The US Executions / Death Row Thread

May he forever rot in hell for his ugly deed on earth.

I have read a lot about the executions in the US, what the inmate ate for his last meal and his last words and the likes, and it seems most of them, became religious before they got executed. Majority of them became christian although there were a couple that became muslim, so the chances of him going to hell might be slim, would have been better if they just shot him dead when he got arrested, give him no chance to repent, ensuring his rotting in hell.

For those who are interested, here is a whole thread about the executions of last year in the US: http://www.documentingreality.com/forum/f240/2013-executions-usa-123702/
 
I have read a lot about the executions in the US, what the inmate ate for his last meal and his last words and the likes, and it seems most of them, became religious before they got executed. Majority of them became christian although there were a couple that became muslim, so the chances of him going to hell might be slim, would have been better if they just shot him dead when he got arrested, give him no chance to repent, ensuring his rotting in hell.

For those who are interested, here is a whole thread about the executions of last year in the US: http://www.documentingreality.com/forum/f240/2013-executions-usa-123702/

Yes, they try redeem themselves. Its all friggen fake, fekking hypocrites. I have no mercy for that schite, take responsibility for your actions and accept the consequences.

Thank heavens I am not a judge.
 
US SUPREME COURT ASKED TO HALT MISSOURI EXECUTION

The U.S. Supreme Court was asked to halt the execution Wednesday of a convicted killer in Missouri after a federal appeals court ruled the lethal injection could move forward.

John Middleton was originally scheduled to die one minute after midnight Wednesday for killing three people in 1995. But less than two hours earlier, a federal judge ruled there was enough evidence of mental illness that a new hearing should take place.

Courts have established that executing the mentally ill is unconstitutional.

A three-judge panel of the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Wednesday that the execution could proceed, but Middleton's attorneys appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court and the Missouri Supreme Court. The Missouri Supreme Court, hours later, declined to halt the execution.

Missouri law allows a 24-hour window for executions. If Middleton has not been executed by midnight Wednesday, the Missouri Supreme Court would need to set a new execution date.

Middleton, 54, would be the sixth man put to death in Missouri this year. Only Florida and Texas have performed more executions in 2014 with seven each.

Middleton was convicted of killing Randy "Happy" Hamilton, Stacey Hodge and Alfred Pinegar out of concern that they would tell police about his methamphetamine dealing. Middleton's girlfriend, Maggie Hodges, is serving life in prison after pleading guilty to second-degree murder in all three cases.

But Middleton's attorneys contend that the wrong man was arrested, citing new evidence that included a witness who came forward in February.

Attorney General Chris Koster disagreed. "The time for enforcement of Missouri's criminal judgment against John Middleton is long overdue," Koster wrote Tuesday.


Source : Sapa-AP /kn
Date : 17 Jul 2014 00:56
 
US SUPREME COURT GREENLIGHTS ARIZONA EXECUTION

The US Supreme Court gave the greenlight to Arizona to execute a murderer on Wednesday after he voiced concerns about secrecy surrounding the lethal injection process.

Joseph Wood had challenged his death penalty sentence for the 1989 shooting deaths of his 29-year-old former girlfriend Debbie Dietz and her father Gene, 55.

Wood, 55, had sought more information about the state's lethal injection method, the executioner's qualifications and the manufacturer of the lethal drugs.

Death row inmates have filed similar motions seeking greater transparency in recent months amid concerns about the safety of the lethal drugs and a botched execution in Oklahoma.

The Death Penalty Information Center charged that the high court's decision "allows drug secrecy to continue."

The Ninth US Circuit Court of Appeals had placed a hold on Wood's execution, demanding more information from Arizona.

States that practice the death penalty have relied increasingly on compounding pharmacies, which lack federal approval, since European drugmakers refused to provide products used to execute inmates.

Oklahoma suspended its executions for six months after the April death of convicted killer and rapist Clayton Lockett by lethal injection in a process that took 43 minutes, well over the expected time of a little over 10 minutes.

