Glass' father worked in Arizona Chemical, where he was an instrument repairman. The company had a policy of hiring the children of employees as temporary summer laborers, including Glass.
Before committing a capital crime, Glass already had a criminal record. With fellow inmate Jimmy Wingo, Glass escaped from the Webster Parish, Louisiana Jail in December 1982 and, during their escape, they killed Newton Brown, 55, and his wife, Erlene Nealy Brown, 51 at their home in Dixie Inn. Glass was soon arrested, Wingo later. Both were sentenced to death in the electric chair.
Glass made a headlines in 1985 as a petitioner in a Supreme Court case. He argued that executions by electrocution are violating the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution as "cruel and unusual punishment". But the Court, by majority 5-4, found that electrocution as an authorized method of executions is constitutional.
Glass was electrocuted on June 12, 1987 at the age of 25 and became the 78th person executed in the United States since 1977. Governor Edwin W. Edwards refused commutation of the sentence. Wingo was executed four days later, on June 16, 1987.
Murder in Dixie Inn
Mindenmemories.org
Wingo and Glass had just escaped from prison and were "on the run" Law enforcement were looking for them and knew immediately who had killed the Brown's. These escapee's were on the run and and may have needed money.
"As I recall, the two guys that killed the Browns did a "rush" act. They found a cinder block, or something like that, in the yard and threw it through a sliding glass door. Then, they "rushed" down to the bedroom and killed the Brown's before they even had time to react to the breaking glass. Makes one think about home safety and what one could do to deter such tactics".
Christmas morning 1982
Wingo and Glass had just escaped from prison and were "on the run" Law enforcement were looking for them and knew immediately who had killed the Brown's. These escapee's were on the run and and may have needed money. They didn't catch them and Wingo's girlfriend until January 6, 1983.
Mr. Glass, the dad of Jimmy worked at Arizona Chemical. He was an instrument repairman. The company had a policy of hiring employees children as temporary summer laborers.
Both Jimmy's were in the Minden jail when they escaped. It seems they escaped and went to a shed of some sort at the Brown's residence. We were told they got into the house while the Brown's were not at home. When the Brown couple came home, they shot them. They both denied doing the shooting and blamed it on each other so they were both executed.
Murderer of a Couple Executed in Louisiana
June 13, 1987
A swaggering inmate who said he would ''rather be fishing'' was executed in the electric chair early today for the shooting deaths of a bound and gagged couple in 1982.
Jimmy Glass, the third Louisiana inmate executed in five days, was pronounced dead at 12:14 A.M., Corrections Commissioner C. Hall Phelps said.
The 25-year-old high school dropout went to his death after the United States Supreme Court rejected an appeal without comment Thursday evening. The High Court also refused to stop Louisiana executions on Sunday and Tuesday.
Mr. Glass grinned as he was strapped into the electric chair. A short time earlier he was asked if he had a final statement and he said, ''Yeah, I think I'd rather be fishing.''
Mr. Glass was condemned for killing Newt and Erlene Brown on Christmas Eve five years ago at their home in Dixie Inn.
He contended that Jimmy Wingo, a cellmate who escaped with him from the Webster Parish jail the night of the murders, had held a shotgun to his head and made him kill the Browns after he called Wingo by name.
Mr. Wingo, 35, is scheduled to die next Tuesday for the killings. He said he had nothing to do with them.
Louisiana executes 3d killer this week; convict had slain 2