“there is nothing more you can do for me.”

    by Khantlerpartesar

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    1. Khantlerpartesar on

      https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1990-03-28-mn-229-story.html
      > Author: Roderick (1990)

      > Duffy felt the death penalty was wrong. He said it was applied unfairly to only a fraction of murderers, and said it did not deter many killers. For evidence he offered Alfred Wells.

      > While serving a burglary term at San Quentin, Wells helped install the new gas chamber. He explained its workings to the other inmates, vowing, “That’s the closest I ever want to come to the gas chamber.”

      > After he was paroled, Wells got into trouble again. When his family objected to an affair he was having with his half-sister, Violet, he killed his half-brother, the brother’s wife and another woman in San Bernardino.

      > Short, deformed, slender and slowed by a limp, Wells took off and became in 1941 the target of the biggest manhunt in Southern California to that time. A posse of more than 1,000 men scoured the desert between San Bernardino and Las Vegas for the man headlines called the notorious “Hunchback Killer.”

      > One Mother’s Day, the warden’s wife, Gladys, gave an inspirational talk over the Gray Network, the prison radio system. She received a letter from Wells and they began a regular correspondence. Wells calmed down and began Bible classes.

      > Just before his death in the gas chamber he installed, Wells wrote Mrs. Duffy a final time.

      > “I have really enjoyed all your fine letters, but there is nothing more you can do for me.”

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