Larry Niven wrote a number of short stories about organ transplants; in one of them, “The Jigsaw Man”, the primary source of organs for transplant is executions of criminals, which has led to more and more crimes being punishable by death. The main character of the story, who is currently in jail and awaiting trial, escapes through what amounts a stroke of luck, and finds out that the organ banks are right next to the jail. Certain that he is about to be recaptured and eventually executed, he decides to commit a crime worthy of the punishment he is going to receive: destroying a large number of the preserved organs. At the end of the story, he’s brought to trial only for the crime he originally committed: running red lights.
Larry Niven wrote a number of short stories about organ transplants; in one of them, “The Jigsaw Man”, the primary source of organs for transplant is executions of criminals, which has led to more and more crimes being punishable by death. The main character of the story, who is currently in jail and awaiting trial, escapes through what amounts a stroke of luck, and finds out that the organ banks are right next to the jail. Certain that he is about to be recaptured and eventually executed, he decides to commit a crime worthy of the punishment he is going to receive: destroying a large number of the preserved organs. At the end of the story, he’s brought to trial only for the crime he originally committed: running red lights.
I’ve read that story, but it’s not the one I was thinking of in the grandparent.
I didn’t intend to suggest that “The Jigsaw Man” was the story in question.