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TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (AP) Death penalty supporters gathered for
Timothy McVeigh's execution huddled quietly on bleachers outside
the federal prison early Monday, holding homemade signs in the
glare of television spotlights.
Their signs said "Remember the Victims," "Thou shalt not kill
and live," some with the simple footnote, "168."
On the other side of orange snow fencing, about 400 yards away,
a larger contingent of 120 death penalty opponents sat on straw
bales, some holding flickering candles in milk carton holders.
"I'm sorry, Tim," said one of their signs.
Only about 20 death penalty supporters took the early buses from
a city park to the makeshift protest grounds. Opponents were bused
in from another city park. Uniformed prison guards patrolled the
grassy space between the two groups.
Prison officials had prepared for thousands of demonstrators to
show up. But they numbered about 150 in the early morning hours
Monday.
Ajamu Baraka of Amnesty International attributed the small
turnout to the fact that McVeigh's execution was being carried out
by the federal government -- and that death penalty opponents were
urged to demonstrate in their own hometowns.
Russell Braun, 21, of Terre Haute, holding a sign reading "Bye
Bye Baby Killer," was among those demonstrating in support of the
execution.
"I'm here to make sure the survivors are remembered. It has
nothing to do with McVeigh," Braun said. "The kids could have
grown up and made a difference in this world and they weren't even
given a chance."
A couple from Oklahoma City, Jon Prough, 29, and his wife,
Carrie Prough, 26, drove 10 hours to be in Terre Haute for the
execution of the man who blew up the Alfred P. Murrah Federal
Building, killing 168 people.
"We can give 10 hours of our lives to show people support and
believe in them," John Prough said.
On the other side of the orange fence, a social worker at a
state mental hospital questioned what good McVeigh's death would
achieve.
"What have we accomplished by executing Timothy McVeigh now
that there are 169 people dead?" asked 49-year-old Bert Fitzgerald
of Madison, Ind.
Some people who oppose the death penalty make an exception for
McVeigh, noted 21-year-old Eric Sears, a student at St. Louis
University who came with a group from Chicago. But there should be
no exception, he said.
"The death penalty is vengeance. It's not justice," he said.
About 75 death penalty opponents marched to the prison Sunday.
During their three-mile march, the demonstrators carried
14-foot-high puppets of Uncle Sam and Jesus and banners that read
"Stop the Killing." When they reached the prison, they sang "We
Shall Overcome."
Later Sunday, about 50 abolitionists laid out signs on the lawn
of St. Mary Margaret Church, tucked in a normally quiet residential
neighborhood.
Unitarian minister Bill Breeden, sporting a red T-shirt with
white lettering reading "Stop Executions Now," said he believes
the government is wrong to kill McVeigh.
"He's not afraid of death, he's afraid of insignificance. And
here we are, giving him tremendous significance -- the first federal
execution since 1963," said Breeden, a member of the Bloomington
Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty, based in Bloomington, Ind.
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