Top 10 Modern Methods of Execution
Published on September 18, 2007 - 73 Comments
We have all heard about the various methods of execution used around the world in civilized nations, but quite often we don’t know the methods involved in executing the act. With this list I hope to shed some light on the background of an execution, modern style. All but two of these methods of execution are still in use today. [WARNING: This list includes graphic images.]
1. Lethal Injection

Lethal injection room in Huntsville, Texas
In the short time before an execution by lethal injection, the prisoner is prepared for his death. This can include a change of clothing, a last meal, and a shower. The prisoner is taken to the execution chamber and two IV tubes are inserted in to his arms; a saline solution is fed through the tubes. These tubes are then fed through the wall in to an anteroom from where the execution will be carried out. The anteroom contains direct telephone connections to officials who have the power to stay the execution. Once the IV tubes are connected, the curtains are drawn back so that witnesses may watch the execution, and the prisoner is allowed to make his last statement.
Unless a stay is given, the execution begins. There can be one or more executioners, and sometimes in the case of multiple executioners, the lethal dose is given by only one so that no one knows who delivered it. The executioners are shielded from the view of the prisoner and witnesses. The drugs can be delivered by a machine, but due to the fear of mechanical failure, most US states prefer to manually inject the drugs in to the IV. The drugs are then administered in the following order:
Saline solution is used to flush the IV between each dose. Within a minute of two after the final dose is given, a doctor declares the prisoner dead. The body is then sent to the coroner for verification and sometimes an autopsy and is released to the family for burial or is buried by the state.
2. The Electric Chair
The electric chair was invented by Harold P. Brown who was employed by Thomas Edison for the sole purpose of investigating the uses of electricity for execution. Brown, a dentist used to working with people in chairs, used a chair design for his device. At the time there was still competition to see whether Edison’s direct current (DC) or Westinghouse’s alternating current (AC) would win the current war. Edison was in favor of using his opponents AC as he thought it would lead people to believe that AC was more dangerous than DC. In fact, it would make little difference which current were used at the voltage needed for an execution. Edison was so keen to alienate Westinghouse, that he tried to get people to refer to execution by electrocution as “westinghousing” someone. The chair was first adopted in 1889 and the first execution took place in 1890 in New York.
In execution by electric chair, the prisoner is strapped to the chair with metal straps and a wet sponge is placed in his head to aid conductivity. Electrodes are placed on the head and leg to create a closed circuit. Depending on the physical state of the prisoner, two currents of varying level and duration are applied. This is generally 2,000 volts for 15 seconds for the first current to cause unconsciousness and to stop the heart. The second current is usually lowered to 8 amps. The current will normally cause severe damage to internal organs and the body can heat up to 138 °F (59 °C). While unconsciousness should occur within the first second or two, there have been occasions where it has taken much longer, leading people to speak out against this method of execution.
The post-execution cleanup is an unpleasant task as skin can melt to the electrodes and the person often loses control over bodily functions. The skin is also often burnt. The last use of the chair was on the 12th of September in Tennessee (6 days ago as of writing this). You can view a gruesome image of a person after being executed by the electric chair here.
3. Gas Chamber

Gas chamber at Mississippi State Penitentiary
The gas chamber has been used for executions for a considerable number of years. It has gained the most notoriety from its use in the German prison camps during World War II where it was used to exterminate millions of people in one of the worst cases of genocide in the 20th century. All of the five US states that still use the gas chamber allow the prisoner to choose death by lethal injection instead. The last death by gas chamber in the US was in 1999 when German Walter LaGrand was executed in Arizona. There are unconfirmed reports that North Korea is using the gas chamber as a method of execution and to test poisonous gasses on prisoners.
Prior to the execution, the executioner will enter the chamber and place potassium cyanide (KCN) pellets into a small compartment beneath the execution chair. The prisoner is then brought in and secured to the chair. The chamber is sealed and the executioner pours a quantity of concentrated sulfuric acid (H2SO4) through a tube which leads to a holding compartment in the chair. The curtains are drawn back for witnesses to see the execution and the prisoner is asked to make his last statement. After the last statement, a level is thrown by the executioner and the acid mixes with the cyanide pellets generating lethal hydrogen cyanide (HCN) gas. The prisoners will generally have been told to take deep breaths in order to speed up unconsciousness, but in most cases they hold their breath. Death from hydrogen cyanide is painful and unpleasant.
