Diaz’s left arm had an 11-by-7 inch chemical burn from the lethal drugs. By the time the autopsy began, the superficial skin had sloughed off, revealing white subcutaneous skin. (Source: New Republic)
Yesterday, The New Republic published for the first time a set of photographs of a chemically burnt corpse. The body was that of Angel Diaz, a man executed by the state of Florida in December of 2006.
As author of the piece, Ben Crair explains, “The execution team pushed IV catheters straight through the veins in both his arms and into the underlying tissue.”
Diaz sustained horrendous surface and subcutaneous chemical burns.
“As a result,” Crair continues, “Diaz required two full doses of the lethal drugs, and an execution scheduled to take only 10 to 15 minutes lasted 34. It was one of the worst botches since states began using lethal injection in the 1980s, and Jeb Bush, then the governor of Florida, responded with a moratorium on executions.”
The photographs were made by a Florida medical examiner during Diaz’s autopsy. Crair discovered the photographs in the case file of Ian Lightbourne, a Florida death-row prisoner whose lawyers submitted them as evidence that lethal injection poses an unconstitutional risk of cruel and unusual punishment. While the details of Diaz’s botched execution have been known since 2006, this is the first time visual evidence of the injuries sustained from the lethal injection has been presented publicly.
I’d like to tell you that such images are anomalous, but sadly that is not the case.
I, myself, have seen a set of images of a burnt corpse post execution. The victim in that case was executed in the electric chair. Similarly, in that case, the images were in the possession of a lawyer (who had acquired them through family of the executed) and used in court in argument against the electric chair as cruel and unusual punishment.*1
May I suggest that the photographs of Angel Diaz’ corpse, and all those images like them, be accessioned into the Library of Congress?
If the Library of Congress’ mandate is to preserve those things that are central to American culture; central to the American conscience, dear to this nation’s body politic and truly reflective of our culture, then I hold there is no better collection of images than these.
Between 1890 and 2010, the U.S. has executed 8,776 people. Of those, Austin Sarat, author of Gruesome Spectacles: Botched Executions and America’s Death Penalty says 276 went wrong in some way. Of all the methods used, lethal injection had the highest rate of botched executions — about 7%.
Photographs of a botched execution are as American as apple pie.
Whether an execution is considered officially “botched” or not, the torture imposed on a body in the minutes before death is unconscionable. Crair pursued the story and the publication of the images, rightly so, in the aftermath of the recent botched execution of Clayton Lockett in Oklahoma.
“The execution team struggled for 51 minutes to find a vein for IV access,” writes Crair, “eventually aiming for the femoral vein deep in Lockett’s groin. Something went wrong: Oklahoma first said the vein had “blown,” then “exploded,” and eventually just “collapsed,” all of which would be unusual for the thick femoral vein if an IV had been inserted correctly. Whatever it was, the drugs saturated the surrounding tissue rather than flowing into his bloodstream. The director of corrections called off the execution, at which point the lethal injection became a life-saving operation. But it was too late for Lockett. Ten minutes later, and a full hour-and-forty-seven minutes after Lockett entered the death chamber, a doctor pronounced him dead.”
CLOSING THE BLINDS
The single detail about the Oklahoma debacle that really stuck in my mind was the state’s decision — upon realising the execution was being botched — to drop the blinds.
The gallery of spectators including press, victim’s family and prisoner’s family lost their privileged view.
In that instance when the blinds dropped, the scene switched from that of official, public enactment of justice to the messy, sick, complicit torture of a human. In that instance, the barbarity of the state revealed itself fully. And the state was ashamed. The public were no longer allowed to see.
The notion — indeed the internal logic of the state — that viewing one type of execution is acceptable and another is not is astounding. By virtue of its actions during Lockett’s botched execution, the state has distinguished between what types of torture (execution) it is acceptable to see. Quick, quiet, seemingly painless = good. Noisy, drawn out, demonstratively torturous = not good.
The distinctions are petty. All executions are cruel and unusual.
At this point, I can only presume those who still support the death penalty are those who subscribe to some pathological eye-for-an-eye illogic. Wake up! The state shouldn’t be involved in murdering people. Especially when we have seen 1 in 10 people locked up for life or on death row for capital offenses later exonerated due to DNA evidence or prosecutorial misconduct. The state shouldn’t be involved in murdering innocent people.
