Hembree's letter detailed why his life on death row at Raleigh's Central Prison has been more like a taxpayer-funded vacation than a prison sentence. Calling himself "a gentleman of leisure," Hembree told the people of Gastonia that he watches color TV, reads, takes naps, and eats three meals a day with no worries of seeing his sentence or himself executed.
"Is the public aware that the chances of my lawful murder taking place in the next 20 years if ever are very slim?" Hembree wrote.
Sadly that's true. North Carolina is one of several states where the death penalty cannot be currently carried out. The issue in North Carolina is a prohibition by the state's medical board against physicians participating in executions. State and federal law requires that a physician administer a lethal injection, and lethal injection is currently the only means of execution legally permitted in the Tarheel State. So there hasn't been an execution in the state since 2006. The result is that 165 capital inmates are living Hembree's life of "leisure" on the state's death row.
Hembree's Gastonia Gazette letter made national news. And it's triggered a lot of discussion nationwide among both opponents and proponents of the death penalty.
But missing in this debate as usual is any discussion of the victims. Danny Hembree Jr. was convicted of murdering a 17-year-old who was living a really hard life. Hembree told investigators that he bought sex with the teenager by giving her mother a crack rock. He said he later asphyxiated her with a plastic Walmart bag to prevent her mother from making the same deal with black men. Hembree is also charged with murdering two other young women under similar circumstances. For the record, his family insists he never murdered anyone, though he has confessed to all three killings.