The First Execution in the Gas Chamber
On
February 8, 1924, the first execution by gas took place at the Nevada State
Prison in Carson City as Gee Jon, a Chinese immigrant convicted of murder, was
put to death – but things did not go as planned.
Gee
Jon was born of Cantonese descent in China in 1895 and immigrated to the United
States between 1907 and 1908 and spent most of his life in San Francisco’s
Chinatown. As a young man, he became a member of the Hip Sing Tong, a criminal
gang that dealt in narcotics and liquor. In 1922, territorial disputes with the
Bing Kong Tong led to a bloody and brutal war between the tongs (Chinese gangs),
spreading out across California and Nevada.
Tom
Quong Kee, 74, was a laundry proprietor and a member of the Bing Kong Tong in
Mina, Nevada. Hughie Sing, his American-educated apprentice of two years, set
Kee up to be murdered by Gee Jon. On the night of August 27, 1921, Gee Jon
knocked on the door of Kee’s residence. When the old man answered in his pajamas,
Jon shot him with a .38-caliber Colt revolver. Unlike most tong murders, Jon
and Sing were arrested and thanks to the anti-immigrant frenzy in the United
States at that time, quickly arraigned and charged with murder.
Jon
and Sing were defended by attorneys James M. Frame and Fiore Raffetto, but
there was little defense to offer. After a quick trial, both were convicted and
sentenced to death. Later, Sing's sentence was commuted to life imprisonment
because he was only nineteen years old and Jon had committed the shooting
itself. As luck would have it – bad luck as it turned out – a bill authorizing the
use of lethal gas had passed the Nevada State Legislature in 1921, making Gee
Jon the first person eligible to be executed by this method. Attorney James
Frame argued that his sentence constituted cruel and unusual punishment, but
his appeal was denied. The Supreme Court of Nevada instead complimented the
state legislators for "inflicting the death penalty in the most humane
manner known to modern science."
Problems
with the planned execution began at once. The California Cyanide Company of Los
Angeles was the only distributor of liquid cyanide in the western United States
and refused to deliver it to Carson City because of liability concerns. The
poison was used to eradicate pests from citrus groves in California, they said,
it wasn’t meant to be used on people. But Warden Denver S. Dickerson had a way
around the problem. He sent his assistant, Tom Pickett, to Los Angeles to
personally pick up twenty pounds of the lethal gas, which was contained in a
mobile fumigating unit that cost $700.
More
problems occurred when it came time to carry out the execution. Four guards who
did not want to participate in the process abruptly resigned. Then, officials first
attempted to pump poison gas directly into Gee Jon’s cell while he was
sleeping, but without success because the gas leaked from the cell –
endangering everyone else in the prison.
It
was realized that an actual “gas chamber” was needed, so a makeshift room was
set up in the prison’s butcher shop. At least one cat was used to test the
lethal effectiveness of the chamber to make sure that it worked correctly. It
did. So, plans were made for Gee Jon to be strapped to a chair in the chamber,
which was eleven feet long, ten feet wide and eight feet high.
On
February 8, Gee Jon was placed in the chamber and tied to the chair. A small window next to the wooden chair allowed
witnesses to look inside. The attendees to the execution included news
reporters, public health officials, and representatives of the U.S. Army. Gee
Jon wept as he was placed on the chair until the captain of the guards told him
to "Brace up!"
The makeshift gas chamber at the Nevada State Prison. Note the insect fumigator used to spray the gas, aimed at the chair when the inmate was strapped.
At
9:40 a.m., the fumigating pump sprayed four pounds of hydrocyanic acid into the
chamber. The weather was cold and humid outside and because an electric heater
had failed, the temperature in the chamber was only 52 degrees, not the ideal
75 degrees, causing some of the acid to form a puddle on the floor.
Gee
Jon appeared to lose consciousness in about five seconds, with his head
continuing to nod up and down for the next six minutes. He was completely
motionless after ten minutes. Some of the witnesses momentarily thought they
smelled the odor of almond blossoms, a telltale sign of cyanide, leaking from
the chamber. As panic ensued, the warden cleared the area and opened a vent so
that the poison gas could be pulled out the witness room and the makeshift
chamber. Regardless, prison staff members refused to enter the room until the
puddle of acid on the floor had evaporated. It would be another three hours
before Gee Jon’s body was removed from the chamber and taken to the prison
hospital. A group of seven doctors declared him dead, but did not conduct an
autopsy on the body for fear that remaining gas in his body might be released.
After
the execution, the Nevada State Journal
proclaimed, "Nevada's novel death law is upheld by the highest court —
humanity." However, the San Jose
Mercury News printed, "One hundred years from now Nevada will be
referred to as a heathen commonwealth controlled by savages with only the outward
symbols of civilization."
The
editor of the newspaper in San Jose was not the only one unhappy with how
things had gone with the first ever execution by gas. Warden Dickerson reported
to Nevada governor James G. Scrugham and the state legislature that he believed
the use of lethal gas was impractical. He believed that a firing squad was
still the best method of execution.
But
the gas chamber soon came into regular use (30 more times in Nevada) after
methods were improved and safety issues addressed. The gas chamber continued to
be used for executions for decades to come, only being largely replaced by
lethal injection in the late twentieth century. It still remains a back-up
option in Arizona.
No comments:
Post a Comment