Should Firing Squads Replace Lethal Injections? (HBO) - YouTube

Channel: VICE News

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Ohio's lethal injection process is on trial today,
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in the U.S. Court of Appeals.
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Specifically, the court is deciding whether
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the drug used to sedate prisoners during executions
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is powerful enough to prevent inhumane suffering,
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after a series of botched attempts.
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Supplies of lethal injection drugs are also running low nationwide,
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as pharmaceutical companies refuse
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to sell their products to prisons.
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Now, some states are considering
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alternative forms of capital punishment.
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But it's not exactly a new idea.
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— We were on his left side.
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And he was already strapped to the big black chair.
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Had sandbags, big sandbags, around it.
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A couple of straps on his arms.
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He was wearing a navy blue jumpsuit,
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which I thought was curious, at first.
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Didn't realize until later that the navy blue
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masked the blood that pooled.
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So that's likely why it was chosen.
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Warden Turley came in,
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asked him if he had any last words,
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and he said, "I do not, no."
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A hood, a black hood, was placed over his face, and...
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it wasn't 30 seconds later before it was "boom, boom!"
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— On June 18th, 2010, Sheryl Worsley, a local journalist,
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witnessed the execution of Ronnie Lee Gardner,
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convicted of robbery and multiple murders.
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He was the last American to receive the death penalty,
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by firing squad.
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Ronnie's execution was national news.
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For the 31 states where the death penalty is legal,
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firing squads could be a substitute for lethal injection.
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In 2010, Utah was one of two states with the firing squad
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as a backup method of capital punishment.
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This year, Alabama lawmakers have a bill
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to follow in their footsteps,
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and other Southern lawmakers are believed to be weighing alternatives,
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as legal challenges to lethal injection continue.
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— The execution felt violent,
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it felt jarring,
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but, at the same time, it felt clinical,
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and professional, and clean.
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And I know that sounds like an oxymoron,
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but it truly felt... sterile.
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— That's where the four bullets went in,
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and it's dried blood and splatter that came out,
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and his heart and lung material,
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and everything that goes with it.
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That's funny, to see that.
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That just shows that it is really him.
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— Ronnie Lee Gardner asked his brother, Randy,
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not to witness his execution.
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But in 2016, Randy obtained the photo records from that day.
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It took him two months to pull out the pictures,
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and actually look at what happened to his brother.
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Randy says he copes through anti-death penalty activism.
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He has been arrested for displaying the graphic images
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of his brother's death at Utah's Capitol,
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and for demonstrating in Washington D.C.
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— How did it change you?
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— I dreamed about it, having nightmares.
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Him being executed, and his head being cut off, and him being shot.
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And now that I've seen these pictures,
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when I see how brutal it really was, you know,
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it hurts my feelings.
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You know, we felt like we were victims of a murder, really.
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Of a state-sanctioned murder.
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— You know, Ronnie Lee Gardner, his brother talks about the fact
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that Ronnie Lee found God and he was changed.
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Well, I'll tell you, everybody finds God before they die.
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— Representative Paul Ray authored the bill
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that brought the firing squad back as an option in Utah in 2015,
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and has a bill on the floor right now
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that adds violent sex trafficking as a capital offense.
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— Would your guess be that firing squad is
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the most humane way to carry out capital punishment?
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— I think it is.
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I mean, if you look at the other options,
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hanging, electrocution, and lethal injection,
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this is, obviously, the quickest,
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most painless way to take somebody's life.
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— In Utah, lethal injection is still the primary execution method.
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Though they don't have the drugs on hand,
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they hope to find them before the next executions.
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Of the nine men on death row in Utah right now,
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three say they prefer death by firing squad.
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— Is it ever kind of crazy as a lawmaker
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to be talking about what the best way is to take somebody's life?
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— You know, it's it's a it's a big deal in Utah
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if we take somebody's life,
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and so, we wanted to make sure
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that we were doing the things the right way,
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and I think, by going back to what we've used, we know what works
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and we've not had ever had a problem with it.
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And these people that go to death row, they're monsters.
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I mean, they're not there because they sang too loud in the choir on Sunday,
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they're there because they killed somebody, and they're gonna continue to kill people.
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So the only thing that we can do, is terminate them.
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— Lethal injection was considered the most humane execution.
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It was developed in 1977,
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after a nine-year national moratorium on the death penalty.
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In theory, it seemed like putting a horse to sleep.
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In practice, correctional staff were poorly trained,
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and that drug mixtures caused complications
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and slow, painful deaths in many cases.
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— Relative to lethal injection, a firing squad death is much quicker.
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We've had lethal injections in this country
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that have lasted over two hours,
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because executioners have been trying to find a correct vein,
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there have been problems with the drugs,
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the inmate is simply not dying...
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— For over 25 years, Fordham Law Professor Deborah Denno
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has studied America's repeated attempts
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to find humane ways to execute criminals.
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— A firing squad sounds pretty grisly, frankly.
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Does that make sense as a method for the 21st-century?
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— There have only been two botches
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of firing squad executions in a, say,
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a sample of 144 civilian executions,
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over the course of this country's history.
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Both of those botches would not happen in the present day.
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One was because the inmate was intoxicated,
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and moving so much that the target got displaced.
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In another case, the executioners
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purposely shot in the side of the inmate's body,
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because they wanted that inmate to suffer.
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Again, we wouldn't see those kinds of incidences today.
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— So when people say the firing squad is a more humane way to die...
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— There is nothing more humane about it. They don't know.
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You know, this is not humane to anybody.
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It's not humane to Ronnie,
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it's not humane to the people that do it.
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It's—I mean, it's a terrible, terrible murder.