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View Full Version : (Sep 15, 2009): "Governor delays Ohio execution after vein troubles" (Associated Press)


CGP
09-15-2009, 10:26 PM
READ @ AP/GOOGLE (http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5h18cDX6PuFXpdEc3JIHpQRFMapvAD9AO36KO0)


Gov. Ted Strickland ordered a weeklong reprieve for a condemned inmate Tuesday after the Ohio execution team had problems finding usable veins for the lethal injection even after the inmate tried to help.

Executioners were unable for more than two hours to find veins that would accept fluid from an IV without collapsing for 53-year-old Romell Broom, who was sentenced to die for the rape and slaying of a 14-year-old Tryna Middleton in 1984. At one point, Broom covered his face with both hands and appeared to be crying.

The scene was reminiscent of problems that delayed executions in 2006 and 2007 and led to changes in Ohio's lethal injection process. No Ohio governor has issued a similar last-minute reprieve since the state resumed executions in 1999.

Richard Dieter, director of the nonprofit Death Penalty Information Center, said he knows of only one inmate who was subjected to more than one execution attempt. A first attempt to execute Willie Francis by electrocution in Louisiana did not work, and he was returned to death row for nearly a year while the U.S. Supreme Court considered whether a second electrocution would be unconstitutional.

He said he expects legal challenges will mean Broom will not face execution again in a week's time.

"I think this is going to be challenged, whether under our standards of decency subjecting someone to multiple executions is cruel and unusual ... whether this is in effect experimenting on human beings, whether or not they're sure what works in Ohio," he said.

The team began working on Broom, in a holding cell 17 steps from the execution chamber, at about 2 p.m., four hours after his execution was originally scheduled. That initial delay was due to a final federal appeals request.

After the team spent nearly an hour trying to find a workable vein, Broom tried to help them bring him a quicker death. He turned over on his left side, slid rubber tubing designed to clarify his veins up his left arm, then began moving the arm up and down while flexing and closing and opening his fingers. The execution team was able to access a vein, but it collapsed when technicians tried to insert saline fluid.

Broom then became visibly distressed, turning over on his back and covering his face with both hands. His torso heaved up and down and his feet shook, as he appeared to be crying. He wiped his eyes and was handed a roll of toilet paper, which he used to wipe his brow.

He sat up at the end of the bed and talked with his execution team.

The team had been asking Broom whether he wanted a break, but he chose to push ahead, as did the execution staff, prisons director Terry Collins said. Collins then insisted on a break and contacted the governor to let him know about the difficulties.

Broom, who did not have any witnesses present, requested that one of his attorneys, Adele Shank, come to the witness area. She asked to speak with Broom but was told that once the process started, it's protocol that attorneys can't have contact with their client.

"I want to know what Romell wants," Shank told a prison official, who told her that he was being cooperative.

"He's always cooperative," responded Shank. "I want to know what he wants me to do."

At about 3:20, the team tried to insert shunts through veins in Broom's legs as he sat upright on the table. He looked up several times during the process and appeared to grimace. A member of the execution team reached over and patted him on the back.

Roughly five minutes later, the team returned to Broom's arms to again try to access a vein and get the saline solution to work.

After speaking with the execution team, Collins said he determined that it was time he ask the governor for a reprieve, at about 4 p.m. The team told him they didn't believe his veins would accept the saline fluid, or hold if the execution reached the point when the lethal drugs would start being administered.

The state's execution rules have allowed team members to take as much time as they need to find the best vein for the IVs that carry the three lethal chemicals since the 2006 execution of Joseph Clark was delayed for more than an hour after the team failed to properly attach an IV.

The state also had difficulty finding the veins of inmate Christopher Newton, whose May 2007 execution was delayed nearly two hours.

In that case, the state said the delay was caused by team members taking their time as opposed to an unforeseen problem.

Ohio has executed 32 men since Wilford Berry in 1999, an execution slightly delayed also because of problems finding a vein.

