This week in 1953

To his friend and attorney Emanuel Bloch, from Julius Rosenberg:
“Be strong for us, beloved friend, and we wish you long life to continue your fruitful work in health and happiness.
. . . NEVER LET THEM CHANGE THE TRUTH OF OUR INNOCENCE.”

— Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, convicted of espionage, electric chair, New York.
Executed June 19, 1953

Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were American Communists accused of passing atomic secrets to the Russians. Ethel’s brother David Greenglass confessed to selling nuclear secrets and accused Julius of doing the same. Greenglass also accused his sister of typing up notes of a secret meeting, but decades later he recanted the story.

Both Rosenbergs declined to make official final statements before their executions. Philosopher and novelist Jean-Paul Sartre called the execution a “legal lynching which smears with blood a whole nation. By killing the Rosenbergs, you have quite simply tried to halt the progress of science by human sacrifice.”

In 2008, however, Rosenberg codefendant Morton Sobell admitted that he and Julius were spies for the Soviets. Julius even had two code names, first “Antenna,” then “Liberal,” according to recently released KGB documents. The papers do not reveal whether Ethel had a covert identity. The extent of her involvement in the case remains in question.




 

This week in 1944

The condemned shoved Sheriff John R. Watson with his elbows when asked for a last statement. As his death warrant was read aloud, he stuck out his tongue.

— Austin Cox, convicted of murder, firing squad, Utah.
Executed June 19, 1944

Little was written about Cox except that he “ran wild” in Ogden with a shotgun, killing five people, including a district judge.




 

This week in 1987

“I am an innocent man. You are murdering me this day. I do still love you all in Christ. God bless you all.”

— Jimmy wingo, convicted of murder, electric chair, Louisiana.
Executed June 16, 1987

A former Boy Scout and park ranger, Wingo claimed he had never entered the house where the Browns were killed (see previous entry). Outside the prison, on the night of his execution, a sixteenyear-old boy whose sister had been killed by another inmate held a sign that read “Tell them about Jesus, then put them in the chair.”




 

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