- Gary Gilmore
Infobox_Criminal
subject_name = Gary Gilmore
image_size =
image_caption =
date_of_birth = birth date|1940|12|4
place_of_birth = Stonewall,Texas , USA
date_of_death = death date and age|1977|1|17|1940|12|4
place_of_death = Salt Lake City,Utah , USA
alias =
charge =Murder , 2 counts
penalty = Death penalty
status = Executed by firing squad
spouse =
parents = Frank Gilmore
Bessie Gilmore
children =Gary Mark Gilmore (
December 4 ,1940 —January 17 ,1977 ) was an Americancriminal andspree killer who gained international notoriety for demanding that his death sentence be fulfilled following two murders he committed inUtah . He became the first person executed in theUnited States after theU.S. Supreme Court upheld a new series of death penalty statutes in the 1976 decision "Gregg v. Georgia " (these new statutes avoiding the problems that had led earlier death penalty statutes to be deemed unconstitutional in "Furman v. Georgia ").Biography
Early life
Gary Mark Gilmore was born in rural
Stonewall, Texas , the second of four sons born toMormon s named Frank and Bessie Gilmore. His parents drifted around the country while he and his brothers grew up, his father earning a living selling advertising space in magazines. Gilmore was raised in adysfunctional family and had a horrible relationship with his father, who was a violent alcoholic and often abused his wife and sons. Gary's brother Mikal described their father as "an often violent and unreasonable man." Frank Gilmore's mother claimed that he was the illegitimate son of magicianHarry Houdini , who rejected hispaternity . Mikal has said he does not believe the story is true, but suspects that his father believed it.The Gilmore family settled in
Portland, Oregon in the early 1950s. Gilmore began getting into trouble with the law as a teenager, with offenses ranging fromshoplifting ,car theft andassault and battery . Although Gilmore had an IQ of 130, had high scores on scholastic tests, and clear artistic skills, he dropped out ofhigh school at age 14 in the ninth grade. He went with a friend to Texas to see his place of birth, returning to Portland after a few months.Criminal
By the age of 14, Gilmore started a small car theft ring with other friends, resulting in his first arrest. He was released to his father with a warning.
Two weeks later he was back in court on another car theft charge. The court ordered him, at age 14, to Oregon's MacLaren Reform School for Boys, where he was released the following year. He was sent to Oregon State Correctional Institution on another car theft charge in 1960, and was released in 1961.
In 1962, Gilmore was arrested and sent to the
Oregon State Penitentiary forrobbery andassault . He faced assault and robbery charges again in 1964, and was given a 15-year prison sentence as a repeat offender. He was granted conditional release in 1972 to live in ahalfway house inEugene, Oregon on weekdays, and study art at acommunity college . Gilmore never registered, and within a month he was arrested and convicted forarmed robbery . Due to his violent behavior in prison, he was transferred from Oregon to a maximum security federal prison in Marion, Illinois in 1975. He was conditionally paroled in April 1976 and went toProvo, Utah to live with a cousin who tried to help him find work. Gilmore worked briefly at his uncle's shoe store, but he soon returned to his previous lifestyle, stealing items from stores, drinking, and getting into fights.Murders
Gilmore robbed and
murder ed Max Jensen, a Sinclair gas station employee inOrem, Utah , onJuly 19 ,1976 . The next day, he robbed and murdered Bennie Bushnell, amotel manager, in Provo. He had also attempted to murder a guest at that motel in Provo named Peter Arroyo but was unsuccessful at doing so. As he disposed of the gun, a .22 caliber pistol, he accidentally shot himself in the hand, leaving a trail of blood when he retrieved his truck at a service garage. The garage owner, seeing the blood and hearing on a police scanner of the shooting at the nearby motel, wrote down Gilmore's license number and called the police. Gilmore gave up without a fight. He was charged with the murders of Bushnell and Jensen, although the latter case never went to trial apparently because there were no witnesses.Trial and sentence
Gilmore's trial began at the Provo courthouse on October 5. Peter Arroyo, a motel guest, testified that he saw Gilmore in the motel registration office that night and that Gilmore robbed Bushnell by opening the cash register. After taking all the money, Gilmore was said to have ordered Bushnell to lie down on the floor and then to have shot him in cold blood. The next witness was Gerald F. Wilkes, a local
FBI ballistics expert, who testified that he found the shell casing at the crime scene which he compared to Gilmore's pistol that was left there. Gilmore's two court-appointed lawyers, Michael Espin and Craig Snyder, surprised both the prosecutor Noall T. Wootton and Judge J. Robert Bullock by not cross-examining the witnesses and offering no defense. Gilmore wanted to testify on his own behalf, but suddenly withdrew the request the following day. Both sides madeclosing argument s.On October 7, at 10:13 AM, the
jury retired to consider the verdict. By mid-day, they returned with a guilty verdict. Later that day, the jury also unanimously recommended the death penalty because of special circumstances to the crime. At the time, Utah had two methods of execution,firing squad orhanging , so Judge Bullock allowed Gilmore to choose between the two. Gilmore's reply was, "I'd prefer to be shot."In November 1976, Gilmore said, "They always want to get in on the act. I don't think they have ever really done anything effective in their lives. I would like them all — including that group of
