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Rights and Liberties

Executions Resume Today, Death Penalty Still Cruel and Unusual

By Billy Sothern, The Nation. Posted May 6, 2008.


Barring a last-minute stay of execution, death row prisoner William Lynd will be murdered by the state of Georgia tonight.

Several years ago at Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola, Leslie Martin was strapped to a table and hooked up to an IV through which a series of chemicals -- a sedative, a paralytic and finally a poison -- flowed into his veins in order to draw the life out of his healthy, 35-year-old body. He remained very much himself even during his final moments, a sort of death row class clown, telling his lawyer, Clive Stafford Smith, "You're fired," just after he received the fatal dose.

Following the execution, Smith fielded confused questions about whether Leslie's remark had been in earnest. Smith explained that it was just a running joke between them, one thing that remained humorous to Leslie when everything else was being taken from him.

William Lynd faces a similar fate in Georgia Tuesday. Lynd has the distinction of being the first person executed in the United States in seven months -- a period in which there was a de facto death penalty moratorium while the United State Supreme Court considered, and rejected, convicted murderer Ralph Baze's argument that his own execution by lethal injection in Kentucky would constitute cruel and unusual punishment. With several more executions lined up in death-penalty states across the country, it is important to once again focus the debate on the stark reality that the death penalty extinguishes the lives of breathing, joking, flawed and thoroughly human beings. Even if the means of taking those lives were as gentle as touching the forehead of the condemned, the ultimate challenge to our humanity would be just as vivid as a gallows, a guillotine or a firing squad.

When representing people facing the death penalty, I have filed motions challenging the constitutionality of lethal injection. I have also filed motions seeking to compel the state to provide a public execution for my clients or to mandate that the jurors who decide their cases be forced to witness the execution process themselves.

While I certainly believe that people should not be made to suffer unnecessarily, I believe we should also be uneasy with the suggestion that an execution can be a peaceful medical procedure. We are talking about taking people's lives and it is incredibly dishonest to conceal the actual violence of the act of taking someone's life against their will.

Methods of execution that force us to confront the brutality of what we are doing more honestly express both society's rage against crime and the brutality of its consequences. For instance, there was the misery of Allen Lee "Tiny" Davis's execution in a Florida electric chair, when blood poured from his head and his contorted face could be seen through the poorly fitted mask as he struggled to stay alive, breathing ten breaths after the electricity stopped. Or the flames that sometimes shoot from the orifices of people in the electric chair. Or the extended "cut down" procedures necessary for inmates with bad veins who are being killed by lethal injection. Or the humiliating bowel releases of people hanged in the public square.

As our country resumes executions following the Baze decision, we must be mindful of the fact that extinguishing the life of a healthy person who wants to live cannot be done without violence. Whether William Lynd is led kicking and screaming to the gallows in a public square or goes to his death quietly, without any expression of pain as he succumbs to the poison flowing unseen in his bloodstream -- he has not died peacefully. And we should know that -- no matter the manner of execution -- he never will.

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See more stories tagged with: death penalty, capital punishment, criminal justice system, lethal injection, supreme court, baze v. rees, william lynd, electric chair, 8th amendment

Billy Sothern, a New Orleans anti-death penalty lawyer and a Soros Justice Media Fellow, is a frequent contributor to The Nation and the author of Down in New Orleans: Reflections From a Drowned City (California).

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Executions to resume today.
Posted by: Woodpecker on May 6, 2008 3:14 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A few months ago on British TV, I saw a documentary about someone who looking to find a totally painless form of execution- when he did and reported his findings to the pro-death penalty crowd in the US, to his surprise, they rejected it- the reason being that they WANT the condemned individual to SUFFER. based on this argument can anybody seriously DENY that proponents of capital punishment are in fact borderline (even if only subconsciously) SADISTS(people who derive emotional or even sexual gratification from the infliction of physical pain)???

Terry

Sadism is NOT the hallmark of a civilized society( which is one reason most Western democracies have dropped the habit of state mandated death)

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Just one point
Posted by: Axiom69 on May 6, 2008 5:45 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Even if the means of taking those lives were as gentle as touching the forehead of the condemned"

If only their victims died so peacfully...

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WHO ELSE EXECUTES PEOPLE ?
Posted by: VZEQICVA on May 6, 2008 7:23 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The list is easy to find on the web. We are not in good company. Most everyone has abolished it. But then it's about being civilised. Thanks, ANNA

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William Lynd's Resume
Posted by: Aristides on May 6, 2008 3:26 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here's what brought Lynd to the execution chamber:


Date of scheduled execution State Victim name Inmate name Status
May 6, 2008 Georgia Ginger Moore
Leslie Joan Sharkey, 42 William Lynd pending

William Earl Lynd was sentenced to death for the 1988 murder of his live-in girlfriend, Ginger Moore. Lynd and Ginger lived together in her home in Berrien County. Following an argument three days before Christmas of 1988, Lynd shot Ginger in the face and went outside to smoke a cigarette. Ginger regained consciousness and followed him outside. Lynd shot her a second time, put her into the trunk of her car and drove away. Hearing Ginger "thumping around" in the trunk, Lynd got out, opened the trunk and shot Ginger a third time, killing her. Lynd returned home, cleaned up the blood, and drove to Tift County, where he buried Ginger in a shallow grave. He then drove to Ohio. Lynd later killed 42-year-old Detroit resident Leslie Joan Sharkey after attacking her on the side of a road near Chesapeake, Ohio. Leslie was shot on Christmas Day as she traveled to West Virginia for a family gathering. According to the Georgia attorney general's office, Lynd was able to convince Leslie Sharkey that her car was damaged after attracting her attention by flashing his headlights at her. When she pulled her car over to the side of the road, Lynd attacked her and shot her three times. Leslie was able to drive away and tell police what happened before she died. Lynd fled and later pawned the gun he used to kill both women. He traveled to Texas and Florida, then eventually returned to Georgia to surrender to Berrien County authorities. The murder weapon was recovered and identified by ballistics examination, and Ginger Moore's body was located based on information provided by Lynd. Testimony in the punishment phase showed that Lynd had also kidnapped and sexually assaulted another woman.

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» RE: William Lynd's Resume Posted by: DaveH
» RE: William Lynd's Resume Posted by: Aristides
» RE: William Lynd's Resume Posted by: pfeifer999
» Victims and Victimizers... Posted by: Bearzerker
Lets face it.
Posted by: rickiey on May 7, 2008 5:48 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is justice. Pure and simple. It's not abbout sadism. It's not about "the enjoyment of the infliction of pain". It's not about revenge.

It is about justice. Justice is when people get what they deserve, what they earn.

This man, in cold blood, killed 3 women. This man earned the death penalty. He deserves it. Nothing else is an appropriate reward for his actions.

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human
Posted by: cbronzo on May 7, 2008 6:33 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
in reading article, I see nothing about the life long pain the victim's family is/ will be going though ( the criminal is not the victim, for those of you who forget)

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MAYBE WE SHOULD GO BACK TO
Posted by: mindtrvlr on May 7, 2008 7:41 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Way Ann Bolen was ewxecuted in England.

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You raise a good point
Posted by: clvngodess on May 8, 2008 7:04 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But revenge, and this is legal revenge, doesn't really bring closure to the suffering of those left behind. Grief and loss is an individual process, and it's not state sanctioned either. It would be interesting to study how many families actually got closure by witnessing the death of the perpetrators, or by the knowledge of the death of the perpetrators/murderer of their loved ones. I would think that it really doesn't close the wound.

And, sadly, it has been proven that the death penalty is by no means a deterrent to these heinous crimes.

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