After the prisoner is dead, the chamber is purged of gas and neutralized with anhydrous ammonia (NH3). Both the ammonia and the acid that must be removed from the chamber are highly dangerous. Guards with oxygen masks then enter the chamber and remove the body so that it can be examined by a doctor.
4. Single Person Shooting

Execution of a Vietcong captian
Execution by shooting is the most common method of execution in the world, used in over 70 countries. Whilst most of these countries use the firing squad, single person shooting is still found. In Soviet Russia, a single bullet to the back of the head was the most frequently used method of execution for military and non-military alike. This is still the main method of execution in Communist China though the gunshot can be to either the neck or head. In the past, the Chinese government would ask the family of the executed person to pay the price of the bullet. In Taiwan, the prisoner is first injected with a strong anesthetic to render him senseless and then a bullet is fired in to his heart.
5. Firing Squad

Antonio Echazarreta executed in 1913 in Mexio
The firing squad is considered by many to be the most honorable method of execution, and for that reason it was specifically not used on war criminals. While the method differs widely from country to country, generally the condemned is blindfolded and restrained. A group of men then fire a single bullet in to the heart of the prisoner. In some cases, one of the shooters is given a blank - so that afterwards he will feel less guilt. None of the shooters knows who has a blank or, in fact, if any of them do. In the most recent execution by firing squad in Utah, the brother of the executed man stated that there were five bullet holes in his brother’s shirt, indicating that every shooter fired a live round. Here is an eyewitness account of the execution of William Johnson, a deserter in the Army of the Potomac in 1861.
All being ready the Marshal waved his handkerchief as the signal, and the firing party discharged the volley. Johnson did not move, remaining in a sitting posture for several seconds after the rifles were discharged. Then he quivered a little, and fell over beside his coffin. He was still alive, however, and the four reserves were called to complete the work. It was found that two of the firing party, Germans, had not discharged their pieces, and they were immediately put in irons. Johnson was shot several times in the heart by the first volley. Each of the four shots fired by the reserves took effect in his head, and he died instantly. One penetrated his chin, another his left cheek, while two entered the brain just above the left eyebrow. He died at precisely a quarter to four o’clock.
In the United States only two states allow execution by firing squad: Idaho, and Oklahoma; though Utah still has four prisoners on death row who were sentenced when it was lawful there and they may be permitted to be executed in this way.
6. Hanging

17 and 18 year old boys hanged in Iran for homosexuality
Hanging is carried out in a variety of ways: the short drop is when the prisoner is made to stand on an object which is then thrust away - leaving them to die by strangulation. This was a common method of hanging used by the Nazis and was the most common form used before the 1850s. Death is slow and painful. Suspension hanging (very popular in Iran) is when the gallows itself is movable. The prisoner stands on the ground with the noose around their neck and the gallows is then lifted in to the air, taking the prisoner with it. The standard drop was in common use in English nations after the 1850s - it involved tying the noose around the prisoner’s neck and then dropping them a short distance (usually 4-6 feet) to break the neck. This was the method used to execute the Nazi war criminals. The final method is the long drop, devised in 1872 in which the weight of a person was taken in to account to determine the correct rope and drop to be used to ensure the breaking of the neck. This was the method used by Albert Pierrepoint, the last executioner of England, described here in more detail:
The night before the execution, Pierrepoint would visit the condemned man in his cell with the Warden. The prisoner was not told that pierrepoint was his executioner. The purpose of the visit was to size the man up. Pierrepoint would use the information he had gained on the visit to decide what thickness of rope and what length of drop to use. He would soak the rope in water and would hang a sandbag the weight of the prisoner at the end to prevent stretching during the execution. The next day pierrepoint would put a cloth over the face of the prisoner and tighten the noose around his neck. He was very careful to ensure that the trapdoor beneath the condemned would be opened as soon after the noose went on as possible and would often kick the level with his foot. The person would then drop through the trapdoor and their neck would break, causing death.
