Execution by shooting

Method of execution From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Execution by shooting is a method of capital punishment in which a person is shot to death by one or more firearms. It is the most common method of execution worldwide, used in about 70 countries,[1] with execution by firing squad being one particular form.

In most countries, execution by a firing squad has historically been considered a more honorable death and was used primarily for military personnel, though in some countries—among them Belarus, the only state in Europe today that has the death penalty — the single executioner shooting inherited from the Soviet past is still in use.

Brazil

Although Brazil abolished capital punishment in peacetime, it can be used for certain crimes in wartime, such as betrayal, conspiracy, mutiny, unauthorised retreat in battles, and theft of equipment or supplies in a military base.[2][3] The execution method in this case is execution by shooting.[2][4]

Europe

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A PB pistol with suppressor, used for executions in Belarus

In Belarus, executions are performed by a single executioner shooting the condemned through the brain from behind with a suppressed pistol.[5]

In Germany, shooting by a single bullet to the back of the head was the execution method used in East Germany from 1968 until the abolition of capital punishment in 1987 (although the last execution was carried out in 1981 with Werner Teske being the last executed anywhere in Germany). All executions in East Germany were conducted at a central execution place, located at the Leipzig Court Building. Prisoners were not informed about the imminent execution until a few seconds before it was carried out—the prisoners were taken to the Leipzig Court Building, were he was put to wait in an office. After a while, an officer would enter the office, telling the prisoner that his execution was imminent. The prisoner was then led into another room, passing three men—the warden, a public prosecutor and the executioner—seemingly by coincidence while walking on the corridor. While passing the executioner, one single shot was fired into the back of the prisoners head from close range without having the barrel of the pistol touching the prisoners skin. This method was named "unexpected shot on close range" and it was taken great care that the execution was conducted without officers having to handle the prisoner manually in order to prevent any stress reactions. See Capital punishment in Germany.

Soviet bloc

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Lined up people executed by shooting by Cheka in 1918 during the Red Terror at a yard in Kharkiv, Ukrainian SSR, The Black Book of Communism

In 20th-century communist states, shooting was a standard form of execution of civilian and military prisoners alike, with the Soviet Union setting an example of the single-executioner approach. The firing squad, with its solemn and lengthy ceremony was used infrequently.

The most common method was the firing of a pistol bullet ("nine grams of lead") into the brain.

This method was widely used during the Great Purges of the late 1930s at locations outside the major cities, e.g. Krasny Bor near Petrozavodsk, against purportedly anti-social elements, "counter-revolutionaries" and other enemies of the people.

It was also used to execute those who had committed ordinary criminal offenses. Even after the breakup of the Soviet Union, people continued to be executed by shooting. Serial killers Andrei Chikatilo and Sergey Golovkin were executed in this way in 1994 and 1996, respectively, the latter just before Russia discontinued capital punishment as part of its accession to the Council of Europe. See Capital punishment in Russia.

United Kingdom

No British citizen has ever been executed for a civilian crime by shooting by the British judiciary. Execution by firing squad has been a strictly military punishment. A Royal Commission on Capital Punishment considered shooting as a possible alternative to hanging, although the findings published in 1953 concluded shooting was not a sufficiently effective means of execution to justify a switch to the method from hanging.

United States

Since 1608, about 142 men have been judicially shot in the United States and its English-speaking predecessor territories, excluding executions related to the American Civil War.[6] During the American Civil War, 433 of the 573 men executed were shot dead by a firing squad: 186 of the 267 executed by the Union Army, and 247 of the 306 executed by the Confederate Army.

Today, execution by shooting is allowed in the US states of Idaho, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Utah, as well as Mississippi.

Asia

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An execution by shooting in Shanghai in 1948
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An execution by Shooting in Bang Kwang Central Prison in 1972
  • In China, shooting as a method of execution takes two typical formats, either a pistol shot in the back of the head or neck or a shot by a rifle in either the back or the back of the head from behind.[1] Recent executions in selected provinces since 1997 have been switched to using lethal injection.[8][9] Hong Kong abolished the death penalty and Macau never had the death penalty prior to the handover, and neither restored it when they returned to Chinese sovereignty.
  • In India, during the Mughal rule, soldiers who committed crimes were executed by being strapped to a cannon which was then fired. This was known as blowing from a gun. This method, invented by the Mughals, was continued by the British who used it to execute native deserters and mutineers, especially after the Sepoy Mutiny of 1857.[10] It is not practiced in the Republic of India, having been replaced by long drop hanging. See Capital punishment in India.
  • In Mongolia, capital punishment has been abolished since 2016, but the method of execution in 2012 was a bullet to the neck[12] from a .38 caliber revolver, a method inherited from Soviet legislation (see Capital punishment in Mongolia).

See also

References

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