Posted on 02/12/2007 7:47:47 PM PST by Graybeard58
TAMPA A doctor told a panel reviewing Floridas lethal injection procedures that executioners did the worst thing they could do during the botched killing of condemned inmate Angel Diaz last year.
The testimony came from Mark Heath, a Columbia University anesthesiologist who has testified on the behalf of death row inmates in about 20 states.
But despite such testimony, the key question of whether Diaz suffered pain during the execution remained murky. Heath said the execution team did exactly 100 percent the wrong thing during the Dec. 13 execution of Diaz, who was condemned for the 1979 shooting death of a Miami topless club manager.
Plastic needles threaded into Diazs arms tore through his veins, splashing chemicals into his flesh. Because the chemical didnt go directly to Diazs brain and heart, he took 34 minutes to die about twice as long as usual.
An autopsy the next day showed Diaz suffered footlong chemical blisters on both of his arms.
Floridas execution procedures call for a three-drug cocktail: a sedative, a drug that causes paralysis and a drug that causes a fatal heart attack.
The executioner testified last week that he released the sedative into Diaz, then couldnt get the paralytic drug to flow into Diazs vein. The doctor who performed the autopsy said Diazs veins likely tore right away, so none of the sedative likely made it to his brain quickly.
None of the materials injected went to the right place, Medical Examiner William Hamilton testified Monday. Was he feeling anything? I dont know.
A medical member of the execution team then decided to release the third drug, which causes a severe burning pain, into Diazs other arm. This move baffled Heath because the painful third drug likely was injected into Diazs body without the benefit of the sedative.
The vein in the second arm also broke, perhaps preventing Diaz from suffering severe burning pain from the third drug, Heath said.
Thank God the other IV wasnt working either, Heath said. The people doing this could not have thought through the contingencies.
Heath said witness accounts that Diaz was breathing like a fish out of water lead him to believe the drug causing a painful feeling of paralysis took effect before the painkiller.
That is a classic sign that fish-out-of-water look that the person is partially paralyzed and struggling for breath, Heath said.
He added, Mr Diaz, in my opinion, was not properly anesthetized.
The drugs eventually were absorbed from Diazs flesh into his bloodstream, but at a very slow rate. Its unknown just how fast each drug was absorbed because nobody has tested how rapidly those drugs are absorbed through human tissue.
State officials who participated in the execution have testified that they saw no evidence of pain, in contrast to press witnesses whose published accounts told of Diaz grimacing, squinting and coughing. A capital defense attorney who witnessed the execution also said Diaz appeared to be in pain.
Whether Diaz felt pain is important because the U.S. Constitution forbids the government from exposing any prisoner to cruel and unusual punishment.
Blood samples taken during and immediately after the execution could indicate if an inmate experienced pain. But in most cases, including with Diaz, blood samples arent taken until an autopsy the next day. By this time the drug levels have broken down.
Heath told the panel that if it wants to carry out executions by lethal injection, it should have doctors at the inmates gurney to troubleshoot any problems. That creates a Catch-22 for the state because medical associations forbid doctors from participating in executions.
The panel was formed by then-Gov. Jeb Bush after Diazs death, and no other executions have been scheduled.
The panel is expected to meet again Monday in Tampa, at which point it may hear from a doctor who has testified on behalf of state governments that use lethal injection procedures similar to Floridas.
Oh, silly me. I thought the title was referring to Terri Schiavo.
Heath is a tool. Just Google his name.
Hang the sonzabitches. It's time tested and traditional. A proper drop ensures a quick demise. We could fly someone in from Singapore to train us on how to do it properly. It would cost a whole lot less than the legal fees dealing with these chickens*** lawsuits.
And could we have a report on how the victim(s) of this nice man felt while he was killing them?
Details. You'd think government bow wows would get it down straight.
Mr. Diaz, in my opinion, was not properly executed . . . because it shouldn't take 27 years--27 YEARS--for justice to be done and this murderer to be punished!
He took 27 years to die about 27 times as long as it should have.
He's dead isn't he?
Doesn't sound botched to me!!
Columbia is as leftist as possible, and anesthesiologists are the highest paid of surgeons.
Considering his multi-state vacation to spare killers from justice, these facts are a perfect storm for moral and ethical cluelessness.
Time to bring back the guillotine!
Nothing inflamitory in those words. >:-<
< / s >
I will volunteer to do the executions!
He deserved more than the "fish out of water" look.
I too am so sick of worrying about the murderers.
BIZARRO WORLD.
I have as much desire for revenge as anybody, but this sounds as bad as the scene in The Green Mile where the sponge is dry during the execution.
People already are against execution to the point of absurdity, why give them ammunition? These predators should be dispatched with coldly and efficiently without people screwing it up and scaring people.
No, in my mind death by fireants is a bit cruel and it's only unusual because of these bleeding heart criminal lovers draging it out for 27 years arguing about the color of the tubes the drugs are deleivered in.
This so called expert has testified in 20 states. Wonder how rich he is now?
Maybe they should go back to hanging.
It works, and it's fast.
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