The Supreme Court did not detail its decision in short orders vacating the judgement of the appellate court and denying Wood's request to stay his execution.


Source : Sapa-AFP /kd
Date : 23 Jul 2014 09:30
 
Arizona execution takes two hours

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-28457460

23 July 2014 Last updated at 23:31 GMT
Arizona execution takes two hours

US death row inmate Joseph Wood has died after an execution in Arizona took nearly two hours to kill him.

Wood, a double murderer, was executed by lethal injection.

His lawyers filed an appeal for an emergency stay of execution, after he had been "gasping and snorting for more than an hour" in the death chamber.

They argued the extended execution process violated Wood's right to be executed in the absence of cruel and unusual punishment.

The execution should have taken 10 minutes, his lawyers said.

It began at 13:52 (20:52 GMT), and Wood was pronounced dead at 15:49, one hour and 57 minutes later, according to the Arizona attorney-general's office.

Wood was convicted of the 1989 murders of his estranged girlfriend Debra Dietz and her father Eugene Dietz.

He had sought to force Arizona to name the manufacturers of the drugs used in the execution, but a last-ditch ruling by the US Supreme Court cleared the way for the execution to go ahead.

In communications with Wood's lawyers this year, Arizona officials said they would use a two-drug combination of midazolam and hydromorphone to put him to death.

But they declined to provide further identifying information, including the name of the drug's manufacturer, citing a state confidentiality law aimed at protecting the drug makers from reprisal.
 
Somehow my care bone seems to have gone missing.

It must be in the Malaysian airline thread.
 
CONDEMNED MAN'S US EXECUTION TAKES NEARLY TWO HOURS

America's death penalty debate raged Thursday after it took nearly two hours for Arizona to execute a prisoner who lost a Supreme Court battle challenging the experimental lethal drug cocktail.

Convicted killer Joseph Wood gasped and snorted during the 117 minutes it took him to die Wednesday after he was injected with a relatively untested combination of the sedative midazolam and painkiller hydromorphone, witnesses and his lawyers said.

It usually takes 10 minutes to put an inmate to death using a lethal injection.

It was the second botched execution in the United States so far this year, prompting outrage from death penalty abolitionists and critics.

"He gasped and struggled to breathe," attorney Dale Baich said after the execution in the southwestern US state.

So drawn out was the procedure that Wood's lawyers fielded an emergency motion during the execution to try to cut it short and revive their client.

Wood, who was convicted for the 1989 murders of his girlfriend Debbie Dietz and her father Gene, finally died at 3:49 pm (2249 GMT).

But the victims' family rejected claims that Wood had died an agonizing death.

"You don't know what excruciating is. What's excruciating is seeing your dad lying there in a pool of blood, seeing your sister lying there in a pool of blood," Jeanne Brown told reporters.

"That's excruciating. This man deserved it. I don't believe he was gasping for air. I don't believe he was suffering. Sounded to me as though he was snoring."

"Arizona appears to have joined several other states who have been responsible for an entirely preventable horror -- a bungled execution," Baich said in a statement.

Just a day before he was finally put to death, the US Supreme Court had denied Wood's request to halt the execution because of the state's secrecy over the nature and origin of the drug cocktail.

Witness Michael Kiefer, a reporter for The Arizona Republic, said Wood gasped more than 640 times.

"It was very disturbing to watch... At a certain point, you wondered if he was ever going to die," local Fox News affiliate news anchor Troy Hayden said.

But witnesses and medical observers said Wood did not suffer.

Capital punishment opponents vowed to redouble their efforts to outlaw the practice, which already has been abandoned in most other countries.

"The worst part about Joseph Wood's botched execution was, it was entirely predictable and avoidable," said National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty executive director Diann Rust-Tierney.

"Americans have had enough of the barbarism. We're learning, sadly, that in too many cases, we are simply incapable of carrying out capital punishment in the humane way in which our laws guarantee."

She noted that the lethal drug cocktail used in Wood's execution had only been used once before, in Ohio, where it took inmate Dennis McGuire 26 minutes to die.

