About the debate, see kgov.com/kjo
The Blasphemous Comma Bible: Luke 23:32. The web is filled with references for this. Hardly any of those references indicate, as does the actual reading of Luke 23:32 in the 1611, that this is more than a comma problem; it's also a wording problem. The 1611 doesn't say "two others, malefactors" but "two other malefactors", even though "others" appears dozens of times in the 1611 in Luke's writings alone.
There is also the following corroboration:
Benson Commentary, reprint published in 1857 (Joseph Benson was born in 1748 and here it is listed as being published in 1810; referenced in 1914 and in a personal letter of 1813 as reported in this 1814 publication), staties:
"There were also two other malefactors — This should rather be rendered, Two others, who were malefactors, were also led with him to be put to death. The distinction between Jesus and the malefactors is remarkably preserved in the next verse. And when they were come to the place called Calvary — See on Matthew 27:33, and Mark 15:22; there they crucified him — That is, nailed him to the cross; and the malefactors,"
Vincent’s Word Studies (first published in 1887), note at Luke 23:32 states:
"The possible omission of a comma before malefactors in the A. V. might make a very awkward and unpleasant statement. Better Rev., two others, malefactors."
About Joseph Benson: One of the most eminent of the early Methodist ministers in England, Joseph Benson was born at Melmerby, in Cumberland, Jan. 25, 1748. At sixteen he fell in for the first time with the Methodists and was converted. In 1766 Mr. Wesley appointed him classical master at Kingswood School. He devoted himself closely to philosophy and theology, studying constantly and zealously. Dr. Clarke calls Benson "a sound scholar, a powerful and able preacher, and a profound theologian." Besides editing the Methodist Magazine for many years, he published A Defence of the Methodists, A Farther Defence of the Methodists, Vindication of the Methodists, Apology for the Methodists, Sermons on various Occasions, Life of John Fletcher, and A Commentary on the Holy Scriptures. In a quote from the footnotes of Asbury's Journals - vol. 3 Frank Baker writes:
"It is amazing to realize that within a generation four massive commentaries on the whole Bible were published by British Methodists: Thomas Coke, six volumes, 1801-9; Adam Clarke, eight volumes, 1810-26; Joseph Benson, five volumes, 1811-18; Joseph Sutcliffe, two volumes, 1834-39."
Sulu Kelley of Wesleyan Heritage Publishing says: "In my opinion Joseph Benson's Commentary ranks right up there with Adam Clarke's and Thomas Coke's."
From Commenting & Commentaries -- A Catalogue of Biblical Commentaries and Expositions by C. H. Spurgeon:
Adopted by the Wesleyan Conference as a standard work, and characterized by that body as marked by "solid learning, soundness of theological opinion, and an edifying attention to experimental and practical religion." Necessary to Methodist Students.
1611 Preface: See the section titled Translators to the Reader, for the translators explanation that the King James Bible is not a new translation but in large part, a revision.