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Showing posts with label USA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label USA. Show all posts
Ernest Lee Johnson
Ernest Lee Johnson
Attorneys for a man sentenced to death for a 1994 triple murder filed a new complaint in federal court on Monday, arguing again that a medical condition will cause pain and suffering if he is executed but offering a more detailed alternative.

Because of a brain defect caused by the removal of part of a tumor in 2008, if Ernest L. Johnson is executed using Missouri�s lethal injection protocol, �there is a substantial and unjustifiable risk that the execution will result in violent and uncontrollable seizures that will cause severe pain and serious harm,� violating the Eighth Amendment prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment, his attorneys wrote in the complaint.

Whereas Johnson�s lawyers, W. Brian Gaddy and Jeremy Weis, had previously written that Missouri law allows the use of lethal gas, they have now given a specific second option. Precedent requires inmates challenging an execution method to propose an alternative, but Missouri has not had an operable gas chamber since the mid-1960s.

Gaddy said because the U.S. Supreme Court case that set the precedent, Glossip v. Gross, was decided in 2015, there is some gray area on how challenges to protocols will be litigated.

�The issues involving alleging and improving an alternative method of execution are new issues that haven�t been fully developed in the court system,� he said.

He said he looks forward to arguing the case in U.S. District Court and to seeing whether the state will agree with using gas to kill Johnson.

�That would be new territory, and we would cross that bridge when we get to it,� Gaddy said.

Missouri law does not define what type of lethal gas is to be used in executions, the complaint said, and allows the director of the Department of Corrections to determine which can be used. Recent legislation passed in Oklahoma allows �the use of nitrogen gas which can induce� a shortage of oxygen �as a method of execution,� Johnson�s lawyer wrote. They also filed a copy of a study lawmakers in Oklahoma commissioned that shows, according to the complaint, that nitrogen gas is a safe, cheap and readily available alternative to injection.

The necessary implements for nitrogen-induced hypoxia are available in the open market, and the gas can be given to Johnson via a mask, hood or other enclosed device, the complaint said, making it unnecessary to build a new, operable gas chamber.

�An execution by lethal gas would significantly reduce the substantial and unjustifiable risk of severe pain that currently exists with Missouri�s current lethal injection method, as applied to Mr. Johnson,� the complaint said.

Johnson was sentenced to die for the February 1994 murders of Mary Bratcher, Mable Scruggs and Fred Jones in a drug-fueled robbery at a northeast Columbia convenience store. Courts twice overturned his sentence, but a third challenge was unsuccessful. His execution was postponed again in November when the U.S. Supreme Court sent his case back to the Eighth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which subsequently sent it back to U.S. District Court, where Monday�s complaint was filed.

Nanci Gonder, spokeswoman for the Missouri Attorney General�s Office, said an answer to the complaint will be filed by Aug. 22, the deadline for her office to do so. She did not comment further.

Johnson�s attorneys for the second time submitted the affidavit and opinion of Joel Zivot, an Emory University physician, who examined Johnson in summer 2015.

If Johnson does experience seizures and pain in the execution, done via an injection of pentobarbital, the state�s execution protocol does not offer any guidance on what the execution team is supposed to do or how it would treat Johnson if the execution fails to kill him, the complaint said.

�Missouri�s protocol is grossly inadequate to address the significant risks to Mr. Johnson during an execution � risks that could cause an excruciating and severely painful procedure,� the attorneys wrote.

Source: The Columbia Daily Tribune, Alan xx, August 3, 2016

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"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed, but by the punishments that the good have inflicted." - Oscar Wilde

Missouri: Attorneys for death-row inmate suggest method for lethal gas execution

President Obama
President Obama granted clemency to a record 214 inmates on Wednesday, far surpassing his previous single-day record, as part of an ongoing effort to release federal inmates serving prison terms deemed to be unduly harsh.

To date, Obama has commuted the sentences of 562 federal inmates, more than the previous nine presidents combined. 

The White House said in a statement that the president will continue commuting the sentences of inmates through his remaining months in office.

�Today began like any other for 214 federal inmates across the country, but ultimately became a day I am confident they will never forget,� said Neil Eggleston, the White House counsel. 

The 214 inmates freed represents the most commutations in a single day since at least 1900, Eggleston said.

Typically, Obama has granted clemency to 40 or 50 inmates a month. In this case, 67 of the 214 inmates had been sentenced to life in prison. 

Almost all of those released from their sentences on Wednesday had been convicted of nonviolent drug crimes, according to the White House.

The White House said the large number of commutations underscores the need for broader criminal justice reform, which has some bipartisan support but has stalled in Congress.

�While we continue to work to act on as many clemency applications as possible, only legislation can bring about lasting change to the federal system,� Eggleston said. �It is critical that both the House and the Senate continue to work on a bipartisan basis to get a criminal justice reform bill to the President�s desk.�

Click here to read the full article (+ list of inmates)

Source: The Washington Post, Greg Jaffe, August 2016

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"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed, but by the punishments that the good have inflicted." - Oscar Wilde

Obama commutes the sentences of a record number of inmates

Black Lives Matter
More than 50 organizations linked to the Black Lives Matter movement came together to draft its 1st policy platform, released Monday. 

"We seek radical transformation, not reactionary reform," Michaela Brown, a spokeswoman for Baltimore Bloc, an organization that worked on the platform, said. "As the 2016 election continues, this platform provides us with a way to intervene with an agenda that resists state and corporate power, an opportunity to implement policies that truly value the safety and humanity of black lives, and an overall means to hold elected leaders accountable." 