Collins said the difficulty in the process "absolutely, positively" does not shake his faith in the state's lethal injection procedure.

The execution team's struggle prompted the American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio to ask state officials to immediately halt executions.

"With three botched executions in as many years, it's clear that the state must stop and review the system entirely before another person is put to death," ACLU Ohio counsel Carrie Davis said.

Collins said he thanked Broom after the reprieve was issued for the respectful way he dealt with the execution team and the demeanor he showed through the difficulties.

Another lawyer for Broom, Tim Sweeney, wrote Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice Thomas J. Moyer asking him to end the procedure.

"Any further attempts today to carry out the execution of Mr. Broom would be cruel and unusual punishment in violation of ... the U.S. Constitution," he wrote. "They would also violate Ohio's statutory requirement that a lethal injection execution is to be quick and painless."

Collins said the team would try to determine, before Broom's next scheduled execution date, how to resolve the problem with finding suitable veins.

Ikasu
09-16-2009, 01:10 AM
Death penalty should be outlawed.

JBPoliticsJunkie
09-16-2009, 01:11 AM
Death penalty should be outlawed.

I second that.

CGP
09-16-2009, 01:12 AM
Death penalty should be outlawed.

The image of the prisoner helping the "execution team" to find a vein is really off.

I wonder if hard-line pro-lifers are ok with the govt murdering certain criminals?

Yes, he should be locked up forever for his violent crime but use of the death penalty is extremely problematic on so many levels.

Lealy
09-16-2009, 01:24 AM
I remember this case I was 14 at the time. If not being able to find a vein is cruel then they need to start arresting nurses. How stupid. Sorry this is no where near where I am moderate. I would make it cruel. There are plenty of ways to execute murderers I can think of a couple of dozen off the top of my head. I have been around a murderer and nope no empathy. I am all about the victim, family and taxpayer who should not have to be burdened with giving murderers better health care, housing and education than the victims.

mavfin
09-16-2009, 01:27 AM
While not being able to find a vein was a bad thing, yes, as the father of three daughters near that age, I have little sympathy for a man who was convicted of raping and killing a 14-year-old girl. Don't forgot why the man was there in the first place.

Besides, if you can't find a vein, then find a rope, or get a firing squad, That will take care of the problem. Cruel and unusual? I bet either one of those ways is a lot quicker and cleaner death than he gave that teenage girl.

CGP
09-16-2009, 01:34 AM
Don't forgot why the man was there in the first place.

That's why prisons where invented.

Murder is murder.

Kbentleyis
09-16-2009, 01:53 AM
Hard to comment. I'm not close to a victim's family who has suffered a loss from a murderer. But, I also have compassion for human life.

Just can't have an quick and easy answer for this.

greenleaf
09-16-2009, 04:46 AM
I don't support the death penalty. There are some crimes so repulsive that revenge is tempting, but I don't see that as our role. Life in prison without the possibility of parole punishes the offender and protects society.

NSTYLE77
09-16-2009, 05:16 AM
While not being able to find a vein was a bad thing, yes, as the father of three daughters near that age, I have little sympathy for a man who was convicted of raping and killing a 14-year-old girl. Don't forgot why the man was there in the first place.

Besides, if you can't find a vein, then find a rope, or get a firing squad, That will take care of the problem. Cruel and unusual? I bet either one of those ways is a lot quicker and cleaner death than he gave that teenage girl.

I'm with you on this one. I have ZERO sympathy for anybody that kills a child. The only people I feel sympathy for are the victims family.

Spang
09-16-2009, 10:05 AM
Cruel and unusual?

"It's cruel and unusual. Well, we'll do it more, it won't be so unusual." - Nick DiPaolo.

foxyladi
09-16-2009, 11:36 AM
no easy answers here.

NativeSun
09-16-2009, 03:32 PM
I wonder if hard-line pro-lifers are ok with the govt murdering certain criminals?


I wonder why hard-line pro-abortionists are not also in favor of the dealth penalty. BTW, the Catholic Church opposes both abortion and capitol punishment.