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Lethat Injections - Florida, California Suspend Executions

Croynan

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The New York Times

December 16, 2006

Florida, California Suspend Executions


By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Filed at 12:30 a.m. ET

OCALA, Fla. (AP) -- Gov. Jeb Bush suspended all executions in Florida after a medical examiner said Friday that prison officials botched the insertion of the needles when a convicted killer was put to death earlier this week.

Separately, a federal judge in California extended a moratorium on executions in the nation's most populous state, declaring that the state's method of lethal injection violates the constitutional ban on cruel and unusual punishment.

U.S. District Judge Jeremy Fogel ruled in San Jose that California's ''implementation of lethal injection is broken, but it can be fixed.''

In Florida, medical examiner Dr. William Hamilton said Wednesday's execution of Angel Nieves Diaz took 34 minutes -- twice as long as usual -- and required a rare second dose of lethal chemicals because the needles were inserted clear through his veins and into the flesh in his arms. The chemicals are supposed to go into the veins.

Hamilton, who performed the autopsy, refused to say whether he thought Diaz died a painful death.


''I am going to defer answers about pain and suffering until the autopsy is complete,'' he said. He said the results were preliminary and other tests may take several weeks.

Missing a vein when administering the injections would cause ''both psychological and physical discomfort -- probably pretty severe,'' said Dr. J. Kent Garman, an emeritus professor of anesthesia at the Stanford School of Medicine in California.

''All the drugs would be much slower to affect the body because they're not going into a blood vessel. They're going under the skin. They take a long time to be absorbed by the body,'' said Garman, who said he was ethically opposed to lethal injection.


An inmate would remain conscious for a longer period of time and would likely be aware of increased difficulty breathing and pain caused by angina, the interruption of blood flow to the heart, he said.

Jonathan Groner, associate professor of surgery at Ohio State University, said the injection would cause excruciating pain ''like your arms are on fire.''

Bush created a commission to examine the state's lethal injection process in light of Diaz's case, and he halted the signing of any more death warrants until the panel completes its final report by March 1.

The governor said he wants to ensure the process does not constitute cruel and unusual punishment, as some death penalty foes argued bitterly after Diaz's execution. Florida has 374 people on death row; it has carried out four executions this year.

Governor elect-Charlie Crist planned to continue the moratorium when he takes office in January, spokeswoman Vivian Myrtetus said.

Fogel said the California case raised the question of whether the three execution drugs administered by the San Quentin State Prison are so painful that they ''offend'' the ban on cruel and unusual punishment. Fogel said he was compelled ''to answer that question in the affirmative.''

California has been under a capital punishment moratorium since February, when Fogel called off the execution of rapist and murderer Michael Morales amid concerns that condemned inmates might suffer excruciating deaths.

Fogel found substantial evidence that the last six men executed at San Quentin might have been conscious and still breathing when lethal drugs were administered.

Lethal injection is the preferred execution method in 37 states. Last month, a federal judge declared unconstitutional Missouri's injection method, which is similar to California's.

The U.S. Supreme Court has upheld executions -- by lethal injection, hanging, firing squad, electric chair and gas chamber -- despite the pain they might cause, but has left unsettled the issue of whether the pain is unconstitutionally excessive.

Diaz, 55, was put to death for murdering the manager of a Miami topless bar during a holdup in 1979.

The medical examiner's findings contradicted the explanation given by prison officials, who said Diaz needed the second dose because liver disease caused him to metabolize the lethal drugs more slowly. Hamilton said that although there were records that Diaz had hepatitis, his liver appeared normal.

Executions in Florida normally take no more than about 15 minutes, with the inmate rendered unconscious and motionless within three to five minutes. But Diaz appeared to be moving 24 minutes after the first injection, grimacing, blinking, licking his lips, blowing and appearing to mouth words.

As a result of the chemicals going into Diaz's arms around the elbow, he had an 12-inch chemical burn on his right arm and an 11-inch chemical burn on his left arm, Hamilton said.

