US South Carolina set to execute prisoner in state's first firing squad execution - Brad Sigmon, convicted in a 2002 double murder, has chosen a method that is rarely used. Utah carried out the last firing squad execution in 2010.

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Brad Sigmon, convicted of beating his estranged girlfriend’s parents to death in Greenville County in 2001, in an undated photo.

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COLUMBIA, S.C. — A South Carolina man convicted in a 2002 double murder is set to die Friday by firing squad, a rarely used execution method never before carried out by the state.

Barring a last-minute reprieve from the governor’s office or the U.S. Supreme Court, Brad Sigmon’s execution is scheduled for 6 p.m. at the Broad River Correctional Institution in Columbia. Sigmon, 67, would be the oldest inmate executed by the state. His lawyer, Gerald “Bo” King, has requested clemency from Gov. Henry McMaster, arguing Sigmon has transformed his life in prison, rededicated himself to his Christian faith and poses no further danger while incarcerated.

“The man Brad is today does not deserve execution,” King said Thursday.

McMaster, a Republican, signed a bill in 2021 that legalized the firing squad and requires condemned inmates to choose between it, lethal injection or the state’s primary execution method of electrocution. His office declined to comment.

Sigmon chose a firing squad after concerns were raised about previous lethal injection executions in South Carolina. Inmates required twice the dose of pentobarbital, and one inmate “died with his lungs massively swollen with blood and fluid,” akin to “drowning,” according to an autopsy report cited in court documents filed by the defense last month.

State prosecutors responded that Sigmon “waived any argument about lethal injection” since he chose to die by firing squad.

King said Sigmon has admitted his guilt and “accepted that he deserves punishment” but added that “he’s been asked to make this choice as to how he’s going to die” with only basic knowledge of each protocol.

South Carolina restarted executions in September after a 13-year pause caused by the state’s inability to procure lethal injection drugs. A shield law allows officials to publicly withhold details surrounding where the state sources its current supply of pentobarbital.

Richard “Dick” Harpootlian, a former prosecutor who handled death penalty cases, introduced the firing squad proposal when he served in the state Legislature in 2021. He said he “wrestled” with pushing for the method but found it “less barbaric” than the electric chair. “I don’t relish the idea of somebody being shot to death, but if they’re going to die, this is an alternative,” Harpootlian said.

The state has released some details about how it plans to carry out the firing squad execution; the last one occurred in 2010 in Utah, the only state that has used the firing squad since the Supreme Court ruled the death penalty constitutional in 1976. In South Carolina, three Department of Corrections employees will make up the volunteer squad, officials said. They will fire rifles, each one loaded with live ammunition, from behind a wall about 15 feet from the inmate, who will be seated.

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The execution chamber at the Utah State Prison after a firing squad executed Ronnie Lee Gardner in 2010.

Before the shooting, the inmate will be allowed to make a last statement, then a hood will be placed over his head and a target pinned over his heart. Bullet-resistant glass separates the execution chamber from another room where witnesses, including media, will be permitted. “I don’t know what they have done or how they have trained to prepare to shoot another person from 15 feet away in the heart,” King said. “It’s easier to think of ways that it could go wrong than to feel confident it will go right.”

Deborah Denno, a professor at Fordham Law School who studies the death penalty, said execution by firing squad remains one of the “least inhumane” options compared to other methods, including lethal injection and nitrogen gas, given how quickly someone can die after being shot in the heart.

Its return hearkens back to other periods in American history when firing squads were more common, such as the colonial era and the Civil War, when it was used against deserters.

“Even though [a firing squad] was used in our very first execution in 1608, we’ve never had this many states adopt statutorily the firing squad until now,” Denno said, adding that a bill in Idaho would make it the primary execution method.

Witnesses to Utah’s last firing squad execution recently recalled to NBC News the sound of rapid gunfire in the chamber and how the inmate, Ronnie Lee Gardner, appeared to flinch and move his arm after being shot. A corrections department spokeswoman said the agency offers mental health support for staff taking part in executions.