There have been some instances where the long drop method has caused decapitation - the most recent of which was the hanging of Saddam Hussein’s half brother, Barzan Ibrahim al-Tikriti, in Iraq in 2007.
If you can play real audio, here is a BBC interview with Pierrepoint.
7. Beheading

Sentenced at 15, Dhahian Rakan al-Sibai’i, executed July 2007
In some nations that adhere to Islamic Sharia law, beheadings are still a commonly used method of execution. The most frequently seen cases involve beheading by a curved, single-edged sword. While many nations allow beheading by law, Saudi Arabia is the country that uses it most often. The sentence is normally carried out on a Friday night in public outside the main mosque of the city after prayers. The penalty can be dealt for rape, murder, drug related crimes, and apostasy (rejection of religious beliefs).
Saudi Arabia frequently comes under fire from international agencies because of the fact that they continue to pass this sentence on minors. Saudi Arabian officials state that they are not in breach of international law because the sentence is not carried out until the child has reached the age of 18. This was the case with Dhahian Rakan al-Sibai’i (pictured above) who was sentenced at 15 but executed this year at the age of 18.
8. Guillotine

Eugène Weidmann, last public guillotine execution in France, 1939
Contrary to popular belief, Joseph-Ignace Guillotin did not invent the Guillotine; he suggested that a method of execution be devised that was quick and to be used on all people regardless of class. He sat on the committee that eventually designed the device, but it was actually Antoine Louis who came up with the design that was then used to build the first functioning guillotine. This is one of the two execution methods on this list which is no longer used anywhere in the world.
The device itself is a large timber frame with a space at the bottom for the neck of the prisoner. At the top of the machine is a large angled blade. Once the prisoner is secured, the blade is dropped, severing the head and bringing about immediate death. Much speculation exists as to whether or not the person dies immediately, and one man went so far as to ask a prisoner to blink after his head was cut off if he could. The accounts tell us that he did blink, but it is most likely that if he did, it would have been a post-death twitch.
The last public guillotining in France (photo above) was secretly filmed, and the scandalous behavior of the onlookers caused the government to ban public executions. It was the official method of execution in France until the death penalty was outlawed in 1981.
9. Stoning
Stoning to death is when a person’s movements are restricted and an organized group throws stones at them until dead. Under Islamic Sharia law, stoning is an acceptable method of execution and it is used in many Islamic nations. In Iran, stoning is sanctioned for adultery and other crimes. Article 104 of the Law of Hodoud provides that the stones should not be so large that a person dies after being hit with two of them, nor so small as to be defined as pebbles, but must cause severe injury.
“The penalty for adultery under Article 83 of the penal code, called the Law of Hodoud is flogging (100 lashes of the whip) for unmarried male and female offenders. Married offenders may be punished by stoning regardless of their gender, but the method laid down for a man involves his burial up to his waist, and for a woman up to her neck (article 102). The law provides that if a person who is to be stoned manages to escape, he or she will be allowed to go free. Since it is easier for a man to escape, this discrimination literally becomes a matter of life and death.” [Source]
Sentences to death by stoning, or stoning without a sentence have occurred in Afghanistan, Nigeria, Iran, Pakistan, Sudan, Saudi-Arabia and the United Arab Emirates in recent years, according to the International Society of Human Rights. Videos of recent stonings have been smuggled out of Iran. You can watch them here. The most recent stoning in Iran was in 2007 when Jaffar Kiani was stoned to death for adultery.
10. Garrote

1901 execution by garotte in Manila
The garrote is the second method of execution on this list which is no longer sanctioned by law in any country though training in its use is still carried out in the French Foreign Legion. The garrote is a device that strangles a person to death (as in the photograph above). It can also be used to break a person’s neck. The device was used in Spain until it was outlawed in 1978 with the abolition of the death penalty. It normally consisted of a seat in which the prisoner was restrained while the executioner tightened a metal band around his neck until he died. Some versions of the garrote incorporated a metal bolt which pressed in to the spinal chord, breaking the neck. This spiked version is known as the Catalan garrote. The last execution by garrote was José Luis Cerveto in October 1977. Andorra was the last country in the world to outlaw its use, doing so in 1990.
