Elite Electric Chair Pain

Elite Electric Chair Pain




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Does someone executed by electric chair feel pain?
Like any other execution method, the people most qualified to give you an answer can no longer do so. But we can make some conclusions from what we know about human physiology and the mechanics of death by electrocution.
The process of electrocution is pretty straight forward. You will be strapped to a hard backed wooden chair by leather belts at your wrists, ankles, forearms, chest and waist. Electrodes will be attached to the crown of your head and one or both of your calves. The electrodes will be faced with sponges soaked in a saturated brine to conduct the electricity into your body and re
Like any other execution method, the people most qualified to give you an answer can no longer do so. But we can make some conclusions from what we know about human physiology and the mechanics of death by electrocution.
The process of electrocution is pretty straight forward. You will be strapped to a hard backed wooden chair by leather belts at your wrists, ankles, forearms, chest and waist. Electrodes will be attached to the crown of your head and one or both of your calves. The electrodes will be faced with sponges soaked in a saturated brine to conduct the electricity into your body and reduce burning. On command from the warden, the power supply will be activated, delivering a fatal electric shock through your body at the electrodes. Most electric chairs deliver somewhere in the area of 5–13 amps of alternating current at between 1,700–2,500 volts. Multiple shocks are applied prior to checking for signs of life. The process is often more of an art than a science; executioners developed their own particular techniques through a process of trial and error.
If done properly the sheer force of the electricity should depolarize and destroy your brain and central nervous system followed by disrupting the pacemaker in your heart causing cardiac arrest. As has been attested to by lineman who have suffered accidental electrocutions but survived, loss of consciousness was instantaneous upon contact with a high voltage source. So, if you’re going to die in a well designed and properly maintained electric chair and executed by a competent executioner, it must be something like a cessation of feeling. In one instant you’re sitting blindfolded in darkness in a hard wooden chair, the sensation of the leather straps pinioning you into the chair, the cold wetness of the electrodes on your head and legs then BANG!!! - the next instant unconsciousness and……whatever lies beyond death (if anything).
What happens to your body is, to say the least, unpleasant.
Hollywood productions like The Green Mile or Lonely Hearts portray electrocutions in a dramatic but unrealistic fashion. In the movies, the electric chair makes loud electrical noises with the prisoner screaming, shaking and flopping about during the ordeal. The claim of eyeballs popping out of their sockets is another Hollywood fabrication from the fake electrocution scene in the low budget snuff film Faces of Death. A real life lightning ride to the other side doesn’t look like that. Typically, the chair is eerily quiet during operation; the only sound is the hum of the power supply transformer nearby or the whirring of an auxiliary generator in the prison. The prisoner jerks upright when the first jolt of electricity is applied; the skeletal muscles will tense and contract maximally under the force of the current. Inmates can defecate and urinate uncontrollably, the skin will turn bright red, then white. They can drool or foam at the mouth as well. There are almost always first and second degree burns around and under the sponges from electrothermal heating of the nearby tissue due to the extreme current flux at the electrodes. When the power is shut off the convict slumps down in the chair against the restraints. There will be an odious smell of a mixture of burnt flesh, singed hair, urine and feces in the death chamber.
If the execution is not properly done and with defective equipment, the nightmare only intensifies. The electric chair would probably be a horrible way to die if unconsciousness is not instantaneous. The sensation of a botched judicial electrocution, I’d guess, must be like a massive, jagged splinter being driven through your entire body followed by the sensation of being on fire after a few seconds. If the sponges are absent or improperly moistened with brine, both they and the skin under them can catch fire. A nightmarish spectacle of electrical arcing between the electrodes and the convicts body can occur as did in the executions of John L Evans and Joseph Tafero in Alabama and Florida, respectively. Oftentimes the electric shocks can leave the body mangled and in a vegetative state with the heart still beating and the convict breathing, leaving the prison staff with no other choice but to continue applying jolts of electricity until death occurs. Use of excessive amounts of electric current can cook the flesh on your bones, similar to that of a cooked chicken. The skin can slough off and fall off the meat, and is particularly revolting for the prison staff to deal with post execution, as they unstrap and remove the dead convict from the chair. Additionally, some doctors have claimed that electrocution may actually stimulate parts of the brain associated with fear and nightmarish imagery. Quite an ominous prospect, especially if the state has to give you 5 or 6 jolts of electricity before you finally die.