The platform demands reparations for slavery, investment in education and jobs, an end to the death penalty, the "demilitarization" of police departments, and decriminalization of prostitution and drug-related offenses.

Source: theweek.com, August 2, 2016

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"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed, but by the punishments that the good have inflicted." - Oscar Wilde

U.S.: Black Lives Matter releases platform calling for an end to the death penalty

Delaware SC
Delaware Supreme Court
�Delaware�s current death penalty statute violates the Sixth Amendment role of the jury,� the state�s high court rules in a 3-2 decision striking down the entire death penalty law.

WASHINGTON � Delaware�s death penalty law is unconstitutional in light of a U.S. Supreme Court ruling from earlier this year addressing the role of the jury in handing down death sentences, the state�s Supreme Court ruled in a split decision on Tuesday.

The decision expresses �the majority�s collective view that Delaware�s current death penalty statute violates the Sixth Amendment role of the jury as set forth in Hurst [v. Florida]� � the January U.S. Supreme Court decision addressing the jury�s essential role in the sentencing phase of a death penalty trial.

Specifically, the Delaware court found the statute to be unconstitutional because a judge, independent of the jury, can find �the existence of �any aggravating circumstance�� that would be required to impose a death sentence.

Additionally, the state high court ruled the statute to be unconstitutional because it does not require juror unanimity in finding such aggravating circumstances and does not require the jury to find that the aggravating circumstances outweigh the mitigating circumstances presented. The court found that such a determination about the weighing of aggravating and mitigating circumstances, similarly, must be made unanimously.

Finally, the court ruled that the portions of the statute that it found to be unconstitutional are so intertwined with the remainder of the death penalty statute that it could find �no way to sever� the unconstitutional provisions, leaving �the decision whether to reinstate the death penalty�if our ruling ultimately becomes final�and under what procedures� to the state�s legislature.

Tuesday�s ruling was laid out in a brief, 5-page, unsigned opinion that was followed by extensive opinions from four of the five justices on the state�s high court.

The issue came to the Delaware Supreme Court in the form of a certified question from the Delaware Superior Court in Benjamin Rauf�s pending capital case.

The decision was deeply divided, despite the format of the ruling. Only a bare majority of three of of the five justices agreed that the entire death penalty law is unconstitutional. A fourth justice agreed only that one portion of the law is unconstitutional, and the final justice believed none of the law is unconstitutional.

In a lengthy, 91-page opinion for a three-justice majority of the court written by Chief Justice Leo Strine Jr., he first noted the state�s argument in the case. The U.S. Supreme Court�s decision in Hurst should be read narrowly, that state argued � effectively as �a clean-up case� to an earlier U.S. Supreme Court decision � Ring v. Arizona � holding that juries must determine facts necessary to make a defendant eligible for a punishment, here, the death penalty.

�I am reluctant to conclude that the Supreme Court was unaware of the implications of requiring �a jury, not a judge, to find each fact necessary to impose a sentence of death.� If those words mean what they say, they extend the role of a death penalty jury beyond the question of eligibility,� Strine wrote in the opinion, joined by Justices Randy Holland and Collins Seitz Jr.

Notably, Strine wrote in a footnote in his opinion, �I admit that Hurst can be read more than one way,� adding, �I understand why my respected colleague in dissent views Hurst as simply an application of Ring, and as a case-specific ruling that a jury must make all findings necessary to make a defendant eligible for the death penalty.�

That was not, however, Strine�s conclusion � or the conclusion of the majority of the justices on the Delaware Supreme Court.

�There is no circumstance in which it is more critical that a jury act with the historically required confidence than when it is determining whether a defendant should live or die,� Strine concluded for himself, Holland, and Seitz. �Put simply, the Sixth Amendment right to a jury includes a right not to be executed unless a jury concludes unanimously that it has no reasonable doubt that is the appropriate sentence.�

Holland also wrote a brief opinion, in which he was joined by Strine and Seitz, concurring in the court�s decision.

A fourth member of the court, Justice Karen Valihura, �conclude[d] that the only portions of our statute that are adversely impacted [by Hurst] concern judicial findings of aggravating circumstances not found by the jury.�

Specifically, Valihura wrote that she �would leave to the citizens of Delaware to decide certain issues regarding capital punishment not directly addressed by Hurst� and would not declare other parts of the law unconstitutional � specifically, the unanimity questions and the role of the jury in weighing of aggravating and mitigating circumstances � �without a clear directive from the United States Supreme Court.�

The court�s final member, Justice James Vaughn Jr., wrote that Delaware�s law is �fundamentally different� from the Florida statute at issue in Hurst in ways that are �central� to this case because of determinations that are required to be made by the jury in Delaware. Vaughn would have upheld the statute�s constitutionality in whole.

Delaware most recently held an execution in 2012, and 18 people currently are on death row in the state. In the modern death penalty era, since 1976, Delaware has held 16 executions.

The head of Delaware�s superior court had put new death penalty prosecutions on hold in February while it considered the effect of the Hurst ruling on the death penalty in the state.