Arizona Governor Jan Brewer said she was concerned about the time it took for Wood to be executed, and ordered a "full review" of the process.

"One thing is certain, however, inmate Wood died in a lawful manner and by eyewitness and medical accounts he did not suffer," she insisted.

"This is in stark comparison to the gruesome, vicious suffering that he inflicted on his two victims -- and the lifetime of suffering he has caused their family."

Wood was one of several inmates to resort to the courts to seek greater transparency about the method being used to put them to death, amid concern about the efficacy of the lethal drug protocol.

Outrage grew after another execution went awry in Oklahoma in April, with the inmate appearing to suffer before he died.

Oklahoma suspended its executions for six months after putting to death convicted killer and rapist Clayton Lockett in a process that took 43 minutes.

Individual US states may choose whether or not they will implement the death penalty.

Those that carry out executions have relied increasingly on compounding pharmacies, which lack federal approval, since European drugmakers refused to provide products used to execute inmates.

Wednesday's execution was the 26th in the United States, and the first in Arizona since October.


Source : Sapa-AFP /kd
Date : 24 Jul 2014 09:45
 
2-HOUR EXECUTION REKINDLES US DEATH PENALTY DEBATE

The third botched execution in six months in the U.S. has rekindled the national debate over the death penalty and given potentially new evidence to those building a case against lethal injection as cruel and unusual punishment.

Joseph Rudolph Wood took nearly two hours to die and gasped for about 90 minutes during his execution in Arizona on Wednesday. The process took so long that his lawyers had time to file an emergency appeal while it continued. The Arizona Supreme Court also called an impromptu hearing and learned of his death during its discussions.

"He has been gasping and snorting for more than an hour," Wood's lawyers wrote, demanding that the courts stop the execution. "He is still alive."

Arizona Attorney General Tom Horne's office said Wood, 55, was pronounced dead at 3:49 p.m., one hour and 57 minutes after the execution started.

It is the third prolonged execution this year in the U.S., including one in Ohio in which an inmate gasped in similar fashion for nearly a half-hour. An Oklahoma inmate died of a heart attack in April, minutes after prison officials halted his execution because the drugs weren't being administered properly.

Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer said she was ordering a full review of the state's execution process, saying she's concerned by how long it took for the administered drug protocol to kill Wood.

An Associated Press reporter who witnessed the execution saw Wood start gasping shortly after a sedative and a pain killer were injected into his veins. He gasped more than 600 times over the next hour and a half. During the gasps, his jaw dropped and his chest expanded and contracted.

An administrator checked on Wood a half dozen times. His breathing slowed as a deacon said a prayer while holding a rosary. Wood finally stopped breathing and was pronounced dead 12 minutes later.

"Throughout this execution, I conferred and collaborated with our IV team members and was assured unequivocally that the inmate was comatose and never in pain or distress," said state Department of Corrections Director Charles Ryan.

Defense lawyer Dale Baich called it a botched execution that should have taken 10 minutes.

"Arizona appears to have joined several other states who have been responsible for an entirely preventable horror - a bungled execution," Baich said. "The public should hold its officials responsible and demand to make this process more transparent."

Family members of Wood's victims in a double 1989 murder said they had no problems with the way the execution was carried out.

"This man conducted a horrific murder and you guys are going, let's worry about the drugs," said Richard Brown, the brother-in-law of Debbie Dietz, who was killed along with her father. "Why didn't they give him a bullet?"

Wood looked at the family members as he delivered his final words, saying he was thankful for Jesus Christ as his savior. At one point, he smiled at them, which angered them.

Arizona uses the same drugs - the sedative midazolam and painkiller hydromorphone - that were used in the Ohio execution earlier this year. A different drug combination was used in the Oklahoma case.

"These procedures are unreliable and the consequences are horrific," said Megan McCracken, of the University of California, Berkeley, School of Law's Death Penalty Clinic.

States have refused to reveal details such as which pharmacies are supplying lethal injection drugs and who is administering them out of concerns that the drugmakers could be harassed. States have been scrambling to find potentially lethal drugs as several European-based pharmaceutical companies refuse to supply them if they are intended for executions.

