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Arizona plans to carry out its second execution this year
Arizona plans to carry out its second execution this year

Washington Post

time23-05-2025

  • Washington Post

Arizona plans to carry out its second execution this year

PHOENIX — The state of Arizona is planning to carry out a second execution this year, this time for a man convicted of violently killing four members of a family in 1993 at their home in metro Phoenix. Prosecutors filed a request Thursday with the Arizona Supreme Court to set a briefing schedule leading up to the execution of Richard Kenneth Djerf, who pleaded guilty to killing Albert Luna Sr., his wife, Patricia, and their 18-year-old daughter Rochelle and 5-year-old son Damien. A judge later sentenced Djerf to death. If the court agrees to the schedule suggested by prosecutors, the state's highest court would consider the request for Djerf's execution warrant in late July, with the execution likely occurring in early September. The Associated Press has sent an email seeking comment to attorneys who represented Djerf. Two months ago, Arizona executed 53-year-old Aaron Brian Gunches in the 2002 killing of Ted Price, marking the state's first use of the death penalty in over two years Gunches' execution had originally been scheduled for April 2023, but it was called off after Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs ordered a review of the state's death penalty procedures. Late last year, Hobbs fired the retired judge she had appointed to conduct the review, and the state's corrections department announced changes in the team that lethally injects death row prisoners. Arizona, which has 111 prisoners on death row, has been heavily criticized for its use of the death penalty. It underwent a nearly eight-year hiatus in the use of the death penalty after a 2014 execution was botched and because of difficulties obtaining drugs for execution.

Arizona plans to carry out its second execution this year
Arizona plans to carry out its second execution this year

Associated Press

time22-05-2025

  • Associated Press

Arizona plans to carry out its second execution this year

PHOENIX (AP) — The state of Arizona is planning to carry out a second execution this year, this time for a man convicted of violently killing four members of a family in 1993 at their home in metro Phoenix. Prosecutors filed a request Thursday with the Arizona Supreme Court to set a briefing schedule leading up to the execution of Richard Kenneth Djerf, who pleaded guilty to killing Albert Luna Sr., his wife, Patricia, and their 18-year-old daughter Rochelle and 5-year-old son Damien. A judge later sentenced Djerf to death. If the court agrees to the schedule suggested by prosecutors, the state's highest court would consider the request for Djerf's execution warrant in late July, with the execution likely occurring in early September. The Associated Press has sent an email seeking comment to attorneys who represented Djerf. Two months ago, Arizona executed 53-year-old Aaron Brian Gunches in the 2002 killing of Ted Price, marking the state's first use of the death penalty in over two years Gunches' execution had originally been scheduled for April 2023, but it was called off after Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs ordered a review of the state's death penalty procedures. Late last year, Hobbs fired the retired judge she had appointed to conduct the review, and the state's corrections department announced changes in the team that lethally injects death row prisoners. Arizona, which has 111 prisoners on death row, has been heavily criticized for its use of the death penalty. It underwent a nearly eight-year hiatus in the use of the death penalty after a 2014 execution was botched and because of difficulties obtaining drugs for execution.

Arizona plans to carry out its second execution this year
Arizona plans to carry out its second execution this year

The Independent

time22-05-2025

  • The Independent

Arizona plans to carry out its second execution this year

The state of Arizona is planning to carry out a second execution this year, this time for a man convicted of violently killing four members of a family in 1993 at their home in metro Phoenix. Prosecutors filed a request Thursday with the Arizona Supreme Court to set a briefing schedule leading up to the execution of Richard Kenneth Djerf, who pleaded guilty to killing Albert Luna Sr., his wife, Patricia, and their 18-year-old daughter Rochelle and 5-year-old son Damien. A judge later sentenced Djerf to death. If the court agrees to the schedule suggested by prosecutors, the state's highest court would consider the request for Djerf's execution warrant in late July, with the execution likely occurring in early September. The Associated Press has sent an email seeking comment to attorneys who represented Djerf. Two months ago, Arizona executed 53-year-old Aaron Brian Gunches in the 2002 killing of Ted Price, marking the state's first use of the death penalty in over two years Gunches' execution had originally been scheduled for April 2023, but it was called off after Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs ordered a review of the state's death penalty procedures. Late last year, Hobbs fired the retired judge she had appointed to conduct the review, and the state's corrections department announced changes in the team that lethally injects death row prisoners. Arizona, which has 111 prisoners on death row, has been heavily criticized for its use of the death penalty. It underwent a nearly eight-year hiatus in the use of the death penalty after a 2014 execution was botched and because of difficulties obtaining drugs for execution.