Sigmon was found guilty in the beating deaths of his ex-girlfriend’s parents, William David Larke, 62, and Gladys Gwendolyn Larke, 59. Prosecutors say Sigmon used a baseball bat to attack the couple in their Greenville County home, and then abducted his ex-girlfriend, who managed to escape from his car. Sigmon fled and was captured in Tennessee after a multiday manhunt.

In his request for his execution to be halted, his defense lawyers said the jury at his trial was not told about his history of mental illness, including bipolar disorder, and his “traumatic and abusive childhood,” underscoring claims of ineffective legal counsel. The South Carolina Supreme Court had previously rejected Sigmon’s request to stop his execution and did so again on Tuesday, finding that such mitigating evidence “would not have influenced the jury’s appraisal of Sigmon’s culpability.”

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From another article: Gladys and David Larke are pictured during a Fourth of July celebration in the 1990s. (Archive of that article)
 
Forget about the feelings of the gunmen for a minute, what about the poor cleaner who has to go in and mop up afterward? Poor Bert or Jacinta will need a day off afterwards. Could get messy.
Just send in a roomba with a pentagram painted on it’s top side with a goat skull glued onto it.

Preferably while that lawyer scumbag watches.
 
Just send in a roomba with a pentagram painted on it’s top side with a goat skull glued onto it.

Preferably while that lawyer scumbag watches.
I mean if we're talking efficiency, why don't we just shop vac their blood out all at once? If we do it right we can donate the blood too. This can also be the primary execution method, exsanguination via shop vac
 
I could see this also being argued as a way to cut the more expensive helium with a little bit of cheaper oxygen. Not enough to really affect buoyancy but over time it adds up, like shaving gold coins.
According to the trials of the Old Bailey, this should get the offending party drawn and quartered as this is considered a grave offense against the monarch.

I will leave it to you to consider which monarch adulterating helium with oxygen offends.
 
All of these arguments about execution method are ultimately ridiculous. I personally think the old Soviet method of capital punishment, a bullet to the brain, is probably the quickest and most humane. But they ask, who would be executioner? What kind of person could do such a thing?
I would gladly take George Floyd to the room with a drain in the basement of Niggeryanka
 
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Forget about the feelings of the gunmen for a minute, what about the poor cleaner who has to go in and mop up afterward? Poor Bert or Jacinta will need a day off afterwards. Could get messy.
Maybe just shoot him outside on the dirt. EZ.
People do not want the death penalty to look that way because we imagine killing the double-murder evil rapist guy, not gently putting them to sleep like we do with an old dog. We have obviously known how to give people painless deaths for a long time, they even do it legally in some places as MAID. No one- or at least not a lot of people- want to give criminals a "Forever Sleep" death. We want them shot, hanged, or shocked to death, and if they're getting injected with medicines, they aren't getting the fun ones.
While the spectacle is certainly a part of it, in a "Act like this and watch what you get" sort of way, I really don't care how we do it. I think shooting them in the back of the head is probably an effective middle ground between Canadian Healthcare and breaking on the wheel, its a violent enough solution that those baying for blood are satisifed, and I get what I want, which is a criminal too dangerous to be given freedom again dealt with swiftly.

The problem is that half of America is run by shitlibs who will cry about a violent child murderer and rapist being shot in his disgusting face. Look up the Cheshire, Connecticut home invasion case, two animals invaded a family home, beat the family with bats, raped the wife, strangled her to death, raped the 11 year old daughter then tied her and the other daughter to their beds, and lit them on fire, burning the family home to the ground. They were originally convicted and sentenced to death, but the Connecticunts' supreme court then ruled the death penalty was unconstitutional so they were spared and got life in prison. The Connecticunts are now paying for these two subhumans' cost of living indefinitely. If anyone exists that should be broken on the wheel or boiled alive or be given any of the other torturous spectacle executions,its them, but a shitlib is such a low form of life that it cannot recognize that some human beings are such abominations that the only correct action is to impose swift execution. Personally I'd have had them crucified, but a bullet to the back of the head would suffice if we are to impose a standard method of execution.

Edit: I forgot, one of them trooned out in prison, so the Connecticunts paid for his sex change too. Fuck Connecticut.
 
