Posted on 12/13/2005 10:28:22 AM PST by John David Powell
If not Death, then what? A personal look at capital crime and punishment
December 13, 2005
by John David Powell
If not Death, then what? Thoughtful individuals across the social and political spectra ponder this question today as they search for a suitable punishment for historys longest-running crime.
Capital crime and punishment is not a subject I enjoy. It became personal on Oct. 26, 1981. Dont let anyone tell you time heals all wounds. It does not. And the recent debate over whether a state should execute a convicted murdering thug just keeps open the wound.
Sometimes I bring it upon myself. Back in February, I received an email from Karen in Indiana. Karen wrote, in part: What can you tell me about William Minnick? I am writing to him from an anti death penalty web site. I have not asked him, Did you do it. I do have many pages of court papers he has sent to me. I cannot find info about Martha Payne on the web. I can only find info to help Minnick. My search found your article (Death Penalty Over Coffee at Sparkys). What really happened? Was he the killer? Is he a sociopath?
So many questions, and so little reason to answer.
My brother-in-law came home from work and found Marthas body on the bedroom floor of their Greencastle, Ind., home. She had been raped, anally sodomized, and stabbed in the upper back. The knifing killed her. Her body also bore ligature marks on the neck and burn marks on the ankles, which indicated her killer tried to electrocute her. Minnick told his girlfriend that he raped Martha, but that Ace killed her. He never gave up his phantom accomplice.
A jury found him guilty, and on June 10, 1982, two and a half months after the birth of my first daughter, a judge sentenced Minnick to death
An appeals court overturned the conviction on technicalities.
A second jury found him guilty, but did not recommend death, because they did not have access to all of the evidence from the first trial. The judge did, however, and sentenced Minnick to death on Oct. 16, 1985, nearly four years from the day he murdered Martha.
The judge wrote in his order of execution: . . . The court further finds as an aggravating circumstance that the crime mutilated her body and defiled her even after death, that the crime was the kind of horrendous crime that the legislature anticipated when it listed rape or robbery as aggravating circumstances and, therefore, the court specifically finds that the circumstances of the crime, the violence of the attempted electrocution, the strangling and the knifing are those kinds of aggravating circumstances.
Other aggravating circumstances turned up beyond the crime scene. They turned up when the courts overturned his first conviction. They turned up when my in-laws returned to court to relive the horrific details. They turned up each time Minnick filed briefs and appeals. They turned up when the Indiana Supreme Court set aside the death sentence of another murderer [Saylor v. State, 808 N.E. 2nd 646 (Ind. 2004)], because the trial judge overruled the jurys recommendation against a death sentence. They turned up when the court agreed a year ago that he is incompetent, then delayed his sentencing until the State of Indiana determines he is competent to stand before a judge and face a maximum of 160 years in prison.
They continue turning up when an email prompts me to do a web search and I discover dozens of sites devoted to a vicious killer. The aggravation transcends believability when a smirking Minnick, a crucifix around his neck and another on the wall behind him, mocks me from my computer screen.
He asks for correspondence and support from all (both men and women), from all professions examples journalists, United Nations Personnel, Foreign Government-officials, United States Supreme Courts law clerks, and citizens from all across the nations.
He concludes with Hopefully well help expose the corruption inside the judiciary and bring end to death penalty in U.S.A.
The latest aggravation occurs when I realize we have something in common: An end to the death penalty. Except, I dont think he would like my suggestion.
Its real simple. If not Death, then the closest thing to it.
Martha will never have children, will never see her nieces and nephews, will never open presents at birthdays and Christmas. She will never see a sunrise or feel a cool breeze blow across her brow.
Her family will never speak to her. They will never share the dramas and traumas of every-day life. They will never share cards and letters. They will never experience the joy of her company.
So it should be for Minnick and for everyone convicted of a capital crime. If not Death, then the closest thing to it, which would be total removal from society, where they will never open presents at birthdays and Christmas, never see a sunrise, never speak to a family member or friend or another living soul, and never share cards or letters. Or emails. Or their ramblings on personal web pages.
If not Death, then the closest thing to it. Otherwise, we show distain for the victim, the victims family, and a system that demands justice for all.
John David Powell is a communication professional, an award-winning Internet columnist, and a contributor to the Christian History Project. His email address is johndavidpowell@yahoo.com.
Take all convicted murderers, rapists, pedophiles and on a monthly or bi-monthly basis bring them to a point of departure and move them all to thes eislands. Give them a bag with a knife, seeds a book on survival in the land, and leave them there. While waiting for departure show them videos of how to live off the land. They can't live in society like a decent human being, good bye. If they escape and make it back and are caught, execute.
Now that would be interesting. That could be hell on earth. Unlike the cushy prisons where criminals rule ... and victims have NO rights.
I prefer to send them to another planet.
It is sad that your wound is tortured, again and again, by the presence of this monster on the face of the Earth. May God bless you and your family. May you have as much peace as the circumstances of your life permit.
Congressman Billybob / John Armor
Who is searching for a suitable punishment. The people of the USA support the death penalty overwhelmingly. There is no search going on except in the minds of deluded left wing idiots.
I am all for the death penalty for heinous crimes, but I can't say we should be proud of how it's been applied.
Until we can get them off of THIS plantet, the death penalty is the best final solution.
The death-row inmate I am most interested in seeing put to death:
http://www.tdcj.state.tx.us/stat/austinperry.htm
His 9-year old victim lived in our neighborhood.
Isn't that basically how Australia was populated?
If I may make one tiny change to your proposal and make it one of the Aleutian Islands. Why let them live in a tropical paradise?
They can live on blubber.......
bttt
I do believe that in the British Isles, where most Aussies came from, the description of criminal was pretty broad, ranging from murder to "looked at a lord the wrong way", "did not genuflect upon passing carriage" or "stole bread crust from plate".
A couple of points: Blubber comes from whales. Whales are HUGE. (which you already knew)Not easily caught, killed, or butchered by one person.
The Aleutian Islands are part of the State of Alaska, even though most of the islands are uninhabited, and would be especially difficult to survive on, but it could be done.
I have a better suggestion. If you insist on sending trash to Alaska, at least send the b*stards to the Arctic for an 18-month sentence, where the bugs, polar bears, and arctic foxes will take care of them in very short order. In the unlikely event that such trash survives the short Arctic summer, the long, dark, bitterly cold Arctic winter would finish them off. End of problem in less than one year.
How about life without parole, spent in solitary confinement with no exercise, library, or visiting privileges. No mail, no windows, no communication with the outside world. Only 3 lousy meals per day, slid under the door. I could accept that alternative to the death penalty. (I bet there would be prisoners begging for the needle after a short time.)
Please accept my condolances on the tragic loss of your sister-in-law to that animal.
I am going to assume that there was sufficuent evedence of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
If he's guilty then fry him....mentally incompetent my a$$.
Send them over to China. They generally just take them out and shot them in the back of the head. Quick justice, none of this 24 yr. stuff! (OBTW, they shot the protesters too)
Sure thing, but it's more costly than all others.
Yes, but the British also imprisoned them there. it was just a smaller population of England with jobs to support the prison, feeding them, health care (though limited). I'm saying no care of any sort. live where they want, how they want, feed off one another is they want. Not our concern.
I know there was a movie of this once.
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