute them? Fact: sentencing someone to death costs millions more than keeping them in prison for life. Susie, the problem with Virginia's death penalty is that it discriminates against the poor and people of color. As for the rest of you, I find it disgusting that you would use religion or the bible as your argument as to why we should kill. The bible, this holy book that many think we should live our lives by, tells us that we should not cheat, lie, steal, yet we should kill? Katherine, while it's refreshing to view a less ignorant opinion, it means nothing if you cannot show some facts to back it up.
Katherine, What college did you attend when you researched this subject? Obviously they did not have an English Department. Learn to spell and use proper gramar if you want to get your point acros.
Katherine, save your religious BS for those who do not commit capital murder. You have absolutely no idea what it was like living in this area during the "reign of terror." My heart goes out to the lives that were forever changed by these pathetic excuses for human beings. The bible says a lot of things...interpretation is the key...it also says "an eye for an eye."
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