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I mean if we're talking efficiency, why don't we just shop vac their blood out all at once? If we do it right we can donate the blood too. This can also be the primary execution method, exsanguination via shop vac
Now you're talking! I always say China has the right idea because they harvest the condemned's organs. They don't wait 20 years either, so they're still fresh and usable.
 
You're a retard. There's a big difference between signing up for the police or the army, and signing up for the Schutzstaffel.

Well I don't believe in God, can we please just permanently get rid of them as quickly as possible and prevent any further damage they can do?
Read closely-not talking about the Army or even the (Waffen) SS. Talking about German who were ok with working in concentration camps.
 
So does that stat about how it's more expensive to execute someone than lock them up for life have anything to do with the fact it'd taken 23 years to execute this guy?
Makes me wonder when was the last death sentence speedrun - in that the accused was killed in a timely matter after the conviction?

Because I’m 99% sure it’s still Timothy McVeigh, which is great Rot In Hell but there’s no reason it can’t be expedited. Hell I remember watching a somber Death Row video about a guy who wound up killing himself because they took so damn long.
 
I love the idea that you could be deported even as a citizen because "well, we just don't want you here." Bring back banishment and exile as a punishment!
Every Serious Nation had some version of banishment, exile, or "punishment by transportation", because they recognized certain people will simply continue to wreak havoc as long as they're around. A recognition that this person is intentionally undermining his host community should be sufficient for physical removal.

So does that stat about how it's more expensive to execute someone than lock them up for life have anything to do with the fact it'd taken 23 years to execute this guy?
No, it's another Kafka trap, just like the NGO "executive director" oy-vey'ing "There's no evidence you need alternative execution drugs, the single one that's approved works, btw ignore the fact that we're throwing endless legal shenanigans at disrupting its supply!"

They're the ones dragging out executions for that many years, so they can turn around and claim they're more expensive than a prison sentence, and the second you get rid of the death penalty, they'll turn around and argue the expense of lengthy prison sentences (which they're also making more expensive via endless "rights" that have to be satisfied). They're just agents of chaos and subversion.
 
I'm glad the firing squad is making a comeback. Next we need to start expediting the execution process, there's no reason it should take multiple decades. We KNOW it doesn't have to take that long too, only took them like 5 years to kill Timothy McVeigh because if the government wants you dead, they'll kill you, and they won't waste time with bureaucratic nonsense.

Modern execution methods, the lethal injection especially, basically everything after hanging though, are "humane" only for the executioners and those who condemn criminals to death, not to the actual criminals themselves. It's all for that "I'm not KILLING him, just putting him to SLEEP!" cope. Of the hundreds or thousands who have been executed, not one has come back from the dead to complain about how "inhumane" it was.

It's kind of bullshit they make you sit. I'd want to stand.
Reminded me of this.
 
It's kind of bullshit they make you sit. I'd want to stand.
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Pictured - joshua connor moon, infamous owner of kiwifarms and far right ustase leader stands defiantly as he smokes a final cuban cigar smuggled into death row by his supporters, while awaiting the firing squad after having ordered an obscene 12 pounds of expensive serbian cheeses, a basket of kiwi fruits and a case of bud light with the troon crossed out with a black marker as a final fuck you to the trans community - newsweek
 
This shit was confusing to read as I skipped the very first paragraph.

It wasnt until I went back and it makes it clear one of the murderers Hayes is a tranny and is now a "woman".

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You dont hate these people nearly as much as you should.

And like in almost every single case, both the perps of that horrible crime where life long pieces of shit with rap sheets a mile long.

there's no reason it should take multiple decades.
That, like the use of lethal injection is part of the process to make it so difficult to carry out its just not used at all.

Its really fucked up though. You read about murderers from the 1960s and before and from sentencing to execution was a few years tops. Now youre lucky if it takes less than 20.
 
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And like in almost every single case, both the perps of that horrible crime where life long pieces of shit with rap sheets a mile long.
Home invasions where the people are home at the time should be taken much more seriously.

There's an expectation that violence could come into play on either end that shows a sociopathic heart.
 
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