I have another very busy day ahead of me, but will try to squeeze in 2 or 3
new TC posts this morning, and other 2 or so later this afternoon & evening.
In case any of you haven't heard, a member of the serial killer fraternity
WAS indeed legally murdered last night, by your pathetic society. I am speaking
of course of Kenneth Allen McDuff, in Texas. I have already made 2 long posts
in recent days concerning Kenneth's life abd crimes, so I won't bother
repeating myself. But I do feel OBLIGATED to mark his tragic murder publically,
and to reaffirm the FACT that in murdering Kenneth, your society absolutely
legitimizes the CHOICE of ALL free victim-creations of society turned predators
and aspiring predators, to redouble their killing and other violent crime
efforts. Kenneth's murder will serve to INCREASE the number of societal victims
who CHOOSE to became serial or mass predators, and I celebrate that fact, even
as I mourn Kenneth's death.
For his final statement to you pathetic humans, Kenneth chose to go with:
"I'm ready to be released. Release me." I would have chosen a more venomous
parting shot, but different strokes for different folks. Can't blame Kenneth
for WANTING to LEAVE your world, to finally not have to deal with the hypocrisy
and malevolence of the society that created him and chose to inflict injustice
and brutality upon him even since he was born 52 long years ago. But death IS
unfortunately, the ultimate injustice and abuse that any of us will endure. Oh
well, at least Kenneth got to harvest a decent number of humans, and hopefully
felt as though he had achieved some measure of vengeance.
He did enjoy a VERY nice final meal, consisting of TWO T-bone steaks, five
fried eggs, vegetables, french fries, coconut pie and a Coca-Cola. In the end,
ALL of our lives are DOOMED to end the same way: Nothingness for all of
eternity. At least Kenneth carved out his own path of vengeance, harvesting 14
or so humans before finally having his life snuffed out by a legal act of
murder, committed by the same PERVERSE society that is guilty of and
responsible for having created him, and chose to NEVER take ANY responsibility
for acknowledging the FACT that Kenneth was and is MORE of a victim that the 14
people that he killed. Having been murdered himself, Kenneth is now a MARTYR.
If you would like to view a photo of Kenneth, to pay your final respects,
face to face, to this martyr and victim of society, simply point your web
browser to:
http://cnn.com/US/9811/17/texas.execution/
Rest In Peace, Kenneth. You WILL be avenged!
Take care, JOE
The following appears courtesy of today's Associated Press news wire:
Infamous Texas Killer Executed
By MICHAEL GRACZYK
HUNTSVILLE, Texas (AP) -- Asked if he had a final statement before his
execution, convicted killer Kenneth Allen McDuff said: ``I'm ready to be
released. Release me.''
McDuff, 52, was executed by injection Tuesday night, three decades after his
first victims were slain. He was suspected of killing as many as 14 people, all
in Texas.
``He's going where he needs to go,'' said Brenda Solomon, the mother of Melissa
Ann Northrup, whom McDuff was convicted of killing six years ago. ``He looked
like the devil.''
McDuff is thought to be the only person ever freed from death row and then
returned after killing again.
He was sentenced to death for fatally shooting two teen-age boys in Fort Worth
in 1966 and raping and strangling their 16-year-old female companion. His
sentence was commuted to life in prison six years later after the Supreme Court
ruled the death penalty was unconstitutional.
He was released in 1989, along with thousands of other inmates, as Texas prison
officials sought to find space for newly convicted felons.
Ms. Northrup and Colleen Reed, 28, were killed three years later. Ms. Northrup,
pregnant and a mother of two, was abducted from a Waco convenience store where
she worked. Ms. Reed was abducted from an Austin car wash, tortured and raped.
Other women turned up missing in central Texas and McDuff was suspected. He
received the death penalty for killing both women.
It wasn't until last month that authorities found Ms. Reed's skeleton, buried
along the Brazos River south of Waco. Unearthed nearby were the remains of two
other women, also believed to be McDuff victims.
McDuff reportedly took authorities to Ms. Reed's body and drew maps to show
where the other women were buried. The Austin American-Statesman reported that
in exchange, a prison sentence was reduced for his nephew, convicted of dealing
drugs.
Also Tuesday night, a man convicted of stabbing a female neighbor he had tied
to a bed was executed by injection in Virginia. Kenneth Wilson, 34, made no
final statement.
AP-NY-11-18-98
-------------------------------------------------------------
The following appears courtesy of yesterday's Reuters news wire:
Killer who sparked tougher Texas laws executed
HUNTSVILLE, Texas, Nov 17 (Reuters) - A serial killer whose case led to tougher
treatment of criminals in Texas was executed by lethal injection on Tuesday.
