On
this date, July 23, 2008, Dale Leo Bishop was executed by lethal injection in
Mississippi. He was convicted of the December 10, 1998 murder of Marcus James
Gentry. I was speechless when his last words encouraged those abolitionists to
vote for President Obama if they want to end the death penalty.
Final Words:"To Mark's family, I would like to express my sincerest apologies. It was a senseless act. It was a needless act. The world is worse off without him. To my family, I love you. It's going to be all good." He finished by referring to Obama, the Democratic presidential hopeful. "For those who oppose the death penalty and want to see it end, our best bet is to vote for Barack Obama because his supporters have been working behind the scenes to end this practice. God bless America; it's been great living here. That's all."
We,
the comrades of Unit 1012, will post this article on the Death Penalty, to
comment on the event that date.
Obama on the Electric Chair [PHOTO SOURCE: http://www.wallstreetdaily.com/2014/06/12/obama-investigating-death-penalty/]
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PAGE
TITLE:
http://www.wallstreetdaily.com/
ARTICLE
TITLE:
To Obama:
Leave the Death Penalty Alone
DATE: Thursday June 12,
2014
AUTHOR: Floyd Brown
AUTHOR
INFORMATION: Floyd Gregory Brown (born March 10, 1961; Bremerton,
Washington) is an American author, speaker and media commentator. He is
president of Excellentia Inc., a consulting company specializing in non-profit organizational
strategy, development and marketing. Brown has also worked as a political consultant
and conducted opposition research for political campaigns. Brown is noteworthy
for his introduction of the "Willie Horton" television ad during the Bush-Dukakis
presidential race.
To Obama: Leave the Death Penalty
Alone
Posted By Floyd Brown On June 12, 2014 @
5:00 am In Floyd Brown,Public Policy |
On his way to the presidency, Barack Obama said a
lot of things…
He told us he was against same-sex marriage.
He said he opposed new taxes [1]
on middle-class Americans.
And he told us he supported the death penalty.
But, like a mirage in the hot Arizona desert, many
of Obama’s promises have evaporated.
Most recently, the Justice Department – with
Attorney General Eric Holder leading the charge – has begun investigating
states that are still using the death penalty.
The inquiry is, ostensibly, the result of April’s
execution of convicted killer Clayton Lockett in Oklahoma.
On June 3, 1999, Lockett abducted, beat up, and
finally shot 19-year-old Stephanie Neiman. He then ordered Shawn Mathis to dig
a grave in a ditch beside the road. With her mouth duct-taped and her hands
bound, Neiman was buried alive.
At Lockett’s trial, prosecutors produced DNA
evidence, as well as his fingerprints on the duct tape. According to the trial
transcript, Lockett admitted to police that “he decided to kill Stephanie
because she would not agree to keep quiet.”
Lockett was convicted of murder, rape, forcible
sodomy, kidnapping and assault. And 15 years later, he was executed.
But as most know, Lockett’s execution didn’t go
smoothly. According to Eric Holder, Lockett felt some pain during his
execution, which Obama called “deeply troubling.”
Let Justice Be Served
The president went on to say the review of all
death penalty cases in America is necessary: “Racial bias. Uneven application
of the death penalty. Situations in which there were individuals on death row
who later on were discovered to be innocent… All of these do raise significant
questions about how the death penalty is being applied. I think as a society,
we have to ask ourselves some difficult and profound questions.”
Traditionally, though, the death penalty has been
the domain of the states – and Senator Kelly Ayotte, of New Hampshire, brought
this up with the president.
As a former State Attorney General and prosecutor
who’s familiar with the procedures used in death penalty cases, Ayotte disputed
Obama’s attempts to meddle with the death penalty:
“This is an issue that has been reserved for the states, and I would hope that the Attorney General, in reviewing this, would not take any kind of executive action, but would instead make his recommendations to the states, and let them act accordingly.”
Don’t count on that happening, though. From day
one, the Obama team has displayed an arrogant, go-it-alone attitude on most
issues.
What’s more, if anyone is responsible for Lockett’s
pain, it’s the U.S. government.
You see, Obama’s Drug Enforcement Administration
(DEA) ordered its agents to seize supplies of sodium thiopental – the
painkiller ubiquitously used in executions – in 2011, after questions arose
about how the drugs were imported.
Oklahoma was then forced to use an untested
combination of drugs in Lockett’s execution, which resulted in his painful
death. Oklahoma used a mixture of midazolam, vecuronium bromide, and potassium
chloride for Lockett’s execution, and his cause of death was ruled a heart
attack brought on by the drugs.
Witnesses said his body twitched with pain. But
frankly, I’m more concerned with the pain of Stephanie Neiman. Lockett damned
himself the night he killed her.
At the sentencing hearing, Steve and Susie Neiman
asked jurors to give Lockett death. They described the tragedy of losing their
only daughter to a vicious killer:
“Every day we are left with horrific images of what the last hours of Stephanie’s life was like. We were left with an empty home full of memories and the deafening silence of the lack of life within its walls… We feel that the only thing left to do is let Clayton Lockett serve out the sentence of death that a jury sentenced him to. Anything less is a travesty of justice.”
If Obama continues tampering with the death
penalty, I hope the Neimans’ words will ring in his ears. Let justice be
served.
Your eyes on the Hill,
Floyd Brown
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