reverend s andrabbi s fromSalt Lake City — to butt out. This is my life and this is my death. It's been sanctioned by the courts that I die and I accept that." The execution was set for sunrise onDecember 6 ,1976 , but three days earlier, Gilmore received astay of execution . During the time Gilmore was ondeath row awaiting his execution, he attemptedsuicide twice, the first time on November 16 and the second exactly a month later. While incarcerated, Gilmore developed a deep dislike for two of his fellow inmates, convicted murderers and rapistsPierre Dale Selby and William Andrews, the "Hi-Fi Murderers." Gilmore had to pass the men's cells on his way to the firing squad and called out, "I'll see you inHell , Andrews and Pierre!" The two were eventually executed for their crimes in 1987 and 1992 respectively.Execution
Gary Gilmore was executed by firing squad
January 17 ,1977 , at 8:07 a.m., after angrily telling hislawyer s to drop theappeal s they had filed in defiance of his wishes. The night before, Gilmore had requested an all-night gathering of friends and family at the prison mess hall. On the morning of his execution, he enjoyed a last meal consisting of ahamburger ,hard-boiled egg s, abaked potato , a few cups ofcoffee , and three shots of contrabandwhiskey . He was then taken to an abandoned cannery behind the prison which served as the prison's death house. He was strapped to a chair, with a wall of sandbags placed behind him to absorb thebullet s. Five prison guards stood concealed behind a curtain with five small holes cut for them to place their rifles through which were aimed at him. After being asked for any last words, Gilmore simply replied, "Let's do it." Gilmore had requested that, following his execution, his eyes be used for transplant purposes. Within hours of the execution, two people received hiscornea s. His body was sent for anautopsy and cremated later that day. The following day, his ashes were scattered from an airplane in Utah.References in popular culture
According to his brother
Mikal Gilmore 's memoir "Shot in the Heart ", Utah's tradition dictated that afiring squad comprise five men — four of them with live rounds, and one with a blank round, so that each of the shooters could cast doubt to having fired a fatal shot. However, upon inspecting the clothes worn by Gary Gilmore at his execution, Mikal noticed five holes in the shirt — indicating, he wrote, that "the state ofUtah , apparently, had taken no chances on the morning that it put my brother to death" (p. 390).Gilmore's story is documented in
Norman Mailer 'sPulitzer Prize -winning novel "The Executioner's Song " (1979), which was adapted by Mailer for the 1982 television movie of the same name starringTommy Lee Jones as Gilmore. Jones won anEmmy Award for his portrayal of Gilmore. Gilmore's brother's memoir "Shot in the Heart " was made into an HBO movie starringGiovanni Ribisi ,Elias Koteas , andSam Shepard .The
December 11 ,1976 episode of "Saturday Night Live " featured guest hostCandice Bergen and the cast singing aChristmas -themedmedley enitled "Let's Kill Gary Gilmore For Christmas." Dressed in winter attire and surrounded by fakesnow , the performers sang the medley of familiarChristmas carols with alteredlyrics . Among its more memorable lyrics are set to "Winter Wonderland ": "In the meadow we can build asnowman / One with Gary Gilmore packed inside / We'll ask him, 'Are you dead yet?' He'll say, 'No, man' / But we'll wait out thefrostbite till he dies." [ [http://snltranscripts.jt.org/76/76jgilmore.phtml Saturday Night Live Transcripts - Season 2: Episode 10 - Candice Bergen / Frank Zappa] }] Later in theTV season and subsequent to Gilmore's death,NBC re-ran theepisode , but thenetwork removed thismusical sequence . In its place, NBC inserted a brief, Christmas orientedfilm - filmed at anairport - about people meeting friends and relatives after disembarking fromairplanes . For a subsequent broadcast of this episode in2005 , NBC reinserted the original Gilmore sequence.The Oakland-based performance artist
Monte Cazazza sent out photos of himself in anelectric chair on the day of Gilmore's execution. One of these was mistakenly printed in aHong Kong newspaper as the real execution. Cazazza was also photographed alongsideCOUM Transmissions /Throbbing Gristle membersGenesis P-Orridge andCosey Fanni Tutti for the "Gary Gilmore Memorial Society" postcard, in which the three artists posed blindfolded and tied to chairs with actual loaded guns pointed at them to depict Gilmore's execution. [http://www.brainwashed.com/axis/coum/ggms.htm]In 1977,
The Adverts had a top 20 hit in theUK with the song "Gary Gilmore's Eyes". The lyrics describe an eye donor recipient realizing his new eyes came from the executed murderer. The song was later covered by the Germanpunk rock bandDie Toten Hosen .A year later,
The Police released the song "Bring on the Night" as a single. The song's lyrics describe Gilmore's execution. ("citation needed)"Gilmore is also the main character of artistMatthew Barney 's "Cremaster 2" (1999), the second part of "The Cremaster Cycle ", a series of five films dealing withsurreal and controversial topics and themes.In
Christopher Durang 's play "Beyond Therapy " (1983), the character "Bruce" claims that he "Wanted to see Gary Gilmore executed onpublic television ."In Pico Iyer's
The Humble Comma See also
*
Capital punishment in the United States
*John Albert Taylor
*List of individuals executed in Utah References
External links
* [http://www.crimelibrary.com/notorious_murders/mass/gilmore/index_1.html?sect=8 Gary Gilmore] (on
Crime Library ).
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