On this
day, 25 January 1996, Billy Bailey was the third person executed by hanging in
the U.S.A since 1965 and currently as of today, the last person executed by the
gallows in the country. Let us not forget the two victims he murdered, see this
CNN News Source: http://edition.cnn.com/US/9601/hanging/
Delaware holds first hanging since
1946
Inmate's decision stirs controversy
January 25, 1996
Web posted at: 1:10 a.m. EST
From Correspondent Gary Tuchman
SMYRNA, Delaware (CNN) -- Convicted
double-murderer Billy Bailey was executed early Thursday in Delaware. Bailey
drew a lot of attention because of the method he chose: death by hanging.
Only a few hundred people live in the
tiny town of Cheswold, Delaware. Two of them used to live in a modest home
where they grew corn and soybeans, and, more importantly, raised children and
grandchildren.
Clara and Gilbert Lambertson were 73
and 80 years old, respectively, when a man named Billy Bailey came into their
lives and then ended their lives.
"This was a heinous crime against
innocent people. They were elderly, in their own home. They did not know Billy
Bailey. He simply intruded and took their lives in a vicious manner," said
Delaware Deputy Attorney General Paul Wallace.
Bailey, 49, was convicted of shooting
the Lambertsons to death 17 years ago.
Bailey's was the third hanging
execution in the United States since the death penalty was reinstated by the
U.S. Supreme Court in 1976.
It was the first hanging in Delaware since
1946. Hanging as capital punishment is allowed in just three other states:
Montana, New Hampshire, and Washington.
'Things can
really go wrong'
In Delaware's largest city,
Wilmington, they rang a bell to protest hanging and the death penalty in general.
The protesters are among some who consider hanging cruel and unusual
punishment.
"If you drop a man too far you
can actually decapitate him. If you don't drop him far enough, you will break
his neck, and he'll strangle to death slowly, kicking at the end of the
rope," said Bailey's attorney, Edmund Lyons.
The two-story wooden gallows is
outdoors on the grounds of the Delaware Correctional Center in Smyrna, where
heavy rains were forecast for Wednesday night. The 220-pound Bailey was
escorted up 19 steps to a platform, where an unidentified staff member in a
black hood served as hangman.
Delaware inmates have the option of
dying by lethal injection, but Bailey chose the other method.
"I think that it has a bad image
because things can really go wrong. There is no doubt, hanging is not 100
percent certain. Nothing is," Wallace said.
Victims' son:
'We finally got him'
What is
certain is the anger and depression that Delbert Lambertson, 70, and Saxton
Lambertson, 68, have experienced. They are two of the victims' four children,
and had planned to be among the witnesses to the execution.
"It's something that I
think I'm obligated to do on behalf of my father and mother. That's the way I
feel. When we see this happen, I can say to my mom and dad, we finally got
him,"
Delbert Lambertson said.
Delaware corrections officials make it
clear that they prefer lethal injection to hanging, one reason being that
they're out of practice. When it comes to experienced practitioners, the
condemned man's attorney may have put it best when he said, "It's not as
if you can look in the yellow pages under 'h' for hangman."
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