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So, I got offered the chance to witness someone getting killed...

Byrd Man

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I'm a news reporter for a radio station in rural Georgia. I got an email today from the Georgia Association of Broadcasters and Georgia Department of Corrections to witness an execution in two weeks.

On April 28th, they're putting this guy to death for a murder he committed in 1994 and they need two media witnesses.

While, on one hand I think it would be sick and something horrible to see, a part of me thinks this could be a damn good news story.

So, I throw my mercy on the community, what would you do?

Here's some backstory on the guy they plan on killing...

The state plans to execute an Athens-area man later this month for murdering a follower of his small white supremacist group more than a decade ago.

William Mark Mize will be put to death by lethal injection at 7 p.m. April 28 unless state officials agree to commute his sentence or pardon him. He would be the second person executed this year in Georgia.

The state Department of Corrections scheduled Mize's death Monday, shortly after an Oconee County Superior Court judge ordered that the execution happen between April 28 and May 5.

Mize, 52, has been on Georgia's death row in Jackson since 1995, when an Oconee County jury convicted him in the shooting death of Eddie Tucker of Hull.

A former Ku Klux Klan member, Mize led a small Klan-like group called the National Vastilian Aryan Party.

He shot Tucker with a shotgun, execution-style, in October 1994 after Tucker didn't carry out an order to burn down a crack house in Athens, state prosecutors said.

Before Mize is executed, the State Board of Pardons and Paroles will conduct a clemency hearing.

The board will meet with his Macon attorney, Franklin J. Hogue, on Thursday and with Mize next week, Hogue said.

Hogue, who was appointed to the case by a federal judge in 2001, said Monday he hadn't spoken with his client about the scheduled execution but assumed Mize was aware of the date.

Mize has appealed his conviction several times to state and federal courts, unsuccessfully. Most recently, the U.S. Supreme Court refused on March 23 to review the case.

"He's consistently maintained his innocence from the day of his arrest to this minute," Hogue said.

Three other Mize followers were arrested and charged with murdering Tucker in a wooded area of Oconee County in October 1994.

Two of them, Christopher Hattrup and Terry Mark Allen, were convicted and now are serving life sentences in prison. Prosecutors dropped charges against Mize's girlfriend, Samantha Doster, who testified against Mize during his trial.

According to court records, Mize and several NVAP members gathered at Mize's home on Oct. 15, 1994, and they later left to go camping. On the way, Mize told the group there was a crack house in Athens that he wanted "gotten rid of."

Hattrup and Tucker were supposed to set the house on fire but didn't, and Hattrup later told Mize they "didn't need anybody around that couldn't follow orders," referring to Tucker.

The group stayed at a bar until it was dark, then drove to the Oconee County woods and walked in without a flashlight. Tucker, Hattrup and Mize got ahead of the rest of the group, who testified they heard a shot and Tucker say, "My God, what did you do that for?"

After a second shot, Doster heard Hattrup ask Mize if he had the gun and Mize replied, "No, man. I thought you had it."

"No. He took it away from me," Hattrup said, and then Mize said, "If you can't finish it, I can."

Allen then moved up the trail and talked with Mize and Hattrup about muscle spasms and how Tucker was still moving. Then there was a third shot.

Back at the car, Mize came out of the woods holding the shotgun, then asked the others "if they knew why it was done," according to court records. Everyone nodded agreement, and Mize said the same thing could happen to them if they ran their mouths.

Doster testified later that Mize confided in her that he had finished Tucker off by shooting him in the head.

But Doster since has recanted her testimony, and Mize has tried to assert his innocence, claiming Hattrup did all the shooting.

Since his conviction, Hattrup also has made sworn statements that he alone killed Tucker after the two got in a drunken argument and that Mize didn't order the killing.

Last year, however, the U.S. 11th Circuit Court of Appeals found Hattrup's statements "wholly unconvincing," in part because he contradicted himself about who fired which shots at Tucker.

"This internal contradiction on a crucial point suggests that, at best, Hattrup has an incomplete memory of the incident (perhaps because of his admitted drunkenness), and at worst is lying in order to help his friend Mize," the court said.

So, shall I RSVP yes or no?
 
And, while seeing anyone being killed isn't good. I'd say lethal injection would be the best way to go, I would hate to witness someone getting the chair or even hung.
 
I'm a news reporter for a radio station in rural Georgia. I got an email today from the Georgia Association of Broadcasters and Georgia Department of Corrections to witness an execution in two weeks.

On April 28th, they're putting this guy to death for a murder he committed in 1994 and they need two media witnesses.

While, on one hand I think it would be sick and something horrible to see, a part of me thinks this could be a damn good news story.

So, I throw my mercy on the community, what would you do?

Here's some backstory on the guy they plan on killing...



So, shall I RSVP yes or no?
personally I'd say no because of religous reasons.

However, if i were you I'd go. He's a neo-nazi and there is nobody worse then them other then Islamo-facists-Terorists. They've basiclly stripped themselves of humanity by there hatred. Plus, its only lethal injection. Not too gory.
Plus, this could be a good story if you use the Racism angle. Remind people that hatred is still deadly today, even in these United States.
I think you should Go!
 
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Have you ever seen someone die before, in person? No. Then ****ing do it. Anything is worth the experience.
 
I don't know that I could.

