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Omaha Steve

(99,584 posts)
Thu May 14, 2015, 07:27 PM May 2015

Nebraska has purchased drugs necessary for lethal injections, Gov. Ricketts says

Source: Omaha World Herald

By Paul Hammel

LINCOLN — On the eve of a legislative debate about repealing Nebraska’s death penalty, Gov. Pete Ricketts announced Thursday that the state is on the verge of obtaining a new supply of drugs to carry out an execution.

Ricketts, in a late afternoon press release, said that the state has purchased a supply of two drugs, sodium thiopental and pancuronium bromide, from a lab in India, HarrisPharma, and already has a supply of the third drug required, potassium chloride.

When the drugs arrive, the governor said the state will have the ability to carry out a lethal injection execution.

The state has been unable to do that since December 2013, when its supply of sodium thiopental expired.

FULL story at link.

Related Stories @ link.

Proponents of death penalty in Nebraska are on the defensive, for the first time in years

Religious leaders call for death penalty repeal; 'I hope we will choose to value life,' bishop says

Read more: http://www.omaha.com/news/crime/nebraska-has-purchased-drugs-necessary-for-lethal-injections-gov-ricketts/article_3423d60a-fa8c-11e4-a761-1f25f74fc5ba.html

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Nebraska has purchased drugs necessary for lethal injections, Gov. Ricketts says (Original Post) Omaha Steve May 2015 OP
Murder by state. mahannah May 2015 #1
We'll get the drugs Real Soon Now ^TM longship May 2015 #2
What a good Catholic. ForgoTheConsequence May 2015 #3
Thanks, OS - Keep us on our toes. Let's make sure the governer tests out these new meds first. erronis May 2015 #4
I wonder if this is connected to this: Liberalagogo May 2015 #5

longship

(40,416 posts)
2. We'll get the drugs Real Soon Now ^TM
Thu May 14, 2015, 07:46 PM
May 2015

I just do not know how anybody can defend the death penalty any longer. Especially since so called humane lethal injection is apparently not so humane, and that no reputable pharmacy will supply the necessary lethal drug cocktail.

So some states have put forth laws to go back to much more brutal and less humane methods. Tennessee and their electric chair (fry them to death), and Utah and the shooting gallery (non-drive-by shooting -- but we'll give blanks to one of the shooters so he doesn't feel too bad).

One hopes that the drugs from India are safe and effective (TM) and are not typical of other nostrums from that area of the world, which often contain little of the prescribed contents.

Maybe they could bring over a Baba who knows the Tantra Touch of Death.

Or maybe just the Head Ripping Off Machine:



End the death penalty!

ForgoTheConsequence

(4,868 posts)
3. What a good Catholic.
Thu May 14, 2015, 07:58 PM
May 2015

He brags about how much he donates to Catholic schools in Omaha, hypocrite.

The Roman Catholic Church has long called for a culture of life, promoting and supporting the fundamental good of human life in all areas of civil government for the sake of the common good. Catholic teaching allows the use of the death penalty under certain clear and specific conditions. We do not believe that those conditions exist in Nebraska at this time.

For this reason, the Catholic bishops of Nebraska, guided by prudence and the teaching of the Church, support legislative efforts to repeal the death penalty and reform our criminal justice system.

We have great compassion for those families who have been impacted by acts of profound violence. Their pain is real, and they are not alone in their anger over the injustice they have suffered. However, we do not believe that violence is best fought with violence. Too often, the death penalty serves our cultural desire for vengeance. We must all be careful to temper our natural outrage against violent crime with a recognition of the dignity of all people, even the guilty.

We are also disturbed that since 1973, 143 individuals in the U.S. have been released from death row as the result of evidence that demonstrated they were wrongly convicted. As technology improves, this may become more commonplace. We also know that racial minorities and the poor are disproportionately sentenced to death, often as a consequence of racial bias or inadequate defense due to an ability to pay for better representation. We are deeply troubled by a justice system in which the innocent might be executed, and in which race, education, and economics might play a factor in a death sentence.

The death penalty is not necessary in Nebraska. The purposes of a criminal justice system are rehabilitation, deterrence, public safety, and the restoration of justice. The death penalty does not provide rehabilitation to convicted criminals. There is no clear evidence that executions deter crime. Public safety can be assured through other means. And justice requires punishment, but it does not require that those who have committed capital crimes be put to death.
We call for the repeal of the death penalty in our state. We also call the state of Nebraska to increase efforts towards the rehabilitation of all criminals. We recognize that some criminals will never be fit for reintegration into society. Therefore, we support the use of just sentences that keep Nebraskans safe.

Our position is rooted in the teachings of our faith. We ask those who disagree with us to reflect prayerfully on the words of Jesus Christ himself: “love your enemies, and pray for those who persecute you, that you may be children of your heavenly Father.”

-Archbishop George Lucas, Archbishop of Omaha
-Bishop James Conley, Bishop of Lincoln
-Bishop William Dendinger, Bishop of Grand Island

erronis

(15,241 posts)
4. Thanks, OS - Keep us on our toes. Let's make sure the governer tests out these new meds first.
Thu May 14, 2015, 08:36 PM
May 2015

We wouldn't want any possibly innocent prisoner being put to death with a bad mixture of untested drugs.

However, we would probably welcome any politician supporting this atrocity to test these meds first. Slow drip, left arm. Let us know when you feel really calm...

Maybe like all those neocons who were for "enhanced interrogation techniques" who wouldn't let themselves try a wet washcloth across the face.

You are all brave and patriotic, except when it comes down to your own lives.

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