Troy T. Alvin wants Judge Edward Smith off his case.

Convicted murderer Troy T. Alvin has bequeathed his radio receiver, TV and corpse to the Northampton County judge who five years ago sentenced him to life in prison.

In a three-page hand-written will filed in Northampton County Court, Alvin names Judge Edward G. Smith as his executor in the event of "his untimely death." Alvin asks that the judge dispose of his corpse in "a moral fashion, consistent with a proper ceremony and berial(sic)" .

In the cover letter, dated May 7, Alvin also references that his will requires the judge to recuse himself from the homicide case, pursuant to the code of judicial conduct.

Alvin is scheduled to appear before Smith on Friday for another hearing about his second petition to contest his conviction.

Alvin, now 33, is serving a life sentence in Schuylkill County prison for the March 11, 2002, first-degree murder of Ronald Blum Jr., 27. Blum was shot during a drug deal at the corner of Seventh and Bushkill streets in Easton.

Smith in 2006 had denied Alvin's request to be retried because his defense attorney was ineffective. A three-member Superior Court panel later upheld Smith's ruling.