11 comments
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May 30, 2014 at 11:49 am
Jake
I would rather be shot in the head than have my arms and legs tied down and then be injected and die a horrible death in this way.
May 30, 2014 at 7:33 pm
Cara
Who cares… If they did something worthy of the death penalty, I have a hard time feeling sorry for their “pain and suffering”… I care more about the pain and suffering they put their victims through!
July 1, 2014 at 7:17 am
Linda Sellers
I just cannot feel sorry for these criminals. And by the way, they are not victims, they are criminals. There’s a reason why they’re on death row. I wonder if these criminals suffered as much as their victims did. Although I do agree that we shouldn’t murder anyone, should we just keep them incarcerated for life? To me, that would be a far worse punishment than death.
September 7, 2015 at 1:48 pm
Hot Lips
I agree with Cara. Why should we care what pain they are suffering on the table. Did he give the victim’s family any thought of the pain that he was putting them through, I don’t think so. The way I look at it if he puts the family through all that pain then he should suffer the same pain, what goes around comes around. An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth. So do I think that person should suffer like the victim and their families, hell yes!!!
September 7, 2015 at 2:23 pm
petebrook
How do you know a person being executed is guilty of the crime to which they’ve been sentenced to death for? Over 300 people have been exonerated from death row after serving decades for crimes they never committed. God knows how many innocent people the United States has fried.
October 1, 2015 at 6:20 pm
James White
Who cares if they suffer during their execution? Have you ever looked at crime scene photo’s, or heard stories of people who suffered horrific damage by psychotic murderers and rapists? Murderers and Rapists don’t worry about killing one of their victims in the least painful or horrific way. Personally, if someone is convicted of homicide or rape, or even pedophilia, take them out into a courtyard and burn them alive. Bet they would cry out loudly for the needle or electrocution at that point. Or, if people are a little squeamish to take out the monsters in such a fashion, have a system like China. After they are sentenced to death(and these would be murderers, rapists, pedophiles, caught in the act, or the evidence is not refutable, then take them outside the courthouse and put a bullet into their brains. Lets see, a .25 cent bullet versus millions of dollars to put someone to death…….yeah, seems like a no brainer(no pun intended) to me.
October 2, 2015 at 8:52 am
petebrook
And what about people who are innocent and are executed?
January 3, 2017 at 5:13 am
Sharon McDougall
I’m with James White on this one. I’m a great believer of the death penalty so therefore he deserves to die with pain. The reason I’m saying this is because he never thought of the person/persons that he inflicted pain on, more to the point their families will live with the pain for the rest of their lives, where as he only had to have pain inflicted on him for a shorter time. So as the saying goes what goes around comes around, and also an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.
January 9, 2017 at 7:42 am
petebrook
What about the men and women on death row who are innocent of the crime for which they were sentenced?
February 13, 2018 at 8:33 pm
Marc
Wake up? Wide awake here. May I suggest YOU wake up. Name ONE just one sentence that is more effective than the death penalty? No penalty cures 100% of the guilty’s inability to stop committing crime like the death penalty! I guarantee that after they serve their death sentence, they won’t even j-walk!
On a serious note though, why don’t you look at their crimes? What they did. What their victims endured. What their families know happened to their murdered family members & the torture they’ll be forced to live with for eternity.
The guy who said, “an eye for an eye makes the world go blind” was MIRDERED.
We do agree on one thing; The state shouldn’t decide who lives or dies. That’s precisely why there is a trial and a JURY of 12 people decide it. Tge state simply carries out the penalty.
Still though, I don’t think the state should even do that. It should be the family of their victims that get the fine pleasure of ending their miserable & selfish existences.
February 18, 2018 at 10:32 am
petebrook
Marc, I guess I just return to the fact that there are hundreds of people who have been exonerated from death row because it was later discovered that they did not commit the crime. For as long as a system is not 100% accurate in its rightful judgements, the U.S. will never not be killing innocent people. When life imprisonment (and the possibility of later correction of conviction) is another option, I’ll take it.
On the moral side of the issue: You believe in vengeance and murder, whereas I don’t believe killing someone makes up for the killing of another. On that we’ll have to differ.