Florida Corrections Secretary James McDonough said the execution team did not see any swelling of the arms, which would have been an indication that the chemicals were going into tissues and not veins.

Diaz's attorney, Suzanne Myers Keffler, reacted angrily to the findings.

''This is complete negligence on the part of the state,'' she said. ''When he was still moving after the first shot of chemicals, they should have known there was a problem and they shouldn't have continued. This shows a complete disregard for Mr. Diaz. This is disgusting.''

Earlier, in a court hearing in Ocala, she had won an assurance from the attorney general's office that she could have access to all findings and evidence from the autopsy. She withdrew a request for an independent autopsy.

David Elliot, spokesman for the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty, said experts his group had contacted suspected that liver disease was not the explanation for the problem.

''Florida has certainly deservedly earned a reputation for being a state that conducts botched executions, whether its electrocution or lethal injection,'' Elliot said. ''We just think the Florida death penalty system is broken from start to finish.''

Florida got rid of the electric chair after two inmates' heads caught fire during executions in the 1990s and another suffered a severe nosebleed in 2000. Lethal injection was portrayed as a more humane and more reliable process.

Twenty people have been executed by lethal injection in Florida since the state switched from the electric chair in 2000.


Associated Press writers David Kravets and Marcus Wohlsen contributed to this report from San Francisco.

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eM.:(
 
This is so crazy............ so the murderer got a few more minutes of life to live, it should be the familes of the victims outraged. The people being executed did someting terrible to be in that position in the first place. I for one do not understand the need to wipe the IV site with alchol before insertion because infection will not be a problem in a dead body.

I for one did a sudy and wrote a 30 page paper on "The Death Penalty" and Lethal Injection is one of the most "pain free" ways to die. Your body becomes totally relaxed and your heart and lungs just progressively slow down untill they stop. It's nearly the same as "snowing" a patient in the medical field. Now if you want to talk about a painful way to die. The most painful meathod of death used in the United States is "The Gas Chamber". The gas they use makes the muscles in the body convulse and contract so violently that if the executed wasn't strapped in the way he is his body would snap the bones of the skeleton in half in many places.
 
Capital punishment is so unnecessary. I already recognize that most people will disagree with me but I just beleive that life in prison is better than capital punishment for several reasons, including but not limited to errors in convicting the wrong person, processing capital punishment cases cost more than life in prision, and an advanced society should not unnecessarily need to solve its problems through violent acts.
 
I would think that the most humane way to chemicaly kill someone would be the way they put pets down with an over dose of barbiturates. I've held an animal while it is done and you hardly notice the transition. So why start with an anaesthetic and then without checking it has worked, administer another drug to stop them breathing followed by a third to stop their heart. Is this why they need a team so that no one person can be blamed for the death?
 
I look at this suspension of capital punishment as a first tentative step out of the Dark Ages and into the light of a modern, compassionate community. ..|
 
I am against the death penalty, and not because of this story.

We are only being shown, once again, the high level of incompetence exhibited by the government.
 
I am against murder.. and that's all capital punishment is, MURDER. No one has the right to take someone else's life.
 
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If the method is to be used, you mean to tell me there are not enough qualified doctors, and other medical personell to give a proper and clean injection.

If they can do so when they prep you for surgery and then continue onward why is it such a big issue in these cases?

I am assuming once one is sedated, the other injections needed to complete the said procedure could then be administered.

As for my position on the death penalty, i have mixed feelings and emotions and i think much of it may have to do with the nature of each individual case that is the subject matter of this issue.

It is just not a white or black issue - and that is not meant as a racial reference in any manner.

However, one does wonder sometimes - what is the point of all of it and or any of it?
 
Bah. Death penalty is so outdated... It's like the U.S. and some other countries didn't hear the news yet: Murder is murder, no matter if it's the state doing it or not. Get rid of that barbaric punishment!
 
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