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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Aug 31, 2018 20:32:58 GMT -6
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Mar 22, 2017 19:18:36 GMT -6
Not sure if anybody has ever seen this video, but I decided I would post it here since this board seems to be dead as most people on death row are going to be. It is basically a reconstruction of a lethal injection scene that was botched. The video is from an anti-DP YouTube channel but I am still posting it because I find it interesting and want to see your takes on it. This is apparently how an execution would work, though this is just a reconstruction scene.
Based on the evidence of how the scene was set up, I'm gonna venture a guess that the execution scene was based on the massive cluster that happened when Ohio tried to execute Clayton Lockett and couldn't get it right because they hired someone off the street who pushed the needle through the vein rather than a trained EMT (which ISN'T against the Hippocratic Oath since they aren't technically doctors) to insert the IVs correct. They have most of the same information that was gotten from Lockett's execution, such as the needle going through the vein, the drugs not taking effect because of that, him suffocating while half-conscious as well as the drugs used (Midazolam, Vecuronium and Potassium). Me posting this is in no way me saying that I'm against capital punishment. I'm only posting it because I wanted to get your take on it.
So watch and please comment on what you think.
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Jan 8, 2017 2:41:46 GMT -6
Oh so you mean that Anti-DPs aren't celebrating that another state bites the dust? Who would have guessed.
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Jan 6, 2017 22:53:46 GMT -6
I'm sure that anti-DPers are absolutely overjoyed seeing as Delaware just abolished the death penalty also. It may die in some states, but not in all states.
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Nov 10, 2016 21:53:27 GMT -6
Well since we have Trump as a president, I wonder if that will help the DP in any way...?
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Sept 8, 2016 11:21:26 GMT -6
Yes. There was an interview that he did on YouTube.
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Sept 3, 2016 0:37:45 GMT -6
Attached are shots of said lethal injection machine. The first picture is Delaware's machine which I got from a 20/20 interview with Fred Leuchter on the same channel. The syringe he is inserting is a saline syringe. From left to right, the syringes are 2 pentothal, 2 pavulon and 2 kcl and the end syringes are saline flushes. The second picture is of Missouri's machine when they used it in Potosi. There are no pictures of Illinois's machine when its opened up. My avatar is the picture of the machine New Jersey never used. Fred Leuchter confirmed it himself when I e-mailed him a few years ago. Attachments:
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Aug 30, 2016 18:52:46 GMT -6
From "The Execution Protocol" and they do it a second time when they were practicing for an execution at least back then. Just take a look at it and tell me what you think. This is the clip I've always wanted.
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Oct 2, 2015 1:35:02 GMT -6
Well if worse comes to worse, they can raid the veterinarian clinics for drugs.
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Sept 30, 2015 21:22:36 GMT -6
Anybody know how long it took for her to die? She was euthanized instead of executed (Sodium Pentobarbital) and when I euthanized by dog two years ago, he died instantly.
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Sept 28, 2015 17:21:15 GMT -6
Actually it is scheduled for tomorrow and not scheduled for tonight.
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Jan 8, 2015 4:20:25 GMT -6
If anybody cares and since Agave seemed to have jumped ship, here is where Cool C would have met his end for being a cop killer.
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Jan 7, 2015 17:13:43 GMT -6
Unfortunately, they got the whole thing rolling. As for making our own drugs, the Supreme Court will not allow us to use compounding drugs in executions.
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Jan 7, 2015 15:24:16 GMT -6
Of course he did. Its Pennsylvania. I already knew what would happen. Now there is no way they will do anything, given that any sort of drugs are difficult to come by thanks to the f**ktards that are the EU.
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Jan 7, 2015 14:39:55 GMT -6
Anybody think that it will go through?
