The old guy was a serial confessor the right guy was going to his death. The prosecutor scared the old man to leave and take his confession back when his wife disapproved of him admitting the wrong man was convicted, due to her desire to rise in the social status The guilt was eating away at the prosecutor. The night the convicted guy was to be put to death he was home disturbed and drinking. The serial confessor comes back and attempt to get him to call off the execution. They get in a physical altercation. The prosecutor takes the clock out of the old man’s hand as he is going to hit him with it and hits the old man instead killing him. The wife and her dad walk in. See the dead man. The dad reveals he is a serial confessor. Yet they don’t understand why the prosecutor killed him. (Honestly it was self defense yet that not the point of the story)
Electrocution as a humane means of execution was first suggested in 1881 by Dr. Albert Southwick, a dentist. On August 6, 1890, William Kemmler became the first person to be sent to the chair. After he was strapped in, a charge of approximately 700 volts was delivered for only 17 seconds before the current failed. Although witnesses reported smelling burnt clothing and charred flesh, Kemmler was far from dead, and a second shock was prepared. The second charge was 1,030 volts and applied for about two minutes, whereupon smoke was observed coming from the head of Kemmler, who was clearly deceased. An autopsy showed that the electrode attached to his back had burned through to the spine. Can someone please, explain to me what humane to me again? Let alone the lethal injections and gas chambers! That doctor shiuld’ve looked as murderer himself in the public eye back then. Was he serious? Along with Julius Mount Bleyer, inventor of the lethal injection who praised it as being cheaper than hanging. 👀 I personally am against artistic executions but in my opinion there’s a no better execution than dying abruptly. No pain experience, no turture.
I once read a long time ago that electrocution would be painless since the person would be instantly rendered unconscious.🤷♀️. I'm skeptical about that to say the least. When I was 3 years old I took my dad's sunglasses with metal frames and plugged them into a light socket. Horrible, incredible pain throughout my entire body, then I blacked out. Fortunately the fuses blew soon enough for me to survive. Of course household current is not thousands of volts if that's still used, and only lasted seconds, but my experience was enough to still make me extremely careful decades later. I think electrocution abhorrent for any reason. Also have read the riot act to my husband who wasn't careful around damp areas, and was too lazy to shut down the breakers when fiddling with electrical work but I stopped him before he got hurt. I think he complained at work about my attitude and got told off and warned. He's acted responsibly since.
The old guy was a serial confessor the right guy was going to his death. The prosecutor scared the old man to leave and take his confession back when his wife disapproved of him admitting the wrong man was convicted, due to her desire to rise in the social status The guilt was eating away at the prosecutor. The night the convicted guy was to be put to death he was home disturbed and drinking. The serial confessor comes back and attempt to get him to call off the execution. They get in a physical altercation. The prosecutor takes the clock out of the old man’s hand as he is going to hit him with it and hits the old man instead killing him. The wife and her dad walk in. See the dead man. The dad reveals he is a serial confessor. Yet they don’t understand why the prosecutor killed him. (Honestly it was self defense yet that not the point of the story)
Thank you so much!!!!
Georgann Johnson was gorgeous and a very good actress.
Midnight cowboy
Electrocution as a humane means of execution was first suggested in 1881 by Dr. Albert Southwick, a dentist. On August 6, 1890, William Kemmler became the first person to be sent to the chair. After he was strapped in, a charge of approximately 700 volts was delivered for only 17 seconds before the current failed. Although witnesses reported smelling burnt clothing and charred flesh, Kemmler was far from dead, and a second shock was prepared. The second charge was 1,030 volts and applied for about two minutes, whereupon smoke was observed coming from the head of Kemmler, who was clearly deceased. An autopsy showed that the electrode attached to his back had burned through to the spine.
Can someone please, explain to me what humane to me again? Let alone the lethal injections and gas chambers! That doctor shiuld’ve looked as murderer himself in the public eye back then. Was he serious? Along with Julius Mount Bleyer, inventor of the lethal injection who praised it as being cheaper than hanging. 👀 I personally am against artistic executions but in my opinion there’s a no better execution than dying abruptly. No pain experience, no turture.
So what do you advocate?
And who atones for the "justice" system's mistakes or intentional frame-ups?
I once read a long time ago that electrocution would be painless since the person would be instantly rendered unconscious.🤷♀️. I'm skeptical about that to say the least. When I was 3 years old I took my dad's sunglasses with metal frames and plugged them into a light socket. Horrible, incredible pain throughout my entire body, then I blacked out. Fortunately the fuses blew soon enough for me to survive. Of course household current is not thousands of volts if that's still used, and only lasted seconds, but my experience was enough to still make me extremely careful decades later. I think electrocution abhorrent for any reason.
Also have read the riot act to my husband who wasn't careful around damp areas, and was too lazy to shut down the breakers when fiddling with electrical work but I stopped him before he got hurt. I think he complained at work about my attitude and got told off and warned. He's acted responsibly since.
Yikes 😳
the guillotine is much faster .. assuming the blade is really sharpe
Hanging sounds cheaper....reusable rope...a scaffold and trapdoor...100 bucks? Dark humor...
This is not the whole episode, is it?
No
Was she the other woman in One for the Road?
Yes, she was Georgann Johnson.
The DA is Pat Hingle, the judge from Eastwood's "Hang 'em High."
The drunk is Russell Collins, the telegrapher from "Bad Day at Black Rock."
So he sacrificed an innocent man for his own ambition ❓. Nice 🤦🏻♀️‼️
just like TRUMP
Ppl have been doing that for centuries.
Ever heard of Bruno Hauptmann?
And countless others.
I would like to hear others names hear.
@@rhuephus Hey, you Liberal, leftist Democrat. I'm a Black supporter of President Trump😊
@@rhondae8222 👍🏿👍🏿
What happened
Who was the killer
TRUMP did it
The Old man did it.
The Wife is Eve in the Garden of Eden.
Adam's Offsprings- most of them Never learn.
😮😅
🤕
I don't see anything far-fetched at all in this scene.
Greed
Idk
It's SHE AND DADDY
no ..its HER and Daddy