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1. dalandzadgad - September 18th, 2007 at 5:47 am
seems so much tamer than your Gruesome Executions list.
this is old, but i thought this method of execution was…interesting:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crushing_by_elephant
2. jfrater - September 18th, 2007 at 6:12 am
dalandzadgad: the elephant thing is definitely weird!
3. Jackie - September 18th, 2007 at 7:12 am
They did that elephant execution in the movie Kama Sutra.
4. jfrater - September 18th, 2007 at 7:24 am
Jackie: I haven’t seen that movie - is it worth watching?
5. JOE ROSSON - September 18th, 2007 at 8:18 am
I thought Nikola Tesla invented(or discovered)ac(alternating current).The electric chair reminds me of The Green mile.
6. jfrater - September 18th, 2007 at 8:21 am
JOE ROSSON: the reference is to the two companies that were trying to capitalize on the two different currents for the main grids - not to the discovery itself
7. JOE ROSSON - September 18th, 2007 at 8:40 am
Oh,o.k. Hey, that might be a cool list, the greatest inventors
8. hgaratie - September 18th, 2007 at 8:48 am
What a fascinating list! I didn’t know that the guilliotine stayed around until just recently! Thanks for all the photos, they definitely help give the full image! I don’t understand why when using stoning as an execution the men are only burried to their waste and the women up to their neck??? SO NOT FAIR…
thanks as always jamie =)
9. jfrater - September 18th, 2007 at 10:39 am
JOE: it would - good idea.
hgaratie: it is quite a surprise. I think if I had to be executed I would choose the guillotine - at least it is fast.
10. sakul - September 18th, 2007 at 12:43 pm
You again forgot ‘execution by hellfire missile’. In gaza or the west bank, if someone in Israel decides it is your time to die…. they will execute you AND your family and whoever just happens to be in the vicinity… by firing a missile from a helicopter miles away…. Heck, at least most of the above examples get a trial, even a sham one…
what, no comment jfrater?
11. jfrater - September 18th, 2007 at 12:58 pm
sakul: I don’t comment on demand - I do have other aspects of my life to take care of each day. Your example is utterly ridiculous and you know it - I am talking about state sanctioned executions - not military manoeuvres. Please stop using every post I write to vent your hatred of Jews - it is becoming boring for everyone. You have written some excellent comments on some of the other posts - let’s try to keep it that way.
12. Joe rosson - September 18th, 2007 at 1:15 pm
Yeah,greatest inventors. You can go by witch one made the biggest impact on our lives, or something like that.Edison and Tesla would have to be near the top. Did you know that the word computer was actually used to name a human instead if a machine when it was first coined?
13. jfrater - September 18th, 2007 at 1:34 pm
Joe: I didn’t know that - when was that?
14. sakul - September 18th, 2007 at 1:49 pm
sakul: I don’t comment on demand - I do have other aspects of my life to take care of each day. Your example is utterly ridiculous and you know it - I am talking about state sanctioned executions
…
Wow… these are STATE SANCTIONED EXECUTIONS.. You don’t think that the Israeli State orders these executions? Not military manoevers…how utterly naive… I have no hatred for Jews.. I have disgust for the people that are about to start ww3. They are called Zionists. And they aren’t all Jews.
15. jfrater - September 18th, 2007 at 1:51 pm
sakul: fine. Will you stop talking about Jews now please?
16. sakul - September 18th, 2007 at 1:52 pm
http://www.countercurrents.org/pa-auken161206.htm
article about how Israel not only sanctions executions by apache helicopter, but how they also claim that they are ‘allowed’ to do it. They are called ‘targeted killings’.
17. sakul - September 18th, 2007 at 1:54 pm
sakul: fine. Will you stop talking about Jews now please?
…
I said Zionists. You are the one talking about Jews. They are different ya know.
18. jfrater - September 18th, 2007 at 1:55 pm
sakul: fine. Will you stop talking about Zionists now please?
