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Member Section => Down Range Cafe => Topic started by: kmitch200 on April 30, 2014, 12:31:32 AM

Title: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: kmitch200 on April 30, 2014, 12:31:32 AM
Oklahoma inmate dies of heart attack after botched execution

The execution of a convicted murderer was halted Tuesday night when the delivery of a new lethal injection combination was botched, but the man died later of a heart attack, the head of the Oklahoma Department of Corrections said.

The execution of Clayton Lockett, 38, began at 6:23 p.m. when official administered the first of three drugs. A doctor declared Lockett to be unconscious at 6:33 p.m.
About three minutes later, however, Lockett began breathing heavily, writhing on the gurney and straining to lift his head from the pillow. The condemned man could be seen speaking, CBS affiliate KOTV in Tulsa reported.
<snip>
Autry, Lockett's attorney, questioned the amount of midazolam that was given to the condemned man, saying he thought that the 100 milligrams called for in the state's execution protocol was "an overdose quantity."
A four-time felon, Locket, was convicted of shooting 19-year-old Stephanie Neiman with a sawed-off shotgun and watching as two accomplices buried her alive in rural Kay County in 1999.

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/oklahoma-inmate-dies-of-heart-attack-after-botched-execution/

-------------------------------------
Not really sure if you can call this botched...he was supposed to die, he died. May not have been by the book but he is dead.
I can think of at least one worse way to die...like being blasted with a shotgun, then buried alive. 
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: Ichiban on April 30, 2014, 04:41:53 AM
How about this?  Simple, cheap, and effective.

(http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/f/f9/Nguyen.jpg)
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: billt on April 30, 2014, 07:26:13 AM
I just can't wrap myself around all of these problems and issues they seem to be having with all of these lethal injection executions. First they couldn't get the drugs to perform them because there was a "shortage". Then it seems they have constant issues with the whole Rube Goldberg contraption they use to administer this 3 or 4 drug cocktail working correctly. The thing has so many hoses attached to it, it looks like the back of the aquariums at Pet Smart.

While all this is going on you can take a sick and dying dog or a cat to any vets office in the country, and have it put down painlessly in 5 minutes, for usually under $100.00 bucks. They slip away in mere seconds without making a sound with one single shot. Talk about over complicating something with a lot of nonsense. Do any of these people in charge of these things possess a single ounce of common sense?
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: brushmore on April 30, 2014, 07:34:26 AM
Quote
While all this is going on you can take a sick and dying dog or a cat to any vets office in the country, and have it put down painlessly in 5 minutes, for usually under $100.00 bucks. They slip away in mere seconds without making a sound with one single shot. Talk about over complicating something with a lot of nonsense. Do any of these people in charge of these things possess a single ounce of common sense?

I was thinking the same exact thing.  Mankind has been killing each other for a very longtime I would think this is one thing that should be kind of easy by now.

I think this is probably intentional to try to sway the public opinion against capital punishment.
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: tombogan03884 on April 30, 2014, 08:50:48 AM
He's dead.
Sounds like it worked fine to me.
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: jaybet on April 30, 2014, 11:11:34 AM
We could solve all of this controversy by simply passing a law that a murderer is executed in the same fashion as he murdered his victims. Be it by gunshot, drunk driving, or rats gnawing at their testes, the killer gets what he gave.
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: MikeBjerum on April 30, 2014, 11:19:47 AM
Lethal Injection:

Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: tt11758 on April 30, 2014, 12:09:49 PM
He's dead.
Sounds like it worked fine to me.

My thoughts exactly!
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: TAB on April 30, 2014, 03:09:02 PM
yep, learn for next time... still worked.
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: Timothy on April 30, 2014, 04:30:52 PM
Dead is dead...  Score one more for the Sooners!
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: ellis4538 on April 30, 2014, 05:19:21 PM
Maybe it's not a good Christian attitude but, the killer didn't care if his victim suffered why should anyone care about him?

Is it just me.......


Richard

Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: Big Frank on April 30, 2014, 06:55:32 PM
They could make the punishment fit the crime . . . shoot him and bury him alive.
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: TAB on April 30, 2014, 07:04:06 PM
Maybe it's not a good Christian attitude but, the killer didn't care if his victim suffered why should anyone care about him?

Is it just me.......


Richard

Because he has the same constitutional rights you do. 


Yeah its a stretch ,but its all I got.   I say give them years to appeal and put a bullet in thuer head.
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: lhprop1 on May 01, 2014, 10:47:28 AM
This is how I imagine it went down

Bad Guy:  "Gurgle, gurgle, gurgle,  it's the big one.  I'm comin' Elizabeth!"
Chuck:  "Quick, grab the defibrillator."
Larry:  "Naw, I think this one will work itself out."

Also, wouldn't a 170 gr. hot lead injection be just as quick and lethal as these drugs?
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: Big Frank on May 01, 2014, 03:31:32 PM
I think we should have the death penalty in every state and use the guillotine. If they know they'll lose their heads instead of spending life in prison maybe the bad guys will think twice. Just maybe.
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: PegLeg45 on May 01, 2014, 04:02:35 PM
I was thinking the same exact thing.  Mankind has been killing each other for a very longtime I would think this is one thing that should be kind of easy by now.

