Aug. 10, 2008

Insanity On Death Row

Mentally Ill Prisoner Who Murdered Woman In 1985 In Tennessee Could Be Executed

  • Play CBS Video Video Fight For Life On Death Row

    Gregory Thompson is on death row but his lawyers say he is mentally ill and the execution of an insane person is unconstitutional. (This segment was first broadcast on Nov. 11, 2007.)

  • Gregory Thompson

    Gregory Thompson  (CBS)

  • Interactive Capital Punishment

    Learn about the death penalty in the United States. Check out statistics, history, famous trials and more.

  • Interactive In Your Head

    A look at the human brain and diseases and disorders that can plague it.

(CBS)  "$444,000? What did you do with that money?" Logan asked.

"I sent it to Brenda Lane's family," Thompson said.

"You sure about that?" Logan asked.

"Yeah," Thompson said.

"What if I said to you there was no check?" Logan asked.

"It’s in my name," Thompson insisted.

"What if I said to you, though, there was no check, it’s in your head, not in your name?" Logan asked.

"No, there was a check. It wasn’t in my head, you know," he claimed.

"Are you a con man? Are you acting for me?" Logan asked.

"No. I’m serious. This is me. This is who I am," Thompson replied.

"How can you be sure that Greg Thompson is not just acting up, that he’s not just pretending?" Logan asked attorney Dana Chavis.

"For over 20 years, prison doctors have administered very powerful anti-psychotic drugs to Greg Thompson. I don’t know of any doctor that would prescribe or force that type of medication upon a person unless they believed they were truly psychotic," Chavis replied.

Asked what the effect of that medication is, Chavis said, "It doesn't take away his mental illness. He's always insane. But what it does is that it hides that insanity."

"But it doesn't actually make him normal?" Logan asked.

"Not at all," Chavis replied.

But does Thompson understand that taking the medication may make him appear sane enough to be executed?

"Well, I had a -- I made a choice years ago. That if I were to get to that point I'd rather be normal than insane," Thompson told Logan.

"Why is that?" she asked.

"Because it hurts. I’m tired of being mentally ill, you know. So if they want to kill me at the end, then they kill me at the end," he replied.

"I think I have to forgive him," Brenda Lane's sister Barbara Brown said. "I am a Christian and we are to forgive people. It's hard."

"But you want him to die for what he did," Logan remarked.

"Yes, I do want to see him executed," Barbara said.

Thompson's lawyers are going back to federal court in October and hope eventually to get a ruling that Thompson -- despite his medication -- is mentally incompetent and should not be executed. The Tennessee attorney general, who declined 60 Minutes' request for an interview, is expected to argue that Thompson understands why he is being punished, is not insane, and therefore should be executed.

Asked if he's afraid to die, Thompson said, "I'm on drugs right now. And I feel good. I'm not afraid. When I -- when these drugs wear off a little bit I'll be afraid again."

"If you were executed what do you think would happen to you afterwards? What comes next?" Logan asked.

"Well, I know that the dead can speak," Thompson said.

"The dead can speak? You think you would die?" Logan asked.

"I think it'd be a horrible ending," Thompson said. "Because if the dead can speak that means you got thought in the grave. You got thoughts going on in the grave. I don't know about that."

Produced By Tom Anderson
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by briansgirl2 August 11, 2008 2:56 PM EDT
I''m a Christian, but I say - - - "take him out". That poor woman must have gone through all kinds of emotions while these two drove around looking for a death sight for her. What happened to his accomplice in this crime? I didn''t see the report on 60 minutes.
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by kennedy7955 August 11, 2008 1:05 PM EDT
When it comes to prisoners on death row who are insane, the law is very clear: you cannot execute them. The Supreme Court has ruled it unconstitutional and deemed it "cruel and unusual punishment."

