Even though I'm opposed to the death panalty in principal I doubt the world will miss this guy very much
White supremacist executed for 1998 killing of black man tied to back of pick-up truck and dragged to death
* Hate crime killer given lethal injection today
* Victim was decapitated after vehicle slammed into ditch
* Accomplice on death row with case under appeal
A white supremacist who was sentenced to death for the murder of a black man in an horrific killing that echoed the atrocities of the lynching era was executed today.
Lawrence Russell Brewer, 44, was scheduled to be put to death by lethal injection at 6pm CST for his part in the 1998 killing of James Byrd, Jr in East Texas.
Brewer was one of three men convicted of killing Byrd after they offered him a lift along a remote country road.
Death sentence: Lawrence Russell Brewer, pictured arriving at court in a bulletproof vest in 1999, was executed today
Byrd, 49, was beaten unconscious and urinated upon before being bound to the vehicle by his ankles with a heavy logging chain and driven for three miles.
Forensic evidence showed that he was alive for much of the ordeal but was killed when the vehicle hit a concrete drainage channel causing his head and arm to be ripped from his body.
Victim: James Byrd Jr died after being chained to the bumper of a pick-up truck by Brewer and two other white supremacists
John William King, 36, was also convicted of capital murder and sent to death row. His case remains under appeal.
The third man, Shawn Berry, 36, received a life prison term.
Final hours: Brewer was taken from his cell at the Polunsky Unit in Livingston, Texas, to an isolation cell in Huntsville, Texas, where the sentence was carried out
After dumping his remains in an African American cemetery his killers drove off to a barbeque.
In an interview from death row, Brewer told Beaumont television station KFDM that he participated in the assault on Byrd but had 'nothing to do with the killing as far as dragging him or driving the truck or anything.'
He told the station his execution would be a 'good out' and he's 'glad it's about to come to an end.'
The Texas Department of Criminal Justice said Brewer's family was allowed to see him one last time this morning.
He was then be taken from the Polunsky Unit in Livingston to an isolation cell in Huntsville where the sentence will be carried out.
Byrd's death led to the Federal October 22, 2009 Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act, commonly known as the 'Matthew Shepard Act'.
President Barack Obama signed the bill into law on October 28, 2009.
The brutal death put Jasper, a typical East Texas town with the obligatory Dairy Queen and Walmart and a handful of fast-food places some 60 miles from the nearest interstate highway, under a national spotlight.
'Everywhere you went, anywhere in the country, once people found out you were from Jasper, Texas, they wanted to ask you about it,' says Mike Lout, the mayor and owner of the town radio station.
'Everybody first was shocked and appalled and not proud of it. They talked about it so much in the days past it, I think most people wanted to put it out of their minds.'
'It's heartbreaking,' said Billy Rowles, who was sheriff at the time of Byrd's murder.
'A lot of effort and hard work and soul-searching went into trying to live down the stereotype. It's so easy to get back into that mode.'
A CRIME THAT SHOCKED AMERICA...
The horrific killing of James Byrd Jr is seen as one of America's worst racial crimes since the civil rights era.
The brutal nature of his death shocked the U.S. and was condemned by the then President Bill Clinton.
As the defendants had served time in prison, their arrests focused national attention on the prevalence of the white supremacist prison gangs to which they belonged.
Brewer's father claimed his son had joined the gang after being brutalised and abused by black inmates while incarcerated.
During the trial Brewer claimed that although he had been present on the night, he had not taken part in the killing and blamed the other two - John King and Shawn Berry, both 24 at the time. He told the jury he 'had no intention of killing nobody'.
In court he claimed King had started a fight with Mr Byrd, and that Mr Berry had slashed the victim across the throat before chaining him to the bumper of the pick-up truck.
Prosecutors said they believed Mr Byrd had been killed to promote Brewer and Berry's white supremacist organisation the Confederate Knights of America and to initiate Berry into the group.
Brewer admitted joining the group while serving time in a Texan prison with King.
Basketball star Dennis Rodman made a $25,000 donation to a fund started to support Byrd's family. He had previously offered to pay for the funeral.
The Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act passed in 2009 expanded the 1969 United States federal hate-crime law to include crimes motivated by a victim's actual or perceived gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, or disability.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...ecuted-1998-racist-killing.html#ixzz1Yf82oZJC