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“Interview With an Executioner”

The title of thie post is the headline of this piece at ABC News based on the interview given by Jerry Givens, the former executioner for the Commonwealth of Virginia (hat tip: TalkLeft).  Here is how the lengthy piece starts:

Jerry Givens spent 17 years as a professional killer. From 1982 to 1999, he killed 62 people. He was never punished. His work was paid for by the Commonwealth of Virginia.

As the state’s chief executioner, Givens pushed the buttons that administered lethal doses of electricity to the condemned. He could even choose how many volts to administer. And he is the first to admit that it was largely guesswork. “If he was a small guy, I didn’t give that much. You try not to cook the body, you know. I hate to sound gross,” he told ABC News in a rare interview.

Only a handful of executioners in America have ever spoken publicly about their experiences, and fewer, if any, have revealed the emotional toll the job can take on a person or the mind-set of the man behind the proverbial mask.  Givens told ABC News that his experiences in the death chamber have caused him to change course and oppose the death penalty.

Givens defies the stereotype of the cold-souled executioner.  A deeply religious layman, Givens claimed he prayed with many of the condemned men he was about to execute, a bold gesture at odds with the grim, emotionless solemnity with which executions are often portrayed in the movies.  He said he’d suggest to a condemned man that this was a last chance to repent and seek forgiveness from God.  And he said he’d join the men in prayer. No one’s tomorrow is guaranteed, he said.