Source: BuzzFeed, Chris Geidner, August 2, 2016


Delaware latest state to end death penalty


Sen. Coash: �Ruling affirms Nebraska decision - we can't fix what's broken�

LINCOLN, NE � In light of today�s Delaware Supreme Court ruling declaring it�s death penalty unconstitutional, Nebraska State Senator Colby Coash said he is more confident than ever about the Legislature's vote to end the death penalty.

"With Delaware joining the growing majority of states that have abandoned the death penalty, it�s obvious the trend is away from this costly broken system that risks executing an innocent person and wastes millions of taxpayer dollars," Coash said.

"I understand why our Attorney General says he can't predict when or if Nebraska will ever carry out an execution again. This was a driving force for the supermajority of Senators - 16 Republicans, 13 Democrats, and 1 Independent - who voted to end our death penalty system last year. We�ve all studied the issue and its history carefully. We have spent years and years attempting to find a constitutional execution method, and �fix� the system. But it wasn�t possible,� Coash said.

Last week, KFXL-Fox news caught up with Attorney General Doug Peterson at the Buffalo County Fair, and reported: �Nebraska Attorney General Doug Peterson says even if voters do vote to bring back the death penalty, it could still take quite awhile to enforce it.�

Including Delaware, nineteen states and the District of Columbia formally ban capital punishment, and 12 states haven�t carried out an execution in approximately 10 or more years (CO, NH, KS, CO, CA, AR, WY, MT, NC, NV, OR, and NE). Three of those 12 states have gubernatorial moratoriums on executions in place (Colorado, Oregon, and Pennsylvania) and Nebraska�s conservative legislature voted to replace the death penalty with life without parole last year. That decision will be decided by the voters in November.

�To his credit, Attorney General Peterson understands the hard reality of ever carrying out an execution again. One year ago, Gov. Pete Ricketts used state funds to spend $54,400 for the purchase of drugs from India; however, the Food and Drug Administration blocked the purchase. In May, pharmaceutical company Pfizer announced that it was blocking the use of all its drugs for lethal injections. All federally approved drugmakers in the U.S. whose medications could be used for executions have now put them off limits,� Coash noted.

�Nebraska�s last execution was in 1997, just shy of 20 years ago. In those two decades we�ve had enthusiastically pro-death penalty governors, attorney generals, and majorities in the Unicameral who have pledged to get our death machine up and running. Yet we�ve not been able to it make it happen, in our 19 years of trying, we�ve not been able to fix the system,� Coash said. �And there is no reason to think that will change, ever.�

�Voters should know they�re not voting to fix a system,� Coash said. �They�re voting to keep a system that hasn�t worked for 20 years and will continue to not work should the Legislature�s decision be reversed.�

Source: Retain a Just Nebraska, Press Release, August, 2, 2016. Retain a Just Nebraska is a public education campaign to urge the retention of LB 268, the Nebraska Legislature�s vote to end the death penalty. Supporters include fiscal conservatives, law enforcement officials, faith leaders, murder victims� families, and Nebraskans from all walks of life. It is a statewide coalition conducting public education on the smart alternative of life in prison without parole, which protects society without the many problems of our death penalty system.

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"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed, but by the punishments that the good have inflicted." - Oscar Wilde

Delaware Supreme Court Rules That State�s Death Penalty Law Is Unconstitutional


University of Utah anthropologists counted the number of carbon-dated artifacts at archaeological sites and concluded that a population boom and scarce food explain why people in eastern North America domesticated plants for the first time on the continent about 5,000 years ago.

Population boom preceded early farming in North America
New research backs eastern North America plant domestication theory 
[Credit: WikiCommons]
"Domesticated plants and animals are part of our everyday lives, so much so that we take them for granted," says Brian Codding, senior author of the study published online by the British journal Royal Society Open Science. "But they represent a very unique thing in human history. They allowed for large numbers of people to live in one place. That ultimately set the stage for the emergence of civilization."

Graduate student Elic Weitzel, the study's first author, adds: "For most of human history, people lived off wild foods -- whatever they could hunt or gather. It's only relatively recently that people made this switch to a very different method of acquiring their food. It's important to understand why that transition happened."

The study dealt not with a full-fledged agricultural economy, but with the earlier step of domestication, when early people in eastern North America first started growing plants they had harvested in the wild, namely, squash, sunflower, marshelder and a chenopod named pitseed goosefoot, a pseudocereal grain closely related to quinoa.

Codding, an assistant professor of anthropology, says at least 11 plant domestication events have been identified in world history, starting with wheat about 11,500 years ago in the Middle East. The eastern North American plant domestication event, which began around 5,000 years ago, was the ninth of those 11 events and came after a population boom 6,900 to 5,200 years ago, he adds.

For many years, two competing theories have sought to explain the cause of plant domestication in eastern North America: First, population growth and resulting food scarcity prompted people to grow foods on which they already foraged. Second, a theory called "niche construction" or "ecosystem engineering" that basically says intentional experimentation and management during times of plenty -- and not immediate necessity -- led people to manage and manipulate wild plants to increase their food supply.

"We argue that human populations significantly increased prior to plant domestication in eastern North America, suggesting that people are driven to domestication when populations outstrip the supply of wild foods," Weitzel says.

"The transition to domesticating food allowed human populations to increase drastically around the world and made our modern way of life possible," he adds. "People start living near the fields. Whenever you've got sedentary communities, they start to expand. Villages expand into cities. Once you have that, you have all sorts of social changes. We really don't see state-level society until domestication occurs."

