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View Full Version : Inmate seemed like he 'would never die'


Bronco_Beerslug
12-14-2006, 08:12 PM
I don't think humans have the right to kill other humans anyway but this isn't helping the cause of those who think they do.

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Inmate seemed like he 'would never die' (http://tinyurl.com/yctx2c)
By RON WORD

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. - It seemed like Angel Nieves Diaz would never die.

Two executioners injected him with three chemicals that were supposed to do the job in a few minutes. But 10 minutes later, he was still alive, his eyes darting back at the 25 witnesses.

Diaz shuddered several times, but continued moving and breathing for nearly half an hour, finally dying 34 minutes after the execution began.

I've witnessed all 20 lethal injections in Florida. In most cases, the inmate is unconscious in three to five minutes and dies in 10 to 15 minutes.

But Diaz, who was condemned for shooting the manager of a Miami topless club in 1979, needed a rare second dose of chemicals Wednesday before dying.

Seconds after the chemicals began flowing, Diaz looked up, blinked several times and appeared to be mouthing words, perhaps a prayer, some suggested.

A minute later, he began grimacing, later licking his lips and blowing. He appeared to move for 24 minutes after the first injection.

In most Florida executions, witnesses have little to watch. No talking is allowed, and the only sound comes from a noisy window air conditioner. First, the official witnesses take seats in the first two rows. Reporters are assigned the back two rows.

Then brown drapes separating the witness room windows from the execution chamber are opened. The inmate can be seen strapped to a gurney, IV tubes running into each arm and a sheet pulled up to below his chin. Plastic tubes extend through a hole in the wall where the two executioners, who are paid $150 in cash each, wait for a signal from the warden to begin.

Lethal injections are done in the same room where Florida's famous electric chair "Old Sparky" was used to electrocute 44 inmates after the state resumed executions in 1979 following a 15-year hiatus. Florida later switched to lethal injection because two inmates' heads caught fire during executions in the 1990s and another suffered a severe nose bleed in 2000.

After the curtains open, the warden asks if the inmate has a final statement. A microphone hanging from the ceiling picks up the condemned person's last words. In a faint voice, Diaz proclaimed his innocence in Spanish and criticized the way he was being put to death.

"The death penalty is not only a form of vengeance, but also a cowardly act by humans," he said. "I'm sorry for what is happening to me and my family who have been put through this."

In October, Gainesville serial killer Danny Rolling sang a spiritual song. In 2002, Aileen Wuornos, a prostitute who killed six customers, predicted that she would somehow be back.

After the statement, the warden nods, signaling for the chemicals to begin flowing. Two medical professionals watch a heart monitor attached to the inmate. When it shows no activity, they emerge wearing strange-looking "moon suits," which cover them from head to toe. Corrections officials say it is to protect their identity.

After checking for a pulse and shining a flashlight in the inmate's eyes, one of them nods to the warden, who notifies the governor and makes the final announcement: "The sentence of the state of Florida vs. Angel Diaz has been carried out at 6:36 p.m. Please exit to the rear of the room."

Garcia Bronco
12-14-2006, 08:41 PM
Maybe some body was paid off the give him a shot of H, and then give him the actual lethal injection. Maybe it was his last wish.

-Slap-
12-14-2006, 10:22 PM
It took him 34 minutes die and his family is pissed.

I wonder how the family of the man he murdered has felt over the last 27 years?

Bronco_Beerslug
12-14-2006, 11:46 PM
It took him 34 minutes die and his family is pissed.
I wonder how the family of the man he murdered has felt over the last 27 years?I'd guess neither family is happy with what happened to them.

Diaz proclaimed his innocence to the end. (http://tinyurl.com/vt7c9)
Paul Doering, a University of Florida pharmacy professor who is familiar with the lethal injection chemicals, said even if Diaz had a diseased liver, it would not have made any difference on how the drugs worked.

"This explanation doesn't make a bit of sense," Doering said. "It is the greatest fairy tale since Cinderella."

Dr. Mark Heath, an anesthesiologist at Columbia University Medical Center who has studied lethal injection cases across the country, said the effects of drugs used in an execution can be influenced by the medical condition of the prisoner.

"However, it's quite unlikely that the unusual features of this execution, if in fact it was unusual, are fully attributable to hepatic (liver) disease," Heath said.

Diaz's attorney filed a lawsuit Thursday on behalf of death row inmates, asking the Florida Supreme Court to rule that the state's lethal injection procedure is unconstitutional and to preserve evidence in the case.

NYBronco
12-15-2006, 01:44 PM
There seems to be more humane consideration to an execution under our prison system than what the victims and their surviving families have experienced.

Perhaps if convicted felons knew their death experience would be a mirror image of those they killed they may reconsider.

Crushaholic
12-15-2006, 02:11 PM
There seems to be more humane consideration to an execution under our prison system than what the victims and their surviving families have experienced.

Perhaps if convicted felons knew their death experience would be a mirror image of those they killed they may reconsider.

Bingo. The death penalty is less of a deterrent if they appear to just "go to sleep". I have zero sympathy for someone who decides they are going to take someone else's life. Let the penalty mirror the crime...

epicSocialism4tw
12-15-2006, 03:55 PM
Maybe we should have just reported him to his local media so that they could ruin his life without ever receiving a trial. I hear that that works.

BroncoInferno
12-15-2006, 04:44 PM
There seems to be more humane consideration to an execution under our prison system than what the victims and their surviving families have experienced.

Perhaps if convicted felons knew their death experience would be a mirror image of those they killed they may reconsider.

