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After acquittal of ex-death row inmate, debate needed on Japan's death penalty

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Japan should be ensuring the safety of its citizens, but instead it is taking people's lives. Is it acceptable to maintain the ultimate penalty under such circumstances? This is a serious question for society. The acquittal of 88-year-old Iwao Hakamada, who had been handed the death penalty, has been finalized after prosecutors decided not to appeal the verdict issued by the Shizuoka District Court during his retrial.

Missouri: Death row inmate wants his execution videotaped

Russell Bucklew
Russell Bucklew
A death row inmate with rare birth defects is fighting for Missouri prison officials to allow a videographer to record his execution in what his lawyers say will be a “prolonged, tortuous death.”

Attorneys for convicted killer Russell Bucklew filed a motion Friday in a Missouri District Court arguing that they want a visual record of the execution to use as evidence in a civil rights lawsuit against the state.

“If Missouri officials are confident enough to execute Russell Bucklew, they should be confident enough to videotape it,” Cheryl A. Pilate, one of Mr. Bucklew’s attorneys, said in a statement.

The execution is scheduled for May 21, making Bucklew the first inmate to see the death penalty since a flubbed lethal injection in Oklahoma caused a convicted murder to writhe and moan in pain before he eventually died of a heart attack 43 minutes later.

Bucklew, 45, is convicted of the 1996 murder of Michael Sanders, in addition to kidnapping and raping Sanders’ ex-girlfriend.

Bucklew suffers from a rare congenital disease that causes clumps of malformed blood vessels to grow in his face, head, neck and throat, his lawyers said. Because of his condition, they argue Bucklew is likely to hemorrhage and choke during his execution.

His attorneys contend that the execution would count as cruel and unusual punishment, violating the Eighth Amendment to the Constitution.

“It is clear that a tape of the execution is relevant to future litigation,” the motion reads. “Among many other purposes, it may allow this court, or any other court, to better examine whether Missouri’s lethal-injection procedures are ‘sure or very likely to cause serious illness and needless suffering’ in violation of the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution.”


Source: MSNBC, May 16, 2014

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