Background
Donald Edward DeMag was born in Burlington, Vermont on December 15, 1922.
Donald Edward DeMag was born in Burlington, Vermont on December 15, 1922.
Prior to his death sentence, DeMag had been sentenced to life imprisonment after being convicted of murder, and had escaped and been recaptured while trying to enter Canada. In 1952, DeMag and fellow-prisoner Francis Blair escaped from the state prison in Windsor by crashing a laundry truck through the front gates. DeMag and Blair beat the couple with a lead pipe as they attempted to rob them.
Weatherup died of her injuries.
Two days after their escape, DeMag and Blair were recaptured. They were tried for first-degree murder, convicted and sentenced to death by electric chairman
Blair and DeMag were both executed by electric chairman Blair was executed on February 8, 1954.
DeMag was executed at the prison in Windsor on December 8, 1954.
He was buried at Holy Family Cemetery in Essex Junction, Vermont. Although DeMag was the last person executed by Vermont, he was not the last person to be sentenced to death by a Vermont court. Lionel Goyet, a soldier who was Absent Without Leave for the fifth time, robbed and killed a farmhand, and was sentenced to death in 1957.
His sentence was commuted six months later, and Goyet was conditionally pardoned in 1969.
He had no further problems with the law, and died in 1980. The death penalty was effectively abolished by Vermont in 1965.
lieutenant remained as a possible sentence if a defendant was convicted of murdering a prison employee or law enforcement officer, but was never used. As a result, the possibility of a death sentence in such cases was removed from state statutes by the Vermont General Assembly in 1987.