There was only one person to have survived an electrocution and been interviewed afterward about the ordeal. Willie Francis, a 17 year old youth was supposed to be electrocuted for a murder at St Martin’s Parish Jail in Louisiana on May 3, 1946. But a poorly wired portable electric chair and a drunk executioner failed to deliver a shock strong enough to kill him before the generator was damaged. Francis claimed later that the experience was “plum miserable” and that it had made his mouth taste like cold peanut butter and made him hallucinate little pink and blue speckles. He screamed during the ordeal and told his keepers to “TAKE IT OFF!!!!!” as the shock was applied. Francis remained on death row for another year after the botched execution while his lawyers argued that a second attempt to kill their client would violate his Fifth Amendment protection against double jeopardy. Louisiana ex rel Francis v Resweber, 329 U.S. 459 (1947) ultimately went before the United States Supreme Court, but in a 5–4 decision, the Court turned down this argument, stating that Francis’ right to protection from double jeopardy had not been violated as his sentence had not yet been carried out. On May 9, 1947, Francis was successfully electrocuted a second time.
Related Questions (More Answers Below)
Do inmates scream when being executed on the electric chair?
What do they 'plug' prisoners bottoms with before they get executed by the electric chair and why do they bother if they give them a diaper?
Why do they make an inmate who is going to be electrocuted in the electric chair change out of his prison issue boxer shorts into prison issue briefs before he is taken to the chair? Why is this only done for electrocution?
Why is it said death by electrocution in the electric chair is messier than death by other execution methods?
How does it feel to be electrocuted in an electric chair?
YES it hurts. There has only ever been one known survivor of the chair, On May 3, 1946, Francis survived an attempt at execution by the electric chair. Witnesses reported hearing the teenager scream from behind the leather hood, "Take it off! Take it off! Let me breathe goddammit!" as the supposedly lethal surge of electricity was being applied.
The design of the chair and the voltage used means death is not instant. The reason the hood is applied isn't to contain blown brain matter or popped eyeballs, it's so that people watching don't witness such things happening leaving them traumatised. Re
YES it hurts. There has only ever been one known survivor of the chair, On May 3, 1946, Francis survived an attempt at execution by the electric chair. Witnesses reported hearing the teenager scream from behind the leather hood, "Take it off! Take it off! Let me breathe goddammit!" as the supposedly lethal surge of electricity was being applied.
The design of the chair and the voltage used means death is not instant. The reason the hood is applied isn't to contain blown brain matter or popped eyeballs, it's so that people watching don't witness such things happening leaving them traumatised. Remember…most people watching someone be put to death are there because the person in the chair killed a member of their family, lawyers who represented the person usually attend as well as family of the convicted. The hood is for their benefit rather than the person in the chair.
The head and one calf are shaved of all hair, an ointment is applied to help conduct the electricity as well as a wet sponge to the top of the head. 2 large leather belts are placed around the person's mouth and eyes before putting the famous hood over their face. The anonymous executioner will first charge the box which sends electricity into the person, during the charge lights around the prison tend to dim (this can be seen happening during Ted Bundy's execution video outside of the prison. When the charge occurs the lights inside and outside the prison flicker causing the crowd to cheer knowing Roll 1 was coming) once the charge is complete the person is asked if they have any last words, should they speak the executioner will random push or pull the lever at any moment once the person is done speaking, he can wait 2 seconds or 20 mins if he wishes.
