Courtwatch
September 16, 2009 4:48 PM

Can Ohio Execute the Same Man Twice?

(AP)
For two hours Tuesday afternoon at a prison in Lucasville, Ohio, while the rest of us were at work or school or home, Romell Broom's team of executioners worked to find a usable vein which would deliver the lethal injections designed to stop his heart and end his life. First they tried his arms. Then they tried his legs. Broom himself, a convicted rapist and murderer, even tried to help at one point, flexing his hand and fingers while lying on his side. He grimaced. He wiped his brow. Nothing worked. His veins simply wouldn't hold up.

Eventually, long after Broom was supposed to be dead, the prison director and execution team gave up. They called the governor and asked for a reprieve. The governor relented and now Broom sits in legal limbo, waiting evidently not just for some medical procedure that would free him up to be put to death but also for some guidance from the state and federal courts about whether it now would amount to "cruel and unusual" punishment to execute him at all under Ohio's evolving (but clearly still troubled) lethal injection protocols.

The grisly details surrounding Broom's failed execution—which read like an outtake from the movie "The Green Mile" or a transcript from a torture probe-- remind us that the United States Supreme Court did not come remotely close last year to fixing the many problems that still surround lethal injection in America. It's true that the Justices upheld Kentucky's lethal injection procedures. But those measures are different from the procedures in place in Ohio, a state that consistently has had problems over the past few years ensuring that its executions are swift and humane.

In the Kentucky case, Baze v. Rees, decided in April 2008, the Court by a 7-2 margin made it more difficult but not impossible for other death row inmates to successfully challenge their state's injection protocols. Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Jr. wrote that an inmate must show both that a state's method "creates a demonstrated risk of severe pain" and also that there are other alternatives that are "feasible," "readily implemented" and capable of "significantly" reducing the risk of that "severe" pain.

Chief Justice Roberts wrote: "Simply because an execution method may result in pain, either by accident or as an inescapable consequence of death, does not establish the sort of 'objectively intolerable risk of harm' that qualifies as cruel and unusual" under the Eighth Amendment. That's the law right now. Where does Broom's botched execution fall into that legal standard? You tell me. How "severe" was his pain? How likely is it that it would occur again if the state tried to execute him again? And could Ohio come up with an alternative that would comply with the other standards set forth in the Court's opinion?

Ohio, it turns out, has been pressed for years to fix its lethal injection protocols, to bring them into some sort of compliance not just with Supreme Court standards but also with common decency. In just the past three years, two men were executed in arguably cruel and unusual fashion. In the case of Joseph L. Clark, in 2006, executioners were also unable at first to find a vein. "It don't work," Clark was reported to say. Visitors could hear him moaning and groaning behind a curtain closed to shut off a view of the execution. Some 40 minutes later, a working vein was finally found and Clark was executed.

In the case of Christopher Newton, in 2007, it took executioners two hours to find a vein and successfully administer the lethal cocktail. At the time, the Newton execution was the longest execution in the history of the Buckeye State. And it—and the attention drawn to the subject by the Supreme Court case-- finally prompted some action. Last year, under threat of judicial sanction, Ohio changed its injection protocols to try to ensure a swifter and less painful death for its capital convicts.

We know now that the new procedures don't work either. It simply cannot be a coincidence—bad luck for the men, bad news for officials-- that these ghastly events are taking place with such frequency in the same state when other states are able to execute their condemned with more precision, less pain, and fewer complications. It is no wonder that the call to end lethal injections in Ohio altogether, or at least until the right protocols are found, is getting louder and more diverse.

That's the political case. The legal case as usual is cloudy. For example, it would be surreal if Ohio now were able to argue (under Chief Justice Roberts' new standard in Baze) that because it can't find any "feasible" and "readily implementable" alternatives to the current protocols it shouldn't be required to fix its obvious problems. And I'm just waiting to see if anyone in the Ohio Attorney General's office has the gall to argue to a federal judge that because so many of its recent executions have been excruciatingly long and painful they no longer should be considered "unusual" under the Eighth Amendment.

