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However, one of the three chemicals in the lethal injection process didn’t enter
his veins, and
instead dispersed into the
tissue of his arms, leaving -inch
long chemical burns.
Almost twenty - five minutes
after the first of the three
chemicals were injected,
Diaz was still moving,
contorting, blinking and
apparently mouthing
words. It was then that
prison officials stepped forward to
administer a second dose
of the deadly concoction.
How kind of them.
Tookie had taken longer
to die and prison officials
had not considered his
massive 50lb muscular
frame, injecting him with
the same dose a man half
his size would have
received. Barbara Becnel,
Tookie’s advocate, and who had
co-written several of
his books on gangs, was at
his execution. Speaking at an
anti-death penalty
convention in Chicago in
November, she described the last
minutes of his life: “His feet and part of his body started contorting and distorting . . . could see
he was in
trouble...[he] died a horrible, excruciatingly painful death, where he not only woke up to the horror of his lungs paralyzed, so he was being slowly smothered to death, but the drug that makes your heart stop makes your veins feel like they’re on fire at the same
time as it causes a massive
heart attack, so it’s as if
someone picked up a Mack truck and put it on your chest.”
Execution
by lethal injection followed the
reintroduction of the death penalty in the USA in 97 , being the brainchild of a medical examiner with no knowledge of anaesthetics or pharmacology and without having undertaken any prior research. Regardless of this the lethal injection method of state murder became the preferred choice in all but one state
that executes
capital offenders. Bursts of
three chemicals are used to
kill the prisoner. The first is a sedative, the second a paralysing,
muscle-relaxing drug
and the third causes a heart attack.
Evidence revealed in an
investigation last September
shows that lethal injection
is anything but the humane medical
procedure its advocates profess.
Witnesses to the last
six executions in San
Quentin claim it is likely
the inmates
suffered excruciating deaths. It was further revealed that the second,
paralyzing drug in the lethal injection procedure is actually administered
to conceal any outward visible signs of pain, observers believing the inmate is calm and quiet, when they could be inwardly screaming in agony, unable to move a muscle or cry out. Indeed, animals are put to death in a more humane way. Human Rights Watch have noted that animals fare better when being “put to sleep”, with 30 US states banning
the use of
neuromuscular blocking agents
like pancuronium bromide in animal
euthanasia, lest the animal suffer undetected pain.
Racist and
class-biased
Many point
to the dissolute nature of the
death penalty, to how it degenerates
civilised society. It is
all of this indeed, but,
morality aside, state execution has
always been racist and
class-biased in the
US. More than half of the 4,000
executed since 930 have
been black — some five times
the proportion of
African-Americans in the
US population as a whole.
Forty-two percent of all back men
on death row are black, even though they make up some percent of people living in the U.S. Almost 85
percent of those
executed since 97 have
been convicted of
killing whites. In that same
period only one person has been
executed for killing an
African-American. In the
history of executions in the USA, of 8,000 executions carried out, only 8 have involved a white person killing a black person.
Not so long ago, the US
General Accountancy Office
(GAO), the alleged non-partisan
audit, evaluation, and investigative
arm of Congress, put out a
report addressing the
racism endemic in capital
cases. It stated: “Our
synthesis of the 8 studies shows
a pattern of evidence indicating racial disparities in the charging, sentencing and imposition of the death penalty . . . In 8 percent of the
studies, race of victim was
found to influence the likelihood
of being charged with capital murder
or receiving the death penalty”, and “those who murdered whites were found to be more likely to be sentenced to death than those who murdered blacks.”
The death penalty
rarely targets the rich and
never the company directors
knowingly responsible
for corporate manslaughter.
If you are wealthy, then you
can afford the best legal representation money can buy. William A Schabas, in his book The Death Penalty As Cruel Treatment and Torture ( 99 ), looks at the class dimension of
capital cases.
He writes: “A majority
of capital defendants are
indigent, and they are normally represented by state-appointed counsel, since the professional fees paid are insufficient to attract experienced lawyers. At best, the accused is
defended by an eager,
well-meaning, but
inexperienced advocate. At worst,
counsel are lazy or
incompetent or both.”
In a system in which
money tips the scales
in favour of justice, the poor are
clearly at a
disadvantage. Presently, 90 per
cent of death row inmates could not
afford their own trial
lawyers. No doubt right now
US government officials will
be working on an execution protocol
that removes the likelihood of prisoners dying agonising death. This however does not distract one iota from the fact that state sanctioned murder
is barbaric and
sickening. Changing the damned
method of execution is not the solution — only the abolition of the death
penalty would be.
However, while we, as socialists, would dearly welcome the abolition
of the death penalty,
for us, as a revolutionary
party, it is a single issue
amongst thousands of
others, many equally
deserving. We have no intention
of appearing churlish,
but whilst only a few dozen
have been executed in
the US in the past year,
some 40,000 children die of
hunger and its related
illnesses every single
day. Up to 55,000 people may
have been killed in Iraq
since the US-led
invasion. And daily, thousands
more suffer fatality through
corporate manslaughter
and bureaucratic negligence
in every area of our society.The
working class is murdered and battered
and robbed and dehumanised every
day.
Yes, we loathe the
death penalty, as much as we
detest every other injustice
perpetrated against our
class, but we locate the
problem in a class war that
is waged daily against
us. Our duty is to respond
by urging our class to end
capitalism and, in so doing, finally eliminating all the social problems that
presently plague us;
forever changing a society
that sees its poorer and more
desperate members
killing one another and thus
ending up victims themselves at the hands of the capitalist state’s
killing machine.
John Bissett
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