You know, I think that only the lives of people who are tried for serious crimes, and found guilty by a jury of their peers, and then given ample opportunity to appeal their verdicts, should be executed. That was the case with Ted Bundy and John Gacy and Jeffrey Dahmer.
They all were executed -- but only after being tried, convicted, sentenced, and THEN only after they were allowed to appeal both the verdict and the sentence.
Teller was murdered.
While I consider many of Teller's abortions to have been murder, it seems to me somewhat odd to suggest that since Teller committed murder, he "deserved" to be murdered as well.
Teller likely justified his late-term abortions by saying that the babies whose lives he took were somehow less than human, and did not deserve life.
But, in my book, no one -- unborn babies and men like Teller -- deserves to have his or her life taken away by the action of one person.
They all were executed -- but only after being tried, convicted, sentenced, and THEN only after they were allowed to appeal both the verdict and the sentence.
You're mistaken about Dahmer who was sentenced to 15 life terms; 957 years, and murdered by fellow inmate Christopher Scarver.