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View Full Version : Controversy May End Calif. Executions


msnicolea
02-22-2006, 06:17 PM
By DAVID KRAVETS, Associated Press Writer

SAN FRANCISCO - The state's postponement of an execution because no medical professional would take part amounts to a moratorium on capital punishment in California, home to the nation's largest death row, and could have implications for other states that use lethal injection.


Michael Morales, 46, was scheduled to die Tuesday by injection for torturing, raping and murdering a 17-year-old girl 25 years ago. But officials at San Quentin State Prison could not meet the demands of a federal judge who ordered licensed medical personnel to take part in the execution. Because of ethical considerations, there were no takers, and the execution was called off.

The reprieve meant California, with 650 condemned inmates, awoke Wednesday to what effectively was a moratorium on executions.

The case may eventually place the issue of lethal injection before the U.S. Supreme Court. Thirty-seven of the 38 states with capital punishment use a procedure similar to California's.

The high court has yet to weigh in on a question that inmates around the country have been raising in recent years: whether lethal injection is unconstitutionally cruel and unusual.

Last week's ruling in the Morales case by U.S. District Judge Jeremy Fogel shifted the debate subtly to whether licensed medical personnel should play an active role in an execution, something the American Medical Association and other medical groups have long opposed on ethical grounds.

"This is an issue that is ultimately going to have to be resolved by the Supreme Court," said Richard Dieter, executive director of the Death Penalty Information Center. "Because you're ultimately not likely ever going to have doctors in the execution chamber."

In California and other states with lethal injection, licensed medical experts generally do not take part in the execution itself, other than to pronounce a prisoner dead. In California, the intravenous lines are inserted by prison staff trained specifically for that purpose. The drugs are then added by a machine.

Natasha Minsker, a capital punishment expert with the American Civil Liberties Union, which opposes the death penalty, said she believes a prison may be breaking the law by using executioners who do not have proper medical credentials.

"There are limits on practicing medicine with controlled substances," she said. "It appears prison personnel in this are breaking the law because they are not licensed to do this."

Fogel will hold hearings in May on whether California's method of execution is cruel and unusual punishment. Until that is resolved, neither Morales nor any other California death row inmate is likely to be executed unless licensed medical personnel step forward.

The next inmate in line, Mitchell Sims, 45, is on death row for killing a pizza delivery man in 1985. His final appeal rests with the U.S. Supreme Court. No execution date has been set.

California, like most states, carries out lethal injection with three separate drugs — one to relax them, another to paralyze them and a third to stop their hearts.

Morales' attorneys claimed that once a sedative is given the prisoner, he may feel excruciating pain if still conscious when the paralyzing agent is administered. The federal judge, in response, ordered a licensed anesthesiologist to be on hand to ensure that wouldn't happen.

In the alternative, the judge said the prison could use just a sedative to execute the inmate, but it would have to be injected by a licensed practitioner, a group that includes doctors, nurses, dentists, paramedics and other medical technicians.

But two anesthesiologists refused to take part in Morale's execution, citing ethical concerns. And the prison could not find a medical professional willing to administer the one-drug injection.

"I have no doubt that every inmate nearing execution will glom onto this," said Kent Scheidegger, director of the Criminal Justice Legal Foundation, a pro-capital punishment group. "But I can't imagine the Supreme Court requiring a state to do something that can't be done."

ysolde
02-22-2006, 06:26 PM
Now that would be interesting -- if the DP ended in this country, not due to legal arguments (which will never end -- it is, after all not unusual), but because no one will perform it.

Weddings by
02-22-2006, 06:26 PM
I hate to post in this thread because I can't see it remaining calm and friendly, but I wanted to point out that the article doesn't mention ending executions. It is talking about a particular method.

:) That's all.

ysolde
02-22-2006, 06:29 PM
I hate to post in this thread because I can't see it remaining calm and friendly, but I wanted to point out that the article doesn't mention ending executions. It is talking about a particular method.

:) That's all.

True, but most states either use lethal injection or give it as an option to the condemned.

msnicolea
02-22-2006, 06:31 PM
I think California only uses lethal injection unless the inmate requests gas. So, in effect, this would eliminate the DP in California and, potentially, elsewhere.

Edited to add link re: means of execution by state: http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/article.php?scid=8&did=245#authorized

ysolde
02-22-2006, 06:34 PM
FYI:

The use of lethal injection has become standard. From 2001, only 3 out of 273 executions have been by a different method. The last execution by any other method was the use of the electric chair on May 28, 2004 when James Neil Tucker was executed in South Carolina. The last use of the gas chamber occurred on February 24, 1999 when Karl LaGrand was executed in Arizona, the last use of hanging was on 25 January 1996 when Delaware hanged Billy Bailey and the firing squad was also last used in 1996 when John Albert Taylor was shot in Utah on January 26.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_punishment_in_the_United_States

lawyerlee
02-24-2006, 04:30 AM
I've found this situation to be an extremely interesting development in the death penalty discussion. And what exactly does a state do if it cannot find a medical profession who is willing to perform the execution? This is not the way I'd ever imagined capital punishment ending, but I have to respect the decision of these doctors to extricate themselves from this process.

LittleFredPunkinHead
02-24-2006, 07:57 AM
I may be overly pessimistic... But I can totally see some random doctor popping up to volunteer. There's one of those guys in every bunch.

msnicolea
02-24-2006, 08:02 AM
I may be overly pessimistic... But I can totally see some random doctor popping up to volunteer. There's one of those guys in every bunch.


This will be interesting to monitor. I suspect that you are right, and that doctors will come forward. I'll also bet that these same doctors oppose doctor-assisted suicide on the grounds that they are supposed to be "healers" not "killers." Will the hypocrisy never end? :(

Asha
02-24-2006, 08:38 AM
if a dr. came forward, i imagine s/he could risk losing his/her medical license since it looks like it is against medical ethics. so, if they lost their medical licenses there still would be no one to perform the procedure.