When early North Americans first domesticated crops

The region of eastern North America covered by the study includes most of Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee and Arkansas, and portions of Oklahoma, Kansas, Iowa, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Mississippi and Louisiana.

Population boom preceded early farming in North America
This map shows the area covered by a new University of Utah study that concludes a population boom and resulting 
scarcity of wild foods are what caused early people in eastern North America to domesticate wild food plants for
 the first time on the continent starting about 5,000 year ago. The triangles and names represent archaeological 
sites previously identified as locations where one or more of the these plants first were domesticated: squash, 
sunflower, marshelder and pitseed goosefoot, a relative of quinoa. The small circles are sites where 
radiocarbon-dated artifacts have been found, with a single circle often representing many dated artifacts.
 The study area includes much of eastern North America inland from the Atlantic and Gulf coasts 
[Credit: Elic Weitzel, University of Utah]
"This is the region where these plant foods were domesticated from their wild variants," Weitzel says. "Everywhere else in North America, crops were imported from elsewhere," particularly Mexico and Central America.

Four indigenous plant species constitute what scientists call the Eastern Agricultural Complex, which people began to domesticate about 5,000 years ago.

Previous research shows specific domestication dates were 5,025 years ago for squash at an archaeological site named Phillips Spring in Missouri, 4,840 years ago for sunflower seeds domesticated at Hayes in Tennessee, 4,400 years ago for marshelder at the Napoleon Hollow site in Illinois, and 3,800 years ago for pitseed goosefoot found in large quantities at Riverton, Illinois, along with squash, sunflower and marshelder.

Three more recent sites also have been found to contain evidence of domestication of all four species: Kentucky's Cloudsplitter and Newt Kindigenash rockshelters, dated to 3,700 and 3,640 years ago, respectively, and the 3,400-year-old Marble Bluff site in Arkansas.

Sunflower and squash -- including acorn and green and yellow summer squashes -- remain important crops today, while marshelder and pitseed goosefoot are not (although the related quinoa is popular).

Deducing population swings from radiocarbon dates

"It's really difficult to arrive at measures of prehistoric populations. So archaeologists have struggled for a long time coming up with some way of quantifying population levels when we don't have historical records," Weitzel says.

"People have looked at the number of sites through time, the number of artifacts through time and some of the best work has looked at the effects of population growth," such as in the switch from a diet of tortoises to rabbits as population grew in the eastern Mediterranean during the past 50,000 years, he adds.

Codding says that in the past decade, archaeologists have expanded the use of radiocarbon-dates for artifacts to reconstruct prehistoric population histories. Weitzel says radiocarbon dates in the new study came from artifacts such as charcoal, nutshells and animal bones -- all recorded in a database maintained by Canadian scientists.

The University of Utah anthropologists used these "summed radiocarbon dates" for 3,750 dated artifacts from eastern North America during the past 15,000 years.

"The assumption is that if you had more people, they left more stuff around that could be dated," Weitzel says. "So if you have more people, you conceivably should have more radiocarbon dates."

"We plotted the dates through time," namely, the number of radiocarbon dates from artifacts in every 100-year period for the past 15,000 years, he adds.

The analysis indicated six periods of significant population increase or decrease during that time, including one during which population nearly doubled in eastern North America starting about 6,900 years ago and continuing apace until 5,200 years ago -- not long before plant domestication began, Codding says.

Codding notes that even though plant domestication meant "these people were producing food to feed themselves and their families, they're still hunting and foraging," eating turtles, fish, water fowl and deer, among other animals.

The other theory

Weitzel says the concept of niche construction is that people were harvesting wild plants, and "were able to get more food from certain plants." By manipulating the environment -- such as transplanting wild plants or setting fires to create areas favorable for growth of wild food plants -- they began "experimenting with these plants to see if they could grow them to be bigger or easier to collect and consume," he adds. "That kind of experimentation then leads to domestication."

Codding says: "The idea is that when times are good and people have plenty of food then they will experiment with plants. We say that doesn't provide an explanation for plant domestication in eastern North America." He believes the behavioral ecology explanation: increasing population and-or decreasing wild food resources led to plant domestication.

Source: University of Utah [August 02, 2016]

Population boom preceded early farming in North America


New research led by the University of Leicester has overturned a long-standing theory on how vertebrates evolved their eyes by identifying remarkable details of the retina in the eyes of 300 million year-old lamprey and hagfish fossils.

Discovery sheds light on how vertebrates see
Professor Sarah Gabbott on fieldwork in Illinois digging for new fossil specimens. In her hand is 
a hard nodule formed 300 million years ago on a warm, shallow sea floor 
[Credit: Thomas Clements]
The study, published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, led by Professor Sarah Gabbott from the University of Leicester Department of Geology, shows that fossil hagfish eyes were well-developed, indicating that the ancient animal could see, whereas their living counterparts are completely blind after millions of years of eye degeneration - a kind of reverse evolution.

The researchers examined the eye tissue in two fossil jawless fish species - Mayomyzon (a lamprey) and Myxinikela (a hagfish) found in the Carboniferous age Mazon Creek fossil bed, Illinois.

Using a high-powered scanning electron microscope to magnify the eye 5,000 times they could see that the fossil retina is composed of minute structures called melanosomes - the same structures that occur in human eyes and prevent stray light bouncing around in the eye allowing us to form a clear visual image.

This is the first time that such details in fossil vertebrate eyes have been brought to bear on the tricky problem of how their eyes evolved.

