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Byron Black to be first man executed with working defibrillator fitted - despite claims he could suffer

Byron Black to be first man executed with working defibrillator fitted - despite claims he could suffer

Yahooa day ago
A triple-killer is set to be the first man executed with a working defibrillator in his chest when he's put to death in Tennessee today.
Byron Black's bid to delay the execution was denied on Monday, and he will now be killed by lethal injection.
There is uncertainty over whether the device will shock his heart, potentially prolonging his death and causing suffering when the deadly cocktail takes effect.
The 69-year-old is in a wheelchair and is said to have dementia, kidney failure, brain damage and congestive heart failure.
His cardioverter-defibrillator is a battery-powered device that delivers electric shocks to restore a regular heartbeat if needed.
Black's lawyers said a doctor should put a device over the implant to ensure it's switched off, and in July, a judge agreed it was necessary to avert the chance of unnecessary pain.
But the state Supreme Court said last week the judge lacked authority to order the defibrillator to be deactivated.
Lawyers representing have argued that the lethal injection will not cause the device to shock Black and that he would not feel it even if it did.
However, his lawyer, Kelley Henry, said the execution could become a "grotesque spectacle" and Black could still be in pain even if he looks unresponsive.
Black shot dead his girlfriend Angela Clay and her two daughters - aged six and nine - in a jealous rage in 1988.
He committed the murders while on work release for shooting Clay's estranged husband.
Linette Bell, whose sister and two nieces were killed, recently told local station WKRN-TV: "He didn't have mercy on them, so why should we have mercy on him?"
Read more:
Black's lawyers have also unsuccessfully tried in recent years to save him from execution by arguing he's intellectually disabled and ineligible for the death penalty under US Supreme Court precedent.
Twenty-seven men have been executed in the US so far this year - the highest since the 28 killed in 2015.
However, nine others are scheduled before the end of 2025.
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Analysis: An Epstein cover-up? Victims and allies suggest it's happening now, under Trump
Analysis: An Epstein cover-up? Victims and allies suggest it's happening now, under Trump

CNN

time8 minutes ago

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Analysis: An Epstein cover-up? Victims and allies suggest it's happening now, under Trump

For years, Republicans and MAGA influencers have been keen to rip the lid off a supposed government conspiracy to cover up information related to Jeffrey Epstein's crimes and alleged associates. Many key figures who now serve in the Trump administration pledged to do exactly that. The administration's failures to live up to those promises and its bizarre handling of the situation now have it scrambling. On Wednesday night, that will take the form of top officials strategizing at Vice President JD Vance's residence, CNN is now reporting. But their task is only getting harder. And that's in large part because a growing chorus of Epstein's victims and their allies now suggest there could indeed be a cover-up afoot. One forged by the same MAGA administration that built itself up as the antidote. To be clear, President Donald Trump has not been accused of any crimes in relation to Epstein. 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Last week, family members of one of Epstein's and Maxwell's most prominent accusers, Virginia Giuffre, cited Trump's recent admission that he had been aware that Epstein recruited Giuffre from Mar-a-Lago. They cited other evidence that Trump was aware of Epstein's affinity for young girls and women and said, 'It makes us ask if he was aware of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell's criminal actions.' (Giuffre died by suicide earlier this year.) In another letter, Giuffre family members and other accusers also cited the still-unexplained prison transfer of Maxwell to a lower-security prison camp that sex offenders like her don't appear eligible for, without a waiver. That news came shortly after Maxwell, who's serving a 20-year sentence, was interviewed by Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche. And it comes as Trump has dangled the possibility of pardoning Maxwell, who's appealing her conviction. 'This move smacks of a cover up,' they wrote. 'The victims deserve better.' They're not the only ones to raise concerns about the prison transfer. Two attorneys who have represented Epstein accusers, Brad Edwards and Paul Cassell, said in a letter Tuesday that they were given no notice of Maxwell's transfer or any chance to object. They said the victims view the transfer 'as extraordinarily insensitive and suggestive of ulterior purposes.' That letter was one of several entered into the record as part of proceedings over whether to unseal grand jury testimony from the investigations into Maxwell and Epstein. And some of those letters have also raised concerns about a cover-up. One unnamed victim in her letter appeared to cite a Bloomberg report that the FBI has redacted the names of Trump and other prominent public figures in the Epstein files – a report that CNN hasn't confirmed. 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GOP Rep. Cory Mills accused by ex-girlfriend of threatening to release sexually explicit images, videos of her
GOP Rep. Cory Mills accused by ex-girlfriend of threatening to release sexually explicit images, videos of her

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  • CNN

GOP Rep. Cory Mills accused by ex-girlfriend of threatening to release sexually explicit images, videos of her

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Military base shootings have ranged from isolated incidents to workplace violence and terrorism

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