19. sakul - September 18th, 2007 at 2:01 pm
ok… everyone carry one and stick their heads back in the sand…. Somewhere, a shepard is calling his sheep back….
20. sakul - September 18th, 2007 at 2:02 pm
.
21. jfrater - September 18th, 2007 at 2:03 pm
sakul: cool, thanks. And not banned - I am just asking as one gentleman to another. You are free to ignore my request.
22. sakul - September 18th, 2007 at 2:11 pm
Yeah, well it’s your site. You sound like a somewhat educated fellow… Why don’t you look at this information yourself? We are heading for a major catastrophe in this world… Doesn’t that concern anyone? Guess not.
23. sakul - September 18th, 2007 at 2:16 pm
sakul: fine. Will you stop talking about Zionists now please?
…
Oh, and one last thing.. that is the whole problem here Jamie… nobody’s talking about it.
24. jfrater - September 18th, 2007 at 2:28 pm
sakul: it doesn’t concern the list universe - there are other places people can find that information and make informed decisions. I don’t object to you talking about it - just do it when the topic is appropriate - and I don’t consider this to be so
25. zionist power - September 19th, 2007 at 12:02 am
sakul,
Get a grip man and relax.
Shouldnt you be getting your WW3 survial kit ready or something?
26. JOE ROSSON - September 19th, 2007 at 10:29 am
jf,you can check it out on wikipedia,or most any info website.Yep,a computer was first used to discribe a number crunching individual.
27. conni - September 19th, 2007 at 7:49 pm
Wow. Stoning is evil. I watched the video and read the article about stoning women. Just horrific. Thank you for bringing this to light. Too many people aren’t aware of this. Or they don’t believe it’s true. I sure wish it weren’t true.
28. inanytime - September 19th, 2007 at 10:06 pm
nice list. but the stoning image is photoshopped. i can tell by the pixels and seeing quite a few shops in my time.
29. soonerproud - September 19th, 2007 at 10:59 pm
The firing squad is still on the books in Oklahoma but has not actually been used since we adopted lethal injection as the primary means of execution. All executions in Oklahoma have been done by lethal injection since the death penalty was reinstated.
Interesting fact: Oklahoma was the second state in the union to adopt lethal injection. Texas was the first state to do so.
30. jfrater - September 19th, 2007 at 11:53 pm
Conni: too right. It is a terrible thing that should be stopped.
inanytime: really? At least there is the video link which is authentic even if the image is photoshopped (that is how the image was when I found it incidentally)
soonerproud: can you still choose to have the firing squad in Oklahoma even though injection is the norm?
31. soonerproud - September 20th, 2007 at 3:03 pm
I don’t think so jfrater. I could be wrong, but then again I am not on death row.
I will look it up and see if I can find some information on it.
32. soonerproud - September 20th, 2007 at 3:51 pm
Found the information you are looking for. Here is the quote from amnestyusa.org.
“h Authorizes electrocution if lethal injection is ever held unconstitutional and firing squad if both lethal injection and electrocution are held unconstitutional.”
Here is the link to the page I found this information.
http://www.amnestyusa.org/abolish/execmethod.do
Governor Brad Henry (D) signed a bill into law allowing the death penalty in cases where a sex offender has multiple convictions for sodomy, rape and molestation of children.
33. jfrater - September 20th, 2007 at 10:21 pm
soonerproud: wow - thanks for finding that. I can’t believe that they consider electrocution more humane than firing squad! I wonder if they have witnessed an electrocution!
34. Jackie - September 21st, 2007 at 6:58 am
Jamie: sorry it took me so long to answer your question, yes, Kama Sutra is a great movie, especially if you are interested in Indian culture (as I am). It is pretty much a story about a forbidden love between two people.
35. jfrater - September 21st, 2007 at 7:10 am
Jackie: okay - I will check it out - thanks for that
36. tintinx - September 23rd, 2007 at 7:23 am
You have a really good site but there are a couple of things to point out about this particular list (yes, I’m a frightful pedant).