Wood filed several appeals that were denied by the U.S. Supreme Court. Wood argued he and the public have a right to know details about the state's method for lethal injections, the qualifications of the executioner and who makes the drugs.

Such demands for greater transparency have become a new legal tactic in death penalty cases.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals had put the execution on hold, saying the state must reveal the information. But the Supreme Court has not been receptive to the tactic, ruling against death penalty lawyers on the argument each time it has been before justices.

The Arizona governor said medical and eyewitness accounts indicated that Wood did not suffer and he died in a lawful manner in which justice was served.

Attorney general's spokeswoman Stephanie Grisham, who witnessed the execution, said Wood "went to sleep, and looked to be snoring."

"This was my first execution, and I was surprised by how peaceful it was," Grisham said in an email. "There was absolutely no snorting or gasping for air."

Wood had been convicted of fatally shooting Dietz and her father, 55-year-old Gene Dietz, at their auto repair shop. Wood and Debbie Dietz had a tumultuous relationship during which he repeatedly assaulted her. She tried to end their relationship and got an order of protection against Wood.


Source : Sapa-AP /aw
Date : 24 Jul 2014 19:39
 
AS INMATE DIED, LAWYERS DEBATED IF HE WAS IN PAIN

The nearly two-hour execution of a convicted murderer prompted a series of phone calls involving the governor's office, the prison director, lawyers and judges as the inmate gasped for more than 90 minutes.

They discussed the brain activity and heart rate of Joseph Rudolph Wood, who was gasping over and over as witnesses looked on. The judge was concerned that no monitoring equipment showed whether the inmate had brain function, and they talked about whether to stop the execution while it was so far along.

But the defense lawyers' pleading on the grounds that Wood could be suffering while strapped to a gurney, breathing in and out and snoring, did no good.

Nearly two hours after he'd been sedated Wednesday, Wood finally died.

A transcript of an emergency court hearing released Thursday amid debate over whether the execution was botched reveals the behind-the-scenes drama and early questions about whether something was going wrong.

The third U.S. execution in six months to go awry rekindled the debate over the death penalty and handed potentially new evidence to those building a case against lethal injection as cruel and unusual punishment.

Department of Corrections Director Charles Ryan read a statement Thursday outside his office dismissing the notion the execution was botched, calling it an "erroneous conclusion" and "pure conjecture." He said IV lines in the inmate's arms were "perfectly placed" and insisted that Wood felt no pain.

But he also said the Arizona attorney general's office will not seek any new death warrants while his office completes a review of execution practices. He didn't take questions from reporters.

Defense lawyer Dale Baich called it a "horrifically botched execution" that should have taken 10 minutes.

U.S. District Judge Neil V. Wake convened the urgent hearing at the request of one of Wood's attorneys, notified by her colleagues at the execution that things were problematic.

A lawyer for the state, Jeffrey A. Zick, assured Wake that Wood was comatose and not feeling pain.

He spoke to the Arizona Department of Corrections director on the phone and was given assurances from medical staff at the prison that Wood was not in any pain. Zick also said the governor's office was notified of the situation.

Zick said that at one point, a second dose of drugs was given, but he did not provide specifics. The participants discussed Wood's brain activity and heart rate.

"I am told that Mr. Wood is effectively brain dead and that this is the type of reaction that one gets if they were taken off of life support. The brain stem is working but there's no brain activity," he said, according to the transcript.

The judge then asked, "Do you have the leads connected to determine his brain state?"

The lawyer said he didn't think so.

"Well if there are not monitors connected with him, if it's just a visual observation, that is very concerning as not being adequate," the judge said.

Wood died at 3:49 p.m., and judges were notified of his death while they were still considering whether to stop it.

Zick later informed the judge that Wood had died.

Anesthesiology experts say they're not surprised that the combination of drugs took so long to kill Wood.

