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- <text id=89TT0373>
- <link 90TT0812>
- <title>
- Feb. 06, 1989: "I Deserve Punishment"
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Feb. 06, 1989 Armed America
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 34
- "I Deserve Punishment"
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Killer Ted Bundy bargains and postures to the end
- </p>
- <p> Pleasantly handsome, piercingly intelligent, he was a
- master manipulator, a silver-tongued charmer who lured women to
- their deaths, confounded police pursuers and clogged the court
- system for nearly a decade. Last week, when Ted Bundy was
- finally strapped into Florida's electric chair and jolted with
- 2,000 volts of electricity, he paid with his life for the 1978
- kidnaping and murder of Kimberly Leach, a twelve-year-old Lake
- City girl. But if his last-minute confessions prove to be true,
- the former law student may have killed as many as 50 young women
- in Utah, Washington, Idaho, Colorado and Florida from 1973 to
- 1978, making Bundy one of the nation's most grotesquely prolific
- serial killers.
- </p>
- <p> Through legal maneuvers, Bundy, 42, had won three earlier
- stays of execution. But his luck ran out on Jan. 23, when the
- Supreme Court refused another delay. Cocky and contemptuous at
- his 1980 trial, Bundy turned remorseful in his final days,
- offering to confess to an array of unsolved murders. "Ted Bundy
- feels morally compelled as he faces death to do the right
- thing," said Diana Weiner, one of his attorneys.
- </p>
- <p> Although his disclosures may eventually help close up to
- 23 outstanding cases, few authorities credited Bundy with more
- than a last-ditch effort to delay his execution. Said Florida
- Governor Bob Martinez: "For him to be negotiating for his life
- over the bodies of victims is despicable."
- </p>
- <p> A onetime Boy Scout and A student, Bundy seemed headed for
- a sterling career in Republican politics in Washington State and
- even served as assistant director of the Seattle Crime
- Prevention Advisory Committee. Perversely, he was the author of
- a pamphlet instructing women on rape prevention.
- </p>
- <p> That such an ostensibly upstanding citizen would rape and
- mutilate scores of women, then dump their bodies in remote
- places, was almost beyond comprehension. The morning of the
- execution, some 200 bloodthirsty revelers gathered outside the
- penitentiary in Starke, Fla., for a ghoulish celebration. They
- lit sparklers, cheered and waved signs reading BURN, BUNDY, BURN
- and ROAST IN PEACE. One of the few dissenters was college
- student Nanda Rogers, 22, of Orlando, who stood by herself a few
- yards away. "I believe in the sanctity of human life -- even Ted
- Bundy's life," she said somberly.
- </p>
- <p> The day before his execution, Bundy, choking back sobs,
- said, ``I don't want to die, I kid you not, (but) I deserve,
- certainly, the most extreme punishment society has." He had
- seemed to deliberately seek that punishment. In December 1977,
- while jailed in Colorado awaiting trial for the murder of a
- nurse, Bundy asked policemen which state would be most likely
- to execute a killer. Florida, he was told. He soon escaped from
- jail and headed for the Sunshine State. There he crushed the
- skulls of two sorority sisters in their rooms at Florida State
- University. Three weeks later, he killed young Kimberly Leach.
- </p>
- <p> In a final interview, conducted by California psychologist
- and radio evangelist James Dobson, Bundy tearfully cited the
- media as a source of his dementia. Perhaps playing to his
- inquisitor, a member of the 1986 federal pornography commission,
- Bundy said, "Those of us who are . . . so much influenced by
- violence in the media, in particular pornographic violence, are
- not some kind of inherent monsters. We are your sons, and we are
- your husbands, and we grew up in regular families."
- </p>
- <p> Some of Bundy's relatives might not have been so "regular."
- The illegitimate son of a Philadelphia department-store clerk,
- Bundy claimed he spent his early years with a deranged
- grandfather who assaulted people, tormented animals and had an
- insatiable appetite for pornography. Bundy talked of being
- appalled after his first murder. "It was like being possessed
- by something so awful, so alien," he said. "But then the impulse
- to do it again would come back even stronger."
- </p>
- <p> Yet a succession of appellate courts ruled that Bundy was
- not mentally incompetent to stand trial, as he repeatedly
- claimed. In 1987 a federal judge called Bundy "the most
- competent serial killer in the country . . . a diabolical
- genius." His decade of imprisonment and endless appeals
- eventually cost Florida taxpayers more than $6 million.
- </p>
- <p> In a society increasingly fascinated with violent crime,
- the Ted Bundy story captured the public imagination. Five books
- and a television mini-series were produced about the
- boy-next-door killer. With network-TV broadcasts of the
- murderer's last interview and scenes of crowds gathered outside
- the penitentiary, even his execution became a media circus.
- Whether Bundy intended it or not, his final encounter with death
- renewed his nightmarish grip on the nation's attention.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-