Crime Alabama prisoner subjected to 'three hours of pain' in possible longest recorded execution in US

UniLad (Archive) - August 15, 2022
by, Jake Massey

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An Alabama prisoner was subjected to 'three hours of pain' in what may have been the longest execution in US history, according to a human rights organisation.

Murderer Joe Nathan James Jr received a lethal injection at a south Alabama prison on 29 July after the US supreme court denied his request for a stay of execution.

He was was pronounced dead at 9.27pm (3.27am on Friday BST), after the start of the procedure was delayed by nearly three hours.

State officials initially insisted that there was 'nothing out of the ordinary' about the execution; however, they later stated that executioners had difficulties establishing the intravenous lines carrying the lethal drugs.

Citing James Jr's autopsy report and an article by The Atlantic, human rights organisation Reprieve US has concluded that the lethal injection began long before media witnesses were admitted at around 9.00pm.

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According to The Guardian, the director of Reprieve US, Maya Foa, said in a statement yesterday (Sunday 14 April): "Subjecting a prisoner to three hours of pain and suffering is the definition of cruel and unusual punishment. States cannot continue to pretend that the abhorrent practice of lethal injection is in any way humane."

She added: "This is the latest example of the extreme lengths states will be go to hide the brutal reality of lethal injection because they know the public would oppose it if they found out what was really going on."

UNILAD has reached out to Alabama state prison officials for comment.

James Jr, 50, was convicted and sentenced to death over the 1994 shooting death of Faith Hall, 26, in Birmingham.

Hall's daughters said they would rather James Jr served life in prison, but Alabama governor Kay Ivey let the execution proceed.

Prosecutors said James Jr briefly dated Hall and he became obsessed after she rejected him, stalking and harassing her for months before killing her.

On 15 August 1994, after Hall had been out shopping with a friend, James Jr forced his way inside the friend's apartment, pulled a gun from his waistband and shot Hall three times, according to court documents.

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Hall's two daughters, who were three and six when their mother was killed, said they wanted James Jr to serve life in prison instead of being executed. The family members did not attend the execution.

"Today is a tragic day for our family. We are having to relive the hurt that this caused us many years ago," the family's statement issued through state representative Juandalynn Givan's office read. Givan was a friend of Hall's.

"We hoped the state wouldn't take a life simply because a life was taken and we have forgiven Mr Joe Nathan James Jr for his atrocities toward our family.

"We pray that God allows us to find healing after today and that one day our criminal justice system will listen to the cries of families like ours even if it goes against what the state wishes."

Ivey said she always deeply considers the feelings of the victim's family and loved ones, but 'must always fulfil our responsibility to the law, to public safety and to justice'.

She added: "Faith Hall, the victim of repetitive harassment, serious threats and ultimately, cold-blooded murder, was taken from this earth far too soon at the hands of Joe Nathan James Jr.

"Now, after two convictions, a unanimous jury decision and nearly three decades on death row, Mr James has been executed for capital murder, and justice has been served for Faith Hall."

The governor added that an 'unmistakable message was sent that Alabama stands with victims of domestic violence'.
If you have experienced a bereavement and would like to speak with someone in confidence contact Cruse Bereavement Care via their national helpline on 0808 808 1677
 
Journalists expecting people to give a shit when this guy was minimum a murderer, and being right that people will fall for the 'human rights' nonsense makes me feel bad man.

The family defending the retard is worse though.
 
Lead and Rope is both cheaper, and induces less pain, but we have to be "humane" right?
Yeah, this is a really strange sense of "humane executions"
Why are hanging or shooting shunned and this shit isn't, even though they are very fast and/or painless?
Because they outwardly damage the body and that makes it look more scary?
I know which sort of death I would prefer between instant death through shot in the heart to getting injected with cleaning solution.
 
"they later stated that executioners had difficulties establishing the intravenous lines carrying the lethal drugs."

Is it a really problem if you miss the vein in this scenario? I can't imagine that you would be too worried about causing damage to surrounding tissue in this instance.
 
Maybe they could fix this problem by encouraging people to not commit premeditated murder? Then they would only ever have to execute traitors.
 
Yeah, this is a really strange sense of "humane executions"
Why are hanging or shooting shunned and this shit isn't, even though they are very fast and/or painless?
Because they outwardly damage the body and that makes it look more scary?
I know which sort of death I would prefer between instant death through shot in the heart to getting injected with cleaning solution.

Westerners are scared of blood.

And generational trauma from all those wars over the years.

Death penalty was almost universal before the end of WW2.

About 20 odd years later, they were being phased out as leftism and secularism and cosmopolitanism and atheism and being edgy against religion and being irreligious started becoming big in society.

Through in that most of the pop culture like Hollywood demonizes the death penalty in many ways, even when they make it look cool or promote movies like "The Punisher" when the end goal is to make it look bad.

They also stereotype it as well, as something that doesn't work, with all those studies by think tanks saying that the death penalty doesn't deter crime.

The death penalty is usually there as a punishment and not a deterrent, but leftists frame it not as some closure for the victim, but some failed policy that still doesn't stop crime.

Wet markets been banned around the west, as a result most people like their burgers but don't know how its really made.

Even in those "factory farms" where must of the slaughtering is done by some machine inside a metal box.

The biggest organizations behind ending the death penalty are all in the west and they bribe other nations to get rid of it.

The only parts of the world that now use the death penalty, is parts of America, China under the CCP and most of the Muslim World.
 
"they later stated that executioners had difficulties establishing the intravenous lines carrying the lethal drugs."

Is it a really problem if you miss the vein in this scenario? I can't imagine that you would be too worried about causing damage to surrounding tissue in this instance.
I think it's a question of effectiveness. Just as you need to find a vein to actually draw blood, you need to do so to effectively administer a poison into the bloodstream. Otherwise, you get a drawn-out scenario like this.
 
On one hand, we really shouldn't be allowing the state to be so sloppy with this shit. On the other, perhaps I'd feel more sympathy if he wasn't a murderous scumbag.

Either way, hangings should be brought back.
 
Why is it fast to euthanize a pet but not a human? I had to euthanize my dog years ago (it was either that or he'd die painfully over hours), and it took seconds from injection to death. I wasn't at all prepared for how fast it was.
 
Westerners are scared of blood.

And generational trauma from all those wars over the years.

Death penalty was almost universal before the end of WW2.

About 20 odd years later, they were being phased out as leftism and secularism and cosmopolitanism and atheism and being edgy against religion and being irreligious started becoming big in society.

Through in that most of the pop culture like Hollywood demonizes the death penalty in many ways, even when they make it look cool or promote movies like "The Punisher" when the end goal is to make it look bad.

They also stereotype it as well, as something that doesn't work, with all those studies by think tanks saying that the death penalty doesn't deter crime.

The death penalty is usually there as a punishment and not a deterrent, but leftists frame it not as some closure for the victim, but some failed policy that still doesn't stop crime.

Wet markets been banned around the west, as a result most people like their burgers but don't know how its really made.

Even in those "factory farms" where must of the slaughtering is done by some machine inside a metal box.

The biggest organizations behind ending the death penalty are all in the west and they bribe other nations to get rid of it.

The only parts of the world that now use the death penalty, is parts of America, China under the CCP and most of the Muslim World.
Japan, surprisingly still carries out the death penalty with hanging.

 
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