Once the lever is pulled electricity goes into the body via the brain and calf muscle, you can remain conscious for a split second up to 30 seconds. If you remain awake the pain will be indescribable to the person (keep in mind the death penalty is only applied to those who caused suffering to other humans showing no mercy or sympathy for the pain they were inflicting on their victim) so remaining conscious for a few seconds is well deserved. The flesh ontop of the skull begins to cook while the brain literally boils, once the brain starts to boil the person will no longer be aware of anything even though they are still alive. Organs begin to fail such as the liver and kidneys by also boiling while the current also goes to work on the heart. After 1 minute the switch is flipped and 2 doctors will examine the person, one checks for a pulse the second shines a light in the person's eyes. If either show the person is still alive an even stronger current is sent thru the person. This is when the skin can split anywhere on the body, the brain can eject via the nose and eyeballs can bulge or explode. The splitting of skin is because of how tense the muscles have become, they go so rigid the tension rips the muscle and skin. Smoke will appear from the head and calf where the electrodes are located. Doctors check again and off the body goes to the morgue. So to answer the question, yet it hurts. Whether for a split second or 30 seconds during that 1 second the pain you will feel will be off the scale. It's a truly horrid way to die but these people deserve it. I would much rather have lethal injection, it's just like being knocked out for surgery, death by lethal injection is actually pleasurable because of the 3 different drugs used at different times. I dont agree with the injection because the person doesnt suffer the way they made their victims suffer 🤷🏻‍♀️ they exit life high on the best drugs. Wheres the punishment in that? Bring back the chair or hanging to all states
Do inmates scream when being executed on the electric chair?
What do they 'plug' prisoners bottoms with before they get executed by the electric chair and why do they bother if they give them a diaper?
Why do they make an inmate who is going to be electrocuted in the electric chair change out of his prison issue boxer shorts into prison issue briefs before he is taken to the chair? Why is this only done for electrocution?
Why is it said death by electrocution in the electric chair is messier than death by other execution methods?
How does it feel to be electrocuted in an electric chair?
How do prison officials prevent inmates who are electrocuted in the electric chair from urinating while the electricity is coursing through their body? How are they prevented from wetting their pants during the electrocution?
How scared are people who are about to be executed?
Why do prisoners who are going to be electrocuted in the electric chair always go to the electric chair with full urinary bladders? What happens when the electricity hits them with their full bladders?
What if you survive your execution, lethal injection and electric chair somehow, what will they do with you?
How do they prepare someone who is going to be executed by the electric chair?
Why is it that people who are about to be executed never fight back?
Why were prisoners executed by electric chair, or by needle when you could just shoot them in the head and get it done quicker, less painful and cheaper?
Why are inmates who are about to be executed in the electric chair required to wear rubber pants over their underwear, but not for firing squad or lethal injection?
What happens when executed by the method of an electric chair? How long does the procedure last? Is this method painful? What exactly happens through the procedure?
Why did prisoners being executed in the electric chair always urinate while the electricity was running through their body? Did they wear special underpants on account of that?

How does it feel to be electrocuted in an electric chair? What would dying by an electric chair feel like?
Defecation and urination often happens
During execution by electric chair Defecation and urination often happens. The person loses control over his bodily functions because of the electric current and this is why this is a common response.
During electrocution the flesh of the person swells due to the swelling of tissues. Parts of the skin might actually fall if touched too early.
The Eyeballs of the inmate might pop out. According to one account it might pop out and rest on on the person’s cheeks.
The body temperature rises a lot and the body turns red. A burning smell is usually noticed During electrocution. Smoke might also be seen & the person’s body gets hot.
As a result of the high temperature the person’s body gets subjected to a fire might happen. The person’s body might catch fire and the smell of burning flesh might be noticed.
As a result of the high temperature resulting from the electric current passing through the head the brain gets cooked in most cases. See what happens to your body when you get an electric shock. (See What does it feel like to die?)
Due to the swelling of the skin parts of it might fall apart. Pieces of the skull might also detach due to the very high temperature.
If the condemned died after the first shock then the pain could be very brief. If the first shock did not kill them then intense pain might be felt until death or unconsciousness happen.
Death happens by asphyxiation or cardiac arrest
The death process is still not fully clear but it could be a combination of asphyxiation ,lack of oxygen, and cardiac arrest.
Due to the very high temperature the blood of the inmate usually boils.
Dislocations or fractures might happen
The inmate’s body usually moves very violently and this can result in dislocations or even fractures. (See What does it feel like to die by lethal injection?)
The inmate might vomit blood and drool as a result of the damage taking place inside the body.
Third degree burns usually happen where the electrodes meet the body. This usually happens at the head and the leg.
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