Kenneth McDuff, 52, died at 6:26 p.m. (7:26 EST), five minutes after a fatal
mix of chemicals was injected into his arm. ``I'm ready to be released, release
me,'' he said as the drugs began to flow .
McDuff was thought to be the only U.S. criminal ever to go to death row for one
murder, get out of jail, then be sent back to death row for another killing.
His case sparked an outcry from law-and-order groups seeking an end to early
parole.
In response to public pressure, Texas officials tightened parole policies and
spent $2 billion building new prisons to alleviate overcrowding. Now the state
has so many jail cells that it rents them out to other states to house their
prisoners.
McDuff was put to death for the 1992 rape and murder of 22-year-old Melissa Ann
Northrup, a pregnant mother of two from Waco, Texas, and had another death
sentence pending for the 1991 slaying of 28-year-old Colleen Reed, an Austin
accountant.
McDuff committed both crimes after he got off death row and out of prison for
the 1966 killing of three teenagers during a robbery and sexual assault in Fort
Worth, Texas.
He escaped the executioner for the 1966 murders because his death sentence was
commuted to life in prison in 1972 when the U.S. Supreme Court temporarily
struck down capital punishment.
With the more lenient sentence in hand, he eventually got out of prison
altogether in an early release programme caused by severe overcrowding in Texas
jails.
Police suspected him in as many as 14 murders. He recently led them to the
bodies of three of his victims in a deal to get a more lenient sentence for a
nephew serving time for selling drugs.
McDuff was the 17th person executed this year in Texas and the 161st since the
state resumed capital punishment in 1982.
For his last meal, he requested two T-bone steaks, five fried eggs, vegetables,
french fries, coconut pie and a Coca-Cola.
20:56 11-17-98
----------------------------------------------------------
The following appears courtesy of yesterday's United Press International news
wire:
Texas executes serial killer
HUNTSVILLE, Texas, Nov. 17 (UPI) Kenneth Allen McDuff, a serial killer
described by one prosecutor as "the monster who comes out of the dark," has
been executed for the slaying of a Central Texas store clerk.
The 52-year-old McDuff was pronounced dead at 6:26 p.m. CST today after
receiving a lethal injection at Huntsville for the murder of Melissa Northrup.
The 22-year-old woman was pregnant with her third child when she was abducted
from a Waco convenience store on March 1, 1992.
Before he was injected, McDuff said, "I'm ready to be released. Release me."
Northrup's mother, Brenda Solomon, said: "I'm glad this is over. My children
are going to rest in peace now. And he's going where he ought to go. I know
where he was released to."
One of the most notorious killers in Texas history, McDuff was originally
sentenced to death for the 1966 slayings of three Fort Worth teenagers. But he
was spared from the electric chair, which Texas used at that time, when the
U.S. Supreme Court struck down the death penalty in 1972. His sentence was
commuted to life in prison.
To the horror of Central Texas lawmen, McDuff was paroled in 1989 because of
overcrowding in the Texas prison system. His subsequent killing spree spurred
the Texas Legislature to enact sweeping reforms of the state's parole process.
McDuff was convicted of killing two other women and is a suspect in 11 other
slayings. During one of his trials, a prosecutor called McDuff "the monster who
comes out of the dark and snatches innocent people off the street and
slaughters them."
The Austin American-Statesman reported today that McDuff was the secret
informate who helped authorities find the missing bodies of three slain women
this fall. The newspaper said McDuff was taken off death row for two days to
help law officers locate one of the bodies buried near Waco. The victim was
Colleen Reed, who was abducted from an Austin car wash in December 1991.
Although there was no deal for the information, the American- Statesman says a
Waco federal judge reduced the sentence of McDuff's nephew from 15 to 10 years.
Michael Wayne Royals was convicted in 1992 on a drug charge.
Court files show Royals was the leader of a distribution network for
amphetamines and methamphetamines in the Waco area in the late 1980s and early
1990s.
Prison officials say McDuff, who reportedly had a terminal case of hepatitis C
and cirrhosis of the liver, requested a last meal of two T- bone steaks "and
all the fixings."
McDuff was the 17th convicted killer executed in Texas this year and the 161st
since the state resumed executions in 1983.
