On 13 February 1906, Williams was executed in the basement of the
Ramsey County Jail in Saint Paul. There were 32 witnesses present during the execution, including Daily News reporter Joseph Hennessey, who entered the jail with the crowd, despite the fact that reporters were forbidden to attend. Before execution, Williams spoke from the gallows and insisted his innocence: "Gentlemen, you are witnessing an illegal hanging, I am accused of killing Johnny Keller. He was the best friend I ever had and I hope I meet him in the other world. I never had improper relations with him. I am resigned to my fate. Goodbye."
Botched execution and death penalty abolition After Williams dropped through the trap door, the rope used to hang him proved to be too long as Ramsey County Sheriff Anton Miesen had miscalculated its length, and Williams's neck stretched as well, causing his feet to make contact with the floor below the gallows. Three sheriff's deputies working for Ramsey County took turns hoisting the hanging rope upward so Williams would be suspended in the air, causing him to slowly strangle to death. Williams took over 14 minutes to die. After the execution, Williams's attorney called his hanging "a disgrace to civilization," and several newspapers compared hanging as a method of execution to torture methods during the
Inquisition. Later, three Minnesota newspapers were fined $25 each for violating a
gag law prohibiting the publication of any particulars about executions because they reported in detail about how Williams's execution transpired. Following Williams's execution, the public sympathized with Williams's story, with many purportedly finding the elements of "love and heartbreak" to be "relatable," and members of the public began to view the death penalty as a cruel and inefficient punishment that did not deter crime. Also following Williams's execution, Governor
John Albert Johnson held a meeting with Sheriff Miesen to understand what went wrong with Williams's execution. Afterwards, he commuted several active Minnesota death sentences to life imprisonment, and his successor,
Adolph Olson Eberhart, commuted the remaining death sentences; Johnson specifically called the death penalty "[a] survival of the relic of the past." In 1911, State Representative George MacKenzie authored a bill to abolish the death penalty; on , Governor Eberhart signed it into law, thereby abolishing capital punishment in the state. Williams was the last person to be executed in Minnesota's history; no executions have taken place in Minnesota since his hanging in 1906. ==See also==