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Lethal Injection, Cruel and Unusual Punishment?

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  • Lethal Injection, Cruel and Unusual Punishment?

    http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la...=la-home-local
    U.S. Judge to Open Rigorous Review of Lethal Injection
    Federal judge will open four days of hearings focusing on a killer's claim that lethal injection is cruel and unusual punishment.
    By Henry Weinstein
    Times Staff Writer

    September 26, 2006

    California's execution of condemned inmates by lethal injection will be put to its most stringent test ever at a hearing scheduled to start today in San Jose federal court.

    Attorneys for Michael Morales, who was sentenced to death for the 1981 murder of Terri Lynn Winchell(17) in Lodi (According to court documents, she had been strangled, bludgeoned with a hammer, stabbed and raped. The Tokay High senior had fought her attackers until she died.), will try to show that California's procedures violate the 8th Amendment to the Constitution because they may inflict unreasonable pain upon inmates.

    The case has ramifications not only for the 638 individuals scheduled to die in California but for inmates in other states, including Maryland and Missouri, where court challenges to lethal injection are also pending.

    Fordham University law professor Deborah Denno, an expert on methods of punishment, said the California case is pivotal because U.S. District Judge Jeremy Fogel has gone beyond judicial efforts in other states to delve into how lethal injection works, including the unusual step of visiting the execution chamber at San Quentin earlier this year. The issue may wind up before the U.S. Supreme Court.

    Fogel has scheduled four days of hearings, allotting himself six hours to pose questions to members of the execution team at San Quentin and to medical experts. The lawyers will also question witnesses.

    "What's at stake in this hearing is whether or not a judicial officer is willing to take a very sober, extremely hard constitutional line on the administration of lethal injection in California," said Elisabeth Semel, who runs the death penalty clinic at UC Berkeley's Boalt Hall School of Law.

    "One thing that sometimes get lost, or confused, is if the state wants to continue to execute people, it is the responsibility of the state to institute a procedure that meets the requirements of the 8th Amendment," which bars cruel and unusual punishment, Semel said.

    Nathan Barankin, a spokesman for Atty. Gen. Bill Lockyer, whose lawyers are defending the California procedure, offered a contrary view.

    "This is a very straightforward case — whether California's existing lethal injection protocol puts Morales at risk of suffering cruel and unusual punishment," Barankin said. "It is his burden to prove that to the court, and we are confident that the state's protocol is the most humane method of carrying out this criminal sentence."

    Dane Gillette, California's senior assistant attorney general, who heads the office's death penalty unit, added: "We believe that California's current lethal injection protocol is constitutional, as was the old one, and that the hearing will establish that fact."

    But Morales' legal team believes "that we will establish that California's execution protocol is so poorly designed, managed and staffed that the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation is institutionally unable to ensure that executions are performed humanely," said Washington, D.C., attorney Ginger Anders.

    Barbara Christian, mother of the slain teenager, stressed Monday that she is not concerned with whether Morales suffers.

    "As a mother, I don't care what kind of pain Morales feels because of what he did to my daughter," Christian said in a formal statement released by her attorney, Gloria Allred. "He showed no mercy when she cried out for it. He deserves no mercy." According to testimony introduced at trial, Morales killed Winchell, then a high school student, by beating her head in with a claw hammer.

    Morales' lawyers are expected to probe everything about the state's lethal injection procedures — the nature and amounts of the drugs used, the lighting in the room where people monitor the inmate's death and the background of the people on the execution team.

    The state has had a de facto moratorium on executions since February, when officials postponed Morales' execution after they were unable to meet Fogel's conditions, imposed to ensure that the execution would withstand constitutional scrutiny.

    Since then, California officials have made some changes in the three-drug cocktail in use at San Quentin and across the country. The first drug, sodium thiopental, is an ultra-fast-acting barbiturate that is supposed to make the condemned inmate lose consciousness. The second drug — pancuronium bromide — is a paralytic agent to prevent the inmate from moving or speaking. The third, potassium chloride, causes cardiac arrest.

    A key contention in Morales' lawsuit — and lethal injection challenges in several other states — is that condemned inmates have been insufficiently sedated by the first drug and therefore experience intense pain but are unable to express it because they are paralyzed.

    Fogel, in prior rulings in the case, said state records suggest that sodium thiopental may have not worked properly in as many as six of the 11 lethal injection executions conducted in the state, starting with that of William Bonin, the so-called Freeway Killer, in 1996.

    A federal judge in Missouri has halted all executions in that state after finding flaws in its lethal injection procedure. An execution has been blocked in South Dakota while a federal judge reviews challenges. Yet another federal judge, in Baltimore, held an extensive hearing on the issue last week.

    On the other hand, federal judges in Florida, Oklahoma and Texas have recently rejected challenges to lethal injection, though none of them held hearings as in-depth as the four-day proceeding Fogel has scheduled.

    In response to Fogel's concerns, California officials have made some changes in procedure. They have lowered the initial sedative dosage from 5 grams to 1.5 grams, but the state protocol now also calls for the barbiturate to be administered in a constant flow through an intravenous line in one of the condemned person's arms. The remaining two chemicals are to be injected sequentially in the other arm after the initial sedative dose.

    State officials believe these changes will ensure that the inmate remains unconscious during the entire execution. But Morales' attorneys — who also include John Grele of San Francisco, David Senior of Los Angeles and Richard Steinken of Chicago — are skeptical. They note that such a procedure has not been tried in California or elsewhere and consequently would need to be closely monitored by medical professionals.