In the meantime, Broom waits-- sore arms and legs and all. If he is "re-executed" he will become the first man in America since at least 1946 to achieve the dubious distinction, says Richard Dieter of the Death Penalty Information Center. That's some trivia that neither Ohio nor the United States Supreme Court ought to ignore.



(CBS)
Andrew Cohen is CBS News' Chief Legal Analyst and Legal Editor. CourtWatch is his new blog with analysis and commentary on breaking legal news and events. For columns on legal issues before the beginning of this blog, click here.
Tags:
execution ,
lethal injection ,
Romell Broom
Topics:
Death Penalty
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Add a Comment See all 48 Comments
by dawsouthernOhio September 21, 2009 6:07 AM EDT
I get sick of hearing how bad the guy suffered over a needle! There are other places to place an I.V, - This guy RAPED AND MURDERED this poor little girl! Why don't someone paint a picture from the Court proceedings on this girls pain and suffering, while this man was raping her, do you think she enjoyed what he done to her! then he murdered her! and she is still DEAD! You people are pathetic that are protecting him and worrying about his pain. Better add this too, it doesn't matter what color or race he is, just because he happens to be black doesn't make it a race issue.
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by sweetingham September 17, 2009 12:03 PM EDT
Excellent column, Cohen.
Sobering details and interesting legal issues.
Keep us posted, please!
Reply to this comment
by govtguy September 17, 2009 8:04 AM EDT
A 30.06 to the chest/heart area will take care of the problem. It's worked for several hundred years and no one complained. The guy deserves what he gets, pain or otherwise.
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by rf35 September 17, 2009 7:48 AM EDT
The headline is wrong. Ohio can't execute anyone twice. The first attempt failed, so by definition, there was no execution. Someone please buy the CBS staff a dictionary.

I'm a fan of hanging, myself. If done properly, it's quick and painless. If not, the condemed man will still die, albeit more slowly (maybe by God's will, if you buy into such things?). Using a proper nylon rope will prevent the possibility of it breaking...if it broke, it would pretty much HAVE to be "divine intervention." If the condemed was so large that there was a chance of the rope breaking, then an alternate method could be used. Maybe a large axe and a block of wood.
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by docpeter1953 September 17, 2009 7:37 AM EDT
Heck, when the first attempt failed they Ohio officials should have placed a call to Huntsville, Texas and asked for a team to come up there to do the job. Texans don't seem to have any problem finding veins. They could have been flown up there in a couple of hours, problem solved.

And NO, I am not a death penalty proponent. Yes I am being sarcastic and facetious.
Reply to this comment
by bubbadubba September 17, 2009 7:31 AM EDT
CAN OHIO EXECUTE THE SAME MAN TWICE? (headline)
"You are sentenced to have someone try and find a vein in your arm until you are dead."
Man, how can we be so cruel.
This poor guy, he was executed once by people trying to find a vein in his arms so executing him again would be executing him twice.
Great headline as usual.
Who writes these stories,a five year old?
Using their logic walking someone to the room to be executed is "execution" so nobody can be executed ever again.
Reply to this comment
by rplat September 17, 2009 6:08 AM EDT
The first attempt was not an "execution". The man has be sentenced to death and deserves to die. The next time they had better get it right.
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by hower4 September 17, 2009 4:35 AM EDT
......... and America thinks it's a humane society!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

