Florida court puts 'Old Sparky' on trial
Inmate says death by electrocution is cruel
July 9, 1997
Web posted at: 11:31 p.m. EDT (0331 GMT)
In this story
From Correspondent Susan Candiotti
JACKSONVILLE, Florida (CNN) -- Florida's electric chair, known as "Old
Sparky," has dispensed plenty of death over the years. Now it's the
chair's turn to go on trial.
The inquiry was prompted by the March 25 botched execution of convicted
murderer Pedro Medina, a gruesome incident that outraged death penalty
opponents.
As a result of that incident, hearings are under way in a north Florida
courtroom on behalf of Leo Jones, who was to be executed April 15 for the
1981 murder of a Jacksonville police officer.
Jones' execution is on hold until the court resolves his complaint that
the electric chair amounts to cruel and unusual punishment, a violation
of the U.S. Constitution. Duval Circuit Judge A.C. Soud is to issue a ruling
August 8.
"The sole issue to be determined is whether the electric chair
in its present condition is cruel and unusual punishment," defense
attorney Martin McClaine said.
Jones' attorneys are focusing on the Medina execution, during which
flames shot out from behind his face mask. Witnesses testified that his
body jolted for several minutes after the electricity was turned off.
A faulty sponge and headpiece were blamed. It was the second botched
execution in the 74-year-old chair since 1990.
'It is possible he experienced pain'
"It is possible he experienced pain during his execution,"
testified Dr. Jonathan Arden, first deputy chief medical examiner of New
York City, at the hearing.
Later, under cross-examination from the state, he said: "I see
no evidence that he was awake and able to feel pain after the current was
turned off."
Another forensic pathologist said any sign of breathing by Medina would
indicate the brain was still working. Two journalists who also testified
Wednesday said they saw a slight movement of the chest after the electricity
was cut.
"It seemed to me to be a spasmodic movement. It was kind of a shudder,"
Michael Griffin of The Orlando Sentinel said.
A victim's father says pain unimportant
Glenn Lawhon, who watched the execution of his son's killer 15 years
ago, dismisses complaints about the chair. "I think it's foolish to
worry about whether or not there's a little pain involved," he said.
Soud ruled in April that problems with the chair had been fixed, and
any future executions would be constitutional. He said he was convinced
Medina felt no unnecessary pain.
But Jones' attorneys won a continuation of the hearing from the Florida
Supreme Court, which ruled that Soud did not allow them to call expert
witnesses.
Arden said the only autopsy he has performed on a victim of electrocution
involved a construction worker who was killed by 880 volts, well below
the 2,000 volts pumped out by Florida's chair.
But having read accounts from a physician's assistant who detected a
faint pulse -- called an agonal pulse -- and slight movements of the chest
in the minutes after the electric chair had run its cycle, Arden said there
was little doubt Medina was still alive.
"Somebody having an agonal pulse or agonal respiration is still
alive," Arden said. "It may not be strong. An agonal pulse clearly
indicates somebody ... who is on the way out. But it also indicates somebody
who, at that moment, is still alive."
Medina probably not conscious
Arden disputed earlier testimony for the state that the burst of voltage
that entered the brain would be like turning the lights out. "It is
not a simple phenomena, like an on-off switch," Arden said.
In testimony that Soud did not accept as evidence but allowed for review
by the state Supreme Court, Arden said it was doubtful that Medina was
conscious immediately after the execution. "At the time of these agonal
pulses, it is mostly unlikely that he was conscious and feeling pain."
Death penalty opponents argue that what happened to Medina should be
the death knell for the chair.
"With flames shooting out of a man's head, it's a further sign
that this form of punishment is flawed and should be done away with,"
Steve Hawkins of National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty said.
The chair's failures are prompting debate over whether death by lethal
injection should be an option.
"If you have lethal injection, I suspect the same arguments --
it's too cruel, it's too painful -- would be made as well," Florida
Gov. Lawton Chiles said.
After Soud issues his ruling, the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments
September 8. If "Old Sparky" is powered down in Florida, that
will leave five states -- Georgia, Alabama, Kentucky, Tennessee and Nebraska
-- that use the electric chair as the sole means of execution.
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