Posted on 09/16/2006 9:24:38 AM PDT by mcg2000
Lawyers for another condemned inmate say Stanley Tookie Williams may have felt horrible pain.
Prison officials allowed the execution of convicted murderer Stanley Tookie Williams to proceed, even though a nurse had failed to hook up a backup intravenous line minutes before authorities delivered the lethal injection drugs, according to court filings made public Tuesday.
Defense attorneys for a man on death row at San Quentin cited the problem as part of a legal challenge to California's lethal injection procedure. Later this month, U.S. District Judge Jeremy Fogel in San Jose will hear the challenge, which asserts that condemned prisoners may not be properly anesthetized and therefore experience excruciating pain during executions.
Attorneys for Michael Morales also assert in the newly unveiled court papers that California's execution protocol "is performed by prison personnel with criminal records of misconduct and who lack skill, competence, professionalism, patience, stability, training, qualifications, mental health and the necessary character to perform executions and the tasks associated with executions."
The team leader during the execution of Williams, a co-founder of the Crips gang who was convicted in the 1979 killings of four people, was suspended for misconduct, the papers contend. No details were provided. Many paragraphs of the legal pleadings were blacked out, under an order issued by Judge Fogel earlier this year that nothing be made public that would tend to identify a member of the execution team.
The over-arching contention of Morales' lawyers is that California's lethal injection protocol, which was modified in March, violates the 8th Amendment's prohibition on the "infliction of unnecessary pain in the execution of the death sentence."
California's protocol "is implemented under unacceptable conditions that unnecessarily increase the risk of unconstitutional pain, including obstructed views" that make it very difficult for prison personnel to see if an inmate is sufficiently anesthetized before the lethal drugs are administered, according to the papers submitted by attorneys David Senior, John Grele and Richard Steinken.
In addition, they say the procedure is flawed by inadequate lighting, remote administration of the drugs, unqualified management and "the absence of meaningful participation by properly licensed medical personnel."
Deputy Atty. Gen. Dane Gillette countered in legal papers that "conducting a lethal injection execution" under California's protocol "does not result in cruel and unusual punishment or deprive [Morales] of any right under the 8th or 14th amendments" to the U.S. Constitution.
Morales, 46, was scheduled to die in February for the 1981 slaying in Lodi, Calif., of teenager Terri Winchell. But state officials called off the execution after they were unable to meet conditions set by Fogel. California is one of several states where lawyers for condemned inmates have alleged that lethal injection, considered a more humane procedure than previous methods, often masks a painful death.
The California protocol calls for the inmate to be walked into the execution chamber and strapped onto a gurney. A nurse or medical technician inserts a catheter into the prisoner's vein, then leaves and the execution chamber is closed. A member of the execution team in an adjoining room inserts, in succession, three syringes containing the lethal drug cocktail into an intravenous line that flows into the prisoner.
How that procedure works in practice will be the subject of the court hearing starting Sept. 26. In preparation for the hearing, lawyers for Morales and California correctional authorities submitted a 22-page joint statement of "undisputed facts" and a five-page statement of "disputed facts."
The statements were drawn up by the lawyers after extensive pretrial discovery, including depositions of numerous individuals who have participated in executions at San Quentin.
Among the disputed defense contentions was that conducting an execution is "a surrealistic experience . Warden Steven Ornoski was practically beside himself during the Stanley Williams execution."
Morales' lawyers painted a picture of earlier executions at San Quentin as chaotic and largely unmonitored by trained personnel. Wardens during the last three California executions refrained from looking at any part of the condemned inmate other than his feet, defense attorneys said.
During Williams' execution in December, a nurse struggled to start the backup line in the prisoner's left arm, then in frustration left the chamber without setting it properly.
As she exited, a member of the execution team said: "It wasn't flowing, the drip wasn't flowing." Before the door closed behind the nurse, a team member repeated, "The left wasn't running," according to the defense attorneys' filing.
Ornoski, standing in the center of the anteroom, said "Proceed" and the execution of the 51-year-old went forward, the defense said.
Corrections officials did not dispute other points raised by the defense, including:
There is no doctor or registered nurse on the execution team at San Quentin and there is no requirement that a registered nurse be on the team.
Execution team members are not required to undergo psychological testing.
During the last eight California executions, team members did not practice mixing sodium thiopental, the fast-acting barbiturate that is supposed to anesthetize the inmate before the second two drugs pancuronium bromide, which paralyzes the inmate, and potassium chloride, which causes cardiac arrest are administered.
The team member who handled the syringes during the last two executions was not trained how to make a visual inspection of whether the lines properly delivered the drugs.
During Williams' execution, team members inside and outside the death chamber didn't determine or couldn't tell that the line was not set properly.
After Morales' execution was postponed, California in March revised its execution protocol. The state released a redacted copy of the protocol and said at the time that because of security reasons the unredacted document would not be released to the public.
Under the old protocol, the execution team first administered 5 grams of sodium thiopental. Under the new protocol, the execution team will initially administer 1.5 grams of sodium thiopental. Then, the state will administer 5 more grams of thiopental through an intravenous drip set at a rate that will take 20 to 30 minutes to run out past the point the prisoner is expected to be dead. In the meantime, the two lethal drugs will be administered. According to the statement of undisputed facts, "no state other than California" uses an initial dose of sodium thiopental that is less than 2 grams.
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- henry.weinstein@latimes.com
It is fast and reliable, if a bit messy. It works the same on everyone.
How much pain did he cause?
In other words I won't lose any sleep over Tookie regardless.
Did he do the Tookie Shuffle?
Shame if he did and I missed it.
ROFL. I'm sure he'll testify via video conference from somewhere in Hell.
Poor baby.
Pain? so what. He has no right and society has no obligation to insulate from pain.
Did I miss something in Civilization 101?
I thought the point of prison and the death penalty was to deter crime through being scared sh*tless vs being civil.
This looks like it promoted that theory in spades.
(oops. PC slip up)
Dig him up and execute him again more humanely!
This one goes to -11
The old method of cutting off the head with a short knife is still working in varous islamic lands, and the old method of a rifle bullet in the back of the head still works in various communist and emerging former communist states, and can be done by rank amateurs with no training at all.
Horrible pain while being executed for crimes involving horrible pain for the victim? Sounds like justice to me...the true meaning of "an eye for an eye"
Punishment is supposed to be swift and just. In my opinion, the pain Tookie Williams put the public through by keeping himself alive through appeals, outweighs any minor discomfort this puke may have felt as he was finally being put out of OUR misery.
Yeah, but the only people we could find to take the job were all lawyers.
So what's the problem here. He got caught and executed. It is, as they say, "the way the Tookie bumbles."
I say dig him up and do it again until we get it right.
Perhaps they should switch from lethal injection to death by starvation since it's supposed to be such a "peaceful" way to go.
I say dig him up and do it again until we get it right.
I remember reading that Tookie looked annoyed at the time it took them to find a vein and administer the injections. What was he thinking, "That's sixty seconds of my life I'll never get back."? My first reaction was that his travail would make a most excellent Snickers ad, "Not going any place soon?"
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