Tomorrow, Thursday, January 8, Philadelphia golden-age rapper Cool C — real name Christopher Roney — is set to be executed by lethal injection, the result of his 1996 conviction on charges of first-degree murder for the shooting death of Police Officer Lauretha Vaird. The shooting occurred in January of that year, when Roney, then 26, and two other men attempted to rob a Philadelphia PNC Bank branch. Roney shot Vaird, a 43-year-old mother of two, as soon as she stepped through the bank's entrance, making her the first officer killed responding to a call in the city's history.
Cool C, considered a pioneer of the Philadelphia rap scene, emerged at a time when hip-hop was overwhelmingly, almost exclusively, found in New York. With the rap world at large focused on the five boroughs, the mid Eighties were a time when one of the quickest ways to achieve notoriety was to record a dis song targeted at the popular artists of the day.
Cool C did just that with his 1987 debut single, "Juice Crew Dis." Amid the infamous South Bronx vs. Queens feud, Cool C represented Philly's issue with Juice Crew member and Queens resident MC Shan having allegedly turned his back on the Philly scene that gave him his start. Cool C had a style similar to Shan's, which made his reworking of some of Shan's signature lines as disses toward him and Juice Crew members Roxanne Shante and Marley Marl stand out in one of rap's most battle-heavy climates.
Stepping up to Shan made Cool C a hometown hero and garnered the attention of increasingly prominent rap labels. The next year, City Beat, the label that also originally released Rob Base and DJ E-Z Rock's "It Takes Two" and Ultramagnetic MC's "Traveling at the Speed of Thought," put out Cool C's next single, "C Is Cool." That and C's self-released follow-up, "Down to the Grissel," were successful enough to land C a deal with Atlantic Records. In 1989 Atlantic released C's debut album, I Gotta Habit, boasting his signature single "Glamorous Life," whose suave boasts and featured females (including a young Jill Scott) landed the video regular rotation in rap outlets.
After one more album, Life in the Ghetto, Cool C formed the group C.E.B. (Countin' Endless Bank) with fellow Philly natives and longtime associates Steady B and DJ Ultimate Eaze. Landing a deal with Ruffhouse Records, they released their self-titled debut in 1993.
The album tanked, and Cool C disappeared from the pages of rap magazines until news about his shooting of Officer Vaird hit three years later (coming as a shock to rap fans as well as Roney's friends and family — his criminal record to that point consisted solely of a 1993 conviction for carrying a .45 without a license). To this day, Roney and his mother maintain his innocence, claiming they were eating together at the time of the robbery, despite a surveillance video, ballistic and forensic evidence, and three eyewitnesses linking him to the murder. It was actually with Steady B (née Warren McGlone) that Cool C and associate Ernest Mark Canty attempted the 1996 heist that led to C's conviction. According to McGlone, Canty had planned the robbery of a Philadelphia PNC Bank the morning of Tuesday, January 2, 1996. While Canty waited in the getaway van, parked in a Rite Aid lot across the street, McGlone and Roney ambushed the employees as they were opening the bank. The man believed to be Roney was seen in a surveillance video aiming a gun at the bank's entrance. Officer Vaird, responding to the silent alarm, was shot by Roney as she entered the building. Assistant District Attorney Roger King argued the element of planning, including the specific pointing of the gun at the doors, was enough evidence to support a first-degree murder conviction.
The death penalty was sought for all three, but Canty and McGlone received life in prison without parole, while on November 1, 1996, Christopher "Cool C" Roney was sentenced to death. He's since been an inmate of Pennsylvania's State Correctional Institution at Greene. Former Pennsylvania governor Ed Rendell originally slated Roney's death for March 9, 2006, but litigation issues caused it to be indefinitely delayed. Tomorrow, slightly more than nineteen years after the attempted robbery, Roney will be executed.
The rap world's been largely silent for the past two decades regarding Cool C's trial, incarceration and execution. Not even Cool C and Steady B's Overbrook High classmate Will Smith has been asked about or commented on the situation. Days after their arrest, then–Ruff House Records President Joe Nicolo said he was shocked to hear of the story, stating, "Their music wasn't about robbing people or toting guns or knocking off banks, their bravado was in their rhyming ability." The only artist of note to even mention Cool C has been fellow Philly rapper and DJ Kay Slay affiliate WarChyld, who released a Cool C "dedication" Monday in the form of a remake of C's "The Glamorous Life."