The eye is a complex structure and must have evolved through small step-by-step changes but these are not recorded in living animals and until now it was thought that these anatomical details could not be preserved in fossils.

Discovery sheds light on how vertebrates see
The fossil of a 300-million-year-old primitive jawless fish - a lamprey - about 6 cm in length. The eyes are the two dark 
circles on the right-hand side and are so well-preserved the retina and lens can be seen in high magnification 
[Credit: Rober Sansom]
Professor Gabbott explains: "To date models of vertebrate eye evolution focus only on living animals and the blind and 'rudimentary' hagfish eye was held-up as critical evidence of an intermediate stage in eye evolution. Living hagfish eyes appeared to sit between the simple light sensitive eye 'spots' of non-vertebrates and the sophisticated camera-style eyes of lampreys and most other vertebrates."

The details of the retina in the fossil hagfish indicates that it had a functional visual system, meaning that living hagfish eyes have been lost through millions of years of evolution, and these animals are not as primitively simple as we originally believed. As a result they are not the most appropriate model for understanding eye evolution.

Professor Gabbott added: "Sight is perhaps our most cherished sense but its evolution in vertebrates is enigmatic and a cause celebre for creationists. We bring new fossil evidence to bear on an iconic evolutionary problem: the early evolution of the vertebrate eye. We will now scrutinize the eyes of other ancient vertebrate fossils to see if we can finally build a picture of the sequence of events that took place in early vertebrate eye evolution."

The team also found the earliest evidence of skin pigment patterning in a fossil.

She added: "This heralds the realistic possibility of inferring details of the ecology and behavior of our ancient ancestors. Animals today have stripes for many reasons from camouflage to sexual display- we now have the potential to understand behavior in long extinct vertebrates."

Source: University of Leicester [August 02, 2016]

Discovery sheds light on how vertebrates see


Did you know that birds and crocodiles are practically cousins? Around 230 million years ago, you wouldn't have been able to tell the difference between the two different lineages. This is because birds and crocodilians (which includes alligators, caiman, and gharials) are part of a much larger group called Archosauria, or ruling lizards, which means they share a common ancestor far back in time. When they split from each other, they formed two major evolutionary pathways: the bird-line archosaurs, which also includes all dinosaurs, and the crocodile-line archosaurs, which includes crocodilians and their ancestors, the crocodylomorphs.

The first crocodile ancestors
Skeletal reconstruction of Carnufex 
[Credit: PLOS]
Back at around the time of this split, during a time known as the Late Triassic, the world was much more different than it was today. Small crocodylomorphs prowled the land, along with the earliest dinosaurs. There were a host of other bizarre reptiles, such as the predatory rauisuchids, which might be closely related to the first crocodylomorphs, and small, fox-like sphenosuchians.

One of these was an animal known as Carnufex. Not only is that an awesome name, but it was also an impressive beasty to withhold, coming in at around 3 metres in length. It had serrated teeth for tearing apart its prey, and a long, slender body for rapid movement. Importantly, it is from around the time when this dinosaur-crocodile split occurred, and therefore should hold important clues to the evolutionary history of these groups.

Susan Drymala and Lindsay Zanno from North Carolina recognised the importance of Carnufex in helping to solve the dinosaur-crocodile divergence issue, and set out to conduct an impressive anatomical assessment of the well-preserved fossils. The fossils belonging to Carnufex also come from North Carolina, and were first discovered in 2003. They consist mostly of skull material, which is important for determining diagnostic relationships in archosaurs, and several bits of the spine and limbs.

The first crocodile ancestors
The teeth of Carnufex, perfect for piercing and slicing flesh 
[Credit: PLOS]
By analysing the anatomy of Carnufex along with a large range of other similar animals, they were able to work out its evolutionary relationships (published in PLoS ONE). What they found is that, quite like many early diverging species, Carnufex had a mosaic of features, some more crocodilian, some more dinosaurian.

What this implies is that Carnufex is actually one of the earliest diverging crocodylomorphs, and therefore was highly important in determining the early fate of this ancient group. It was closely related to another crocodylomorph called Redondavenator, which was also fairly hefty in size.

This is important for several reasons. Carnufex was no tiddly croc, but a pretty large and fearsome predator. Other crocodylomorphs around at this time were usually small, nimble hunters, quite different from Carnufex. What this means is that the very first crocodylomorphs, such as Carnufex, were much larger than we previously thought, and developed their smaller body size later on, something which we can trace based on their evolutionary relationships. This also means that evolution of a smaller body size was something that occurred subsequent to the acquisition of features defining crocodylomorphs, rather than before.

In the Late Triassic, this means that Carnufex would have been one of the top predators roaming the plains of North America. This is quite exceptional, as other crocodylomorphs at the time were by no means top tier predators, with this role usually taken on by other now extinct archosaurs. Shortly after (geologically speaking..) Carnufex, this top predator tier was taken by theropod dinosaurs, which went on to dominate for around 150 million years.

What is clear is that Carnufex was a key stage in crocodylomorph evolution, and may have been critical in helping them survive the end-Triassic mass extinction, which took out almost all other archosaur groups around at the time.

Author: Jon Tennant | Source: Public Library of Science [August 02, 2016]

The first crocodile ancestors

This piece was published in partnership with the Influence.