1. In ‘Hanging’ you state: “The standard drop was in common use in English nations after the 1850’s”. As one of your other lists is about grammar, I’m compelled to point out that the 1850s is a plural and not a possessive so the apostrophe is incorrect.
2. Staying in ‘Hanging’ you state: “Albert Pierrepoint, the last official Execution of England” when you actually mean he was the last executioner. Also, the word does not require capitalisation.
9.95 out of 10
37. jfrater - September 23rd, 2007 at 7:24 am
tintinx: with great shame I bow my head! I will rectify the errors. Thank you
38. tintinx - September 23rd, 2007 at 9:13 am
Wow. Swift response and a truly great website (I’ve been riveted to reading older posts for at least the past hour). I write a web and technology column for my local newspaper (readership > 100k) and I’m going to give this site a mention.
39. jfrater - September 23rd, 2007 at 10:05 am
tintinx: I have no life - so I can dedicate myself to reading all the comments and replying to most
Thanks for offering to mention it in your paper - the more people that visit the better!
40. crafty - September 30th, 2007 at 10:31 pm
stoning to death is the way it should be.. its the natural way of the bible to execute someone
41. nutstomper - September 30th, 2007 at 11:20 pm
iran as islam is fucked up. i hope we nuke them and turn the whole useless region into a glass bowl
42. Sue - October 1st, 2007 at 8:13 am
it amuses me that we claim we are not monkeys, yet we do things like throw stones at each other.
43. jfrater - October 1st, 2007 at 8:18 am
Sue: so true!
44. Sean the pyro - October 6th, 2007 at 9:56 pm
I agree that many of the things going on in the middle east are truly atrocious but how much better are we when certain members of our enlightened civilization (crafty) publicly support genocide? Please tell me we are smart enough to find a better solution then that.
45. Peggy - October 25th, 2007 at 7:57 pm
Something to think about,,,Mary was an unwedded,pregnant,female,She would have had to face the stoning to death if,she didnt have a great story about it being the child of god.I would have made up something myself to keep from getting stoned to death!!!
46. Albertan - November 2nd, 2007 at 2:55 am
Uh Peggy…Mary got married to Joseph….sorry to intrude on your idiocy!!
47. soonerproud - November 2nd, 2007 at 12:24 pm
Albertan:
Mary was betrothed to Joseph when she became pregnant. Betrothed means that some one is committed to marriage but have yet to seal the deal and consummate. In ancient Jewish culture, betrothal is considered as binding as marriage but is more equivalent to the modern day practice of engagement. Betrothed couples were to refrain from relations until the marriage ceremony is performed. So technically Mary was an unwed, pregnant female.
48. Iceman - November 3rd, 2007 at 3:59 pm
Sorry to be pedantic, but Pierrepoint was not the last official executioner in the UK, by the time the last judicial executions took place in the early 1960’s, he had already resigned and had been replaced by a number of other official executioners. In fact the last executions took place simultaneously for 2 people convicted of the same crime (murder whilst committing a robbery I believe). They were both hanged at exactly the same time, one in Walton Jail Liverpool and one in Strangeways Jail Manchester, obviously each execution was performed by a different hangman. although their identities are secret one is believed to be Steve Wade who had acted as Pierrepoint’s assistant for many years previously.
If you are interested I am sure I could dig out the full information (names, dates etc )
49. jfrater - November 16th, 2007 at 9:49 am
inanytime: #28 - I can’t believe I missed that comment
+1 to you.
50. GTA - November 18th, 2007 at 5:33 pm
I’d prefer a Firing Squad. It’ll be easier and faster
51. ASimon - December 4th, 2007 at 10:13 am
Great list. Your site has become a daily must read for me while Im overseas. If anyone is truly interested in the history of American executions there is a book out there by Frederick Drimmer called Until You Are Dead….The Book of Executions In America. Interesting read although a little macabre. It also talks about the story behind each type of execution and how and when certain events lead to the use of the different types. Sheds a lot of light on why some people are against the death penalty.
52. Bilboman - December 5th, 2007 at 5:55 pm
Correction: Spain’s last two executions by garrote were on 2nd April 1974; 5 firing squad executions followed in 1975 barely 2 months before the death of dictator General Franco. José Luis Cerveto was sentenced to death but reprieved.