------------------------------------------------------------
The following appears courtesy of the 11/18/98 online edition of The San
Antonio Express-News newspaper:
McDuff put to death for two killings
Killer escaped execution for earlier slayings
By Matt Flores
Express-News Staff Writer
11/18/98
HUNTSVILLE — Kenneth Allen McDuff told a prison official he sometimes had no
control over what he did. Less than two hours later — and more than 30 years
after the state first sentenced him to death — he was executed.
McDuff was pronounced dead here Tuesday at 6:26 p.m., minutes after a lethal
mixture of chemicals was injected into his veins.
Earlier, following a 15-minute meeting with the prisoner, Allan Polunsky,
chairman of the state prison board, described McDuff as "very calm, very
tranquil."
He said McDuff was lying down, resting on a cell bed with his hands clasped
behind his head.
"The last thing he said to me was, 'Sometimes people do things that they don't
have any control over,' " Polunsky said.
Before visiting with him, Polunsky had referred to McDuff as "the worst of the
worst."
For his last meal, McDuff ordered two 16-ounce T-bone steaks, eggs, french
fries, a vegetable medley, coconut pie and a Coca- Cola.
Shortly after he lost an 11th-hour appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, McDuff
uttered his last words: "I'm ready to be released. Release me."
Dozens of onlookers, stationed outside the prison system's famed Walls Unit,
clapped as family members of McDuff's victims were led out of the facility
after the execution. Though several death penalty opponents were present, there
were clearly many supporters of McDuff's execution.
Some carried placards denouncing the convicted capital murderer, including one
that read: "Q: How do you want your McDuff? A: Fried!"
Several of McDuff's relatives witnessed his execution, but did not speak to
reporters.
Relatives of McDuff's victims expressed relief that he finally was put to
death.
He previously had escaped execution for the 1966 murders of three youths near
Fort Worth. In 1972, after the Supreme Court ruled the death penalty
unconstitutional, his sentence was automatically commuted to life in prison.
In 1989, as the Texas prison system grappled with severe overcrowding, McDuff
was paroled to Milam County.
McDuff, 52, was executed for the abduction-slayings of Colleen Reed and Melissa
Northrup, who disappeared in late 1991 and early 1992.
Reed, the first of the two to be killed, was a 28-year-old accountant abducted
from a downtown Austin car wash.
Reed's sister, Lori Bible of Round Rock, traveled here Tuesday, but did not
witness the execution.
"I saw no benefit to see Kenneth McDuff's last breath," Bible said. "What was
important was that he never have another opportunity to hurt another person on
this earth."
Three months after killing Reed, Northrup was abducted and killed. The
pregnant, 22-year-old convenience store clerk from Waco had once worked with
McDuff.
"I wanted to make sure he was dead so he wouldn't hurt anybody else," said
Northrup's mother, Brenda Solomon. "We don't have any closure in our life, but
we start another chapter tomorrow."
Asked what she would tell her 10- and 12-year-old grandchildren about their
mother's killer, Solomon replied: "I will tell them he died easily — nothing
like your mother did."
It was only within the past two months, near Waco, that authorities unearthed
the bodies of Reed and two other women, Reginia Moore and Brenda Thompson.
Authorities would not name the person who tipped them to the whereabouts of the
remains, but the Austin American-Statesman reported in a copyrighted story
Tuesday that it was McDuff himself who drove law enforcement officials to the
site where one of the bodies was buried.
The story also noted that a federal judge in Waco earlier this month reduced
from 15 years to 10 years the prison sentence of one of McDuff's nephews, who
had been convicted on a drug charge.
Prison officials declined to comment on the subject Tuesday, saying it was a
law enforcement issue.
McDuff was suspected in the deaths or disappearances of about a dozen young
women in Central Texas.
His 1989 release from prison left the public aghast. Soon after, legislators
and prison officials made sweeping changes to laws and parole board policies
aimed at curtailing the release of convicted killers.
McDuff was the only person in the state's history sent back to death row after
being paroled.
Two years ago, McDuff said he might cheat the executioner again. He announced
he was dying from hepatitis C and cirrhosis of the liver, which he thought
would kill him before he was executed.
He became the 17th person to be executed by the state of Texas this year.
>Let's all have a moment of silence for all the innocent people >he killed.
Hello,
You can have your moment of silence for whomever you wish. I will not partake
of it, because I KNOW that Kenneth is MORE of a victim than any and all of the
people he killed.
>Good
>riddance McDuff. You will NEVER kill again.
That's true. All Kenneth will do is INSPIRE those who follow in his
footsteps, to AVENGE his legal murder by being even MORE brutally violent and
deadly than they would otherwise be. And I salute this FINAL achievement of
Kenneth's, that lives on even after his death. The LEGACY that Kenneth leaves
can NEVER be erased. It stands forever, tall and proud.