The actions of the defendant regardless of their mental condition should be the sole focus of any trial and its conclusion.
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by sugarfootsms August 11, 2008 7:12 AM EDT
This man wasn''t crazy when he committed this murder. He played crazy so much that they medicated his phony mental mind and now he experience side effects from his medication. The side effects doesn''t seem to be harmful to others. The side effects gives him hallucinations and etc, but he can stay that way and still under medication be executed. The system has made a new man out of him by feeding him drugs to change his mind and personality. He will be fixed like this for life. If you take the medicine away, you may cause something more serious to brain damage and then you won''t be able to relate to him at all. All I''m saying is the State has fixed him,(not healed him)and he can be executed in this state of mind. He knows this and that''s why he mentioned it would be unfair for them to kill him while he is on meds. But it''s too late to take the medicine back. So let him sue, and give the money to the victim''s family. But one thing for sure, he doesn''t need to be around anybody, not even the mental hospital has to put up with a mutiple personality criminal messed up from med''s in a prison facility. HOLLA-BACK!!
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by samlawson1 August 11, 2008 6:17 AM EDT
Since when is this Lara Logan a 60 Minutes journalist now? I thought I could at least watch one serious show on network television where some young hotty wearing tight clothes and having her blouse halfway unbottunned wouldn''t exist, but I guess I''m wrong. I do research on this lady and find out she''s sleeping around with soldiers and colleagues in Iraq. I thought this was at least one show I could watch on television with my sons without it being sexually charged but obviously I was wrong.
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by moonshadow22 August 11, 2008 4:03 AM EDT
The fact we must face here, it that frankly the world is a better place without some people on it. These people are specifically murderers, rapists, and child molesters who repeatedly do long lasting harm to others. Some offenders are capable of rehabilitation to the point where they know exactly how much harm they have done, and they should spend the rest of their life in a hellhole. Some people (like this guy) just need to die. They are not worth the effort.
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by moonshadow22 August 11, 2008 1:15 AM EDT
The fact we must face here, it that frankly the world is a better place without some people on it. These people are specifically murderers, rapists, and child molesters who repeatedly do long lasting harm to others. Some offenders are capable of rehabilitation to the point where they know exactly how much harm they have done, and they should spend the rest of their life in a hellhole. Some people (like this guy) just need to die. They are not worth the effort.
Reply to this comment
by moonshadow22 August 11, 2008 12:32 AM EDT
The fact we must face here, it that frankly the world is a better place without some people on it. These people are specifically murderers, rapists, and child molesters who repeatedly do long lasting harm to others. Some offenders are capable of rehabilitation to the point where they know exactly how much harm they have done, and they should spend the rest of their life in a hellhole. Some people (like this guy) just need to die. They are not worth the effort.
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by patriot12436 August 11, 2008 12:14 AM EDT
obes99
You are one of the reasons i like having Canada for a nerighbor. Even if you disagree with the death penalty you make perfect sense. We do not have to agree to get along.
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by obes99 August 10, 2008 11:50 PM EDT
Just my two cents worth...and hopefully the victims'' family reads this, and 60 minutes producers.
My name is Paul. I live in southern Ontario and I''ve worked as an RN in Psychiatry for 15 years. I have had the opportunity to work in some of the most respected psychiatric facilities in North America, including Yale and Homewood HC and currenttly at a maximum security forensic psychiatric hospital. I am a small fish in a big pond but it''s that kind of humility that I hope all those who hear my point of view will respect.
I have grown up with 60 minutes as a staple in my life. That being said I have never been so disappointed in the journalistic level I''ve come to expect. I have interviewed thousands of Pts in similar circumstances. This man IS NOT PSYCHOTIC. I have worked with thousands of Pts who are antisocial(previously known as psychopaths/sociopaths)and thousands who are truly psychotic. It is very easy to diagnose someone who is psychotic. Their thoughts are disorganized and genuinely look like they are distracted by auditory/visual hallucinations. This man processed each question and fed the interviewer with what would ''sound crazy''.
