Wilcher Misses Date with Destiny
Thursday, July 13th, 2006The life of confessed murder Bobby Glen Wilcher was spared Tuesday when the Supreme Court decided 24 years wasn’t quite long enough to make up its mind whether they need to review his case or not. Wilcher, who couldn’t be consoled after he missed his date with destiny, was taken back to his cell and put under suicide watch and prescribed counseling. Does anyone else see the irony of that predicament?
Anyway, Clarion-Ledger Prespective Editor Sid Salter, one member of the media who’d been scheduled to witness the execution, blogs about the delay (which could take months), his support for the death penalty and being told by Wilcher himself the murderer would kill again if given the chance.
Salter colleague David Hampton, editorial director at the C-L, opposes capital punishment and blogs that Tuesday’s delay is another example of a bad system not working.
Back in the 80s, while Wilcher was on trial for the murders, Salter was in the early stages of his tenure as editor and publisher of The Scott County Times. The case is being covered these days for the SCT by longtime Mississippi newspaper reporter Chris Allen Baker, who before Tuesday’s stay reflected on the significance of the case some parallels to another horrific event that still awaits final justice in Montgomery County.
Meanwhile, other papers are beginning to weigh in on the stay. The Natchez Democrat doesn’t delay in putting a period on the sentence: Wilcher should be dead by now.






