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NVRSTUKXJ
09-25-2007, 01:51 PM
why are these 2 crap bags still allowed to breath???????

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20972425/

WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court on Tuesday agreed to consider the constitutionality of lethal injections in a case that could affect the way inmates are executed around the country.

The high court will hear a challenge from two inmates on death row in Kentucky — Ralph Baze and Thomas Clyde Bowling Jr. — who sued Kentucky in 2004, claiming lethal injection amounts to cruel and unusual punishment.

Baze has been scheduled for execution Tuesday night, but the Kentucky Supreme Court halted the proceedings earlier this month.

The U.S. Supreme Court has previously made it easier for death row inmates to contest the lethal injections used across the country for executions.

But until Tuesday, the justices had never agreed to consider the fundamental question of whether the mix of drugs used in Kentucky and elsewhere violates the Eighth Amendment’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment.

All 37 states that perform lethal injections use the same three-drug ****tail, but at least 10 states suspended its use after opponents alleged it was ineffective and cruel. The three drugs consist of an anesthetic, a muscle paralyzer, and a substance to stop the heart. Death penalty foes have argued that if the condemned prisoner is not given enough anesthetic, he can suffer excruciating pain without being able to cry out.

Lower court judge's ruling
U.S. District Judge Aleta Trauger ruled last week that Tennessee’s method of lethal injection is unconstitutional and ordered the state not to execute a death row inmate. The state is still deciding whether to appeal the judge’s ruling, but agreed to stop a pending execution.

A ruling from California in the case of convicted killer Michael Morales resulted in the statewide suspension of executions.

States began using lethal injection in 1978 as an alternative to the historic methods of execution: electrocution, gassing, hanging and shooting. Since the death penalty resumed in 1977, 790 of 958 executions have been by injection.

Baze and Bowling sued in 2004 and a trial was held the following spring. A state judge upheld the use of lethal injection and the Kentucky Supreme Court affirmed that decision. The appeal taken up Tuesday by the U.S. Supreme Court stems from that decision.

“This is probably one of the most important cases in decades as it relates to the death penalty,” said David Barron, the public defender who represents Baze and Bowling.

Baze, 52, has been on death row for 14 years. He was sentenced for the 1992 shooting deaths of Powell County Sheriff Steve Bennett and Deputy Arthur Briscoe.

Bennett and Briscoe were serving warrants on Baze when he shot them. Baze has said the shootings were the result of a family dispute that got out of hand and resulted in the sheriff being called.

Bowling was sentenced to death for killing Edward and Tina Earley and shooting their 2-year-old son outside the couple’s Lexington, Ky., dry-cleaning business in 1990. Bowling was scheduled to die in November 2004, but a judge stopped it after Bowling and Baze sued over the constitutionality of lethal injection.

My Green Jeep
09-25-2007, 02:10 PM
why are these 2 crap bags still allowed to breath???????

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20972425/

WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court on Tuesday agreed to consider the constitutionality of lethal injections in a case that could affect the way inmates are executed around the country.

The high court will hear a challenge from two inmates on death row in Kentucky — Ralph Baze and Thomas Clyde Bowling Jr. — who sued Kentucky in 2004, claiming lethal injection amounts to cruel and unusual punishment.

Baze has been scheduled for execution Tuesday night, but the Kentucky Supreme Court halted the proceedings earlier this month.

The U.S. Supreme Court has previously made it easier for death row inmates to contest the lethal injections used across the country for executions.

But until Tuesday, the justices had never agreed to consider the fundamental question of whether the mix of drugs used in Kentucky and elsewhere violates the Eighth Amendment’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment.

All 37 states that perform lethal injections use the same three-drug ****tail, but at least 10 states suspended its use after opponents alleged it was ineffective and cruel. The three drugs consist of an anesthetic, a muscle paralyzer, and a substance to stop the heart. Death penalty foes have argued that if the condemned prisoner is not given enough anesthetic, he can suffer excruciating pain without being able to cry out.

Lower court judge's ruling
U.S. District Judge Aleta Trauger ruled last week that Tennessee’s method of lethal injection is unconstitutional and ordered the state not to execute a death row inmate. The state is still deciding whether to appeal the judge’s ruling, but agreed to stop a pending execution.