"This doesn't actually sound like a botched execution. This actually sounds like a typical scenario if you used that drug combination," said Karen Sibert, an anesthesiologist and associate professor at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. Sibert was speaking on behalf of the California Society of Anesthesiologists.

Sibert said the sedative midazolam would not completely render Wood incapacitated. If he'd felt pain or been conscious, he would have been able to open his eyes and move, she said. The other drug was the painkiller hydromorphone.

"It's fair to say that those are drugs that would not expeditiously achieve (death)," said Daniel Nyhan, a professor and interim director at the anesthesiology department at Johns Hopkins medical school.

An Ohio inmate gasped in similar fashion for nearly 30 minutes in January. An Oklahoma inmate died of a heart attack in April, minutes after prison officials halted his execution because the drugs weren't being administered properly.

Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer said later that she was ordering a review of the state's execution process, saying she's concerned by how long it took for the drug protocol to kill Wood.

Family members of Wood's victims in a 1989 double murder said they had no problems with the way the execution was carried out.

"This man conducted a horrific murder and you guys are going, 'let's worry about the drugs,'" said Richard Brown, the brother-in-law of Debbie Dietz. "Why didn't they give him a bullet? Why didn't we give him Drano?"

Arizona uses the same drugs that were used in the Ohio execution. A different drug combination was used in the Oklahoma case.

States have refused to reveal details such as which pharmacies are supplying lethal injection drugs and who is administering them out of concerns that the drugmakers could be harassed.

Wood filed several appeals that were denied by the U.S. Supreme Court. Wood argued he and the public have a right to know details about the state's method for lethal injections, the qualifications of the executioner and who makes the drugs. Such demands for greater transparency have become a legal tactic in death penalty cases.

Wood was convicted of fatally shooting Dietz and her father, 55-year-old Gene Dietz, at their auto repair shop in Tucson.


Source : Sapa-AP /nsm
Date : 25 Jul 2014 04:29
 
US SUPREME COURT DENIES STAY IN MISSOURI EXECUTION
By JIM SUHR
Associated Press

The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday denied a stay of execution for Missouri inmate Michael Worthington, who is scheduled for lethal injection for the rape and killing of a neighbor in 1995.

His execution planned for just after midnight Wednesday is set to be the nation's first since one in Arizona last month in which an inmate gasped more than 600 times while taking nearly two hours to die.

The 43-year-old Worthington had been sentenced to death for the September 1995 attack on 24-year-old Melinda "Mindy" Griffin during a burglary at her home.

Worthington's lawyers had filed last-minute appeals Tuesday to the Supreme Court and asked the governor for clemency.

They called into question the Arizona execution and two others that were botched in Ohio and Oklahoma, as well as the secrecy involving the drugs used during the process in Missouri.

Democratic Gov. Jay Nixon was weighing Worthington's clemency request, spokesman Scott Holste said.

The three botched executions in recent months have renewed the country's debate over lethal injection. In January, an Ohio inmate snorted and gasped for 26 minutes before dying. A few months later in Oklahoma, an inmate died of an apparent heart attack 43 minutes after his execution began. Most lethal injections take effect in a fraction of that time, often within 10 or 15 minutes.

Ohio, Oklahoma and Arizona all use midazolam, a drug more commonly given to help patients relax before surgery. In executions, it is part of a two- or three-drug lethal injection.

Texas and Missouri instead administer a single large dose of pentobarbital - often used to treat convulsions and seizures and to euthanize animals. Missouri changed to pentobarbital late last year and since has carried out eight executions during which inmates showed no obvious signs of distress.

Missouri and Texas, like most states, refuse to name their drug suppliers, creating a shroud of secrecy that has prompted lawsuits.

On Tuesday, Griffin's 76-year-old parents anticipated witnessing Worthington die.

"It's been 19 years, and I feel like there's going to be a finality," Griffin's mother, Carol Angelbeck, told The Associated Press by telephone Tuesday.


Source : Sapa-AP /mjs
Date : 06 Aug 2014 02:20
 
TEXAS EXECUTES MAN WHO KILLED EX-WIFE, HER BROTHER

A man convicted of gunning down his former common-law wife and her brother more than two decades ago in Houston was put to death by lethal injection Wednesday evening.