The cruelty of isolation: There's nothing ‘humane' about how we treat the condemned
The cruelty of isolation: There's nothing ‘humane' about how we treat the condemned

Yahoo

time03-04-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

The cruelty of isolation: There's nothing ‘humane' about how we treat the condemned

Photo by Peter Dazeley | Getty Images On March 19, I served as a witness to the execution of a man named Aaron Gunches, Arizona's first since 2022. During his time on death row, he begged for death and was ultimately granted what is likely more appropriately described as an emotionless state-assisted suicide. This experience has profoundly impacted me, leading to deep reflection on the nature of death, humanity, and the role we play in our final moments. When someone is in the end stages of life, we talk about hospice care, comfort, care, easing suffering and humane death. We strive for a 'good death' — a peaceful transition. I've seen good ones, and I've seen bad, unplanned ones. But what happens when that transition is forced into stark, lonely isolation? Is there anything truly humane about dying alone? The answer, I believe, is a resounding no. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX We prioritize pain management and physical comfort, but we often neglect the profound, undeniable and universal need for human, emotional and spiritual connection. To die alone, separated from others by sterile glass, or a cold, impersonal screen, is an act of profound cruelty. Even for those who have reached a point where death feels like a release, the absence of human touch, of a familiar voice, of a loving spiritual presence, strips away the last glimpse of dignity in death. 'But protocols!' they say. 'Safety!' they shout. Yet, the risk of a gentle hand held, a whispered word of comfort or permission to let go, pales in comparison to the soul-crushing certainty of a solitary end. The fear of infection or injustice, however valid, should never outweigh the fundamental human need for connection in our final moments. Imagine the sterile room, the beeping machines, the cold, hard bed or gurney. Imagine the fading breaths, the growing fear, the desperate, unspoken plea for someone, anyone, to be there. And then, imagine the silence. The absolute, deafening silence of a room emptied of empathetic life, witnessed only by machines or perhaps a stranger or unseen observer. We are more than just physical bodies. We are beings of spirit, of emotion, of connection. To deny that spiritual presence, to treat death as a purely clinically physiological event, is to diminish the very essence of what it means to be human. Simply knowing that a loved one's spirit departed this earth when they were alone is like knowing something precious and irreplaceable was torn away. It is a wound that festers and never fully heals, akin to having your soul torn apart, leaving a hollow shell, like Voldemort. How can we justify robbing people of their last moments of connection, of dignity, of peace? The answer, I fear, is that we cannot. And the darkness of that realization should haunt us all. This is cruel punishment. The kind of cruel punishment prohibited by the United States Constitution. I don't know what it's like to die alone. I pray I never will. But someone very close to me once did. They died in a room, empty of anyone that truly cared for them, as they faded away. The protocols, the rules, the rigid adherence to organizational procedures, all conspired to keep us apart. I know, with a gut-wrenching certainty that it will haunt me forever, that they died alone. No hand to hold, no voice to soothe, no loving gaze to meet theirs. Just the cold, clinical silence. The image of their final moments, devoid of human warmth, is a scar etched onto my soul. It is a constant, agonizing reminder of the inhumanity we inflict when we prioritize rules over compassion. It is a testament to the fact that a 'humane' death, without human presence, is a contradiction in terms. This leads me to the chilling, inescapable shadow of the death penalty. How can we, as a society, justify the deliberate, state-sanctioned taking of a life, especially when we often impoverish the human experience of that final act? Through rules and protocols we ourselves have written, we have stripped away the condemned's humanity, confined them to a solitary cell for the night(s) before their execution, and, at least in the State of Arizona, denied them of even one in-person visit in the 10 days leading up to their execution. We deny them the comfort of human touch, the solace of familiar voices. We orchestrate the death with clinical precision in a stark, white room with only prison guards present. When the time comes to finish the act, like a play, we open black curtains for unseen witnesses behind glass to watch, forbidding them from being a mere six feet closer. When the time of death is announced, the curtain immediately closes. The witnesses to this play sit behind the glass on backless benches so close together they can reach out and touch. They are a mixture of victims, media, state officials and their guests, and those requested by the person being executed. Surely their opinions, thoughts and emotions differ widely, and yet they are forced to be in the same room, unable to freely express themselves as they watch. It is just observation with an unspoken expectation of silence. While it troubles me to say this, we have come a long way