I think this is probably intentional to try to sway the public opinion against capital punishment.

I have had that thought before....... and these days, I could see it...seems no tactic is too absurd any more.


I think we should have the death penalty in every state and use the guillotine. If they know they'll lose their heads instead of spending life in prison maybe the bad guys will think twice. Just maybe.


If not the guillotine, try a Halifax Gibbet.....the results are quite smashing.   ;)

 
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: billt on May 01, 2014, 05:08:08 PM
If not the guillotine, try a Halifax Gibbet.....the results are quite smashing.   ;)

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

"the head block wherein the axe is fastened doth fall down with such violence, that if the neck of the transgressor were so big as that of a bull, it should be cut in sunder at a stroke, and roll from the body by an huge distance."
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: ellis4538 on May 01, 2014, 05:48:46 PM
Saw a movie one time filmed in India or someplace like that where the convicted individual got to lead an elephant to the execution site, put his head on a block, and then have the elephant squish it like a bug!!!!!  Works for me.

JMHO


Richard
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: tombogan03884 on May 02, 2014, 10:41:32 AM
Saw a movie one time filmed in India or someplace like that where the convicted individual got to lead an elephant to the execution site, put his head on a block, and then have the elephant squish it like a bug!!!!!  Works for me.

JMHO


Richard

Darn, I think even the over priced injections would be cheaper than keeping an elephant .
Just stick to a bullet in the neck or a rope, it's simpler, cheaper, and a LOT less clean up.  ;D
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: Magoo541 on May 02, 2014, 10:54:32 AM
I have had that thought before....... and these days, I could see it...seems no tactic is too absurd any more.
We just want to kill them gently?  ::)
If not the guillotine, try a Halifax Gibbet.....the results are quite smashing.   ;)
Had to look that one up-WOW!  That's some rough stuff there!
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: PegLeg45 on May 02, 2014, 10:58:04 AM
We just want to kill them gently?  ::)Had to look that one up-WOW!  That's some rough stuff there!

Yes indeed....killing them softly....... ;D  ;D  ;D
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: tombogan03884 on May 02, 2014, 03:40:22 PM
Didn't they try that with Noriega ?
As I recall it was Van Halen at about 1000 decibels.  ;D
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: Solus on May 02, 2014, 07:47:43 PM
I've had some thoughts about capital punishment and how we  handle it..so might as well put them out here for review.

The only problem I have with capital punishment is that it cannot be undone...and with the findings lately of a high number of wrongful convictions, those concerns are stronger.  Nothing to do with being considerate of the guilty....just concern of offing the innocent.  And while I have difficulty imagining this happening, I'm not so naive to think it does not....that those in charge will frame someone for a capital offense and ram rod the guilty verdict through.

Another issue is how we deal with the execution.  I tend to believe in being personally responsible.  As a juror, before I could recommend the death penalty...if jurors do that...I would need to be so convinced the criminal should die that I could enter their cell and slit their throat while they were restrained.

It tends to bother me that a jury can say we just listened to the evidence and thought it proved them guilty...and the judge can say  the jury found them guilty, I just sentenced them according to the law, and the executioner can say those guys upstairs send them down here and I just pull the level.

I don't imagine this solution would every be found workable, but I would like to see something along the lines of if a jury recommends the death sentence, then one of them, chosen by lot, does the deed...hands on face to face, not pushing a button or pulling a trigger.

Those involved are willing to take personal responsibility for the killing or they should not vote to have it happen.

Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: fatbaldguy on May 03, 2014, 05:59:36 AM
Those involved are willing to take personal responsibility for the killing or they should not vote to have it happen.

Rope and gallows.  Both re-usable.  I'll pull the lever to drop the trap, and stare them in the eye as I do it!
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: TAB on May 03, 2014, 08:44:07 AM
No punishment is reversible,  so one that spent 10 years in jail will be scared for life.
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: Rastus on May 03, 2014, 09:34:32 AM
I go with having to have 2 witnesses for capital punishment Solus, beyond that I don't care so much.  The guy they executed this past week fought the guards tooth and toenail and had to be tasered.  It is reported he never showed remorse while incarcerated; instead he was defiant and fought to the very end.  I don't think it's right to get a high from vengeance or some other feeling of euphoria from an execution and I don't think it is right to make the criminal suffer needlessly. 

That said, if an execution doesn't go quite as well as we'd like then that is something to learn from for the next one.  This was a bad guy convicted with the requisite 2 witnesses.  This was a mad dog that had to be put down.

If the execution didn't go so well for him let the Southern Poverty Law Center or ACLU buy the next one.  Otherwise, "Move along people, nothing to see here."