One afternoon, Donnie Calhoun, owner of Calhoun Compounding Pharmacy in Anniston, Alabama�"Compounding for Life's Problems"�came back from a meeting to find a strange request from the Alabama Department of Corrections. The girl who'd answered the phone had written the question down on a notepad: Did he want to make a lethal-injection drug that would be used to carry out an execution?

"I went, what? They do this?" Calhoun recalled. He called them back and let them know that he would not make a drug that could be used to kill. "For me, as a healthcare professional, I want to help people live longer. The last thing I want to do is help someone die."

Other sterile-compounding pharmacists in the state were similarly unenthused about requests to help Alabama execute its death-row inmates. Of the nearly 30 compounding pharmacies contacted by the state, all refused, according to court records. "Of course, we said absolutely not," says one of the owners of Eagle Pharmacy in Hoover, Alabama. "It's something no one wants to do, and it's quite understandable."

Another pharmacist in Virginia adds that someone from the attorney general's office recently popped into his store and asked about lethal injection drugs. "No one will do it," he says. "Maybe you should try executing them with heroin," the pharmacist wise-cracked about a drug that's a whole lot easier to obtain in the state of Virginia.

Life is getting increasingly complicated for officials in states intent on carrying out the death penalty.

For the past few years, executions have been hindered by an unlikely obstacle: the moral compass of the pharmaceutical industry�or, more precisely, Pharma's concern over bad PR.

This is especially evident in Europe, where there's widespread opposition to the US death penalty. The EU, which bans capital punishment, also prohibits the sale of drugs for lethal executions in America, so pharmaceutical companies that do business in Europe have to actively take steps to ensure their products aren't used in American executions. Many large companies not only refuse to make drugs for lethal injection but make their distributors sign contracts forbidding them from selling drugs to US Departments of Correction. Many have written US states asking that they don't use drugs they already have in stock.

Of course, that hardly guarantees that their product won't end up in a syringe in an execution chamber: States tend to ignore their requests that their medicine isn't used to kill.

Documents obtained by the Influence show that two of the substances in Virginia's stash of execution drugs�rocuronium bromide to induce paralysis and potassium chloride to stop the heart�were manufactured by Mylan and APP Pharmaceuticals respectively. Both companies have European branches and have denounced the use of their drugs in executions.

There are clear incentives for doing this: In 2014, Mylan lost $70 million when a German investor pulled out, after it was discovered Alabama was using Mylan-produced rocuronium bromide to put prisoners to death. The drug was part of a previously untested execution cocktail, according to NBC News.

In October 2015, Mylan published a statement decrying the use of its drugs for capital punishment:

"Recently Mylan received information indicating that a department of corrections in the US purchased Mylan's rocuronium bromide product from a wholesaler for possible use outside of the labeling or applicable standard of care. Mylan takes very seriously the possibility its product may have been diverted for a use that is inconsistent with its approved labeling or applicable standards of care."

Mylan confirms to the Influence that the Department of Corrections it wrote in 2015�asking that the drugs only be used for approved-medicinal purposes, not death�was the one in Virginia.

"Mylan takes seriously the possibility that one of its products may have been diverted for a use that is inconsistent with its approved labeling," the company wrote in 2015. "We appreciate that the Department of Corrections may purchase Mylan products for therapeutic purposes. Nevertheless, we would request your assurances that the Department of Corrections has not acquired Mylan's rocuronium bromide or any other Mylan product for a purpose inconsistent with their approved labeling and applicable standards of care, and that it will not do so in the future."

"Pharmaceutical companies have never wanted medicines they make to save and improve the lives of patients used in executions designed to end the lives of prisoners," says Maya Foa, director of the death-penalty team at Reprieve, an advocacy organization for criminal justice. "They have taken concrete steps to prevent this by implementing rigorous distribution controls to prevent sales of these medicines to Departments of Corrections for use in lethal-injection executions. States like Virginia should respect the wishes and interests of the industry and stop the misuse of medicines in executions."

More documents obtained by the Influence indicate the wholesaler that sold Mylan's drugs to the state of Virginia before the company put contractual controls in place was Cardinal Health�a large drug distributor based in North Carolina.

There's no evidence that Cardinal Health has sold drugs to Department of Correctionssince the companies instituted their controls. It's a sign that the public pressure campaigns of groups like Reprieve will continue to diminish the drug supply as the drugs in stock expire.

Alfredo Prieto was killed by the state of Virginia on October 1, 2015. The Virginia Department of Corrections confirms that he was executed using Mylan's rocuronium bromide and APP's potassium chloride. The latter drug has effects likened to "being burned alive from the inside," if the prisoner is not fully sedated.

The potassium chloride from APP expired this June, according the the Virginia Department of Corrections. But the Mylan-produced rocuronium bromide is good until 2017.

Somehow, using pharmaceutical companies' drugs despite their protests isn't even the sketchiest way states have gone about conducting lethal injections.

A few years ago, Texas, Arizona, and Nebraska paid $80,000 to a businessman to obtain the sedative sodium thiopental from India. That plan went awry when the FDA confiscated the drugs in 2015�turns out, you're not allowed to order large quantities of powerful barbiturates from foreign countries via mail.

When a Nebraska official asked the vendor for a refund, he (obviously) declined, pointing out that he'd met his end of the bargain. The FDA is likely still warehousing them, Chris McDaniel reported for Buzzfeed.