Incidentally, France’s last guillotining was as recently as 1977!
53. jfrater - December 6th, 2007 at 2:11 am
Bilboman: thanks for the comment - I don’t think the list is incorrect - your information is more specific but the list doesn’t contradict what you have said
ASimon: Thanks
Where are you holidaying? And thanks for the book recommendation - I really enjoy books on this topic.
54. ASimon - December 7th, 2007 at 7:47 pm
jfrater: Unfortunately not holidaying. Im in the US Army and deployed :(. Thankfully Ill be going home in a very short time.
55. dsfadsfsdaf - December 12th, 2007 at 3:41 pm
ya… this is the best site ever….
why would anyone ever do this
56. Kai4a - January 10th, 2008 at 5:45 pm
Does anyone else here suspect that Sakul, nutstomper and crafty are all the same person? Maybe it’s just me, maybe all bigots start to sound the same after a while…
btw- I agree with GTA, firing squad is the way to go. Somehow dignified and quick. Of course, given the choice I’d rather be IN the firing squad rather than in front of it.
57. Shakespeare’s Girl - January 17th, 2008 at 11:03 pm
Ah, capital punishment. I have always loved the contoversy surrounding this subject, and I was wondering recently, if we (the government in general) execute someone for their crimes, aren’t we in essence commiting a crime? Shouldn’t capital punishment be abolished in this case, because it places us on the same level as the people we execute?
58. GingerLee - January 17th, 2008 at 11:32 pm
Shakespeare’s Girl: No because any government action is guiltless. The mother can’t shoot the dick who raped and murdered her daughter otherwise she gets in trouble, it’s of course high and mighty officials who get the pleasure of doing that.
I think Gandhi said it best: An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind.
If you continue to pluck and destroy in circulation we all lose.
59. Beefykeith - January 18th, 2008 at 6:00 pm
Hanging you are wrong the last hangings in England were both on the 13 August 1964.
Harry Bertrum Allen from Manchester hung Gwynne Owen Evans at Strangeways Prison and at the same time Robert Leslie Stewart from Chadderton Lancashire hung Peter Anthony Allen at Walton prison Liverpool.
60. Lars - April 6th, 2008 at 11:20 am
Thanks for a interesting site. For your information,
the picture of the stoning is not a real stoning, but
from a anti-stoning protest in Brussels.
http://gfx.dagbladet.no/pub/ar.....otest2.jpg
61. John - April 21st, 2008 at 12:55 pm
Would you be more thrilled if it were real? It does quite nicely the way it is, doesn’t it?
I think it’s pretty obvious that it isn’t real. Look at the rocks with “blood” on them. The dirt around the lady would be covered in blood if there were rocks thrown at her that actually picked up some blood.
62. Lars - April 22nd, 2008 at 1:04 pm
Hi John,
What do you mean by “be more thrilled?”. Why do you want to know that? I simply informed about the picture. I think it has some relevance on a site on this. You don’t, fine. It doesn’t take a genius to see that it’s not real, but then again Nigeria scammers earn money… I knew right away since I had seen the photo in a newspaper, I didn’t write this to make sure everyone would see that “Lars” is clever. Why can’t we be polite on internet forums instead of being aggressive right away?
Lars
63. jessyka - May 4th, 2008 at 6:43 pm
This is disgusting and nasty but every person who has murdered deserves it
64. shafa - May 8th, 2008 at 1:42 pm
Its all horrible and painful even to think about the above mentioned methods of execution especially electric chair, stonning and gas chamber.
Though the guilty should be punished for his crime and to avoid others from doing the same bt at the same time death penality in any form should be abolished.
thanks for the educative article.
65. jajdude - May 17th, 2008 at 12:23 pm
The stoning picture creeped me out.
66. Neil Saunders - May 21st, 2008 at 1:40 pm
It’s high time that human beings around the world moved on from these barbaric rituals of bloodletting.
