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Death Row's 'Last Meal' Means More to Executioners than Executed

September 28, 2011 RSS Feed Print

The idea of a "last meal" for condemned prisoners is irrational and a bit bizarre. But so, perhaps, is the Texas decision to eliminate the practice in the execution-happy Lone Star State.

The change happened after a state lawmaker expressed outrage after convicted murderer Lawrence Brewer ordered a last meal that, it's fair to say, most nutritionists would consider a bit excessive, and certainly not heart-healthy. Brewer, a self-described white supremacist convicted of dragging an African-American man, James Byrd, Jr., to his death, ordered the following, according to the Los Angeles Times:

Two chicken-fried steaks with gravy and sliced onions; a triple-patty bacon cheeseburger; a cheese omelet with ground beef, tomatoes, onions, bell peppers and jalapeños; a bowl of fried okra with ketchup; one pound of barbecued meat with half a loaf of white bread; three fajitas; a meat-lover's pizza; one pint of Blue Bell Ice Cream; a slab of peanut-butter fudge with crushed peanuts; and three root beers.

If we weren't already disgusted with Brewer, the choice of his last meal seals it. The menu reads like some Onion story about last meals chosen by categories of felons (would an embezzler demand a vintage Chateau Lafite Rothschild and some pâté?). Or maybe he was hoping to beat the state to the punch, suffering a massive heart attack before they walked him in chains to his death chamber.

[Jamie Stiehm: Lynch Law Lives on Stage and in Troy Davis Execution]

State Sen. John Whitmire was outraged, calling Brewer a "bad person" who did not deserve special treatment. The understatement of Whitmire's description is almost as extreme as the last menu. And—worse!—Brewer didn't even eat it. Was it a deliberate attempt to make the state waste cash, or was his stomach a bit upset, under the circumstances? We may never know.

We can argue about the morality or criminal justice effectiveness of the death penalty. But make no mistake—the tradition of the "last meal," which is ingrained in movies and novels as well as our justice system—is more about us than it is about the condemned person.

Does anyone think someone who did something so horrible that the state will kill him or her deserves a special meal? Is it meant to bring some sort of comfort to the person about to die? No—it's about the rest of us feeling more comfortable about participating, even just as helpless witnesses, to a killing. Providing a last meal, last rites, and other courtesies gives an illusion of ceremony and thought to the killing, helping us to believe that the execution is more rational than the murder the condemned person may have been convicted of committing. It gives a sense of civility to an act so uncivilized that we imprison—and in some cases, execute—people who commit it.

[Vote: Should Troy Davis's Execution Revive the Death Penalty Debate?]

And then there is our relationship with food, both as something to nurture us and something to mark occasions (which is part of why couples spend absurd amounts of money on wedding cakes that few people really want to eat). The other day, I was forced to buy mousetraps, and while I wanted the uninvited brown field mouse out of my apartment, I'll concede I was happy to find traps that would not make me actually look at the dead mouse, once it was caught. The traps required peanut butter as a lure. I had spent more than a full minute in my local Walgreens looking at the labels on the peanut butter, considering the reduced-fat option, and whether I wanted chunky or smooth, before it occurred to me that it really didn't matter. I still don't know whether it was an automatic reaction—I'm a food label-reader—or whether spending even a minute to choose the mouse's last meal made me feel better about killing it. (The traps are still empty after several days. I'm hoping that the mouse, which, after all, was guilty of nothing worse than trespassing, scurried back out onto the terrace for good).

The last meal for prisoners is irrational, in terms of the condemned person. It's the death penalty-favoring public that needs it.

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death penalty

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I dissagree with Katelynn. I think that the death penalty is not right at all I do however think that the do deserve a good

Katie Schrader of WA 11:56AM February 28, 2012

I think that people on death row dont deserve to have a good meal before they die because they did terrible things to end up on death row. They deserve the worst.If the person wants a good meal then they shouldnt have broke the law.

Katelynn Schrader of MI 11:52AM February 28, 2012

I personally believe that the death penalty is cruel and unusual punishment to any person animal anything living. I believe and this is my own opinion that even thought people are on death role I believe that they deserve that right to have whatever they wish to eat before their execution. I believe this because would you like to know you’re going to die and never get to eat what you want before your death I wouldn’t I would like to know when I was going to die so I could eat whatever and how much I want before I die, because that’s the last thing you’re ever going to eat and remember besides being put to death and it may help relieve some of the fright of your death. Yeah some people have tried to be forgiving and know what they did was wrong and that maybe the only thing that you remember is telling the family your sorry before your executed would you like to die on an empty stomach I wouldn’t I believe that everyone and everything should be feed before there death animals, humans any living thing. This is my opinion and everyone has their own opinions and their own rights to their opinions. Thank you.

Missy Williams of KY 6:47PM October 31, 2011

Susan Milligan

Susan Milligan

Susan Milligan is a political and foreign affairs writer and contributed to a biography of the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, "Last Lion: The Fall and Rise of Ted Kennedy." Follow her on Twitter @MilliganSusan.

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