The 10 Most Controversial Death Penalty Cases Ever
7 Caryl Chessman (1960)
In 1948, a Californian man named Caryl Chessman received the death penalty for robbery, kidnapping and rape. During one of said kidnappings, the victim had suffered bodily harm and this contributed to the jury’s final decision to sentence him to death.
Chessman wrote and published several books from his death row prison cell that claimed he was innocent and his confession to the crimes had been “coerced”, which accumulated public support including famed writers/poets Ray Bradbury and Robert Frost, as well as President Roosevelt’s wife Eleanor.
After a whopping NINE stays of execution, Chessman was finally executed in 1960 by means of gas chamber. While he was in the chamber, a federal judge permitted him another stay of execution but he was already dead by the time they pulled him from the chamber.