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Не, попечителски смъртни случаи ...
Няма длъжностни лица, осъдени на смърт в ареста в Обединеното кралство от 1969
Не, всички несправедливости ...
Активисти заричат да запази натиска, за да протестират срещу всички несправедливости
Mentally ill inmate put to death in Arkansasвсички кредити: Socialist Worker Website (САЩ)
публикувани: 8януари 2004
Някакви новини актуализации по този случай ще бъдат изброени в подножието на тази позиция,
Death Row затворник Чарлз Сингълтън, 44, е починал от смъртоносна инжекция в Звеното Cummins затвор близо до Varner, Арканзас във вторник, Януари 6. Сингълтън бе осъден на 1979 пронизваща смъртта на Mary Lou Йорк, и е прекарал 23 години, осъдени на смърт.
Members of the Northwest Arkansas Chapter of the Arkansas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty held a candlelight vigil outside the Washington County Courthouse as the execution approached. Singleton’s short, incoherent final statement was read out before the lethal chemicals were administered: “The blind think I’m playing a game. They deny me, refusing my existence, but everybody takes the place of another. I will come forth as you go.”
Members of Mary Lou York’s family attended the execution. If any relatives of Charles Singleton had decided to attend, under Arkansas law they would have been held at a roadblock a mile from the prison’s entrance and denied the right to witness their loved one being put to death.
Singleton, who was also known as Victor Ra Hakim, had been diagnosed as suffering from schizophrenia. A 1986 Supreme Court decision, Ford v. Wainwright, bars execution of the mentally insane—those who cannot understand the reality of, or reason for, their punishment. In Singleton’s case, authorities got around this prohibition by obtaining a court order to forcibly medicate him to render him temporarily mentally competent—in order to be put to death.
The symptoms of Charles Singleton’s mental illness were obvious and myriad. By the late 1980s he had begun to suffer delusions, such as that his cell was possessed by demons and that his thoughts were being stolen as he read the Bible. He described himself variously as the “Holy Ghost” and “God and the Supreme Court.”
He expressed the belief that execution was simply a matter of stopping his breathing, and that a judge could restart it again—clearly a lack of understanding of the nature of execution.
By the early 1990s Singleton was regularly taking anti-psychotic drugs. If he failed to take his medication, or it needed to be increased or changed, his symptoms would worsen. He was subsequently put on an involuntary medication regime. A 1990 US Supreme Court ruling (Washington v. Harper) allows state authorities to “treat a prison inmate who has a serious mental illness with antipsychotic drugs against his will, if he is dangerous to himself or others and the treatment is in his medical interest.”
Singleton’s symptoms subsided and Arkansas officials set an execution date. His lawyers argued, обаче, that it could not be in their client’s interest to be forcibly medicated to prepare him for execution, and his death sentence was stayed awaiting a decision. През октомври 2001, a three-judge panel of the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled 2-1 that the death sentence should be commuted to life in prison.
Обаче, in February 2003, a full-court ruling of the 8th Circuit held that Arkansas authorities could forcibly medicate Singleton to prepare him for the death chamber. They wrote: “Singleton presents the court with a choice between involuntary medication followed by an execution and no medication followed by psychosis and imprisonment,” adding remarkably, “Eligibility for execution is the only unwanted consequence of the medication” (курсивът е добавен).
Dissenting, Judge Gerald Heaney wrote: “I believe that to execute a man who is severely deranged without treatment, and arguably incompetent when treated, is the pinnacle of what [former Supreme Court] Правосъдие [Thurgood] Marshall called ‘the barbarity of exacting mindless vengeance’” [in Ford v. Wainwright]…. Underneath this mask of stability, he remains insane. Ford’s prohibition on executing the insane should apply with no less force to Singleton than to untreated prisoners.”
The European Union, as well as Amnesty International and other human rights groups, petitioned Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee to commute Singleton’s sentence to life in prison, but he refused. The 8th Circuit’s ruling stood, and after having evaded execution on six previously scheduled dates, Singleton was put to death on Tuesday.
Amnesty International condemned the execution: “While more than half the world has abolished the death penalty in law or in practice, the United States has allowed Charles Singleton to be executed—a man who suffers from irrefutable mental illness. Global standards of decency prohibit the execution of ‘persons who have become insane.’ Singleton was said to be ‘seriously deranged without treatment’ and ‘arguably incompetent with treatment.’… The execution of the mentally ill is another example of the arbitrary and unfair manner in which the death penalty system is administered.”