Execution elicits opposing vigils WALLA WALLA. Wash (AP) While death penalty opponents proved silently bv candlelight outside the state penitentiorv. those who wanted Westley Allan Dodd to hang set off firecrai ker* and waved sparklers After his midnight exe< ution. .ilenit 1 At) people cheered Dodd's death like boosters at a pep rally One woman tugged at a noose she had slipped around her net k "I'm feeling real good about this, lust ice has been served." another woman. I Jena Brown of Walla Walla, said. On the prison grounds, opponents and propo nents of the death penalty were separated into ad latent fenced lots Prison officials arrested five death penal!v opponents after they climbed a snowy embankment near a guard tower. They were in jail early Tuesday. Walla Walla County sheriff s officials said The 50 capital punishment opponents were as somber as the proponents were jubilant. "At five after 12. I looked up .it the prison and just had a feeling of sorrow and pain." said the Rev. left Spent er of Rit.bland, struggling with the emotion in his voice. "I thought about the vu tuns' families, I thought about Wes' family I thought about Wes himself. "It's a very brutal thing our state has done." Dodtl. 31, was pronounced dead at 12 on a m He was put to death for molesting and murdering three young boys in 1989. Dodd rejected all appeals on his behalf. He se lected hanging over lethal injection because he strangled one of his victims. Debbie Miller of Walla Walla said she braved Hit' near-zero wind chill and three im lies of snow to stand outside the prison Us a use of Dodd’s vii tims Tin hen* for the kids that were killed 1 have a 4 year-old bov at home " she said Till here for the families While proponents held up signs that said "Dodd should dangle" and sang ri» k songs with good bye themes, the opponents kept a silent vig il with lighted i undies Tears rolled down several faces and voices went scratchv with feeling when word of Dodd's death was rei eived "You were on the right side of history You were on the right side of the moral issue, and we will prevail." Magdaleno Ten" Rose Avila a re gional offii ml lor Amnesty International, told the group On the state ( apitol steps in Olvmpia a Unit 411 opponents of the death |>enalt\ held .1 landlelight vigil throughout the evening There were no chants or songs, just quiet conversation in the light rain. "The ever ution unleashes something uglv in society." said Ulen Anderson, an organizer ot Olympians Against the Death Penalty It gives the state's blessings on the use of violence to solve our problems It jierpetnates the t vc le ot violence w hen the government sees killing as ip pmpriale " Autopsy may prevent future hangings OLYMPIA, Wash (AP) — The exec ution of Westley Allan Dodd might provide evidence that could lie used to prevent other inmates from dying on the gallows, an attorney said "We couldn't stop this hang ing. hut mavhe we'll be able to stop those in the future," said Timothy Ford, a lawyer who represented 2t> state taxpayers in an unsuccessful bid to halt the hanging. Reporters who witnessed the hanging early Tuesday said Dodd appeared to die instantly and without struggle, but there were some contrary indica tions. Ford said. Witness accounts suggested "some movement about :t0 or 40 seconds” after Dodd's bound and hooded body plunged through the gallows, "indic ating that death was not instantaneous," he said Dodd may have suffered dur ing "a period of prolonged con s< iousness. or some period of consciousness." said Ford, who has handled and worked on ap peals m capital punishment cases nationwide At least one reporter who witnessed the exw ution said he thought he saw some slight movement in Dodd's abdomen, but most agreed Dodd was not conscious and that the move ment probably was involuntary muscle contractions An autopsy being conducted Tuesday in Seattle could show whether Dodd died instantly and without suffering “Even if that happened this time, that doesn't mean it will happen the next time." Ford said. The question is central to claims by death penalty oppo nents that hanging is cruel and unusual punishment and thus is banned by the Constitution WANTED Continued from Page 1 have their own program, longer said, and the idea to begin one hero began after the national agency found a delinquent par ent in Oregon, Non-payment of child sup port is a huge problem. Jaeger said, with half-a-billion dollars in current and back payments due last year in Oregon Ol that figure, only about $1-0 million was collected by the agency las! year Child support payments can often mean the difference lie tween a family on welfare and a self-sufficient family, said AFS Administrator Stephen Min nich. Hut Jaeger added that finding these parents is important for another reason. "It's not just about money," she said "It's also about getting an emotional contact with these children frum their parents." 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