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View Full Version : Cult leader says he's too obese for execution - UPDATE: Killer put to death



MedicCook
10-19-2006, 09:03 AM
Cult leader says he's too obese for execution

http://i.a.cnn.net/cnn/2006/LAW/10/18/bc.na.gen.us.cultleader.ap/vert.lundgren.ap.jpg
Cult leader Jeffrey Lundren says his diabetes and obesity would make execution by injection painful.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- A federal judge on Tuesday delayed next week's execution of cult leader Jeffrey Lundgren to allow him to join a lawsuit by five other death row inmates challenging the state's use of lethal injection.

In his request to join the lawsuit, Lundgren, 56, said he is at even greater risk of experiencing pain and suffering during the procedure than other inmates because he is overweight and diabetic.

Similar lawsuits filed in several states have led to the halting of executions in Missouri, Delaware and New Jersey.

Opponents have argued that the use of the lethal injection is unconstitutionally cruel and painful and that the procedure is often carried out without specifically trained medical personnel present.

But Ohio's method of lethal injection came under national scrutiny by death penalty opponents in May after problems slowed the execution of another inmate who was a former intravenous drug user and the vein the execution team chose collapsed as the chemicals started flowing.

While Judge Gregory Frost issued an order temporarily delaying Lundgren's execution, he said it appears to him that potential flaws with Ohio's execution process could easily be corrected.

"Thus, any delay in carrying out Lundgren's execution should and can be minimal," Frost said.

State Attorney General Jim Petro will appeal the ruling to the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati, said spokesman Mark Anthony.

Lundgren's sentence stems from a conviction for the fatal shooting of a family of five in 1989. The family, which included three children, were killed while they stood in a pit dug inside his barn in northeast Ohio.

Lundgren formed a cult after he was dismissed in 1987 as a lay minister of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, now known as the Community of Christ.

He said passages in the Bible told him to kill the family. Several witnesses said the family was not as enthusiastic about the cult as Lundgren would have liked.

The family he killed had moved from Missouri in 1987 to follow Lundgren's teachings.

Frost's decision allows Lundgren to join a 2004 lawsuit brought by death row inmate Richard Cooey, convicted of the rape and murder of two University of Akron students in 1986.

Cooey argues that the way chemicals used in lethal injection are administered makes the process painful enough to amount to cruel and unusual punishment, in violation of the constitution.

Four other inmates had previously joined the lawsuit.

http://www.cnn.com/2006/LAW/10/18/bc.na.gen.us.cultleader.ap/index.html

MedicCook
10-19-2006, 09:04 AM
So the fact that they want to execute him is not a problem, it is just how they give the meds to kill him that he does not like. :dry:

Mac
10-19-2006, 10:00 AM
He really doesn't look to overweight either.... Just a ploy to stall things.

sws4420
10-19-2006, 10:16 AM
:Lighten:


:sniper: :snipe:

MedicCook
10-19-2006, 10:18 AM
This is where I do not think the death penalty is worth it. It usually cost more to send a prisoner to death row than it would be to give that same prisoner life in prison. All these appeals in the court system is costing the tax payers lots and lots of money.

sws4420
10-19-2006, 10:20 AM
Bullets cost almost nothing.

Cutesunshine
10-19-2006, 10:57 AM
I think if there's no grounds for an appeal... like dna evidence... they should be executed immediately after they are sentenced. Save everyone the trouble.

MedicCook
10-19-2006, 11:01 AM
The chance of that ever happening is slim to none.

sws4420
10-19-2006, 11:34 AM
I think if there's no grounds for an appeal... like dna evidence... they should be executed immediately after they are sentenced. Save everyone the trouble.In Texas if there's three credible witnesses and DNA evidence, you go to the head of the line.

Tiffany
10-19-2006, 12:03 PM
I think they deserve to suffer, and whether they are obese or diabetic shouldn't matter. The lethal injection is nothing compared to what was done to those people. Make the bastard suffer and feel more pain.

sws4420
10-19-2006, 01:10 PM
Well shit, if he's diabetic just lock him in solitary confinement with no food except candy. Shouldn't take too long.

MedicCook
10-19-2006, 01:13 PM
It would be more fun to keep him alive and let his sugar go up and down over and over again. Maybe he would get some nasty diabetic sore's on his body and they would get all infected and leak puss all over the place.