A ruling from California in the case of convicted killer Michael Morales resulted in the statewide suspension of executions.

States began using lethal injection in 1978 as an alternative to the historic methods of execution: electrocution, gassing, hanging and shooting. Since the death penalty resumed in 1977, 790 of 958 executions have been by injection.

Baze and Bowling sued in 2004 and a trial was held the following spring. A state judge upheld the use of lethal injection and the Kentucky Supreme Court affirmed that decision. The appeal taken up Tuesday by the U.S. Supreme Court stems from that decision.

“This is probably one of the most important cases in decades as it relates to the death penalty,” said David Barron, the public defender who represents Baze and Bowling.

Baze, 52, has been on death row for 14 years. He was sentenced for the 1992 shooting deaths of Powell County Sheriff Steve Bennett and Deputy Arthur Briscoe.

Bennett and Briscoe were serving warrants on Baze when he shot them. Baze has said the shootings were the result of a family dispute that got out of hand and resulted in the sheriff being called.

Bowling was sentenced to death for killing Edward and Tina Earley and shooting their 2-year-old son outside the couple’s Lexington, Ky., dry-cleaning business in 1990. Bowling was scheduled to die in November 2004, but a judge stopped it after Bowling and Baze sued over the constitutionality of lethal injection.

Well, if that is an issue about not giving them enough.. give them
too much... then they wont feel anything and wont be able to
"cry" out... did the people they killed get to cry? I doubt it...

Tax payers are supporting those scum bags and that has got to
stop.. they both killed someone... its time to go with what the judge
and jury said... lethal injection

Just my 2 cents...

Fire Ball
09-25-2007, 03:33 PM
Just wrap about 15 feet of det cord around the base of the neck and let her rip.

Short and sweet. Not cruel at all. :)

06GrnRubi
09-25-2007, 04:09 PM
why are these 2 crap bags still allowed to breath???????


Liberals

SHNIPE
09-25-2007, 04:31 PM
if we lived in iraq they would have been killed (probably with stones or hung publicly from a lamp post) the same day as the murders they commited. Ironic that we are trying to bring FAIRNESS AND SAFER LIVING to their country when we let convicted murderers use our JUSTICE system to cheat their own deaths

jeeper05
09-25-2007, 04:32 PM
stripem necked coatem in honey and cows blood dropem in the middle of the amazon even if they cry nobody will know

Teal-J
09-25-2007, 05:13 PM
If they are so worried about lethal injection, just stand them up in front of a firing squad.

Allen
09-25-2007, 06:47 PM
Would they prefer a lethal dose of cocaine and heroin? ;)

FrenchChili
09-25-2007, 08:03 PM
Let's make them jump off a cliff
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=es-fliEYjnY

Or open up an artery and let them bleed to death.

amber.hodge
09-25-2007, 08:08 PM
Oh hell no. You cannot be serious. You know, get me a musket gun and some ammo and then I'll go ahead and shoot them for you, retrieve the round and reuse it on the next guy. It will be free, painless - well, as painless as they deserve, and it will also be fast.

Moriarty
09-25-2007, 08:24 PM
I don't know why this whole lethal injection, electric chair, gas chamber debate is still going on. There has always been one and only perfect way to put someone to death.

Its quick and painless for the liberal crybabies, its cheap for the taxpaying crowd who gets mad about what it costs to kill a man/woman, and its gruesome enough to put some fear in the criminal element who may face it if they keep treating society as there toilet, and its also gruesome enough to satisfy the family members who don't think going to sleep peacefully is good enough for the guy who just stabbed,raped, and shot their daughter.

Who's gonna pay the guy to keep the blade sharp, you might ask?
This is the best part, you have the guy 2nd in line do the sharpening for the guy 1st in line.

Firing Squad? Why dirty the bullet.

http://i90.photobucket.com/albums/k243/dean-moriarty/450151380_4a830cd8b8.jpg[/IMG]

TRobertsRN
09-25-2007, 09:49 PM
Just wrap about 15 feet of det cord around the base of the neck and let her rip.

Short and sweet. Not cruel at all. :)


Wow, 15 feet.

With 15 feet you can walk 4 prisioners back to camp with one Marine.

Like the idea.

Semper Fi