It is the responsibility of the state to protect its citizens, not enact vengence. You don't trust the government with your money, do you? Why do you trust them to execute the right people? We all know about cases where DNA exonerated death row inmates. What about pre-DNA, or modern cases with little or no DNA evidence? Who knows how many innocent men have been or will be murdered by the state for a crime they did not commit.

BroncoInferno
12-15-2006, 04:51 PM
It took him 34 minutes die and his family is pissed.

I wonder how the family of the man he murdered has felt over the last 27 years?

I'd wager they don't feel a whole lot better now. Their loved one is still dead and executing the alleged murderer does not change that. It also doesn't do anything to better protect society that life without parole would not have achieved. Again, the job of the state is to protect us, not enact revenge on our behalf.

Bronco_Beerslug
12-15-2006, 06:31 PM
I'd wager they don't feel a whole lot better now. Their loved one is still dead and executing the alleged murderer does not change that. It also doesn't do anything to better protect society that life without parole would not have achieved. Again, the job of the state is to protect us, not enact revenge on our behalf.
My point view now too although it wasn't this way until the last few years. Most of my life I've always thought we shouldn't take a chance of some criminals getting back into society again (we should kill them).

I now believe civilized people don't murder people for any reason.

Here's the latest........

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Official says Fla. execution was botched (http://tinyurl.com/yxsscv)
By RON WORD, Associated Press Writer 47 minutes ago

OCALA, Fla. - Gov.Jeb Bush suspended all executions in Florida after a medical examiner said Friday that prison officials botched the insertion of the needles when a convicted killer was put to death earlier this week.

Separately, a federal judge in California imposed a moratorium on executions in the nation's most populous state, declaring that the state's method of lethal injection runs the risk of violating the constitutional ban on cruel and unusual punishment.



http://d.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/ap/20061214/capt.flps10212140136.diaz_execution_flps102.jpg?x= 372&y=345&sig=7Xl0IjsejfLTxQcAsYq7dA--
The daughter of Angel Nieves Diaz, Debbie Nieves, left, and her aunt, Nena Nieves, right, cry outside the Florida State Correctional Facility in Starke, Fla. Wednesday, Dec. 13, 2006 before Diaz was executed in the prison. A man convicted of murdering the manager of a topless bar 27 years ago was executed by injection Wednesday despite his protests of innocence and requests for clemency made by the governor of his native Puerto Rico. (AP Photo/Phil Sandlin)


U.S. District Judge Jeremy Fogel ruled in San Jose that California's "implementation of lethal injection is broken." But he said: "It can be fixed."

In Florida, medical examiner Dr. William Hamilton said Wednesday's execution of Angel Nieves Diaz took 34 minutes — twice as long as usual — and required a rare second dose of lethal chemicals because the needles were inserted clear through his veins and into the flesh in his arms. The chemicals are supposed to go into the veins.

Hamilton, who performed the autopsy, refused to say whether he thought Diaz died a painful death.

"I am going to defer answers about pain and suffering until the autopsy is complete," he said. He said the results were preliminary and other tests may take several weeks.

Bush created a commission to examine the state's lethal injection process in light of Diaz's case, and he halted the signing of any more death warrants until the panel completes its final report by March 1.

The governor said he wants to ensure the process does not constitute cruel and unusual punishment, as some death penalty foes argued bitterly after Diaz's execution. Florida has 374 people on death row; it has carried out four executions this year.

Diaz, 55, was put to death for murdering of the manager of a Miami topless bar during a holdup in 1979.

The medical examiner's findings contradicted the explanation given by prison officials, who said Diaz needed the second dose because liver disease caused him to metabolize the lethal drugs more slowly. Hamilton said that although there were records that Diaz had hepatitis, his liver appeared normal.

Executions in Florida normally take no more than about 15 minutes, with the inmate rendered unconscious and motionless within three to five minutes. But Diaz appeared to be moving 24 minutes after the first injection, grimacing, blinking, licking his lips, blowing and appearing to mouth words.

As a result of the chemicals going into Diaz's arms around the elbow, he had an 12-inch chemical burn on his right arm and an 11-inch chemical burn on his left arm, Hamilton said.

Florida Corrections Secretary James McDonough said the execution team did not see any swelling of the arms, which would have been an indication that the chemicals were going into tissues and not veins.

Diaz's attorney, Suzanne Myers Keffler, reacted angrily to the findings.

"This is complete negligence on the part of the state," she said. "When he was still moving after the first shot of chemicals, they should have known there was a problem and they shouldn't have continued. This shows a complete disregard for Mr. Diaz. This is disgusting."

Earlier, in a court hearing in Ocala, she had won an assurance from the attorney general's office that she could have access to all findings and evidence from the autopsy. She withdrew a request for an independent autopsy.

David Elliot, spokesman for the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty, said experts his group had contacted suspected that liver disease was not the explanation for the problem.

"Florida has certainly deservedly earned a reputation for being a state that conducts botched executions, whether its electrocution or lethal injection," Elliot said. "We just think the Florida death penalty system is broken from start to finish."

Florida got rid of the electric chair after two inmates' heads caught fire during executions in the 1990s and another suffered a severe nosebleed in 2000. Lethal injection was portrayed as a more humane and more reliable process.

Twenty people have been executed by lethal injection in Florida since the state switched from the electric chair in 2000.

-Slap-
12-16-2006, 01:33 AM
I'd wager they don't feel a whole lot better now. Their loved one is still dead and executing the alleged murderer does not change that. It also doesn't do anything to better protect society that life without parole would not have achieved. Again, the job of the state is to protect us, not enact revenge on our behalf.

Believe me, should circumstances ever dictate, I wouldn't wait for the state to exact revenge for me.

baja
12-16-2006, 02:11 AM
This topic, like no other, reveals a great deal about those that comment on it.