As a typical Canadian, I don''t agree with capital punishment but it is disturbing that the gist of this story is that he is ''insane''. I don''t buy it and as Americans, you should be ashamed that a liberal thinking Canadian thinks you let this murderer off too easy.
60 Minutes, Regretfully yours,
Paul
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by cesarc47 August 10, 2008 11:46 PM EDT
I''m a supporter of the death penalty, also knowlwedgeable of mental ilness. This report played down the fact that this man was probably sick in 1985 when this crime was comitted.Thoght we know little about his condition, we do know that it usually manifest itself in most people in their late teens early twenties. There was no metion of the fact that his condition cannot be cured all the drugs do is give him relief from his symptoms. He is sentensed to life under medication.
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by nooch1215 August 10, 2008 11:34 PM EDT
I''m sick of eveyone forgetting about victims and standing up for criminals. Execute him. You liberals need to wake up and live in the real world. And his lawyers - what a couple of idiots. If that was their sister, they would not not be buying his act.
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by patriot12436 August 10, 2008 11:30 PM EDT
KAYKAYB824
tHE WAY YOU FLIPFLOP ON HERE YOU SHOULD HAVE BEEN A POLITICIAN.
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by patriot12436 August 10, 2008 11:26 PM EDT
athought1
You sound like another bleeding heart A-S-S-H-O-L-E.
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by patriot12436 August 10, 2008 11:20 PM EDT
bennyblack1
I have a better idea, lets parole these psychos and let them go home and live with the bleeding hearts on these websites.
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by patriot12436 August 10, 2008 11:18 PM EDT
kasmith1964
And what about the victim, did he consider her right to life when he killed her ? I have no sympathy for you bleeding heart types.
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by patriot12436 August 10, 2008 11:15 PM EDT
ryynnoo
When you have walked in the victims shoes then you can speak for them.
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by patriot12436 August 10, 2008 11:13 PM EDT
kaykayb824
I had a classmate in college who didn''t believe in the death penalty. Then her husband was murdered by a 14 year old in a robbery. After that she was a staunch supporter of the death penalty. Being the victim can change your attitude and make all the difference in the world. Too many people are bleeding hearts and want to forgive, as long as it doesn''t happen to them or their families.
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by patriot12436 August 10, 2008 11:09 PM EDT
The man was sane when he committed the crime and was tried. If not he would not have been rational to tll them where to find the body and the knife. The sentence should be carried out. He can never be a functioning member of society.
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by donuts30001 November 14, 2007 9:37 PM EST
EVERY GREAT NATION THAT EXISTED FELL FROM WITHIN AND WE ARE WELL ON OUR WAY THERE. THE DELIBERT KILLING OF A YOUNG WOMEN IN THE MANOR Gregory Thompson IS JUST ANOTHER EXAMPLE OF THE DECAY. WHO IS RESPONSIBLE, OUR LEGAL SYSTEM, THERE IS NO COMMON SENSE LEFT IN OUR LEGAL SYSTEM THAT WOULD ALLOW THIS COLD BLOODED MURGER BE EXICUTED. WHEN WILL THE VICTUM''S RIGHTS BE CONSIDERED ("OH" I FORGOT THE VICTOM HAS NO RIGHTS) IT''S JUST ANOTHER MURDER. ALL Gregory Thompson NEEDS IS A TOMBSTONE. MAYBE IF THOSE IN THE LEGAL SYSYEM WERE TO EXPRIANCE THE SAME WITH THEIR DAUGHTERS THE SYSTEM MIGHT JUST WORK.
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by leosolaris November 14, 2007 5:25 PM EST
Of all the people who support the death penalty, I''m 1 of the strongest supporters. Having said this tho'' doesn''t undermine what I believe we must do to resolve this difficulty. And that is to place people like Gregory Thompson in a Psychiatric Hospital to be thoroughly studied in order to see what makes him, & others like him, tick. It is very important to get to the bottom of his, & others, psychiatric disorders, Thru all aspects of Scientific study & Genetic analysis, in order to resolve, & put an end to this Serious problem Right Now, Once & Forever. You may leave a message 4 me at silentsongs@netzero.net in care of Leosolaris.
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