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Post by The Tipsy Broker on Apr 1, 2009 7:46:10 GMT -6
There is another movie, apparently, simply called "Hangman". It depicts the more barbaric 17th or 18th centrury. Or so I've heard. I have yet to get my hands on either of them. Not the hangmen, the movies. Must check that out, didn't know about this one Theres one called The Last Hangman, about Albert Pierrepoint as well.
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Post by rick4404 on Apr 1, 2009 14:32:33 GMT -6
Yep, who cares about their mental torture. By the time they see the guy in black hood they won't have to suffer it for long anyway ;D How long is an execution 5-10 minutes max? They can suck it up. In Texas, they pretty much have it down to the second. The execution begins at 6:00 p.m., and it's usually over by 6:20 p.m. unless there is an unforeseen snag. I assume it all depends upon how quickly the executioner(s) push the lethal drugs into the IV lines. In the three drug protocol, the administration of the three drugs in sequence is broken up by flushing the line clean with saline between each drug. That supposedly keeps the lines from getting clogged because when the drugs mix together in the IV lines it causes them to clog.
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Apr 4, 2009 19:04:03 GMT -6
As for the bit about a machine not being used anymore, I am currently in contact with the inventor of the machine Fred Leuchter, and he told me that only 4 states used the machine which were Illinois, Delaware, New Jersey (when it still had the DP) and Missouri. He also told me that they all still use the machine, but lie because of fear of the Jewish groups.
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Post by rick4404 on Apr 4, 2009 19:57:23 GMT -6
As for the bit about a machine not being used anymore, I am currently in contact with the inventor of the machine Fred Leuchter, and he told me that only 4 states used the machine which were Illinois, Delaware, New Jersey (when it still had the DP) and Missouri. He also told me that they all still use the machine, but lie because of fear of the Jewish groups. Since New Jersey never conducted one execution between the time the state reinstated the death penalty until it was abolished again; the correct vernacular would be that onle three states used the Leuchter lethal injection device.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 4, 2009 20:34:20 GMT -6
As for the bit about a machine not being used anymore, I am currently in contact with the inventor of the machine Fred Leuchter, and he told me that only 4 states used the machine which were Illinois, Delaware, New Jersey (when it still had the DP) and Missouri. He also told me that they all still use the machine, but lie because of fear of the Jewish groups. Don't trust anything Leuchter has to say, he is more famous for being a Holocaust denier than for having invented the LI machine.
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Post by Californian on Apr 4, 2009 21:10:02 GMT -6
As for the bit about a machine not being used anymore, I am currently in contact with the inventor of the machine Fred Leuchter, and he told me that only 4 states used the machine which were Illinois, Delaware, New Jersey (when it still had the DP) and Missouri. He also told me that they all still use the machine, but lie because of fear of the Jewish groups. Don't trust anything Leuchter has to say, he is more famous for being a Holocaust denier than for having invented the LI machine. As I recall, he holds himself out as an engineer but has no engineering degree, as well. I will say this-he makes some potent arguments against the Nazi gas chambers due to the chemical properties of HCN gas. I found myself doing a little research on some of the points he made, and he was correct. I have great confidence in our Teutonic friends' engineering prowess, however, and am sure they managed somehow.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 5, 2009 11:25:49 GMT -6
Don't trust anything Leuchter has to say, he is more famous for being a Holocaust denier than for having invented the LI machine. As I recall, he holds himself out as an engineer but has no engineering degree, as well. I will say this-he makes some potent arguments against the Nazi gas chambers due to the chemical properties of HCN gas. I found myself doing a little research on some of the points he made, and he was correct. I have great confidence in our Teutonic friends' engineering prowess, however, and am sure they managed somehow. IF I remember correctly he took samples in what he thought were the execution chambers 50+ years after the war had ended. The nazie's had destroyed the execution chambers before abandoning the camp. They were later rebuilt probably in the 50's.
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Post by Potassium_Pixie on Apr 5, 2009 11:27:40 GMT -6
Even so, I do think that someone should make a machine real soon that injects the chemicals rather than do it manually since people tend to screw it up like that. I may be the only one that thinks that though.
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Post by rick4404 on Apr 6, 2009 18:56:52 GMT -6
The only other lethal injection device anyone knows about was the one which was used by Jack Kevorkian on a few of his "patients." It was a rather crude device.
I agree about Fred Leuchter. He's nothing more than a crackpot, who happened to make a name for himself until he was largely discredited with his remarks about the death chambers that were used in Nazi Germany.
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