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Title: Nitrogen gas executions approved by Oklahoma House
Source: Associated Press
URL Source: http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/storie ... AULT&CTIME=2015-03-03-16-14-45
Published: Mar 3, 2015
Author: Sean Murphy
Post Date: 2015-03-03 19:26:53 by cranky
Keywords: None
Views: 1028
Comments: 11

Oklahoma would become the first state to allow the execution of death row inmates using nitrogen gas under a bill overwhelmingly approved on Tuesday by the House of Representatives.

The House voted 85-10 for the bill by Oklahoma City Republican Rep. Mike Christian, who began studying alternative methods after a botched lethal injection in the spring that led the U.S. Supreme Court to consider the constitutionality of Oklahoma's current three-drug method.

Christian said numerous studies have been conducted on nitrogen hypoxia, which is similar to what pilots at high altitudes can encounter when oxygen supplies diminish. He described the method as humane, painless and easy to administer.

"I believe it's revolutionary," said Christian, a former Oklahoma Highway Patrol trooper and a staunch advocate of the death penalty. "I think it's the best thing we've come up with since the start of executions by the government."

Christian said prison officials in several other states expressed an interest in his proposal, but he declined to name them.

Rep. Kevin Matthews, who voted against the bill, said he wished the Legislature would spend more time trying to solve such problems as low wages, a lack of affordable health care and poor education outcomes.

"I just don't have the stomach for looking for new ways to kill people," said Matthews, a Tulsa Democrat.

The bill now heads to the Senate, where a similar measure passed a committee earlier this year with bipartisan support.

Under the bill, lethal injection would remain the state's first method of execution, but nitrogen gas would become the second alternative method and be used if injection were declared unconstitutional or if the drugs became unavailable. Under current law, electrocution is the second option, followed by firing squad. The bill would make electrocution the third method, followed by firing squad.

Christian said there would be no need to construct a gas chamber and that the nitrogen could be administered inside a tent or through a secure mask worn by the inmate. He said the problem death penalty states are having securing lethal drugs would be alleviated with the purchase of a nitrogen generator, which would give prison officials an everlasting supply of the ingredient necessary to carry out executions.

Unlike traditional gas chambers that used drugs such as cyanide that caused a buildup of carbon dioxide in the blood, Christian said breathing nitrogen would be painless because it leads to hypoxia, a gradual lack of oxygen in the blood.

Although some members questioned Christian about how the method would work, there was no debate against the bill.

No state has ever used nitrogen gas or inert gas hypoxia to execute an inmate, and there has not been any reported use of the method in other countries, according to Amnesty International's most recent report on the death penalty internationally. The 2013 report did note that execution data from China, the nation that executes the most people, is not readily available. Amnesty International opposes the death penalty in all cases.

"Without more research, I think this would be a very risky experiment," said Richard Dieter, executive director of the Washington, D.C.-based Death Penalty Information Center. "This is a human life that's being tested, and the standard should be much higher than ... one or two people saying, `I think this will work.'"

Executions in Oklahoma are on hold while the U.S. Supreme Court reviews the state's lethal injection method. The legal challenge, which was sparked by a botched execution last spring, centers on whether the sedative midazolam properly renders an inmate unconscious before the second and third drugs are administered. Oklahoma officials concede midazolam is not the preferred drug for executions, but death penalty states have been forced to explore alternatives as manufacturers of more effective drugs refuse to sell them for use in lethal injections.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 7.

#7. To: cranky (#0)

There are practical issues with the death penalty that don't get much mention.

#1) It's often cheaper for the state to never pursue the death penalty, but just go with life in prison. Those charged with the death penalty run up both serious legal bills for the state, and also are isolated from the general prison population which is also more expensive.

#2) While it's a simple armchair quarterback thing to say a horrible criminal should die, if it's going to happen, then a few people have to actually do the deed and carry out the execution. This can be traumatic for the often good and moral people that have to take the person's life, even if they don't expect it to. (One such person did an essay on that issue, which is a compelling read).

And of course #3) People have been exonerated from the death penalty, both before and after they were put to death.

Pinguinite  posted on  2015-03-04   10:37:58 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 7.