About the victim, from Tulsa Channel 6
http://www.newson6.com/story/25392928/remembering-stephanie-neiman-oklahoma-murder-victims-tragic-story (http://www.newson6.com/story/25392928/remembering-stephanie-neiman-oklahoma-murder-victims-tragic-story) :

<snip>
Lockett murdered Neiman on June 3, 1999. Stephanie, 19, had just graduated from Perry High School, where she played the saxophone in the band, two weeks earlier.

Neiman and a female friend had stopped to visit another friend named Bobby Bornt, 23, who was at his Perry home with his 9-month-old son.

Clayton Lockett, 23, his cousin, Alfonzo Lockett, 17 and Shawn Mathis, 26, were already there. While Bornt's baby son slept in another room, they had tied up and were beating Bornt because he owed money to Clayton Lockett.

When Neiman's friend went inside the home they hit her with a shotgun then forced her to call Neiman into the home.

They repeatedly raped Neiman's 18-year-old friend, tied up the two women then used Neiman's truck to take the adults and the baby to a rural part of Kay County. When Neiman refused to give Clayton Lockett the keys to her truck or provide him the alarm code, he ordered Stephanie to kneel while Mathis dug a grave.         

Lockett shot her and the gun jammed. While Neiman lay there screaming, the attackers cleared the jam and Lockett shot her a second time. Even though she was still breathing, he ordered the other two attackers to drag her into the grave and bury her.

They threatened to kill Bobby Bornt and Neiman's friend if they went to police, but they did anyway. Perry police arrested the three attackers just three days later.

Alfonzo Lockett and Shawn Mathis are each serving life terms for their parts in the crime.
<snip>
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: tombogan03884 on May 03, 2014, 09:37:52 AM
Solus overlooks one fact in his post.
The convictions that have been found to have been wrong generally dated to before DNA testing and were disproved by the new methods .
On the other hand DNA evidence is now common enough that it has been used to convict litter bugs.
That, coupled with the huge amount of CCTV usage greatly lessens the chance of getting the wrong guy.
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: Solus on May 03, 2014, 12:32:16 PM
Solus overlooks one fact in his post.
The convictions that have been found to have been wrong generally dated to before DNA testing and were disproved by the new methods .
On the other hand DNA evidence is now common enough that it has been used to convict litter bugs.
That, coupled with the huge amount of CCTV usage greatly lessens the chance of getting the wrong guy.

This is true...it is likely that mistaken convictions might be reduced...

And, yes, TAB,  I have always thought that if we presume the power to lock someone away for life..or a prolonged time, it is not a big step to capital  punishment.  Capital punishment just has no change of any mitigation...  and I'm not saying that is a reason to stop it..just that it is a concern. 

When I was in the 9th grade I had a friend who used to say..  "Remember you can be convicted on the testimony of two lying witnesses."  It is not all that difficult to find two people who will lie.

Another realization I have come to is that our, or any, legal system comes down to a group that has agreed upon certain unacceptable acts and will use deadly force to impose our rules on violators.  I am not saying this is bad...it is just what it is.  What makes any system good or bad is the content of the rules.
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: Big Frank on May 03, 2014, 02:12:42 PM
This is true...it is likely that mistaken convictions might be reduced...

And, yes, TAB,  I have always thought that if we presume the power to lock someone away for life..or a prolonged time, it is not a big step to capital  punishment.  Capital punishment just has no change of any mitigation...  and I'm not saying that is a reason to stop it..just that it is a concern. 

When I was in the 9th grade I had a friend who used to say..  "Remember you can be convicted on the testimony of two lying witnesses."  It is not all that difficult to find two people who will lie.

Another realization I have come to is that our, or any, legal system comes down to a group that has agreed upon certain unacceptable acts and will use deadly force to impose our rules on violators.  I am not saying this is bad...it is just what it is.  What makes any system good or bad is the content of the rules.

I've been in this situation myself. My neighbor, a convicted felon who knew the system, lied about me to the police. Then his drunken step-father who wasn't even home at the time of the alleged incident said he witnessed the whole thing. The next thing I knew I was charged with 2 felonies. I couldn't prove my innocence so I plead no contest to a misdemeanor in order to get the felony charges dropped. I was given jail time then probation among my other punishments.

I also had to forfeit my Dan Wesson revolver that I supposedly used during this fictitious incident. That's when I found out you shouldn't show all your neighbors your gun collection or tell them what you have. And I couldn't get a CCW for 8 years because of the misdemeanor I plead to. So the police took the word of a child abuser who was also fired from a nursing home for abusing elderly patients over my word. Even though I had a squeaky clean record without so much as a parking violation. And the prosecutor doesn't care about right or wrong. He only wants more convictions to make himself look better.
Title: Re: Oklahoma botched execution?
Post by: Rastus on May 03, 2014, 07:14:34 PM
The Bible says it takes two witnesses to convict for this sort of thing and that lying is on their heads.  Now, that being said, dufus prosecutors and cops have no business not doing their job to help protect the wrongly accused.  It is a lot easier just to write it down and go on one's business then to really investigate and confirm liars stories. 

There are always going to be people involved and just because they are in the legal or police system it does not mean they are competent or that they really care for justice.