Posted on 12/24/2006 10:19:25 AM PST by Graybeard58
I think that killing them the same way they killed their victims would not be cruel.
What's taking so long, get on with it.
If I ever do anything worthy of the book ... this is what I want.
Whiny, disgusting murdering pigs. Strip them of their skin, and spray them with acid.
Their victims didn't deserve their pain; but these worms do.
The "cruel" part is making the convicted hang out with public defender lawyers for decades on end, who give them the faint hope that their cases can be overturned.
I had my old Black Lab put down last fall. First he gave her a shot of something to make her sleepy. That took about a minute. She even snored, LOL! Then, they gave her the shot that stopped her heart. Most peaceful thing I've ever seen, though I miss her greatly.
I think we need Veterinarian Students on the case, because that's what I used to have my Cinder put down, quickly and humanely. And Cinder had a heart of gold that I would've given anything not have had to stop, versus these merciless scumbags.
I did some research on the case. This is from an anti-death penalty site.
America (Ohio): Death penalty, Richard Wade Cooey
PUBLIC AI Index: AMR 51/101/2003
EXTRA 36/03 Death penalty 11 July 2003
USA (Ohio) Richard Wade Cooey (m), white, aged 36
Richard Cooey is scheduled to be executed in Ohio on 24 July 2003. He was
sentenced to death in December 1986 for the murders of Dawn McCreery and Wendy
Offredo, aged 20 and 21 respectively, committed in August of that year in
Akron, Ohio.
According to the trial record, on 31 August 1986, 17-year-old Clint Dickens
dropped a chunk of concrete off a bridge, hitting a car beneath. He and his two
friends, 19-year-old Richard Cooey and 18-year-old Kenneth Horonetz, then
offered a ride to the occupants of the car, Wendy Offredo and Dawn McCreery, so
that they could call for help. They drove them to a nearby mall where Wendy
Offredo called her mother, and Richard Cooey gave the mother directions to pick
up the women. Dawn McCreery called the police. The five then got back in Cooey
s car to drive back to the damaged vehicle. Richard Cooey and Clint Dickens had
decided to rob the women, and Kenneth Horonetz jumped out of the car when the
robbery began. The women were driven to an isolated wooded area, where they
were subsequently murdered by blows to the head.
After a two-day trial in November 1986 in front of a panel of three judges,
Richard Cooey was convicted of kidnapping, rape, robbery and murder. After a
sentencing phase which began and ended on 5 December 1986, he was condemned him
to death. Clint Dickens received a life sentence, being too young for the death
penalty under Ohio law. He will not be eligible for parole until 2082.
Richard Cooeys clemency petition seeks commutation of the death sentence on
the grounds of his efforts towards rehabilitation during his more than 16 years
on death row. It details how, in the structured environment of prison, he has
matured into a 36-year-old adult who is remorseful for the crime and has
accepted responsibility for his role in the deaths of Wendy Offredo and Dawn
McCreery.
At the time of the crime, Richard Cooey was a teenager emerging from a
childhood of parental abuse and neglect. According to the clemency petition,
when Richard was a young child, his father adopted a toilet training regime
that included shoving the childs head into the toilet or rubbing the childs
face in his own faeces. The father, who abused drugs and alcohol, allegedly
used to hit the boy in the face without provocation or warning, and would beat
him with a belt and his hands, sometimes to the point of drawing blood. Richard
Cooeys mother also developed a drinking problem. The boy began drinking
alcohol from the age of five. By the age of 12, he was using marijuana, speed,
and/or opiates on a daily basis. At the time of the crime in August 1986, two
months past the age of 19, Richard Cooey was on a months leave from the army,
and had engaged in a three week drinking and drug binge. On the day of the
murders, he had consumed marijuana, beer, cocaine and opium with his two
friends.
At a clemency hearing on 8 July 2003 before the Ohio Parole Board, prosecutors
and relatives of the murdered women urged the Board to allow the execution to
go forward. Family and friends of Richard Cooey appealed for him to be allowed
to live. The Boards recommendation is not binding on the Governor.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Amnesty International opposes the death penalty in all cases, unconditionally.
Every death sentence is an affront to human dignity, every execution a symptom
of, not a solution to, a culture of violence. The death penalty has not been
shown to have a special deterrent effect and extends the suffering of one
family, that of the murder victim, to another, that of the condemned prisoner.
It denies the possibility of rehabilitation and reconciliation.
Today, 112 countries are abolitionist in law or practice. The USA, a country
whose government frequently claims it is the global human rights champion, has
carried out 864 executions since resuming judicial killing in 1977. The vast
majority of these killings have taken place in the past decade, and include 44
so far this year.
AI Index: AMR 51/101/2003 11 July 2003
It's hard to give a rats a$$ whether or not these scum feel anything before their meeting with the great beyond...
I think that killing them the same way they killed their victims would not be cruel.
_________________________________________________________
If possible; how about the execution also taking place where they commited their crime? This would bring justice and closure.
:-o
I LIKE THAT IDEA!! Especially if you haul it out AFTER their skin's been peeled.
:-)
These lawsuits are getting annoying.
Maybe they should just ask the the perp how he would like to die at the prescribed time.
Uh, actually not executing those who wrongfully take an innocent life is an affront to human dignity. Leting a murderer live diminishes the value of the life that was taken and thus the value of all of our lives.
Gee, I wonder if their victims cries were ever heard in such a way?
It denies the possibility of rehabilitation and reconciliation.
This is a crock of CRAP!!!!
I was living in Kansas when Stephine Smith was Raped, Sodomized, and killed.
The person that did it, did so because he knew there was NO DEATH Penalty in Kansas, he asked for and received the 'Hard 40', 40 years without Parole.
If there would have been, this young woman would be alive today.
I can guarantee that if this animal had been executed, there is a 100% chance he would never do that to anyone again.
I say bring back Public Hangings, let'em swing for a couple of days until they start to stink, cut 'em down and call the family to come bury him!!!!!
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