Virginia executes man who challenged methods

by CJaye | July 25, 2008 at 03:32 am
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JARRATT, Virginia  A killer who argued that Virginia's procedures for lethal injection were unconstitutional was executed Thursday after a federal appeals court upheld the primary method of capital punishment in the country's second-busiest death chamber.

Virginia executed Christopher Emmett on Thursday for the 2001 death of a co-worker.

Christopher Scott Emmett, 36, was pronounced dead at 9:07 p.m. ET. He was convicted of beating a co-worker to death with a brass lamp in 2001 so he could steal the man's money to buy crack cocaine.

Emmett's appeal was the first to require a federal appeals court to interpret a U.S. Supreme Court decision in April that upheld Kentucky's three-drug method of lethal injection and apply it to another state's procedures.

Gov. Tim Kaine declined to intervene with the sentence being carried out.

"Tell my family and friends I love them; tell the governor he just lost my vote," Emmett said in the chamber before he died. "Y'all hurry this along. I'm dying to get out of here."

The lethal injection appeared to go as planned. Emmett was pronounced dead about five minutes after he was sedated.

His attorneys claimed that Virginia's use of lethal injection amounted to cruel and unusual punishment because of the possibility that paralyzing and heart-stopping drugs could be administered before inmates are rendered unconscious by another drug.

Unlike Kentucky, Virginia does not allow for a second dose of sodium thiopental, which results in a deep, coma-like unconsciousness, even when a second round of the other drugs is required. Virginia also administers the three drugs more quickly than Kentucky.

 

In 10 of the 70 lethal injections performed in Virginia before this year, a second dose of the last two drugs was given because the inmate did not die within a few minutes after the heart-stopping drug was administered, according to court papers.

This month, a divided panel of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond ruled that Virginia's protocol was similar enough to Kentucky's that it would not cause inmates excruciating pain. Emmett's attorneys had asked the full court to review the case, but justices voted 6-4 against the full hearing.

Judge Roger Gregory, writing in favor of the full court hearing Emmett's appeal, said that the Supreme Court found the sodium thiopental "essential to the humanity of Kentucky's procedure" and that Virginia did not offer safeguards comparable to those used in Kentucky to ensure that inmates didn't experience excruciating pain.

Emmett was the 102nd inmate executed in Virginia since the U.S. Supreme Court reinstated capital punishment in 1976. Only Texas has executed more prisoners.

 

Link to:

All About Capital Punishment

 

 

 

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CJaye

The crackhead killed for money to get drugs.  The prisons are so overloaded and he knew before he killed that man it was wrong.  He did it anyway to satisfy himself so now he paid for his crime as per the law in that state.  "Lethal Injection" If you can't do the time don't do the crime"

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aba

wow...you kill a man (with a brass lamp nonetheless), to get money ,to buy drugs even tho you know that its wrong and that the punishment for killing someone is getting killed yourself,whether it be by leathal injection or a cardboard box you're gonna die and you still do it anyway? i also don't understand why he should expect the governor to interven b/c he didn't kill a guy. maybe somebody can explain this to me?

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CJaye

This guy killed a guy with a brass lamp for money to buy drugs.  This guy felt Virginia's lethal injection procedure was unconstitutional.  Maybe this guy shouldn't have killed the guy with the lamp to steal his money so he could buy crack.  Should I explain that again? It will only take a second.

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aba

thankz Cjaye...lolz im glad somebody agrees with me

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