The execution of convicted double murderer Joseph Wood began at
1:52 p.m. at a state prison complex, and the 55-year-old was
pronounced dead just shy of two hours later at 3:49 p.m., the
Arizona attorney general's office said.
During that time, his lawyers filed an unsuccessful emergency appeal
to multiple federal courts that sought to have the execution halted
and their client given life-saving medical treatment.
The appeal, which said the procedure violated his constitutional
right to be executed without suffering cruel and unusual punishment,
was denied by Justice Anthony Kennedy of the U.S. Supreme Court.
"He gasped and struggled to breathe for about an hour and 40
minutes," said one of Wood's attorneys, Dale Baich.
"Arizona appears to have joined several other states who have been
responsible for an entirely preventable horror: a bungled execution.
The public should hold its officials responsible."
Arizona Governor Jan Brewer expressed concern over how long the
procedure took and ordered the state's Department of Corrections to
conduct a full review, but said justice had been done and that the
execution was lawful.
"One thing is certain, however, inmate Wood died in a lawful manner
and by eyewitness and medical accounts he did not suffer," the
Republican governor said in a statement.
"This is in stark comparison to the gruesome, vicious suffering that
he inflicted on his two victims, and the lifetime of suffering he
has caused their family."
An Arizona Republic journalist who witnessed the execution said he
counted the inmate gasping for breath about 660 times.
"I just know it was not efficient," said the reporter, Michael
Kiefer. "It took a long time."
DRAWN-OUT DEATH
Charles Ryan, director of Arizona's Department of Corrections, said
protocol was followed and that the execution was monitored by a team
of licensed medical professionals.
He said Wood was "fully and deeply sedated" five minutes after the
drugs began to be administered, and that the medical team reaffirmed
that he remained deeply sedated seven more times before he was
pronounced dead.
Ryan said in a statement that apart from snoring, Wood "did not
grimace or make any further movement."
The Pima County Medical Examiner will conduct an independent
autopsy, he said, and a toxicology study was requested too.
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Wood had been one of six death row prisoners who sued Arizona last
month arguing that secrecy surrounding the drugs used in other
botched executions in Ohio and Oklahoma violated their rights.
But he exhausted his appeals on Wednesday when the Arizona Supreme
Court lifted a hold after reviewing a last-minute appeal that
involved demands for more information about the lethal drug cocktail
to be used in the execution.
Wood's lawyers had also wanted to know the qualifications of the
medical staff conducting the execution.
Anti-death penalty campaigners expressed horror over the drawn-out
death. Cassandra Stubbs, director of the American Civil Liberties
Union's Capital Punishment Project, said Arizona had broken
constitutional rights, and the bounds of basic decency.
"It's time for Arizona and the other states still using lethal
injection to admit that this experiment with unreliable drugs is a
failure," she said in a statement.
Diann Rust-Tierney, executive director of the National Coalition to
Abolish the Death Penalty, said Wood's execution had been shocking,
cruel and entirely predictable.
"Americans have had enough of the barbarism," she said.
In January, convicted rapist and murderer Dennis McGuire was put to
death in Ohio using a sedative-painkiller mix of midazolam and
hydromorphone, the first such combination administered for a lethal
injection in the United States. The execution took about 25 minutes
to complete, with McGuire reportedly convulsing and gasping for
breath.
In Oklahoma in April, convicted killer Clayton Lockett writhed in
pain and a needle became dislodged during his lethal injection at a
state prison. The execution was halted, but Lockett died about 30
minutes later of a heart attack.
(Writing by Daniel Wallis; Editing by Cynthia Johnston, Eric Walsh,
Robert Birsel)
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