A haunting true-crime retelling of Willie Francis—the Louisiana teen who survived a botched 1946 electric-chair execution on “Gruesome Gertie” and was sent back after the Supreme Court’s Resweber ruling. From St. Martinville to D.C., we examine the Eighth Amendment, double jeopardy questions, and what “cruel and unusual” means when the machinery of death fails.
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KEYWORD:
Willie Francis, Gruesome Gertie, botched execution, electric chair, St. Martinville Louisiana, 1946, 1947, Louisiana history, Supreme Court, Resweber case, Louisiana ex rel. Francis v. Resweber, Eighth Amendment, cruel and unusual punishment, double jeopardy, death penalty, execution gone wrong, true crime documentary, legal history, civil rights era, wrongful conviction, constitutional law, criminal justice reform, Bertrand DeBlanc, Andrew Thomas, Louisiana justice system, 1940s America, historical crime story, justice and dignity, US legal precedent
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