A couple of years ago my dad and I were driving home from our camp. As we crossed over a hill a bunch of kids on quads cut us off and took off down the road. less than a mile later we crest another small hill and lying in the street is one of the riders. My dad called 911 as I rushed up to him but it was too late. That was the first time anyone ever died in front of me.

Its not fun to watch.
 
I really do not believe that this man's execution would bother me. He is a convicted felon who has been living off of taxpayer dollars FOR 15+ years. I would have no interest in seeing this, but it happens.
 
personally I'd say no because of religous reasons.

However, if i were you I'd go. He's a neo-nazi and there is nobody worse then them other then Islamo-facists-Terorists. They've basiclly stripped themselves of humanity by there hatred. Plus, its only lethal injection. Not too gory.
Plus, this could be a good story if you use the Racism angle. Remind people that hatred is still deadly today, even in these United States.
I think you should Go!

Yeah, it's true he is a dumb redneck, but it's still a living person being killed. Might have to give it some thought.

Have you ever seen someone die before, in person? No. Then ****ing do it. Anything is worth the experience.

Its true I have never seen anyone die before, but I have seen a few grandparents on their death beds. And, I'm not sure where I can put covering an execution on my resume, but it would certainly catch the eye.
 
And, while seeing anyone being killed isn't good. I'd say lethal injection would be the best way to go, I would hate to witness someone getting the chair or even hung.

Like you said, injection is not too bad, compared to seeing other things. Plus who hasn't seen a dead body before?

If you feel it's good for your career and it will benefit from this story, then go for it.
 
Yeah, it's true he is a dumb redneck, but it's still a living person being killed. Might have to give it some thought.



Its true I have never seen anyone die before, but I have seen a few grandparents on their death beds. And, I'm not sure where I can put covering an execution on my resume, but it would certainly catch the eye.

I am wholly opposed to the death penalty having seen it first hand myself. I think that it is an enlightening experience. Not that I get some sicko fascination from watching people die but when I saw this man die... He died. Someone, a real person, killed him. It was a moving and powerful experience and I don't think you should miss it out.
 
It was a moving and powerful experience and I don't think you should miss it out.

Wow...you seemed to enjoy that a bit too much....hopefully it was an execution like the one I got asked to go see....
 
Wow...you seemed to enjoy that a bit too much....hopefully it was an execution like the one I got asked to go see....

It was. Totally legal. I was a friend of the victim of a murder. I was wholly opposed to the death penalty before and now I'm just assured of that decision.
 
This reminds me of that Reno 911 episode where the officers competed in a scavenger hunt and tickets to an execution were their prize. :hehe:

For the record, I probably wouldn't be able to watch.
 
I wouldn't go . . . NO ACTION . . . if they still used the electric chair, then we'd really be talkin :o
 
It's news. Go for it.

Hopefully he doesn't pull a Horace Pinker or a Max Jenke.
 
I wouldn't do it.

Watching someone die is an experience I have no problem avoiding.


If it's good for your career, and it wouldn't bother you, than go. But if you think it would bother you, I say don't. Because it's not something you can unwatch. And I know it would be playing in my head over and over.
 
Take it. I think everyone should witness a death first hand at least once in their lifetime.
 
People die everyday, if you have bills to pay and this story would get you a good pay check, then go. It would make the man's death worth something.

However, if seeing someone die strikes you as morally wrong, go get a sandwich instead.

Life's what you make it. If you can't make it, that's life.
 
I'm a news reporter for a radio station in rural Georgia. I got an email today from the Georgia Association of Broadcasters and Georgia Department of Corrections to witness an execution in two weeks.

On April 28th, they're putting this guy to death for a murder he committed in 1994 and they need two media witnesses.

While, on one hand I think it would be sick and something horrible to see, a part of me thinks this could be a damn good news story.

So, I throw my mercy on the community, what would you do?

Here's some backstory on the guy they plan on killing...



So, shall I RSVP yes or no?

sure. So, he killed a member of "his" white supremacist group? Well I say that's a good start, may as well take him out too. One less bigot in the world to worry about.
 
go for it, I'm an inspiring reporter myself (graduating in May).
 
One thing that bothers me about it is, the fact that he may be innocent. But, if he is guilty of this. I'm sure there are other horrible things he's done in his life to make up for it.

Like in that story, he didn't think twice about burning down a house that was probably full of people.
 
sure. So, he killed a member of "his" white supremacist group? Well I say that's a good start, may as well take him out too. One less bigot in the world to worry about.

Can't let them damn KKK's overpopulate...Who cares if that KKK is a living being who is clearly disturbed, evident by BEING in the KKK? Cause you know....Doing the same thing that he did, to him, shows that he's wrong.
 
One thing that bothers me about it is, the fact that he may be innocent. But, if he is guilty of this. I'm sure there are other horrible things he's done in his life to make up for it.

Like in that story, he didn't think twice about burning down a house that was probably full of people.

If we are to value human life, we must value all life. Regardless of race, religion or creed. Killing to stop killing is a self-defeating endeavor and does not clarify righteousness in anyway.
 
Can't let them damn KKK's overpopulate...Who cares if that KKK is a living being who is clearly disturbed, evident by BEING in the KKK? Cause you know....Doing the same thing that he did, to him, shows that he's wrong.

He killed, thus he should be killed. Life taken should be repaid by a life taken. That's the law of nature.
 

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