The shady sources of drugs and the secrecy surrounding execution protocols have had nightmarish outcomes. In 2010, the state of Arizona likely used an expired batch of sodium thiopental from overseas to sedate Jeffrey Landrigan before administering the paralytic, as Liliana Segura reported at the Intercept.

Because the sedative forming the first part of the execution-drug trio had likely expired, Landrigan was probably fully conscious when the second drug paralyzed him, and when the third drug stopped his heart. His eyes were open when he died.

Neither does using a US pharmacy to obtain execution drugs guarantee that things will be handled professionally.

In 2014, the Apothecary Shoppe, a compounding pharmacy in Tulsa, Oklahoma�"Because your prescription matters"�was revealed as the source for lethal-injection drugs used in three Missouri executions.

A year later, regulators inspecting the pharmacy found more than 1,000 code violations�including questionable sterilization practices and drug potency, Buzzfeed reported. The Apothecary Shoppe had also fudged the expiration dates on its drugs.

As Buzzfeed pointed out, years before, Missouri's death-row inmates had expressed their concerns that products made by compounding pharmacies didn't "meet the requirements for identity, purity, potency, efficacy, and safety that pharmaceuticals under FDA regulation must meet."

The state dismissed such concerns.

Click here to read the full article

Source: Vice, Tina Ganeva, July 31, 2016


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"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed, but by the punishments that the good have inflicted." - Oscar Wilde

The Sordid Ways Death-Penalty States Obtain Execution Drugs

Dylann Roof
Dylann Roof
Lawyers for Dylann Roof, the accused Charleston church shooter, filed a motion to challenge the constitutionality of the federal death penalty Monday.

Roof's lawyers argue that "the federal death penalty constitutes a legally prohibited, arbitrary, cruel and unusual punishment prohibited by both the Fifth and Eighth Amendments."

They continue to argue that the death penalty itself is unconstitutional in addition to the federal law:

The Federal Death Penalty Act "may have been designed with as much care as possible under the circumstances, the capital sentencing process that the statute provides is constitutionally inadequate in practice. The results of jurors' good-faith grappling with the law - arbitrary, biased, and erroneous death verdicts - are intolerable as a matter of due process and proportional punishment."

Roof faces 33 federal counts, including hate crimes, in the shooting deaths of nine black parishioners during a Bible study. 

His penalty trial is set to begin in November.

The challenge is being brought because the federal government is seeking the death penalty in the case after rejecting Roof's offer to plead guilty and accept multiple sentences of life in prison without the opportunity for parole, Buzzfeed reports.

Sources: The Dallas Morning News, Hannah Wise; The Associated Press, August 1, 2016

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"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed, but by the punishments that the good have inflicted." - Oscar Wilde

Dylann Roof challenges federal death penalty law as unconstitutional

Nebraska: Gathering signatures against the repeal
Nebraska: Gathering signatures against the repeal
LINCOLN, NE � Republican State Senator Colby Coash said today that Nebraska Attorney General Doug Peterson�s statement that there is no way to know how long it would take for the Legislature to get the death penalty functioning again should voters approve bringing it back, is further proof there will never be another execution in Nebraska no matter what voters decide in November.

Last week, KFXL-Fox news caught up with Peterson at the Buffalo County Fair, and reported: �Nebraska Attorney General Doug Peterson says even if voters do vote to bring back the death penalty, it could still take quite awhile to enforce it.�

�Nebraska�s last execution was in 1997, just shy of 20 years ago. In those two decades, we�ve had enthusiastically pro-death penalty governors, attorney generals, and majorities in the Unicameral who have pledged to get our death machine up and running. Yet we�ve not been able to it make it happen, in our 19 years of trying, we�ve not been able to fix the system,� Coash said. �And there is no reason to think that will change, ever.�

�This was a driving force for the supermajority of Senators - 16 Republicans, 13 Democrats, and 1 Independent - who voted to end our death penalty system last year. We�ve all studied the issue and its history carefully. We have spent years and years attempting to find a constitutional execution method, and �fix� the system. But it wasn�t possible,� Coash said.

Attorney General Peterson�s predecessor claimed a quick fix was coming 7 years ago:

�According to Attorney General Jon Bruning, executions could resume as quickly as one or two years from now.� May 29, 2009, 10/11 News

�That �one or two years� has now become 7 years. In the last 57 years, here have only been 3 executions in Nebraska.�

�To his credit, Attorney General Peterson understands the hard reality of ever carrying out an execution again. One year ago, Gov. Pete Ricketts used state funds to spend $54,400 for the purchase of drugs from India; however, the Food and Drug Administration blocked the purchase. In May, pharmaceutical company Pfizer announced that it was blocking the use of all its drugs for lethal injections. All federally approved drugmakers in the U.S. whose medications could be used for executions have now put them off limits,� Coash noted.

�Voters should know they�re not voting to fix a system,� Coash said. �They�re voting to keep a system that hasn�t worked for 20 years and will continue to not work should the Legislature�s decision be reversed.�

Source: Retain a Just Nebraska, August 1, 2016. Retain a Just Nebraska is a public education campaign to urge the retention of LB 268, the Nebraska Legislature�s vote to end the death penalty. Supporters include fiscal conservatives, law enforcement officials, faith leaders, murder victims� families, and Nebraskans from all walks of life. It is a statewide coalition conducting public education on the smart alternative of life in prison without parole, which protects society without the many problems of our death penalty system.