Tiffany
10-19-2006, 07:47 PM
Eww, i just got a visual. Thanks :wink:

Mac
10-19-2006, 09:08 PM
I second that Ewww :blink:

MedicCook
10-19-2006, 10:33 PM
:biggrin:

sws4420
10-14-2008, 02:40 PM
Killer who claimed he was too fat is executed
http://msnbcmedia3.msn.com/j/msnbc/Components/Photo/_new/081014-death-cooey-hmed920a.hmedium.jpg

CINCINNATI - Ohio executed a 5-foot-7, 267-pound double murderer who argued his obesity made death by lethal injection inhumane.

Richard Cooey, 41, died at 10:28 a.m. Tuesday at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in Lucasville, said Jim Gravelle, a spokesman with state attorney general's office.

There were no immediate reports of difficulties finding suitable veins to deliver the deadly chemicals, a problem that has delayed previous executions in the state.
Story continues below ↓advertisement

Cooey's attorneys had argued that his weight problem would make it difficult for prison staff to access a vein. A prisons spokeswoman said Cooey received a pre-execution exam early Tuesday and was cleared.

Last words
Cooey, who killed two University of Akron students in 1986, walked into the death chamber at 10:15 a.m. wearing gray pants and was strapped onto the gurney.

"You (expletive) haven't paid any attention to anything I've said in the last 22 1/2 years, why would anyone pay any attention to anything I've had to say now," Cooey said looking at the ceiling. He made no other comment.

Cooey tapped the fingers of his left hand several times before he died and his face took on a purple shade.

Six family members of one of his victims watched the execution. Summit County Prosecutor Sherri Bevan Walsh said the family was disappointed that Cooey was vulgar and hateful at the end.

Appeal denied
He was the first inmate executed in Ohio in more than a year, and the state's first since the end of the unofficial moratorium on executions that began last year while the U.S. Supreme Court reviewed Kentucky's lethal injection procedure.

Cooey lost a final appeal earlier Tuesday when the U.S. Supreme Court turned down without comment his complaint that the state's protocol for lethal injection could cause an agonizing and painful death. He wanted the state to use a single drug rather than a three-drug combination, and asked for a stay of execution pending a hearing on that motion.

The court on Monday denied a separate appeal based on Cooey's claim that his obesity was a bar to humane lethal injection. The argument also had been rejected by a federal appeals court in Cincinnati and the Ohio Supreme Court, with both courts ruling that he missed a deadline for filing appeals.

Cooey is 75 pounds heavier than when he went to death row — the result of prison food and 23-hour-a-day confinement, his lawyers said.

They also argued that a migraine medicine prescribed by a prison physician could reduce the effect of the anesthetic used as part of the three-drug lethal injection.

Previous cases
They claimed that Ohio has a history of botched executions.

The last Ohio inmate to be executed was Christopher Newton — who was similar in size to Cooey — in May 2007. The execution team had trouble putting IVs in his arm, which delayed his execution nearly two hours. There were similar problems in the execution of another inmate in 2006.

Cooey made an earlier trip to the death house. But a U.S. District Court judge intervened hours before his scheduled execution in July 2003 when the Ohio Public Defender's office said it needed more time to assess the case after an appeals court dismissed his previous attorneys for inadequate representation.

Cooey and a co-defendant were convicted in the sexual assaults and slayings of University of Akron students Dawn McCreery, 20, and Wendy Offredo, 21, in September 1986. His co-defendant was 17 and was sentenced to life in prison because of his age.

The state has now executed 27 inmates since 1999, when Ohio renewed executions after more than three decades.


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/27169680/

MedicCook
10-14-2008, 03:00 PM
Ohio has issues with a lot of things it seems. From exucusions to elections. Ironically they both have the same outcome.

Thomas the Solitary
10-15-2008, 03:23 AM
"You (expletive) haven't paid any attention to anything I've said in the last 22 1/2 years, why would anyone pay any attention to anything I've had to say now,"


Best last words. Evar.

It'd be better if he had been flipping them off, too.

MedicCook
10-15-2008, 04:26 AM
The way I see it, it is just the system keeping whitey ginger down.

Thomas the Solitary
10-15-2008, 05:07 AM
He was obviously eating better than me, on death row.