If you want to torture your own citizens then go ahead, but what gives you the right to impose your disgusting morality on other countries, especially by force of arms?
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by White_Duck September 17, 2009 4:34 AM EDT
And after what this man did to his victims, we are supposed to feel sorry for him for some misplaced needle sticks? OK, get better trained or qualified "injectors", but carry out the sentance as it was duly prescribed by law.
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by babooph September 17, 2009 4:26 AM EDT
Medical workers are trained to "do no harm" odd they are used in executions,but who else could do this deed?Very strange mess,glad me or mine are not involved.
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by jxknowles September 17, 2009 3:44 AM EDT
Someone already stole my Texas line, so I'll just say "let's get it right people". I'm not big on capitol punishment, but sometimes, the punishment fits the crime.
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by stryker54 September 17, 2009 1:59 AM EDT
Thinking about it, I think we should kill them in the same manner they killed their victims. Leathal injection was to good for Timothy McViegh. He should have been strapped to a ryder truck filled with explosives, long fuse that came right up to where he was and than boom. they use a gun, we use a gun, they strangle, we strangle them. I think if the justice system would get a little barbaric maybe we wouldn't have so many hurting others if they knew the same treatment awaited them. But that is only an opinion.
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by stryker54 September 17, 2009 1:52 AM EDT
When are we going to quit coddling monsters like this. If you receive the death penality for raping and killing a 14 year old, who cares if he had some pain, they all should. Maybe than these people will think twice about harming people. They should go out like Gary Gilmore, firing squad. At least he stood up as a man, demanded he be executed for his crimes after getting the death penality, and had the guts to do it in front of a firing squad. He was a monster for what he did, but at lest he was also man enough to take a dose of what he did. These pansy ass criminals that kill and hurt people, especially children should quit complaining about how they are executed. 38 in the back of the head sounds human to me.
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by Lawyers-Guns-n-Money September 17, 2009 1:45 AM EDT
'Can Ohio Execute the Same Man Twice?'

Um, Mr. Cohen? That's a rather irrational question. That is unless you're supposing Broom was resuscitated after he was executed in order for him to be executed once more.
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by dixxson September 17, 2009 1:32 AM EDT
It seems that everything Evil" is Republican Associated!
NO: Republicans!
NO: Death Penalty!
And I believe a very Large majority of the Death Sentence Crimes,
would have "Never" been Committed!
The most atrocious, and Horrific, death penalty crimes occurs "mainly" in the "Death Belt States".
Reply to this comment
by Newster1 September 17, 2009 1:24 AM EDT
Good grief those docs are incompetant, what if he was not a prisoner and was having a heart attack and they needed to start a freaking IV?
Ya give him the sleeping gas like the do in surgery, and then stick him in the heart with the iv needle and its done.
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by stuart-johns September 16, 2009 11:05 PM EDT
Can you execute someone twice? Maybe if he lives in Texas.
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by koko98-2009 September 16, 2009 10:56 PM EDT
Maybe Ohio should have hired Michael Jackson's doctor. If he could find a vein in that freak he should be able to terminate this case as well.
Reply to this comment
by CBSTV September 16, 2009 10:50 PM EDT
There is a low signal-to-noise ratio in these comments. Contrasted against intelligent assessments from Steve-Hall and wwudiver are numerous depraved remarks.

Let's be truthful when discussing this serious subject: "Execute" is a euphemism for "kill." An "inmate" is an incarcerated person. An "execution team" is a group of people who kill.
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by taxchurches September 16, 2009 10:43 PM EDT
As always, the shallow always rave about "what about the victims"? So for the cheap seats: this is the same as the issue of torturing prisoners at Gitmo or whether U.S. soldiers should be tried for war crimes on foreign soil, etc. It is OUR behavior we are concerned with here, not the condemned prisoner's. The point is simple enough: we hold ourselves to a higher moral standard, because if we don't, what are we punishing? Victims have a recourse to the law, a right to justice and due process, but not lynch mobs.

These indignant, self-righteous outbursts, such as seen at "tea parties" and now at presidential addresses to joint meetings of Congress, are getting decidedly old. Why do you people insist on coming across as clothed monkeys, or at best, Neandertals? Some us fail to see anything admirable about it. It isn't hard to figure out why few take America seriously, and why many who do despise it. Sophistication, subtlety of thought and moral depth are yardsticks of humanity. Try not dragging the rest of us down, ok? No point justifying another 11 September 01 in the minds of your enemies.
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by thesevenveils September 17, 2009 3:28 AM EDT
Having our own little tea party are we?
So, it is true, the punishment is for the crimes and not as retribution to the victims. And it is ever so rare that victims or their families are able to collect any compensation from the defendant.
Pass the scones please.
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