from the nooses and electric chairs of our past that sit on display in the Pinal County Historical Museum just a mile down the road from where Arizona prisoners are executed. By simply paying a bit more for a licensed and trained phlebotomist, we have surpassed our barbaric ways of poking and prodding our way to death, which sometimes led to an execution taking hours, instead of minutes. This is to the credit of the current administration of the Arizona Department of Corrections, Rehabilitation, and Reentry. They have shown a true desire for transparency and a more human-centric model of running our prisons. For this I have a great deal of respect, and I will be forever grateful. The department's director asked me, a self-proclaimed anti-death penalty individual, to bear witness to an execution — a step toward transparency through ensuring a diverse representation was present to witness the state's most grave action. It is clear that the state has worked to make this death quick and painless, regardless of how willing Aaron was to die. Arizona recently commissioned a report on death penalty procedures, and while it was scrapped before it could be completed, the fact that the study was conducted indicates that government officials continue to search for humane ways to die — and this in a country where we are still debating whether convicted criminals deserve a humane death. From witnessing this execution, it seemed to me that the definition of success under the new administration was for the death to be 'swift and without complication.' In the press conference after the execution, state officials proclaimed that the execution went as planned — it was a success. However, for those of us in the witness room, the time could not go quickly enough. I myself watched and counted as the 32 minutes went by so slowly. I saw pain in Aaron's eyes. In his face I saw breathing that seemed as though it was not a natural way to pass. While this certainly seems more 'humane' than the stories of past executions, why an individual who practically led the charge in his own execution could not simply take a pill (like those used in physician-assisted suicide/dying) is beyond comprehension. After witnessing the execution. I left the prison complex in Florence and traveled to a place I have considered sacred and safe for decades, St. Anthony's Greek Orthodox Monastery just south on Highway 79. I stood in the Chapel of St. Nicholas, catching my breath and allowing my heart to slow down. Of all the things I had experienced that morning, nothing came to mind more than how alone Aaron looked during his final moments. I wondered what harm could come from allowing him to have a loved one sitting by his side, holding his hand, and telling him it's okay to let go. I have done this, been next to people I loved in their dying moments and told them it's okay. In doing so, I willingly gave them a piece of my heart. But through witnessing the isolation of Aaron's death, a piece of my heart was ripped from me. I can physically feel it. Regardless of the egregiousness of crimes committed, how can we think we possess the moral authority to extinguish a human life while it lays alone in cold silence? Can we be forgiven for doing so? Can we truly think it's OK? To die alone, separated from others by sterile glass, or a cold, impersonal screen, is an act of profound cruelty. Even for those who have reached a point where death feels like a release, the absence of human touch, of a familiar voice, of a loving spiritual presence, strips away the last glimpse of dignity in death. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the isolation and loneliness of death were almost universally condemned. 'The darkness of our societal choices,' some called it. But is the death penalty, with its procedural isolation and finality, really any different? Whether it's a pandemic protocol or a state-sanctioned execution, the fundamental question remains: how can we claim to be a humane society when we so readily inflict the cruelty of isolation in our final acts? How can we justify robbing people of their last moments of connection, of dignity, of peace? The answer, I fear, is that we cannot. And the darkness of that realization should haunt us all. This is cruel punishment. The kind of cruel punishment prohibited by the United States Constitution. I am against the death penalty, and if it was on my ballot tomorrow, I would vote to end it. But the current reality is that the death penalty is legal. And, so, should we not demand that our state laws and procedures be as true as possible to the intentions of the Constitution? Should we not strive to improve our protocols around the death penalty? To reduce the cruelty of isolation and continue to search for ways to make it more swift and less painful? I am a career civil servant. I have worked my entire life to improve government policies, procedures, and operations. I believe in the government's ability to critically assess itself, learn from mistakes, and take action to improve fidelity to laws and better serve the public. As a witness, I feel obligated to ensure we continue to find a more humane way of execution, one with dignity and human connection. Let us remember that we are not just bodies, but souls. Should we have the chance to be with someone in their final moments, the most humane act we can offer is simply our presence, one soul to another. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

