April 29, 2015
Mohenjo
Breaking News, Political
amazon, business, Business News, Clayton Lockett, cruel and unusual punishment, Death Penalty, death row inmates, execution by lethal injection, Hotels, huffingtonpost, human-rights, lethal injection, medicine, mental-health, Oklahoma, Oklahoma Death Penalty, research, Reuters, Science, Science News, Slideshow, Supreme Court, Supreme Court Capital Punishment, technology, Technology News, travel, U.S. Supreme Court, vacation, Washington
FROM
Huffpost Politics
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The U.S. Supreme Court was set on Wednesday to hear arguments in a case brought by three death row inmates challenging Oklahoma’s method of execution by lethal injection as a violation of the U.S. Constitution’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment.
The three-drug process used by Oklahoma prison officials has been under scrutiny since the April 2014 botched execution of convicted murderer Clayton Lockett. He could be seen twisting on the gurney after death chamber staff failed to place the intravenous line properly.
Richard Glossip, John Grant and Benjamin Cole, the inmates challenging the state’s procedures, argue the sedative used by Oklahoma, midazolam, cannot achieve the level of unconsciousness required for surgery, making it unsuitable for executions.
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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/04/29/supreme-court-capital-punishment_n_7169890.html
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February 27, 2014
Mohenjo
Crime
amazon, BONNE TERRE, business, Business News, Crime News, Death Penalty, Death Penalty Mo, Execution, Hotels, huffingtonpost, human-rights, lethal injection, medicine, mental-health, Michael Taylor, Michael Taylor Dead, Michael Taylor Executed, Michael Taylor Mo, Mo, research, Science, Science News, Slideshow, technology, Technology News, travel, vacation, Video
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A Missouri inmate was executed early Wednesday for abducting, raping and killing a Kansas City teenager as she waited for her school bus in 1989, marking the state’s fourth lethal injection in as many months.
Michael Taylor, 47, was pronounced dead at 12: 10 a.m. at the state prison in Bonne Terre. Federal courts and the governor had refused last-minute appeals from his attorneys, who argued that the execution drug purchased from a compounding pharmacy could have caused Taylor inhuman pain and suffering.
Taylor offered no final statement, though he mouthed silent words to his parents, two clergymen and two other relatives who witnessed his death. As the process began, he took two deep breaths before closing his eyes for the last time. There were no obvious signs of distress.
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