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US prisoner to be executed despite ethical concerns over heart implant

US prisoner to be executed despite ethical concerns over heart implant

Straits Timesa day ago
NASHVILLE, Tennessee - Tennessee is scheduled on the morning of Aug 5 to execute a prisoner who has a heart implant, even as the case has raised ethical concerns that lethal injection without turning off the implant may result in a torturous death.
Lawyers for the prisoner, Byron Black, who was convicted in 1989 of killing his onetime girlfriend and her two young daughters, had already argued that Black's intellectual disability should exempt him from the death penalty.
But the fact that his heart implant, which functions as both a pacemaker and a defibrillator, will continue to operate during his execution has added another ethical quandary. Black's lawyers and some medical experts have warned that the device may shock him repeatedly as the lethal drug is injected.
'That's purposes at odds,' said Arthur Caplan, a top bioethicist at the New York University Grossman School of Medicine. 'They're trying to make this guy die, and you have technology attached that's trying to keep him alive.'
Given that Black is intellectually disabled and has dementia, Caplan added, Black may not understand what is going on beyond the searing pain of repeated shocks.
Black, 69, is scheduled to die by lethal injection at 10am (11pm Singapore time) on Aug 5 at the Riverbend Maximum Security Institution in Nashville.
The US Supreme Court on Aug 4 refused to intervene in the case, rejecting four separate petitions. Shortly after, Gov. Bill Lee of Tennessee, a Republican, said he would not approve Black's request for clemency.
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'The courts have universally determined that it is lawful to carry out the jury's sentence of execution,' Mr Lee said in a statement.
Black has been on death row for more than 35 years, after a jury found him guilty of the brutal 1988 murders of his onetime girlfriend, Angela Clay, and her two young daughters, Lakeisha, 6, and Latoya, 9. He was sentenced to death for one daughter's death.
Black has maintained his innocence, but his appeals have repeatedly been denied.
'Our office will continue fighting to seek justice for the Clay family and to hold Black accountable for his horrific crimes,' said Mr Jonathan Skrmetti, the Tennessee attorney general, in a statement released after the latest ruling by the Tennessee Supreme Court last month. He cited testimony from an expert witness called by the state that 'refutes the suggestion that Black would suffer severe pain if executed'.
In an interview with local TV station WKRN last month, Ms Linette Bell, Clay's sister, asked, 'What about the pain he left them suffering in?'
Polls have shown that a narrow majority of Americans – 53 per cent – favor the death penalty, but that they overwhelmingly oppose it for those who have an intellectual disability or struggle with mental illness. Black, his lawyers said, will be the first intellectually disabled prisoner executed since the 1970s, when the death penalty became a legal option again in Tennessee.
Black was first scheduled for execution in 2022, but it was delayed after an investigation was opened into why the state did not properly test its lethal injection drugs. He is also among the inmates who have sued Tennessee over its new injection procedure, which was put in place this year.
In a letter to Mr Lee asking that he commute the sentence to life in prison, Black's legal team outlined not only his current health problems but also the documentation surrounding Black's intellectual disability. The letter said that he had never scored higher than 70 on an IQ test, that he repeated second grade at a segregated elementary school in Nashville, and that he struggled as a child to learn simple games or to remember to do basic chores.
During an evaluation in 2025, he could not make change for a US$5 (S$6.44) bill. He now uses a wheelchair.
If convicted today, Black would not be eligible for the death penalty under the current clinical standards. But because his legal team challenged whether his intellectual disability made him ineligible under the previous standards, the state courts refused to revisit his case and apply the new standards.
'It is a violation of the law and the Constitution to execute him,' said Ms Kelley Henry, chief of the capital habeas unit at the federal public defender's office in Nashville. And, she added, 'if they're going to execute him, they don't have the right to torture him.'
Black has had a heart implant in place since 2024 because of heart failure and heightened cardiac risk. In the case of lethal drug injection, the device may prevent his heart from slowing down and then begin shocking the heart, something that might be repeated over and over.
Henry, in one legal document, warned that it would be 'a grotesque spectacle', one that would cause Black 'extreme pain and distress' and weigh on the conscience of the witnesses.
The implant would have to be deactivated by a medical professional. But Nashville General Hospital, which did not respond to a request for comment, told Tennessee officials that staff members would not willingly assist in the deactivation of the device, according to court documents.
The Tennessee Supreme Court said late in July that the execution could proceed without medical intervention. NYTIMES
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US murderer with heart defibrillator implant complains of pain during execution
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US murderer with heart defibrillator implant complains of pain during execution

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Lawyers for convicted murderer Byron Black had sought prior to his execution to have his defibrillator deactivated, arguing that it could shock his heart back into rhythm while he was being put to death. WASHINGTON - A convicted murderer with a heart defibrillator complained that he was in pain while being put to death by lethal injection in the southern US state of Tennessee, according to witnesses to the execution. Byron Black, 69, was executed on Aug 5 at Riverbend Maximum Security Prison for the 1988 murders of his girlfriend, Angela Clay, 29, and her daughters Latoya, nine, and Lakeisha, six. Black's lawyers had sought prior to his execution to have the defibrillator deactivated, arguing that it could shock his heart back into rhythm while he was being put to death. A state court ruled in Black's favour in July but was overruled by the Tennessee Supreme Court. Journalists who witnessed the execution said Black lifted his head shortly after the dose of pentobarbital was injected and said 'Oh, it's hurting so bad.' 'I'm so sorry,' they quoted his spiritual adviser, who was in the death chamber, as saying. Speaking at a press conference following the execution, the witnesses said Black appeared to be in distress but it was not clear if that was because of the lethal drugs or the defibrillator, which also served as a pacemaker. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore MRT track issue causes 5-hour delay; Jeffrey Siow says 'we can and will do better' Singapore ST Explains: What is a track point fault and why does it cause lengthy train disruptions? Singapore Three people taken to hospital after fire in Punggol executive condominium Singapore Elderly man found dead in SingPost Centre stairwell could have been in confused state: Coroner Singapore 81 primary schools to hold ballot for Phase 2C of Primary 1 registration Singapore S'pore and Indonesia have discussed jointly developing military training facilities: Chan Chun Sing Singapore Two workers died after being hit by flying gas cylinders in separate incidents in 2025 Sport Young Lions and distance runner Soh Rui Yong out of SEA Games contingent There have been 28 executions in the United States this year, the most since 2015, when 28 inmates were also put to death. Twenty-three of this year's executions have been carried out by lethal injection, two have been by firing squad and three by nitrogen hypoxia, which involves pumping nitrogen gas into a face mask, causing the prisoner to suffocate. The use of nitrogen gas as a method of capital punishment has been denounced by United Nations experts as cruel and inhumane. Florida has carried out the most executions in 2025 – nine. The death penalty has been abolished in 23 of the 50 US states, while three others – California, Oregon and Pennsylvania – have moratoriums in place. President Donald Trump is a proponent of capital punishment, and on his first day in office called for an expansion of its use 'for the vilest crimes'. AFP

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