NationStates Jolt Archive


Disconnect plug after successful lethal injection...

Sel Appa
10-02-2007, 02:18
Apparently, Tennessee's execution maual is full of instructions that mix procedures for lethal injection and electrocution. While not followed in practice, it is there on the books and might be used by accident...

Link (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070209/ap_on_re_us/execution_manual)

NASHVILLE, Tenn. - Tennessee's procedure manual for executing prisoners is a jumble of conflicting instructions that mixes new lethal injection instructions with those for the old electric chair, an Associated Press review found.

Before a lethal injection, the 100-page "Manual of Execution" instructs prison officials to begin by shaving the condemned prisoner's head — as if preparing him for electrocution. They would also need a fire extinguisher nearby.

Gov. Phil Bredesen suspended four executions last week, calling the document a "cut-and-paste job" that needs significant revision. He set a May 2 deadline for the overhaul.

The mistakes were added last summer when Tennessee decided to update the manual after a death row inmate asked to be electrocuted, Correction Commissioner George Little said. The state's last execution took place in June, before the manual was revised.

Little attributed the errors to poor proofreading.

"This is human error," Little said. "Bottom line, it's in the typing, but certainly not in the carrying out of the actual executions."

The manual's minute-by-minute guidelines for lethal injections includes the instruction: "The Executioner will engage the automatic rheostat." A rheostat controls the voltage flowing to an electric chair.

The guidelines also tell the facility manager to disconnect the electrical cables in the rear of the chair before a doctor checks whether the lethal injection was successful.

Bredesen said Tennessee's execution teams have relied on an "oral tradition" and routine drills have ensured that lethal injections have been given properly.

But the state doesn't want to risk the legal ramifications of a spotty execution protocol, and Bredesen said he wants to make sure future executions aren't botched.

"My attitude toward (the death penalty) is that at some level it's a necessity, but an unpleasant necessity that ought to be done properly and done in a dignified fashion," he said. "And we were at risk of not doing that."

The governor's reprieve came after death-row inmate Edward J. Harbison sued the state over its execution procedures. That challenge was based on an earlier version of the manual that did not include the mistakes.

Harbison challenged the kinds of drugs used in lethal injections, the lack of specific guidelines on how to administer them and an absence of required professional standards for the execution team.

The state will evaluate the three-drug cocktail as part of its overhaul of the manual, Bredesen said.

The manual also calls for a doctor to slice deeply into an inmate's limb if technicians cannot insert the catheter into a vein. That procedure has been challenged in other states as cruel and unusual punishment and for violating a doctor's oath to not harm a patient.

The document does not say what should be done if an inmate's veins collapse or if the needle goes through the vein.

In December, then-Florida Gov.
Jeb Bush suspended executions after Angel Nieves Diaz required a second dose of lethal chemicals and took twice as long as usual to die. The drugs were mistakenly injected into his tissue instead of his veins.

Executions also are halted in Missouri, California and North Carolina because of lethal injection concerns.

Wow...
Trotskylvania
10-02-2007, 02:19
Apparently, Tennessee's execution maual is full of instructions that mix procedures for lethal injection and electrocution. While not followed in practice, it is there on the books and might be used by accident...

Link (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070209/ap_on_re_us/execution_manual)

Wow...

"Okay Timmy, go sit on Santa's Lap now. *flips switch on electric chair*"
Zarakon
10-02-2007, 02:19
They CUT AND PASTED the guidelines about state execution?
Sel Appa
10-02-2007, 02:21
They CUT AND PASTED the guidelines about state execution?

Way to teach the kids about plagiarism...;)
Demented Hamsters
10-02-2007, 02:28
Way to teach the kids about plagiarism...;)
Next they'll be using Wiki.
Zarakon
10-02-2007, 02:31
Next they'll be using Wiki.

That'd be pretty funny, actually. Okay, hold him still and whack him with the hatche-wait, smack him with a herring. The procedure just changed.
Trotskylvania
10-02-2007, 02:31
That'd be pretty funny, actually. Okay, hold him still and whack him with the hatche-wait, smack him with a herring. The procedure just changed.

Wait! Now it says to let him run free....
Pepe Dominguez
10-02-2007, 02:33
Too complicated. Utah's firing squad option has always made the most sense to me. Simple point-and-click job, and painless. That's the way I'd want to go.
Demented Hamsters
10-02-2007, 02:37
Tennessee's execution teams have relied on an "oral tradition"
This is how to give someone a lethal injection, for God's sake! Not how the world was created during Dreamtime and that rain is from Rona crying because she was banished to the moon when she cursed it for hiding one night.