#8. To: All (#7)

Here's one article:

Not that I necessarily agree with it, but it's something that strongly warrants consideration.

ejusa.org/learn/secondary%2Btrauma

Those who witness or participate in executions share an unlikely bond: they are at the absolute center of the death penalty. The mythology is that executions heal wounds, but studies and individual experiences suggest that executions inflict more wounds than they heal, all while creating a new set of grieving victims.

Every execution requires a team of workers who watch the inmate in his or her final days, who strap the inmate to the gurney, who insert and reinsert the needles, and who remove the inmate's body from the gurney after the execution. They are the ones who deal with botched executions, who struggle with inmates fighting to stay alive, and who pull inmates away from their families when it is time for their final goodbye. Corrections officials, haunted by the experience of putting people to death, have committed suicide, turned to alcohol, or suffered mental and physical health problems.

In their words: Stories of a broken system

"Sometimes I wonder whether people really understand what goes on down here and the effect it has on us. Killing people, even people you know are heinous criminals, is a gruesome business, and it takes a harsh toll… You don’t ever get used to it."1 — Jim Willet, former warden, Huntsville, Texas, who oversaw 89 executions

"There was this big old-line officer, a well liked fellow, and he oversaw the executions. Afterwards he’d get very, very drunk and not come in for several days. It’s terrible, terrible – I get very emotional thinking about it. I certainly don’t like terrorism or murder but there has to be a better way than putting men to death."2 — Steve Dalsheim, former Superintendent, Sing Sing Prison, New York

"Those of us who have participated in executions often suffer something very much like posttraumatic stress...For me, those nights that weren’t sleepless were plagued by nightmares. My mother and wife worried about me. I tried not to share with them that I was struggling, but they knew I was."3 — Dr. Allen Ault, former warden and director of the Georgia Department of Corrections, who oversaw five executions.

A new set of victims is created among the family members of the condemned who watch. I wondered most about the mothers who saw their sons being put to death. Some would just wail out crying. It’s a sound you’ll never hear any place else, an awful sound that sticks with you.

— Jim Willet, former warden, Huntsville, Texas, who oversaw 89 executions

Executions traumatize clergy, jurors, journalists, and others

Carol Pickett, a minister who witnessed almost 100 executions in Texas, attributed his severe health problems to the stress involved with witnessing these executions. They haunted him years after he stopped ministering to death row inmates. Studies have found symptoms of anxiety, nausea, and nightmares among journalists who had recently witnessed an execution.4 Jurors suffer as well. Two studies found that jurors who serve on death penalty trials are likely to endure prolonged distress as a result of determining whether someone should live or die.5

New victims – the families of the executed

Every execution leaves a family behind – a son or daughter who doesn’t understand why their parent was executed, a grieving mother who will never hear the voice of her child again. Theirs are among the hidden stories of capital punishment:

Case in point: Delores Williams was just 12 or 13 years old when she was raped and became pregnant. She never told her son, Wesley Eugene Baker, that he was the product of rape. By the time he was executed for murder 47 years later, she had already lived through an abusive relationship and lost her other son and a brother to murder. Just before Baker’s execution, she told the Baltimore Sun, "I just don't want to lose Eugene… I understand the [victim's] family, the suffering they have been through," she said. "I just don't want to lose my son. I think I've had my share."

Case in point:Bill Babbitt made the hardest decision in his life when he told police he suspected his brother, Manny Babbitt, of being responsible for an attack on an elderly woman who later died of a heart attack. Manny had been suffering from post-traumatic stress symptoms ever since returning from two tours in Vietnam. The police promised Bill that Manny would receive the psychological help he needed and that he would not receive the death penalty. But in the end Manny was convicted of murder and sentenced to death. Said Bill, “Right away, Manny forgave me. My family, my brothers and sisters, they all forgave me. But I never really reconciled with my mother…I watched them kill my brother at San Quentin… I pray Manny’s children will forgive me.”6

The death penalty’s impact reaches far beyond the victim and the executed. All who cross its path shoulder the burden of participating in the death of a human being, while the system creates a whole new set of victims who are left to grieve in silence.

Pinguinite  posted on  2015-03-04 10:48:13 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: Pinguinite (#7)

#1) It's often cheaper for the state to never pursue the death penalty, but just go with life in prison.

Not in Texas. Or any state that is actually serious about it.

Tooconservative  posted on  2015-03-04 12:30:50 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 7.

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