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"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed, but by the punishments that the good have inflicted." - Oscar Wilde

Nebraska AG admits even if voters bring back the death penalty he can�t predict when or if Nebraska could execute anyone

Oklahoma death chamber
Oklahoma death chamber
After a string of execution mistakes and resignations, the state is replacing the personnel key to carrying out the death penalty in Oklahoma. But state officials say they view execution experience as "immaterial" in the hiring. posted on Jul. 29, 2016, at 11:16 a.m.

After a grand jury investigation found carelessness, secrecy, and ignorance led the Oklahoma Department of Corrections to multiple botched execution attempts, a department spokesperson told BuzzFeed News that a new prison warden's execution experience was "immaterial" to his selection for the job.

Oklahoma officials pointed to no experience in the new warden's past with executions, and BuzzFeed News has been unable to find any evidence that the new warden has any experience with carrying out or overseeing death sentences.

On Wednesday, corrections head Joe Allbaugh, himself new to the position, announced the selection of Terry Royal to run the Oklahoma State Penitentiary. Both the warden and the director have many responsibilities under the state's current execution procedures.

Neither Allbaugh or Royal appear to have any experience with executions.

When asked if Royal had any experience carrying out executions, a corrections spokesperson responded that "[t]he execution question is and was immaterial to his hiring."

Royal, who most recently ran the Lake Correctional Institution in Florida, has 25 years of corrections experience - but none in any prison that had responsibilities for carrying out executions.

Royal's appointment will still have to be approved by the Oklahoma Board of Corrections, which will meet in September. The Board is also expected to discuss the grand jury's findings at the meeting.

Asked why the department believed Royal's experience or lack thereof was "immaterial," spokesperson Terri Watkins told BuzzFeed News, "The warden under the protocol doesn't have a role in executions. That is why execution experience is immaterial to the hiring."

Under the current protocol, however, the warden has significant responsibilities overseeing executions. The warden, along with another corrections employee, chooses which execution team members are retained and which are replaced.

The 34-page execution protocol closes out by stating that "[t]he wardens of Oklahoma State Penitentiary and Mabel Bassett Correctional Center are responsible for compliance with" the procedures.

Previously, the warden had also received the execution drugs, and was supposed to verify their contents. In fact, the grand jury report singled out the previous warden, Anita Trammell, who stepped down during the investigation into how the wrong execution drug was used in the 2015 execution of Charles Warner.

Earlier, in 2014, Oklahoma took 45 minutes to execute Clayton Lockett in what Trammell described as "a bloody mess." After an investigation run by the Department of Public Safety, which reports to the governor, the state was allowed to carry out another execution.

The state changed the protocol, however, giving the warden fewer responsibilities.

This time, in January 2015, they used the wrong drug with Warner. The mistake only became public when the state nearly used the same wrong drug in the following scheduled execution, in September of that year.

This time, the investigation into execution mistakes was conducted by a grand jury. The grand jury report placed much of the blame at the feet of Trammell and former corrections director Robert Patton.

Before the grand jury, Trammell also tried to argue that it wasn't her responsibility.

"Warden [Trammell] further testified [s]he was not responsible for what happened at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary facility as it related to executions, despite being the Oklahoma State Penitentiary's warden, because it was the Director's job," the grand jury wrote.

"There are just some things you ask questions about, and there's some things that you don't," Trammell told the grand jury. "I never asked questions about the process" of getting the drugs.

Trammell also told the grand jury that "there were lots of things that took place at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary that wasn't in the policy."

The grand jury report found that "Warden [Trammell] did not do [her] job and, consequently, failed the Department and the State as a whole."

The grand jury also wrote that "the Execution Protocol explicitly states the Warden of the Oklahoma State Penitentiary is responsible for compliance with the Preparation and Administration of Chemical provisions of the Execution Protocol."

Royal will inherit Trammell's execution responsibilities, provided the protocol isn't changed.

"With the director's leadership and the rest of talented staff at the department, we will face challenges head-on to ensure the goals and mission of the facility and agency are met," Royal said in a statement. "I appreciate Director Allbaugh's confidence in me to lead the Oklahoma State Penitentiary."

None of the prisons Royal has worked at carried out executions. The Florida Department of Corrections did not respond to repeated questions about his experience, and the Indiana Department of Corrections, where Royal started his career, would not answer questions about its execution personnel.

Royal also spent time in Arizona, working at a minimum security private prison. Patton, the Oklahoma corrections director that resigned in the middle of the grand jury investigation, was the Division Director of the Arizona Department of Corrections while Royal was in Arizona. As such, Patton was overseeing a variety of things - including overseeing security assessments of the prison were Royal was warden.

The grand jury report noted that there was significant overlap between Arizona and Oklahoma's execution methods. Patton molded Oklahoma's protocol after Arizona's, and also hired the Arizona warden that ran the prison where a 2-hour execution occurred.

Allbaugh, the head of the Oklahoma Department of Corrections, also has no execution-related experience. This is his 1st job in corrections, in fact. Allbaugh previously served as director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency under President George W. Bush.

When Allbaugh was selected earlier this year, the chair of the Board of Corrections, Kevin Gross, said it "might be interesting" to have someone without direct corrections experience run the prison system, according to the Tulsa World.

Source: BuzzFeed News, July 30, 2016

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"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed, but by the punishments that the good have inflicted." - Oscar Wilde

Oklahoma Hired A New Warden After Botches, But Considered Execution Experience Irrelevant