Louisiana, Arizona end pauses on capital punishment as 3 executions set for March
Louisiana, Arizona end pauses on capital punishment as 3 executions set for March

USA Today

time13-02-2025

  • Politics
  • USA Today

Louisiana, Arizona end pauses on capital punishment as 3 executions set for March

Louisiana, Arizona end pauses on capital punishment as 3 executions set for March Three states have scheduled executions in March, including one eyeing a controversial nitrogen gas method in order to carry it out and another state that struggled to insert IVs into three separate inmates during their lethal injections. Louisiana's execution of Christopher Sepulvado on March 17 would mark the end of a 15-year break in executions in the state, which plans to use nitrogen gas. Arizona's execution of Aaron Gunches on March 19 would be the first in the state since 2022, when the state struggled to carry out three executions. Meanwhile South Carolina is set to execute its fourth inmate since September, when the state reinstated the practice after a 13-year pause. "The resumption of executions in states which have not killed prisoners in over a decade is a troubling last gasp for the death penalty in the United States," Abraham Bonowitz, executive director of Death Penalty Action, told USA TODAY on Wednesday. "Killing old men decades after their crimes does not make us safer, nor does it bring back the victims in these cases." Republican Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry said in a statement Monday that "justice will be dispensed." 'For too long, Louisiana has failed to uphold the promises made to victims of our State's most violent crimes," he said. "I anticipate the national press will embellish on the feelings and interests of the violent death row murderers, we will continue to advocate for the innocent victims and the loved ones left behind." So far this year, the U.S. has executed three inmates, with two more scheduled to die and on Thursday and at least 12 more by the end of the year. Here's what to know about the newly scheduled executions. Louisiana ends prohibition on death penalty A De Soto Parish judge granted a death warrant Tuesday for 81-year-old Christopher Sepulvado to be executed on March 17 for the murder of his 6-year-old stepson in 1993. Attorney General Liz Murrill told The Associated Press that the state will use nitrogen gas and expects to execute four inmates this year. The Rev. Jeff Hood, a spiritual advisor for Death Row inmates and anti-death penalty activist, was a witness to the first nitrogen gas execution in the United States − that of Kenny Eugene Smith on Jan. 25, 2024 − and described it as being "horrific." "Kenny was shaking the entire gurney. I had never seen something so violent," Hood wrote in a column for USA TODAY following the execution of Kenneth Smith. "There was nothing in his body that was calm. Everything was going everywhere all at once, over and over." Sepulvado's attorney, Shawn Nolan, told KTBS-TV that the inmate is in poor health and confined to a wheelchair. "Chris Sepulvado is a debilitated old man suffering from serious medical ailments," he said. "There is no conceivable reason why 'justice' might be served by executing Chris instead of letting him live out his few remaining days in prison." Arizona to restart executions after review The Arizona State Supreme Court granted a warrant of execution for Aaron Gunches on Tuesday, setting the first execution in the state in more than two years for March 19, reported The Arizona Republic − a part of the USA TODAY Network. Gunches was sentenced to death for the 2002 murder of Ted Price, a former longtime boyfriend of Gunches' girlfriend. Gunches has advocated for his execution, and the state's Supreme Court previously granted a death warrant for him in 2023 that was not completed when Democratic state leadership paused executions upon taking office. Gov. Katie Hobbs and Attorney General Kris Mayes suspended capital punishment pending a review of Arizona's death penalty process because the state struggled to insert IVs for three lethal injection executions in 2022: those of Clarence Dixon, Frank Atwood and Murray Hooper. Dixon's attorneys said it took 40 minutes to insert IVs. Dixon's execution team resorted to inserting an IV line into his femoral vein, which caused him to experience pain and resulted in a "fair amount of blood," according to Associated Press reporter Paul Davenport, who witnessed the execution. The execution team for Atwood also struggled to insert IVs, prompting technicians to consider the femoral vein, as well. However, Atwood asked the team to try his arms again, eventually guiding them to insert the line into one of his hands successfully. During Hooper's execution, he turned and asked the viewing gallery, 'Can you believe this?' as the execution team tried and failed repeatedly to insert IVs into his arms before inserting a catheter into his femoral vein. Hobbs ended the review process late last year, and Mayes announced she was pursuing the execution of Gunches. State officials have said there will now be additional members on the execution team, including a phlebotomist. During previous executions, the IV team was sometimes staffed with corrections officers. South Carolina to execute fourth person in five months Meanwhile the South Carolina Supreme Court on Friday scheduled a March 7 execution date for Brad Sigmon for the 2001 murder of a couple and the kidnapping of their daughter, according to the Greenville News − a part of the USA TODAY Network. Sigmon would be the fourth man executed by the state since September if the execution is completed, following Freddie 'Khalil' Owens, Richard Moore and Marion Bowman last month. Lawyers representing Sigmon, 67, filed a motion last week to stay Sigmon's executionafter reviewing Moore's autopsy. According to the motion, the previous three men remained alive for 20 minutes after receiving a dose of pentobarbital, and Moore had to be injected a second time. 'This raises grave concerns: that during all three of SCDC's recent executions, the drugs were either not properly administered, not reliable and effective, or all of the above,' according to the motion. USA TODAY reached out to the South Carolina Department of Corrections for a response.

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