To this day, the fallen policewoman, Lauretha Vaird, is remembered as one of Philadelphia's most beloved officers. A mother of two sons — eleven and seventeen at the time of her death — she changed careers from an assistant to special-education teachers at Germantown's Pickett Middle School to serve her city in her mid thirties. The Officer Down Memorial Page created in her honor relates several stories of her heroism and the love she inspired. In 2010, Vaird was honored in Philadelphia's Feltonville neighborhood with a "Celebration of Life" at the Boys and Girls Club, which was also named after her. The Vaird Foundation, founded by fellow officer Kimberly Byrd, runs prospective law enforcement career mentoring and college assistance programs and has given thousands of dollars in college aid.
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Jun 9, 2014 23:26:16 GMT -6
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Feb 23, 2014 20:06:20 GMT -6
First question: Which was used first: gas chamber or electric chair
Second question: If the electric chair was used first, where was the chamber located in since I heard they used the electric chair in the gas chamber.
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Feb 9, 2014 4:20:49 GMT -6
Nitrogen Asphyxiation may not happen anyway because most of the states are too afraid to try to change a method. Texas might try to try it if LI really is blocked by the idiots in the EU, but most other states, I'm terrified would abolish it.
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Feb 3, 2014 23:36:02 GMT -6
I never thought about the oxygen mask being used for nitrogen and it probably would be ten times easier. You could use the old electric chairs to strap the person down and instead of the electrodes, a gas mask with a gas tank would be connected. How fast does it take for one to die? I know that you lose consciousness rather quickly, but how long until brain death and then the stoppage of the heart. Obviously they would attach an EKG to monitor heart rate.
Though to be honest, I'm hoping that we will still be able to carry on with LI and give a big FU to the morons that make up the EU.
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Feb 2, 2014 4:38:43 GMT -6
Since the EU seems DETERMINED to destroy lethal injection, nitrogen asphyxiation seems to be the only way that the US might be able to continue going on with executions. Even someone from the UK (Michael Portillo) said that nitrogen asphyxiation was a humane method of death. With that being said, would it be possible to convert a gas chamber so that instead of releasing cyanide, it releases nitrogen?
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Dec 23, 2013 2:44:40 GMT -6
I'm just glad that they executed the ahole.
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Dec 23, 2013 2:43:31 GMT -6
Did they use Propofol or am I thinking of another state?
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Dec 23, 2013 2:42:08 GMT -6
What happened to Robert William Seals? I didn't see how much time he got
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Dec 23, 2013 2:38:49 GMT -6
I just want something to say whether or not she murdered her kids. I shudder to think what would happen if she's found innocent by DNA testing...
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Dec 23, 2013 2:34:56 GMT -6
Don't worry. After their execution they are gonna be burning anyway.
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Dec 23, 2013 2:33:05 GMT -6
I think the movie based on her made more people into Pro-DP advocates then Anti-DP advocates. I know that when I watched the movie, the only thing I got out of it was don't kill or you'll be executed.
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Dec 23, 2013 2:29:16 GMT -6
It may be disgusting, but it also may be very effective.
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Dec 23, 2013 2:24:57 GMT -6
25(2014), 15(2015), 7(2016)...Zero(2020). Good. [/quote] Only in your dreams. What will it take for the states to start executing and the EU Pee-Yew to get their heads out of their *%#*@*? Another Charles Manson?
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Dec 23, 2013 2:23:11 GMT -6
Thank you. And yes, the DP will be around and will be here to stay. If they run out of drugs then they'll switch to another method. Those Euroweenies will never be able to kill it off.
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Oct 15, 2013 7:38:59 GMT -6
If she was terminally ill, then I would have been for it. I don't think that people that aren't terminally ill should end their lives. There is always hope, and I have no doubt that with time, the surgery could have been fixed.
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