Take care, JOE
> MEGABITE
> ICQ 7217577
>
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>> If you would like to view a photo of Kenneth, to pay your final respects,
>>face to face, to this martyr and victim of society
retco...@aol.com (RetCop1035) Wrote:
> Yeah, hold your breath.
Hello Chuck,
I do not take advice from Inferiors. If you want to hold your breath, go
right ahead. I value oxygen and do not deprive myself of oxygen, ever.
>This model of EVIL incarnate was convicted of 2 and suspected of
>killing 11 others.
Kenneth was and is nothing more than a PALE shadow of the malevolent evil of
your society, which CREATED him.
>He deprived the world, of possible Noble prize winners, presidents or just
>good
>citizens.
Spoken like a truly loyal citizen-slave of this diseased society. I honor his
right to have chosen to wipe the humans of his choosing off the face of planet
earth, for the purpose of achieving justifiable vengeance against YOUR society.
>Because of this and other progressive steps BW Bush my be your next
>president.
I don't follow politics. All political leaders are WHORES, and top political
leaders are all genocidal mass murderers. So I really don't care who THE next
president will be. He or she is not MY president, because I am not a member of
any society.
Take care, JOE
> chuck
>Go UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE Volunteers!
>#1 in the Sec
>#1 in the Nation
>In Both football and Women's Basketball!
>#2 in the SEC
>#9 in the Nation
>In Men's Basketball!
>
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Joe, You seem to be a serial killer/murderer expert- do you have any
evidence that a SK or murderer has ever stated that he killed or killed
in a more brutal fashion in order to punish society for implementing
the death penalty ? You often state the above as some sort of consolation
when a murderer is executed- just wondering if it's wishful thinking
on your part or if there is a factual basis for it.
Robert
R Weems Jr <El...@viking.cris.com> Wrote:
> Joe, You seem to be a serial killer/murderer expert- do you have any
>evidence that a SK or murderer has ever stated that he killed or killed
>in a more brutal fashion in order to punish society for implementing
>the death penalty ?
Hello Robert,
There is no need for any killer to verbalize this fact, for me to know,
thanks to my superior insight, that it is true. Killers choose to seek
vengeance due to the PERSONAL, INTERNAL injustices that they were subjected to.
The AMOUNT of rage and hate is determined by EXTERNAL as well as internal
factors. Killers know that they have a RIGHT to kill. The smarter ones know
that their society has no right to even punitively punish, much less kill,
them. The even MORE insightful ones embrace the PERVERSITY and MALEVOLENCE of
their society, as DEMONSTRATED to them by the death penalty, and justify
claiming MORE vengeance than they otherwise would have.
>You often state the above as some sort of consolation
>when a murderer is executed- just wondering if it's wishful thinking
>on your part or if there is a factual basis for it.
There is a factual basis. But of course whether or not you choose to accept
this piece of truth is up to you. I do not care. I KNOW the truth, and am
satisfied merely with stating it.
Take care, JOE
>
> Robert
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> That's true. All Kenneth will do is INSPIRE those who follow in his
>footsteps, to AVENGE his legal murder by being even MORE brutally violent and
>deadly than they would otherwise be. And I salute this FINAL achievement of
>Kenneth's, that lives on even after his death.
Joe,
You give these violent murderers far too much credit.
You might prefer otherwise, but their motives are more likely to be about their
own rage or greed rather than some "greater cause" on behalf of the death
penalty recipients who have preceeded them.
Take care,
Lady A
>> That's true. All Kenneth will do is INSPIRE those who follow in his
>>footsteps, to AVENGE his legal murder by being even MORE brutally violent
>and
>>deadly than they would otherwise be. And I salute this FINAL achievement of
>>Kenneth's, that lives on even after his death.
wwwo...@aol.com (WWWoLadyA) Wrote:
>Joe,
>
>You give these violent murderers far too much credit.
Hello Lady A,
No, I give them the credit that they deserve. The credit that societally
indebted and perversely bigoted members of society refuse to give them, due to
their own unrepentent prejudice.
>You might prefer otherwise, but their motives are more likely to be about
>their
>own rage or greed rather than some "greater cause" on behalf of the death
>penalty recipients who have preceeded them.
I have already answered this question, to the poster who made the initial
inquiry. I don't repeat myself for your benefit.
Take care, JOE
>Take care,
>
>Lady A
>
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