In March 2025, three state corrections department volunteers armed with rifles lifted their weapons and fired at Brad Sigmon, who sat in a metal chair 15 feet away inside the Broad River Correctional Institution in South Carolina.
Sigmon—convicted of the brutal 2001 murder of his girlfriend’s parents—was the first U.S. prisoner to be executed by firing squad in 15 years. He chose that method of execution over lethal injection or the electric chair, which he feared would “cook him alive.”
Since 1976, only seven prisoners have been executed by firing squad in the United States. Sigmon’s death, which was covered extensively by the media, reignited a debate over capital punishment.
History of the Death Penalty
The death penalty has been used for millennia; it was included in the Code of Hammurabi, the collection of laws set forth around 1754 B.C. by the Babylonian king Hammurabi. The Old Testament of the Bible states that the death penalty was an appropriate punishment for crimes such as adultery, murder or assaulting a parent.
But capital punishment wasn’t universally condoned; William the Conqueror disallowed execution for any crime except during wartime. His leniency didn’t last long, and during the reign of King Henry VIII, as many as 72,000 are believed to have been executed by methods such as being burned at the stake, drawn and quartered, beheaded, hanged or boiled to death.