Willie Trottie's execution was carried out about 90 minutes after the U.S. Supreme Court rejected his last-day appeals. He had contended he had poor legal help at his trial and questioned the potency of the execution drug.

Trottie repeatedly expressed love to witnesses - both people he selected and relatives of his victims, Barbara and Titus Canada - and several times asked for forgiveness as he was about to be executed.

"I love you all," he said. "I'm going home, going to be with the Lord. ... Find it in your hearts to forgive me. I'm sorry."

As the lethal dose of the powerful sedative pentobarbital took effect, he closed his eyes and breathed quietly. After about eight breaths, he opened his mouth to exhale, then closed it. There was no further movement.

Trottie, 45, was pronounced dead at 6:35 p.m. CDT - 22 minutes after the injection began.

His was the eighth lethal injection this year in Texas, and the first in the nation's most active death penalty state since recent executions went awry in Oklahoma and Arizona. Unlike those states, where a drug combination is used for capital punishment, Texas uses a single lethal dose of pentobarbital.

Trottie had acknowledged shooting Barbara Canada, 24, and her brother, Titus Canada, 28, at their parents' home in Houston. But Trottie said the May 1993 shootings were accidental and in self-defense, and not worthy of a death sentence.

Prosecutors said he had threatened to kill Canada, who had a protective order against him, if she didn't return to him. They said he carried out that threat when barging into the house and opening fire.

His attorneys had argued to the Supreme Court that Trottie's lawyers at his 1993 trial were deficient for not addressing his self-defense theory and for failing to produce sufficient testimony about Trottie's abusive childhood with an alcoholic mother.

State attorneys scoffed at the argument, saying Trottie's self-defense claim was absurd and had been rejected in earlier appeals.

Trottie's attorneys also contended the dose of pentobarbital for his lethal injection was past its effectiveness date and could subject him to unconstitutional "tortuous" pain.

The state responded that the drug doesn't expire until the end of the month and that tests showed proper potency. They argued the appeal seeking details of the drug was merely another attempt to force prison officials to disclose the compounding pharmacy that provides the execution drugs, something the courts repeatedly have refused to order.


Source : Sapa-AP /kn
Date : 11 Sep 2014 02:10
 
TEXAS EXECUTES WOMAN WHO STARVED CHILD TO DEATH

Texas, which has put more inmates to death than any other US state, on Wednesday executed child killer Lisa Coleman, one of only a handful of women on death row.

Coleman, 38, who failed in an 11th-hour court appeal, was declared dead by lethal injection at 6:24 pm (2324 GMT) at the state penitentiary in Huntsville, Texas Department of Criminal Justice spokesman Robert Hurst said.

Coleman was convicted in the 2004 kidnapping and killing of her live-in girlfriend's nine-year-old son.

The child's body bore signs of starvation and abuse, according to court records, which said that he was kept bound in the apartment shared by the two women.

The boy died of malnutrition and weighed just 35 pounds (15 kilos).

His mother also was found guilty in his murder and given a lengthy prison sentence.

Coleman was also convicted of kidnapping for keeping him isolated and bound -- adding the aggravating charge of kidnapping that made her conviction in his death a capital crime.

Coleman's attorney, in a Supreme Court appeal filed late Tuesday, denied that the boy had been kidnapped, and insisted that capital punishment never should have been considered for his client.

The lawyer, John Stickels, said witnesses saw the boy playing unrestrained with other children days before he died -- proof, he said, that the kidnapping conviction was wrong.

The Supreme Court rejected the appeal one hour before the scheduled execution.

Coleman's is the 30th execution in the United States since the beginning of the year, with nearly a third carried out in Texas.

She is just the 15th woman put to death in the United States since capital punishment was restored in 1976, out of a total of nearly 1,400 executions, according to the non-profit Death Penalty Information Center.


Source : Sapa-AFP /kd
Date : 18 Sep 2014 03:33
 
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