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A man who brutally executed a well loved police officer and given the death penalty is now the one asking for mercy. Is it wrong to put a man to death who is blind from several strokes and apparently has no memory of his past crime? Prosecutors and the victims family still want the execution to go ahead as planned but is it morally right?  Vernon Madison was convicted and sentenced to death in the April 1985 killing of Mobile Alabama Police Corporal Schultze, in cold blood, in 1994 after 2 previous trials were appealed. One was appealed on a "Race-Biased" jury (1985) and the second (1990) for "Improper Testimony Of An Expert Witness". In the 1994 Guilty verdict the Jury opted for a Life Sentence Without Parole, however, the Judge overturned it, giving Madison the Death Sentence. The murder occurred when Mobile Police Corporal Julius "Sonny" Schulte responded to a call from Cheryl Ann Green for a missing 11 year old daughter. Upon arrival in an unmarked vehicle Green stated it was a misunderstanding and that the daughter was found to be driven home by a friend. The call turned into a Heated Domestic call between Green and Vernon Madison, 27 years old, a live-in boyfriend, Officer Schultz told Madison he should maybe stay away for the night while things cooled down then without warning Madison shot the officer twice in the head then show his live in girlfriend twice in the back. It is hard to argue the brutality of the crime but should we argue whether it’s right to put a man to death by lethal injection who has had several strokes and is now completely blind and from memory lose is no longer aware of the crimes that we will be executing him for?

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The Execution Of Officer Julius Schulte

A man who brutally executed a well loved police officer and given the death penalty is now the one asking for mercy. Is it wrong to put a man to death who is blind from several strokes and apparently has no memory of his past crime? Prosecutors and the victims family still want the execution to go ahead as planned but is it morally right? Vernon Madison was convicted and sentenced to death in the April 1985 killing of Mobile Alabama Police Corporal Schultze, in cold blood, in 1994 after 2 previous trials were appealed. One was appealed on a "Race-Biased" jury (1985) and the second (1990) for "Improper Testimony Of An Expert Witness". In the 1994 Guilty verdict the Jury opted for a Life Sentence Without Parole, however, the Judge overturned it, giving Madison the Death Sentence. The murder occurred when Mobile Police Corporal Julius "Sonny" Schulte responded to a call from Cheryl Ann Green for a missing 11 year old daughter. Upon arrival in an unmarked vehicle Green stated it was a misunderstanding and that the daughter was found to be driven home by a friend. The call turned into a Heated Domestic call between Green and Vernon Madison, 27 years old, a live-in boyfriend, Officer Schultz told Madison he should maybe stay away for the night while things cooled down then without warning Madison shot the officer twice in the head then show his live in girlfriend twice in the back. It is hard to argue the brutality of the crime but should we argue whether it’s right to put a man to death by lethal injection who has had several strokes and is now completely blind and from memory lose is no longer aware of the crimes that we will be executing him for?

Comments

Anonymous

Who doesn't love a Deadbug🪳

Anonymous

My heart goes out to the officers family for having to continue dealing with this shit. If they don't send him to death, it's gonna open a lot of doors for all kinds of excuses 😤 😉