I can’t help thinking that a lot of the people who moralise about how wicked convicted murderers are actually get rather a big kick out of the thought or spectacle of judicial execution. In other words, they dress up their own sadism in high-sounding, self-righteous language.
Incidentally, I was puzzled by GingerLee’s remarks above. Perhaps he/she was indulging in irony when remarking that “any government action is guiltless”. Of course it is trivially true that state actions - good, bad and indifferent - are immune from the criminal sanctions of that same state (and usually, although not always, from the sanctions of others). It is still possible to believe, where appropriate, that they are morally wicked. BTW, surely the whole point of Gandhi’s remark (which sits oddly in GingerLee’s post if he/she is NOT being ironic) is that purely retributive punishment ultimately harms the society that practises it.
67. Taija - May 28th, 2008 at 11:50 am
Hanged for homosexuality? Horrible, just horrible.
68. Ashar Ali - May 28th, 2008 at 12:16 pm
maybe, a life sentence is better than executing, becoz wouldn’t people suffer more if theyhad to live without thier loved ones and also, thier wud no longer be any guilt ridden executioners either
69. JAKE - June 24th, 2008 at 2:18 pm
damn if i gotta choose id that the needle
70. Joe - June 24th, 2008 at 7:59 pm
I feel very thankful for these methods and devices after reading Top 10 Serial Killers list. Thank the inventors for there contribution to society.
71. DOUG - June 27th, 2008 at 3:01 am
ALBERT PIERREPOINT WAS NOT ENGLANDS LAST EXECUTIONER AS STATED,HE RESIGNED IN 1956,TWO SIMULTANEOUS EXECUTIONS IN MANCHESTER AND LIVERPOOL TOOK PLACE ON 13TH AUGUST 1964 WHEN CAPITAL PUNISHMENT IN THE UK WAS ABOLISHED.THE THICKNESS OF THE ROPE WAS STANDARD AND WAS NOT SOAKED WITH WATER EITHER.THE ONLY PART OF THE EXECUTION WHICH CHANGED BY THE JOB WAS THE LENGTH OF THE DROP.PIERREPOINT WAS NOT INTRODUCED TO THE PRISONERS UNTIL A FEW SECONDS BEFORE THEIR DEATHS EXCEPT WHEN HANGING WAR CRIMINALS IN GERMANY AS HE HAD TO WEIGH THEM,A JOB DONE BY BRITISH PRISON OFFICERS BEFORE HIS ARRIVAL AT THE PRISON.HE IS CREDITED WITH THE FASTEST HANGING ON RECORD,THE PRISONER BEING SUSPENDED ON THE END OF THE ROPE 7 SECONDS AFTER PIERREPOINT ENTERED HIS CELL!
72. Double - August 2nd, 2008 at 6:13 pm
What are sad lot human beings are. I am against all forms of execution, but I do think that murderers etc should be subject to Spartan imprisonment and hard labour and no prospect of release. Surely we are being hypocritical if we kill offenders for their crimes? Mankind should have progressed beyond this barbarism. I am happy to say that Britain and several other European nations will not extradite to any country (including the USA) when the prisoner could face the death penalty. I feel proud that we have reached a higher level of civilisation by our policy on capital punishment.
73. DOUG - August 10th, 2008 at 2:26 am
So you are proud of our so called civilised Britain? When hanging was abolished in this country the violent crime rate was around 5 times lower than it is now,prison is not a place of punishment and our laws are a joke.You say that “mankind should have progressed beyond this barbarism”,but what about the rights of innocent victims of murder.Teenagers in particular have no fear of commiting murder as they get a “life sentence” with a tarriff of around 12 years.With time off for good behaviour they will be out after ten.Hanging WAS a deterrent.Very few murders would be commited if the perpetrator ended up at the end of a rope.There is no fear and therefore very little chance of our country ever becoming a safe place to live again.At the time of writing 23 teenagers in London alone have been murdered this year already and you call this civilised.The death penalty may well be barbaric but without it the murder rate has spiralled out of control.How can you possibly justify our society which hands down sentences of 20 years or more for robbery yet passes down almost derogatory sentences for the taking of anothers life,do we value property more?Is this what you laughingly call a higher level of civilisation?