Oral traditions are what people do while sitting around a campfire, not in a prison when trying to kill someone.
Sel Appa
10-02-2007, 02:37
Too complicated. Utah's firing squad option has always made the most sense to me. Simple point-and-click job, and painless. That's the way I'd want to go.

Yeah, in all honesty, that has semmed the safest bet and leaves a tad of guilt unlike the button or switch method.
Dodudodu
10-02-2007, 02:38
Too complicated. Utah's firing squad option has always made the most sense to me. Simple point-and-click job, and painless. That's the way I'd want to go.

I'd want to be guillotined (sp?)

But most people call me somewhat old-fashioned.
Demented Hamsters
10-02-2007, 02:38
I'd want to be guillotined (sp?)

But most people call me somewhat old-fashioned.
If you want to be really old-fashioned, you should ask to be crucified.
Pepe Dominguez
10-02-2007, 02:40
I'd want to be guillotined (sp?)

But most people call me somewhat old-fashioned.

That'd be as painless as a firing squad, even if the clean-up is a bit of a burden on prison staff.. both in the mop-up and in the mortuary process (gotta sew the head back on, etc.). Painlessness is what the courts are primarily concerned with though, so it may be more possible than it sounds. :p
Pepe Dominguez
10-02-2007, 02:42
Yeah, in all honesty, that has semmed the safest bet and leaves a tad of guilt unlike the button or switch method.

Nah, it's more a "firing squad machine" than an actual, 5-man lineup like in the old days. The blank bullet has been replaced by two buttons pressed simultaneously, where only one is connected. At least, that's how I remember it.
Sel Appa
10-02-2007, 02:43
That'd be as painless as a firing squad, even if the clean-up is a bit of a burden on prison staff.. both in the mop-up and in the mortuary process (gotta sew the head back on, etc.). Painlessness is what the courts are primarily concerned with though, so it may be more possible than it sounds. :p

I think the head can live on for as many as ten seconds though...
Swilatia
10-02-2007, 02:44
If you want to be really old-fashioned, you should ask to be crucified.

no. what's really old-fashioned is having stones throne at you until you die.
Pepe Dominguez
10-02-2007, 02:45
I think the head can live on for as many as ten seconds though...

I've read medical explainations of that theory that make it seem doubtful. First, the immediate blood loss would knock you out. Then, even if you had a couple seconds worth of blood still in the brain, you'd be trying to process thought with a severed brainstem, which I hear is impossible. Of course, knowing for certain is a bit difficult.. but maybe a few thousand lab rats could 'volunteer' to help enlighten us.. :p
Sel Appa
10-02-2007, 02:52
Nah, it's more a "firing squad machine" than an actual, 5-man lineup like in the old days. The blank bullet has been replaced by two buttons pressed simultaneously, where only one is connected. At least, that's how I remember it.

I thought they tried that and it didn't work well. *sigh* anything to get rid of the guilt...
Pepe Dominguez
10-02-2007, 02:56
I thought they tried that and it didn't work well. *sigh* anything to get rid of the guilt...

I think it's been a machine since the moratorium ended. Automated lethal injection, on the other hand, failed. I guess the machine wasn't designed to provide variable flow.. there's a few tricks involved when injecting large quantities into the bloodstream that the machine couldn't figure out, they say. So it's done by hand now.
Sel Appa
10-02-2007, 03:40
I think it's been a machine since the moratorium ended. Automated lethal injection, on the other hand, failed. I guess the machine wasn't designed to provide variable flow.. there's a few tricks involved when injecting large quantities into the bloodstream that the machine couldn't figure out, they say. So it's done by hand now.

Meh...it's all zeroth-degree murder(since first is taken) to me.
Zarakon
10-02-2007, 04:07
Y'know, it could be worse. They could've spliced game programming in. They could scream "FINIISH HIM!!!" right before they flip the switch.
Demented Hamsters
10-02-2007, 04:11
Y'know, it could be worse. They could've spliced game programming in. They could scream "FINIISH HIM!!!" right before they flip the switch.
A couple of other suggestions:
"Someone set up you the bomb"
"Excellent" (either in the style of Mortal Kombat or Burns)