'Gary Mark Gilmore' (
December 4,
1940 –
January 17,
1977) was an
American murderer who gained international notoriety as the first person executed in the
United States after the
death penalty was reinstated in
1976 after ''
Gregg v. Georgia'' lifted the four-year moratorium instated by ''
Furman v. Georgia''.
Biography
Early life
Gary Mark Gilmore was born in a rural
Texas town on
December 4,
1940, the second of four sons. His parents drifted around the country most of the time while he and his brothers were growing up, his father earning a living selling advertising space in magazines. Relations between Gary and his father were bad, his father being cold and indifferent to him as a child.
In Norman Mailer's ''
The Executioner's Song'', it is suggested that Gilmore was the illegitimate grandson of magician Harry Houdini.
The Gilmore family settled in
Portland, Oregon, in the early
1950s, where Gary Gilmore began getting into trouble with the law, with offenses ranging from shoplifting to assault and battery charges. He dropped out of
high school at age 15 and drifted across the
Midwest making a living out of robbing houses and stores.
Robbery and homicide
He was convicted of armed robbery in
Indianapolis,
Indiana in 1964, and received an 18-year prison sentence. He was conditionally paroled in March 1976 and sent to
Provo, Utah to live with a distant cousin of his who tried to help him find work and make a living for himself. Gilmore briefly worked as a roadie on
Wings' 1976
Wings over America Tour, but he soon returned to his previous lifestyle, stealing money and items from stores and homes.
Gilmore was convicted of killing Bennie Bushnell, a
motel manager, in Provo, Utah, on
July 20,
1976. He had also been charged with murdering Max Jensen, a
Sinclair gas station employee in
Orem, Utah, the previous day, but that case never went to trial apparently because there were no witnesses. Gilmore's trial was held from
October 5 to
October 7 1976 — he was quickly convicted of the murder, mostly because there was no defense on his part. The jury also recommended the death penalty for Gilmore due to the special circumstances to the crime. At the time, Utah had two methods of execution,
firing squad or death by
hanging, so Gilmore was allowed to choose between the two. His reply was, "I'd prefer to be shot."
Execution
During the three months Gilmore was on death row awaiting his execution, he attempted
suicide twice. The first was on
November 16 1976 and the second was a month later on
December 16. The execution was stayed three times. While incarcerated, Gilmore developed a deep dislike for two of his fellow inmates, convicted murderers and rapists Pierre 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 as he was led past he laughed at the men and called out, "I'll see you in Hell, Andrews and Pierre!"
Gilmore was shot by a
firing squad on
January 17,
1977, at 8:07 a.m., after angrily telling his
lawyers to drop the appeals 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 the 17th, he enjoyed a last meal consisting of a hamburger, hard-boiled eggs, a baked potato, a few cups of coffee, and three shots of
whiskey. 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 the
bullets. 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. Gilmore's last words were, "Aim small, miss small."
Gilmore requested that, following his execution, his eyes be used for transplant purposes. Within hours of the execution, two people received his
corneas, inspiring the
British punk rock band
The Adverts to write and release "Gary Gilmore's Eyes" later that year. Gilmore's body was cremated.
According to his brother
Mikal Gilmore's memoir ''
Shot in the Heart'',
Utah's tradition dictated that a
firing 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 the 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 of
Utah, apparently, had taken no chances on the morning that it put my brother to death" (p. 390).
References to the execution
★ The
Oakland-based performance artist
Monte Cazazza sent out photos of himself in an
electric chair on the day of Gilmore's execution. One of these was mistakenly printed in a
Hong Kong newspaper as the real execution. Cazazza was also photographed alongside
COUM Transmissions/
Throbbing Gristle members
Genesis P-Orridge and
Cosey 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.
[1]
★ A
December 11,
1976 episode of
Saturday Night Live featured the cast singing a Christmas-themed medley enitled "Let's Kill Gary Gilmore For Christmas." Among its more memorable lyrics are set to "
Winter Wonderland": "In the meadow we can build a snowman/One with Gary Gilmore packed inside/We'll ask him, "Are you dead yet?" He'll say, 'No, man'/But we'll wait out the frostbite 'till he dies."
★ In 1977,
The Adverts had a top 20 hit in the UK 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 German punk-rock band
Die Toten Hosen and by Paul Roland.
★ Gilmore's story is documented in
Norman Mailer's ''
The Executioner's Song'' (1979), which was adapted by Mailer for the 1982 television movie of the same name starring
Tommy Lee Jones as Gilmore. Jones won an Emmy for his portrayal of Gilmore.
★ Gilmore is also the main character of artist
Matthew Barney's ''Cremaster 2'' (1999), the second part of
The Cremaster Cycle, a series of five films dealing with surreal and controversial topics and themes.
★ One of Gilmore's brothers,
Mikal (a well-known music journalist), wrote a memoir, ''
Shot in the Heart'', that chronicles his relationship with his brother, and their often troubled family history. In 2001, it was made into an
HBO movie starring
Giovanni Ribisi,
Elias Koteas, and
Sam Shepard.
★ The episode "Whacked" of (first aired: 5/16/2005) involves a murderer on death row. The murderer indicates to the police at one point that "Gary Gilmore had it right," referring to his last words, eager to die.
★ The hip hop group
The X-Ecutioners make a reference to Gary Gilmore's execution in their theme song. The piece begins with the voice of a man describing the event.
★ On
The Police's second album
Reggatta de Blanc, the song "Bring on the Night" was about Gilmore's execution.
Sting also stated this in a February (21-22?) 1981 concert in Melbourne, Australia.
★ In
Tobias Wolff's memoir,
This Boy's Life, the author writes that one of his first friends' father, Mr. Crockett, became a justice of the state supreme court that later granted Gary Gilmore his wish to die.
See also
★
Capital punishment in the United States
★
John Albert Taylor
★
List of individuals executed in Utah
External links
★
Gary Gilmore (on
Crime Library).