    But the state's protocol does not call for a doctor on its 14-member execution team, and medical oaths — "first, do no harm" — bar doctors from participating in executions. Organizations for registered nurses also urge members not to participate. The only role a doctor has had in the modern era of capital punishment in California is in pronouncing the inmate dead.

    In February, Fogel told the state it either had to have an anesthesiologist on hand or execute the inmate with an overdose of the sedative.

    The state chose the first option, but the two doctors appointed to do the job backed out shortly before the execution was scheduled to occur.

  • #2
    This is getting rediculous. If there is one thing these criminals might fear, it is death. If you take that off the table, then what?

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    • #3
      F@#$ Lethal injection .22 shells are dirt cheap. Line those bastards up.

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      • #4
        The penal system will bankrupt the state if they don't start finding a way to get rid of these guys quickly and cheaply. They are trying to get certain offenses committed in prison to end up in a death sentence, but they still can't even get death row cleaned out. It's stupid. We're caring more about the rights of the criminals and forgetting about what happened to the rights of the victims.

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        • #5
          This why I hate defense attorneys. My client will suffer "ureasonable pain". What about the pain your client inflicted upon that 17 year old girl? If you ask me, these fucks get off to easy with lethal injection. They should be put down the same way their victims were.

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          • #6
            There was a guy just executed in Florida last week that fought this same battle. It actually worked for him for a little while - his offense was in 1984 - he shot a cop.

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            • #7
              Originally posted by bad14u
              This why I hate defense attorneys. My client will suffer "ureasonable pain". What about the pain your client inflicted upon that 17 year old girl? If you ask me, these fucks get off to easy with lethal injection. They should be put down the same way their victims were.
              No joke. As if strangling, bludgeoning with a hammer, stabbing and raping aren't cruel and unusual. And what about the cruel and unusual pain that her family and friends have to go through? Wow, that the court would even consider a case like this is mind boggling. And that any lawyer would take a case like this is unconscionable. I agree that they should suffer the same fate as their victim. If that kind of treatment is "unreasonable" they should have thought of that before they brutalized that girl. When people do things like that to other people, they should cease to be protected by basic human rights, because they've taken away their victim's basic human right to live. Punishment should be severe and swift. If the state isn't going to defend the rights of it's people who abide by the law, than they're as guilty of her murder as the ones who actually comitted it.

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              • #8
                What's next, do we then have to bore them to death? Or would that be considered "unusual" under the cruel and unusual statutes.

                I say do it like they do in some provinces of China, when someone is executed it's done with one shot to the head, and the family of the person executed then has to cough up the cost of the bullet for the government. Not that they have a decent legal system, but they sure have that last part down.

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                • #9
                  I have mixed feelings about the death penalty. One one hand, it serves as as a deterrent to serious crime. Yet on the other hand, it tends to embolden criminals who already have committed crimes that warrant the death penalty. My biggest concern is for people who are wrongly convicted and sentenced to death. It has happened in the past and it will happen again. There is no taking that back.


                  Lethal injection is simply one way of executing convicted prisoners. If the formula strength of the the sedative is correct then there should be no pain since the convict should be thoroughly sedated anyhow. If the argument is that the sedative portion is not strong enough then perhaps the barbituate dosage level should be raised accordingly and then the lawyers have no case.


                  In my opinion, the gas chamber is the most painful and horrible method of execution. Blood agents such as cyanide horribly disform a victim and bones break due to violent muscular contractions during this process. I will go no further than to say that the victims are strapped in not for their own benefit but for the benefit of those who witness the execution.

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                  • #10
                    Make Them all suffer s*%t the world is crazy enough. Down with them all...

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                    • #11
                      PI: wise words!
                      there need to be enough checks and balances in the system. while i love the idea of these shit-bags being interned in solitude and the mental anguish that involves, i think some of them know where they're going after death, and that's why they fear the death penalty so much.
                      gas chambers are fucked up, and the electric chair supposedly causes the same bone breakages due to muscle contractions, but having been under sedation for surgery before i'm hard pressed to understand how it is at all painful if adminstered correctly. On one hand i'm glad that the courts are looking at the issue w/ a fine tooth comb, on the other hand i'm sick of convicted shit-bags using the legal system to delay their departure from a world they've made worse.
                      I'd simply like to point out to some of these convicts however that they nullified their constitutional rights when they took the same rights of peace, liberty and happiness from others. some of these people never quite understand their crimes, or that their crimes are of unjustified control and attempted domination over others. if they're too stupid to know where to draw the line, it needs to be drawn for them.
                      on the other hand, how many convicts have recently been freed from prison after further investigation from others, often educational institutions, that have shown the flaws in prosecution, how do you remove the emotion conveyed by prosecuting attorneys when attempting to make an impartial decision of life or death?
                      somewhere there needs to be a line drawn ourselves, but I think it should start earlier. not at the point where we question if we're handling the end result (execution) in the appropriate manner, but whether or not we've handled the conviction appropriately.

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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by bad14u
                        They should be put down the same way their victims were.

                        Amen to that!!!

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by bad14u
                          They should be put down the same way their victims were.
                          that's right! an eye for an eye... an eye for a tooth.
                          this is a tough subject because this land we live in, america, (if that's where you live) is supposed to be the land of tolerance. i'm not really sure who started that, but if a judge can start off a sentencing with "i shouldn't even be considering this" and then let the bastard off... there's something wrong with our legal system.
                          i just read about that in the paper.

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                          • #14
                            :usausausa

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                            • #15
                              It is seriously sad that there are people(lawyers) who just for the money, freakin help these people!!! I think he should be taken out and the court dates dismissed. Why spend more money on the man if we know he did it? Just my opinion. I think it'd be different if there was a question of innocence.

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